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ID?* <S§£*s£gia 3fettim»t $e li»^ss»ngjeir«.
The Clement Attachment—Cost-
How Operated—Its Great Value
and Profitableness.
From time to time we have spoken of
that wonderful cotton ginning and spin
ning contrivance, known as the Clemen}
Attachment, and continued to watch its
developments and steady progress in pub
lic opinion with no little interest. At
first, the invention was regarded hy many
as unsatisfactory and chimerical. It was
said to he an old and discarded inven
tion which had been revamped and
brought forward anew for speculative pur
poses. But the curious machine, in pro
portion as it was investigated and criti
cised, seemed to take the faster hold upon
popular attention. At length it began to
he utilized in practice with marked suc
cess, and now there is every prospect that
hundreds of these “attachments” will
soon be at work throughout the cotton
region.
From many elaborate descriptions of
the mechanical construction, operation
and advantages of this machine, the most
complete and succinct that we have seen,
is furnished by F. E. Whitfield, Sr., of
Corinth, Mississippi, and may be found in
the last issue of the Patrons of Husband-
rax sax mix. case.
ry.
We mention, in substance, some of the
leading features connected with the cost
and operation of the Clement attach
ment. The price of an entire set of new
machinery at the Bridesbuig factory,
Fhiladelpliia,.is $4,000, but if part of the
machinery, say onerhalf, be second hand
ed the cost will not exceed $2,500 or
$3,000. Great care should be taken, how
ever, to send on an expert to select the
second hand material that may be util
ized.
Four hundred spindles arc required -for
the manufacture of the coarser yarns, and
from four hundred and fifty to five hum
dred when the finer numbers, ranging
from fourteen and upwards, are pro
duced.
One machine will work up from fire
hundred and fifty to seven hundred
pounds of cotton in ten hours, and re
quires fourteen hundred square feet of
solid floor, besides another apartment or
attic for feed table, cleanser and tempor
ary supply of seed cotton. It may be
driven by an engine of seven or eight
horse power, or the usual -water wheel.
The latter is much the least expensive.
Seven or eight operatives, all women or
girls, over .ten years of. age* are sufficient
to operate one machine. These are dis
tributed as follov^: One to attend cleans
er and feed tabic, one at the card and
drawing frame, one at the speeder, two at
the spinning frames, and two at the reels
and thread press.
The yarn can be spun as fine as No.
200, or finer than can be procured from
ordinary ginned cotton.
A suitable building should be two sto
ries in height, solidly constructed and well
braced to sustain the jar of the machinery,
with an area of 2,000 feet of floor for even
the smallest mill.
Treated by the Clement Attachment,
the raw material is more than doubled in
value. When the numbers produced are
very fine, the increase in value will reach
125 per cent. The new process is thought
also to enhance the quality of the yam as
compared with that. manufactured from
the baled cotton of commerce, as the thread
“is more sheeny and much stronger.”
Ready sale is found for all the yam, and
it is asserted that there are 25,000looms in
Philadelphia whose proprietors buy all
their thread, and do not use a single spin
dle.
In Europe, too, the general custom is
foronesetofmillstospin the yam, and
another do the weaving.
To ran all the year, an. eight months
supply of cotton should be purchased in
January, to afford material until the new
crop begins to be harvested.
It is estimated that the net proceeds by
the use of the attachment is from one to
One and a half cents per pound of seed
cotton, and the machines are much more
durable than the common cotton gin, be
sides being exceedingly simple. The cost
per se of each attachment is $200, and'
with all the changes in the card about
$375. This does not include the royalty
of $150. The entire fibre is removed
from the seed, thus saving six or eight per
cent, of lint obtained from the cotton seed
from ordinary gins by oil mills.
The attachments can be made of all
sizes, so as to suit any card from thirty to
sixty inches, and all kinds of cotton
card, say ordinary top-feed self-strip
pers, worker and strippers, dr the roller
cards.
The mills are netting, Mr. Whitfield
says, from thirty-three to fifty per cent,
per annum on their investment. At least,
all within the scope of his knowledge are
doing so. They may be found in success
ful operation at Windsor, North Carolina;
Westminster, North Carolina, at Mat
thews’ Depot, Mecklenberg county, North
Carolina, Andersonville, South Carolina,
Newborn, North Carolina, Tuscumbia,
Alabama, and many others are in process
of construction. That at Senoia will be-
gin work this month.
It should be borne in mind that all the
seed cotton put aside to be treated by the
Clement Attachment, should be thorough
ly dried in the sun before it is packed
away in bulk. Otherwise the heat will
cause the seed to sprout and stain the
lint, besides retarding the cleansing opera-
tions.
The writer has often seen Sea. Island
cotton dried liras, packed as hard as a
board, and kept in perfect order for a
whole year. Indeed, the essential oil of
the seed seems to penetrate the lint, im
parting a soft texture and rich, creamy
color.
The above comprises a compendious
resume of what Mr. Whitfield has to say
of the Clement Attachment in the Patron
of Husbandry. If the half that is claimed
for it is true, a great revolution must be
wrought in the handling of cotton, ere the
lapse of many years. The work of our
cotton mills will be confined, in a great
degree, to the manufacture of cloth from
the thread produced by these machines,
and the staple will find its way to market
in a far less bulky form than heretofore.
The gain to the farmers, too, would be
immense. *It is too soon, however, to cal
culate with certainty upon such results.
We only print the status of this new hi-
invention from the best available data,
and the reader can form his own condu-
Xhe Decision of the Supreme Court.
The announcement of the refusal of a
new trial in the case of Samuel H. Hill,
convicted of the murder of Simmons in
Atlanta, was made through the telegrams
of yesterday. Below will be found so
much of the decision as is of interest to
the public. It was read by Judge Jack-
son, formerly of this city. * Interest in the
case has extended over the whole State,
and the public will read the finale of the
whole trial with close attention. It is one
of the great cases of the State, and fixes
several legal principles. From’this decis
ion there is no judicial appeal, and the
only hope the prisoner now has is in Ex
ecutive clemency:
When analyzed, the grounds taken in
the motion for a new trial may be classi
fied under four heads.. First, alleged er
rors of the court below in respect to the
jury. Secondly, in the charge to the
jury. Thirdly, in regard to newly dis
covered testimony. And fourthly, in up
holding the verdict as authorized by the
law and evidence.
We come now to consider the errors
assigned upon the chaige and refusal to
charge. The portions of the chaige ex
cepted to seem to have been cut in seg
ments from the body of the chaige.
Without stopping, however, to see wheth
er the whole segment embodies more than
one point, and whether, in that view, any
of them can be reviewed under the ruling
of this court in similar cases, if strictly
applied, let us analyze them to see wbat
rear points are relied on, as well as we
may. from the wholesale maimer in
which they are presented.
The main point made, as it strike us, is
that the court did not fairly submit to tho
jury section 4334 of the code, which enacts
that “all other instances which stand on
the same footing ot reason and justice as
those enumerated shall be justifiable homi
cide.” Defendant insists that the court
should have turned the jury loose upon this
section, and should have instructed them
that “when a man kills another for having
criminal intercourse with his wife, it is for
the jury to decide whether the killing
stands upon the same grounds of reason
and justice as those enumerated in the
code, aud if they so believe, it would be a
case of justifiable homicide.” The judge
declined to give this request, but instruct
ed the jury that “there is no principle of
reason or justice enumerated in the code
by which, after an injury shall have been
consummated, no matter how great and
no matter how grievous that injury may
be, the party injured would be justified in
taking vengeance into Lis own hands, and
in deliberately seeking out the wrong doer
and slaying him;” tbs t “the existence of
such temptations, provocation or passions,
might be looked to for ascertaining motives
or to inquire whether the killing was in
tentional or malicious, hut would afford
no justification for the killing if perpetrat
ed for the mere purpose of vengeance,
punishment or vindication;” that “one of
the principles • of reason and justice on
which a homicide can be justified is this:
That such homicide was committed as a
defense against an injury, to prevent an
injury of the serious kind described, or to
stay its progress.” ■
So that the issue is plainly presented,
whether homicide to be justifiable must
be in defense of wrong or to prevent its
consummation—in the language of the
judge, “to stay its progress” — and
whether, if committed for a past wrong,
it is our duty to deal. - i-»**«wed there-
l .VT~ T ™ > “ ’ inminiwu m wcuug, f orv > tLi»*Drartoan justified in deliber-
another who commit-
—The New'York Sun says the long-ru
mored dissolution of the British Parlia
ment is announced for Easter. The epoch
is chosen with Lord Beacousfield’s custom
ary adroitness, and some of those who
have clamored for dissolution with the
adultery with the slayer's wire—the
is justifiable in law.
The question turns on our code. What
are the previous sections referred to in
section 4334? They are 4330, 4331, 4332
and 4333, and so far as at all applicable
here, they read as follows' in giving the
instances of justifiable homicide: “in self-
defense, or m defense of habitation, per
son or property, against one who mani
festly intends, or endeavors, by violence
or surprise, to commit a felony on either;
or against any persons who manifestly in
tend and endeavor, in a riotous and tu
multuous manner, to enter the habitation
of another for the purpose of assaulting
or offering personal violence to any per
son dwelling or being therein. A bare
fear of any of those offenses, to prevent
which the homicide is alleged to have
been committed, shall not be sufficient to
justify the killing. It must appear that the
circumstances were sufficient to excite the
fears ofa reasonable men, and that the
party killing really acted under the Influ
ence of those fears; not in a spirit of re
venge. If after persuasion, remonstrance,
or other gentle measures used, a forcible
attack'and invasion on the property or
habitation of another, cannot be preven
ted, it shall be justifiable homicide to kill
the person so forcibly attacking and inva
ding the property or habitation of anoth
er; but it must appear that such killing
was absolutely necessary to prevent such
attack and invasion, and that a serious in
jury was intended or. might accrue to the
person, property, or family of the person
killing. If a person kill another in his
defense, it must appear that the danger
was so uigent and pressing at the time of
the killing, that in order to save his ewn
life, the killing of the other was necessa
ry; aud it must appear, also, that the per
son killed was the assailant, or that the
slayer bad really, and in good faith, en
deavored to decline any further struggle
before the mortal blow was given.”
These are the enumerated instances
where one .may kiU another and be just i- ■
fied in doing so; and tbe legal question is,
does the principle of defense, defense of
some sort, enter into them all, and can
any case stand on the same footing of rea
son and justice, as these enumerated cases
do, unless defense of some sort—the pre
vention of some impending wrong—enters
as an element therein? Judge Hillyer
charged that defense against some urgent
and pressent danger must have operated
on the mind of the' defendant, or he was
not justifiable; or to put the question on
the case at bar, he charged in effect that
defendant must have railed Simmons to
prevent him from attempting or consum
mating an impending adultery with his
wife, and not avenge past adultery with
her, in order to justify the killing. Mark
the question now is not the reduction of
the crime from murder to manslaughter,
but the absolute and unconditional justifi
cation of the killing. In other words, that
such killiDg was no offense at all.
It will he seen by merely glancing at
the quotations froip tbe code of the enu
merated cases of justifiable homicide, that
each of them contemplated defense
against immediate and pressing danger.
It is defense of self, it is defense of habi
tation, property or person; it is defense
against one who manifestly intends or en
deavors by violence or surprise, to com
mit a felony on either, it is defense
against a mob violently and riotously in
tending and endeavoring to enter one’s
house to assault or wrong some person
therein; it is defense against real, immi
nent, impending danger; a mere fear of
any offense to prevent which the killing is
done, shall not justify it, the circumstan
ces must be such as to excite reasonable
fears In a rational mind, and the person
killing must act under the influence, of
such fears, and not in a spirit of revenge;
not only must it he in defense, but it must
be absolutely necessary to prevent the at
tack or invasion, and even in self defense,
the strongest of all defense, the danger
must be so urgent and pressing at the
time of the killing, that in order to save
one’s own life, the killing was absolutely
necessary.
So that our law broadly separates the
act of deliberately seeking another and
slaying him for past wrongs, however
heinous they may be, from tbe act of slay
ing another to prevent his doing a present
wrong, or future wrong imminently im
pending. Wherever done to avenge the
past, it is not justifiable; when done un
der pressing necessity to defend life, or
limb, or wife, or child, or habitation, or
property against felonious attacks on cith
er, it is justifiable.
Therefore, our law, in common with
the laws of all civilized states, with
winch we are acquainted, forbids ven
geance for the past, but permits defense
against tbe present and tbe immediate
and pressing future; and therefore, the
presiding judge did not err in the refusal
another paramour of his wife, hut that fice by sowing disseu^on' and hatred be
lie was not so guilty as Simmons. Thele- tenon ■nv-emnnian and Irishmen,and Lord
gal question, and with that question n-iy Beaconsfield’s vicious manifesto directly
' " ‘ — — appeals to the worst passions and prej
udices, for the purpose of Stirling up En
glishmen against Irish nationality. The
Ministry neither knows nor cares how to
relieve our distressed fellow countrymen.
Lord Beaconsfield’s foreign policy has
been an inglorious and disastrous failure.
Vote againsUhim as you would against an
enemy of your country.
Is the verdict supported by the evidence,
and is the defendant guilty of murder?
The evidence shows deliberate revenge.
The wrong was a grievous wrong, but
the revenge therefor was conned over and
calculated for weeks. The prisoner’s
statement alone, stiipped of all inferiority
to evidence,"and admitted to be the whole
truth, shows a case of deliberate murder.
Hence, the last refuge of counsel, the
change of base, the desire to set op the
plea of insanity on a new hearing.
But wbat are the facts? The wife of
Hill was introduced to Simmons as a lewd
woman, and in company with lewd wo
men—as a single woman and not a mar
ried woman—as Miss Etheridge, and not
Mrs. Hill. She was introduced without
his seeking her. One of her companions
in sin sent for him. He took her for a
woman of the town, and so he had cause
to believe her to be, from her company
and conduct. The record shows that
she had been enticed from allegiance to
her husband, if, indeed, her own disposi
tion needed seductive influences to lead
her astray, week3 if not months, before
Simmons knew her.. He met her thereaf
ter at balls, where virtuous women did
not go, and at places to name which chas-
ity would blush. He did discover that
she was a married woman, and was Hill’s
wife, hut at what point of time during
their intimacy, the record does not show.
When he made that discovery, he should
have stopped that wild career of sin,
which he seems to have-entered un
der the lead of married men, but
he did not. On the Sth day of
December, 1S73, in company
with another man and with Simmons, she
left her home and her husband, about
whose affection for her and anguish at her
departure there can be no doubt, recover
ed her within three days through the in
strumentality of a lewd woman, and her
knowledge that Simmons knew her lodg
ing, who seems to have induced her to re
turn to Hill. Her husband condoned the
past guilt of his wife, as he had the right
to do, and restored her to his home. H«
moved her to the country, eight miles from
Atlanta, and about the I6th of January
Simmons was seen to pass and repass once
that country place in a buggy, and about
tbe same time a note was received by her,
said to be written by him, hut in a dis
guised hand, and Hill received a-letter
from her begging him to come to her,
but without stating any particular
reason. Thenceforward, HiU seems
to have deliberately intended to
wipe out his wrongs in the blood
of Simmons; and thirteen days thereafter,
on tbe 29th of January, just after Sim
mons had been shaved in the barber-shop
of the National Hotel, and was at the
counter of the bar-room, about to settle
for a drink he had taken, Hill stepped up
behind him and with some profane or vul
gar exclamation prefixed to the remark,
“shoot, you’ve got it to do,” as Simmons
turned to see what or who it was, shot
him through the face and head, and about
the last exclamation of the dying man
was, “He shot me for nothing!” The
dead man had no chance for his life. Hill
may have thought Simmons was armed,
and from his exclamation it seems he did
think so, but Simmons had no weapon
drawn, and was allowed no time to draw
one if he had it. If this be not muidcr
what can make a case of murder, wherever
in the past there has been great provoca
tion ? Hill, in his statement, admits the
killing for revenge, and puts his defense
there. He says that he would have killed
idea of its weakening him will probably
be disconcerted, for the moment, at get- ' &ftherequestto charge, or in the charge
ting wliat they want. I I given on this point.
ted adultery with his wife nearly two
months before the homicide, and thirteen
days before rode past the house where she
was and wrote to her about the same time,
and in deliberately shooting him down
without a moment’s time for defense,
when he knew at the time of the killing
that the wife had left his home, and that
others were guilty, also, although not so
much so, in his opinion; or do these
facts reduce the homicide to voluntary
manslaughter?
There cannot be found a case in any
law book with which we arc familiar that
approximates such a conclusion. It is
only where the danger is so imminent and
immediate that one cannot appeal to the
law for help, that, in civilized society, he
can help himself.
It is true that where virtuous wives or
sisters or daughters are insulted jurors are
slow to convict the avenger of the affront,
though time enough had elapsed to put
passion underthe sway of reason; but even
m such cases no court has ever held, or
can- hold without becoming instead of ex
pounders makers of the law—that aunh
verdicts are in accordance with the law.
The Augusta case of shooting at another,
in our own reports, is wholly unlike this.
There no breath of suspicion soiled the
purity of the wife. The very evening be
fore, the affront was given; and the
insulter the very next morning at break
fast had tiie audacity to take his scat at
the same tabic, aud immediately in front
of the insulted woman and the guardian
of her virtue; and it was in that case that
this court ruled that the jury might
consider whether it stood on the same
ground of reason as the cases enumerated
in the code. The wife was not only pure
hut present; passion, just kindled up the
night before, flamed up beyond control at
the sight of the aggressor, who was not
hunted down to he slain, hut who obtrud
ed his presence before those he had
wronged. In this case Mrs. Hill was safe
eight miles in tbe country; and while thus
safe, Simmons was sought, was found,
and W2s slain without a moment’s warn
ing.
We forbear to detail further the facts of
the case made by this record. We would
not unveil the folly and frailty of the un
happy woman, whose conduct has robbed
her husband of home and of liberty, and
one of her paramours of life; nor would
we expose the haunts of vice uncovered
by this evidence, and the men who fre
quent them. We add but a single re
mark; If men will take tbe law into
their own hands, become themselves the
judges of their own cases, and their own
sheriff to execute the sentence themselves
jronounce they must be certain that they
. udge the case according to law, and exe
cute the sentence which that law pronoun
ces, or they must suffer the consequences
of their mistake of the law. Homicide
for past offenses, however heinous, delib
erately planned aud premeditated, aud
carried into execution, after reason has
had time to assert her supremacy over
passion, is murder; and he who judges
that in his own case it is not, and exe
cutes sentence in such a case on a fellow
being, must suffer the penalty which the
law imposes upon the murderer.
You need not neglect your business
when troubled with a cough or cold, if
you only use a reliable remedy at once.
Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup is the best reme
dy we know of. Price only twenty-five
cents.
The Uses of'the Pine Tree.
Like the palm tree of the East, our no
ble forest pine seems valuable for divers
purposes, aside from buildiig and the
production cf naval stores. Even the
leaves are now utilized for mattresses and
upholstering purposes. Mr. Albert Maas,
of Meridian, Mississippi, has patented an
improved process for preparing the green
leaf, which adapt it perfectly to the man
ufacture of paper, and is cheaper than any
other material. It is proposed also to use
tbe rosin and juices aud leaves for medical
purposes. It is a comfort to know that
our forests cannot he exhausted for a de
cade of centuries.
Shad Business.—A Fulton Market
fisherman reports to the New York Sun
that the first shad in that market this
year was on January 5tb, from Florida.
The largest, he reports, weighed soven
and a half pounds, and were from the
North river. Millions of little shad usc-d
to be seen during the fisheries there, but
none are now visible. The largest single
haul he ever made was in 1852, and the
seine contained 1,054 shad. This was in
the North or Hudson - river. : The yearly
average was .about tliirty thousand.
BY TELEGRAPH
London, March 11. — Sir Stafford
Xorthcote lias issued an address to the
electors of elections of North Devon, in
which he says that Parliament has,
throughout a period of unlimited difficul
ty and anxiety upheld the honor of the
country and vindicated its claims to
proper rank and influence among the na
tions. Its foreign and colonial policies
have all been animated by the same spirit
and the same determination to uphold
the greatness, integrity and constitution
of the Empire, and to knit together the
various races who own the sovereignty of
the Queen. It has labored to avert war,
and where that has been impossible has
successfully striven to limit its range and
prevent complications which would have
been menacing to the particular
interests of the whole country, and
tbe general peace of Europe. It has em
phatically proclaimed the national deter
mination to maintain, strengthen and de
fend the colonial and Ifidian empire. It
has earnestly promoted measures for the
advancement of the true interests of Ire
land, while it has steadily resisted pro
posals tending to weaken the ties which
rind the United Kingdom. In domestic
legislation it has kept in view the import
ance of arriving at the general good of the
community. It has been able to effect
substantial improvements in many laws
affecting the great industrial classes. Af
ter a period of commercial depression, bf
a most unexpected and grave nature, the
losses of which we have hail to endure, it
has supported us. The taxation. of the
country is lighter than in almost any year
previous to the accession of the present
government to power, while the real
amount of the national debt stand now at
£180,000below the sum at which we found
it. The war into Which, bnt for decided
policy, we should have probably been
drawn, would hare been extremely bur
densome to the tax payers. I- trust that
the period of anxiety, is drawing to a close.
Should elections result in reward of con
fidence in the present ministry,' it will he
our earnest endeavor to show ourselves
worthy thereof, promising the same policy
which we maintained insight of the em
pire and the world.
St. Petersburg, March 11.—A great
fire occurred on Monday at the weaving
works in Moscow. The entire building
was destroyed. :.Twenty-four r persons
were burned to death-and twenty-nine in
jured. -
General Yon Duentiln has resigned the
post of Chief of the third section, or police
department, of the privy chancellory. :
The official Gazette publishes the fol
lowing note conspicuously: “Prince Or-
loff was not present at the recent recep
tion of the French Minister of Foreign
Affairs.”
London, March 11.—The steamer
Othello, sailed from Hull, on the eighth
instant for New Siork, has put into Ply
mouth, having lost-Jrails, staunchions and
boats, and sustained other damages in a
collision.
The Home Rule confederation of Great
Britain has issued the following violent
manifesto to the Homo Rule Association
aud the Irish people in Great Britain:
Lord Beaconsfield has issued, in the guise
of a letter Jo the Viceroy of Ireland, a
declaration of war upon your countrfjhnd
you and your friends. The Ministry is
seeking to obtain a renewed - term ot of-
Preaident could not interfere to pardon.
He thought Congress had unlimited pow
er over the whole subject and could re
verse or annul any proceedings of courts
martial. The approval of the President
is a part of the judicial act ofa court mar
tial. HoW can he exercise pardoning
power in the matter iu which he judicially
acted ? How can he undo, as President,
what he does as agent of Congress ?
Mr. Carpenter said that the approval
was in. his capacity as Commander-in-
Cliief—pardon was in his capacity as
chief magistrate under the Constitution.
Mr. Jones responded that the armv was
under the despotic power of Congress.
The Constitution did not contemplate
Presidential pardon of offenders in milita
ry service. He differed from the Senator
from Wisconsin (Carpenter) who thought
the President had the power to appoint
all the officers in the army and the Con
stitution vested with all military matters
absolutely . in Congress. Any other ar
rangement would plainly be dangerous.
In time of danger the habeas corpus could
be suspended and all power be centered
in the hands of the military commander.
Was his judgment to be the conclusive
subject to possible pardon and precluding
congressional relief? 2 Mr. Jones thought
that part of the sentence of Porter imposing
political disabilities was null and void.
The sentence of a soldier could not: abro
gate the rights of a citizen. He regarded
he doctrine held by the opponents of the
hill as full of danger to our institutions.
-At the conclusion of Mr. Jones’remarks,
Mr. Davis, of West Virginia, moved that
the pending bill:be postponed, and that
tbe Senate proceed to consider the fortifi
cations appropriation bill, the effect of
which action would cany the Porter hill
to the foot of the Calendar.
Mr-Logan moved to indefinitely post
pone the Porter bill.
Mr. Davis, of West Virginia, moved to
lay-the Potter hill on the table. The
President pro tempore (Edmunds) ruled
that this motion superseded that of the
Senator; from Illinois (Mr. Logan.)
; Themotion was agreed to by a viva
Voce vote, and the bill was laid on the ta
ble, subject to he called up by % majority
vote.
The fortifications appropriation bill
Was then taken up, and at 4 p. m. the
Senate went into executive session, and
when the doors were re-opened,adjoumed.
Washington, March 11.—Bills were
-eported from the Committee on Public
Buildings and Grounds, and referred to
the Committee of the Whole, for the eretv
tion of public buildings ift Lynchburg,
Virginia,. Charlestown, West Virginia,
Greensboro, North Carolina, Houston,
Texas, and Clarksburg, West Virginia.
The House then resumed the considera
tion of the political assessments bill.
! Upson, of Texas, offered an amend
ment. ‘
t Hostetter, of Indiana, demanded the
previous question.
- The Republicans filibustered to prevent
action oh the demand for the previous
question,' desiring to prolong debate.
After much waste of time Aiken, of
South Carolina, moved to lay the bill and
amendment on the table. This the House
refused to do by a vote of 121 to 112—a
strict party vote, except that Aiken, Fel
ton, Morse and Wells voted with the Re
publicans in tbe affirmative. The House
then adjourned. tion.
i The Senate to-day confirmed the follow
ing nominations: To be supervisor of
Census, D. A. Perryman, oocoml district
of Alabama; William T, Fleming, second
district of Louisiana. To he postmaster,
J. R. Smith, of Galaboro, North Caroli
na.
The House committee on public lands
agreed to-day to report favorably to the
House, Representative Hull’s bill to con
firm certain entries and warrant locations
in the former Palatka military reservation
in Florida.
The nomination of Rev. Thomas J.
son that the sheriff who draws jurors
his personal friend, and, with the district
attorney, was elected on the Work
ingmen’s ticket. Some, however, think
that the Citizen's Protective' Union can
exert influence-enough to secure his con
viction and punishment. The witness
against him is a member of the police
force, who has been attending the meet
ings of workingmen in. disguise and tak
ing notes of tbe incendiary language used
by speakers.
This morning the police seized a num
ber of -placards exhibited in the public
streets, bearing the following announce
ment : “Read the Communist and awake
be freemen. Thieves in council. Price
ten cents by newsdealers.” The authorship
of the placard has not been ascertained by
thh authorities.
New Orleans, March 11. —Hugo
Van Ulesh was arrested to-day and re
manded without bail for breaking into
the house of his divorced wife in the
night'armed with a deadly weapon, with
the mtention of killing her. This is a
capital offense underthe laws of Loui
siana.
. The motion in arrest of judgment in
the case of E. C. Palmer, late President
of the New Orleans Savings Bank, and
who was convicted of embezzlement, was
argued to-day before Judge Whittaker,
and taken under advisement.
The trial of David. Urhuehart
ex-President of the New Or
leans Savings Institution, who was indic
ted for feloniously misappropriating the
funds of the hank, will commence to
morrow before the Superior Criminal
Court.
Augusta, March II.—A destructive
fire here last night destroyed Murray’s
stable, the store room belonging to R. H.
May 4b Co. r containing about one hun
dred and fifty buggies and other vehicles
J.,D. McCarthy’s grocery and other smal
buildings. Several, horses were burned
in the stable. The total loss is about
$32,000. " Insurance. $26,000. The origin
of the fire is unknown.
New Yoke, March 11.—Charles S.
Parnell held a conference to-day at the
New York hotel, with friends from this
and.neighboring cities, to consider the ex
pediency of establishing land leagues in
this country." It was decided to establish
a central organization of that kind here,
With branches in various States through
out the country. Mr. Parnell sailed for
England inthe steamer Celtic, this after
noon.
London, March 11.—Right Hon. W.
E. Gladstone has issued tbe following ad
dress to the electors of Midlothian: In an
electioneering address issued by Lord
Beaconsfield, an attempt is made to work"
upon our fears dark allusions to the re
peal of the union and the abandonment
Of the colonies. Those who endangered
the Union with Ireland were the party
tiiat maintained there an alien chtirch,
an unjust land law, and franchises infe
rior to ours. To the colonies, liberal ad
ministrations gave them popular and re
sponsible government, undertook to de
fend Canada with the whole strength of
the Empire, and organized a great scheme
for uniting: the several settlements of
British North America in One Dominion.
The manifesto is signed by the follow- Simmons as Supervisor for tho Fifth dis-
ff nf Piii’linnwinf • TTnnTi' uf fifrArma tniQ rftnnvfotl *r\ tVin Can.
in" members of Parliament: Frank Hugh
O’Donnell, James L. Finnegan, Ennis
Alexander, M. Sullivan, Justin Mc
Carthy, John O’Connor, Langford and
others.
Pajiis, March 11.—At a meeting of the
bureaus of the various groups <51 the Left
inthe chamber of Deputies yesterday, it
was resolved that nothing less than the
passage of article seven in its entirety
coaid be accepted by the Left, and that
an.interpellation be addressed |o the gov
ernment in the chajnber.
Columbia, S. C., March li.—Tho
Democratic State Convention is called to
meet Jane 1st.
Omaha, March 11.—The Democratic
trict of Georgia was reported to tho Sen
ate from the Census Committee to-day
adversely. A motion was made to pror
ceed to its consideration immediately, but
Mi. H11W fJanraia. nhinoteH.' and under
the rules the case was laid over. * rm-
William E. V. Estes has been appoin
ted storekeeper and guager for the dis
trict of South Carolina.
San Fean cisco, March 11.—Dennis
Kearney was arrested hy the police at his
residence this morning, on two charges of
misdemeanor,based on remarks at a meet
ing Tuesday night. Ho furnished bail
and was released from custody.
De Kalb., Miss., March 11.—The
court trying the case against-Vligin and
Convention will be held at Columbus ! Houston Gully, for the murder of Gil-
March 31st. _ j mer, has just adjourned for the day. On-
Little Rock, Ark., March 11.—The ' ly four additional jurors were obtained,
Democratic Convention is called to meet
June 2d.
Camden, N. J., March 11.—The elec
tion for municipal officers Tuesday, re
sulted in a victory for the Democrats.
Washington, March 11.—In the Sen
ate the Vice President beingjtbsent, Mr.
Edmunds presided.
Mr. Sharon presented a petition of the
newspaper proprietors of Nevada for a re
daction ef the tax on paper. Referred.
On presenting the petition Mr. Sharon
said he thought the tariff might now be
advantageously removed from many ar
ticles.
In the House, tho committee on appro
priations to-day decided to incorporate in
a special deficiency bill the item of $600,-
000 for the pay of United States marshals
and deputies, without any provisions or
restrictions, and instructed Representative
McMahon to report the bill at once to the
House.
Mr. Kelly, of Pennsylvania, rose to a
question of privilege and sent to the
Clerk’s desk, and had read an article from
the Evening Bulletin, of the 10th, detail
ing an alleged conversation between Mr.
McCay and himself on the subject of the
sugar bill. He wanted to state to tho
House that, for the first- time In -nineteen
years, he had been corruptly approached
for the purpose of controlling his vote in
the Committee of Ways and Means in the
House. A member of the andaclons lob
by had told him that he was acting in dis
regard to the sentiment of his people, to
which he had- replied that though sixty
years had passed over his head, he was
still able to take care of himself:- The
Speaker then proceeded with the call of
committees for reports.
Richmond, Virginia, March 11.—The
Conservative State Central Committee
met here to-night, for the purpose of call
ings State Convention to select delegates
to.the National Democratic Convention.
The discussion upon the position of the
members of the committee who had acted-
with the Keadjuster party in the last can
vass, and who had.heen, as they claimed,
read out of the party for their opposition
to the McColloch hill. Dr. Wise, of Wil
liamsburg, twice refasedto say whether
he would or would not pledge himself to
support the Democratic nominee for Pres-
dent, b'ut finally said'that as between
Grant and Tilden, he was in favor of the
former, but as between Hancock and
Grant, he was in favor of Hancock.
He was followed in the same spirit
hy Messrs. Grover,of Norfolk,and Stovall,
of Henry county, who distinctly agreed
with Dr, Wise in opposing any calf for a
State Convention which should include
all who desire the election of a Democratic
President. The proposed call is so wide
as to include everybody who desires to be
Democratic in national politics.
Washington, March 11.—In tho Sen
ate, Mr. Gordon, from the Committee on
Currency, reported adversely on the Sen
ate bill amending the enrolling and li
censing act of 1703. Indefinitely post
poned.
The morning hour having expired the
Senate resumed the consideration of the
bUl for the relief of Fitz John Porter,
Mr. Jones of Florida having the .floor.
Mr. Allison announced that immediate
ly after Mr. Jones remarks he would ask
for the consideration of. the fortification
appropriation bill to the exclusion of all
other business.
Mr. Jones then proceeded^to speak in
support of the hill. He held that the
power of Congress ever courts martial was
unlimited under" the constitution. The
President derives his power of approval
of sentences from articles of war which
are created hy Congress. He- did .not
tliiiik the President's pardoning power
was intended to be exercised over persons
either iu the army or the navy
Congress could take to itself
party is acting fir concert'with the agita
tors. The European element of discon
tent is not a fiction, and the object of such
men could only he pillage. San Francis
co, however, is.not going to be laid in
ashes. Every * arrangement is mads to
meet the first act of vidience, and if it
eomes to this the. retribution will. be;, ter
rible. tj . . ..
London, March II.—In the House of
Commons to-day, the Chancellor Of the
Exchequer presented the budget, showing
that the revenue this year, yields 2,195,000)
pounds less than estimated, leaving, a de
ficit of 3,356,000 pounds.
HaBkisbue'G, Pa., March 11.—Emil J
Pelroff, who has been for some-time on
trial here for attempting to bribe members
of the State Legislature, was to-day found
guilty as charged. The remaining Legis
lative bribery cases will now, it is under
stood, be pressed to trial.
Milwaukee, Wis.,. March 11.—The
Democratic State Central Committee to
day decided to hold the State Contention
at Madison, May 19.
Washington, March 11.—The House
committee on epidemic diseases, agreed
to-day to report favorably to the House
the following measures: A joint resolu
tion authorizing the President to call an
Intern itional Sanitary Conference to meet
at Washington ; the Senate bill With
amendments to increase the efficiency of
the National Board of Health; tho joint
resolution to print 10,000 copies each of
the‘report.of the National Board of Health
and tbe report ot the yellow fever Com
mission. -
Tiie Post-Office Department last night
concluded the contracts for the Star mail
service to the. following ten States :
North Caroling South Carolina, Georgia,
Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee,
Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana. The con
tracts are for four years from July 1st
next. Tiie total amount of the contracts
as awarded is about $885,000. The routes
included in this letting are 3,200 in num
ber. There were 62,000 bids.
Indianapolis, March 11.—The flax
mills of Lehman, Rosenthal & Co., at
Frankfort, Indiana, exploded this morn
ing about seven o’clock. The mills were
entirely destroyed by fire. Ten persons
were killed, among them Patrick Leahy,
fireman, and Thomas Caxton, engineer.
The cause of the explosion is unknown..
Atlanta, March 11.—The Gate City
Guards have decided to erect a memorial
arnioiy, which shall commemorate tbe;
reunion of the States and-the return of
peace, as distinct from many structures
erected in the North and South, commem
orative of tiie events which occurred dur
ing the late war. This decision has grown
out of the warmth and cordiality, of the
reception given this organization every
where on its iate tour through the North,
and tiie projectors of the building say Its
doors shall always be open to all who
march under the stars and stripes, whieh
shall float from its turrets. ♦"
Captain J. T. Burke, who commands
the company, started a subscription for
this purpose with $1,000. A maud fair
will be held in Atlanta in April, in aid of
the enterprise. Many individual sub
scriptions are being privately made, it .is
proposed to open subscription lists in ev
ery principal city iu the country, in order
that all States may be represented.
San Francisco, March 11.—The ar
rest of Kearney was made quietly, and
has caused no excitement. It U doubted
whether he can be convicted, for the re*-
The Wiregrass Watchman has the fol
lowing items:
We reviewed from our land lady’s ta
ble last Sunday, Irish potatoes of this
year's growth. Mrs. Pace informs ns that
she will soon have garden peas.
' It Is said that the greatest compliment
you can pay a Hazlehurst mgn, is to. cafi
him “an advanced thinker.” That beats
the title of “Colonel” all out of sight.
. Homicide in Wilkbs. — McDuffiie
Journal: A homicide took place in
Wilkes county, near the line of Lincoln,
some days ago, the particulars of which
have just reached us. As the matter wiil
perhaps undergo legal investigation, we
will be very brief in our statements. A
man named George T. Autrey, alias John
Turner, made his appearance in. the
neighborhood of Graves Mountain some
time during last year, or the latter part of
the year before, and was not there long
before he became involved iu a difficulty
with a Mr. Coxwell, and was shot twice
and severely cut with a pocket
knife. He (Aultry) afterwards left the
community and remained away until
about five weeks ago, when he came back.
He stayed in the neighborhood about a
month, after which he was missed again.
The people, suspicious from' his sudden
out of the fifty-two men presented, mak
ing six secured thus far. Four white
and two colored. The. court meets again;
at 9 a. m. to-morrow. ■ ; , ,
Nei^ York, March 11.—A San Fran
cisco special to ihe Herald says : “Not-
withstanding the press denials nothing in through Thomasville last week in a spe
nds agitation is more' certain than. that ^ '
the Socialistic, Communistic and -Nihilist fe
confidence,
augmented public expenditures and taxa
tion. ”•
j Abroad the Ministry ha-ro endangered
their prerogative by gross misuse, weak
ened the Empire by needless wars, dis
honored it in the eyes of Europe by filch*,
■ing Cyprus frpm the Porte, under a clan
destine treaty; aggrandized Russia, lured
Turkey to dismemberment and ruin, and
loaded India with unjustifiable war. The
Ministry have done nothing to improve
our social condition. You are promised
advantages of ascendency in the councils
of Europe. The-word “ascendency” is
best known to us by its baneful connec-
tion with the history of Ireland. I must
assert the co-equal rights of the inde
pendent allied powers, but in the mouth
of the present ministry,the claim is ridicu
lous; You have great issues before you,
and Ldo not doubt Midlothian will.nobly
discharge ils duty. . .
TILE ODODflT A PUTERg
Much malicious mischief is being done
Buena Vista, such as rocking houses,,
disjointing wagons, pulling fences down,
and putting dangerous obstructions across
the sidewalks.
The peach trees of Early county are
very backward for the season.
Dan Brihebty, colored, will expiate
dastardly crime committed in Thorflas
county to-day on the gallows.
The Thomasville library fair will be
quite an event'in that citv, judging by the
amount of preparations being made.
Ex-Govebnob J. E. Brown passed
Charles Ingraham, a young white
mule thief, now languishes in the Brooks
county jail for running away with one
mule of Mr. Thomas W. Jones.
The dry weather has caused rust to ap
pear in several counties in southwest
Georgia.
The Talbottonianshada grandjailroad
meeting last Tuesday. After the oratory
of the occasion had subsided resolutions
were passed appointing committees to can
vass the county: to procure the right of
Way'from Talbot ton to the Southwestern
railroad; to open books of subscription;
to arrange for the chain-gang of the county
to work ; on tbe ne w road; and to solicit
aid for the railroad from this city, Co
lumbus and other: places. One hundred
and slxty-threC and a quarter shares were
subscribed-on the spot. The subscription
list Is -rapidly increasing, and has now
reached $22,000. We wish the enterprise
the greatest success.
Talbotton will have a spring fair.
Fine rains have fallen In Taylor
county.
—An infant of a Woman hy the *me of
Mary J. Harris was. smothered to death
on Thursday last near Gogginsville. From
all the circumstances the affair does not
look exactly right, although the coroner’s
jury rendered a- verdict of accidental
death.
The IshmaelUe has completedi to first
year.- We wish it many even more pros
perous. ••v-ra-.b *-..■■■ .. )i» i
: Some of the Dougherty county farmers
are planting com.
Hazlehurst has had vegetables and
strawberries all winter.
Two Texas ponies have been taken np
asestrays in Haalehurst. They are cer
tainly a long way from home.
Forsyth is making an honest effort,
with fair hopes of success, to establish a
public library. It is a step in the right di
rection.
Mb. J. M. Stiger, of Glenmore, Ga.,
has succeed in establishing a colony of
New Englanders at Way cross, and is no yf
prospecting at Jeaupwith a like view.
Buena Vista. Argus: At the resi
dence of the bride’s father, by Justice J.
M. Gill, Mr. Thomas Lawhom, aged sev
enteen, and Miss Emma Worrill, aged
fifteen years. All of Markgr county.
Sparta Ishmaelite: Wit,know a Han
cock fanner who has caught more than a
hundred rats in traps within the last few
months. If he would only run his traps
in connection with a sausage grinder, tbe
business would be quite profitable.
The same paper says:
Another Fire.-—We regret very much
to learn that tbe house of Hr. Jeff Law
rence, with almost everything which it
contained, was burned last week!, The
fire was not discovered until past the
middle of the night; and then it had
made such headway that it was impossible
either to extinguish it, or to save much of
the furniture. The origin of the fire is
The loss is-probably in the
of $3,000..
Enquirer-Sun: The distance of Macon
from Columbus is only one hundred
miies. The Telegraph and Messen
ger says the rainfall in Macon the past
two months amounted to only 4.14 inches,
The Columbus record shows 6.39 inches
for the same time. The same paper says
that inthe year the fall in Macon has
been less than 40 inches. Last cotton
year the fall at Columbus was 56.94
inches, the year before 51.47 and the pre
ceding year 53.85. How can this vast
difference occur, if each account is kept
accurately ? We think ours is, for we get
it weekly from one of our most careful
warehouses who report from the-New
York Chronicle. More rain fell here the
past winter than that of 1S78-9. Inseven
years at Nashville the rainfall has never
exceeded. 68.14 inches, nor fallen below
46.91. In six years at Columbus it has
never exceeded 58.79 no fallen below
61.41.
Mumford, of Talbotton, in the Col
umbus Times, says:
Our railroad boom is still booming,
though, we are sony that the Columbus
boys were so badly disappointed at not
finding the usual “change cars” at Gene
va, yet we can promise great things by the
next court, as we have six months to run
on. Our railroad is a necessity, and it
will be built. No such effort has ever
before been put forward in -this county.
The meeting for Wednesday,; the 17th,
will be the largest ever assembled in the
county, and the action of that meeting
will give no “uncertain sound.” Every
nook and comer of the county is being
thoroughly canvassed. Our noble fellow
citizen, Captain S. W. Thornton, is the
;reat movingspirit in the enterprise, and
ils Work is telling. Nearly $15,000 have
already been subscribed by.; our citlzens,.
and it will reach $50,000 before two
Weeks. Our road is bound to be built.
disappearance, began to search, and. on
last Sunday, found his "body deposited in
” under some straw and dirt. Upon
off the clothes it was discovered
that thirty-eight buck-shot with some small
shot had gone into his balck. Two of the
buckshot went through, one coming out
about- midway -the chest and the other
near the left nipple. - It is said he was
dragged several hundred yards from tbe
place hevuUwL The verdict of the
coroner’s jury, on last Monday, was that
the deceased came to his death by a
gun shot from the hands of some unknown
party or parties. Suspicion rests on one
or two parties. The above information we
received from a gentleman who attended
the coroner’s inquest.. c ;f.
Hazlehubst’s Exports fob 1879.—-
Wiregrass Watchman: At an expense
of some time and trouble we have gather
ed together a few facts in reference to the
exports of our town for the year 1879, as
evidence conclusive that our section is not
be derided by any people:
In the naval store line we exported 10,-
78S barrels of rosin and 3,000 barrels of
ligtr,‘tr6r$o the. rosin at the low
30 cents per gallon and we have the sum
of $77,364. Then we find that wo shipped
50,000 pounds of wool, which, at 30 cents
per pound, foots the sum of $15,000, mak
ing an aggregate, for these two products
alone, ofa sum total of $93,000. Now-add
to this the immense, amount of cash real
ized from the sale of timber, and we have
in circulation, at all seasons of the year,
an amount fully ample for all necessary
demands, leaving our farm products,
which are by no means of triffiing impor
tance, as a surplus.
[ —There is great suffering in northern
Scotland, but the Scotch, like the Ulster
Irish, try to conceal their woe.
—The negro physicians of-Tennessee
hare organized a State medical society, of
which Dr. J. M. Jameson is President...
Supplying a Missing Link.—Both of
the Houses of the South Carolina General
Assembly have passed tbe bill to facilitate
the completion of the Blue Bidge railroad,
which will supply tbe missing link be
tween Charleston and the - Cincinnati
Southern railroad via Knoxville:
—There was an incident of the Dow
trial, at Bellow, that most unaccountably
escaped the attention of the local press,
and yet it is entirely too good to be lost
to the public. When one of the female
witnesses was asked by a prosecuting law
yer, of a well-known convivial turn of
mind, if she believed in the Bible, abe
replied emphatically that she did. “Do
you believe then, that wives should be
obedient to their husbands?” asked the
lawyer. She snapped her eyes and re
sponded: “Not when their husbands
come home drunk, like you do.” You
could have heard a paper of pins fall for
ten minutes afterward.
—The eminent firm of Bass & Co., the
Burton brewprs, has been converted' into
a limited liability company, but as the
shares are to bo confined to the existing
partners, there is no prospect of the public
being able to enrich themselves by the ac
quisition of any of them. The new com
pany is registered with a capital of £3,-
200,000 divided in 82,000 shares of £100
each. The consideration for the sale and
transfer is £2,720,000, payable by the al
lotment of 32,000.shares, each of which is
to be credited in the company’s books as
paid up to the extent of £85. Tbe sub
scribers are the present partners Messrs.
Bass, Ratcliff*, Grettons, Spender Clay,
and Charles Clay.
Mb. Tilden’s Income Tax.—The ex
perts employed here and in the Northwest
collecting evidence in the case of the
Government against Samuel J. Tilden for
Lis failure to pay his income tax have fi
nally completed their labors, and have re
ported the evidence to E. D. Webster, the
special agent of the Commissioner of In-.
teraal Revenue, General Green B. Raum.
The case will..he entered on the April
calendar of the United States Circuit
Couit for this District for trial.. It has
been postponed from time to time at the
request of the lawyers for the defendant.
The prosecution, having failed to elicit in'
full the testimony of two or three of Mr.,
Tilden’s brokers and partners, has con
sented to delay in order to perfect evi
dence, but will now insist on a trial at
as as early a day as practicable. It is un
derstood that Mr. Tilden’s known and
proved liabilities, or deficit on his ucome
tax, amount to over $80,000, and there are
several wrecked railways in as many
States still to be heard from. In a single
one of these railway wrecking operations
Mr. Tilden and two of his partners made
five hundred and one thousand dollars
and some odd cents (which the reporter
could not distinctly catch), all in the same
year that Mr. Tilden swore his income at
$11,000. This was not the St. Louis, Al
ton and Terre Haute Railway suit wliloh
Mr. Tilden lately settled by paying $100,-
000. '
•The depth of stow on the Pacific
coast is uncommonly great this season,
and many lives have been lost in ava
lanches.
—We have some learned and religious
men on the press. The Port Jervis Daily
Union, in its description of the funeral of
certain citizen, states that “At the rear
of the pulpit, on the wall, appeared very
prominently the initials “I. H. S.,” for
tiie words “I have suffered.”
—The arrivals bf vessels at Pensacola
for the past month have been seven ships,
forty-six barks, four brigs, and seven
schooners, a total of sixty-four, with an
aggregate tonnage of 39,438. The depar
tures for the same period have been fifty
with'exports' as follows: 0
Hewn timber, 512,857 cubic jeet.
Sawn timber, 653,642 cubic feet.
Lumber, 6,702,000 superficial feet, aud
quantity of coal and cotton.
—If a negro cannot be legally convict
ed of crime by a jury not composed in
part of negroes, can a sausage maker be
legally convicted unless there are sausage
makers on tbe jury? The same question
applies to the owners of-Jackasses, trapeze
performers, Congressmen, eleigymsn, and
cross-eyed or one-eyed men. The Wash
ington Post thinks that under the late de-
cisons of the Supreme Court,- these ques
tions are all-pertinent.
—-The Bishop of Manchester was present
lately at the examination of tiie Latin
class in a ladies’ college where the new
mode of pronunciation is in vogue, when
one of the scholars "pronounced vidssim
we-kiss-im. ‘(What’s that' word?” asked
the Bishop. “We-kiss-im, my lord—by
turns.” “Oh, yo do, do you? I begin to
comprehend now the popularity of the
new pronunciation.”
—The Cincinnati Gazette takes a col
umn to prove that we have no need for a
navy, and that it is"'a useless expenditure
of money to build war ships. As we have
had no nary for a number of years, it
would seem that it is really possible to get
along without one; bnt, strange to aay,
although we have been without the article
for fifteen years, the princely sum of $450,-
600,000 has been spent, under pretense of
building a navy, since tha year 1865. The
whole of that enormous amount has gone
into the pockets of “good” Republicans.
No country on earth has been so plun
dered for the. benefit of a political party,
exclusively, as the United States.
—That gold-crosses are often hollow is
well enough known, but perhaps few per
sons have discovered what a French wri
ter has—the use to which this vacant
space is put by English ladies. It is filled,
he says, with cordial, or sherry, or brandy,
for sipping in public placek; and thus the
religious symbol is made to administer to
creature comfort. “This custom can be
observed nightly at the opera; where a
charming young English lady is in the
habit of pressing to her lips at tbe most
pathetic passages an enormous gold cross.”
“If this story is an invention, it is at least
ingenious.
Said the nurse to the Doctor: “Sure,
sir, I only know of one good medicine for
the baby, and that is Dr. Boll’s Baby Syr
up.” Price twenty-five cents.
An old pfiy.TJKii'relTrarrWHVIB.™.-.-
n« had placed in bU hand* >>/ an Bast India
minion ary tbe foramla of m aimple vegetable
remedy (or tha apeedy and .permanent carafe ~
Consumption. Broncbitai,Catarrh. Asthma, ard
all Tbrr&t and Long Affections, also a positive
and radical enre for Nerrpu* Debility ana all
Norton* Complaints, alter having tested tbe
wonderful curative pewen in thousands of eeeea,
has felt It hla duty to make it known to all
suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive (and
a desire to raliere human suffering, 1 will send,
free bf charge'to all who desire it, this recipe
with full directions for preparing and using, in-
German. French or Entflish. .Sent by mail by
addressing with rtam,-naming thiapaper,*W. w.
Svssii 1*0 Powers'd Block. Rochester. H Y.
THE GENUINE
DR. C.McLANE’S
Celebrated American
WORM SPECIFIC
. i OR
VERMIFUGE.
SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.
T HE countenance is pale and lead
.en-colored, with occasional flushes,
or a circumscribed spot on one or both
cheeks'; the eyes become dull; the
pupils dilate;” an azure semicircle
runs along the lower eye-lid; the
nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes
bleeds; a swelling of the upper lip;
occasional headache, with humming
or throbbing of the ears; an unusual
secretion of saliva; slimy or furred
tongue ; breath very foul, particularly
in the morning; appetite variable;
sometimes voracious, witli a gnawing
'•ensation of the stomach, at others, .
Vitirely gone; fleeting pains in the
stomach; occasional nausea arid-vom
iting; violent pains throughout the
abdomen; bowels irregular, at rimes
costive; stoalsslimy, not unfrequent-
ly tinged with blood; belly swollen
and hard ; urine turbid ; respiration
occasionally, difficult, and accompa
nied by hiccough; cough.sometimes
dry and convulsive; uneasy and dis
turbed sleep, with grinding of the
teeth; temper variable, but' generally
.irritable, &C.
"Whenever the above symptoms
are found to “xist,
DR. C. McLANE’S VERMIFUGE
will certainly effect a cure.
IT does not contain mercury
in any form; it is an innocent prepa
ration, not capable of doing the slightest
injury to the most tender infant.
The genuine Dr. McLane’s Ver
mifuge bears the signatures' of C.
McLane and Fleming Bros, on the
wrapper. —:o:—
DR. O. MCLANE’S
LIVER PILLS
are not recommended as a remedy “ for
all the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in
iffections of the liver, and in all Bilious
Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Head
ache, or diseases of that character, they
stand without a rival.
AGUE AND FEVER.
No better cathartic can be used prepar
atory to, or after taking Quinine.
As a simple purgative they are un
equaled.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
The genuine are never sugar coated.
Each box has a red wax seal on the
lid, with the impression Dr. McLaNS?S
Liver Tills.
Each .Trapper bears the signatures of
C. McLane and Fleming Bros, a#
• Insist upon having the genuine Dr.
C. McLane’s Liver Tills, prepared by
Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the
market being full of imitations of the
name McLane, spelled differwptljb«fi
same pronunciation.