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amw AUGUST. T W T i 13 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13114 15 16 17 18 19 20 1 21 22 23 '24 25 26 27 28 29 30 311 - - - - FOR THE HERALD. MEssRs. EDITonS: The enclosea communication, which we clip from the Orangeburg Democrat, is from a personal friend and among the best farmers in that County. The article is based on practical observation and experience, and is well worthy the careful perusal of the farmers of Newberry. We agree with J. W. S. that the want of proper drainage and the lack of potash in the soil is the prime cause of rust in cotton. We are promised a careful analysis of soil subject to rust, and hope by another season we. may be able to give to the public its causes scientifically treated, as well as a preventive. H. RUST IN COTTON. Editor Orangeburg Democrat: The subject of rust in cotton will only be interesting to those in the count; living below the clay belt. We all know clay lands do not rust cotton, but continue to mature until frost. Why they do this will be apparent as we proceed. What is rust in cotton ? Some will tell you it is a want of vegetable mat ter in the soil; others that it is caused by an excess of moisture ; others again that cool nights pro duce it, and I have heard some old farmers say, it always starts from poke weed growing near the cotton. Now all these different opinions prove conclusively that this scourge -ea-r'j otton fields has been having its own way, not because there is no remedy for it, but because the dis ease, if I am allowed the term in this connection, is so little understood. It cannot be for want of vegetable matter in the soil, for we frequently see cotton rusting in soils abund antly supplied with vegetable mat ter. I'll admit it does correct it to a limited extent. I have seen cot-~ ton almost entirely destroyed by rust in bottoms, where there was an abundance of vegetable humus washed in from surrounding hills. Neither can moisture be the prevail ing cause, or the clay lands would also suffer by rust in wet seasons ; and the same reason may be assign ed why cool nights do not cause it. The poke weed does not grow everywhere, and particularly about these rusty cotton patches, there fore the blame cannot be laid at its door. Then if none of these opin ions advanced are the cause of rust, what is it that causes cotton to rust on nearly all the lands below the cotton or clay belt ? My answer is the want of su.fficient potash in the soil. And now for the proof. Why does rust start and spread from a poke weed growing near cotton ? Not solely because it takes the disease from the poke, but be cause the poke has exhausted all the available potash in the soil near it, and the cotton near, being the first to feel the want of potash, show symptoms of rust. The an alysis of poke and Irish p-otato vines show that they contain more potash than any other vegetable product. We are also taught that clay soils abound in potash, hence the absence of rust in cotton on them, and in consequence their su perior adaptabiity to cotton. In 1873 I applied fifty bushels un leached ashes to an acre of land that had been rusting cotton badly. The cotton remained green until frost, and matured fruit to the top, when the adjoining cotton failed to mature any top crop, and some of it dying with rust the first of Sep tember. That strip of land has not rusted cotton since. The pot ash in the ashes was what the soil nceded to keep thc cotton from rusting. The following year one of my hands put a.sack of Kainit or German potash salt on one acre through the middle of a seven acre patch of cotton. The land 1~~A ~ r. ,l+irft+iAfl fcmr ~ leaves and all the top bols dead before half grown. This acre re mained green until frost and ma tured its fruit to the top. This last experiment itself was evidence conclusive to my mind that potash was the remedy for rust in cotton. I have since noticed the same re sults in similar experiments. I believe on lands thoroughly drain ed, (and no other kind should be planted in cotton,) and not entirely destitute of vegetable matter; pot ash in every instance will correct the tendency to rust in cotton. By rest and rotation the tendency to rust can be corrected in a great measure but when lands are planted every year, and e is not near the surface, potash must be supplied either in unlimited amounts of trash and litter from the woods, stable manure, ashes, or some of the commercial preparations of potash. J. W. S. MIDDLE ST. MATTHEWS. HOG PENS AND HOG CHOL ERA. Now that summer is approach ing, hogs, if confined, should be turned out to pasture. Many a farmer keeps his pigs in a little yard or pen, often near the house, where the mud is as deep as they can wallow through. He throws their feed in the mud, from which they must pick it as best they can, and clean water is something that they do not get from one year's end to another. Yet such a man will wonder why his family has the fever and his hogs have cholera. I have seen hogs kept in this way, or, worse yet, in floored pens which were never cleaned, until at killing time their bellies were full of small ulcers; and such meat is packed and shipped to the East as prime mess pork! Places where filth al ways reigns supreme, are the fat tening-pens connected with dis tilleries. I believe that such places have as much to do with spreading disease among hogs as among cattle. So far as I have ever known, when cholera makes its first appearance in any. district, it has nearly always been among the swill-fed hogs of distilleries or flocks treated as de scribed above. I do not claim that in great cleanliness we have an in fallible preventive of cholera ; but I do claim that' with cleanliness and proper variety of food, the appear ance of the malady would be less frequent and its victims fewer; that farmers, by little care and at tention might save themselves much loss. Men shut a pig up in a filthy pen and give him filthy garbage to eat, and then abuse him because he is an unclean animal ; but let them give him a clean place to stay in, clean food and clean water, in short, treat him as well as other stock, and see if he is not as clean as other animals. Nowv, farmers, try a little wholesome cleanliness with your hogs and see if they do not pay better.-V. J. Eers, in Rural New Yorker. HINTS. If farmers' families would eat less pork and more eggs and chicken meat they would be healthier. ISave your early pullets ; they give the increase. It don't pay to keep a stock of old hens year after year. Keep charcoal where the fowls can get it whenever they want it. It is one of the best preventives of disease among fowls that 1 know of. About this time look out for hen hawks. Don't trust to any such device as traps on top of poles ; a good marksman with a shot-gun or rifle will do more towards ex terminatiug hawks than all the traps in creation. Now that the meroury is well up towards the nineties, look out for the spider louse or red mite. They are nocturual wretches, hiding on the under side of the roots and in cracks through the day, and creep ing out at night to suck the blood of both old and young fowls. Libe ral doses of coal oil on the perches and in all cracks and crevices, and a thorough fumigation with sul phur is the remedy. The variations in weight of eggs per dozen is from three to five ounces. This shows that eggs should be bought and sold by weight. It has been decided by those who ought to know about such things, that 300 pounds of Peru vian guano is sufficient for an acre of corn land. The manure of 50 fowls in one year, mixed with four times its bulk of swamp muck or dry earth even, is every whit as valuable as three hundred weight aliscellaneous. THE GENUINE DR.C.cLANE'S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC I OR VERMIFUGE. SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. THE countenance is pale and lead Ten-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 unusuai secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very foul, particularly, in the morning;. appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach; occasional nausea and vom iting; violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels irregular, at times costive; stools slimy, not unfrequent ly tinged with blood; belly swollen and hard; urine turbid; respiration odcasionally difficult, and accompa niei 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 exist, 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 doingthe 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. -:0: DR. C. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy "for all the ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections 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 IXITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the lid, with the impression DR. McLANE'S LIvER PILLS. -Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. McLANE and FLEMING BROS. Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. McLANE's LIVER PILLs, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name MifLane, spelled differently but same pronunciationi. itsyotful coor TaIs tandar rties com-ed oulnded soothin thenano great e com fft, arte ascp bydef andus beos stisatr and eer. It res tores graypertiaed itrto the ycuthfllr colator tei.ora Ior revesting baldtines, ithng man dadrff hIt girow thec hada coolesing, othing aso great cfort, and effeualp deitsle. cosites hie andurean. aeul By consoiroeriESiT reRToe for, tseinenting purposessn main thie, hair groltiar. n stroln gh m'.:y Ahs aessg,anorprtin ha be foard from effctal or desirable. n deiAble shaye, to Drow Strt bAk, aye dsron. aschts, as, "Thle beinsitnt anre preto, and aeuck lectd eforecllen qualices aner maen conidr, thc will nREAIhe fuor s h inenedprpse. .PNASH, n Dola. IsuoprfetiLoo PghaEE an' i the Or VGTBE WHImEdy RoW sl ec,Thits leanteratin PEmayNE relie on sYPoJ cangeth scEoLor infa the bear fhromgy rs ancy fothen tem dicreieves t aisesil appieruia lyeuadm,n effealy produes a skiedi rebnos was.ff Manufacte by Dr. P.. HL &ANT.As, NAHUALLACE, A o~b alt orneisz y~ D-atl aw, IMe1c NEBERY S C Oct a5 perfetf.ol UIIE,adi h Oct. 25, 43-tf. fififift A MONTH guaranteed. $12 a day Pianos and Organs. PIUSIC EMPORM This Beautiful Organ For Only $90 Cash! Sweetest Tonted Organi Made. Other N i Ne Ogas Ther Nicetw rgnew rans.M CASES and DOUBLE REED. Beautifl| Ne Upright Piano For $125 Cash. ic 1 Oct, Bos8Wood Piano For $150 Cash. ACENT FOR Mason & Ilamlin, Wilcox & White, Waters, Peloubet, Pelton & Co., and other Organs. Decker Bros , IIailet, Davis & Co., Arion, Waters, Wagner and other Pianos. Full line of SMALL INSTR{UMENTS, SEET MUSIC and MUSIC BOOKS at LOW EST PRICES. AGENTS WANTED. Send for Catalogues. Address, W. F. CIJMMLNS, KNOXVILLE, TENNs Feb. 19, S-6mi. Jiron WPorks. FOUNDRY NOTICE. TIlE undersignecd would respectfully in form his friends and the friends of Mr. PE TER K!ND, that he has bought the PIIG NIX IRON WORKS, of Columbia, S. C., and is now prepared to do all kinds of work in the max;ufaeture of STE AM ENGINES, from five-borse power to any size, Boilers, Saw, Grist and Cane Mills, all kinds of Ag ricultural Implements, Iron and Brass Cast iigs, Columns for stores, of all descriptions, Railings for Baluonies and Cemetcries, and Repairing of' all kinds of machinery. Mr. Peter Kind will superintend the busi ness, and all orders sent shall have prompt attention. Reasonable prices, and good work done by thec best mechanics. DIrect all orders to ,G. DIERO KS, Or, PETER KIND, Superint.endent, for G. Diercks, Columbia, S. C. Mar. 19, 12-tf. ESTABtLISHED 1865, GILMORE & CO., Attorneys at Law., Successors to Chipman, Hosmer & Co., 629 F. Street, Washington, D. 0. American and Foreign Patents* Patents procured in allicountries. No PEES Im ADVA~CE. No chaige unless the patent is grant ed. No fees for making preliminary examina tions. No additional fees for obtaining and conducting a rehearing. Special attention given to Interference Cases before the Patent Office, Extensions before Congress. Infringement Suits in different States, and all litigation pertaining to Inventions or Patents. SND STAMP FoR PAPHLET OF sIXTY PAGES. United States Courts and Departments. Claims prosecuted in the Supreme Court of the United States, Court of Claims, Court of Comn missioners of Alabama Claims, Southern Claims Commission and all sorts of war claims before the Executive Departments. Arrears of Pay and Bonnty. OFICERS, SOLDIERS and SAILORS of the late war, or their heirs, are in many cases entitled to money from the Government, of which they have no knowledge. Write full history of ser vice1 and state amount of pay and bounty received. Enclose stamp, and a full reply, after examination, will be given you free.' Pensions. All orrICnns, soLDIEas and SAILOnS wound ed, ruptured or injured in the late war, however slightly, can obtain a pension, many now receiv ing pensions are entitled to an Increase. Send stamp and information will be furnished free. United States General Land Office. Contested Land Cases, Private Land Claims, Mining Pre-emption and Homestead Cases, prosected before the General Land Office and Department of the Interior. Old Bounty Land Warrants. The last Report of the Commissioners of the General Land Office shows 2,897,500 acres of Bounty Land Warrants outstanding. These were issued under acts of 1855 and prior acts. We pay :ash for them. Send by registered letter. Where ssignments are imperfect we give instructions to perfect them. Each department of our business is conducted in a separate bureau, under the charge of expe rienced lawyers and cler-ks. By reason of~ error or fraud many attorneys are suspended from practice before the Pension ad other offices each year. Claimants whose ttorneys have been thus suspended will be gra :itously farnished .with full information and proper papers on application to us. As we charge no fee unless successful, stamps or return postage should be sent us. Liberal arrangements made with attorneys in ll classes of business. Address. GILMORE & CO., P. 0. Box 44. Washington, D). C. WAsHINiGTON. D. C., November 24, 1876. I take pleasure in expressing my entire coni ience in the responsibility and fidelity of the Law, Patent and Collection House of Giilmore & L;o., of this city.II B HIE GCro h Eatonal MEtroolta B. I kTE (Che. of, 0teNtoalMtooitnBn. De.3 5Tf.h 'f P ~~ a T nWrr7n D EUDE Miscellaneous. PRINTIMiIIOU~, BOOK STORE! el SUBSCRIBE FOR THE Newberry Herald, $2.00 PER ANNUX. CARDS,-Y BRIEFS, LABELS,l TICKETS, ENVELOPES, CIRCULARS, S( NOTE HEADS, O STATEMENTS, LETTER HEADS, LEGAL BLANKS, sl B IL L I-,ADS, INVITA IiONS, PAMIN'ILETS, HAND BILLS, DODGERS, .R PLACARdS, C Etc., &c. .ETC., &c. .&a F PRINTED AT THE d si HERALD PRINTING OFFICE, a NEWBERRY, S. C. 1 An elegant lot t Invitation and Wedding Papers, c B WITH ENVELOPES TO MATCH. 13 PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS, LETTER ALBUMS, GAMES, PAPER DOLLS andp PAPER FURNITURE b For children, &c., &c., &c AT THE v HERALD BOOK STORE. BIBLES, HYMN BOOKS, PRAYER BOOKS, PAPER of all kinds, ( PENS, PENCILS, INK, a ENVELOPES, 0 SLATES, d DIARIES, FOR SALE CHEAP AT TUE HERALD -OO STORE. ORDERS FOR SCHOOL BOOKS, and all other kinds ot - BOOKS, or any article in the STATIONERY LINE PROMPTLY FILLED. Address,I T. F. GIRENEKER, Editor H ERALD and Proprietor Book Store. Jan. 27, 4-tf. OUR MONTHLY. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. Ourt MosTatY is a magazine devoted to gen eral and religious reading. Its contains 24. double column pages, and every endeavor will . be made to make it wvorth the money. Every charitably inclined person should sub scribe for it, as the entire subscription is devoted to the support of the orphans in the THORNWELL ORtPIIANAGE of Clinton, S. C.. by whom all the work upon it is done. It is carefully edited and is worth the I price asked for it. Will not the friends of the I Orphanage get up a list of subscribers for us and so enable deserving boys to assist in supporting themselves. All subscriptions should be sent at once to the editor and publisher, R EV. WM. P. JACOBS, Oct. 20, 42-tf. Clinton, S. C'. Wood's Household Magazine] (Vol. 16) for 1879, enlarged to 100 pages, contains the cream of the world's literature I arranged in twenty departments, for the entertainment, instruction, and profit of 1 every rcader. Yearly, $2.00; sample copy, 1 10 cents. Order from newsdealers or di- 1 rect. Unprecedented terms frce to agents. Send 10c. for outfit, worth $1. S.S. WOOD, | Tribune Building, N. Y. City. The above popular Magazine and the I Newberry UERALD will be furnished to new subscribers at .the low rate of $:3 for the two. Feb. 5, 6-tf. | T HE WE EKL.Y NE WS CONTAINS . LIVE EDITORIAL' THE LATEST TELEGRAMS! CAREFULLY SELECTED MAIL NEWS! BESIDES THlE FOLLOWING SPECIALTIES: PRIZE STORIES! PRIZE STORIES! |t A CHESS COLUMN! a AN AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT ! RECORD OF MARRIAGES AND DEATHS! The Weekly News GIVES MORE FOR THlE MONEY e Than any other Southern Weekly ! n SEE TILE PRICES! Single Subscriptions, per Annum..$ 2 00 a Five Subscriptions at $1.75............ 8 75 Ten Subscriptions at $1.50...........15 001 Twenty Subscription at $1.25.........25 00J Fifty Subscriptions at $1.i......... .. 50 00 The WEEKLY NEWS will be sent to year ly subscribers to the Daily Edition of THE - NEwS AND COURIER for $1. The WEEKLY NEWS will be sent for one year to six months' subscribers to the Dail.y Edition of TIIE NEWS AND COURIER for $1. 50. No reductionis will be made in the price to y subscribers of TllE NEwS AND CouRIER ex-k cpt as above. Remember! The WEEKLY NEWS contains I all the Latest News, selected from THE I NEws AND CouIERs, besides these specialties. which do niot appear in the Daily at all: 1 A PRIZE STORY! ! A CHES3S COLUMN! hi AN AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT ! D And a Complete Weekly Record of C DEATHS and MARRIAGES in this State. Any one of these specialties alone is te worth the price of subscription, and the subscriber really gets A FIRST-CLASS WVEEK LY PAPER BESIDES FOR NOTHING. ~ RIORDAN & DAWSON, c Feb. 19, 8-tf. CHAELESTON, S. C. st in th oc Dec., 50-1y. ~ Any Book or Article. Prugs X Fancy yr.icles. DR: E. E. MACUN GGIST AND Ch1ST, COLUMBIA, S. ( Removed to store two doors not to Wheeler 11onse. A full stock of Pure Mediines, 'mi , Perfunieries, ToileL Articls, G"d.1 1l Field Seeds, al.ways in ,tore at. Aderate prices. Orders promptly atternil to. Apr. i1, 15-tf. ;tationery ad Bidbg 111 STATIONI IY HOW. -0 E. R. STOKES HAS just opened, in the new and had me building immediately opposite be loenix oilce, on Main street, a comp te ;ock of STAT10.NE1RY, omprising Letter, Cap and Note Paper, if 1 sizes, qualities and of every descriptiot; lat Papers of Cap, Demy, Double-Cap, Me ium, Royal, Super-Royal, and Imperia zes, which will be sold in any quantity, o1 tanufactured into Blank Books of any size. nd ruled to any pattern, and bound in any ,yle, at short notice. ENVELOPES i endless variety-all sizes, colors and quali. es. BLANK -BOOKS f every variety, Memorandum and Pasi ooks, Pocket Books, invoice and Lettei ooks, Receipt Books, Note Books. ARCIIITECTS and DRAUGHTSMEN will nd a complete stock of materials for theil se. Drawing Paper, in sheets and rolls, ristol Boards, Postal Paper and Boards, Oil aper, Pencils, Water Colors, in cakes and oxes, Brushes, Crayons, Drawing Pens. SCHOOL STATIONERY f every description; a great variety of con enient and useful articles for both Teacherr nD Pupils. ALSO, P1hotograh Albums, Writing Desks, Por )>ios, Cabas, with boxes, and a countles ariety of FANCY ARTICLES. Also, a most elegant stock of Gold Pe!s nd Pencil Cases, superbly-mounted Rubbr roods. INKS. Black, Blue, Violet and Carmine, Indelige nd Copying; Mucilage; Chess and Bak ammon Men and Boards: Visiting and Wd ing Cards, and everything usually kept i a rirst Class Stationery flou, Vbich the subscriber intends this shall bf He will still conduct his BINDERY nd LANK BOOK MANUFACTORY and 1k 'ER-RULING ESTABLISHMENT, wlich as been in successful operation for cer irty years in this State, and to whichhe rill continue to devote his own personal3.t tntion. His stock will be kept up full ad omplete, and his prices will be found alwys easonable, and he hopes to have a shareof latronage. E. R. STOKES, Main Street, Nov. 15, 46-tf Opposite Phonix Offie .?iscellaneous. Pianos and Organ. The undersigned takes this method ton orm the citizens of Newberry and surroud ng Counties, who are desirous of purelis g an Organ or Piano, that lhe has perfet d arrangements with the manfacturenby vhich he can RETAIL you a Piano oan )rgan AT wilOLESALE PRICEs. We canwell roui a fir.Ct class instrumient at the sme rice as these cheap shoddy things so ix ensively advertised over the country. A riten guarantee for 5 years accomipazes very instrument we sell. We p)ut them;p your residence, and keep thiemi in toe or 12 months free of charge. We respet ul refer to the following well known pfr is to whomi we have sold Mr. J. 0. Peoples, Piano, Ne wherry ( I.; Mr. 0. [. Schumpert, Organ, Newberr. . II.; Mr. Christian Bennett, Organ, Cokes mry, S. C.; Mr. Jacob Counts, Organ 'rosperity, S. C.; Mr. Jonas Swink, Piano~ nion C. 1[., S. (I.; Mr. Asa Smith, Piano nion (C. II., S. C.; Mr. Jas. R. Ellis, Pia:o, Ini C. H., S. C.; Mrs. E. M. Rice, Organ oldwell P. 0., S. C.; Rev. J. I. Bonner 'iano, Due West, S. C.; .The A. M. F hurch, Organ, Newberry, S. C.; E. S. Cop ock, Piano, New berry, S. C. Old Pianos taken in exchange for net ines. Pianos tuned and repaired st shot otice. Satisfaction guaranteed or no pa'. Respectfully, W. M. SHACKLEFORD. Feb. 17, 1879--8-6m. EMBALMING BURIAL CASES. The subscribers inform the public that hey have on hand EMBALMING CSES, nd are prepared to EMBAL M in a saisfac nry manner. By the use of thesecases odies can be kept through all time vith a erfect preservation of features. "l'hose rho wish our services will cill on us. These mibaling cases are beautiful in their iake and we guarantee them to be all that said of' themn, or take back and .-efund be price. II1, IJIIHPMIN & 80N. Dc. 11, 50-ly. NEW ROTEL. This commodious edifice, situated on [AIN STREET, NEWBERRY, S. C., and nown as the 3LEASE HOTEL, now open, and invites the people one and [Ilto call and know what can be done at all ours, to wit: An~ Ext a Good Breakfast, inner, or Supper, for TWENTY-FIVE ENTS. Forty or fifty regular boarders will be sken at proportionately low rates. The convenience of location., excellent iring water, well furnished table, etc., mnmend this house to every one. Oct. 16, 42-tf. D A LIMITED NUMBER of litI'P active, energetic canvass eL4 rs to engage ini a pleasant and profitable business. ood men will lind this a rar chance TO MAKE MONEY. Such vill please answer this advertise cut y letter, enelosing stamp for reply, ating what business they have been en tgedl in. None but those who meani bush ass needl apply. Address FINLEY, HARVEY & Co., Jun 25, 26-ly Atlanta, Ga. 'RTOGRAPl GALLERY, The citizens of Newberry are respectfully formed that I have opened the Gallery in e Aricultural Society building, formerly cupied by Mr. Wiseman, and that I am epared to take PICTURES SPOOL COTTON. TABLISHED 1S12. TRADE CE CE A. CLARK, SOLE AGENT, 10 BRO WAY, - NEW YORK r'he disti tive features of this spool cot are tha L is made from the very fines1 SEA LAND COTTON. t is fiisi I soft as the cotton from whici: its made; has no waxing or artificial fin is to decei - the eyes: it is the strongest SiDothest I most elastic sewing thr:a in;he mark : tor machine sewing it ha n(Piqual; ij .wound on W ITE SPOOLS. Nhe BJacjs the most perfect J,T BLCK er produqd in spool cotton, being dyei a systc, patented by ourselves. Thi oors are ,red by the N.V ANILINE PROCESS ruering rem s6 perfect and brilliant tha oissmakb everywhere use them instea< ( eewing Iks. -- i Gold 3edal was awarded thisS-nool cot t4 at Park. 1878, for "great strength" am eneral xcellence" being the highes a urd giv:n for spool cotton. Ve invie comparison and respectfulll a s ladies;o give it a fair trial and convinc t mselve oF its superiority overall others .'o be hla at wholesale and retail at - J. D. CASH'S. uly 16, !9-6m. TO $6000 A YEAR, or $5 to $20 1 a day in your own locality. N4 risk. Women do as well as*men 1501UMany make more than thl sount stated above. No one can fail tA uke money last. Any one can do th, Ork. You can make from 50 cts. to $2 a iur by devoting your evenings and spar tne to the business. It costs nothing t< T the business. Nothing like it for mone; aking ever offered before. Business plea! at an l strictly honorable. Reader, if yol ant to know all about the best payin; hsiness before the public, send us your a] cess and we will send you full particular ad privateterims free; samples worth * iso free; you can then make up your mini )r yourself. Address GEORGE STINSO. CO., Portland, Maine. 25-1: THE M~LUIA R.EfifTER THE CAPITAL OF SOUTHI CAROLINI ItCLATION LADE AND CONSTANTLY It (tEASING. WE RESPECTUJLLY INVITE THE A' [ENTION of the ladmng community to th: xcellent newspaers we are now publisi ng in Columbia. TIHE RE1GISTElt is -th mly patpCr ever liblishied at the capitalC outh Carolinia wich is conducted as at he leading dailie.of the principal cities. the country. We ave an able and distiu uished corps ofeditors-gentlemenl we nown all over th'State for their learni ability and sound Cemocratic principles; nn who have seved the State and th South on every ocision when the deman arose for their sevices, and who may I safeiy depended unn as reliable leaders < the Democracy inhie line of journalism. TH E DAIL1 RE(STER is a twenty-eigi :olumn paper, 2tx inches, printed on goc paper and with lege, clear cut type, coi taming the LATES TELEGRAPHIC NEW| ULL MARKET EPORTS, editorial ma ter oin the leading; ecurrences of the time and replete with iimresting miscellaneot reading. The LOcLJ NEW~S is full and i: teresting, one Edite devoting his time C: elusively to that doartmient. Our corre pondence from Wasington and other placd of note gives an enmrtaining resume of a the important evels of the day.. THE TRtI-WEEILY REGISTER, w11 some minor chant.s, comprises the Co. tents of the Daily a$2.00 less per year. THE WEEKLY .EGISTERC is a larg handsomlygotten-.p eight page paper, x42 inches, containig forty-eight columi of reading matter. elbracing all the nev of the week and thecaost important cdit rial and local news. TERMIS-I ADVANCE. Daily Register, 1 yer.............. .$7 " " 6 moths..........---- 3 a a 3.......... .......... 1 TriWeekly Registerl year........... 5 " imonths-.......-2 ...................... 1 Weekly Register, 1 yar............. " " 6 mnths............- 1 a 4 3 '" ....... Any person sendint us a Club of ten su scribers at one tim will receive either the papers free, potage prepaid, for om year.. Any person sendig us the money f< twenty subscribers t<the Daily may reta for his services twenty dollars of tI amount; for twenty nbscribers to the Ti Weekly, fifteen dollasE of the amount; ar for twmty subscriben to the Weekly, fl 'dollai of the amount As am ADVERTISINI MEDIUM, THLE RE ISTERt Lfords unequaled faciiies, having lare :irculation,.andnumbering among i paros the well-to-dopeople of the midd and inper portion of lie State. Terms re sonale. Fonny information desired, address CALVO & PATTON, PROPRIETORS, Columbia, S. C. MParties desiring copies of THE REGI TER .a eXhibit in canvassine will be su pliedm application. fan. 15, 3--tf. TOBIAS DAWKINS, FMRIONBLE BARBEl NE WBERR Y, S. C. SHO NEXT DOOR NORTH of POST OFFIC A ean shave, a neat cut, and polite tentin guaranteed. May 3, 18-tf'. DR. W. SIMPSON. 3 . STAR SIMPsO SIMPSON & SIMPSON, PROPRIEToRS GENN SPRINGS &artanburg County, So. Ca. OPEr0 VISITORS ALL THE YEAIREOUN Acesible from Union C. H., on ti Sparnburg & Union R. R., sixteen mii 8outast of the Springs, and from Sp~ tanbg C. H., twelve miles North. The are god Livery Stables at each of the R*ES 01F BOARD, COTTAGE RENT, &C. For ngle Meals.......-.-..----.. For aDav......-.-.--.--..-.---- .2' For aWeek per. Day........------ . For a.onth per Day.........-.--.-. 1 Cotta{e Rent, per tenement, 3 rooms 1 per month... ... .....-.-.-.--.- 0 - Cottage Rent, whole cottage, 6 rooms peronth......--------. Wate- per Gallon (vessels extra at cos).........-.--.--'". --. Feb 20, .-tf. RaU Roads. Greenville & Columbia Railroad. SUA-MER SCHEDULE. I On and after Monday, June 2d, 1879, the Pas senger Trains will run as follows daily, Sundays excepted: UP. Leave Columbia, - - - 30.35 a m Ah-ton, - - 12.20 p In " Newberry. - - - - 1.23 p m lodges, - - - 427 p m Belton, - - 6.08 p m Arrive Greenville, - - - - 7.8 p.m DOWN. Leave Greenville, - - , - .5 a In " Belton, - -- - 8.25 a m "6 IMdges, - - 955 a m Newberry, M4- -P - m12.4p Alston, - 2.17 p m Arrive Columbia, - - - 3.45 p ra ANDEtSON BRANCH AND BLUE RIDGE DIVISION. Daily, except Sundays. UP TRAIN. Leave Belton at. 6.03 p In 9 Anderson G.50 p im Pendleton 7.45 p m Perryrille 8.20 p m Arrive at Walhalla 9.00 p M DOWN TRAIN. Leave Walhalla at, - - 6.15 a M 6 Perryville, - - 5.55 a m " Pendleton, - - 6.40 a m " Anderson, - - 7.35 a m Arrive at Belton, - - 8.15 a M Laurens Railroad Train leaves Lavrens at 7.80 a. m. and Newberry at 1.40 p. m. on Tues days, Thursdays and Saturdays. Abbeville Branch Train connects at Hodge's with down and up train daily, Sundays ex cepted. Leave Abbeville 8.30 a. m.; leave Hod ges 4.30 p. m. Up and down Trains on the main stem make close connection at Columbia with the up and down day Passenger Trains on the. South Caro lina Railroad and with the through Freight Trains, with Passenger Car attached, on the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad, and at. Alston. with the.trains of the Spartan burg, Union and Columbia Railroad for Union, Spartanburg, Hendersonville, Asheville, &c., &c . THOS. DODAMEAD, Gen'I Supt. JAEv.z NorTON. General Ticket Agent. IMPORTANT -TO Summer Tourists!t On and after the 2nd June a through Schedule will be put in operation connect ing the Atlantic Sea Board and the Moun tains of Western North Carolina, thus affording tourists and others a fine oppor tunity (at moderate rates) to visit one of the most lovely and romantic regions on this continent, and enjoy the health giving breezes of this "Land of the Sky." - ; - 1 A train will leave Charleston daily at 5 a. M., (Sunday excepted) arriving in Colum bia, 10:20 a. m. 5 A train will leave Wilmington, N. G., 10:30 p. m., arriving in Columbia 10:00 a. m. These trains make close connection at Columbia with the Greenville and Colum bia Road, leaving there at 10;35, a. m., arriving in Spartanburg J:10, p. m., Hen dersonville, N. C., 6:20, p. m., and Ashe ville, N. C., 10:20, p. m. Passengers by way of Charlotte will. take the 10:42, a. mn. train on the Atlatnta and Charlotte Air Line, arriving in Henderson ville 6:20, p. mn., and Asheville, 10:20, p. in. Passengers' from Atlanta make close connection at Spartanburg with the 3:10, p. m. train on Spartanburg and Asheville Road, arriving at ]Ie'derson and1 Ashe ville as above. Passengers for Glenn Springs make close 'connection at Spaitanburg with Thompson, & Tanner's Stage Line, arriving at Glenns about 6 p.-m. >Train on arrival at Hlendersonville mnakes close connection with Titompson, Steel & e~ Uarris' splendid new line of stages for f Asheville, making the run in from three and one-half to four hou-s. ~The returning train will leave Hender 1 sonville daily at 6, a. mn., (Sunday excepted) ~arriving in Spartanburg, 9:30, a. mn. Coluin bia, 3:30, p. mn., arriving in Charleston 9:45 p. mn., and Wilmington, N. 0., 6:2G a. mn. CThese Roads are now in fine condition, equipped with splendid Coaches and every t modern api.licance both for safety and comn fort. -Excursion tickets can be had at all the 2 principal ticket offices of our various con 5, ections. JAS. ANDERSON, s Sup4irintendent. ~Spartanburg, S. C., May 28, 1879. a-23-tf'. 4 Summer Excursion Ticketse - GREE.NTILLE AND COLUMBIA RAIL.ROAD, COLUeMA, S. C., July 1, 1879. ROUND TRIP TICKETS Good to return at any time.previous and up to NOVEMBER the FI'RST, 1879;'can be procured at the Ticket Office in Colum bia at the following rates: 5 Columbia to Spartanburg and return, $5 60 "Hendersonville and " 8 60 " Greeniville and return, 8 60 S " Waihalla and return, 9 715 i The Stage Fare from Hendersonville to Asheville, N. C., and return is $3.00, mak t ing the Round Trip to Asheville and return Le $11.60. Stage Fare from Hendersonville .to the Warm Springs, N. C., and return n$11.00, making the Round Trip to the e Springs and return $19.60. - T HOMASI DODAMEAD, d General Superintendent. JA4BEz NORTON, JB., Gen'l TicketAe / - July 9, 28-tf'. *. Harness and Saddles. F. No PARKER, -SUCCESSOR TO WEBB, ,TONES & PaRKER, (Between PoolPs Hotel and the Post Office,) - DEALER IN HARNESS, SADDLES and, LEA THFIR Hfaving boght theE NT I RE S TO0CK of the Harness and Saddle Manufactory of Messrs. Webb, Jones & Parker, I am pre - pared to do all kinds of work in this line. Also will keep on hand for sale, HARNESS, SADDLE3, &e., HARNESS LEATHER, -SOLE LEATHER, UPPER LEATHER, &c., of the best and cheapest. REPAIRING .and all work done to order * At Cash Prices and at Shortest Notice e A WE5EK in your own town, and no capital risked. You can give the sbusiness a trial without expense. r-The best opportunit.y ever ofi'ered re r those willing to work. Yion should try se notinig else until you see for yom-selt what you can do at the busimess we offer. No room to exp)laLin here. You can devote all your time or only your spare time to the business. and make great pay for every 5 hour that you work. Women make as much e as men. Send for special private terms and ~particulars, which we maifil fre3e. $5 Outfit 5free. I)>on't complain ot hard times while 5 you have such a chance. Address H{. HAL LETrT & CO., Portland, Maine. 25-ly. NOTICE. Tote Trvln__-lc Te Td r avge~ oldn rePetubllyin --rmThis undrsieneds anud thresperafly pnb-c fom his friends 'an the Dneral_piublic,