TillWEEKLY EDITION.] ' WINNSBORO, S. C., SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 14, 1877. [VOL.1. NO. 82. NEW ADVE T'I8SEMIENTS. 20 Ladic',1tvoritj Gards, all etylof, with name, 10: Post mh"t' J B IIuowrrzo, Naysau, ,1.19ns. Co., I. Y. You will agree to distribute some of I circularrs, we will Rend "you a IN OILT FIIAME, and a 16 page 6t column illuistratda pper; free for 3 months. Inclosgq 1) cents to pay los tgo. Agents wanted. KENDALL & CO.. Bos ton, Mass. TRIFLING With a Cold is Always Dangerous. USE W ELLS' Car bolic Tablets, a sure re y C* 1 ,an;AU1 . Mueodl;'11 irflno.. PUT :P ONLY IN DLU .JOXES. Sold by all Druggist: ' - C. N. CIIITTENTON, 7 Sixth Avenue, N. Y. I I Vii '- rCC ( a month. AGENTS WANTED nsoona. '1%e o ~ 1 1 7 11o0 , a full account of this great mys tery written by his father, boats Robin son Crusoe in thrilling interest. The Illustrated HIANo-IooI< :to jill .. -rImU s1. a Complete account of ail .dliollnintltibas and sects. 300 Illustrations. Also the ladies' medical guide, by Dr. Pancoast, 100 Illustrations. Theso books sell at sight. Male and femalo agents coin mney on 1iheim. Particulars free. ioies by nalil $2 each.' Jons E. 1o-rrir &og Philadelphia. - , i A HOME AND FARM OF YOUR OWN, On the line of a great railroad with good markets both East West. Now is thg.gne.to S u n . 3ild Clintito, r'rtile Soil, beAt Noifntvf for Stock Raising in the United States. Books, Mnpi, full i foirtI'ntA; alSo, "T E PIONEEW" Sent free to all parts of the world. Aadress. C. "P. T'>a/-71.0, Land Com. U. P. R. R. OMAHA, NEB. N~OTICE. WAo have lisa Iflrgsst.nnll heaRt isollig Statlonory, i'sehsug6 In tq World. It contAins I fl h~ota of hllr, 11 0 (fl~atfp3s, poro'II, pahhllor, o d t 'u. i i a l s eolry. Cotiloto to se n h otobuttouas nu wis'foltninlo Cltyo pin kijtI ds1 p ost all, 25~ cuuale par u- titI nnr cauory, BRIDE & OO., 709 Broaciwa , N. Y. TWEL E sp ar~tces in ono. Th l.V CO IDINATO i'Can bo 5Osdas i P C ?1"CiPuhn itfnn n ra o.Po nlf inolp cpltror. i1e lter. ituhb - Sett P.~c iu rEa CO. 7n 9 BurIad w, un Y L ADD BROS. V E havo now eoniplod one 'of the best stocks of a DRY GOODS, BOOTS and SlIORS, HATS and OAP'8 'YANKEif NO' IONS, CROCwRY, &c. IN T oIR COUNTY. We will not be undersold. Lot us say, however, thapuva Calidioes 1ia tb outs a yard. We-cannot sell them lower aLnD h'ave uniform profit on agod 1 --- TO OUR COLO-ED 1-.n. As you have always put conl dence in us, we will sta~te that you may depend on gettinig good1s at a regular oven price,. No baits held o t~ o'any~ one niGnnD CONGRESS STREET f 0 ~~s 6 WI IS 3RO, S. C. NEW GOODS AT U. G. DESPORTES' AND IN DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, WINES, LIQUORS, Eto., Etc. CALL ATTENTION TO their large and elegant assortment of GLASSWABE,. eipt ly li ler> Fr i n r$dioa -ALSO, To their variety of LAMPS, which, for beauty and cheapiiess, excel. .s. -ALSO, To their large stoclk of CROCKE IY, which they offer at low prices, to closo out their GOODS in thii line. JUST RECEIVED, A ll stock of Plain and Fany Gro qories, wh)1~ih wijl be sol d at low 3t price for the Cash. A LSO, A fine atock of liquors, such as WHISKEY, BRANDY, WVINES in great variety, etc., etc. The patronage of the public is solici ted, fb B. ROSEPIHEIM. fo 1 0--tf I,. CLENDINING, Boots anid Shoe Manufacturer, WINNSBORO, 8. 0. THEI undlerigned ro.. spectfully announces to the citizoena of F"airfield that ho -fhas removedl his Boot and Shioo Manufactory to one door below Mr. 0.Mullr's. I am prepared to manufacture bill styles of worc in a substantial and orkmeniiko ihanner, out of the very best materials, and at prices fully as lowv as the same goods can be manufa tured for at the North or4 else~ivhord. I keep constantly on hland ti good Stock of Sole and Upper Loather, Shooe Findings &e., which will be sold at reasonablo prices. Repairing promptlattended to. Terms stricty Cash. lO IedHdeas bought. -eot 19 J. CIjENDINING. ET -our Job Printin gdono.at NEWS A!D MERLD OeOa. IMPORTANT -TO C~- .dl XL ]> +0 W M L Itf --AND AGCRICULTURISTS! Emperor William Cabbage, r1 1[E best, largest., hardiest and most .Lp rofitable variety of wINTER CASnAOE known in Europe, and imported to this coilntry exclusively by the undersigned, where, with little cultivation, it. flour ishes astonishingly, attaining an enor mous size, and selling in' the market at prices most gratifying to the producer. In transplanting, great -care should be used to give suflicient .spaco for growth. Solid heads the size of the mouth of a flour larrel. is the average run of this choice variety. One packago of ,the seed sent post paid on receipt of 50 Cents, and one 3 cant postage stamp. Threo packages to one address $1 00 and two 3 cent stamps. Trwelve packages sent on receipt of $3 00. pml Read what a well known Garrett Co. Marylander says of the EMPi~bon WIL LIAM Cabbage: BLOOMINOTON, GaRuET Co., Md., Jan. 22, 1877. Mn. .JAMEs CAMPrihi.L, 66 }Fulton St. N. Y. Dear Sir:--I bought sonic seed from you last spring, and it was good. Your Em peror William Cabbage suits this climate ,well. On a mountain side the seed you sent me produced Cabbages weighimg thirty pounds each. Very truly yours, JAMES BROWN. -0 ;/' I am Solo Agent in the U. S. for the famous Maidstone Onion Seed from.Maidstone, Kent Co., England, pro ducing the most producing the most prolific and finest flavored Onions known and yielding on suitable soils from 800 to 1)00 bushels per acre, sown in drills. Mr. Henry Colvin, a largo inirket garden er at Syracuse, N. Y., . writes, 'Your English Onion Seed surprised me by its largo yield, and the delicious flavor of the fruit. I could heve sold any quantity ir. this mart, et at good prices. My wife says she will have no other onions for the table in future. Send me as much as you can for the enclosed $5.00.'" One package of seed sent on receipt of 50 cents and one 3 cent postage stallp, three packages to one address $1 00t' and two 3 cent stamps. Twelvo.paokagessent on receipt of $3 00. My supply is limited. Parties desiring to secure either of the above rare seeds, should not delay their orders All seed wARRANTED F'iiESi AND To GERMINATE. Cash must accompany all orders. For either of the above seeds, address JAMES CAMPBELL, mar.1--xt0im 60 Fulton St., N. Y. THE BALL STILL ROLLS ON -AT THlE GRAND CENTRAL Dry Goods'Establishment -or l Creery & Brother COLUMBIA, S. C. T HE success attending the disposal of orM~(INIFIcENT sTOCK, which we put upon the market early this season at such lowv figures, convinces us that the public appreciate our efforts to mupply themi with the newest and most stylish goods. . iuying as we do from the first hands and for casH, enables us to oter SUPERIOR INDUCEMENTS, We are now receiving a new and elegant stock of SPRING AND SUMMER D 'EL Y Gr- O) O "D S BOOTS, SHOES, which will be sold at the same low ruling populhar prices. We expect to do a r~ryx rUsuING BUSINE~s, and bargains will be offered daily. "A wqrd to the wise is sufficient." .MP Samples sent on ap~plication and exprssag pai onbills over $10. McCRERY& BROTHERI, Grand.Central Dry Goo da Establishment. T. A. McORnnuY. B. 13. McOREERnY. B. A. RAwrJs.. WM. HORKAN. feb 20 IE. J. McCarley ]3 EGS to caln attention to his. now L)Stockc of Boots and Shoes, all sizes ad styles, at unprecedentedly low prices. ALSO, An entirely new Stock of Groceries.. Sugar of all grades, Coffee, Rice, Hominy. Meal, Boap, Starch, Soda,Pepper, Tea,ete. Fine Seed Irish Potatoes. Choicost Brands of Flour. . Bst Corn tund Rye WVhiskey in town, Tobacco and Cigars, Molasses, Lard, Bacon, llams, &c. Lowest market price. or cash. mar 2 R1. J. MotARLEY. VISITING THE PRESIDENT. 110W PEOPLIE ARE INTRODUCED AT TIIE WJIThE 110 U'E. A Subject of interest to everybody, and more especially to the Army of Offce seekors. Correspomdence of the Philulelphia Times. I went up to the White House to see how the Executive machine is run under its now management. The old door-keepers and ushers employed by Grant are still there. They are former soldiers for the most part, to whom Grant was so much attached that he thanked Hayes the other day for not turning then out. The old proverb, ",Like master like man," is exemplified in their cases ; for they are now all smiles and politeness, whereas up. der the old regime they were rather surly and disobliging. In the ante room, at the top of the stairs, where Brother in-law Dent presided over the card basket in Grant's first term, sits a tall, sandy-headed West ern man, with a big inkstand and a stack of blank cards before him. The carpet and walls of this room are of a sickly green, and seem to have taken their color from the ex haling hopes of the leg ion of office-, seekers who have occupied it while waiting to get access to the "foun tain of honor and preferment." Every morning this apartment fills up with a miscellaneous crowd, so large that it overflows into the adjoining halls. The scene is worthy the poncil of a great charac ter painter. Nine tenths of the people are evidently office .seekers. These are easily recognized by their anxious look, restless, nervous man ner, and the pallor of their coun tenances. They reminded me some what of the gamblers at Baden Baden, who sit around the green tables and silently watch the turning of the cards, but they embrace a much wider range of social position. These eager applicants for places are of all ranks, from the ex-senator in black broadcloth seeking to conceal the humiliation which he evidently feels under the haughty air with which he used to Atalk about the Capitol, down to awkward countrymen after village postoffices, dowdy widows in rusty black, and weak-faced young men longing for department clorkships-ycs, even lower, for in the throng are fellows so shabby and forlorn that they would probably be - glad to got a pair of the President's old boots. The tall man with the sandy beard is little better than a snare for the unwary. Few of the cards which he so politely asks the hope - ful callers to write ever reach the eyes of his Excellency. The truth is, this patient and considerate master of the ante-chamber is a breakwater to keep the crowd away from his chief, while they think he is put there to help them to the wished-for interviews. Across the hall, guarding a door, stands; a dapper little fellow of unmixed Ethiopian descent. In his kooping are entrusted such cards as come from persons who appear to L:ave any business that the President might reasonably be called upon to give ear to. He takes them in and delivers them to Mr. Rogers, the private secretary. Mr. Rogers is the second break water. He told me that his or'ders were to keep all office-seekera. away from the President, and. that if any slipped past him it was by strategy, "Gen. Hayes and I were schoolboga together," said he, chatting with me during a shott lull in the -pressure of callers, "and we wore law pern ners in Cincinnati, IHe wanted ta to corne on and help hima in~ cantying out his ideas ofl civil service i-eform,, and I felt that I ought to mahn. a saorifice te do so.. I had no. ideai that my duties: would be so ardnuous. The President hopes that. in the course of four years he can educate the country so that we shall no longer be a nation of ogice-seekers He. is detorminod to make, no re mnovals, except for good. osuse, and to appoint the best men ho can find, wvhethen.the politiciana like them or nlotA" t' Occupying a desk at~ Mr. Bogera' elbow iB usually to be soen Webb Hayes, the President's oldest son, a smooth-faced young man, with a large nose, who wears glasses and looks like a divinity student. He is intelligent and polite, like all the ~family. Between him and the Ph-aident there apnears to exist. a mutual confidence and affection too rarely found between father and son. A third desk in the room is used by a hard-working clerk, who attends to the correspondence under the private secretary's direction. On one side of this room, which by the way is handsomely furnished and has a lovely outlook on the lawn and the Potomac, is a smaller apartment, where other clerks are on duty. On the other side three or four stops lead from an open door down to the President's re ception room, a large square room, with heavy green rep curtains, hung over lace, at the two windows, a bright carpet, two desks, numerous bookcases and an abundance of vel vet cushioned~ohuirs. At a lArge desk, in the middle of the room, e President receives his visitors. All who are members of Congress or Cabinet ministers come directly in from the hall after giving their names to a messenger at the door, and do not, therefore, have to run the gauntlet of the private secretary. Every morning, between ten and twelve, the senators and representa. tivos come in a steady stream. Mr. Hayes has a chair placed facing his, to which he motions each caller by turn, rising to shako hands with him as lie advances, and then resuming his own seat. Sometimes, when the conversation is designed to be especially private he gets up and takes his visitor aside into a window alcove, and sometimes, but very rarely, he goes out with him into his reliring room, adjoining. Carolina Redeemed. NEW YoRK, April 10.-The WorJl(, in view of the removal of the Feder al troops from South Carolina to-day takes occasion to refer to the excellent conduct of the citi zens of that State under the most exasperating provocations, and wel comes them back again from their thraldom. It says : During the canvass of last sum mmor and the exciting contest which followed, South Carolina portrayed conclusively that the welfaro of tho State, and of all its people, white and black, was safe in the hands: of its best citizens, and no whore- else. Firmness, the devotion to duty,. and respect for law, which South Caro lina has exhibited under the- feader ship of Hampton, have convinced her bittorest enemies that she: is fit to take charge of her own interests, and that lessons learned by the- Ehglish speaking races through ages: of ex porience in the management of free government have not been forgotten in the commonwealth of Rutledge and Lowndes. She has so far overcome the animosity of the North , and so far won its respect. by her wise and temporate bearing;, that, something of the old fooling of: fellowship will come back to-day,, wchan the news flashes through the, country that the Federal military no. lbn ger dominate in Columbia, and that South Caro linians have once'more assumed the full stature of'Amarican citizenship. We bid a hear'ty welcome. home to the State o~f Marion, Sumter, 1'inck ney and Laiurens. While the Times would.have pre ferred a compromise taar~ smrrender in the removal of the-tr'oops, it goes on to say the Presidenk is acting within the limits, of hia. constitution al authority, and with, a full sense of his responsibiliieu.. Hie has decided that there is no. p roper warrant . under the law ftna the uses to which troops bave been~ put in South Caro lina and Lpnisiana, and with the con entrence of lam~binet he resolved. to withdrea- lhem. Their wibbdrawal from Columbia takes plaae to-da, and their con,. tinwuo in New Orleans from this mnint becomes impossibles Hew. ing been content with Wade Hamy ton' personal guratees in the case of South Carolnhe is nok in a position to enforce stringent terms in Louisiana. Lookmng' the mats. ter ia the light in whichh sees it, ha, has no right to tittemnpt to exact terms. "If the task assigned to the troops is, as he maintains, unconsti tutional, lie obeyed the dictates of duty when ho transferred them to another place, irrespective of the consequences to thie rival claimanta for ofli'a position. We state the position, not exactly as we should be disposed to have it, but as it pre, sents itself to the President, in the sphere of action which belongs peon liarly to himself." The Black Hillers are rejoicing over, the birth of the first girl baby in that wild, Indian..hamited coun try.. The aparents ought to call her~ Sinnnan (Chavenno.,