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t %demIhttfl IJa2 tV _ e- - --- "- - "_ A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &c. Vol. XX. NEWBERRY, S. C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER I1, 1884. No. 37. r =D .I -AT REDUZD PRICES. Luey llinlton Tobr,:a;et. I._ d>er !':ug tialhut. f resh. 15r. per" can llc,r-. ,rti's 1,3l Ir:el'er?, . D:. per pkg S;. i .l Ri_'toffe". 1:. per !b. I): riam Sntokin Tob:eco 40,. per lb leter:l Inew br:tnld of Ie,co. viz: .\ar,ie MiitchellI Ml:rgg.e pencert' -'ir Pick l:t- Rt"x. dark everal niew br,ik of, Cigars: 1'lit Alaska. 'he Se:.nsat ion, I,:irtate adtLe Gem An extra rine Iot of Pickles and Salites: Chow-Chow. Mlixett Pickles. Celery :Ince :uii, Pepper Sauce in large bot tc:. i a novel pattern Ire-1h lot Potted i Hlm. 12 1-2 per can The ,elebrated A rora Ro-.asted Rio Coffee Extra finle large Lnmons; Ext:a fiue Assorted Jellies, 12 1-2c. per Zlass A l:irgt lIt of can goodc. juit received A fre-: inrvoiie of C:i ailv. well-assorted Ne w L: ver R-lisinU .n+i~ A GenerII Strock of Good. at low tig nres for Cash only. B. 11. LOVELACE. C(NT RACTORS -AND BILJ [LERS. -AND Lumber Mill Men The unlir-igned respect fully inform tIe citizens of Newberry and the surrom)Itling (Cottntties that. having loea tl at lIele:na. they a pre-rpa:erl to con r:at for. a Il u ill. Churches. Dwell iag- and other Buiblinge. We gular:i tee satisfa::ie)n both inl the (liality of our wot k a in the priCes charged for it. Ilavii an exeellcntt saw mill we are also prepare. at short notice. to Sa %w :ul dres lumber. Orders solicited. SHOCKLEY BROS. IrebI 14 TRADE MARK REGISTERED. A New Treatment For Cousumttption, Asthna. 1roti chitim. Dy)spepsia, Catarrh, Headache. )e,ilit y, Rheumati-m, Neuralgia. and cill Chronic and Nervous Disorders. A CARD. we. the untiersigne . h avmr received great and r.erumnent benotit from the use of ""Ct )1 10)UNI) OXYGEN." prepared and :t!ministrred by Dhus. NrA.tK:Y & PAL.EX. of Ihila.eli,La, :ind reir isti-ctt that it is a new diiscovery in medical -cience, and all that is claimel for it. c,u"ider it : luty which we owe to the many th1u: d-s who are suiTering from chronic anti so-ca;l,t- "itur:abe" di,::ses to <to all that we cau to make it, virtues known and to inspire the publie with c~niiieace. We have ,ersonal knowiledge of Drs. Starkey & Palen 'a-iey are eunate 1. intelligent. and consciention: physi;i:ns, who will not, we are -urc. make <n' statewent which they do not know or bli;ve to be true, nor publish any tes timon:als or reports of cases which are not gen nine 3reber ot Congress from Phila-lelphia. T. __lTItR E.ltr andi Puibl-sh:-r "Arthur's H1emen Magazine," P'hiladelphia. V. L. ComIad. E.iter Lutheran Observer," Philadel - PIL. LAEPIA, P.,. June I. :8'2. In t:i natural inqiry in regard 1o our and11 per.monal standing, and to gira conuldence in our statements aind the e of ouar testimniials anti repaorts or ront the abivo cart from gt-ntle widelv known and of the htighaest cter.'Our "Tre itise on Compound tainiurz a hi-N ory of the discovery 'of action of thi. re'markable enra and i auage i<eor' d ofsurpri<lng mp jtlion. Catarrh. Neuralria. Bron-. ete.. ii I a wide ranigeOo uchronic DrW A fRK EY& PA LE.. Gira:u Street, P~hiladel P IA NOS, Grand, Upright and Square. T[he ;tuperiorlty of the 4- sTriEFF" Planos Ia reeogized and ieknowleltde by the highest mos~t~leal t horittee. andi the demand for them Is as steaidliI in creasing as their merIts arre becoming ;no egtenively known. JIigh20t HonlouS Over all Americaun and many European rivals at1 the Exposition, Paris, 1878. I:uve the Endorsemient of over 100 differenut Colee. Seniries and Schools as to their Durability. They are Perfect in Tone and WIork mnanshidp and .EleganUt in Appearance. .\ large a-sortmwent of second-bnud Genra~.l Whiolesaule Agents for Burdett, Palace, Sterling, New Eng gland, and Wilcox and White OR G ANS. ALNOS and ORGANS sold on EASY IN. STALLMENTS, giarl.os taken in Exchanrige, also thor o .ghlIy repaired. tjiSenud fourilltra ted Pianoi or Or gai Catanlognb. Chas. M. Stieff, No, 9. NORTH L1lBERTY-STREIET, BALTIMORE. MD. F. Wert er, Ir., Ageut, Nawberry. Asril 27 Democratic Nominees. FOR PRESIDE'T. STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND, Of New York. FOR VICE P't SIDENT, THOMAS A. HENDRICKS Of Indiana. FOR GOVERNOR, HUGH S. THOMPSON. FOR I.1EUTENANr.GOVERN3R, JOHN C. SHEPPARD. F,J.: zLCiTARY OF STATE, J. N. LIP;C0.::B. FOt TREASURERt. J. P. RICHARDSON. FOR .IDJUTANT .N:) INSPECTOlt GENER.AL, A. X. MANIGAULT. FO1R C .MPT1OLLEi: GENERItA. W. E. STONEY. FOl ATTORNEY GE'ERAL. C. U. MILES. FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF EDUCATIJN, ASBURY COWARD. OR CONGIESSMAN TIIIRD DISTRICT, D. WYATT AI:EN. FOR SOLICITOR SEVENTH CIRCUIT, D. R. DUNCAN. For the State Scnate, J. A. SLIGII. For the lhouse of Representatved, S. POPE. 0. L. SCHUMPERT. W. D. HARDY. For SherilT, W. W. RISER. For School Commissioner, G. G. SALE. For Judge of Probate, J. B. FELLERS. For Clerk of Court, J. Y. McFALL. For Coroner, J. N. BASS. For County Commissioners. E. C. LONGSHORE. J. A. CROMER. A. J. LIVINGSTON. For County A-ditor, W. W. HOUSEAL. For County Treasurer, A. H. WHEELEE. SEND ~OR PRICE LIST. MCE IA E E'S Jewelry PAI,(E 224 KING ST. CHARLESTON, S C. LARGEST STOCK. LOWEST PRICES IN THE SOUTH. REP IIRING A SPECIALTY. SEND mE YOUR WATCHES. Nov. 15-1y. DuieWest FEMALE COLLEGE NEX I' SESSiG N beginas Monday. Oct. Oth. Number of pupils past yecar 187. Number of teachers 12. FacIlities for Frech,.b Music and Painting uusurpassed. Cost of' board and reg ular tuition for year, 6163 00. For Cata logae apply to the President, J. P. IEG'EDY. Aug 2935 2m Due We~st, S. C. liver, KidoI 0r N0018tfl Iroulde. Symptoms: Impure blood, costive boweb., Irregular appetite, sour belching. panins ha side, back and heart, yellow urine, burni ng when urinating, clay.colorod stoola. bai breath. no0 desire for work, chills. fevora, trritability, wh'tishx tongue, dry cough. dizzy hes.I. with dull pain in back part, 19ss of mnelunry, foggy sight. For these trouble '-SW A YNE'.4 lL i,S" are a sure cure. Box. (3o Pills), by matl, 25 cts.. 5 tor Sl.00. Ad dress. lilt. SW A NI. & SON, Philada., Pa. Sold by Diruggiste. Jas. 84-ly. COHUPTO CUE BRWE - S TIlE IIERLD AND NEWS EVERY TIIURSDAY MORNING At Newberry, S. C. BY THOS. F. GRENEKER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERUS--S2,00 PER A!NUlM. _____nvariabI4 in Advanec. leb PinUng, Done at this Offie. At Law t4Amm M fu lIocfrp. WHAT FOUR MAIDENS CAUGHT. --:0: Four marrying mai,iens summering wCr.t, Each cast her 1i: tie net: Returning, they idate to ""nia" what Cartune each has mt t. - oh. na !" said intellkciual Jane. "I caught a college man; No mnoney: but hi< stock of brains Voub l load a cravan." 0i. nma!" remarkel yount Sophy Ann, '"1 caught a splendiil lule: No brains; but lots and lilts of eah. And bluest sort of blootl." "oh, ma !" said delicate Louise, "I gained some strength anI hea'th; I alko : auxht a jonrtialIst. Whose brains will gain him wealth." "No time to iish had I," said Nun Solne thi: ty-four years old --'ct, staying out to watch these girls, I caught a dreadful cold." ADI'Is NW YORK LETTER. I wish some one would tell me if he could, why it is, that when a criminal commits some particular ly atrocious crime an interest is awakened in him that a hundred in nocent men or women could never excite. Only a few years ago a brutal negro strangled a woman ander particularly horrible circun stances, and for nearly a year he poised in prison as a first class dude; uimiring friends sent him good clothes. fruit, flowers, ice cream, and all the delicacies of the season, not to mention first class cigars and other like consolations. Three (lays before his execution a respectably dressed and not had looking woman, called to see him, but was not admitted. She tried for an entire day to see him but failed; she had never seen him and did not know him, and yet when finally refused wept like a child, and going out purchas d a basket of flowers at a cost of five dollars and sent it in to the murderer, with her love. This is the very quin tessence of madness, and yet in Brooklyn a scene was enacted last Sunday which makes me think that some of my colored brothers are daft. In that goodly city a few weeks ago they hung a negro mur derer named Jefferson, one of the most heartless desperate brutes that ever paid the penalty of his crimes upon the gallows. He had been a terror from his boyhood, a thief and a drunkard; as far as could be learned he had not a soli tary redeeming feature in his t har acter. IIe murdered two innocent people and nearly killed two more, maiming them so that one will be terribly disfigured for life and the other, his own brother, will carry the marks of his injury to his grave. No sooner was his awful crime made public, than forthwith an army of philanthropic cranks be came interested in Mr. Jefferson. Ladies called upon him, ministers of all denominations became fear ful he might be lost and they all appeared to be afraid thlat some body else might save him. Some kind-hearted-Sisters of Charity at tempted to pray with and convert him, bnt the regular chaplain of the jail seemed to think that he might just as well die in his sins as have anything to do with the papists. Linda Gilbert, who is known as the prisoner's triend, a sort of crank in her way, who believes if you find a man robbing yoin- house, instead of shooting or arresting him, you should give him a ten dollar bill she took up Jefferson's case. Linda has money, is a true philanthropist; she does not fool away her loose change on innocent or unfortunate people-not she, but let some no torious scoundrel be guilty of some terrible crime, the worse it is the more she glories in her protege, and until the gallows claims him or States prison gets him the gentle Linda will furnish him. with every good thing that heart of man could -wish for. Miss Gilbert and many others became interested in Jeffer. son; they fought Justice up to the very last moment, but at last every' legal resouree had been exhausted ~and Mr. Jefferson departed for the happy hunting grounds. lHe mag. nanimoucly forgave all of his cne. !nies, gave Miss Gilbert his skele ton, and died certain that the Gol dJen Gates were opened and ready to receive him. Some weeks have > assed since then and last Sunday a respectable colored clergyman de nounced the execution of Jefferson as a judical murder. Tihe colored people seem to think that there is a strong prejudice against their race, and from their efforts to get their -criminals off', seeum to think that -tey are entitled to some special exemption from punishment. It is about time that this mawkish sym. jathy for murderers, thieves and vagabon-1 s generally, were stamped o>ut, and that more was done by -these would be philanthropists fox sufferinlg wretches who have nev-er had the fortune to knock down a traveller with a sand bag or havc seen the inside of a States prison. There is too much gush over no torious criminals and too little interest in those who are not. - All ihe ef~Ible 1w4# Ate n6t dead yet. Across the river lives a gen- try t!ernan by the nam- of Jones, and the Joncs had a young and beaut-ful to wife, who was sev:ral years the no, junior of ,Jones. Near Jones's to lived one Sylvester Grey who re of joiced in a most amiale and ex- a I te'llent wife and three very beauti- a ful cl,ihlrcu, but it is evident now ki that .Ir. Sylvester forgot that he ras was married and for m.:tter of that Ian so did Mi s. -Jones. but Jones did so, not. If Mrs. Jones forgot the re- sot sl)ect an-l fidelity that was due to ing Mr. Jones, Mr. Jones had a most gra lively sen,e of what was due to dis himself. and he made up his mind life that it would be a remarkably cold ofi day when he, the aforesaid Jones, ass got left. On Sunday last Mrs. mu Jones made up her mind that she exi would levant with Mr. Sylvester our Grey, and M r. Sylvester Grey made an3 up his mind that he would fly with ent Mrs. Jones. Everything was ready, act the pair stood in the depot ready to has fly; the conductor had halloed "all f aboard" and they were just in the is I act of stepping on the train when who should suddenly appear on the scene but Jones-the injured Jones. Fly and save yo. rself darling, said TIl Mrs. Jones, and darling flew and left Mrs. Jones to take care of her- c self. Did Jones tear his hair, up- c, braid his wife and try and commit mi. suicide by stabbing hiimself with a of I bar of soap? Not a bit of it. and cl1 right here is where Jones show- t ed his good horse sense. IlIe is never said a word to Mrs Jones. boo but he took hold of her and began 11 to strip her of her jewelry. IIe our lightened her of her watch and li chain, he took off her bangles, a aj nice pair of $7() bracelets he slipped lar in his coat-tail pocket, a necklace wa made of gold dollars was the next ed thing that came to hand, finally he in went for her diamond earrings; this we was the last ounce on the back of Ire the dromedary, and Mrs. Jones 'I fought like a tiger, but it was no l" us,. Jones evidently meant busi- 1ll ness, and as ha had the law on his stit side resistance was useless, so rath- its er than part with her ears Mrs. .j Jones let the rings go. Jones evi- in dently considered that he had all that was valuable about Mrs. Jones. of They were love souvenirs that he the h:tdrpaid for in hard cash in brighter ry and happier days, and he had io pre idea that Mr. Sylvester Grey should rea carry off all that valuable plunder ;ur with the oth. r movable property. reg There was no word of reproach, no l threats. Jones turned on his heel , and went quietly back to his work cha just as if nothing had happened, die leaving Mrs. Jones to go to Jericho dril or any other foreign capital which ter, she found most congenial to her health. It may be considered fine ate writing acco ding to the Concord or "rhE Chautauqua standards, but I say. us Bully for Jo Ies. I admire Jones. tac He is my statndard of the esthetic 4of man of the future. ie has shown i. himself a man of taste and feeling n -taste in the articles lie selected ~. from Mrs. Jones' adornments and siel feeling in the manner in which lie pe went after them. Again I say,sn "Bully for Jones." He did just orf what he ought ' .have done. for a th woman of that ko.d was not worth bet fighting for. c We have the promise of another ~ Lunatic Asylum scandal.Mrs.Wylie C the millionaire widow of Trarry town, who disappeared so suddenly 1 two years ago, it appears has been J incarcerated in a Private Asylum 3 by her loving relatives all that time. pot She had an income of 825,000 a tb year, and her relations wanted to car spend it for her. They had her de- WE clared a drunkard, her servants* were suborned to do it. They then ing shipped her off to a private lunaticPo asylum and paid one hundred dol lars per week to have her kept thet e. foc of course the doctor who kept this IIb lunatic paradise was convinced that by she was mgd as a March hare so rec long as lhe got a~ hundred dollars a wek for keeping her. This is the the saP,ej worthy that kept Prouse e Cooper in confinement several years, who is as sane as any man in: in New York. Mrs. Wylie's rela- ~ tives got hold of all her property fy and made $i0,000 a year by kceep- tb ing her in prison. The affsir will m be before the Courts in a week, and gi, I hope it may lead to a thorough g4 investigation ot' these private asy- ou lum horrors and stamp them out rat forever. W. J. Hutchiuson, the broker pei who tried to swindle John R. Duff, and got kicked out of the Stock Exchange for his rascality, losing de his $40,000 seat and $40,000 life W insurance, came to grief this week, al IHe had a long career of success yc and was supphosed to be worth m about four millions of dollars. The break began when he was expelled from the Stock Excchange, and from s that time he has steadily gone down hill. It was discovered that he wasn one of the boriowers who helped t the Wall Street bank to ruin. It is said that lie paid nearly $200,000 fo to save his f'alling credit, but it was t all in vain; on Monday he went by the board and is one of the financial wrecks alo'ng Wall Street beach. People are rushing back to town, the cool weather has made the city w deligh tful. I nn? naioita ate all hO'd at *ork 19 ing to save the country. This is proper time for foreign tourists visit the United States, for they v have an admirable oppor; unity learn just exactly what we think >urselves. Of course it must be ,tle confusing to an Englishman. German. cr a Frenchman, to >w why we select the greate cals for the highest offices in tl: d and wihy we do not select ae of the best citizens instead of .i of the worst. It is not an, dify spectacle or o,e that can bring tification to decent men to see a tinguished citizen of blameless nomina ed for th highest .e in the people's gift, and then assinate him with batieries of d and filth It is not. a pleasant ibi,ion that we are making of1 selves. It is humiliating from standpoint, and the sooner it is ed the better. It is the most ive campaign in New York we e seen since 1840. tocks are getting a lift and oil :itiug. Yours truly. BROADBRIM. E SPRE.1D OF CHOLERA. wing to the spread of the Asiatic tera and its easy means of trans siont through travel, transportatioti aerchandise. the ttails,(etc., the fi ies for which are now so exten114ive.) State Board of Health, in antici ion of its visit to our shores, have ,ed an earnest circular to the local rds urging them to precautio:ary tsures. Extreme clean liness in all surroundings is higliy important, his scourge of mankjud feeds upon . Well water must be pure, sewers idrains kept clean, kitchents, eel and out-house scrupulously neat; cr-closets purified; no trash allow !o gather under houses or in chim corners; no stagnant water to po the air; streets, alleys and lanes 1 swept, and the white-wash brush dly used. 'he Board says: "It should be kept nind that precautionary measures st be taken, imnnediately,before the lcra comes, for sonic of then, if in uted after its arrival will add to spread and virulence." 'he Board urges complete sanitary pection in every city, town and vil 'lie subject under discussion is one )rime moment and should engage most earnest consideration of eve thoughtful person, we therefore sent for the consideration of our ders the following important facts : [t is further recommended to avoid expo to the disease, as the abser.ce of fear in ird to it will not prevent an attack; to e the locality as soon as the disease ap rs and remain away long after it has dis eared; to avoid all fatigue; make no nge in ordinary healthful habit,, or in clothing, occupation, exercise, etc; cat *nripe fruit or vegetables or stale food; ik no milk that has been dilu;ed with wa or that has been received or contained essels washed in other than certainlyun taminated water, and know that the ice I for drinking and other purposes is pure. stomach and bowels should be carefully ;nded to. As cholera Is most frequently ered in by diarrbcea, in event of an at of this nature a pill composed of a grain pium and two of acetate of lead should mptly be taken and if necessary repeated bree hours until a physician can be seen, upon his arrival 'rigidly follow out what eommends.' [here is very little danger in handling the .The contagion Is not propagated by tonal contact; It comes from getting a 1ll portion of the~ evacuation upon the per ,the hands or the clothing, a minimum hich finds access to the bowels through mouth and poisons the individual. The ds should, therefore, be carefully w ashed are eating or drinking. he board recommends the use of a disin tant composed as follows and thoroughly ted: orroive sublimate.........0 graIns. .cohol........ ......... 1 gallon. .naline green............ graIn. 'aer..................1 gallon. .11 evacuatIons should be receIved In a s one fourth filled with the disinfectant, ttle mote of the disinfectant being then tred over them, and the entire contents of essel should be thrown Into a deep and row hole in the ground and covered with th. They should never be thrown .gY EaE else. Should any portion of the floor, is or bedstead be defiled it should at onice 'crubbed with the disinfectant. All cloth ,towels, rags, etc., should, as soon as aibe, be wrapped In a sheet wet with the infectant and then carried to an outhouso boiled for two hours. No remains of d or drink touched or left by the sick, or has remained In the sIck room should eaten hb' the well. They should be covered the disinfectant and buried as already di ted. In case of death the body should be washed, but should at orco be wrap. lIn a sheet wet with the disinfeotant snd sheet not again unwrapped. The inter. at should lake place witbin twenty-four ms. The board are careful to say that 'drink, of alooholle and formented beverages old not be Indulged in,' and that'stimu ts added to the waler drank does not purl. 3r uncontaminate It,' As it Is through mnedIum of water that the disease most guently enters the system. It is recomn aded that all water Intended to be used drinking or other purposes be boIled for hour, and then serated by pouring it thro' air. All wells, springs, cisterns and er receptacles for water should be so ar ged that no surface water can leak into mn, and no well or spring that is exposed contamination from privies should be mitted by local authorities to be used ." It is said that Miss Woodrow, a ughter of the Rev. Dr. James oodrow, of Columbia, has gone the way to China to marry a ung man who is a successful ssionary in that distant country. Fashionable society has now a elling bottle craze. So says an change. Fashionable society t only likes to smell a bottle, but uncork it also. Alcohol is said to be an antidote r snake bite poison only when e patient is not addicted to drink d his system already satturated th alcohol. The Rev. C. C. Brown, of Sumter, ile diriving home last week was rribly shocked by lIghtning. The tan th ha n ditleing was instant 'IE Ohio VALLEY EVE.T. 3L\CIIINEIY AND FINE GOODS, MU SIC AND FIRE-WO1KS, TIlE GLASS BALL AND TUE JEUSEY COws, SAFE SHEE' & IDaNGE.^oUS DO(s. ;F~ot our S,,cri:nloui,vil!e Correipo'.d nt ) Upon .he street, not l:ng since. one of our cousins from over the stream indulged in the original re mark. -When you're in Rome. you must dew as Rome duz.' and to be in a citV that eats and drinks Ex po.ition. takes it with coffee t;.r breakfast, has Exposition baked and broiled (on warm days under the glass.) has Exposition stewed and fried (or the tired workmen seem so.) and takes it on the half.: shell, which has the capacity of exactly fifteen acres, what can one do but write Expositi )n and become expository all through ! While waiting for the engraved diagram of the above rather mixed conundrum, I wipe the dewy drops of summer moisture from my intel lectual brow, and go on with my story. So long as the workmen felt that they had no rights save inside the painted floor line of the space they were to adorn, the quantity of glass in the great whitewashed tem ple, m-ide it a hot-house of some magnitude. But the rush fur space, and the constant demands for in formation that could only be given in the building, have compelled the removal of the chiefs, and their lit tle army of young lady and gentle men clerks, out to the grounds. With President Bennet I. Young and General Manager J. Dl. Wright in constant attendance, it has been found possible to open big % indows and create a small tempest of inov ing air in the vast avenues and courts. So it was that I took a chair in a space that no workman wanted just then, and spent two hours in as cool a place as I have found in Louis ville. The L. & N. Railroad runs by the Sixth street side of the park, in which the Art Palace is located, and the branch road into the grounds is being occupied pretty well by the trains of exhibitors bringing goods. Three hundred car loads were emptied at the great doors last year, and I will not ven ture si conjecture as to the number to arri.re this year. No definite es timate can be made from the books, even in the rare moments that a, newspaper man can get the use of them. As to talking to the railway men unloading cars, or to the work men busy in erecting pavilions and exhibition cottages and stands, more costly than a poor man's home, that is a risk, because it is so easy to drop a ton of steam pipe or spare bit of lumber on the head of the in quisitive man who seems idle, in that his only tool is a pencil. There fore I stand off' and use my eyes, and find no difficulty in the conclu sion that a finer and much better arranged exhibit will greet the vis itor of 1884, although many a de lighted person said in 1883, "They never can beat this." To begin with corrected faults.| The Warren Memorial Church have taken possession of the big organ i that they bought last year, clearing I a needed space, and thereby pleas ing the majority, to whom the music of a big crgan is neither new norj pleasing. It stood just in the pas sageway to the Park, the Art Gal ery, and the Fire-Works Ground,: and so did the indoor music plat form. No one ever thought that there were several wide ways for the crowd to go around, and the crowd never got the idea that it could get around by any other way. There fore in the softest whispers of some divine music, or amid the trills of: some great r,inger. came the dulcet tones of some fat African wencif. "What you scrongin me so fo', say ! white man?"-'-"Get off my toes. confound you." in choice Kentucky --@rat you !you've torp my dress' froni gn irate rural lady, a.nd the helpless policeman's perpet4al moan, '-Do pass along will you, pass right along," where the only chance to go on amid the crowd wedged tight to hear the music, and the double crowd going both ways at once, was to walk on the sea of heads. The music stand, relieved of the big organ, will be in the same place, but the passage on either side will be closed during the mus ic. I hereby suggest to the man-; agement that they had best be kept closed, so that no wild person will have the excuse to say. "I got through there this morning, and I'll go now or die,'' regardless alike of' music or police. Indeed, I grow' skeptical of fond fancies long cher ished as to the power ot music. I once entirely believed in the classic quotation : "Music hath power to soothe a savage, To split a rock, or cook a cabbage" bt Ilhave known a young man to discourse of his new pantaloons and his latest "mash,'' in utter oblivion of the fact that some might p)refer to hear Gilmore; and I have heard the inevitable fat lady explain the .aaa bemntltiO o the "eye s.a Ut a..ls,i)' s au Idt.I "aaj er BRUTAL 3IURDEI CO.11MITTED BY A GEORGIA NEGRO. CoLrIBu', GA.. Au ust 22.7-A wife murder'with details of a most s':ocking nature is reported from Harris County, which is gaining an unenviable notoriety for deeds of violence. In Apple Va*ley, in that - Cointy. lives a colored man named Sydney Hall and his wife, a woman considerably his junior. He has been jealous of her for some time, and so embittered her life that there was no love lost between them. On several occasions Hall claims that his wife had-put poison in his tea and that he lived in con stant dread of his life. When, yesterday evening, Hall went to his employer. Judge Anderson, and told him that "de ole woman would hodder him no more now," the Judge had no conception of the terrible dead which had been com mitted. He went with iall to his cabin, and there on the bed lay the body of the dead woman, her head having rolled off on the floor, which was covered with blood. ."I done it, boss," said Hall, without a quiver. "She won t bodder us no more now." The fiend then gave a circumstantial account of how he killed her. Two weeks before, he said, his wife had made her last attempt to poison him. He then made her di ink some of the tea, which sick L ened her considerably. Yesterday afternoon he chided her with some new evidences of infidelity, to which her-only response was that he would get a good dose of tea V when he was not thinking about it. She then went to bed for her even ing nap. Hall said he sat there e until he saw she was fast asleep, and in thinking over his misfortune he felt almost like killing himself. e Then came the suggestion, "Why y not kill her?" Ile tried to fight the thought down, but could not. t The idea took possession of his mind and held him spellbound. At s last, with a desperate effort, he re n solved to go out to his work and escape the temptation. He took up his axe and went as far as the door. - e He turned for a moment and looked . - at his sleeping wife. Then the desire to kill her became over-pow-. erinr, and before he was conscious of what he was do-ng he was beside - s the bed, had raised his axe and struck for her neck, cutting it con t siderably. At the first blow the woman raised her hand and grasped f the axe handle convulsively and Y attempted to raise herself, with her r head half cut off, as it was. With a terrible wrench he shook off her Y hold and she fell back on the bed. e Another blow completed the work. a and her head tolled off at his feet. He then put the axe away, and at tter ruminating over what he had done concluded that the best that - he could do was to tell his mnaster Lall about it, and he did so. Y~TOUCHUIMG. dRev. C. C. Brown, editor of the t Sumter Watchman and Sothron, writ e lug from Glenn Springs, under date Sof August 21, says : A death occurred in my neighborhood on ~Tue'day, the circumstances 01 which aroma -. od considerable symnpathy, and east a shade ~of sadness throughout our comnmuni. Er, J. T. Bynomn of Neberry, who has III 's and gro-*ing worse for some time, arrived i here on Saturday, b- private eonveyance, accompanied by a servant and tripad, and took a room in the cottage second door a from mine. IIls disease had been for a con tsiderable time of an obscure nature; bet wa flmally discovered to be a tumor in th. e a, -i preatic org .n of the stomacha-but whether ithe discovery was made before he name hers ior not I did not learn. The effect c-f th is in mor having been to est off the supply or the necssay $idto digest food, be-ha been Sfor a long time nadorgoing a process of blow starvation, and was near the termination of the struggle before he pamne; bet ho had dfaithiin the Glens Springs water and hoe Ithat it tpight bene8li him, and egi have come sooner but his wife and ol4est da'Jgb cotr were bodi also sick, and be could so e makea up lisi mind to so.-e away and leave athoem. FinaIIy, however, be took bis1 tb(li servant who arsed hi for niota n s bidding his oedones dna adieu,mae51 e trip in tiro day.. It was a ho#ele's case. however, n4 he began to fink rpdyo "2 onrday, and died Tuesdayv. The esiP r io or thze parting at home, given by 1pI5 ser r, ast-the carrying of )jig in the armstou tone bedside'to the other and then bringin~ him awray-told ja a cegro's simple 1ia. gqage,'was ~realy affecting. He tike.y - waited upon by friends an4 had ih. l)ost of mhedcaiattebntion. t It is Sgid that no watch will keep Jhe -same time with two people. This 1g id owing to the temperature of the wear Ser, and it is clainied th t even th,9 e mere physical diff'erence In gait and r- movement between different people rwill affect the time-keeping of a watch, Swhich is probably al'o effected in someO it degree by the m-ignetism of the rwearer. It is never too late. Eitenne Pra dier, of Aumux, France, lived con ~tentedly a bachelor tuntil be was just r one hundred, and then turned to d thoughts of love. A young school teacher accepted him, and he lived iwith her happily for eight years before iold age really got the best of lhm. t The loving couple had one child In the time. s "The difference between the Quaker. t- form of marriage and the EpicopaL. - form i, that in thei former the bride Sdoes iiot promise to obey but does a while in the latter the bride does prom a- ise to obey but does not obey. . When some pollticians are a d " heYYr found wantig ever? I teeth, the stomach teeth, the meb 41es. and the spankings" of he ardv sacking brood, just when th pI,l:n corn.t was making the ai leavcnly witi the tones of "Ilom( Sweet lome." Then on one sid )f the stand was heard, "Florid :uriosities. Sir.'-"Not a soap, m1a ,i, takes gr:ase out in half a min ite, I'll show von;" on the othez -Ice craan and lemonade, wall .ht in,' with a piano solo, dialc ue. ma:noth cave, and childrei lenmanding candy, in the rearwar< uburbs. That order of things ha assel away. I n this year a mnoust: ois sea-shell )n the exact model of the beautifu hing on .fanhattan Beach, N. Y. s growing into shape where t'e bi >rgan stood and itside the shell vith every liquid note sent out br he finest acoustic contrivance o he age. will be the finest instru uental and vocal performers tha an be had by lavish use cf money 3efore them will be a vast musi< iall, comfortably furnished with tbundant seats regulated by usher, ike an o;,era house ; distinctlj )ublished as no thoroughfare foi he crowd or the indifferent, an< vhere a listener as far back as thi reat electric fount:.in can hea -very note, if only the fools ca, b, rpt still! But I have not told you of tha 'ountain. Some traveler with nem >ry and a purse brought the plai rom Europe, and if "A thing of beauty is a joy forever," his should be a source of happi iess for at least two months. I arge basin of artificial stone is thi ;ub-structure, from which arises oftly stem with the usual ;ountaiz 'orm. Here, amid a delicate lace rork of iron, to be understood onl: y being seen, will be prismati orms of cut, and colored glass, in 3ide of which will be the pure whit ire of the Edison Electric Lighi [n daylight there will only be in >risoned fire behind the veil of tb ralling water. but at night, the onl: light that ever rivaled the glory c God's suns and stars, will conver the whole fountain into an ind( scribable glory of illuminated jewel and radiant water3. The Arabia Nights' enchanters never imagine i more lovely dream come true. My narrowing space warns m that I have written enough for t< lay. Special exhibits seem to groi live and say, "Do write me up ! The large building used for the ca; riage exhibit of last year, is thi year to bellow and mo-on o an, bleat and stamp and smell, the livine odor of the hay and the dairl with the finest cattle and stock c the Western world, while Kentuck will prove again the right to he ancient boast, "The finest horses i the world, sir, only to be beat h our women." How it ever cam abont that sporting people called dog exhibit "A bench show," I d not know, but the noble one of las year will be surpassed in this. Time and space are out and 'ave not hinted at the agricultura horticultural, floral, and all of th other wonders to be displayed b this land that is richer than the ol Eden, and so nearly Paradise the Kentuckians seldom speak of tb "future s' ate." The new selectiot of Art objects in the brick galler: the amphitheater for the fire work and other public and free amus, ments, in short, the Exposition lii before me, almost untouched an undescribed. Two months of writing, twice week, will not more than tell ofi so far as the pen and ink cal Exhibitors, States, railway corpora tions, manufacturers, all who wat this chance to advertise, in which big city remits its taxes, gives lo rents, and opens its doors to tI competition of the whole nation, an people who have things to Be' mineral. to show, and timberi display, had best wake up, for ti space has its limits, and the lin' of paint on the Uoor mark spaces "sold" mqltiply every hour. Son choice exhibits were crowded Ini the galleries last year, and the l. lated ques must go there this yea Still, there is room. H.W. C. Columbus Enquirer-Sun: "It h: been noticed recently that connerfe ten-cent pieces are getting quite nur erous. They are clumsily made ar are brighter andt o lighter weight the the original coin. They feel soft to ti touch andl look as glossy as quicksilve The metal is so soft that the finge nail will almost make an indentio They bear the date 1875. Counterfe half and quarter dollars are also in el elation, but bad ten-cent pieces a the most numerous." "If you don't see what you wa: .Lk for it" is the sign displayed cv the bar in a Bradford saloon. Ai when a man went in and asked pa ment on a bill that had been runni: for 6 months he was run out the fro door, lie is now of the opinion th saloon keepers are not consistent. The spelling bee sometimes bree danger as well as a knowledge of le ters. One James Cohannon was han ed in Nebraska City for shootil James Cook through the heart at spelling bee in 1882. The two dis greed as to the spelling of a word, at to settle It Cohannon used his p1st' What a wonderfiti thint "eddicati