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tc0ver the Ocean Waves " The South Carolina Reserves Will Mettrt?y Sail. Colombia State. Well, it is decided that the Sooth Carolina o a val reserve corps is to go oo a week's croise this samcier, fe ac? cordasse with the plan oQtlined in The State some days ago. Tba corps will probably make their" cruise aboard the United States cruiser ."Atlams.** one of the 6uest vessels in tire navy, aod when they return ashore they will know something about the hardships of the seaman's life. This vessel is to take the Georgia corps out for a two weeks, croise towards the close of this month, the troop? embarking at Bruns? wick, and she will probably then come to Charleston and take the South Caro? lina corps out. A week or two ago Adjutant Gene? ral Watts received the following letter from the Navy Department in regard to the cruise: Sir: It is the intention of this Depart? ment, if ships are available, to afford the naval militia of your State an op - portunity for a few days' drill and in? struction dering the summer months on board a war vessel of tue govern? ment. This instruction will consist of ab?>ut a week's cruise at ???a, or daity drills on board ship for the same period, the militia going on shore for the night, as may be-deemed bes' at the time by the Departrtferit ThHEfe^awmSor ttef?fore, r^t?s^s to be informed as ??o:?u an possible if it is your intention to assign" the naval militia to thia duty, aod, if so, how many officers and men wrtfbe ?rof?ded in the force. Wb?irthi*- information is redeired,* the Department will i o form you of the time for the proposed oVtHe. The force wttjpfefce to~?pj)Jy ift ow? mess gear, hammocks and Bedding, and t her e&*t o f tire ration w h ich mir be ?ssnecTby t?e government if cnsirea, will have to be boroe by tho- Stater Tbroost of ratfonr will bc ?bout 30 cents'a da"y peFuTan. Veryleipecif?ily, A.McAooo. Assistant Secretary. OluB^l?ter #?a*: rtffe^red to1 Coo^ mander Pinckney, of Charleston, who? la in charge of the naval b?tri?rori. Hse:" has just r?foccned Geoera-l . Watts that the Charleston*companies^ ot' the~ biti talion are anxious to on! the- croise and would do so. He stated that he had communicated with the Beaufort companies^ bet bad not ytt heard from them. He had no^doubt, however, but that they, too, would be delighted to take the cruise. In accordance with this. Gen. Watts yesterday, wrote,the Navy. Department acceptrog?tbeloS&, and'requ^tftg^bit the v&sefbe stfrtxiownHowsf?s- the> -ecrd of July if possible-. T HS ST ATE KJ?C\**y?ENT. Gea. Wktito^ th?rb? has decided to have the encampment of the militia forces, of (he State tmd . save he . is mll?iren?^or^^ifr - toe- otrirboV ?? stated yesterday that he bad flattering bids from'Abbeville, Anderson, Gre'eu ville- and-otbe* points for- tte holding of tb*? enc?mpmVdt af one of those towns. He ?aid further thar he yester? day had a tafe with' th? mayor of this city, and that Mayor Sloan Bays* he sees no reason why Columbia should riot have the encampment, aod wHl do nH he can to secure it. It has been de? cided that it shall be held some time in Jury. G sn sra' Watts says be proposes to have the encampment under the strictest military dicipline. He intends to apply to the War Department for tire detail of ?n?ted State's army officers to be in charge of the encampment. He days be finds that the troops all over the State are very anxious for such an encampment, and every company in the State, save the cavalry companies, will attend. He is now in communication with the railroad authorities aod ex? pects to get a rate of a cent a mile each way for all the troops. A Death Blow to Home Life. South Carolina is now being canvass* ed by the advocates of woman's suf? frage, but we do not think that question will ever amount to much here. If wo? men voted they would naturally want office, and then would come the woman politician. You would see men and women scrambling against each other in the mad rush for politioal prefer? ment. You know bow black some? times a man's character is parn ted when he runs for office. Wbat wculd they say of a womeu in thc heat of a poli? tical debate? Her honor, her character would be assailed. Think of the de? bate between Mrs. Lease and Mrs. Diggs out in Kansas, wheo Mrs. Diggs called Mrs. Lease "au infamous liar' on the platform, and judge for your-' self if women could hold that involun? tary respect which every gentleman pays her if s"?e entered as a competitor with man. She enters a crowded car and some fellow thinks "she voted against me" and keeps his t=eat ; she walks the streets and insinuations are whispered against ber character by poli? tical opponents. She holds opinions of her own and vote9 against her hus? band, and discord enters the home when the wife kills the husband's vote.-Anderson InteUingencer. The Athletic Clubs of Harvard and Yale have received a challenge from Oxford and Cambridge. The contests to ?'.xVo rtaco -r> A.? . ?. . : A Hopeful Outlook. I - A Steady Improvement in Business in the South. BALTIMORE. Jane 6.-Special roports j lo the Manufacturers* Record covering the industrial and general business pro- j gress of the Sooth during the past week *how continued improvement, with a steady increase in railroad earn? ings and bank clearings as compared with the corresponding period of last year There is a very marked improvement J also in the condition ot trade, with a j very hopeful outlook for the future, j Cotton mill interests continue to com man? wide attention both on the part of Northern investors who are contem? plating building mills in the South, and OD the part of local people of the South. Among the cotton mills reported for the week are a $500.000 compaoy now being organized to build at Charlotte, N. C. ; a 10.000 spiodle mill at Athens. Ga. ; an 8.000 spind'e at Graham, N. C. ; $25.000 of new machinery is being added to a mill at Augusta, Ga., and a new mill is to be built at Mount Holly. N C. A Western com pan v will build a ?100,000 plant, in Alabama for the manufacture of charcoal and the utili- j zatioo of the bi product in making; wood alcohol ; a ?50,000 cotton seed ! oil mill company has been*organized i at Fort Gaines. Ga; a ?40,000 oHmill at Home ; a |1;2,00'0! ort mil? at Spar? taner gs apd an oil ?/fll? is 'being-or? ganized at Blacksburg. S O. A $150 - 060 baf?ssl oit rt'fiwery and st^p worKs aVe: to be hu itt at Meridiau, Miss.; at Greenville; t?isSri. a ?100,000 cooperage plant is to be started, and at Meridian, Mis*., a $100^000 lumber coiifpztij bas" been orginrz?d-. A $1. 000,000 mining cerapauy. composed mainly of Northern people, has been organized to operarte io Wevt Virginia, j The fertilizer works being- erected at BUck*botev S C , wl?f hkv? a-ca^m?ity of about 25,000 tons per year. life Ey^ ar? 0]p?nT? To the Editor JO/ The State : I am a Reformer with my eyes .recency ^petH??t&t?feli?? iowWdfress of thv TiHnjBn movement. Tillman St Co., are the only ones I see benefitted by the movement,' ?nfl: the peor horny handed sena of toil have dawn a legacy o? di?lit,-rar?s,s ?rfd high taxes I don't feel that I am able to subscribe for your paper, but I do- wish that every remo in the State could read it. A friend handed me? few copies and I read Gen. Hampton's letter, and it al? most made me shed tears, and it makes my soul long for one more op? portunity to do something for the ooble ofd hero, and patriot. Since reading his letter I have made it a point to sound the best men of the community, and I find twenty who agree witt! me and my sentiment? io regard to bim and only one against him. MV. Etfitbr", it was Wade lampton in 1876 who delivered! *s from bondage and degradation, and u must be Wade Hampton in 1895 to do the same thing again. Everybody loves bin but thine whose interest it is to keep op strife He can get the united vote of Reform? ers, Conservatives and negroes. I be? lieve he is patriot enough to lay down a big salary for a small one to save the old State. Gen. Hampton is no feeb? ler than the great old Commoner Alex Stephens was, when he was last elect? ed Governor of Georgia. I am an obscure man ; Gen. Hamp? ton bas never heard of me, yet I feel that he is one of my best friends. FRED WHITE. West Uoion, S. C. June 4, 1895 Further Advances in Pig Iron. CLEVELAND, Ohio, June 6.-The! Iron Trade Revieic says to-day : ! Another week of expanding demand in the iron trade and of further advances ! in pig iron and some lines of finished material has added strength to an ! already strong situation. Heavy- sales j of Bessemer pig iron at Pittsburg and io the valley have been the chief in- i cident of the week, the market having gone to ?12.. The establishment for; the basis of the second half of the : year is an interesting fact about these transactions, and there are coke deals involved whioh indicate that some : furnaces, at least, will not pay ?1.50 1 for fuel in the next six months. Indi- j cations are that $1 35, the nominal price j { to-day, will be close to the actual basis i j tor the summer and fall, j Now that the situation as to Bessemer \ i iron, and coke has been somewhat . cleared up there will be a renewal of j activity in steel and other products ; ! about which there has been uncertainty I as to the third quarter of the year, j Southern irons have scored another ad I vance of 25 cents and the sold up coo \ dition of well-known furnaces gives promise of increasing strength North? ern foundry irons are DOW up ?1 50 from the lowest point and forge iron in i the valley bas sold at ?10 in the week. ; Demand continues that gives uo sug i gestion of reaction, and at the same ; time there is no disposition to jump j prices at a boom pace. Bar silver i without any organization has advanced j about equally with bar iron, the former being 1.10 cents and 1.15 cents at j Pittsburg. Further good orders in ! structural material have beeu followed I hv another advance of ?1 a ton at Heavy Imports of Sugar. Over 530,607,000 Pounds Landed at Five Porte During the Month of May. WASHINGTON, June 6.-Mr. Worth? ington C. Ford, chief of the bureau of statistics, give? out rhe imports of i sugar for the month of May, 1895 The total quantity imported at thc five ports of New York. Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia and San Francisco was 530 697,599 pounds, valued at $10. 289.434. These figures represent a very heavy import. In March, 1894. the imports were 691,339.125 pounds, and in July of the same year 766,- j 046,880. If the monthly importation I be examined as far back as January, 1895, it would be seen that in no | single mooth prior to March, 1834, j bad the imports touched 500,000,000 pounds. The returns of May, 1895, I are heavier io quantity than the im? ports in May of any previous year, and should, therefore, be accounted as breaking the record. The values still rule very low. lu June, 1894, an importation of 521,378,000 pounds was valued at ?13,174,753. The greater import of May, 1895, was valued at only $10,289,434 or nearly $3,000.000 less. He Settled it Up. One Fireman Kills Auother in Sa? vannah-Quickly Bone. SAVANNAH, GA , .lune 6.-Frank Keenan was shot and killed this after? noon by Thomas Pounder. The latter is an engineer in the fire department at headquarters. Keenan was discharged from the department yesterday by Mayor Mvprs, together wirb another fireman, Bob Laird, on account of a cursing match which the two men had with each other. Keenan belonged to the Chemical Company, next door to the engine company No. 3, to w'hich Pounder and Laird, belonged. There was consider? able jealously between the two com? panies. Pounder was a witness in the investigation1 and Keenan attributed hi* discharged to Pounder's evidence. He acnttt?hl??d, tols?v?r'aT partie* that he i? tented to settle the matter with Pounder, aod the latter having been warned was prepared for him. Kee? nan came into the headquarters about 6 o'clock in companny with John Duffy, another discharged fireman, and, meet? ing Pounder, attacked bTm, stnfcfog him several Wows in the face. Pounder jerked loos?d and drawing a pistol from his Shirt bosom fired five shots io rapid s?oo?8st?a~. Four of the bullets took effect in the head and left should? er and one ic the neck. One bail pierc? ed the right temple and'the one in the neck severed thc carotid artery. Kee? nan was dead before striking the ground. Pounder surrendered to the first po? liceman that came up. Keenan was a splendid specimen of physical manhood and was a member of the Savannah football team for' two or three seasons. Myst?rlou? Safe Robbery. NEW YORK, June 6.-The safe in the office of the Harlem Life Publish? ing Company was robbed of a large sum of money a few days ago. The safe was opened io a mysterious man? ner and nearly $5,000 in cash stolen. A report of the robbery was made to Acting Chief Con lin, bot the case was kept quiet, and it did not leak out until to-day. Millard J. Bloomer is editor and Harvey N. Bloomer is manager of the Harlem Life Publishing Company, a syndicate which publishes the Sing Sing Courier, Westchester Critic, Mount Vernon Echoes, Hsrlem Life, Yonkers Blade, New Rochelle Life, White Plains Weekly and Peekskill Home Journal. The strangest part of the affair is that the safe was not broken open and no violence was used. The person who took the money evidently had some kuowledge of the combination of the safe No arrests have been yet re ported. Don't Quell it Past. LONDON, June 6.-The Post will to-morrow publish ? Madrid dispatch sayiog it is almost certain that some general commanding an army corps will go to Cuba to assist Captain Gen? eral Campos in quelling the insurrec? tion. The Cuban war credit that the government will ask the chamber of deputies to grant will be 15,000,000 pesetas. It is announced that Captain General Campos has returned to Ha? vana and that the rebels have been de? feated ?D several combats with govern? ment troops. Did You Ever Try Electric l?itters as a remedy fur your troubles ? If net, get a bottle now and get re lief. This medicine bas been found to be pecu? liarly adapted to the relief and cure of all Fe male Complaints, exerting a wonderful direct influence in giving strength and f:>ue to the organs. If rou have loss of Appetite. Consti? pa ;ion, Headache, Fainting Spells, or are Net vous, Sleepless, Excitable. Melancholy ur troubled with Dizzy Spells, Electric Bitters is the medicine you need. Health and Strength ar?? guaranteed by its use. Large bottles only fifty cents at J. F. W. DeLorme's 1>P . ''oro. --^mat?t- -^a^v School teachers and school trustees can bc accommodated and saved much trouble by =T"iinsT s li*' f*f *!?'?kg needed to H. G. ('9t*?Mp k Co. HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. -Rusks.-One pint warm milk, two eggs, salt, butter size of an egg, one tablespoon of sutrar. flour enough to knead. Rise, then make out and let rise again.-Mrs. F. B. Raulet, in Home. -Breaded Fish.-Arrange in layers one pint of cold boiled cod, or other white tish, half pint grated bread crumbs, half cupful of grated cheese, seasoned with a sp-xmful of catsup and any remains of oyster or other sauce. The top should be of bread crumbs, sprinkled with cheese and dotted with butter. Bake until brown and serve hot. -Country Gentleman. -Tossed Eggs.- Break half a dozen eggs and beat just sufficiently to mix yolk and white. Pour into a hot, but? tered pan and add immediately the fol? lowing mixture: Two small sausages finely minced with two tablespoonfuls of breadcrumbs moistened with cream and seasoned to taste. Stir constantly with a large fork until the whole ia soft and cream}*, taking care not to let it scorch. Turn quic!?l.y on to a hot dish, garnish with ere*? and serve at once.-Lina Dalton, in Farm and Home, i -Irish Stew of Salt Beef.-This is a ! way of using up the remains of a joint of boiled beef. Take slices of potato, ' and place a layer in the bottom of a saucepan. Scatter sliced onions over it, and a good seasoning of pepper and salt, then another layer of potato, onion, etc. Add just enough water to cover the bottom of the pan an inch deep: Put the lid on the pan and boil the contents till tender; then add the salt beef cut into slices half an inch thick, let all simmer for half an hour, and serve. When you have carrots, add two cuts in slices to the other veg? etables.-Leeds Mereur}*. -Apple Tapioca.-Fill a two-quart pudding dish two-thirds full of apples, pared, cored and quartered. Sprinkle over them a little salt, sugar and nut? meg. Take one cup of pearl tapioca, cover with cold water and let it soak two hours. If too thick add a little hot water, put the dish of tapioca into a vessel containing hot water, atad let it boil until thoroughly dissolved. Then pour it while hotover the apples, add a little more seasoning and bits of but? ter. Bake till the aoples are tender. Pierce the apples wita a fork, and if tender remove from the oven and serve hot, with cream and sugar. Fresh peaches or pears used in the place of apples are delicious.-Boston Budget. -Coffee Cake.-This is very fine to eat with coffee for breakfast or at other times. It is best eaten hot and can be reheated in' the oven: Ten ounces of flour mixed with two table? spoonfuls of cream tartar, three ounces of sugar, three and one-half ounces of cottoiene, one-fourth pint of molasses (warmed), one-fourth pound of sultanas (pickled), one-fourth pint of very strong coffee with one teaspoonful of soda dissolved in it, one-half pound of currants washed and dried, two eggs, yolks and whites 1 eaten separately, three ounces candied peel cut small, one pinch of ground cloves, one-half teaspoonful ground ginger, one pinch of allspice, one-half teaspoonful of ground mace. Cream, the cottoiene and sugar; add the spices and the yolks of the eggs; stir in the warm molasses and the coffee. Mix up the fruit and put it into the flour, and gradually add it, beating all the time; lastly stir in the whites, which have been beaten to a stiff snow. Put it into a cake tin lined with greased paper and bake in rather a slow oven for an hour and a half, or longer.-Farm, Field and Fire? side. rutter arah?nc. At a recent institute a dairyman gave the following reasons why butter mak? ing should be followed as a paying bus? iness: 1. That it is the business upon the farra that permits the most absolute ontrol over conditions of production and distribution of product, hence the most profitable. 2. It is the highest art of farming be? cause it combines all other lines and gives greater opportunity for executive and manufacturing skill. 3. lt is most free from irresponsible and destructive competition by neces? sity of its character, and by the per? sonal equation of the individual pro? ducer. 4. It is a more exact line of produc? tion, permitting gross receipts to be forecast with greater exactness, hence, the greater possibilities of increasing net receipts, either by lowering- ex? penses or increasing the volume of product. 5. It permits the employment of la? bor at a season of Hie year when farm labor is the cheapest,if winter dairying is followed. 6. Of all the products sold from the farm, butter takes the lea.^t fertility and restores the greatest amount to the farm, and it is well known that the most fertile sections of the country are where butter-farminir is follows J Stopped I'oachlug. A Scotch gentleman, plagued by poachers, procured a cork leg dressed in stocking and shoe and sent it through the neighboring village by the town crier, who proclaimed that it had been found in a man trap on the previous night in Mr. Ross1 grounds, who desired to return it to its owner. There was no mi-*T- norx'hin?r after that. _ Pf Miss Della Stevens, o? Boston, Mass.,j ^ S {writes: I have always sulTered from fe ^/hereditary Scrofula, for which I tried) Sj?[various remedies, and many reliable1)'-^ /physicians, but none relieved me. Afteri;""i ^?talcins 6 bottles of -?, - \f?? ? I am now well. I j^m^^?^BTt^S? ^ very grateful g^&gW^fitttw^BS S ^?3'to you, as I feel fl^JF^/WT*J'S *~?(that it saved me ^ mm ? ?(from a life of untold agony, and shall! S ?3 j take pleasure in speaking only wordsig^ -?21 of praise for the wonderful medicine, 'jS"; ? land in recommending it to all. )E?b l?TrontlPO on ??lond and Skin Diseases malled free. ?SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ig? ATLANTA, QA. T. C. Scaffe Would inform his friends and customers that he is prepared to manufacture TOBACCO FLUES, Aoy dimension cr thickness, more reasonable than any cf his competitors ; having many advantages over them ; having 1?? years experience in this kind of sheet metal work. HARB Y S? CO., Brokers, OFFICE: COURT HOUSE SQUARE, Keep on consignment FEED OATS, CORN, HAY, COTTON SEED MEAL, DRY SALT MEATS, HAMS, LARD, GRIST, FLOUR, SUGAR, MEAL. ?cc. BAGGING, tr UGA R BAG CLOTH, COTTON IRON TIES. OroWs by sample for all goods in the grocery line. Mav 29. All popular flavors with Pure Fruit Juices. Try our Cherry Phosphate. J. S. HU6HS0N & CO., Monaghan Block. Feb. 8. MAIN STREET SUMTER S. C., NOTICE. I WAST every man and woman in the United States interested in the Opium and Whisky habits to have one of my books on these dis? eases. ?. Address B. M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga. Box 382, and one will be sent you free. ~Y. M. C. A. Until further notice, the Reading Room of tbe Y. M. C. A. will be open daily from 8.30 to 10 P. M. Dailies, weeklies, monthlies, will be found there. Also, the Library from the S. L. I. has been removed to the rooms cf the Y. M. C. A. ,. An earnest invitation is extended to all to visit the rooms and take adran rage of the reading matter Obtained. ?nd ai! I'A'i'KSI JU >i.\r>S at? tended to for HW I* Xii ATE Ff!KS <'t:r office 3s opposite; tti?- r.s. purent<>fii?v. and we cnn ob? tain V:" '?tu in loss tim? than those r? mote from WASH i . ros. semi M< 'Pi: J.. :.!. i ii".-.vt; or J'HOV' i invention. We advise putent Rbilitv of di?rs?? atnl Wt? nm Lc .Vo < HARGE IWLh- : i.TKXt IS SK' . >. For ' ir. Milvie?* terms and references tc actual .. ? in VMIJ,-own Suite, ?j HUI ry. CJJty or Town, \...... UrfBWMBj^ftUTJ'Uf'ii^ Qppotile Patent Office. Washington, I). C. Pire Insurance Agency, ESTABLISHED 1866. Represent, among other Companies : LIVERPOOL s LONDON k GLOBE, NORTH BRITISH k MERCANTILE, HOME, of New York. UNDERWRITERS' AGENCY. N. Y. LANCASTER INSURANCE CO. Capita! represented $75,000,000. Feb. 28. Harper's Weekly HARPER'S? WEEKLY is a pictorial history o ;he tiiue.<. It presents every important even sroinptly, accurately, and exhaustively in ilustration and descriptive text ot the highest .rder The manner in which, during 1S9?, i' has treated 'he <bicago Railway Strikes and the Chino.Japanese War, and the amount of ligh it was ;ibie to throw on Korea the instant a: recition wa* directed to that little-known cour? rry are examples of its almost boundless re -?.urces Julian Ralph, the distinguished w t irer an?! correspondent, bas been sent to the .eat nf war. and there joined by C. D. Weldon, tb? well-known American art<?t, now for many years resident tn Japan, who has been en gaged to cooperate with Mr. K&tpb in sending to H A nr~ R'S WEEKLY exclusive information and illustration. During \'?95 ever}'vital o.uestion wifl 'ne discussed with vigor and without prejudice in the editorial columns, and also in special articles bv the highest authorities in each de. partiuert. Portraits of the reen and women who are making history, and- powerful and caustic political cartoons, will continue to be characteristic features. This Busy World, with its keen and kindly comment on the lesser doings of the day, will remain A regular de? partment Fiction. There will be two powerful se? rials, both handsomely illustrated-The Red Cockade, a stirring romance of olden days by Stanley J. Weyman, and a novel of New York, entitled The Son of His Father, by Brander Matthews-several novelettes, and many short stories by popular writers. SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED PROSPECTUS. The Volumes of the Week-'y begin with th* ?rst Number ior January of each year. When no time is mentioned-, subscriptions will begin with the Number current at time of receipt ot Order Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by EM?, postpaid, on re? ceipt of $1.00 each. Title-page and Index sen on application. Remittances should be made by Post Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of lots. tfew8pnper8 are not to copy thia advertisement without the expr?s? order of HARPER ? BROTHERS. Harper's Periodicals. HARPER'S MAGAZINE, one year, $4 00 HARPER'S WEEKLY, ?. 4 00 HARPER'S BAZAR. " 4 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, .? 2 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Address : HARPER ? BROTHERS, P. 0. Box 959, N. Y. City. HONET. NEW CROP 1895. White Comb Honey inSec tions. Choice Extracted Honey, by the gallon or less quantity. For sale at my residence, or orders may be left office of the Watchman and Southron. N. G. ?steen. COLLEGE, Augusta, Ga. One of thc most com? plete Institutions in the sui.'.h. Ac;-.:al Business. College Currency. Many sracunt- s in sood paying portions. Full Course, i. months. Shorthand an?! Typewriting alsc lu^hr. Free tra! lemons. Send for ctrr"'-?-. * \fEz^^m? Wi L DOIIfiL?S ^IgllIIIWi H ?|JAP> FIT FOR *W J^*\Wt ?ZTO jZ P . . KING' BfcfasggA w- L- Douglas $3 and $4 Shoes. ^^^^^^^^^f \^^^^^ ^ ^ All o^r^sh^^^ ^P^S^^/ ^\?bfc*$2 & S !. 75 Boys1 Schoo! WOK ?jf ^^^^5^-. Y^%. Ladios'$3, $2.50. S2 and $U5. mWT.wff -JO ^Ti-T^rvT^^^Ss?^^ \Ii your dealer cannot supp;y .^^^^^^?S^^^^^a^^^^0'W^ Douglas FOR SALE BY J.RYTTENBERG-& SONS. J. W- F. DeLORME DEALER IN Toilet Soaps, Perfumery and all Kinds of Druggists Sundries Usually Kept in a JE^irst Class DDms Store. Tobacco, Snuff and Cigars, Garden Seeds, ?fcc, also Paints, Oils, Varnishes Glass, Putty, &c, Dye Stuffs. Physician's Prescriptions carefully compounded, and orders answered with care and dispatch. The public will find my stock of Medicines complete, warranted genuine, and of best quality. Call and see for yourselves. Night Calls Promptly Attended To.