The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1876-1881, December 21, 1876, Image 2
WINNRBOIRO, & C.
Thursday, Dec. 21, : 1870
JNO. S. REYNOLDS, Hdltog'.
The B'iyonot House is om'(sig
it9lf with the passage of various
bills. Among those is a tax bill
levying upwards of twelve mills
Of *ourse the taxpayers need not be
troubled about this, as all the pro
tended enactments of the Rump go
for nought. But there is something
sublime in the cheek displayed.
The R tdicals are trying hard to
build a pretext for removing Chief
Justice MUses. They wy the con
stitution inhibits the chief justi ce
from holding any office of trust or
profit, and that the law professor
ship in the State University, at
present filled by Judge Moses, is
such an oftico. Without proceeding
to discuss the subject or to show
the utter weakness of the Radicals'
position in this matter, it is enough
to know that the Bayonet House is
not a constitutionally organized
body, and all its acts are simply null
and void.
Dr. J. F. Ensor, the superintend
e-t of the State Lunatic Asylum,
gave notice, on Friday last, to the
board of regents of the institution,
that he will be compelled to dis
charge all the patients, unless some
immediate relief be found for the
pressing necessities of the institu
tion. Ho lias for some time been
doperdent upon the accomnmoda
tinsim of merchants at the North and
in Columbia, but these are now at an
ond. U:less the Asyluim he helped
out of its strait by privato contribu
tions, there wonld seem to he no
chance but to turn out the inmates
and clo its doors-soetin .hin g
truly torriblo to conteniplate. For
this state of things, as for all the
other troubles that now afdlict the
people of South Carolina, Cham#lulber
lain and the crew he controls arc
responsible. But for thoir lawle's
proceedings, everything might now
be going on smootly and prospor
ously.
Senat.r Robortscoi recently sent
the following telegram to President
Grant: "I soo no disposition on the
part of any one here to break the
peace at this time. I hope the
Federal administration will not
attempt to interfere in the settle
ment of our stato afraaz . Iu Lbai
case I am satisfied that a peaceful
and legal solution can be reached."
The Senator deserves commendation
for his effort to bring on a change in
the President's attitude in the pres
ent issue in this State. He is rather
wrong in hoping that "the Federal
administration will not interfere"
for it has ahieady interfered in a
manner and to an extent that are a
disgrace to the American flag and
a blot on American civilization.
'What the taxpayers of South Caro
lina want, is that the President
cease to interfere, and let the Cham
berlain crew stand on their own
merits and by their own strength.
Then matters would soon be settled,
and that too without any difficulty or
disturbance whatever.
There is between the harangue of
Chamberlain before the Bayonet
House and the Radical Senators,
and the inaugural address of Gov
ernor Hampton, a difference that is
at once striking, and indicative of
the characer of the two men. The
one is false, slanderous, inflammatory
and self-laudatory; the other is a
calm, manly, statesmanlike review
of the condition of affairs in this
State, accompanied with an avowed
determination to see that the laws
shall be imp~artially executed, and
that every means be eimployed to
bring peace and prosperity to the
whole peolie. The one is the
speech of an insincere demagogue,
the falsity of whose pretensions has
long since been exposed ; the other
ic the expression, in simple terms,
of a patriot's determination to do
his whole duty in an offlce to which
he was called by talopeople, without
nly ace~iug on his parte ./he 'two
addresses give an insih into -tilib
chairacteu: of hede~qjive imsn who
deliveredl them. Andino fai' 'mind
will tbe 6ng i' deorilq1 gichoe
an& 0 t Krul0 i good and
orthe Birst imb inea 1868 thd
intell' enL and taxp~~~pl
fu t
e(1 6903 Nore
ceived it. These inen wore the
to e oepublican, but in fact no
)parI fat all-only a imass of deluded
negoes, *ithout educatjoin and
without e4periv nce, bLund, as ' they
thought. by a s'olemn oath to follov
t" lead 6f the party "bossed." It
was only natural, therefore, that
these so-called governors had no
real power at all-except that power
for evil which came of their influ
once over the colored people.
These governors were totally help
less to preserve the peaco and dig
nity of the State, and had always to
go whining to Grant for Federal
bayonets. The contrast between
each of these and Governor Hamp.,
ton is too great to require mention.
We have indeed a governor--one
who conimmands the respect of all
the people, and who can bring
peace, prospority and progress to
the entire State.
A Hollow Sham.
For eight years there has existed
in South Carolina an organization
calling itself the Republican pnrty
and claiming to form part of that,
body of intelligent voters which
gives streng th to the party at the
North. The connection between
the real Republican party and the
hybrid cencerns )i the South hIs
been constantly kept up. The
Southern wing of the party is al
ways represented (i Ohe national
committeo nuil always allowed a
vice-presidency or something of the
sort in the nation-d convention.
Tile white leaders call themselves
Ropublieann-some, possibly, be
caie they aro so fj om conviction,
hut tfe lmarIjority seizing the name
hut as a means to ineirese tho num
ber and the credulity of. their
ignorant dupes. Of the colored
1)01)10 in the South thero are per
Imps a few 1i tie more intefl'nt
Vho are at heart in sympathy rather
with the Republican thn with th
Demucratic paity. But the great
m-iss of t.1 he n egroe<- arc Republicans
rimnply becnuse their leadois tell
them so. They believe that they
were born Rep ulA ican u ani cannot
be anything elso,no matter how often
they vote against the party. They
believe that when they registered as
voters, under the Reconstruction
acts of Congress, they took a solemn
oath to suport the nominces and
the policy of the Republican party.
It is true, large nmbrs of the
colored people all over the South
naive come to see tmo ily Gof their
former notions, and within the past
two or three years havq oereised
their own judgmnont as men and as
citizenms. Pt! ,hisi hes 'econ in spite
of the teachings and the constant
opposition of the Ralicalleaders and
their underlings, and a large portiin
of the colored people are still slaves
to the delusions fixed in their minds
by their first Radical teachers. It is
clear, theni, that the so-called Re
publican pmart~y in South Carolina
-as in the other Southern States
is but a hollow sham ; a party hav
ing but the bare niame of the great
national organization by which it is
recognized, encouramgedl and-protect
ed ; a party owing its strength but
to the ignorance, the superstition
and the race p)rejudico of the negro;
a "a rig of corrupt office-holders
and office-seekers who manage the
negro voter to suit their own ends,
and reap all the substantial benefits
of political power. The Republican
party of the South being so comn.
piosed, it is but the necessary re
suilt of that complosition that cor
ruption in all- its forms should have
pervadled the ,sc-called Republican
governments established in this sec
tion since 1868. The party in the
South owes its strength to the
countenance received from the
national government. That removed,
it would long since have died
of its own weakness and rottenness.
Whenever it has been in trouble,
the bayonets of the Federal army
have been summoned to its aid, and
they have come asm promptly as they
were rcquosted. A party pretend
ing to rest all its claim to popular
su1lport upon its recognition of the
supgriority of intelligence over
brute force has been the helper, by
tho.bxpereis6 of brute force, of a crew
of jilugoreors hanving ineither [mioral
strength nor just claim to moral
Bupport - The longer the decayhig
carcass of Southern Republicanism
last*0 'there'dre, faIr-mninded people
pveghbretinyressed1 with iLs
wsjkoss and worthlessness. We
sl@JA tod~ay in 8onth Carolina a
b'lo nsa indeed, upheld by the
$4t 'ffilting akatist the oev
M4o'dI and itsleadera nefybg the
consttiojn -and ; thq' courta. .The
d1eederaite a~ts of th&e irt '1asrf
Gentlemen of the Senate and Joue
of .$eeetdtives:
It is with foolings qf the prd
foundist holicitude tha* I assumo
the arduous duties an grave o
eponsibilities of tile high position to
hich' th peoplo of South 'Oarolipa
have called me. It is amid evonts
'uinprecedented in thiu ronublic, that
J take the chair as Chief Magistrate
of this State. After years of mis
irule, corruption and anarchy
brought upon us by venal and un
principled political adventurers, the
honest people of the State, without
regard to party or race, with ono
purpose devoted themselves earn
estlv and solemnly to the attainment
of this end. With a lofty patriot
ism never su pasred ; with i
paliene never equied ; with a
colr1age nevol excelled, and with a
subl:ne sens of duty, which find
scarce a parallel in the history of
the worl , they subordinated every
personal feeling to the public- weal
and conseerateod themsolves to the
sacred work , of redeeming their
prostrate State. T1o the aecom
plislinent of this task, they dedicat
ed themtselves with iunfaltering con
fidence and with unshaken faith,
trusting alone to the jnstico of their
Cense aid conmen ding that caune
reverently to the protection of the
Almighty. When the corrupt party
Vhich for eight years had held away
in this ,State4 bringing its civiliza
tion into disgrace tnd m-aking its
gove;nment a public scindal, naw
lint the dem-nd for reforim found a
responsive echo in the popular heart
and that. t ie verlict of tho people
would 1 epronounced against those
who had degraded the State, thay
appealoi to Federl intervonti n,
and, by a libel on our wholo peoplo
as falso as it was basc, called in the
soldiery of the United States army
to act as suspervisors of our electi:m.
In a time of profoun:1 pe-tee, when
no legal oficor had boen resisted in
the proper dischargo of his func
tion4, we have witnessed a spetacle
abhorrent t-) every patriotic heart
and fatal to republican institutions
-Fe-lralt troops used to promote
the sucess of a, political party.
Undismayed, th'11h shocIced by this
1: oss viob tfion of the coisatitution
of the country, our people -with a
determi'inationi thiit no force could
subduo, no fraud could defeat, kept
steadily and peaeoftully in the pathI
of duty, resolved to assort their
rights as American freemon at the
ballot-box-that great court of final
resort, beforo which miust be tried
the gravo questions of tuo suprena
cy of the conshiltion and the
stabilityf our instituations. What
the verdict of the people of South
Carolini has been, you need not be
told. It has reverlberated through
out the St-1te, and its echoes cotie
hack to us from evet y land where
liberty is venerated, declaring in
tones that calot be m-istakn, that,(
sianding on the constitution of our
c'ountry, we proporee to obey its
lies, its peace and" honor, and to
carry out in good faith overy phledge
snide by uis for reform andi honest
government. Wc intendo to pr1ove
t the world the sincerity of our
(declaration that the sole motive
whlich inispired the grand contest
we have so successfully made was
not the p-riltry ambition for party
suprenmecy, but the sacred hopo of
redeeming our State. It wvas this
h >pe that led1 our people to a victo
ry wh'ch w as gr .mkr i in its pi opor
tions, gr'eater mn its success, nobler
in its4 acieivemnent aind brighter in
its priomise of prosperity than any I
other ever won on this conltin(ent I
But it was sought to wvrest the I
fruits of this mnagnificent victory
from the ha:nds that won it by a
gigantic fraud and a base conspiracy.
Whens tihe inmmbers elet of tihe 1
General Assembhly repaired to tile
capitol to take the seats to which
the p~eop~le of South Carolina had
assigned theim, armed soliers of the
Federal .government confronted
them, and their certificates of elec
tioni were examiuned and passed
upon by a corpIoral of the guard.
A spectace so humiliating to a free{
peCople, and so fatalito republican in
otitutione, has never been pr1esented
in America. It could not have been
w'Enessed oven here, wvhero civil
liberty has for yeas's been but a
mockery, bad Inot the ruthless hand
of military power struck down thle
most sacrod guarantees of ,the con
stitution ; for the tread' of the
armed soldier, as he made his rounds'
through the halls of legislation, was
over the prostrate form of lhberty
herself. It was timid these omi
nous, these appalling scones, that
the members of the General Assem
bly were called on to -assume their
duties as thle representativos of a
free State, and that.State one of the
original thirteen who won our inde
pendence and framed onr constitu
tion. That the natural, patuiotic
indignation of our people did not
find esxpression in1 violence, is credi
table in the .highest degree to them; -
and this was duo in a large m'ensuure
to the statesmanlike sand dignified
conduct of those meimbers of the
Goenra Assembly wvho had been
made the victims of this gross out
rage on their persons and this.
daring conspiracy against their eon.
stitutional rights. Debar'red the
free exercise of theirrights by thb
presence of an armed -force, a legal
quorum of the lower House, after
placing on record, a noble protest,
qlujetly .withdrew from the. capitol
and proceedled to organize that
branch: of the- General 'Assembly.'
Notcene form of law or onerequirea -
mseiat of the oonstiltition wae want
ing to give, force and legality to this.
organization, and that its atithority
has not been fully recog~nizesl is gg
tsoleIl tb the Aaitne armed neurton
'whieh ihas su i~e thihi '~vt o
,W4 Angoxesorkeoby -w4eated
pa .y after the organization of the
lower House, it is needless for me
to speak. You have been the
w essos and the viCtims 4f there,
and the bivilized world has looked on
4ith amazement, disgust and horror;
Ou haVia soon a minority' of 'that
ouse* usurp the powerrb of the
WIiolo body ; you have oeun the
majoiity expelled from their hall by
threats of force; you have seen per
sons having no shadow of a claim as
members admitted to seats ''ah
Representatives by the votes of men
who themselves were acting in
direct violation of the constitution ;
-and you have seen the last crowning
act of infamy by which a candidate
for the office of Goveinor, defeated
by the popular voto, had himself
declared elacted by his co-conspira
fors. I make no coinent on these
fLagrant outrages and wrongs ; it
)ortLaii to the General Assembly to
take such action in regard to them
as that honorable body may deem
proper. But it is due to my posi
tion as the Chief Magistrate of this
commonwealth to place on record
my solemn and indignant protest
against tq-ts which I consier as
subverElve of civil liberty and do
structive of our forms of govern
mnut. These are questions which
concern not uL tlone, but the people
of the United States ; for if acts so
unauthorized and so unconstitittion
al are allowed to pa1s without
rebude. popular goveinment as es
tablishod by the constitution will
give place to military despotism.
Our duty, the dut7 of every patriot
is to demand a strict construction of
the con sti tutin and a rigid ad
herence to its provisions. We can
thus only-preserve our liberties and
our government. A groat task is
before the conservativo party of
this State. They entered on this
contest with a platform so broad, so
strong, so liberal, that every honest
citizen could stand upon it. They
recognized and accepted the am end
ments of the constitution in good
faith ; they pledged themselves to
w.rk reform and to ostablish good
government ; they promised to keep
Lp an officient system of public odii
atiou ; and they dec-larod solemnly
that all citizens of South Carolina,
>f both races and of both parties,
should, be rog irdel as equals
11 the eyo of the law, all to be fully
protectedi in the enjoyment of every
lolitical right now possessed by
shcm.
To the faithful ob.3ervance of those
iledges we stand committed, and 1,
ts the representative of the consor
rative party, hold myself bound by
ivery dietato of honor and of good
aith to use every effort to have
hose pledges redeomed fully and
ioncstly. It is due not only to
mirselves but to the colored people
>f the State, that wise, just and
iberal measures should prevail in
m1r legislation. Wo owo i much of
mur late success to those colired
rotors who wore bravo enough to
ise above the prejudice of race,
Iacle ~of party,imntheir determi
iation to save the State. To those
vho, misled by their fears, their
gnorance or by evil conseling,
arn- def ear to our appeJ~s, we
bould be not vindictive but miag
itnimous. Let us show to all of
,homn that the true interests of both
aces can bbst be secured by culti
ating peach and promoting p~rosperi
y among a l classes of our follow.
:litizens. rely confidently on the
mupport of thc members of the
3enoral Assombly in my effjrts to
bttain them laudable ends, and I
rust that all branches of the
~overnmeintwvill unite cordially in
his patriotW' work. If so united
ndI wor ig with resolute
vill and ca est determination, we
n ly hope so to see the dawn of a
>rig"hter dai or our State. God in
Iis infinito rey grant that it may
lamol speedil and may He shower
ho richest ssings of peace and
lappinssa or our whole people.
A short ti e ago a five year-old
3hild of Mr. . Dunbar, of Girayville,
[llinois, fell into the fire. Only
~hildrenu and dog wore present at1
~he time. The log caught the child,
iragged her o1 and acteally tore
ior clothes frdln her, thre saving
er life ; arid' 1 s much tUe worse
)mfned of th ~'o.
A few days go, John Fanes and
hree compa 'ons from Rmdolph,
dIetcalfe cou ty, Kentcky,star-toed
mn a hunting. podition to th3 Cum
>erland Mou tains. After day's e
mnt they pite ed their tents amid
,he wild scene of the moittains,
ittle direamin of the fate intstore
'or them. TI it., night they were
ittacked by a anid of r-obbers who
nfest that loo lity, and not o~ was
pared to toll hex tale. The were
hot and stablyd in a terrible mnan
ecr, and their guns and every tticle
f value were earried off. Hat not
man accidentally passed that vyay
text morning,, it is possible hat
heir bodies would never have jen
ound. No clue has been disco4,ed
o the perpetirators of this dark d.
MI'. ZION INS~I'TUT1'.
THlE next toerm of 1is
schoQl w~ill commence n
WVednesday, Jmnary d,
1877
01tm8 per qiat',p aab
Pximary dpptrtzient. . * $10
Intermediate " .... 12 9
Classical...3
'or Circulars &c., apply to thm
W. M- Dlwro',
de2I t - ~Prinbfptick
or (. iii
1ALbpruo )ntxg.toRs ~e
i.IED,
In Winnsboro, on Saturday ew
ing, December 10, at 5 o'clocki
*MWaaS MAnoaUET F. LAW, wife of Mr.
James W. Law, and daughter of the
late Iev. At. D. Fraser. ,
The doeAth of this estimable lady
has cast at gloom over our entire
community, for she was one whose
Aeerful, pleasant face seemed to
Ah0(l sunshine and brightness on all
around her ; whose very presence
bi ought wil h it joy and pleasui'e.
Brn and roared in this town, evory
one know her worth. Whatever
station of lifo she was called to fill,
sh adornod and beautified. As a
child, as a maiden, as a daughter, as
a sister as aj wife and as a mother, she
was always notod for her affection
and love. AP a neighbor and friend
she was thoughtful, affectionato and
syimpathizinT ; as a companion and
alissouite she was agreeable and in
sti tuctivo ; rnd as a devoted disciple
of the Lord Jesus, she was humble,
faithful and obedient Her piety
was beautiful to behold. It mould
ed her whole life, controlled her
every aftion, governed hor in her
thoights and words, and led her
onward day by day, in the path of
hoimess. Hor mind was well
stored with the fundamental
doctrines of the Bible, and she
loved to converse upon them; and
her expressive countenance would
indicate her pleasure and assent to
tihe truths to which she listened
from the sacred desk, while her
words of approval have often encour
aged and strengthened her pastor.
Early in life, she gave her young
and innocent heart to the Lord, and
always li ved a most exemplary, con
sistent Chi-istian life, and when at
length tho summons came to call
her away tfrom all she held so dear
upon eart', from a devoted hitsband
from her live little children, from
her aged and affo-tionate mother a
and from her brothers whom she
deeply loved, she was - found ready
and watching for the Master.
Death had no terrors for her. If it
w11s her Heavenly Father's will that
she should depart and be with
Christ, she -was willing, and yet it
Vas but natural that sho should
eling tonaciously to life, for she had
so much to live for. Sh has gone
to lier reward,leaving behind her the
precious memories of her spotless
life. E:arth is poorer now than it
was ; but Heaven is infinitely richer.
That bright spirit,sae 'tified and made
while in the blood of the Lamb, is
now before the thronn of God, ador
og tho love of hi'-r Redeemer.
Another sweet voice is added to the
Heavenly choir, another redeemed
soul is safo in Paradise.
On Stbbath evening her remains
wero followed to their last resting
place, in the Presbyterian grave
yard, by a largo concourse of frionds
thus sadly manifesting the universal
steem in wvhic~h she was held, and
blhe sympathy felt for the bereaved
In Columbia, on Fritday, Decom
er 15, 1876, Miss JANE C RA wrORD,
>f Winnsboro. Her remalins were
ronght to this place nnd buried in
~he l'resbytcrian grave-yard, on
abbath morning, at 10 o'clock.
-FOR THE
HEAP OASH ST RE
-OF
HO will soll Dry Goods, Grooerios,
VERY LOW FOR
Ti
t
Al
At
ani
dai
ne
tie
ay can afiortl to usoJ 'gs?.s Ohap,
cause by doing a stdloty ech business
eywneed not makoe on 00 o wa
ey loe. on another bysehing QI etd It
Ole~ 8
Unuit'd 8 ates for the Jistlict
of Smiiil Carolina.
IN TANKRUPTOY
J. A. Caddw411; Bankront.
TI118 Is to give lhotioe that i warrant In
Binkruptky has been issued out of
the District Coift of the United Stated fin
the District of Sodth (Carolinmi, againsht th
estate of JAW13 At OALDVELL,
of Fairfield County, of the Stato of :outh
Carolina, who has been adjudged abank
rupt upon, his, QWn petit ; bkt.the,
payment of any debts, anil the delivery
of any property belonging to said bank
rupt, to him or for his use, and the
transfer of anly property by him, are tor
bidden by law; that a meeting of the cred
itors of said abankrupt, to prove their
debts, and to choose one or inore assignees
of his estato, will be bold at a Court of
Bankruptey, to be hohlen on the 28th day
of Decernber .A. D. P870, at 12 o'clock M.,
at Yorkville, 8. C., before W. I. Clawson,
E01., one of the Registers of said Court.
it. M. WALLACE,
U. S. Marsha', as MAe:senger,
By T. W. CLAW8ON,
doe 23-2t Dopt ty Messenger
J. OLENDINING,
Boot andli1 Shoo Maimllfacturer,
WINNSBORO, 8. C.
TIIE undersigned re
spectfully annioinces to the
citizens of Fairfield that lie
has removed his Boot and
Sihoe Manufactory to one door below Mr.
D. Mulle. I am prepared to manufacture
ill styles of work in a substantial and
workmanlika manner, out of the very best
materials, and at prices fully as low as the
tamn goods can bo manufactured forat the
!qorth or elsewhere. I keep constantly on
land, a good Stock of Sole and Upper
reather, Shoe Findings &e., which will be
;old at reasonable prices. Repairing
>roniptly attended to. Terms strictly Cai.
A0 )ried Hides bought.
oct 12 J. CLENDINING.
lO NoR CHANDLER
CALL ATTENTION
[0 THEIR NEW STOCK OF
STERLING SILVERWARE,
- AT
IREIDUCED PRICES.
.able Spoons,
Tea Spoons,
tugir Spoons,
Table Forks,
Pap Spoons.
Butter Knives,
Pickle Forks,
AND
dec. 7
Hampton Recognized
-BY-.
J. G. IJESPORTESI
.JONCEDED to sell those Goods whioh
a makes a specialty lower than any other
erchanut in the city.
A fresh assortment of Chribtmas Goods.
St at hand.
French and American Candies.
Northern Art;les, Oranges, Cocoanuta,
o., etc.
-ALSO,
A large assortment of foreign and do
estic LIQUORIS,
AT VERY LOW RICES.
fO Call and examine.
dco 28.
1'AI E OF NOUTH' CA ROLINA
COUt/wY op FAIIELD.
ios. Neoly, admuinistraitor of Esatto of.
Ann Wadling,- Deceased, vs. Elizabeth
Walling. Juo. Walling and others.
N, obedience0 to an order fromn the
Court of Probate, made in the above
ited case, I wit'll offer for sale . on the
st Monday in January next before the
urt Honose door in Wi~nnsboro,. S. C.,
e tmect ofhand belongirng to the ontatO of
uw hilinig, #evceasjed, Oontatip ing seven.
.tour aceres, there or less, and boundled
lands of 'irs. 3fartha lack, 'estate of
illip Walling uarld others. t
l'sntds or sua-~ one-halhdash on day of
o, balanco in one and two -years there
er, equal instahunonts seenmretl by IBond) y
al Moratgaga with interost froni e
y of '.ale. jMurbhased* to pay - for
cessary papers.
8. W. BUF?,
HIMPORTANT, NTZO
iRh . MoAIE og oIft
4 archte~dete4 dha tn'
8Ifo HAMPTON is Governor
of tle Whole People,
BARGAINS, BARGAINS, FOR
ALL AT THE,
DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS
AND
MILLINERY BAZAAR,
N Dress Goodes." Oae106oo'k, lecid
and Unbleaohed Muslins, Shawls,
Furs, ClooksBoulevgrd 8 ixth Cor
sets, Millinery *odds, lowers,
Feathers, &c.
-ALSO-.
Blankets, Pants (ods, Cheqyod
Homespuns, Boots and Shoes
of all kinds, Mon's flats
and Cluthing.
JUST OPENED FOR, HOLIDAYS
A lot of Fancy Goods, s8itable ur
prosents.
JUST ARRIVED,
Fresh Family Groceries, Cheese,
Macaroni, Soap, Candles, Starh,
French and Plain Candies, Cocoa
nuts, Oranges, Northern Apples,
Sugar and Soda Crackers, Lemons,
Canned Goode, Fire Crackers, Prize
Candy, Irish Potat6es for eating
purposies, Tobacco,Cigars, Mackerel
&c., &c.,-all of which will bo'sold
as low as the lowest.
Agent for Butterick's reliable
Paper Pattorns-.a suply of latest
styles for Ladies arid Children, just
in at
doc 21 J. 0. BOAG'S.
R. W. PH ILLIPS
DE!A LEIt IN
URNTUlm, Parjor Brackets and
. Picture Frames, for (lsign and
workmanship, unequalled. liermcta
ber my pricea are beyond competition for
the samo quality of goods.
A NEW SU'PPLA
of Rustic Window Shades, low In price
dirable, convenietit, 'that never got out of
o,.-r, and will last longer than aiy other
Shad e. Mattresses, Pictures, lat-Racks,
Mirrors and Lutuber for sale,
Furnitire neatly repaired at moderato
prices. pyecial attention given to the Un
dertaker's )epartmuent. Tkep on hand a
full supply of Cases and Wood Coiins.
MI TEII A[E SihWLTI CAS11,
* *hlerir8s Nale.
B v''t"e of'- ie--tion- adireet
B ed, I 'idi offer for sale before the
Court, Housie door in Winsboro, on the
fiat Morniay in. January next, withlin the
le:ga1 houirs o sale, for cash, the followir.
described piropherty, to wit:
'l .that iJantationl or tract of land
lyin~g in Fairtieid Coun ty, contain ing
four hundred ainI fifty-seven acres, more
or less. and bounded by Iands of estate of
Minor GIviden. JAe..e E. Caldwoll, Ed
ward P. Mobley, and estnte of Mainindo
Barber. Levied u ,an as the prope~rty of
the estate of Minor Gladden deceased, at
the suit of The President and Directors
of the Bank of the State.
Shieriff~s Office, 13. W. RUFF,
1Aiinsboro, S. C. gi. .C,
Dec. 1:, 3876.
dee 14.-3
8iH ERIFF'S SALE.
STA'rE or SOrrn CARloLINA
Conury OF FAIRFZELD.
In tile Common Pleasg.
James B3. McCants, Plaintiff,aais
Joseph C. Caldwel. A. M. Lee, Jr.
anel Ann F. Caldwell, Defenjdan
Order of Foreclosure and Sale.
N obedience to an order of Court m d~ce
Iin the above stated ease, t will oe~*
o ale, before the Court Hlouse door in
Wuuboro, 8. u'.. on the first Monday I
January next, the following desoribed
real p~rope)rty, to wit:
,Alt that certain tract of land known as
' ountd o Uil, itt, lying and betat in
Crook ed Cree 'and1 Dr Fo, waters of
Catawba Ritver, containing eit hndfredE
leres, more or less, and -bounded north
banglofJ- A. Caldwoel out by ands
ast by lhands on Aansel Hfollis5 arid Da~ Id
fail. andJ west by lan'als of Ch I ~
.aster and J. A' Caldwell. . ..
TE3RhsOF SAIg:
pa -til of the urchase money to be
>ftone and two years, Inae ton eal rei-,
utahients, with interest at eon ysa edt
er annum from the day~ of sale,
layable aninally---. to be secure 1l by bou
md hePurhaer to pa~v r al raoesen.
Vhrif' -Ofl, 8. W. flUFF,
Dee. 8, 1870 -*PC
Iee l4-33
FOR SALE OR RENT."
rofer dor sl oar lenttio residence
ho Associato Reftormed Cltbrh n
oaiscottage style, . *1.
11ltt e~Q~ e eh UI#ha bp 4
nIdilngs.; Terms rettsongabrle.
JOHNuW. P OELL
SIH 8, 3 I ITSON 4.
20 f 'I
All laittaen(
A 0 Alisg, t
0AILLAtm)