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PALMETTO POSTERS PEE-DEE TOBACCO FARMERS. They Dincuss the Culture of The Weed at Florence. The meeting of the Tobaoco Grower*' Association wus)hold ut Florence at the Court House, for the discission upon the subject of planting, topping, cultivating and curing tobacco. President M. S. Hayuesworth presided,and Frank K. Myers, secretary, occupied his scat. Mr. Clarke was called upon and spoke upon the cultivation of tobacco, including preparing the grouud fot planting. M. H. Haynes^orth spoke on the subject of "Topping and Priming," followed by Capt. Ellington from Roidsvillo, N. C. Mr. R. E. Currin spoke a length upou the subject of ??" T n n n ........... i ou "Planting and Replanting." These subjects were all well discussed. Many questions were asked upon them and a description of eucii part of the work was curefullv given. R. C. Com- i msoder spoke of the Snow barns. He j thought the farmers had a right to manufacture the Snow sticks for their own use without paying the royalty of five dollars of each farm right. W. F. Clayton thought that the Supreme Court would not allow the farmers to make the sticks without buying a farm right. Buying the county right was advocated by some, but it was hnally decided best for each man to buy his farm right, as the farm right and material for the sticks could be gotten much cheaper than buying the sticks fvotn the manufacturer. It would take too much space to give their names, but four tobacco planters wore reported in Effingham Township, twenty-nine in Florence, one in Savage. two in Arthur, three iu Ebenezer, one in Palmetto, one iu Mars Bluff, fifteen iu Sardis. thirty-two in Timmousville, nine in Max. twenty-four in Cartereville, two in Lynch, five in Bethlehem, three in ChuiKRcn, one in Soloc aud oue in Lamar. There are a latgo number more, but not being present a full list could not be made out. The acreages vary from forty to one. The Dispensary Law On Its Way to ! the Supreme Court. The dispensary law is now on its k way to the United States Supreme Court. A few days ago Constable Beach disobeyed United States Judge Bimonton'f order of injunction in the caee, he having held that no one could ' interfere with liqnor shipped into the State?that the law was unconstitu- ( iional in so far as it interfered with inter-State commerce. He was arrested and put iu jail for contempt. Attorney General Barber left Columbia on Friday for Washington to make application before the United States Su- i prenie Court for a writ of habeas cor- ! pus. The State expects by this moth od to get the entire case beard by the | United States Supreme Court in the i ,] next 20 days ? I i JItirdcr In Sumter. f At Sumter, Albert Dubinin shot, and j killed Peter Blair Thursday morning; H both are colored. The murder was 1 the most cold-blooded and eruel ever committed in this vicinity. DebJain is a mulatto painter of a bad reputation. ' Blair was a common laborer of a good ; J reputation, especially among the ne- j I gruoe. The cause which led up to the j i killing was brought about by the wives j of the men. The men had a row last ; Sunday, and Deblain procured a pistol, j telling his wife be was going to kill ; Blair. As Blair was returning from ' tip-town to his home, which is adjoining that of Deblaiu, Dubinin met him I in the road, caught him in the collar, and before he could make any resistance Dubinin bad shot him three times, killing him instantly The coroner's j jury, after bearing the testimony, run- j dered a verdict in accordance with the j above facts. j Abbeville is progressing constantly. The cotton factory recently organized, has infused a new spirit of c.'itbi'piise into the people. t , At Anderson, Richard Lowery, a ! t colored convict on W. (). Hammonds ^ i plantation was shot while attempting to escape. Three guards tired on him. He recoived six balls. The coroners | jury renderod a verdict of justifiable . J homicide. < Last year a few catfish wore put. in the Whilrlen Snvnnna, Privateer township, Sumter county. This year a number have been caught out. In three rights Mr. R. S. Whilden caught 10:; on eet linos. | New Mill Movements. S About two months ago a new cotton I a ill was projected at Spartanburg. B L. ('arson took u very active part ' I the enterprise. They wish to start J B h a capital of $200,000, which will j v > a mill with 10,000 to 12,000 spin- t 3 1' The projectors of the enterprise i N inch encouraged and they beliCvo j ""hev will soon have stock enough ] 9 ibed to warrant nn organization r 9 1 beginning of work. 1 k f INOERSOLL ON ALCOHOL. 'Wonderful Piece of Word Painting by the Agnostic. The following wonderful piece of word painting has been frequently published, savs The Chicago Tribune, but we reprint it at the request of several readers who desire a complete copy. Colonel Hubert O. Ingersoll, in addressing a jury in a case which involved the manufacture of alcohol, made the following terrible arraignment of the demon : 'T am sure that there is a prejudice against any man who manufactures alcohol. I believe that from the time it issues from the coiled and poisonous worm in the distillery until it empties into the jaws of death, dishonor and crime, it demoralizes everybody that touches It, from its source, to where it ends. I do not believe anybody can contemplate the object without being prejudiced against the liquor crime. All we have to do, Kntlemen, is to think of the wrecks on either nk of the stream of death, of the suicides, of the insanity, of the ignorance, of the destitution, of the little children tugging at the faded and withered breast of weeping and despairing mothers, of wivos asking for bread, of the men of genius it has wrecked, the men struggling with imaginary serpents, produced by this devilish thing; and when you think of the jails, of the almshouses, of the asylums, of tiie prisons, of the scalTolds upon cither bank, i do not wonder that every thoughtful man is prejudiced against this damned stufT called alcohol. Iuternperance euts down youth iu its vigor, manhood in its swkukiii, oiu ?u iu? n ure.tKS the father's heart, bereaves the doting mother, extinguishes natural affection, erases Conjugal love, blots out filial attachment, blights parental hopes, brings down mourning age in sorrow to the grave. It produces weakness, not health; death, not life. It makes wives widows; children orphans; fathers fiends: and all of them paupers and beggars. It feeds rheumatism. Invites cholera, imports pestilence and embraces consumption. It covers the laud with idleness, misery, crime. It tills your jails, supplies your almsbouses, and demands your asylums. It engenders controversies, fosters quurrels and cherishes riots. It crowds your penitentiaries, and furnishes victims for your scaffolds. It is the life blood of the gambler, the element of the burglar, the prop of the highwayman and support of the midnight inceniiary. It countenances the liar, respects the ihief, esteems the blasphemer. It violates cbligation, reverences fraud and honors infamy. It defames benevolence, hates love, icorns virtue and slanders innocence. It ncites the father to butcher his helpless iffspriug, helps the husband to massacre his wife and child to grind the paricldsl axe. It jurns up-men, consumes women, detests life, cursos Clod, despises lieaveu. It suborns r i n Aaaati nnrcnu ndrin ru tVin inrv Iiaw n ' J>?? J """? ind stains judicial ermine. It degrades the jitizon, debases the legislator, dishonors the statesman and disarms the patriot. It brings shame, not honor; danger, uut safety; despair, not hope; misery, not happiness, and vith the malevolence of a fiend it calmly surveys its frightful desolation and unsntiated lavoc. It poisons lioity, kills pence, ruins norals, blights cr" mce, slays reputations, md wipes out - mil Isouor, then curses he world and I . at its ruin. It does all hat and more.- ; - orders the soul. It is he sum of aM I .tainies, the father of all srlmos, the motner of all abominations, the levii's best friend and (rod's worst enemy." few Orleans Cotton Exchange State, ment. Crop . . L- . from September 1st to May I7?h, inclusive: Port receipt*, 7,823,270 bales, against 5,[41.757 last yenr,4.811,181 year l?eforelast and >,851,579 for the same time in 1892; overland o mills and Canada, 947.1:54. against 808,712, 133,97-1 and 197,520: interior stocks In excess >f September 1st, 77,493. against 09,133. 103,>90 and 187,087; Southern mill takings, 611,119, against 016,074, 595,148 and 536,961; crop >rought into sight during '259 days to date, .459.210, against 7.238.078. 0,343,998 and 8,'73.153; crop brought into sight for the week, 19,504. against 32,401 for the seven days <'udng May 17th, last year, 32.350 and 53.043; rop brought into sight for the first 17 days >f Mav, 81,859, against 72,277, 71,451 and 107,'88. Comparisons in those report* are made up o the corresponding date last year, year be<<re last and in 1892, and not to the close of he corresponding week. Comparisons by he week would take in 200 days of the seaion last year, 261 year before last and 263 in 892, ugainst only 259 i liis year. \ n Ttianrorpnt Vlpfnrv. A dispatch from Havana, via Key West, Fla., says: Both sides claim a victory in a mttle of Jovita Sunday. The government ield up all telegrams, permitting only their version to he puhlished. It was first claimed he insurgents lost 1100 dead, including Maxnio Gomez, who was over ten miles away, rin* Government now admits that Gome* ,vus not present and places the rebel loss at >1 dead and Spanish loss at 47 dead and 35 vounded. Lieutenant Colonel Bosch was ihot through the head at the first fire. Surfeon Hulse, one sergeant aud ol'j corporal ire among the Spanish dead. The hattle lasted from 5:30 a. in., till 3 30 p. n. The insurgents were lei', by Antonio arid rose Mai't>o and numbered 2,100. The Spanarils numbered .r,00. The Cubans claim the government lost over 150 killed and many ivounded. The troops wore pursued to the ;atcs of Gunntanamo, which was beseiged intil a regiment sent from Santiago arrived rhursday. Cotton Mills in China anil Japan. The department of Stato at Washington las received an interesting report from United States Consul General Thomas R. rernigan, of North Carolina, stationed at thnnghai, China, on our trade relations vith that Empire. Noiing a failing oft In the mportations of domestic cottons from the United States as well a*. Great Britain. Mr. rernigan advances the opinion that the n a nil fact u re t?f cotton cloth by China and fajmn Is responsible f??r the decrease. In 1HG3 tiie first spinning mill was erected n Japan with 5. Icu? spindles; in 1HM3 them yore sixteen mills with 43,700 < | ?i in I !? .?. anil n 1803 there wore forty-six mills wit It some >00,000 spindles. The statistics regarding tho ndustry in China have not been published, >ut a conservative estimate is ttiat tli" eml of his year will witness 3150.000 spindles, 3,000 ooms, besides numerous eotton gins ready o operate in llfteeu cotton niilU*. Coney Island lias a Hig Fire. Coney Island, New York's popular seaside osort, was visited by its fourth annual ipring Maze, with a result much morodisasrous tlian that of any wliieh had preceded t. Tho total lOM was over $800,000. with >ut little insurance; over sixty buildings irero destroyed or seriously damaged, several persons woresoverely injured, about 200 'amlli?s were rendered homeless and at least [000 people were thrown out of employment, ind all of this was accomplished by the lames in loss than two hours. Tho burned llstrlot comprises eight squared. I / THE NEWS EPITOMIZED Washington Items. The Seoretary of the Interior made a re' milsitlon on the Secretary of the Treasury lor 910,140.000 for the payment of pensions. Colonel Judson D. Bingham, Assistant Quartermaster-General, was placed on the retired list of the United States Army, having reached the age of sixty-four years. The President signed the proclamations declaring the Yankton Sioux reservation In South Dakota and the Sllety reservation in Oregon open to settlement at noon May 21. I During tho month of April, 1895, 40,444 Immigrants arrived at the ports of the United i States. President Cleveland Is deluged by letters ' from parents of trlplots and quadruplets. Groat Britain notified the United States ] that it would not observe the regulations ro| gardlng sealing firearms on vessels In Ber| ing Sea. Admiral Meade declined to answer the ln! quiries of the Navy Department regarding ! his criticism of the Administration. ! United States Minister Haselton was recalled from Venezuela because he was mentally and physically broken down. Postmaster-Genoral Wilson awarded the I oontract for supplying the Postoffloe Doj partment with registered package envelopes, i tag aud dead letter envelopes for the nexl i fiscal year to the Plympton Manufacturing ! Company and the Morgan Envelope Comi pany of Hartford. Conn. Brigadier-General Craighill, tho new Chiol | of Engineers, assumed charge of the Englnoei i Corjw of the Army. The Navy Department states that fifty ablt seamen of the cruiser New York have beer ordered in irons for desertion. Domestic. KOOBD or THK CLUBS. Per Pet rMubs. Won. !/>*?. of. I Clubs. Won. t/>W. ct. Pittsburg..14 7 .667 Phlladol... 9 9 .500 Cincinnati. 14 S .SSninaitimore. 7 H .467 ! boston.... 11 7 .Glljst. Louis.. 9 14 .391 Chicago... 13 9 .591 Brooklyn.. 7 11 .3SS Clovelnad.il 9 .kVbWiudTng'u. 6 12 .833 New York.10 9 ,5.!fl.Louisville. 5 13 .278 Ex-President Benjamin Harrison was th? principal guest of honor at the seml-oentennial celebration of the New Jersey Historical Society at Newark, and was presented with a gold meilal aa the centennial President of the United States. Dr. Hubert ltusaell Booth, of New York, was elected Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly at Pittsburg, Ponn., on the first ballot. The Now Jersey Court of Pardons, by a vote of six to two, remitted the sentence ol one year's imprisonment imposed on Dennis McLaughlin, John C. Carr, Nicholas Crusius and Gottfried Walbaum, the "Big Four" ol the Outtenberg racetrack. Jones A r.aughliu, operating the extensive American Iron Works, Pittsburg, Penu. have voluntarily advanced the wages of nl their skilled workmen ten per cent. Aboul 40tK) men share in the advance. The widow of Policeman Christian Ottc was awarded $6500 by a jury at Elizalieth, N. J., in a case brought to recover $10,00( from tho Suburban Electric Light Oompntij for the killing of her husband by electricity in a pole with which he came in contact. Peter Hardeman Burnett, first Governor ol California, died in San Franoisoo, aightyseven years old. He was born In Nashville Ten?.. of Virginia parentage. A twenty days' extra session of the Ton iv-i*t'e legislature will i>e bold. Warrants wore issued for seventy-four mo nh ?rs of the Pennsylvania Legislature for absence without leave. The prion of wheat in Chicago rose to 70^ c iim iv bushel. Th? convention at Salt Lake City. Utah, called by Governor Bielcards, of Montana, to 1 diseuss means to promote the interests of the | silver cause met, alter a parade, in the | Great Mormon Tabernacle. Over 2000 delegates were present. Governor Kickards presided. t)ii? of the powder mills at Sehaghtieoke, N. Y., blew up. Chauncev Lohmes was killeu and (diaries (dump fatally injured, fiolli men were employed in the mill. T. W. Atkinson, of New York City, was chosen Commander of the New York State Department, G. A. It., by the Saratoga En; eampniont. An anti-trolley indignation meeting in j Brooklyn. N. Y., was attended by 10, 00 per| sons. Three thousand employes of the Pencoyd j Iron Works at West Manyhunk, Penn., had I their wages advanced ten percent. By a tie v<>to the bill forthe reorganization of (he New York City Police Department was ! killed in the State Senate at Albauy. The competitive drill of the military oom! panics at Memphis, Tenn., began. Eekley B. Coxe, the m?st prominent coal operator in Pennsylvania, died at Drifton ?. f pneumonia. He was fifty-six years old. Mr. and Mrs. Hale, a newly-married couple. w?re burned to death in their new 1 o<un? in >i luutuii, fliion. TUB tire was j loroniliary. The trial of Police luspnotor William W. McLaughlin for bribery anil extortion in , taking iir><> from Contractor Francis W. Seagrist, Jr., ended in a disagreement of the jury, l lm jurors stood ton for conviction to i two for acquittal. Mrs. 8. Lowcnsteln, of Brooklyn, died in j giving birth to four hablos, two of whom j survived. j Troops wereaummonod to Franklin (Minn.) | mines to ropr us strikers. Three men and a dozen raco horses wore | killed In a railway accident near Hornolls| Ville, N. V. BORN ABOVE THE CLOUDS, Ten-Pound Youngster ltenches the World bjr Way of Pike's Peak. Dr. Christopher, of Colorado Springs, was , conveyed by a special train to the summit of l'iko's Peak, Colorado, the occasion being i tho birth of a Bon to Mr. and Mrs. John Tug| part. Mr. Taggart Is foreman of the Manitou and Pike's Teak Cog ltoad, and for a I month nnot I.no Ilim.l In ion I.I.. rated a mile ami a half above timber line, at an nltitiide of 12,600 font above the sea. This is tlie llrst recorded hirtli al ho great an elevation in the Hooky Mountains, anil probably ou this continent. Tho youngster weighs ten pounds and has evidently cnm? to stay. The train boys have named liiin Hike's Peak Taggart, Liverpool Cotton Figures. The following are the woekly cotton statistics at Liverpool: Total sales of the week 4*.000, American 47,000; trade takings including forwarded from ships' 9ide 58,000; actual export 7,000; total Import 66,000, American 57,000; total stock 1,681 000, American 1,570,000; total afloat 104,000, American HH.OOOj speculator* took 700; exporters 2,400. \ I ( Women] ( i I How much thov sutler whoa i.orvous ' weak and tired, i Nervous prostration is alii goring, racking, living death to thos^ alluded, though wholly iucomprehopsble to others. The cause of thiH Rendition is impure and iusuthcient Bloqi. Make the blood pure, give it| vitality aud it will properly feed the' nerves and make them strong. Hbal's Sarsaparilla cures nervousness bo tauss it acts directly upou the blood, uaking it rich and pure and endowing'it with ; vitality and strength-giving po /er. No other medicine hits such a rujord of Hood's S; M;i3c?s P THE NATIONAL CAME. . | An imiian baseball ieam is tonriag Kansas. Beektey is now captain of tho I1 ttsburg , ten in. i Comiskov nn<l Mil llane altornati at Ht. Paul's first base. Welch will do the bulk of the catdiing for the Louisville team. Brouthors has been released by Bt Itimora and signed by Louisville. PfefTcr carried his threat into ojecutlon and Voluntarily retired from the Is uisville team. Hinith, of the Rochester^, is plajing his 1 nineteenth year on the diamond. Ewiug at present leads the Ci'icinnatl toum in both lielding and batting. Manager Hanlon, of Baltimore, has offered New York ?500 for Pitcher Clarke. t Washington released nioher Kru n, and then regretting it recalled the release. Captain Nash, of Boston, never p< t up a better all-round game than this season. Bannon replaced Burke in New Yci-k's left i Held, and proved the change u good one. More extra inning games have been played t by Cincinnati tbau by any othor 1 League f club. ' The Boston players to a m:\nthiik they ! have only Baltimore to beat out to'arin the [ pennant. There is a general howl going up) among ' tho managers and players about 1 e new j eoucliing rules. Sohriver has lieen assigned by 'aptain ' Davis, of New York, to catch ittts i regularly. Parr.-II will attend to kin as usual. . Jim ivaiumaterB anil IJOdgr crs" an. fhe latent terms used by laseball writer to designate the Philadolpli a* and llrioklyns respectively. , At Liberty, Mo.. Oscar Humiiifll! fifteen ^years of age, was almost instantly killed on ~ the public school grounds by a baAel ail hitting him over the heart. Two umpires of the National lM|?ue believe thai Hawley, of Pittsburg, will be the star .pitcher of 1895, far surpassing Busle, Meekin, Nichols, Htivetts, ot nl. Hart, of Pittsburg; Smith, of thePjlladelphios; Phillips, of Cincinnati, and Buffer, of llaltiinore, seem to l>e the best *ll;ids" iu the pitching department this season, i Anson, of Chicago, says: "My ftev third baseman, Everett, is a worhl-bealeri lie can give anyuody points mi playing tldnj base ' 1 have tbe pri/.e of tlie season in hioi.j Stivetts, of Huston, has adopted a i?iw motion in delivering the ball, lie dnitbkis himself up in such a way as to nmke one relieve he is going to pitch the ball with two!hands. ' Catcher Fisher, of Chattanooga, this false teeth. Iu a recent game against Nashville they fell out. and Umpire Keller hfcd|to call time to allow him to pick them upui, 1 wash them. Connor, of St. Louis, is batting freely enough to make those ivho woro aii.v ous to have li tn dropped from the New Yoijc team wish he was a Giant now. He is ml king a specialty of home runs and t wo-baggl rs this saason. Paul Hines, tin* old Providence flelj er, refuses to i>e crowded off the diamond.; After several yarn of retirement he wil again enter the profession, having seenredjan engagement with the liiirlington (lowi) club as captain and llrst baseman. The New Yorks lost their llrst gu ue in Louisville since 189;J. They could iiot hat the bull, wnile Louisville took kindlj to the pitching of Meekin, gettiug eight jilts in three inniugs. Meekin then gave ''ay to lioswell, who li exeellent Work. The Northern Piesbyterlans on Sabbath Observance. At Friday's session of the Preel>'terlan Oener.i! Assembly at Pittsburg, Pa., tfeSab i'oiii inwrvim commiiiue preseuttM) iui report, which was adopted. It ombodM* resolutions to the effect that this General issoni bly expresses its profound sense of fhe importance of Inculcating Scriptural piecepLs in reference to the Habbath in the hom'", 8undny school and in all young people's awociations; that it deprecates the growing fmdonev in many places to make the f.orti'j day a season of worldly entertainments, .s?e|d visitations and personal self-indulgence} partieiilurly enjoins upon the members of the Church to see to it that they do uathing by example to increase ibe frightful disecration of the Lord's day, and warns the "uinlsters and members of the Church nsfaijist the I evil ami insidious influence of lb? Sunday newspapers ami urges them by word ijud action to do all they cap to decrease tlxdr unwholcsotee power. Photographed liy LigbtJiirf. John T. NVilkerson was struck by ligttning In his shop door at Pensile la, Fla., Bt|l was killed. Ifc wtis standing by a telegraph instrument, which was dlseoiine'ted fro; l any wire, but a loose wire was in eontnci with Ids body. The other end of the wi>? was fastened'to ti pine tree ibout 10) fc?fc away. When iVtllfeeanii'a hn Iv ivhs nndMMfld. a picture of lit" trtv\ froia tie top to the point at which the w ire wan {ie|, wa? >ti()(l photographed on each side jiuit inder tlio anus. A Worm That tlestroya llt-mp. Every traveling man who eomoj ffoiji Kentucky brings new* of the ravageaof th? army worm. Wholoeroi.* are destroyed. J- new pest In a small bine* worm that Wu'ks at night only. It touohas nothing bat iemp, and at the present rate ernry stalk ot hemp In Kentucky will be destroyed. . ^ Inly Know , | euros. Thousands write that they sufi fered intensely with nervousness and | wore cured by this great medicine, j The building-up powors of Hood's SarI saparilla are wonderful. Even a low 1 j doses are sufficient to create au appeI ..? i r- iu..i A; ? -A- i?i (vavvi, i?uu liUUl bUUb 11ILIU UU lb* Iltitlllug, purifying, strengthening effects | are plaiuly felt. The nerves become stronger, the sleep becomes natural and refreshing, the kamls and limbs become steady, and soon ''life seem to go on without effort," aud perfect health is restored. Such is the work which Hood's Sarsaparilla is doing for hundreds of women today. arsapanBIa are Blood. I AN AMERICAN HORSE WINS. Michael Dwyor's Banquet Won the Big Rare at New Market. f At New Market, England, 011 Thursday a damper was placed upon the erowingof English sporting fraternity over tho defeats of American horses, especially over tho jubilant utterances at the defeat of Stounell, Wednesday, on the selling plate, when Michael P. Uriyot'n horse finished sixth, with Simms up, and was bought iu by Mr. T. lloodless, owner of Crawley, the second horse, for 940 guineas. Michael F. Dwyor's aged Banquet, won tho selling plate of 103 sovereigns Thursday, and was afterwards bought in by Dwyor for 158 sovereigns. The conditions of the*, race were as follows: Selling plate of 103 sovereigns, 3 years old, to carry 110 pounds, and 4 years old and upwards to curry 133 pounds; the winner to be sold by auction, for 300 sovereigns. The entrance foe 3 sovereigns; course, one Ditehloy mile. Ave entries, or no race. Dwyer's bay gelding Banquet, aged, won. The bay horse Droge, si* years old second; bay filly Courante, throe years old third. Ten horses started Banquet and Droge carrying 120 pounds. The bettiog at the start was 5 to 4 against Banquet. Northern Farmers Coming South. The fact that the Northern papers are <* ticing the movement of Northern farmers Co the South shows that the movement has already attained large proportions. The raon they say about it the greater the movemenl will become. And with tho Immigrants will come industries of one kind and another] TV ,i, atAit wc< kannu V? n n,\r\nn pon/io /% f # kn QamHo will he very different from what It 1* now.^ Aiken C8. C.) Recorder. House and Children Horned. At Felix, ai luiio.. be'ow Selroa, Ala., n uogro wom^ ^>ck"d her two children tif> in the liousc.-ffl^i went off. The usual result ? followed. The limine h.irned ilown with the ehildreu iu it. Both of vhem were burned to death. Pr?Tl4i*ce. R. T. Please forward six boxes ?f Tetterlne, C.'<1 D. I think it strange that it la not sold fctri in New England, a. It !s the bast cura for EOi gema. Ring Worm aad all eruption* r\t tbl kin I ever saw. I (rot a box from a Cincinnati drummer, and gave part of it to a young lad) who had tried almost erer)thing to rcmotr* Pimples and an eruption from her face. TWfl applications of Tett-rir.e completely cured bur. i know al?o a gentleman whose bodybad b<en covered with Eczema?two boxe* ol Terterlne cured him completely, and now hi* akin is a* smooth as a baby's. P. O. Hanloo, with Silrer Springs Bleaching Co Sent by mail tor 60e. iu stamps. J. T. Shuptriue, Sa? vuuuah. Us. Attorney General Olney directed that t1i% suit for 415,000,000 agaiunt Mrs. Stanford, of California, be pushed. Need Clear Head*. Working people need clear heads, KrmntC sleep anil good dtgeetion; for If sloannss oouiee. what then? It is cneapur to keep well. That 'queer feeling" spring* rrom indigestion. First you "pooh, poybt" Than you growl iiutrinea and send for the doctor, (to need of! lhai. A box of Rtpuns Tabules will set yottl l ight and keep you right; so you oan eat, sleep und work. Ask the druggist for them. Chicago had 111 suicides between January 1 and May. (Wethers Appreciate the t.ood YVerh Clf pn rlfgtr^a 1 ^irtrva* Trvn io nri f K it* aowlmiaw (ties?a boon tolls* paia-etrickl?n arvri nureousj Orlp Is reported to be dying out in Lou*; don. J. O. S Impart*. MsrqiifiM. W. T*,, nafM1 " Hall's Catarrh Cnr* cared nse ot ? vwry had1 ease af oalKrvti." nrusnheta hbW It, Tfltr. Cholera is again ravaging several Russia* province*. Mr*. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup far children frothing. softens the gunse. reduces intismrniw tion, allays rain, cures wind colic 2*e. a bottle^ Hypnotism is said to be a cure tor dlpso* mania. _ IVhrs V Ovate I* Rsslltr .ha! yonr corn* Are /one, and no patn, bow grati-fai yon feci. The waric ef Hlndercortis. 16* Real Formosa Oolong tea bav advanced * ? price on aooonat of the Chlnoan war, I hn-'* found I'iso's Cure for Consumption . 11 untiling medicine? F. R. IjOTZ. I'tOQfef ^cott Street. Covington, Kv Oct. 1, ld?ll. tua | | ?x XFWM I.KTTi K o. value scot sV ALL O I |'K K.K l? letters of ftes i>m uer, I'karle* Bw ltlwin ?V Co.. mi Wail si * v. HIGHEST AWARD* WORLD'S F: AIR. I - r-*r^ fr . igissaia THE BEST PREPARED ROOD SOLD EVERYWHERE. * JOHN CARLE 4 SONS. Ney York. * J