s v. lv J' - 1 t - U STEPS OF f i . - . . Covered With Blood pms a . Cat fc olio erviCN PEILSTS FIGHT DUR15G MUASS." A Ben atlon In the Roman, CU Circle t of Brooklyn That Has So Parrallet. The Cane Creating Intea E- ! citementaadlndignati" - I- vs, February IS, A sensa 7ry largest kind was ereat- 4t - . "Stte oldest consecrated x . ia lirCfn. ; It arose from an rI.ti-M upon the pastor of the charch . v W'm. J. UUL at the very steps of the altar by his assistant, Eer.- Dr. Patrick Mclknald.r lne trouoie vckut v .1 aktiMin .ui. in rvirif;ic mass, wneu wio Was crowded with worshippers- Father Hill is about 53 years of age, and it was under his. successful administration that the parish had Wen freed from dbt and consecrated some years ago. ' i)r McDonald cams tp the parish from Newark, N. J., and was original ly Tram the dioeese of Cloyne, Cork, Ireland, Ite is a highly educated man, has travelled widely and it is said ha once or twice been in ecclesiastical trouble. He had started fcFatheri Uhit xa said, that he hadf suffered from fattening of the brain. He Ja of i powerful physicque,! . weighing about : 550 pound Dr; McDonald had been appointed by Pastor Hill to celebrate themassiat 10 o'clock and also th fcigh mass at IU " j During the eelebration of the former .the worshippers were amazed to see Dr. McDonald approach Father Mil... - hb offered to assist at the celebrm bration, and strike him a violent blow, felling the pastor to the floor. Before Father Hill could arise Dr. McDonald came to the chancel rait and, gestiow- ! i4?n- lwiMW.: exclaimed that there had been a conspiracy between Father Hill and 'BishopA McDonald to drive him from the diocese. He then turned, and again assaulted Father MIL Pa rishioners finally rushed forward jand held him until the arrival of officers, H was subsequently taken to St. IVtfr's -'hospital for treatment iu '-'.a rge f an officer. Excitement runs bifh. .. y ' ' RIOTOUS ECCENTRICITY sane in Other Blatters. I1U Society Peea ; I Ilaritie 'ere Uubearable. A" Bebux,- February IS. -Count Von Ilairach, an oSieer of the guards, r- ctntly resigned his commission and 'r "now has been compelled to leave Ber ! ,'lin on v account of his riotous ecoentric i "ity. His actions had become a public i scandal. A fe w days ago, he ordered 1 twenty-five cabs -to be at his disposal H at the hotel Bristol. After they had i been drawn up in a tow, he swung him- ! self into the box of the foremost one ' itnd drove off at a furious pace, leaving. !the cabmen to lose the fares or i race i with him for them. At the restaurant he' gaye a great suppdr to Jhe girls of i .the London theatre and, after every ! body present had got drunk, he threw bottles through mirrors that coat thou ; sands of marks. Cme evening, he ap 'o:j red "at the .West Minster hotel with h t).ick of hounds and demanded that each be assigned to a "carpettd room f or tlie night.. ' .'I'hVimnt's familv anDealed to the t-m!K"-or for help in curbing the young- iivfr.v'-t'extravaganee, and tbus It came iiU. j t ike count left his regimegt and nnaIlyBerlink He is now in Dresden, The Lord Deutscher Lloyd has sent expert engineers to examine the Cor-. 'iath canal recently opened in Greece. They wilt take measurements to show w nether or not the canoiNbe used by the company's steamships. ' " --.. BUTLER, QF NORTH CAROLINA. Th Katlotiai Convantloa of the Farmer I : Alliance and the New Officer.' Topbka, February 10. The national convention of the Farmers' alliance 'concluded Hs work last night and adjourned.- The following officers were 'elected for thejensuing year: l'resident Marion Butler, of North Carolina " ' Vice-lYesident-J. L. Gilbert, of Cali fornia. I ' r .Secretary and Treasurer-:-D. P. Dun- ! can. of South Carolina. H '-. Executive Commi t tee Mann Page, of. Virginia; 11. C Dunning, of Pennsyl vania; U. E. Dean, of New York; H. LL loucks, of South Dakota. Vl'he executive, committee was at thorized to appoint a national lecturer and select a place for holding the next "convention. v Ben Terrell, of Texas, the present national lecturer, wiljl doubt less be chosen for another term. Th ssilnry of the president and lectu wa fixed at $3,000 each and of the vice president 82,250. ' ' ' . i HCNTwT L. WIL66N ILL. -4- r'rvn lined to Hln Koomst Kansas Cltj, wltk) il' " . ' a Turo for the-Worse. . j ' Kansas City, Mo., February lt.i-Ctm- rvsman Wilson, of 'West Virginia, did notpeak here 'Saturday night, nor U'. he partake of . a banquet provided at the Midland ; hotel by. local demo crats. A tremendous - audience was disappointed in consequence. At fT o'clock that I night pr. Porter, a local phjsleiah, positively forbade. Mr. Wil son to leave his room. His" physical! condition was snch, the doctor said, to k venture Would be exceedingly dan-! erous.-- "ij. J ' Mrrwilson Worse. , ! Ivassas City, February. It. This .morning a change for the worse came i ii the Condition of Congressman W. L. Wilson, wlo arrived m this city yester day morning, enrmttf W Mexico. He is a vry sick man. ' J - t- Another Alabama Snstio. , KrtNOHlk,February 18. At Johns, a mining. town near here, Dennies Cle ments and Vilt Harge, rivals for MU-s .Cora Burgess, met at her house, a'quar rel ensued and Barge drew a pistoLand put a pistl, ball throujrh Clements head, Clements falling in the arms of. the girll In resisting arrest. Bar ire was snob ueua. ji: mm OlympU s feature. !; r.nn.AUKTJ'HJA, hruary is. Minister rr.kr.owr. schema addressed La lalrgo :iith ail hends on day night in j the rtnai slsoal. Cape xhurch on Hawaii -tfli believed here to was trreeted wHk " U steamship Oly en he refered in di- .ji Jlawau. .. . . j 1 v'ashijtos, torrin Thurt udiree here - It May Be. February 11 pThe r vrhich foundered ;4r4on (inter Dia- rattt-ras. last week, ' fvy been theJJrit-' llil. - ' - ' f ' - 1 i Cry .tvtb'M r . n: ?.ch dlFoitJers, take 1 ! i; bottle. Gennlsehas -ifi red Lues en vxsppei THE ALTAR . - . M - 1 i" ifc The JLemarkablo Fcnvcrs of o 2cn ; - - - i.k' , ' I I fatersstlnff Story 1$ ' -n' vdlMii and His Wonderful; Kacneifefa -Aa Incident of Ills ... la Indian ; i fr l Tn the -vicinity of Bond "bill on! a cross road m Lewistoiy Hvc3 an old nun named Pierre Hubert Gicrc. His abode lis witli ayouns French Canadian family who knew hna when all lived in Canada on thp St. Francis river. The man has a history us wen ; asysovbc marked pccultafities. J 3 Let! him' tell his own. story, -Boritt in Canada ho e4ry . enlis tod in thetEnglish army and wa3 sent as ieutenant to India, where he fount , in several minor rebellions. It was ; always said of him that while he was brave he had . reason to be, for n t was iimrjreimable. : This was no doubt Icaused by the fact that lie pes- sessed then, as bo doesf now, a re- ; markable power, the like of which a ; mania the eastern part ot tnq svato .. is said-to possess. IIceoms ;tobc a magnetic t person apu can airay ? pain by the laying on o hands, viz. , j ho rubs gently t&e parts airocicu, and pain ceases tor some tunc, - lie t does not understand the cause of, it, but uses it freely upon every occa- . sion when ho can. ; If X i f Once, he saf s, fi Incfia an oIDcer high up in tho servKJOiwas wounded , by a rifle ball, which lodged some I where in the man's abdomen. Pienv . r.ffprod to tell the doctors whero it a was, but was declined the chance b the siiff-necked physiclabs, who'JC- Heved no more in his jiilory than in that of tho Sepoy magicians. UI can make one of you tell where 5 the ball is." said Pierre. : ''Uo 'j ahead, " said a doctor, laughing. . - Pierre walked up to ayounff phy- siciani who was half inclined to be- j lieve him, and, placing hi3 hand upon 1 the lad's head, said :kSIeep. " ) The 1 young manSank Into a chair? and slept. Pierre stood over him awhile and then said: 'i'Tcll the doc- toramhere the rifle bail is." I y "It is in the cavity ; cf the abdo- men! wnere 11 nas iauen ironi vue ribsj Open the abdomen and yOus will 2nd it on the left side. None bf the nitcstiucs are in jured.7 ; j "Am I asepahairV !; : 'Nd,ou are a majjnetic, person with; mesmeric powers." ' ; 1 Pierre saj's that they lounu the - ball fas indicated and lifter that his prestige was great It v.as in Iiadia.f that he learned he nucut use of the, English language. ti ' jj Returning to Canada later in life , he was engaged on a whaling , ship' as harpooner and madel tooucy thcrc. He has ,been in the United States for ten years, though he came hero from' Eall River only last, summers He is about thirty years old and. goes about but little. Kis power td cure headaches, toothjiches and all minor kinds of .aches and pains is simply wonderful. , He! cannot Jieal his own ills. As yet (lis fame as a mifrnetic healer has jsbarcely gone beyond his own neighborhood and the shadow of Bond hill! He has no education and cannotjpead or writqj English, but in his knock's about the, world he has picked up considerable infonnation. Lewis ton (Mcj) Jour nal. ;. . - ! ' ,; ornan in English Politics. Tho womdni canvasser is a pictur esque feature , of -English politics not j yet familiar in thi3 country. At one of V..Q recent 'elections ! tho 1 women canvassers, who really lovb the heat and burden of the (day, rer ceived their reward in this vorld, for the day before election the l?ad ing liberal paper in London paid a hundsome -Iribute to' tho j untiring and successful exertions of the isixty ! women canvassers who bad J been working onjbehalf of tbOainistcrial eafadidates. ''They went in," wroto thri, special correspondent, "where the mere male canvesser had igno tniniously failed, and tlicy came ovjt victorious.' , A voter, whom a pcf suasivtt woman cannct pfci the bet ter of . is clearly beyond the reach Of all human argument." The1! chief requisites for this sort 0 work, ,'lt would seem, are" ax robust j constitu tion, an infatuation forvpcli!ics aiid a distinct call or the work Chic- go Post, i j J ' J4 F Negroea VYho Pssj for Voltes. j- At the census of 18&0 '.nearly 3-1 ppri cent, of the colored population was under ten years of a?e,! whiloattho! census of 1890 only 23 per cent. Vjis under ten years of age;-' Samuel E. Tatum, a Washington negi-o,: in ex plaining this, says: ;rlt may' be! a fact that the colored popiafjon is con-i 8tantly falling off in its increase, for which thercmay be! a rcat.maoy reasons. We should firs takciqto I consideration the vast number ot people of color leaving the race year-i ly. There are thousands j who emi grate from the south so liht in com plexion that In the north they are' supposed to be white and jn this way . ayast number of families in 'tho course of a decade lose their identity as pecple : cf color. "-rfil. -Louis Globe-imoerat. 5 j . Lqxoox; ; (bruaryj rL The ! Daily Xe ws Paris correspondent savs that owini to his trouble in the extra parliamentary f naval ; commission ca r riday, Admiral Gervais will s reshrn his post at tthe head of the admiraUy.i and will ask to be sent out for actlva service. " f ir s t - - Z- Crink Tocttthert Trxe4r FqUswa,t ' Valdosta;. Ga.; February 9. fhe Te ecope's Lake Park iorrespondentl famishes an" account of a fight there ' Saturday night hi which5 white ifcan Jamed Bubber Hiers sent H pistol ball1 thrown the braitonf Sam Lofton: kill-1 lag him mstantlv. Tb the result of a feud of Ion standing. L " wuue Ts a iae. oottom .... .-I... ,. ' Y j i . f .11 Isn't This Worth CONVINCER NO. 1. We eellclt earrrependeoee and will be lad i " I feel inore than ever J - 3 "I have been ti great, J r t ! that' the Electropoise isl; s E,uffereS froa Asthm.J, , S MfnhmUAf li Two of our best doctors J vi a creat agent for the relief ,- , V s ... - ,. ?: . of suffering humanity;. (. g As a last resort I tried the :ij 3 Would iJiat tvery suferer . . f -; ! Electropoise, it cured !; Mas. C ACarlton ! 5 6 ; ThaddetjsW. Summers, J Statesville,Na!; m": . Statesville, N. Cj; XlactrapaUa. XT HAS CUBED THOUSANDS. (3. ATLAXTIC ELECTROPOISI! CO, Washtsotok, D. CL CRUELTY COST HIM HIS LIFE. - I r I A Son Defends Ills Bother mnd tbe Bfaatal I afhe Gets K -lied. Columbus, Februarjr Eas,t: ; Highlands, a jsnburb of Columbna, was thes noene of a-terrible trag edy early yestordayUsorninjr. James ITioinpson, a naaoninist, reiurnea- Lome Sat u l-day niffht considerably nn- der the innuenoo 01 liquor, quarreiea with his wife and finally drove her out into a furious iafn storm at midniffht. She souffht rcfuLfo at a. neighbor's house with three -little children. About S o'clock ason, Clitf Thompson, aged S3 years, iho is a printer by trade, re- tamed from his woclc and went to bed, knowing nothing- of the treatment of: his mother. Clin is deaf and dumb. Yesterday morning' at 6 o'clock Mrs, Thompson returned -to hor home. busied herself about the house and at tended to her children, who returned with her Thompson was aroused, and UDOtng nis wiio m ne aouo reneweu his qnarrfl with her and ordered her to gtit out. -': The woman pleaded with her brutal husband, who, losing control of him self, made a savage attac on her. At this juncture Ct ill, the deaf mute so, appeared in the room, and at onoe sprang to the assistance of his mother. His father, turnod on him to drive him off. The by jerked his mother away, when Thompson rushed for a pistoL intending, itxis presumed, to- shoot either his wife or son, possibly both. Clin gTabbed a razor from the top of a bure&tt and a deadly struggle ensued between him and his father. The boy mede a luntro at the infuriated man, slashing ,him across the threat, sever ing the carotid artery and cutting- him severely in several other place. .There upon the elder fell to the floor in a pool of blood and expired in a few min utes. The son proceeded at once to the police station, wrote a statement of tha tragedy on a piece of paper and sur rendered himself and was placed under arrest, j - . The affair created intense excite ment, and hundreds of people sur rounded! the place. Public sentiment is -with the son, who is j an industr'ous man, and who was forced to commit tho horrible act in defense of his mother. THE INDIAN TR0U3LE3. The Banker HUl linn District Cicltrd i . - Or- r the Possible liloodshed. Paris, February 8. A special to The Herald from Tucson, Ariz., says: The stage wldch arrived here last night from Mammoth brought additional ad vices, regarding tho Indian troubles in the Bhliker Hill mining district The fight that occurred last Wednesday eveningj bentween Hualpi Clark and a small band of Apochos, under the lead ership of the renegade 'Kid," resulted in the death cf a squaw and possibly one of tee warriors; , Mr. Clark, who left Mclvinney's ranch late last Wednesday night with a num ber of Cowboys for thecene of x the battle, jwhieh oocurred that evening about dark, was seen hear Mammoth X. early Saturday morning by the passen gers on the stago. lie told them that when he and tho cowboys visited the place where the fight .took place they found One dead squaw; that she was not ove 30- years old and exception ally good looking. On, her person was a belt, knife, scabbard and a leather pouch full of raaay curiosities, among ' them feathers of Mexican birds, mak ing it apparent that she was the rene gade Kid's squaw, ami that they had just returned from S or on a. Mr. Clark took all of these articles 1 from the squaw. Including1 a look of Jier hair, which will maky what he considers a valuable addition to his ; large collectioa ox Indian scalps, toma hawks, jetcjv A company cf cavalry afrom Fort Grant will be in Bunker Hill district in a day or two. A larg-o number of cat tlemen and miners are now in pursuit of the lr-dians, and a battle is likely to occur before many days. . A Vorase FuU of lerlL Kbw Yona, FebruarT .6. Tho Ham burg line stamsMp Taormina, Captain Koch, arrived yesterday from Ham burg, after a perilous toyage lasting twBntr-two dart. Mh severe hurricanes in the gulf stream. m one ox wnien ner main mast was snapped off close to the deck. The Taormina brought 131 steerage passen gers. In the early part of the voyage the weather was fair. When near Sable Island, in latitude 40.50 and Inn ituJe 5D.40, she encountered a hurrV cane irpra the southeast. The hurri canexecntlmia 1 fnrtvi:i,t. -hours. A t 7 o'elock, on the morning of me oisv im, a oig- sea oroire on the deck, ahd thexman at the wheel lost control of the vdasol. The bolts in the main boom wtiNJioosened and the boom, threshing about, struck life boat K0N8 on the starboard side and knock ed it overboard. Afterwaid the boom, swinging-with the roll of the ship, car ried avtairthe Lej rigging of the main mast aha thema&t, lesing its traces snappep off and went overboard. Itx was only by long-and troublesome work that the crewswere able to clear away the wreck. , - "Oil in large quantitieswas poured on the troubled waters. Th main steer age passengers below decks. were in an agony of terror. Some men Nvere for hours on their knees WavinwX wMi. others istasrsrerfd about andmn thew Were nitehed 1 thi rvv n.i lV tflD 1 1, .. htn M .l , .... the j ut fcue vessel. itnrr t went bv tho boaM. scredmed and some became hystericaL women f " jpeeta f ne snip to jro down. Cap tain Koch, went gimcng the men and omefl, and, by personal appeals, suc ceeded in Vllayinsr their feafs some-. Wi&ii L1 ht oi the storm, Stew ard Ildbenfel fell on the deck and was seriously m juried in ternaUy. II was uneonc.ous for four days, and is still In a dazed condition. The hurricane subsided on Febrnary 1st, pyt head winds were encountered delaying the ship, five or six days, 'yy -X ' I feyrJriiui. ' yy Y.. AtJ-ASTA, February CAt 12 o'clock yesterday Jue Clark' pronouneed the sentence bnon Harry ilDL makinff it seven ycars.The nrimuK o Dervous and asked for a new trial, but I as yet aodfe anile action has been taken. . -. . . ua wit. v been taken. Investigating? CONVINCER Nfj. 2. tm farnlah T lafarmaxlaa abos taa VMaMjAJ-yS! Lessens Pain, Insures Saf sty to Life of Mother and Child., j My wife, after havinguscd Mothers' Friend, passed through the ordeal with little pain, as stronger m onk hour, than in a week; after the birth of her former child.-J.:MclknJDSJCK, .Bean StationTenn. . JIoTH2nsr Friend robbed pain of its terror and shortened labor. I have tite heal tbie&t child I ever saw 1 i ) 1 ylaas. L. M. Aberx, Cochran, GaJ Eipiaued to ny ddre. haige piepakL on re celptff price, per bonier Foe saw by aU Vtug ristt.1 Book to M.ithrrsmjilrd free. t BUADHEID REGULATOR CO Atlanta. Cflu srtmT CUFFS. Many Men Use Them as Pads for Jotting Down Things. ' A London laundrymun says that tho use of shirt cults for jotting down memoranda is more common than is, perhaps, commonly sup posed. He related how one day a young fallow drove up in a cab and rushed 'nto tho ofilco in great ex citement, asking whether some shirts deposited in the name fcf L had been washed. We found they had not, and as the owner turned them ovei" in 1 feverish heat he fairly yelled jwith iov. Dointimr to a little column of figures on the left cuff of one, which ho explained were the numbers of eight ten pound bank notes; which had been lost or stolen, and bad the J shirt 3 been washed all hope3 cf ever getting them back must have been abandoned. They were, however, successfully traced and recovered a low clays later. The cuffs of stock exchange men are often covered with mysteri ous characters, presumably indiea tions .of the stock market, and the "lips" found on the wrist linen of racing men were actueily taken ad vantago of by ironiag girls onj one or two oecasions with success, fit is not yet recorded, however, thaj. the mannish young woraan has rakjen .to "cuff jotting," as she has to cufi aud shirt wearing. II. O. Picayune. They lave No Corns, Mulle,. Cerale, a premiere ass:Iul a v?as asicea oy a uosion reporter whether it wras true that ballet dancers suffered intenctly froir. -corns, as, he said, it hnd' fccra re ported. "I have traveled with ballet troupe?- II Y 4 . J Ixou anu on ior ui teeu ycuis un uvci the world," said she, '"and have hu,u lots oopport unities to hear al 1 abou i their wops and ailments, but 1 nevei heard corns mentioned. Dancers are least likely of all women to besr troubled, for they make no secret ol lookintj out for thVoomfort and well beinfj of their feet before everything else. 1 can pick out a ballot ii i il a crowd by her 'feet every limci "When chorus and ballet are mixed together in street drcs'i 1 euii red.'ii tcli which is whichr frr the da1 in ' all wear larger shoos thai! rost of their scs. T hey go in for edm Ton in footwear, because it mrans I n ;ic; and butter to them. The choru- mri. of course, .r.as t no - commor. weakness of her sox for squeeziup her foot into the smallest possible shoe. The dancer can't afiord to. he must wear an easy, vidf Saved Her 1 Mrs. C. J. WootmuDGB, of Wortham, Texas, saved the life of her child by the use of AVer's Cherry Pectoral. ' "One of my children hail Croup. The ease was attended by our physiciaa, and was supposed to lie well under control. One night I v was startled by tne cmias nara ltr. and on earns to It found it Stran- f lliiR. It had nearly ceased to breathe, teallzlng that the child's alarnilnp condition had become possible in spite of the medicines Elven, I reasoned that such remedies would e of no avail. Having part of a bottle of Ayers Cherry Pectoral in the house, 1 gave the child three doses, at short intervals, and anxiously waited results. From the moment the Pectoral was given, the child's breathing grew easier, and, in a short time, she was sleeping quietly and breathing natnrallyi The child is alive and well totay, and I do not hesitate to say that Ayer's Cherry Pec- lorai savea ner me." AYER'S Cherry Pectoral I"iepatMbyDr.J.aAyerkCo,LowenMsss. Prompt to act, sure to cure Hard Times 3llEffiS esaa. UHl rerunrers stths Lowest Wfas; lesal tot Cora. Oottoa and FMnati. it 1 . Jruckbag Crops sad Potato 1-5 Morimts of Potash. Kunit. Snlphmts Potash, Bobs 2L "..,stam foc "w.H. POVVU1.1. Sc co gBft" Mmf wtams. ltsJUwore Aid. J VIA & '1 5 ii"c1i.". in HUfwtrat Yf;Oi auite Siincer, r.Wnidttcpcr and CONDENSED SCIIUDUUV EFFECT AUGUST 12. ISO.' l.v liiuuuiioua ....... uv UurKciiiiie Jkr i)UBVit;; .... . ...1 i-v 1 -any, tie , r iireeaitA. 1, isi 4u r, ana' 2 4AM 3 M 5 35 Aft 5 MJ AH I AM .... . ' .... 4 f . i 3J Yr S i r Lv iurh.aa.. .r iittupjow Lv WiWlon-Salein 4. .r llfilKJIO .... . A rS-itl.sir.v ....... tfr itriveVitie Ar Ashevjl.e f HMnsri . 1 no AM 5 8ft AM 6 311 AM 4 4 AM 16 rx :. AM . ft IS A -j ra Si PM AS AM 9 4-.AM 11 ('SAM 4 00 M i.t ihiiiur .... Architricite... r Spariatiburif. ArtJr-env!lie ... Atanin...... i.v i-lijirlt'tif .. irrolDDlltla'. .. 4ii V 9 Ml AM 11 JS AK J BS TH ll 13 m 1 ar. am Vi6 A ISt Al It i r- ! bTa 4V0rv . 85 r 4 tr- py IS VM 7 K AMI 1 1 33 I'M S 1 AM 8 45 AM r Augusta NORTH30UNDNos. ' i: ' .1 36 & IV. . OAILA. o. lit - ftie.f UV AUliht;i .... l.v ( otuniMa ... "r h r;t'lie... tw iita 1 (hi pm t tspm... 4S0 im smiu.........; a ie pin it 1 s put so aui 'iwpm 30 am 1 4Tt via 14 pat t o am p S-' pin 8 24 on 4 1 m i ss i m 9 sTpm IS 44 pm i ......... i sopui. ......... f.V VlLifttil...... r Citsirloi te.,.. .vi bar'otte rSnUsiuir- Lv itm prtogs . l.V:ltUIV4IW ... i.vstiillte .. Ar-iAilsbury Suaary .... i 1 pin.; . 8 00 pin.. 4 15 am to ll ira 31 pm Mlftam 11 40 pin l4pin 8 JTam tlBSsm. ..... . . i t3saiu l oi am... . 9 jk pm 3S aim... . A . .1 is?flpm 30am..r tsnaM .j- ; isinpm ."- 6 05 am II 50 pm i 49 pro 7 40 .-m 1 so urn ;o 1 1 am m 20 am 4 am 4 05 m lti'SMD 4 Mam 4 51 am - l,fls j ui 700 am '7 00 am ...... A r w J nston-Saim l.v GBeisliori .... r iunham... .... Ar-T?a:feljMi ..i, ... l.v Half ijfli..... a r iiidfJtTO . f.v !rferisboro rrjKjiivMie ... r-KrJVIUe... Vr Uui k-vlHe . r Kicnoiond ., 3TWCN WrsT POINT AND i 1 RICHMOND- - Lfiiive Wrst I'olrti 7jo A. s.aa11y.and.5tA.M. Udljf exji-fpf S:in1;v snd Monday; jirrlve l;lch ..fitida.'j it l - 4A M. Itelornlng leave l;lch iionri H.tv and 4.4- I. M. dary ext; pt Sunday; ar rive West Tolnt 5.H and .(u P. M. ' ;; JET RICHMOND AND RALEIGH VIA ! j; KtYSVILLC ! ; LeavcirMrliinonn 12.4' I M.111t; leave Keys .lll-3.l'i r. .d ;?arrtvpTxfprrtS.fB P.M.; it-ndrr-hu tlu )?. ai , Durlum J.li P. M., V&u Igh 6 80 A, in.-, Mi-iurnf uif uatt ijjii 1 nm. dally, Dnrlinm J am Ufcdi-nn. T.a - P Ms. oxf--nl .44 a. M-y arrive Aey.Mvi:! io.i A. M., IM limood I .os p. M; Dally. Mixed hoin Nol 6i 1pv-8 Key bvllt.eMlally xoT-t "utiU iv;! ! m.. Oxford, s a td. wnd unites i'ur uiriiijl 'a. m. .Miqed train f 0.0 leaves lur ua;n, (tativ i-qeep' Sunday. 6 y m., Oxford s so pm in-! bn wtes hi-y&xlUe, l ro P.M. Mlxe.ijTrativ NoNa iav n Osfrrd, dally except tina.i-,i.25 A. M .-to4ar--lveA Duibam 4.15 A. M. tixi-d lliiiin No 61 lave Darlian , dslly i-pt--Sunthi.t A. M.. and rrlvefc Oxford. .l A.M. 'I'ltitiUHbn O. A. li. K R.', Itvesuvford 6 hi a M. alls- exdept. .-und;iy, U.4 A. M datly, pel 6 P. M.,dalli lexce)i .Suiid:iv,:.nd arrive ll nrli rson 6. e . M., 12U P. w.. n-1 T.l P. M M eturnlng. leave llendersiin s.es and no p. M., dalu except -nnday and arrive Oxford . . M , 3.15 p M nd.5 P. M v Now.ajs; sc iind :- oiMlned aV Hlcliitiourt from an'' to Wed! Point and Ballimorr dally xc pt Sunday. OnTra'ns kos. :ar. l 3S Puilm in Buffet Sleepei betyn-en s ew York and Uland. oj.hs. and ss, rui m n sieepK-jj Pars New VorU u'et- Or!e ns. Nnv Y.ikt' AUjmKa and VasUinsflen-to MVmpbls, anu Diiditgi arNrw York to Montv?3iuery Tr tins Xi-K 1 and li run Mrikl heiween Blelr mond and AMauli and c Try -lntlii nSleeplnscars r)..lw- on i.tenmo a. jianvuie ici iensrro. Tiatas Nck. u nnd is, w. X. v. l tvision. carry PuMumjn iMrlor rois between Sails). ury, Ashevllir uia 1 1 01 aiinss. BEHKLIiY, J. 8. B. Tt ovpsov Kup.;rtniej dent, sujk; 1-teDder.t ntists"o. N C. l lelittM nd. Va. W. Ai IT' K. Uener tl Psssenger Agent, i V silnirion, T). ' . II. U AHliWlcK. AasUGent Tass. .Asrent. I Ai 'nnta, Gu. W. II S RKi N. SO II A AS. tien'li naper, Triifl1-Vanacfr I V abliinr- on, D. C. M ashlnRion, U. C. . - f vj I-vi Ik! rrrn 3LD T TTN r"! r - t ,- on i . -" i SM1THDZAL HAnOWARE CO., ! SOLE AGENTS. Steam, Air and zontal of 1 O 4 s y.-.j tJtf 4 ! M ' -P y. Y:frM -' f.v :vi:y3e?. - '' y '- . ! l; v w j -: ,f . ' y i " ' i " . : t X ; : '; - ' I 1 N " A. S. CAMERON STEAM; , ' - nr4n.u I mi: riiaii xwii. f rWsMMM MUillfflan. !' 11 I i i7i ' Mil i n y iiOiiii 1 . y 1 Renews its allegiance to mocraev of the And-asks every friend of good gov rnmen . progress d enterprise for support, price I To Singe Subscribers $1.06 To. 2 of over Ten ,85c the hacds of Me yy ; .-..- ; jrnnxer, is prepared to. execute .all kinds of Job prices that -lavorably with jany FFISE l M Orders Solicited, LOST! A larve amount of mony is lo.t. Hiinually lij paHif-s piirthasinfr "fruit trees, roses, &. Gnt them from H firm tha rows I heir own trees, sends out nothing ,'lmt goosl stock ainl sells at reason;l!e prices.- VW wsmt the ad lres of every farmer or gardener in your section mid w ll make you a lilieial offer. Write for particulars and prices at once. Send itnmp for descriptive utalngue. Agents wauteil eveiy v here. Add ress, Cherokee Nurserj' Co. Way Cross, G.i. (Men I ion 4 his i paper.) lTacuum Pumps, Vertical and every Variety and Capacity. 1 r l : f r Eegular Horizontal Fiston. vis XZt? ilbS" n ' The most simple, durable andpf fective Pump in the market for Mines, Quarries, Kefineries, Breweries, Fac tories, Artesian Wells, Firi Duty and General Manufacturing purposes. ! 7 BSend for Catalogue. Foot of East 23d Street-New York- I . ; ? .' -me fie-' the - Cause' people, its subscription will be : I ! perZyear payable in it tf t tt an old esDerierined Printing, 'and at will eoinpare . WANTED. A hehab'e : I Vtson In yfry T. n to take the ; Exclusive Agetic ..: of the,- : ' ''World Columbian Txpo silion; Illustraied," AUTHEftTIU ORGAN OF THE FAIR. Great Opporf amiy tn Mj.ke Xpntj M the Next Tar. J. T One Chance in a Lime lime T Enclose 15 ceats in Mami fr.V Ssn.- pie copy nad full part iculaifs, J. B. CAMPBELL, Pres., j59 Adams St-, CnicagovIU- PUMP WORKS, I ! - ,- i ; ll 1 l 4 11 ' 1 ft Ik f iiii mm -i i - ! -1 t r.- is