The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 10, 1887, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

HereadL, Tlio Horry Herald.' 003ST-^7"-A--X-. S. OPT'HLIMIKl) EVERY THURSDAY j WILL ALWAYS BE FOl'NI) RELIABLE IN M ATTEHSOF N KWS AND LOCAL INTELLIGENT K. TERMS OF SC BSC1U1TMON: (In variably In advance.) Onk Ykaii <52.00 I Six Months, 1.00 , Tiikkk Months, 50 | Single Copy Five Cents Specimen Copy Free on Application. Short letters on current topics are cor (litilly invited. Correspondents may use any signature but true name of writer must accompnn\ nil communications. Articles to secure insertion must l>e sent in by Monday, previous to day of publication. HATES OF ADVERTISING: Advertisements inserted for less than one month will be charged for at one dollar per inch for tirst insertion and 50 cent-, i for each subsequent insertion. AM legal advertisements ??t legal rates. For a longer period than one month a liberal discount. PLAIN. WORDS ABOUT LABOR. Wholesome Truth from a Work* i iigimui. After all the suffering, misery ami j loss inflicted on lahor hv the strikes j <">f th> past few years, is it not time for the laborer ami the mechanie to pause ami ask himself if the abortive methods of organized labor, with its tyrannical edits and its arbitrary eon- 1 trol, hart? not inflicted on him more absoluie suffering and misery than it j luis over conferred on him benefit more misery than he ever experiennce from the oppression of united capital? Never before in the his torv <?f tho world has anv body of civilized inon so completely surrendered thoir personal rights and their personal liberties, and reduced themselves to such a condition of abject slavery, as the mechanics and laborers of this land have within the lines of the so-called Protective Unions. Is it not time that the workingmon of these United States should rise in their might and proclaim to the world the independence of the workingmen ami the right of every man to himself and his own labor, to use that labor as he will and when ho will, unquestioned by anv man? Is it not time that he took the management of his own affairs into his own hands, uncontrolled by councils, tin awed by tho edicts of master workmen, unterrified by the threats of walking delegates? A workingman's labor is his capital. In the use of that capital his individual will should bo supreme; if weak, he should be supported in that right if it took the whole power of the government to do it. THK STKIKK IN TIIK SOUTH W'KST A strike occurred in the West. This time labor encountered one of the greatest financiers of tho ago, .lay Gould, and one of the most powerful railroad corporations in the I'nion, the Missouri Pacific. The struggle was protracted for months, travel was impeded, property destroyed, lives were taken but in every instance they were the lives of poor men; not a capitalist was harmed, not a financier was injured to the amount of a dollar, for whatever property was destroyed within the city of St. Louis the city of St. Louis was abundantly able to pay for, and what St. Louis did not pay for was settled by the insurance companies and the State of Missouri; so that every dollar of the loss came out of the poor man at last, in his increased taxation on everything he ate, drank, or wore, and for extra rent on the roof that sheltered him. The strike tided, men who had been employed on the railroad ten, fifteen and twenty years suddenly found themselves without employment. The company had other men in their places, and would not take them back. No men cared to employ those who might turn on them at any moment and rend them, so that in the end fully one-half of the men who wont into the strike were utterly and 1w1t>1okk1v ruin y f j eel. And now lot us soo how it fared with Mr. Gould, whom the strikers intended to punish and destroy The first news of the strike sent Missouri Pacific from 115 down to U7; the strikers were wild with delight. Did this dismay Mr. Gould? Not a hit he went into the contest, with the most powerful labor comhinntirn that this country has seen, practically single-handed and alone. He had to confront the combined power of all the labor organizations in the land and the bitter prejudices of many of his own class. He emerged from the conflict without a scar and as the acknowledged champion of order and law, the defender of vested rights, a stronger man and a richer man, with a firmer hold on all of his properties than he ever had boforc since he entered on public life. What did it do for labor? Every man injured by the strike was a poor man, AVAPV m U?? *????? I?mi nniliu mm il |HJ()r (llill), ovory inan thrown out of employ* inent was a poor man, every family that Buffered in consequence of the strike was a poor man's family. All this suffering was in consequence of the |>oo?* man's acts. Verify, verilv, I i / S v ^ J mm * 1 1 ^ "r Agru^ulturHl. lur hi* i poverty was the victim there. Phe *: poor man t<K>k the stripes aiul suffering, capital escaped unharmed. < I.OSSKS TO I.A '{OK Tito loss to labor hv tlic strikes of the past few years oan only bo computed by hundreds of miliums of dol- '' iars, ami v?f this enormous su.ii,everv dollar has been contributed bv labor ^ ami not one eont has been eontri- j ? buted by capital. If the hundreds <>i" millions lost had boon invested in ' homes for the laboring men, would j not their condition have been better ed? Last spring there was a great | labor demonstration tu the eitv "I (| New York. Twenty-five thousand ? men inarched ii. procession; the 111:1joritv of these men represented skill-I ed labor, and it is safe tosav that the labor of these twenty thousand tuoti 1 j for that dnv represented *<?' >,IHM ; thore were tiftv bands of mnsie at $100 $5,000; transportation, ban-I tiers and incidentals, $10,000. The nfternoon wos given to festivity and | feasting. All of the up-town parks ! were crowded till late at ni<rht. I' There was eating and driukiticf and I . joyous congratulations at the ma^ni- ^ ticent sneeess of the strike, and a very reasonable expenditure would , be one dollar a head -making $25,000 more, or in round numbers $100,- j 000 for that single day's parade. 1 This would have built a hundred houses for a hundred workmen and given the fee simple to them and j their families forever. It would! havo started a co-operative store where thousands <>f men might have got their goods at a reduction of nearly one half. Labor lost it; capital did not give a dollar, nor did the ; menace to capital avail them to the! value of a single mill. If capital | had attempted to take from labor in a single day $100,000, what a how! would have gone up about tic tyran iiv of canital. Is it not time then to 1 cry a halt? Are not the exactions and taxes of organized labor more 'onerous and more bundeusome than they have ever experienced from capital? If not on a strike yourself, you are liable to be taxed to support a I j lot of men with whom you have frequently neither sympathy or allilt.i-j tion. The poor laboring man in | ! New York is taxed to-dav to sup- I I port the Jersey coal strikers who are the cause of all his misery and sufTer' iug in this bitter winter time. To every thinking man there is some! thing radically wrong in the effort of organized labor to make the unskilled drone the equal of the skillfuld ! mechanic, or in other words, to reduce all men to a coimnou level, whore genius, industry and skill shall have no weight in solving the j>rol>loni of : lifo. It is safe to sav, and I here appeal to whatever worUingm in knows, that ' there has not keen as nnieh su (Torinoin the ranks of lalior in the memory i of living men as there has licen in the oast two years, and these two years represent the host efforts and results and blessings of united labor; 1 and, furthermore, united labor has inflicted more suffering and mi;-er\ i on the laboring man and the nieclianie, and exercised a more arbitrary 1 * I control over his liberties, than eapital ever dared attempt in the most , oppressive exercise of its power. It has subverted the lirst principles of human freedom in this land, and made the laborer more of a slave than the Southern negro was before the war. It has denied the right of a i free man to his own labor; it has j hedged him in with laws more arbitrary and pitiless than the laws of I )raco. The walking delegate is a new in?, n stitution in America, and no more ingenous to American soil than boy-| I colt. Tito boycott is-: it two-edoed j sword, it cuts both ways, and ilto j men .vho seek to invoke that barba, rous power innst not be surprised if the boycott is met with its natural offset, the black list. The mechanic and the laborer refuse to be coerced l y the employer; by what system of reasoning, then, if the workmen refuse to ho coerced by the employer, can one workinomau claim the rijjdit to coerce another; workin^mau? The most that thej employer does is to refuse to pay a certain rate of wa?res or to accede to certain hours of labor; the man is free to reject or accept the terms of- : fered or to carry his labor ton higher bidder. lie doos not and dare not attempt to force his decrees by personal violence on his employee; yet if the laborer or the mechanic differs from his follows-as to what is best for him and his family, lie does so somej times at the peril of his life. What kind of a Government is that which allows a man who obeys the law to be driven from his work because he is weak and poor? With a, mass of labor unions it is simply a question of force. A man has a perfect rioht to refuse to work, but there his rii/ht ends. Ho has no rijjdit to deny to any other man the same rights that ho claims for himself. The substitution of brute force for reason, is like the substitution of the ('ourt of .ludoe Lynch for the regular forms of law; and brute force is and always . I ? ? ' was, mo most abhorrent ami harlmrous form of human ^ovi'ianicnt, /mlt>,j>c/i<l< /it }\'o)'i'i/iH/i. A correspondent inquires: "Is it wrotitf to cheat a lawyer?" Possibly not; but it is a pretty hard job to undertake. They used to call it matrimony, but a crusty, disappointed old bachelor calls it "mattero" money." Well, j it may be sometimes. The present style; of ladies' hioh i hats and bonnets is supposed to have boon designed by a minister to diseoura<ro people from attending theatres. PX* TS54 v v or some damp plane; take all! ( lirl mix! wiinL lutrnMirhlv in whrm mmx> ;x vn oM) i,o<; m r i'he Wcallli o! the h llcnnit, alia is Sl<i\vlj living Kkypout, V.I., February IV). lohn I. Sehenek, t!??? old Monmouth 'otuitv hermit, is slowlv living at In- homo (if his brother, to whom ho ! vus taken ahout nine months a 00. , Pie hermit is nearly SO years of aoc nid f ?r nearly liftv years lived in ' inclusions, allowing no one to cross ( lis threshold, .lust before his e . noval to his brother's home he i ' men sufTerin?r from a .stroke of par dvsis, anil had it not been for the imely visit of his brother he would , ertiainly have died at the time for vant of nourishment and care. The ,1 iear neighbors ha<l noticed that he 1 ind not been out for several days,' aid. suMieetinjr that he was sick, out for his brother, who found him , erv low. After his removal an ! nvestieation of his hut was made ii a little shanty which was built in i thiol.iit \v!i_ f..iin.l I . ivniiMi (ill IIV'II ?M IA ?>111:ii: 1 i11j_r papers worth $10,000 In other corners of tin* tumblo-down niildino was found quite a Inrire ' inantitv of ir<tl< 1 and silver coins.! l iul'T one of (ho hods in his twoUory rookerv whieh answered for a tome was found an old woolen slock iijj filled with money. The interior of the building very inueli resembled a museum,there bein*r inar.v curious articles hnno ujion the walls, in all ahout thirty musk | ets and onus wore counted. Onj attempting to take one down Mr. Seiienek was astonislie<l at its weight, (poll examination lie was rather surprised to find it tilled up with $10 m i| i pieces. I n a 11 uearl v $ ">( t,t K)(> in nione\ and valuable papers were < found concealed around die hut and out I >n i Mings. The old lint is daily visited l>v nianv sightseers. This ancient, tumble-down building is ! hnrdU two stories high, with an old- ! stvle roof slanting nearlv to the1 ground. .There are four rooms, the largest being eight by fifteen feet. ! The staircase is made from enormous oak loo, with deep notches cut in it. 1 Much of the furniture was made j' from oak trees cut on the farm. iiric-A-Hrac. Time (lid best preacher. llard to heat A ('liina oltlT * Sjh'1 I-hound I lie dictionary. A professional rue" |)oetors. Always in use The lettci s. The weight of all llesh sixteen ounces to t lie pound. There are ahout 700,(100 kernels of j wheat to a bushel. The riches which always take to 1 themselves wings ()s'.-riehes. Tile ancient Unman began his dinner with eggs and linishcd it with apples. A health journal says that inn ole top tables are unhealthy. The\ do look pale. When summoned to do so. a man { goes to court for the sake of appearance. "Why are you so distant?" said a tramp to a beefsteak in the restau- , rant window. "Marine blue" is rightly termed a seasonable color. A Marylane justice decides that a | liusbaud is liable for his wife's slander. Where there is a will there is a way to break it. A bent pin can" pull very much, but, Circa t Scott! how it can push. 1 The "power of the press" is best felt by him who gets his lingers j in its mechanism. To keep apples from rotting, eat 1 tin in up, is the gratuitous adv ice of j <>no of our a^ncultural exchanges. In a recent sermon llonrv Ward Heeoher said: ''I Imvo no sympathy \\ ith ri ?dit-hour inon who have fourteen-hour wives." The man with a single Knjjjlish eyeglass looks as if ho had a pain in : his eye, and in such a condition presents an odd spectacle. What a small population this world would have if all the irruinb- : lers were out of it. Couples court before thev aro mar- ; ried, and they must, also to court before thev are divorced. \ . /.imi pi'iunii sm>nkin<r ?t f nil III^ I dividual notorious for his assurance said he had "cheek enough for two rows of teeth." According to that wise man, Matthew Arnold, "the poor are very much what the rich made them." The father of his country is said tirst to have learned the pleasure of traveling on four wheels when he took a hack at the cherry tree. When von see a <oxxl cow, buy I her. When you have a irood cow, ! eep her. \\ lion you own a had cow, sell her. The rain falls alike upon the just I and the unjust; but it is the unjust J who steal the umbrellas, and let the j just feel the rain. An eininet historian traces base- I ball back to the time when Kebecca J . 1 . - 1 ? O - - I 1 ilinvil I <? Hie \V<' 11 Willi II |> ! Ill and eaujrht Isaac. Some people hftve no more sense than to ask a man who is addressed by the title of "Colonel" in what war he was. Why is a wrinkled facelikea wellploughed field? Heeauso it is furrowed with eare, of course. ' s KlVRENMENT DIRECTORY. | J GOVRENMENT DIRECTORY. kxf.4tt1vk. President (trover (,'IcvoIaikI, of Now 1 York, to March 4th lXSh. IIKAItS OK 1)K1*A HTM KNTT. I Secretary of Stato Thomas F. Bayard, d Dolawaro. Secretary of tho Tronsury Daniel Man-! n'n>;, of New York. Secretary of War William Kndicott ; if Massachusetts. Secretary of tne Navy William (' U hitney, of New York. secretary or the iterior Lucius Q. P. Lamar, of M ississi.tpi. Attorney < leiieral Augustus ' I. Garland ?f Arkansas. Postmaster (Jeueral William F. Vilas >f Wisconsin. l.KOtKl.ATIVK: President of the Senate .lohn Sherman, >f <)hio, Speaker of the I louse of Representatives .1.(1. Carlisle, of Kentucky. .iuoikiahy: Chief .lustlco- lion. M. R. Waite, of Ohio. I'NITKI) STATUS C'OUItT OK SO. OA. ('in nit Judge lfu*_rh I/. Bond. (ty-uit Clerk .1. 11. Ha^ood. District .J udge C. iI. Simonlnn. Clerk K. M. Senbrook. Marshal K. M. Ikn kin. District Attorney I.. F. Youtnims. I'nited States Senators from South i Carolina: Wade I lampton, M. C. Butler ltepresentatlvo Sixth District (Jen W. Durban. C.O\ Klt.NMKNT OK SOI*Til CAIIOI.INW. ( overnor -John P. Richardson, of Clar-I ndon. Lieut. (lovernor Win. L. Mauldin, of rjreenville. Secretary of State W. Z. Leitner, of Kershaw. Comptroller (Jeneral \V. E. Stoney, of Berkh y. Attorney (Jeneral -Joseph II. Marie, of Sumter. Treasurer Isaac S. Bamberg, of Barnwell. Superintendent of Education -.lames I II. Bice, of Abbeville. Adjutant and Inspector (Jeneral Mil 1 lode. L. Bonbam. of Abbeville, le-ton. Superintendent of the Penitentiary T. I I. Lipscomb, o* Newberry. Superintendent of the Lunatic Asylum Dr. .1. F. (irilliu. of D rlin^ton. SU I'UK.M K COliltT: Chief .1 ustice~W. D. Simpson, of Lau ' reus Associate .lustice Henry Mclver, of Chesterfield; Samuel Mc(Jowan, of Abbeville. ciimuit .irniiKs: Kirst 11. i.'. Crossly. Si'ioml A IV Altlricli. Third 'I*. It. Krasor. Kiairtli ?l. II llndson. Kitlli .1 It. Kershaw si\tu I 1). Wltliorsnoon. Hvvi'iitli \V II. \Vm11iii-i?. Ki^litli .1 .1. Norton. Cor.NTY <JOVKUNMKNT. Senator Jeremiah Smith. Itepn sentatives Samuel Hickman, IT. I.. Buck. Clerk of Court J. M. Oliver. Sheriff -II. (1. Sessions. Probate Judge \V. i;. 11 aril wick. School Commissioner .lolm I'. Der ham. County Commissioners David Knbon, IS. (.}. ('ollins, John 11. Suites. County Treasurer f?. H. Meaty. County Auditor K. Norton. Coroner A. II. J. (lalbraith. ? I.Kt < I SI, ATI V K. President ProTetno the Senate James F. Izlar of Orangeburg. Speaker of House Ueoresentative James Simmons of ('hnrle- ion. STACKHOUSE TO THE FRONT AGAIN. o* I \Visli to in to nil tho IVo-l plr or 1 lorry that I have J opened a SALK* LIVERY, AM) FEED STAHLE opposite .lOHDA N & KVAN'S store, one ! door South of the l(A I l,l?()AI), where I keep on hand, at all times, H'l,!fsKC JP Mr,'l0C . ousicO IVIUI.KO, 01,1) H 1 C K () K XJT L 1) H I C K O H If WAGONS, ( 10LUMBUH AND HAYDOt VyOIXMHVS AND HAYDOCXV BUGGIES, | and a full line of 1IAJ1NKS8, and sell ilinn m llic JA>\\ WST I'OHSIBliK pnses. All sales jruarnnteod as represented or your nionoy refunded. Come ami see me. .1. STACKI10U8K, Marlon 8. <'. November 1, 1HHH. 1-y lolinson ?fc Johnson, ( Johnsons ?t (pia01<*)>niiin Marion, 8. C. l" Conway, 8. C. Johnsons & Quattlchaum. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLORS CONWAY, S. C. prompt attention oivkn to 11usl n i:ss. Colleflinir ii ? ?Vl! w'm. i,. buck Sc co are closing out all \V INTKK GO( )l )> ; nt largely Rk i) u c k i) n kicks c k i) u c k j) i kicks o ()ur new Spring stock now en route from UST orthem Cities Necessitates us t < > s?'I| out all winter stock For w a n t of room. Amono specialties , in Cirocerios wo are offering | as follows. Molasses a' ."50 <-ts per gallon, Canary C Sucjir I ri IIis. for *1. Kerosene oil 5 j^al. lots at in ets I per trai. Itio (.'oft'ne, dark jrruin, <> lbs for ^1,1 Yellow eyed beans $2 per Bushel, Family Hour (best) 2(1 H>s for *1, Flour per I ?arrel, *2.5( > to Best Tobacco in market, OUR LEADER,! r 8 to lb (ft 2*) rents per lb J ?? R U E S Cj T' * * '"* I Pearl (irist which wo an* CT Jul Offeri lltr :it I lit' l.()\V A kk; r i i i*; v E M,IO| .r ir* RAIIIiKI.. || 11 a lso Fino lot Haiti more white corn]1 NO. I at *1.10 per suck BARGAINS )/ In Gents ftirniHliitiir (roods and CLOTHING; Moiis' suits from $f>.f>0 to ?10. Hoys " " ?2.50 to *5. i KKSi-KC I K( I.I.Y, w. L. BUCK & Co. HUCKSVIM.K, S. ('. WLOOUGLASir-f ' $300$,* I ^Tolgt TAHNfJ^?"WBjjttfey ?rTOto S^J^? WLDOUGLASlaw/ itQrtri ?'B?*\ ^o.uu <S^b&s 4 SHOE*# ffi>i W.LDOUGLASU ^ $3.00^4 shol#5?4 war rante bottom **" c ^ijlII line ? f oreints,! * xja,dli?s, hvli^secj a,anci ol^ild-ren's fine slices, ifor sale by w. ul. b-u.c1c ?z co. ROCKTlIEl! 100HAKinoLS hock limk q on hand which wo offer at flj.fio pr. l>arrel, Wm. L. Buck & co., buckavillo, s. o.1 1 [JoRRY [{ERALI) IS lMJDMSIIKI) Every Tliursday -AT I UONWAY, S. (!.. ?AND ro cKE::isr:E::R.A.xJ iisrrrsxjXjio-Ei^o?^! TO THE i INTELLECTUAL A N I) ' INDUSTRIAL ADVANCEMENT OK THE MASSES. IA VI N (i A LARGE Circulation it AFFORDS AN | i ADVNTAGEOUSj MKbll'M rOK TilK ; I i \ > Communicate with the people ADVEKTISI.NG DO A K REASONABLE RATES , < Subscription only $2 per Annum ' ( 11 ADDRESS HE HERALD Publishing Co. Conway S. C ' Schedule ol* X uZja'Dn^viiecihU" tii ^ : . * Wilmington, ChadboA rn and Conway P. RIn MT?ct fro.ii di> ('lnnlhourn, N. ('.. 1 )(H". Otli. l^St'. 3VUa.il HTraim.. SOUTH HOUND: IjO.ivo I !Iiii(l'H?urn 7.1)0 A. M. \rriv<> Volaiuk' 7.55 44 44 Ohrcniclon H. 10 44 44 Mt. Talior 8.1)5 44 Loris 1UK) N< )J{'ri! liOI X l> : l.oavo Ijoris, 11.15 A. M. i Arriw Climlliourn 11.55 4 JF" Passenger* from Wilmington will t: U'> ?. train IS on W. ('. & A. U. I(. 4 Train 17 on W. ('. Ac A. It. It., will mulct* conni'i'ti lis with above tiain. (lose r.ni < < tio.i will be in nl i with f.oc 1 train No. 7 for lioinK North. .IAS. I!. C11A DI iO l" I { N, .1 it.. Supt. Wilmington, Columbia & Augusta Railroad. (ii;M:it\l. Pass KN?: !:it Dr.PAKTM h April 20,188 / . rmn: fo i. i,o \v i m; sciikih lk 1. will beopernteU ? n and after tl Is I:?t : No. is, Daily. Leave Wilmington T!5 p m Leave Luke Waccamaw il.lt) p m Leave Marion 1 I.3H p in Arrive at Florence 12.25 p in Arrive at Sumter 4.24 a in Arrive at Columbia O.'tO a in <;<>! N<? SOI Til- No. It), Daily. Leave Wilmington lO.lo p in Leave L ike Wuecaumw 11.15 p in Arrive at Florence 1.20 a in No. 43, l).\i:,v, ^ Leave Florence 4.30 p in Leave .Marion .*>.14 p in I.eave Luke Waccamuw 7.03 p m Arrive a? W iliuin^toii 8.30 p m (lOlNO NOHTH No. 17, Daily. I.eave Columbia 0.55 ]> in Arrive at Sumter 11.55 a in Leave Florence 4.20 in Leave Mavion 5.01) a in Leave l.ake Waceainaw 7.00 a m Arrive at Wilmington 8. 2t) a in Nos. 18 ami 47 stops at all stations ex cept Ke?ister, Fbenezer. ami Sav.mu i'i Wateree ami Simins'. Passengers for Columbia and all points on W (?. U. 11., and. A:. A II. I\. stations, Aikesi Jntu'tioii, and all point ; beyond should take No. 40. Pullman Sleeper in Aiurmtn on this train. .1. F. 1)1 VIN 17, Oen'l Supl. .!. K. Kknly, Supt. Trans. T. M. Fmkhsuv, Uen'l Pass. Ajjent. September 30, issi}, 11 Burroughs High School, CONWAY, S. C. I^XE'T' k.;s IN ABOYF. SCHOOL j j for> n Seliolast.ie v an* will beirin < n Monday, October 4, 188G, and eontinue for forty weeks. The Musical Department will be under . ontrol of .Miss Mary 17. Peiircc. TI7B MS: i ft..: i imiitrv, pi r month, 00. In! 'nnediuto, " V? 7o. Higher, " >\ Music, " :5 01). I s,.Of Instrument, ' 1 00. .1. M. IvNIC,II r, Principal. September :10, 18S0. If Nono genuine unless stamped as follows, JAMES MEANS' S3 SHOE. Those Shoes for gentlemen ^rrn nro made of Finest Tannery Zf ^ 1 Fatf-Shin. stitched wlthlnrgo W- e?L SASlik Maohlno Twi6t, and arc W l\ S&unequalled In /> ml>itit>/, H v \ s*? w Comfort, anil ApjiearB' V\ % rtnee. They arc madr 'i If various wlutl>?, to j> tr. AT" . t,,or l?r?ad or nnr * ;4-i\m IL C ks. row toes. Thomcr St 'trt ?' Oiobo caused such an onor_ mous increase in tho IT JfF demand for them that > 1 (/ft. wo can now furnish |t afl proof thnt our eela| ua, OratiHl factor// protv I A fti <luoo8 a larger i|iianffu/^fV7^ O g X*5U.tity ?' "I'04'8 of tl,i9 fa-OfJt* grade than any f ' ot'"'r factory in 'A/c\ tho world. l!v u Wo nartlcn larly rrqxi?st Jlioso xvlio linvo |?ay inpr or <?(? fot- ttieir A F''n< tonl ,0!,8t try on !l l'Illr \i \\of llursp liefore buying a new V. 'isi'SsAvW; \\ pniv. It (.Oit? nolhlnj it ?\ to try I horn on. p l$ip V ,J- mi:ans * co? / 'TEjjffii 'V MAKtTAOTUICERS. "0"T"N' ft ^ MASS. 'B2BByCONORI FOR S^-X_j ^ EY. Burroughs &Collius. !587. A GRAND COMB'.N AT!QN. !687. THE HORRY HERALD AXI) TIIK- J LUUISVILLP WEEKLY COURIER-JOURMAL. HOTll I'AI'l.'iLH (INK YKAU K(H{ DMA For the amount named above you will receive for one year your home paper with I ho Courier-Journal, \ IlKPIlKSKNTATIVK NKWrtl'APKH OV Til K SOI 'I II, lh-inoeratie and for a deduction of the \\ ar Taxes as now levied hy the'nresent tariff, and the best, brightest and yihlest family weekly in the I'nited States. The Weekly ouner ,lou rnal lias the largest irculation of any Democratic Newspaper in America. sop 2U-tf A LARGE STOCK OF FINK SHOES JUST KECK VKD, AND FOB SALE BY E.T. LEY'IS.