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fIJ WIIiA Ik~~ AVIS,Proprietors.] .A family Paper,'Devoted to Sclem C, Att !:q.quly, Industry and Literature.[ RM-$3O PeAnu inAvne VOL Xi ~WINNSBORO, S. C,* WEDNESDAY. MORNING~ MARCH2I85 N.4 FAIRFIELD HERALD Publiahed Eviry Wednesday at WM"N 'V? 61 - . C., nr WT ILLI.4MS X4 VIS. 0 TERMS-N ADVANCE. 9e Copy one year, - $ 8 00 pive "4 . 6" 12 00 en " " " . - 26 6) Brevities. Sweetening one's coffee is gener. oily the 'ret stirritig tyent of the day. D.:Koven-"is that a Jagger that I Pee boore tue ?' -Rochesr Democral andi4greeee. . The irst American palent to a naturalized Chinaian alia just beel grauke4. U wa. .or fn imsprovetuent in over:all. Sigo:or Bhnga las been pre-ented ly Fra.u1sin D .lursk.j wtith a tviag niticeut wreath of oak leaves aeq, golden acorns. An Indiana darkey sas :"1Pse got my Cibil uightS to b1e MOU Ab, but haint any ole black toes aticken' out'i mny ole hutes j -at de some, all for dat 1.e.,ky Freeditaund's Rooro%Y busi. less." The Philadelphia Herald proudly at-OUocb that 219 twins were among the producotinp ot Pbiladelhiu during the yea: 1874. The crop will be ripe for thra6hing in about three years. For the information and guidance of the 6olored race, it may be as well to state now that the civil rights Lill has no bearing whatever tip the sub. jeot of hon-roosts. Ne"da brides won't stnnd much foolishnesa at a wedding. Recently eC Of them, while going up the aiele of the church, ttpped Abort iand kick ed all th skii off the ihiia of a groomsman who trod on her trail. Jrooklyn Argus. Tilton's foadnes for children is something reark.able-especially for that Winsted 6hild. There's nothing lalf'o *eet in.ifq ps to be read to sleep by a gushing infant of twenty oightb One of the most notioceable sights about Chapultepec, Mexico, is the grove of gigantic Gyprossep, said to be from one thousasid five hundred to two thousand years old, with trunks soarred and torn by shot and shell fired in the many battles that have tuken place In the immediate neigh borhood. On top of the rook is the old Spanish castle, built of porl hyry, marbfe and sand stonie. The Paris correspondent of a Lon don paper describes a simple appa. ratus which seems to threaten the match trade. It is called the eleotri. eal tindir box, and ih small enough to be viarried in a aigar ease. Open ing this box you see a platinum wire stretched scross. Touching a spring the wire reddens suffliently to light a cigar. The hidden agency uhich heat* the wire is a very small electri cal battery, set, in action by the touching of the spring. Garibaldi's routine bill of fare is the following : Breakfast, coffoo; dinner, soup, one plate mueat or fish, fruit ; supper, none. Pius IX is similarly a fruit cater, differing only from the first in being a wine-bibber, ( don't call him a drunkard.) Victor Emmanuel Is a heavy lover of food and Wine, eating Indifferently of mnout things, from the tripie and garlic of Piedtmont to the snakes and muscos ([Laoilian style) ot Ilome, inclunive. 411 these are at present happily liv l ag In the latter city, after much hur Ayburly ad battles fought and won, and tile carlcaturists depict them together, 'arm in arm, saunter ing through the Carso, with toothpicks in their mouths, The wardrobe of Pins IX has at tracto: the attention of a pious Frenchman.on a ,visIt -to Rome. and we gashes somne curious details rrom his leotter to the Paris Figaro. Tho Popei wears ot during the year six white silk capuehins, which his holi ness chiefly spoils by taking snuff. These post Pius lX 2I6.a piece. Hi.. sli ppere, made of red cloth, embroid ered ini gold, cost from ?5 to ?6 a pair, and half a dozen pairs are used dusing the year, while the Pope in winter wears silk stockings over cotf,on ones, and In summer a mixture of sltk thread, for both ofj whiolh he paye ?1 a pair. Ilis holiness' rod miantle aleo, Is worth ?82. I-lis east off gainents are always burnt, no oth er use being'thought sufficiently lhon orable for the clothes which have been worn by the ricar of heaven. A slanderous paragraphist says: "A -dry-goods olerk in an Iowa oity late.ly dropped senseless behind th<n oounter while waiting on customers The female oustomner for whom hi bad pullod down every yard of calic< on the shelves quietly requested the proprietor to remove the mnourn b rance and send on a fresh clerk. A long Isied man' has gone t< sea with his soul stirred by the storj of Enioch Arden. lHe wants to b< wecked and ooine homeo and fin<L hi, A Stupendous Work. It is estimated that if the Engl Channel is buc68sfully tonneled, 300,00 travellers who now cross will inoreptse to 3,000,000. A jr ney from London to P.ris wi!l i take but five or six hours, with , dreaded rtugh sen-voyage taken o Tbe boring is to begin simultaneo ly in Franue and Euglaid, from bottom of two wells, 100 feet de The bore is to be nine feet in divi ter, by machinery invented Dickinson Brunton. The dot made from the exonvation is to continuously carried out thei wh length of the bore, and the fresh bro tthed by the workmen is to coutinuously,forced in. When Char Dickens madte Montague Tigg I projector of a plan for tunneling I Engliibhin Chunnel he did so in I nature of a huge joke, that was i tended as a s-tire upon some of t ohimer cal tuacial sobernes of t petiod. Yet hero, to-day, is a pri tioal and scietatifivilly organis Fchemne backed by large capital the execution in carne,t of the ta lie propused in jest and ridiou Assuredly, it is unsife to ridieu alimost anything, no matter how i practio-Lble it Looks it. thn mtumei for po-terity turns our ri-lcule up ourselves. Great Fishing in Florida. South from Jackponvill,, abo two miles, is Alnehua lake. P. mnetly thii-i wos a prairic (t' of ver 2 000 aere of gof)d grazing land. tho i.itkt. of it was a deep hole laud sink, of which there are a gr( many in the State, into which t waters of McKistry lake, ituat farther north, and the surroundi country used to flow and find tuLterranean outlet to the s< About four years ago the outlet more or lss choked up, and the a plus waater backing soon cover this v%st tract of country, in whi aqueous condition it has remain ever since, increasing and diminh ing in area as the soason varies fri wet to dvy. This lake is litera alive with fish. I have seen color boys, with an ordinary pole, out fr4 the woods, a line not over four f< long, and a fly rudely conbtruct of white and red flannel, catch eigl pounds of black bass in a couple hours. The 6ah average fromt t to twelve pounds. An eight-poui bass is common. IN Klux Outrages. The latest Ku Klux outrage is ported frum Alabam-t. Three Ha oal negroes visited the house of old colorod man named Moses T and forcibly taking him therefro al)d tying him norosi a log, whipF him unmercifully. Moses says th4 were four in the crowd, but I fourth man was unknown to hi The negro whipped states that I cause of this brutal ontrage was tl he hnd incurred the displeasure these ruscals (all bitter Radiua because lie voted a Demoorat tiol at the last election.-Con8litution 's'. Speakers. Somebody has exaimined the ree< and finds out that orly two Speak have been lunger in the chair ti Mr. B3lainse. Henry Clay seri in the 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, Ii and 18th Congresses. Andr Stiephenson, of Viriniia, was Spe. er of the 20th, 21st, 22d and 2 Congresses. Two Speakers! b. served equal terms wvith Mir. Blai -Nathaniel Maceon, of No t'i Ca lina, who served in the 7th, 8th ? 6th Congresses, and ex Vice-Pr. dent Sobuyler Oulfax, who sers in the 38th, S9th~ and 40th Congre es. E~x Senator Bohurs is now in N England lullIlling a few lecure gagements, after which .he goes WV for the sae purpose and to attl to his business ni lEa irs in St. L ot A bout the 1st of May he and faimily wrill sail foe Europe, spe the sumamer in Germany and Swimz land, and, returning in the fall, will give up a month then to lent ing, after which he will resume residence and editoriail work at Louis, he being still one of the ot era and editors of the Western F' perhaps the ntost prominent, asi the most widely circulated, Germ paper in the United States. ] mauoh of his timie, for the next y or two, lhe proposes to devote writingj hia, political history of United States and otlier literi works which lhe has ini contem tion. Mts. Scburs his received oral liberal offers to leave polit journalisam, and literature, and into business at Now York Chicago, but they are not such; at least, as to overcome his testes his duties in the former abund sud inviting fields of labor. Mexico is said to no concentra troops for a raidI inito (Gauatemahl revellgO for the EX"iiniof c The Medicis Exempted IJuder the Nom Tax Law. lie The commissioner of internal rev it enue has decided with reference tc ir- te tax upon mnedici ies under the lav ien of February 8, 1875, that two clas.,e he heretofore held to be liable to st,am ut. tax are ovnditionally exempted. us- First. Oilicinni medicines, o the medioines m ade or compounded accord Dp. ing to formulas published in author. me- ized standard medical authorities by but which have been heretofore pul rie up in a style or mauner similar to be that of patent or proprietary nedi :le oines in general. 4ir Second. Medicines unofficin;l, or be ma,le and compounded aoiording to lei unpublished formulas. Ia the first he of these cases the conditiou ou which he the exemption is made to depend is be that the foriaula 4sll be published n- on the label, and diapensat->ry pharma. he copia, or pharmaaeutical journal, or he other standa-d onedial authority 0- where bucb formula is published, d b1all be distinctly referred to oln the or label. In the second ease no proprie. sk torship must be claimed, and to re. e. move all semblance to any olaim to le proprictorship, or claim to have any n- privato formula, or occult secret or It, art for makiug and preparing the Ot' same, the maker or compounder must publish on his label the ex tot foimu. Ia which he u,os, so that the medical article be free and open to the trade, lit if thay see fit to maku or compound the eame article. The formulas in all ,,mes uijit,st be publiahed in forn li %nd manner, and indicated by such ,weig it and meozures as are generally adopted in thtir standard medic &l au be thorities. ed ng An extraordinary suit is now in a progre.,s in the Otbaneery Court of Ia. Louisville, K.., which from the ;ot prominence of the parties concerned ir- and the character of the issues in ad volved, has created a very decided ch sensation there. The late 11. D. ed Newcomb, for many years president 1h- of the Louisville and Nashville Rail m road, was married twice. 1Hia first Illy wite became insane and killed two of ed her cbildren, and has since been an >m inmate of the Mlassachusetts General oet Hospital for the the ins-ane. Several ed years ago Mr. Newcotub procured a ty decree of divorce, aud was afterward of married to a young daughter of a No wealthy anc prominent citiz-n of ad Louisville, by whom lie had two children. He died last summer, leaving property of between one and tvwo millions. One son by his first wife survived, and is practically the T, plaiutiff in the suit, although it -is a- brought in the name of the first wife, an making all legatees and trustees of DO, wills dcfendants, and is brought to m, declare the second marriage pul and ed void, the divorce, it is claimed, hav ,re ing been illegal. The effect of a de m cision in favor of the plaintiff will he be to declare the children by the he second wife illegitimate. Able coin of sel have beeu emiloyed on both ofdo 114) 1B dt - --------- l. Death Among the Four Babies. I On Monday evening Jennie, the most pronmisang of thme qu-artet of Ilahn babies, .nr LOW strret, died of ard catarrh, atid t,wo of the others, Sairahi era aind Mary, are said to be sick. The an dead baby -tasi yesterday prepared ed for burial and laid in the front room, ith Theli three little sis.ers who ale now ow three weeks old, lay iu the erib ini ik- the adjoining room, Sarah and 3d Katie together at, the head and Mary ive with Jennmie's saant pillow beside no, her,oceupying the other end. Saramh ro- who was delicate from birth, has nid not thirived, but Jem nie seemed to si- bi growing finely until taken siek, ed Her funeral will take place to-day~ s- Mrs. Hahn, the mother, is well enough to go- a bout t he hmouae. She is a comely-f;aeed woman of average ew stature. Althoughi but thirty year an.. of age, Mrs. H-ahin has been th< est mother of ten children, the first be ad ing twins, born whenm she was seven is teen years of age. She was a widus his when she miarm id .ir. hIlahn. ei- The constant increase of bills hv ibe congress demands some remedy. Ii uar- the tortiethi congress, 2,498 bills and~ his resolutions were introduced ; in th( St. fort y first, 3,643 ;lin t he for ty -second via. 4,275, and In the last congress, nio les oat than 5,(030 were presented. Ot tb is latter number, only about, 600 wera Ian passed, and of these 225 were passee 3ut during the first session. The greste ear part of the bills introduced are privam to clain)', and It is urged that somie dif them ferenit and less expensive mode o ary dihposing of such eases should be de g:a- vised. As 1,700 Gopies of every bil .'are printo . without any special order icn, some Idea of the expense which thesa go claims cause may be readily formed and ----***-~ f et, W hat is the difference between and bdneycomb and a honeymoon ? 2 ant hione ycomb consists of a number c small cella, .and honeymoon ver often of one great "se)l." ting - ** iin The la v lion st'amn''a have lease ny.m wti th.ir a ti .n n to ario. te ii Air. Bolink's Anileur Fire Brigaile. .'iMr. Bolink owtin and runs a coop or shop ascur tihe house of oorrectiot and as he keeps a dozin men at work he is bound to have his bhop r1n o .1system." The other day lie wai reading a newspaper article in regard to the prevention of confiragrations The article advised all cmployec: to lay out a regular progrimue of what should be done when a fire was discovered in tLe shop, and drill hiq hands till they understood it. li< bought fifty feet of hose for the peu. stock, detailed a man to u-.o it in case of Ore, and then initructed cacli other mani and boy just what they should do when an alas mi was given. One rolled out barrels, another to save tools, another to throw staves through a window, and each one know exactly what to jump for. This was all right, and Mr. B, link had a good wind to cancol his instr. alice policies and depend on his local fire brigade. .lefore taking this step, h awevcr, it occurred to hin to give his programmo a t' ital. lie had a little curiosity to s.-e if his em ployees would spring to their posts according to in-tructionl. and he studied out a plAn. Yzsterday 0iornting he passed up-stairs, kicked a pile of shavings together on an Uid piece (f zinc, touched a snatch to theus, and next usinute ran down stairs crying out : "The Ahop is on fire I Fire ! fire! fire I fire ! !" The mian who was to use the hose, grabbed it up, threw it out of the window and jumped after it thcut ing "fire I" until be was heird three blocks off. The man who was to save the tools tirew an adz and hit 31r. Rolink ins tile b-Lok, an , then bit himi again with a draw stave. As Mr. Bilink was pawing around on the floor, the man who was to save the ready-made work rolled five pork barrel over him, kicked in the heads of three n-ore, and then dug out through the back door. One man saved a piece of board six feet long ; another took up a stave and broke two winoluws before lie flud, while a third threw a hasunier at the clock, uttered a wild shriek, aid kicked open a side door. In two minutes the shop was clear of every one but Mr. 13link, and he wascrawling out from among the iarrals whei steamer No. 6 came galloping dowi. The snioke wa, ra Iling up through the roof, the boys yelling "fire," and the firemen were determined to save that coopershop or perish in the attempt. AMr. B0 link heard them calling to "1git them hose around hyar," anid to "pay It 3r up toeiglhty-five," and he got to the door and houted : "Hold on, gintlomen : there is no fire here !" "Git out'n thse way !" cried the pipemen ; "yere's your mineral wa ter." "It's only a joke, gentlemen there is no-" Mr. Bolink was shout ing, when the stream of water iifted hin over the barrels, out of the back door, whero lie sat down on a broken shave h(orse, uail his oooper shop had been fi led with water, and the shavings had buried out.. Diir ing the afternoon yesterday hsis whole force were engaged ill empty. isng barrel, wringing out dlraw-shasve~., hsanging broadaxcs up to dry, and] o-therwise gettinsg thai shop ou a workinig ba-,is.-Detroit I'rcs-. Dlssaliaflcd Bolidllde-rs of iho Port Royal lllloaid. , TPhe New York Tribune says: "Another of tle now f eqluent meet, ings of dissatisticd bondholders has h-en nalled for Tuesday, Ialrc l6Lh, ait 50 .lohxange Place.. The railroad ill troublo in this instance is the Port Royal Railroad of Southi Carolina and Georgia. Acecording t,o the st atement of Mlarx & Co., who claim to repre sent the bulk of the foreign bond. holders, the Port R--yal Rasil;ioaa de faulted in its initesest in 1873, anal hias not psaid any interest sincee thsa; timte. TIhey. beoomning dissatisfied at the uniprod u -tiveness of t,be capia tal which they have inlvested in the road, will me'et meet for the purpose or dev isinig measures for the protcot,~ tian of their inteie.ts. Thme pila c be preseunted at the mseeting has1 not been drawn up, but, it is under,tood that steps tow:irds a foreclosure of the property will be tan unless somie shore satifactory plan11 of ad. jurtament is suggested. The Georgis Rasilroad Comps~any hsas ensdorsed th< Port' Ioyasl Conmpany's biond to the extent of $600,000. Accordling tc thiejtinancial statemne1, made A pril 1 18'l(3, the capit,al stock piaid in th, Port Royal Railroad was 3,00(0,000 fubdod debt ~$1,800,000 ; total cos of the road $4,800,000)." And Maynard, of Tlennesseo, ge as minister to thse eiffilget, Orient Trho howling dervishess ehant wild. ,lays, and the sultan hsas orderd a nos set of permutation locks for th doors of his seraglio. A Miin Killed by a Turkey Gobbler. The 1Fayetteville, North Carolina, GSz-te, of a recent dUte. eomaiD. the following aniouncemeint : "Pied at his !eat in A nson C munty N. C. on 20th ultimo, tihe ion. Saum. uel Spencer, L L D., ant one of tie Judges of the superior court of his State. Ilis honor's he lth had becn declining for about two years, but he perfornmed the last circuit three months since and1 we underhtand, in. tended to have left house in a few days for this town, where the supe rior court in now sitting, had it nt been for the folloaing sectident, which, it is thought hastoned his death : He was sitjtiug in his piozz, with a red cap on his head, when a I arge cook turkey pabing, the judge, being sleepy, began to tiod ; wen the turkey, mistaking the no 1. ding and red cap, for a challengQ, mn ade s violent and unexpect.ed an attack on his hoior that ie L rew him out of Is chai-r on the flo sr ; and before ie could get any assistance, so beat and bruSod him that he died within a few d4ys after. 4Thieving in tie outskirts' is the latest desiguationl for p1icking 1.Adio. Josh F'razer is to be hung in Cam dell, on Friday next, for the murder of Bennoy Coolor. A Missouri woman lived twenty l1roo years with three pins roving through her waeted franme. Il.lland now has 12,000 winldmllilh in operation, at an estimated aitnual cost of 4,000,000. "Tee,h in exchange for wheat, pork or potatoe," is what enterpi is. ing dentist in one of the State towns advertises. An insane man blow his brains out on a train on the Northern rail way, near Concord N. H , and anoth. er passenger, becoming faint at witnemsing the fattl deed, went oi the plitform for air and fell off, re oeiving fatal injuries. A good little boy on Ilayne treet aids to clothe and feed his widow%ed mothor by threatening to "1.egO stones at the little girls as they atre going to ichool unle,s they pay Lim a penny a day. His ambition when he grows up is "to be a policeman.'' Chicago Tribulne. Gt:n. Lorenza Thomas. for many years Anjutant Ooneral of the Un1it"d States Army, died at his resideimei it Wmahington on thu 2nd inst., aged 71 yea.s. lie was a native of. Dela.. ware, and was Secretary of W ar during President Johnson's admin i.itration. The Spart1inburg lIer ild leirns that JameCs K. Menus only son of Capt. :. C. Means, about 15 yjars 1)f age, accidentally shot hiulivelf a few days ago, and was killed .it most instanil, . lie was out hunting when the lamentable occurrence t,ok place. "I see very lhttle of you," said an old gont lemtan at a ball bhe othle.r etveninrg to a young lady whom he had( not tiet, in a long time bel.,re. "1 ktnow it." wats thIe art leass reply, "but, mother wouldntr al low mec to wear a vety low neck dress to-nighlt, the weather is so cl. Judge Cook haa a taoub.lesomie grand jury to deal with in G ree-nville. lie directed thema to brintg in ai chiarge against t,he Greenvyileo Daily News for labe, atgaiin.t Treasurter Riunion, which they deland they could not do. Thte Judge t,ten no titled thaemt thtat ho would hold themt over Iroma day to day, without pay, until thtey took ntotioni. Mrs. James K. l'uslk has presentedl the Tennessee Ilistorical Sucioty with a pen m:ade fromt an eagle's qiuill dropped by an eaglo ins Vtr gnitan presented to PresidenOIt Polk in 1845. Mr. P'olk signed his first message to congress withI the pen made from this qui1!, the j,itnt reno lution of congress for the admission of the state of Texas, the ldw :,0 extend the lands of the Uted States over the st,ate of Texas, thte act "re ducing the duty on impjorts, and for other purposes," and the treaty of peace with Mexico, July 4-,h, 1i818. Theno hartford Tlimnes reports tha-t a yo'mng woman of that town wvent to ignire the pie of sewing machtines the other day. She asked if any de duction was iade to clergymen. "Oh, yes," replhed the salesman; "are you a minister's wife ?"~ "No air," was the anaswer, "I am not." "Are you the sister of a olergyman?" "Oh, no," wits the answer. "Then unwhtrelationship, do you ask for reduct,ion 2" "WuelI:" she re ple,"I am rnot a clerg~yman's wife, o,r .Astr, or couisin, but I h:ave jeast hat I nwarre(l tn n' a a nu rat. in th. WE ARE STILL OUR STO CK 03F Dress Goods, Clothing, Cassimers, Hosiery, Shoes, Hats &c. At prices which must Secure their rapidl Sale. We illvitc aln examuillation of goodIs Wve ame offl'irig. ve have just receiv ed a new supply -of SP11ZNG PRINTS, LONG CLOTHS &c. -A LSO, -OF GROCERIES. Su1gar, Coffee, N. 0. Molasses &c. &c. W. H. Flenniken & Co. 11A VE COMIE. WH AT. 1) A N N E N B E R~ U '8S Full Stock of Sprling 00oods. New C,alicoes ! New ('nlics !Piquesc! I'nines The Big Bonanza Stripes. Something New, Comirplete stock of Wiash Popils 150 per yard, Nansooks. 8Witi J/uslins, Victoria i,awns,t Plaiti Mfaslina1 A~ ITTrLE IDEA 01F OURW. JOUND) TO PLEASF ! OUR STOCK of NOTIONS -AND - CL OTING ! Execeu or's Sale. F. Y virtue oran order of tho Court, of J) Probate ror Fairfnold County I will e,iler for sale at public outcry to thme highest. bidder, at the residence of Thomna, Richiardson, udecensedl, near Simpson's T 0. on thme 26th. Marchl, theo personal pro. pe.rty of lihe snidl d- 'net I. E.I W. Phillips DEALER IN FURNITURE ) F TlE very best qualities, for larlors, . Chnmbers nnd Dining Rooms. For design and workumanship. N LQUA LLED! I offor at prices fliMt defy competition ! Jledsteads MADE of hard wood, and warranted to give entire saisfaction. I keep no inferi or nnlity. Uso economy and buy (le best, and buy where you can buy the cheapest. Sleep Comufortable AND HUY lthe People's MPRING BED. Itt is lite boe. in 1h market. without ex ception. They nre cheap. Kentucky lATTAN anl Split %ea( Chairs a spe. eialy. Our prices are beyond compe lition I Mattresses O1 my own manufacture, Window Shades, Wall Brackets, Packets and blirrorp. Riepail PIn1g, FURNITUR1E. neatly repaired at modor. ate Prices. Picluro frames mado to order. Special Attention 0lVEN to the Undortak.'s lep-rl ment.. I keep on hnnd a fill supply of Metalli Case- ied Wo)d Coflins of the finest finisl. All calls promptly altended to. My terms are cash. I aot. upon I he theory that short settlements mako long frioc di. oct3 BUTTER I BUTTER TUST Received 100 lbs. fine aoshen Hul I or. Also a chmco ot. of Froeil Oroceries, consiming of 8 bbiH. No. I Mackerel, 8 htbls. No. 2 Mackerel, 12 Kits No. I 'Mackerel, 24 Kits No. 2 High Pamily, I lihbl. Pigs feet, I blal. Pickled Tongues, 100 lbs. Dried Tongues, 10 lis llo!ogn.. Stitsrges. Also a ohoice lot of Sugars and Coffees, Syrups and Molasus of all grades. Also a fine lot of Fresh Canned Goods. conisiig of Canned Sal mon, Lobsters, Mock Turfle, Corn a.d Desiocated Cocoanut., Plafcd Hlam, Turkey and Sardities. Also a fresh lot of Crack. cra and Cakes, 1 Dozen lilo<os of llerk imer Co. Choese-the finest in town. Also constantly on hand Fresh Flour and Meal, Bacon and Lard, and a choice lot of McEwans Scotch Ale, Liquors and Begars )f the finest Grades, Powder, Sholt and John D. McCarley. sept 24 NEW ARRIVALS I Packages of NEW M ACKOR~EL in B3arrele,half aend quarter liar rols, Kits I, 2, 3, and extra nun beor 1, MES8. 328 Br'.oks of freshc ground FL3URI, all sizes and grades from the Granite Mills Augusta Ga. ALSO, A fuell stock of Groceries, Provisions and Plantation 8upplies, aell of wich will be Hold at the lowest pericos for JA8[l. ct 29 REATPY JRO. &SON. NEW GOODS! 60 pairs of traoe Chains aind Ilames. Black Blands. Coltton andi M.anllla Ropo for plowing. Well Ut pe. L. ii Shovels -ci manucre forks, Tubs and Bluckets, Naeils andI A xos, Cottoun Cards, flanid Saws, Padlocks, dad Irons, Goffee Mills, L.ooks, Perou. saon Caps &c. 1 Tieree Prime Carolina Rie. 26 itarrels assorted Eui.ng and Plant,inq potatoes, L'or Sale low for Cash. 'BY Boaty, Bro. e Son. TRY, DR, RADCLIFP'S Cl RMA T R emedy, "seveul SeniN 0a' 'Goldems Womudea','7 which eti recommeeede i for aill achecs or pains, and is lhcrown upon Its own niorits. No eure, noe pay, Is,lhe meotto. For sale by R i{ Jennings. who is agent for Fairfield Coon ey, and( wIl l ake pleasure in filling er ders for drueggisls andh country reerobaents, l)r'. W. . iAken, or WVinitio-e'ro wrill keep . o R.n If .11'"NlNO ' $:t'