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BY D. R.DURISOE. EDGEFEILD, S. C., JULY ll, 1872, FOL?ME XXX?L-8h. 29. . T -, ^ifclt a. Sin fo j??ve TSeef Is ii a sYn to love thee ? Then my heart is deeply dyed, For the life-blood as it gushes, Takes its crimson from love's rid? And I feel the waves roll o'er me, " And the blushes mount my brow And my pulses quicken wfldry. As my love-dr jams come and go. I feel my spirit's weakness, I know my spirit's power, I-feel my psoyd heart'struggle In temptation's trying hour ; But, amid the dinjpf conflict To %hee still my thoughts incline. Yielding- ali, my sonllias murmure I am thine, forever thine ! Is it a sin to love thee? What were existence worth, A Bereft of aU of Heaven That lingers still on earth ? Frtaidshtr/ssmilo, Hkc beams of shine, r ? ? t Sheds its gilding over the fceart' j Butrtbf soul still cries for somet mor?V Than fri on ddiip can impart ; Frozen, hearts, like ice-bound Erie, Th^nc^suinmer day can melt, , Vainly: boast their power to conquer What their hearts have never ielt ; But I envy not their glory^i ' 'Mid the raptures fhaf are mine, When, with earnest soul,.1 tell thee, I am thine, forever thine ! Is it a sin to love thee ? Gentle voices o'er me fall, Though I press wann hearts around I have given thee mv aU : What though rigid *&bes divide us, And our hands and hearts be rivot If, on earth, we love each other, 'Twould a foretaste be of heaven ; And in some impulsive moments, When our dark eyes flashing meet When I feel thy form so near me, Hear thy heart's quick pulses beat When I feel^raay God forgive me I could ev^erjiMng resign, All I have on earth to hope for, TO be THINE, FOREVER THINE ! For the Advertiser. A Trip ta Kansas City. MIAMI, MO., June 28,1872 Dear Advertiser^-Considera time has elapsed ^nnce you- had letter from me. In regard to whi I need only to state that my last 1 ter did not reach you, and recent! have been travelling, and trying the same time to attend to my wt at home, *which work is of its enough for any matt !*-? Hive reas to be very thankful, however, : having my lot cast amoug a peo? who deeply sympathize with me that work, and are willing to assi me in it. I have been much blessed in Mi mi. Our congregation and Sund school are increasing in numbers ai in interest every week. Our Chur numbers about two hundred ai twenty-five, and is spread over a co siderable extent of country arour our town, thus presenting an indei nite amount of work, besides tl regular Church services; I'have n< been hindered by sickness, nor an of those things which men call mi* fortunes. I and my family have ei joyed remarkably good health, tn and are more cheerful and hapji than many would expect to find us i our new home. Last-.week I. visited .Kansas Git" on the border of the State of Kansa but in this State. This town, whici E? tim?/of ;Jt|i?jl?aa?as struggle, wt .ntt?e itior?1,(Han a'g*uefilla-squatt? headquarter^ 'aiid even at the clos of tKe late war was an insignificar town, now numbers thirty-four tbov sand ; and Wyandotte, beyond th Kansas line, which may be considere part of the same city, and will pei ha^fe-daring 'the present year'be ir corporate^'' ,with .'it, ' '?rnmbers mor than six thousand, making a total c more than forty thousand. At Kansas City is the first Rail road Bridge on Missouri River, am ^ it is a gigantic structure. Over i psases the great flood of travel t California.. I suppose some of you Teaders will be surprised to learn tba it will require only five days for m< to run from home to San Francisco Californian Just think, New York ii the East, San Francisco in the West our State in the centre, and Soutl; Carolina where is she ? Our horizor has so changed that even the geogra phy of the United States seems tc have been changed. .Let me say a little more abou: Kansas. Cky,-the city among th< hills, or rather pinnacles. I snrtpos< this is the only site of its kind whict has been, selected for a great city After spending, in parts of it, per haps millions of dollars in a work o grading.on a single hill, the surtaci of the site will be exceedingly uneven It .i?,?apt,at aU ftlW* >n.^is -i^:t< seemen bigging out a 6road sired fifty feet.deep* through-a hill, and o: course making a corresponding em bankment in the valley below. The hill and valley, on each side of this street will be graded to correspond with the street, and will be studded with lofty brick building?, thus th<? work goes On, and men here tell me 'that even this necessity for avast amount of labor in grading, has con tributed largely to the rapid growth of the city. The - inhabitants of this city are from the East, WTest, North and South. Mexicans, Indians, Negroes, and White men. Taking the last of these names in its ordinary accepta tion, you will find that i s class very largely predominates, and embraces doubtless representatives of every little State of Europe and America. In this city I met that remarkable man, Rev. A. B. Earle, 'the Baptist Evangelist ot Boston, who has been for nearly three months preaching at different points in our. State with as tonishing succ?s?. He has promised to stop with us in Miami, on the 3rd July to spend a short while preac hing for us, fa Kansas City is eighty-one miles We6t of Miami, and the land on the entire route is rich. Very little wheat will be reaped in this Stpte, but the prospect is good for a heavy corn crop. Yours, trulv, E. W. HORNE. For tho Advertiser. The Oats Question, and a Plea for More Thorough Farming, MR. EDITOR :-Seeing the commu nication of my friend. Felix Lake, jr., in a late issue of your paper, in re gard to unremarkable success ri Oat raisings sdi. fleeming a'few- remarks in Tefere'nce-' to the vast importance of this crop acceptable to the farmer , readers pf your journal, I take this [..occasion' to' respectfully urg?rrpon all, whose .land is adapted to the pro?lu? ,tion of the Oat, the adoption of his mode of sowing the Oat on land where cotton is growing; and even land on which, corn is grown can be put down in Oats in this way after fodder has been pulled* ' The selection of a va riety proved to be rust proof, early sown, will always insure a good crop. If the attention which this crop deserves be giverrit, there can hardly be an overestimate of its importance. Let it be done, and the time will mark a'?new; era in^cutkern Agriculture. Why should not the Oat entirely su persede the use of corn. Why culti vate corn all summer to see it at last i withered up by the scorching sun, during the dry season that invariably comes, when Oats, answering every purpose, can be (io much more cheap ly and certainly raised. After makingalloWance for the time lost in harvest, you have the more time to devote to cotton growing, by relying upon ' Oats for stock feed in stead of Corn. The hot and dry summers of the South a fc unfavorable to a successful cultivation of corn. While our mild winters, and the hardiness of the Oat, thriving well on poor and thin soil, make it one of the most remunerative crops generally cultivated. Mr. James Y. Culbreath, a young | and enterprising farmer of the Saluda section of this County, cut and clean ed five hundred bushels of Oats, that only cost in the aggregate twenty dol lars, to sow and harvest. Allow the pasture to be worth the seed and mule feed .required to sow, and the chaff and straw to set off the expense of cleaning, and what" other crop would have paid so well ? These Oats are worth at his barn five hundred dollars cash ; and to have produced the same in value of corn or cotton, would cost nearly three hundred dol lars. In no country under the sun is the great calling of ilie farmer pursued with an eye so little'to profit as in the South. Every where among farm ers here there is urgent need of re form. The old track has been so of ten traveled, and without profit, that aomo less circuitous route must, be opened by which ' better results, in less time, with less labor, less ex pense, and with great certainty, may be reached. Agriculture, being the basis of our national and individual prosperity, should not, by thinking men, be look ed upon as a subject, or object of sec ondary importance. But must be elevated, improved and diversified, by claiming a greater share of thought ful consideration from our intelligent men. The low ebb to which all branches of this great employment have sunk, the dilapidated condition of the whole cotton growing section, the aversion of rho emigrant to re move hither, the continued financial pressure which weighs so heavily and persistently Upon farmers, are a few reasons why young : len, who are about to book themselves for life's rough journey, turn away from a prospect so dark and uninviting and seek in other fields more remunera tive employment. As a consequence, there is loss mon ey, time, study and talents 'evoted to the improvement of this branch of j industry than any other. It is a fact j that the farmer gets on poorly, an^f that we are behind the rest of tle world in raa'.ters pertaining to ai1'1" cultural improvement. Nor is y f?r want of a more favorable soil ,r c": mate, or attributable to the#pditical condition ot the country. LeU8glve a more liberal support to a' innova tions tending tu expedite aA cheapen the farmer's work ; and <>' diversify our crops as to nb longe, depend up on any country for anding that we can profitably grow olives. W. No FUNERALS AVOWED.-A gray haired old man tfed to get a room on Kearney stree Sfn francisco, the other day. H aske;l the woman who answered^ bell: " Have you a room to letr .... " ."Yes*" sh'rephed, "but " But wh*?'' . " " You can?t have it. "Why V*-?' asked* the old gen tleman. " You,re more fchan sixty years, old, arfy?u not?" , 0" ! "J pi sixty five. ' What of that ? ? ??TB.landlady won't allow any fune^8 fr?m her house. ]jT The new leap year style of pop pj^Jhe question- 'Don'tyon want mo Ufvsh dishes for you,' Nice Girls, We all kew a nice girl the mo ment we meet her. That one word " nice" rises to our lips instinctively, we can hardly tell why ; but it is the only word in the language that can be used under the circumstances, and it is fully expressive. Everyone knows exactly what it means. It does not necessarily mean a beautiful girl, or an elegant or an accomplised girl, except to the extent that beauty, elegance and accomplishments are essential to niceness. 'Beauty in its more queenly sense-the Guenevere style of beauty, for instance-is out of the question. Arthur's guilty consort could not have been " nice." In a? sense the nice girl always is, and I think should be, pretty. Yes ; she ought to have nice features-a pure; clear face it should be ; and she is .certain to have nice eyes. No matter for the colour ; let them be blue,or hazel, or black;; and, again, let them be large or small : but they are certain to have an expression about them absolutely charming. They will be kind eyes, sympathetic eyes, ready to brighten at another's hap piness, and to grow brighter still with "tears that leave the lashes bright" over another's sorrowings. The' nice girl is sure to have a pretty mouth, too. There is a secret about pretty months. It is more valuable than any of Madame Rachel's secrets asan 11 aid to beauty," and so is worth finding out. The secret is this : the mouth is of all the features the least under the control of the will. It i? the truest index to the disposition. Eyes may gleam ; smiles may dinmle the cheeks ; amia bility may be simulated with infinite skill ; but the mouth is less obliging than the " hollow hearts" of the poet. It will not " wear a mask ;" and it is only by cultivating sweetness of disposition that a pretty mouth can be secured. The nice girl uncon sciously finds out this secret, and with a sweet mouth and kind eyes she may be content : she has beauty enough. The great charm about the nice girl is that she is so good-tempered which is a synonym for good-hearted -so amiable, so cheerful, and so clever, in the best sense of that word. She is the life and soul of home. Her presence is its sunshine. She makes it. She is indispensable to it. Savs the Fairy in the Christmas tale, speak ing of such a girl in humble life. " The hearth which, but for her, were only a few stones and blicks and rusty bars, is made through her the altar of the home." The same thing ? happens in higher circles, for the nice girl is found everywhere. On J thing to be noted of her is, that she " is always neat. You cannot surprise hpr /"> *l**liahi1J* Wkai n marvpllnns smoothness of hair she has ! And what immaculate cu fis and collars, warranted never to rumple or soil ! It is difficult to believe that her dresses are made : their fit is "perlet- \ tion, and they seem as natural to her as leaves to a flower. There is al ways a graceful * flow about them; and as for color, 6bc has an artist's eye in respect?te ?t. ' She uses a bright ribbon as a painter would do, bm without knowing why. A poem might be written on a nice girl's boots. They are never of thc showy kind : but how charming ! Gloves, again ; it doesn't .matter whether ijouvin, Houbigant; Piver, or some unknown Brown or Jones supplies them. They are always perfection 1 in fit, and, as a.rule, of some neutral tint. Catch our nice girl appearing on the .croquet-lawn in gloves of posi tive yellow, or green, or, must hideous of all, red-that latest outrage on good taste ! . The influence of the nice girl in a house is always felt, but it is not easy to say how it is exercised. Part of the secret is, I fancy, that she is everywhere attended hy two fairies', who are called Order and Grace. Their aid is invaluable. Wherever she goes, tidiness aud neatness result. Her touch has a magic in it. She could not be slovenly if'the tried. It would he impossible for her to arrange a flower, place a chair, loop up a cur tain, or perform the com non est act of daiiy life in any but the right way. Dickens had a nice ?irl iii his mind when lie drew Ruth Pinch, and who can forget the charm with which Ruth invested flat most homely of occupations, tbi making of a meat pudding? lu's by jio means neces sary that the nice girl should be sim ply domestic : but she is sure to prize her home sud to be of use in it. Al ways gay, busy, and cheerful, happy in herae**! and devoted to chose about her. she misses none of the refine ments" or genuine pleasures of life. She ?nows all about the new poet anr'the last novel, the Opera favor I it<s and the popular play. She i )aows something of pictures, can ?ing a little and play fairly, but is not much given to those manipulated fireworks under cover of which every body talks till th'e coda ceases, and murmurs of "Thank.you!" express t he gem eral gratitude for what nobody has heard. Of coutse the nice girl dances, is clever at charades, ana is the idol of the youngsters by reason of her profound erudition in the mat ter of fairy-tales and nursery rhymes, and the inexhaustible fertility of her resources when games and forfeits are in demand. In addition to these qualifications, she is, in all probability, a fair horewoman, can skate, has learned to Bwim at the seaside, and Eerhaps, out of fondness for a brother, as mastered the difficult problem of the cricket-field so far as to watch his exploits therein with an appreciative eye. It is peculiarly pleasant to think of the nice girl in the sick-room. Leigh Hunt wrote a paper on the pleasures of being ill. Not very ill, you know; but sufficiently so to warrant you in keeping to the house, and having people concerned and interested about you. He rated it as one of the pleas ures of life. This at least may be conceded, that it goes far to take it out of the category of the miseries of life when our pet is there, ready .and ! willing to attend on tra with loving j ' devotion and unwearying patience. I She is never afraid, never fatigued. | Her footstep is not heard, her dress Iw OP irritating rustle in it She ' : ?-?? does not talk to you overmuch, fidget you with suggestionsor f attentions. An invalid suffer much from being over-nursed as neglect. She sees that you wan nothing, but conceals from you your wants are supplied. At lowest, she inspires you with c dence : as you mend, her cherful sustains you, and one look at bright face is like a glimpse of bea Universally astractive as they how is it that nice girls are so r They seem never to have been r tiful. Even the poets,-give us records of any. Sweet Anne P I imagine, was one. So was heroine of Suckling's " Ballad u a Wedding," Hike to think. 1 must have been a'nice girl i? yoi of whom it was said by a poet i to know her was a liberal educa -the sweetest compliment ever i to woman ! . But it will not do to venture ? ?this suggestive field and dip i other poets, because after the p< would come the novelists, and in discussion of their heroines we sho get beyond all bounds. But Ed Poe has eight linea addressed Frances Osgood, which so strop indicate t.hat she was one of this r order, and at the same time so ters express all the feelings one wo desire to convey'to a nice girl, tha will venture to quote them : " Wouldst thou be loved ? Then let i heart From its present pathway part not ! Being everything which now thou arl Be nothing which thou art not: So with the world thy gentle ways, Thy grace, thy more than beauty, Shall be an endless theme of praise, And love-a simple duty." . To revert to our point : how is that nice girls always have been, a now are, so rare ? Is it because he? is sp much rarer than beauty? I is there some delusion in the fema breast as to what men admire women,'that leads so many to'assnr. airs, to be haughty and unfeminir or to sink into the slough of fastnes Other reasons may be assigned, b probably the truth will never be a rived at. This, however, is not to i gainsaid, that nice girls bear no pr portion whatever to those whose ge eral bearing'might be held to' justii the great Hazlitt in his extraordinal views of the gentler sex. It is r corded of him that when introduce to some young girls, " they neith? laughed nor sneered, nor gigg'ed n< whispered ; but they were you ii girls. So Lc sat and frowned, blackc and blacker, indignant that thei should be such things as youth an beauty, till he went away before sur per in perfect misery, and owned ii could not bear young girls-the drove him mad." One would like t feej certain that these could not hav been nico cut-'' WILLIAM SAWYER, - .... - - <c> ? - . - ? This OUice is Not iii Funds.' The brood of evils which Radical ism in this State has brought forth i soon to be reinforced. To extortioi and virtual confiscation, the phinde of the Treasury, and the strairglin] of every attempt at enterprise or de velopmcnt by the white people of tin State, to grievous oppression and cn forced poverty is now to be nddei the;r exposure to the " pesti'lcnci that walket h iii darkness, and th< destruction that wastell! at noonday.' This will be thc legitimate conse quence ot' tho abandonment of tin quarantine as suggested in thc sub joined article from the News. The startling announcement ap peared in the Columbia Union a few days a,go. on the authority of Dr. Lob by, the health officer of the port ol Charleston/" that, owing to the want of funds for quarantine purposes, he will probably be obliged to raise tho quarantine from Georgetown to thc coast ol' Georgia on the ISth July," and Dr. Lebby, who has just return ed from Columbia, repeats the state ment, and says that all his eltbrts to obtain any portion of the.liberal ap propriation maile by the last Legisla ture for the quarantine service nave utterly failed. He-says that twenty five hundred dollars is the minimum amount required to maintain the quarantine until next fall, and a war rant for that amount was drawn last week by the Comptroller General, but, on presentation to the Treasurer, it was met with a stereotyped reply, " Ko money in the Treasury." He has since been making every effort to obtain the money from the Treasurer, and he says he has been assisted to the extent- of their power by Gover nor Scott and Comptroller General Neagle, but without success, and he now sees po resource but to raise the quarantine, and abandon the coast to its chances of infection. The crew of the quarantine boat at Buli River have already got tired of waiting for their pay, and abandoned the "boat last week, but Dr. Lebby has alreafly made private arrangements to pay another crew for the present, at least, and the quarantine is re-estab lished. This outrage but adds another count to the indictment to which the present State administration will have to answer before God a'nd the country. -South Carolinian. Not at Home! The Baltimore Gazette says : .*' Gen. Grant has given up his residence at Washington, the supposed seat of the National Government, and has taken up his quarters for the summer months at Long Branch, expecting only to pa,y an occasional flying ^sit to the Federal Capital. He is the first Presi dent of the United States who thus voluntarily abandoned his post in search of personal pleasures, and we trust he will be the last. The people who elected him imagined that he would, in a reasonable degree, at least, attend to the business of tp.e office as his predecessors did, and never thought he would seize every opportunity, no matter how trivial, of running away to indulge in all the idle frivolities and questionable fol lies of the day. If anything should tend to impair public confi?ence in him, it is this incessant desertion of hisduties, and when November comes, i thousands will, by their votes, give bim permission to leave Washington 1 permanently, and in the futur J seek t his own pleasure without making tht : nation pay ?pr his frpjice, 11 The Late Grant Ku Klux. Raid and Riot at Titos, IV, mease's* In the Newberry Herald, of the 3d, we find the subjoined letter from Mr. Thos. W. Blease, living on the Saluda side of our District, giviugan account of the fate most disgraceful and brutal conduct of one Malony, a U. S. Commissioner, accompanied by a gang of negro.desperadoes, in their late riotous assault upon Mr. Bi ease and family,. whilst.in search, as they alleged, of c?rtaih parties charged with Ku Kluxism. The story is uot at all creditable to the U. S. Govern ment, and the officers ( Grant has put in authority to do his dirty work. Such indignities will not be tolerated always. And when the people are once aroused for vengeance, tyrants and tyranny must succumb. Read and reflect:. On Sundayj'^23d June, one James Maloney, who.is reputed to be Assist ant United 'Sft&es Marshal, accompa nied by Peter Simmons, (a black "nigger,") Oscar Cannon, copper colored, (a penitentiary bird,) and Willis Johnson, ("yallow nigger,") went to my store at the Cross Roads a?d ordered a lad, Master Wells, who slept in the store with my son, a four teen year old boy, into the store, sta ting that he should shut himself in, and if he came out that the guard that he (Maloney) was going to place around the house would shoot him. Mr. Smith, who was p?ying a visit to Wells, was then rudely assaulted, und ordered to march to my dwelling house, (about a half mile from the store,) each of the cowardly fellows single filing behinc1 him as close as they could walk, lock step. Smith's lite was threatened, and he assured that if he made any noise whatever that he would be shot'. About half wav between the store and dwelling my son, going from supper to the store, (where he and Master Wells slept,) was pounced upon by two "big niggers," who held his arms behind him whilst Maloney stood in front of him with a pistol presented to his breast, swearing that he intended to shoot him through. Alter he had kept the boy in this position until the cowardly, tormenting, evil spirit waa satisfied, they turned him loose, tell ing him io keep in the path to the store; that if he turned to the right or left, he would be *8hot by men sta tioned in thc woods for the purpose. The file being rearranged as be fore, with Smith being forced to lead, the niglit being dark; and the foliage of the oaks dense, they came into my yar-1 near the piazza~where Mr.-John ^-r-^*--T\ . i x jar-t Mr T T Perry and myself* were---STK*?5^%. ? wife was in her room at the point of death, having been ignite ill for some time)-and they shouted, to our sur pri-c, '"Shoot every damned rascal that comes out of the house. Shoot ! shoot ! " I d i d n ot kn o w w h a t it mean t. Robbers, Lowrey's band, everything, Hit ted across my br tin. The shout ing, shooting, all, all, what do--.s this mean ? I advanced to meet thom al the steps; Perry vas with me; Barr? and Ward jumpfd into the yard. Barre received a ?vere wound. Sev eral attempts' were made to shoot Ward, but failed. .The alarm to m\ wife was co sudden, and when Barre said, " I am shot.' she thought it waa the voice of our ildest son, and be came so frightened that her recovery is now hopeless. . As soon as I auld,,I ascertained what was the mater. Maloney said that ho had a Tarrant D?r Ward, whom hu had faiM to arrest. What Ward was charge! with he did not make known. Sud he had a warra :t foi" Perry. Pew?said, "If you have, I nm ready tu gowithyott." But he (Maloney) apologized to Barre ; said " he was very sory that he got shot ; but I have a wirrant for you, al though it is of lille importance; some negro has a chage against you; you san stay here wwi Mr. Please ?ind re port to me, if yju get well, at your convenience." t told my son to go quickly for a physician; that Barre would bleed to leath. As he started o?' a "nigger" hew down on him with a pistol, 88'ing, " Il you leah de, house ] will shot yon." None of us were armed j blt were enjoying the quietness of tb holy Sabbath even ing, and awaitng anxiously on her, ivho appeared Imost done with earth ly things, whe: we were pounced np DU by these fietis who pretend to rep resent the officrsof America. I know nothiug of thcofficiala of the coun try; 'never living taken any part whatever inplitics; having all my life pursued ur peaceful avocation of Farmer, artisaiand merchant; but if Chese be their representatives, "God save the county." TIOS. W. BLEASE. !i La Loi Matialc Dans le Sud." The judgmetof foreigners respect ing our affairs is often better than Dur own. It idees jaundiced by per sonal or party ntipathies, and, in a measure, it ufcrs the impartial ver lict of histor We therefore like ;o hear what lreigners say of us. The'Frene! of all the civilized oeople of Eurpe, have had most ex perience wi tl martial law. . They ?now the thin when they see it. The French Court' des Etais- Unis de jects his old tquaintance in the Ku Klux, and thi speaks of him : " Enough bs been said and written vt all times o?xceptional laws in our inhappy couiry-enough denunciai ;ions against ie Government, what 3ver it be, wich takes from the or linary tribiuls cognizance of con spiracies am acts of insurrection. But who cou! bave thought-here of iccusing Confess of having created Draconian lav, and the President of ixecuting thu, at pleasure? It is levertheless be, that at this very noment-in :11 peace at'home and vbroad, whet nothing menaces the ;ranquillity ? the country, General | D? jrant puts uler his heel the people Itw )f the South ind seems to take pleas ire in reving extinguished bates. Io every caridand impart ::i man ,he Bubjecti* of South Carolina to martial law as no other prompting tc is se la m cc bc le th cc th ar is sp in ne ar pr ou te: re Ul ar of ot BE dc on loi' mi ral 1 lis cai cai :han r'artt?flterwk It is usel&s tju fe to contest that-it is manifest-there can be but one opinion, except arnon? the politicians, who are working for j Grant's re-election. The Ku Klux proclamation has no other object, and the ' suspension of Habeas Carpus is as much an outrage on good sense as on liberty. The time has been when such a proceeding would have roused the nation ; but manners change with times; the war has - familiarized, the people with the regime of the sword, and the question of dollars is a much more absorbing one than that of pub lic liberty. The oppressed localities are alone conscious of what is passing -nobody else cares anything for it. Yet the situation ?3 deplorable, and would be perfectly intolerable, any where else than in the "United States where all tyrannies are permissible, if they do not disturb the high spec ulators. " To invent a new rebellion at the South, and achieve glory by crushing it, and thereby win a re-election, is, without any doubt, the object of Gen. Grant. It is a pitiful policy, which has more of meanness than wisdom in it." .f Crushing Out the Rebellion." No di -passionate observer of the proceedings of the Philadelphia Con vention can have failed to be impress ed by the fact that in the minds of a majority of the members of that body, of those at least who took the most active part in its proceedings, the idea which appeared to*bc uppermost was that the great Republican party had yet a mission to perform which ii only half fulfilled, and that our " soldier President'' has a work to do which is at best but half done. That work, that mission, is to "crush out the vestiges of the rebellion." For this purpose, in his congratulatory message to Mrs. Grant, Mr. George H> Stuart, of Philadelphia, piously prays that the life of her hero hus band may yet be spared. In the teeth of the fd mal declara tion contained in the preamble to the eighteen resolutions which constitute the Convention's political confession of faith-that the party has "sup pressed a gigantic rebellion"-it i practically assumed, for the pul p?se of the present canvass, that the rebellion is not "suppressed;" that despite tho party's " eleven years of supremacy," it still lives and flour ishes. While the platform approves in the abstract of the amnesty so grudgingly and tardily bestowed upon " those lately in rebellion," it ap peal's tim-there are others still in "rebellion" upon whom unrelenting war must be waged. Hence the need of "the revival of the war spirit" upon which some of our contempora ries plume themselves, as among the mosiuhopetul, and. gratilying- featrirea-L ui mc wn.-w--. -J - Cen as we | have already mentioned, found vent after t he nominations in singing " Old John Brown," and "Sherman's March Through Georgia," and other war songs suitable to the occisi?n. It was the spirit, in met, of a war meet ing-the spirit which might have be?n af propriai ely evoked at SOVSM ?risis of our great .struggle, ota meet ing held in furtherance of tho draft )r for the encouragement cf volun ;eering. Like the songs which were ?ung and tho speeches which were nade, ic belonged to the year 1S0J. Considered as happening in the year LS72-seven years airer thc close ol he war-the whole thing was a sim ile anachronism. Tho country in a tate of profound peace, and Kr?g ling with might and main to go nacl; 0 the ways of peace, ha> no need for. , "r vi val of t he war spirit. As for the supposed exigency of bc times, which, in the jud ruicub of nine ol' the delegates to tho Ccmvcn ion, neecsaiatted thc renomination of ?rant, upon the same principle upon midi the renominating of Lincoln ras urged in 1S?4, that it was bad olicy to "swap horses while crossing stream"-the analogy in point of 1 rc ti m.-tances altogether fails. Willi thee arguments and considerations rhich might be urged in favor of ron. Grant's renomination wc decline D meddle. They concern the party nd not us. But the whole Ameri in people, without distinction of olitics, are concerned in denying tho l'Uiststrous and unfounded allega on that there is any rod stream of rar to be crossed in IS7??, and crisis f thc .country's fate now priding, to e compared to that'of e ight years nee. As fur tho shallow and hol )W pretence that the spirit of rebell ?n, driven from the opon tield, still irks at thc South, in the form of se *et and treasonable organizations, pery circumstance of their present mdition controverts it. The only vestiges of the rebellion" remaining ? be crushed are the poor, i rapo ve r hed, Ktiffering Southern people them ilves, proscribed by Congressional ,W8, despoiled by carpetbag govern ent, struggling with what heart and uirage they can still command to ;ttcr their fallen fortunes. We are surprised that the party aders at Philadelphia should not icniseh'eo have seen the glaring in msisteney between their actions. If Q rebellion is " suppressed," and nnesty to those " lately in rebellion" a thing to be approved, and the .read and growth of fraternal feel g a subject of congratulation, what ?ed for evoking the " war spirit" lew, for singing " war songs," for caching afresh crusade to "crush ,t" the vestiges of treason ? If af r " eleven years of supremacy," the hellion is not yet suppressed, the nion not yet restored, what stronger gument could be furnished in favor confiding the unfinished work to her and more competent hands ? tltimore Sun. w t\ '1' ni ot di O? te til w ft m el ti? co iii di or of m to ni; ci< ca an th wi us til se' tin wi asl tei ari frc en a s of un ho a s JCS- Tho New York Sun's corrcspon-1 g0 nt John is a very sharp fellow. In o of his letters ho says : " I bet a fel v a dollar that I could tell him how ro\ aft ph .ich water to a quart went under tho jg ( lroad bridge ovor the Mississippi at jr{ ihuquo in a year. Ho bet, and I said _ a pints to a quart. I won tho bet." j _ ST What building aro people most ' lee :ely to catch cold in ? Tho bank, bo- WI iso there are so many drafts there, eas hat makes so many drafts in it? Bo- inc w> so many people go there to raise gr< ? wind. ] en! Hu?a Baga or -wedis!. Turnips. : The experience of last year.-?viii doubtless induce a more general at tention to this ?ind similar crops, this season, ibr the supply f tood to stock j of every description : in England this : is their great stand by,'and very j largely by its aid, Jier agriculture hus j been brought up to the present high j standard, perhaps not'excel led even j by that of Holland and Belgium : but with us,' although a very inipcr j tant adjunct, in stall feeding, still for I the same purpose, we have the Indi ? an corn, which the EngliVi; b?ive not. and it answers our purpose better. For sheep and milch cow.- ti;e Kura Baga is f und very nutrition.-?, sur passing most other roots; an*d it ii good also occasiomi ly lo feed to hor ses, if cut fine, and mixed with cut straw or hay,' asan alterative teed. It is also an excellent table vegetable; is very productive, and thor is more nutritive matter rn it than an ? other, of the turnip fatniiy; it i< hardier; and easily kept, and preserver its edi ble qualities long atter ot.h.-r kinds cease to be lit for tn ble use in Opting. When intended for food for stock, early sowing is desirable, say between the middle and last of June, which will secure larger roots and a heavier yield; if for table use, the seeding may be delayed till 'the first up t-. i he middle of July. This root is d<r-; dedly a potash plant : in rh* inore n ic elements thereoI ..tv i ??in?? poi limo, sulphuric acid, soda an< phoric acid, thc firs* pi'ep?n'deral .g. Ashes or their equivalent re thu m >x\ desirable of thin cu.-.? o? miir;.>.- foi tiie turnip. Sea we-is are rich bi potash, wherever t,o bo conveniently had, yielding on au ave; age from eight to ten per-c nt ; stable lind barn yard manure wi i ai. o supply some po ash ; fish furnish aiso an ex cellent application, and if formed in-, tn competa with plaster and any rich earth, would, when reduced, be an excellent manure for turnips, continu ing also phosphoric acid, limo, chlo ride-of'sodium, salt, etc.; sait will supply the soda irnd chlorine, and plaster of Paria the sulphuric acid re quired for the turnips. Thorough preparation of the soil is requisite fen- uea.rly ail croj B, but in this, it is espe 'ially so; when prac ticable, plow two cr three times and fully eight to teri inches deep; reduce tho soil to the finest tilth by harrow?; ina and otoss harrowing, and the uso of the roller. It you sow broadcast, the manure should bc evenly spread and plowed in ; .b?jl'rwhc?i rhu> grown, they -.viii require?'mueh larger amou:^ of manure. If drilling is nv >rted to, is is decidedly best, spread the ma nure evenly 'in the drdls, and run furrows north and south, from 20 to 2'2 inches apart and four indies deep, it the manure, then cover -with the plow and run a light harrow over the furrows. The next step is to drill in the seed, which should be done by a tiri!ling machine, on the top of.thc Hue of tue furrows prepared a* above directed, md thc worlc ii done, n the impie cent will make the-drill,-'drop the .oed, cover and roll, ali at one and he sam? operation, which economise-* imo and labor-ami by tko by, eve y farmer tuid gardener should have i-drilling machine.' Ef you have n?-?i nch an implement, then stretch a line .long the centre of the furrows, ami rith a rake or the corner of a hue. race it drill an ^ deep, drop ti.e etd from tue m Wt ii ot a bottle, ni ny other contrivance ?.! the ki fid ii the bottle equal quantities of ?we ! rid sand should be placed, md '.?e ons tan fly shaken as yon pp-grea* t-> scare* an even and thin distributi in f thc seed?: as tho seed 1.-3 dropped, it a hand follow with a rake..rn o"v r t ho seed, and press the ?O? down ?i them with the back part oi ir. The manure r.-uouiiaended .v-.uld e per aore, ten bushels ashes, t-hr" . r more of bone: dust, two salt, and no ol' piaster; thrpw it i?? bulk, le: remain eight to len days, shovel i; per we i, then broadcast it over the' round, harrow it in and roi i ; ilion )w thcse?d, lightly harrow them in 1 L 11 a light harrow and roll-or 2? v'O-horse loads ol well rou yd n ird and Stable manure, ur r . -, nantity of either ; half ul ?hu ... urn should be plowi I in eight. her half four rich-- .!.. rp iho'n r??p ress with a inSxture <i? ; :i . ?. (hes, two do. salt, aud jue do. i i r; harrow in the in.ixn.ir?-. roll. ?nw ie seed, and harrow ir . .- li -o- v ith :i light harrow, and /till th* 'ound. Other .forumhs might i.. tined, but anything producing the emeuts contained in turnips, me li mned above, cnn be applied at the nvenience or laney of the cultivator. Soak the seed twenty-four hour-, in, ih oil, then dr.-.in oi? ttie oil. and ?y thc seed with ashes, slaked lime plaster, or a mixture of any or all "these-this secures an earlier ger ination, .and the .-dor is a repellant insects, and the oil is ol itself a I lu anare. A pound bf seed is suffi-1 3111 for an acre, ont to allow for all j w? suai ties it is better to sow a pound i so d a half. Less quantities by one-1 sb ird of the manure :tnd the seed th ll bc required if the drill system is an ed. The land should be a deep fer e sand or sandy loam. A? soon as the plants come up, for ! cst .'eral mornings, while the dew is on ' foi em, the plants must be dusted over j pc th a mixture composed of twaparts 1 thi ?es, one part soot, and ono of plas- j yo .; continue this until the plants j 3 in the rough leaf, to protect tilgra . slu im insects-when they are large ; do ough to be worked; if drilled, run j mill cultivator between the middle i GjJ the'rows, leaving the line of plants ( disturbed ; work them by hand and .. 2 at thc same time-in a we*ek give econd working, and thin them out ? as to stand 8 inches apart in the an( vs. In another week or ten days ? CU1 er the second working, give tho mts a third working, and the work Jis lone-it there are *ny naked spots, " iw plants from places wheie they v i too thick, and dibble them in tho :ant places, eight inches apart, se- i ting a wet. season for the work, ant lien the Ruta Bagas are sown broad- vii it, thin out sc as to stand tv. ?Ive rut :hes apart every way. and stir the as )und lrequeutly and keep the plants tho iitlj free from weeds and gnat. \-iw ti dil Thc Augusta Exchange. In this age ot progress the great idea controlling practical iiien is how to do business in the most expeditious manner. The ' Augusta Exchange, which has re cently been established in our ?'t?t, and is cow ou a sure basis, 'is |i mun Cation of chis idea. A krge'cotton ihfdt, , wei; as other interests, had to?ig i.iadc u apparent that an institution ol the kind was necessary ni our city. 'Actuated by t this knowledge; certain pf our leading i bus.iii.-ss men se'i tile ?uii in motion amt' the Exchange soon became a hxed fact, lia advantages are apparent to ?di who iook into tue matter, and particularly"?? lo i he 'acuities ud'orded by it for selling ..na p H rc ha s. ng securities, lu the day gone u\, when thc piiucipai wealth bi lau j ?joli-ii w.,s tn ?lt/V?d, lue ei, .iiier j ^^??>mg ul ?ii crop, JU i.iiie ir.ta^s oui ol j ten ii?ve?teU ins piuliis m negroes, Siu'its aim bonds were heul almost altogether in the cities, it lue painter wisitad to borrow money- his only course was to pay Iiis ' tactor a commission, besides'thc regular interest, for advancing. Now this is all changea.* Negroes are no longer property, and.wy must .M.-ek other ui ve3iments. iue question ti.en is, where should the plauter put hi3 surplus? i'ho answer to luis seems plain fcouthom se curities ol' every description oiler not only ;ih safe .Hilans ol' mvesimerft as can be found but pav remumrative dividends. In the Exchunage the planter has every facility tor purchasing stocks and bonds of luis character. Augusta is already be . >mm/ the great centre tor the purchase and si..u Southern securities,- and as its advantages become more widely known through the Exchange it will increase in importance. I'ho planter, theu, who has a. i jrtaiu sum WUK ?t nu wishes io invw>i lias juiV to senu ii io .ds (actor with direc tion;: to purchase specified stocks or bonds, and without delay or troubie it will be Possessed of good securities by deposit ing them as tx>Uateral, he will find no dimculty in securing u loan from-any ol' the banking institutions of the' city Should ha desire any time to dispose ol his stocks or bauds, they will rn-..-: with ready sale at cae Excu?ngcV A r?gulai cqll ol ali me principal Southern secuniKS at a certain hour.each ?.!;.._* ufiord-j oppoi tunny tor members of Hie Exchange iq either buy or sch; Nearly ali ot the cot ..:>n iiii.js arc represented :n ihe organisa tioH; thcreiore*, the planter will have no trouble in purchasing or ceiling fjfemities at the Exccange, through ins lacwf,'. Much aid iias also L?een givciiipb the cotton irado ot Augusta by Ui^ cstab?st? meru o? tue Exc'iangu. Anorditig unsur-j passed'tacuiities for the management .ul che great staple*, both for present and lu iure deliver}', it will undoubtedly direct much cotton hither that has heretofor iou;::i other outlets. Tho sale of " futures' bas become one of the . great features ? tho-cotton triuie. Previous tn the esta! lishment of tho Exchange a large amount ? i money in the way ol margin? was an nually sent to New .York, tiius takin, away much capital from our midst. Th* Exchange obviates this, and tho margin remain at home. In regard, then, both tri the increase of colton receipts and the n - tention of Margin?, for " futures," the Es change will ad i to ti:0 business and float inp capita! of Augusto. laking it all in al! thc Augusta Ex 1 fiai" ..... isTJiifl of X??i ^S?Sl ';:v;-.v;..r.t?in-:; tution in th'ofSouth. ' Its members are among the most substantial business men .J;' our community, and under their man ago.ment it is bound to flourish and iricrea. tri importance.-Constitutionalist. Brevities ansi Avilies. ?"-* Pov.'?i in Texas the maidens lot warble " Father" come Hom.-," c ?uch times as tho parental relative is PS - elusively cntia.'ied in drinking people's ie.ilth-t!ie old lady "goes forlihn" with : co\v?i?ile. ? ? Tho drug clerk who administered irsenic for magnesia, and killed his man, .ivs lie don't sec why people shouni aako sfi much tone about it, is ?io's made iu apology and done what lie could t<> unka i: right with the family. -r A woman named Joy died at Wa i.t;h, ?H., the other day, at ?ie ase of 07, Tb" people around there had bi - ?un to think that she was going to be a liing of beauty-that is to say, a Joy Drover. . .-. \Vl\ rinw we arc told that a Dela .aro ben i- tho nt?'?her ol' twelve chick ns from nine i-_. *. Th? ownor of thc on ay ?ie can .< ii a lie-she did ii ?th l:or little hatch-it. " A Louisville man, very drunk, ?oled a rattle snake which he found on. :e common by '.?triiiiroini bit-1 him tifty ines. A snake is tooling away his tun i hiting a C/>aisv?Up nun. They an 'K afraid of snakes down here until tiioy at tin t.i ??i choir !> wis. .' . . Danbury News fellow : : The majority of women care but-lit??i kmt suffrage, li the back.or ear seats lukl only be hollowed ont so as to ad di of their bustles lapping over, the illol might go to tlmndor for all they ! ire." sir* An Iowa clergyman, who v.-rar= ri bite hat which lie bought ten yea jo, bi in a terri bio row with hi? eh ure hieb doesn't Uko political preachers. By ">nc 01 thosr. singular freaks Idell eb: trieilA occasionally displays, bode Isiand w;i siriu'fc by lightning! iring a showei , . without th tack being felt by my no. in tho-1 ining States. ??y Newly married daughter-" li-, ngdbes thc honeymoon last, mamma raclical parent-" Untii yon ask yoi isband for money, my dear.'1 SSB* A yoting Lady, seeking a situation, is interested in an advertisement mu one to do light housekeeping. Sn c wrote to the adverli>er, asking where e light house was, and if there Wa* y way of getting to shore on Sundays. ?v With all your commiseration for tfress, join funnies.-: of mind. Inter ; yourself in general happiness, Itel y ll tiiat is human, but suitor not your ace to be disturbed by v oat is neyond $ sphere of your influence ?. : >ydnd ur power lo remedy. .1 Train up a (mild in mc way ho auld go, and when ne gets old he will as ho pleases. t Pj^Why was Noah a bad mouser? ve it up. Because he was forty day.-? :l forty nights before he found ary rac raia.;. pct- A Fe;rt Wayne local was garroted 1 robbed last", week. Tho robbers 8? ! ^ Ti ize .bf Th bia ed three lead pencils, a broken.-iiiie th comb, and a cerii?cate of nic-m' .. - pinafrco-luuftiiolai). bnttRpel'il' <i u solvcfi. The poor fellow".. i:t . -. - r'tlranything} a.i ? r!u-y i-- .. .... ar Tho."Kepnlnican," apnpi . 1 published by*colored mi n at Mary-1 lc, Tenne.-..-ee, ropudiateM Grant, and is tile < ;reoi..-y'banner io if.-, mast-head I the only standard representative of! principle^ for which we coiorod race j conl?mjjd, J. ^ O LK Midsummer Maladies. Thc hot solas rays that? ripon (lie ha . vests generate imny distressing dSiease . Ir* the liver bc at all prt<dlspo36$j to i. regularities, this is the season ? wide.' ! bilious attacks may be .muci/a ' d. .. weale stomach, too, ia lveakl iu th s am mer months, and the loss o .. . n i i t; through the pore-i by excessive Krspirr tion is so great, that a y.-holesoim toni combining also the properties ot' fl - '.hi sive stimulant and gent?o exhibition, in many cases necessary to heaiuu iu under no circumstance!? should- be di . ponsed wimbytiiesicldy and'debilitat!- . ut all the preparations intended thus ' > refie^h, bUrttam; and fortify tue hunc1 frame, lhere is none that will corni . . wi'..i li .fjtetter'.s Celebrated #??tou:. Bu-. . They iiave becn-wcighed bi v '.. Oaf.... -. o': experience and not lo: 'I wan mg ; nave boen recoinmeuded un/n Lite .... ; L a* a great medicivai specific. ; -c no ix ?uverage, and in spite ol interc-' id opposition trom innumerable quarter, sunni, aller a twenty yeais trial, attfce head ol all proprietary mediemos i -. teuued fur tho prevention ?md cure*! ; Jl .ordinary complaints ol' the stomach, the* liver, me bowels*, and tho nerves. the unhealthy districts border! og : o great rivers 'of California, Hostet:-- s .Stomach Bitters may' be classed as . a standard one tor every species of . - mitteilt or "Temittent Teve,*. The pct-! . who inhabit those districts, place I , > the most implicit confidence in the {u, . parution-a confidence tina is ineivi- i every year by the results of its op' tion. As bitters, so ?lied, of the* most p nicious character, are springing up ? tungi on every side, the public is herc forewarned against the draia-shop fraud ?. Ask for Hostetter's Bitters, see thatL label, etc., are correct, and, remeinb i that the genuine article is never sold bulk, but in bottles only. A Fragrant Breath ami "?carly Ti : Are easily attuned, and those w ho :i to a\ ail tin insel<|p of the means, sh. , not complain when accused of gross i. lect. The riozonoNT will--peedly er. >' . cate the cause of a foul bre-ith, beantifj -, hig anti preserving the tielh to the oldei t Spaulding a t?lueisusefui in cc. ry lionise A Healthy Digestion. Lifo is rendered miserable when the digestive organs are impaired. Food i i - comes repulsivo; the body emaciated;? i.te minn depressed, and* melanchi ly m-oods over you. TUITTS ^GETA iSLti. LIVER "PILLS is the remedy'.or these evils; they produce sound digi - lion; creatoagood appetite, impart: - freshing sleep and cheerf ulness or min-... CHARLESTON, S. C., August 1, lSOD. Lit. W.H. TUTT-Dear Sir.--I wi; to inform you, and if you desiri' you'?' . publish it,* that I have been afflicted ;. upwards of seven years'wi th Dysbqwi I could eat nothing that agreed wirb bi X became emaciated, bsd n>energy, ai felt gloomy and melancholy all tho tim . 1 have been using yen;* Liver Pill> S t?f-co wcjiks, ana have experienced greatest hench?. I have a Une appetiUl and eau now eat anything. I corah ' * recommend them to all who have Dv? pepsia. DENNIS O'HALLORA*. Dr. pitt's Hair Dye contains no S><ff*t Lead. BLESSES are thay who seek relic;' !V?u " Liver Complaint," "Billiousness,' Rt Blood, Pimples, Blotdhcs, Eruption Rough Skin, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas aw Scrofulous diseases, by tho' use .>!' Vi. Pierce's Alt. Ext. or" Golden Medica. Discovery, for they. shall b?- rtamw w knowing that the cure is complete. Sold by all druggists. VITALIZE THE HAiRv-Ti'hy docs thc hair become harsh and dry-why decs i tii'.l out-wiiy does it become gray:' Simply because the life has gone out cf rt. Tho libres draw sustenance from th <ealp as thc grass draws aliment from the .?il. mid when tho supply of imtrimei - cut off in cither, case the nroiiui '.ithors tmd die-;. At ih? firs: symiu. f i!.-ay. therefore, tho unfed o^aiY-fi . ror,ts of tho hair should bo i cf.- ?li d ?in ! ..Mnforeori \, ith LYON'S KATirAin?N, ; july preparation which wii .'ir ; . . il.tinents and kcr-p them ina vfgon s .onditioji after tltey have begun to >u Y>. Wini a deficiency of their natural sti; . rm:. As long aS tba Kath:: ron is ?hi: - tilly used, with a proper d ?gi*eo o? fri - ion, morning and evening, so long w I . bo impossible for the bair ti* whiten all out from the scalp. THE VILLAGE CHDR*.':;. -It shorn d tot look like a barn or storehouse, ; iinuld be a building, tho very sight il irhich would cause devout feeling.- i tie breast A well-carved cross s;i. ; .oint to heaven ; massive paneled lion ld impress the visitor with I 'ilemnity of the place int i whicli . utering; stained glass should Ih'ro iy.--.tieTight athwart the'aisles; pul Itiir, coi i i ng .i.nd .galleries should bb ameuted with figurative mould : nd ;in> columns that support thc es, and th.c balusters that rail them lould bc of classic patterns. Any . relation- wishing such a charcl) sitoi lid their laders for finishing mai . ??Mr. P. P: TOALS, importerof'Fnv .unod glass, and manufacturer of : baler iii Doors, Sashes, Blinds, ?fee.. -' ) Ltaync street, Charleston, S. C. 2?. W. ABB IS Oft, LAW BANGE, SndBFiELn, C. ll. firiek Oilico, formerly oHlcc <u ; - igne ifi Addison. .Tam j, 15? -J Law Msec. THE undersigned hr.vo formed :i Cc irtnerehip for fhfc PRACTICE OF LAT * Kdgeni'ld County, ard the Counties . f, o tifth Circuit, under thc nau r and vie of MAGRATH <fc AHN BY. Tiiey will also Piactice in the Courts .. ; rial Justices Jbr taese Counties. THOMAS P. MAGRATH JOHN R. AENEY. Bdgelield; Dec. l l, ? tf -*i? IHN E. R.vrox. JEFF. Pi TAT.BEB' BACON ? TALBERT. rnntNEYS A>TD COUNSELLOK* AT LAW, ill practice in Ev'gefield and adjoint] ? lun?cs. Edgefield C. H., Apr 2 om ! . L. BONHAM. R. C. BONI: VM ^XffA-SI & EO^K'A.t?. Attorneys at Law. Oflice, at Edgefield C. H., S. C. Ian 24 , tf ? W7H. SHAFFER, Dentist,' IA VING located at Edso.'ieh" ofl'eH his Professional services t? ? vit us and surrountling countrv. ec al . late residence of S.S. Tom ni i:so. -'eb 28 tf t?freshiBg Soda Wator a Ladies Praise It 1 The Gentlemen Like It J :-i Everybody Drinks Tt ! Iv S iperb Soda Fount is now pa ful' ^t. "' 't':;tands ready at all hours of H .} ?jp Oirnlsh customers with^de . . \ rpi ie SODA WATEL"^ flavored r-stand purest SYRUPS, rn pi attention given to every ono. A. A. (?TJSBY. lay 22 tr _22 T?tt^ Medidneri, N hand a large supply of Tutt'sS?T* SAPARILLA aS QUEEN'S DI }HT. rice $1 per bottle . .