University of South Carolina Libraries
Till-WEE<;KLY E~DITION.] WVINNSI3ORO, S. 0., SATURDAY MORNING, APlRIL 28, 1877.[OL1NO36 NEW ADVERT'JISIEMENTI'S. ( Ladies' Favorite Cards, all styles, wi th name, 100. Post paid. J IUSTEf), Nassau, Rens. Co., N. Y. You will agree to distribute somo of >F)a circulars, we will send you a IN oIU FRAME, 1111(1 a 10 pago 64 column illustrated paplor, free for 3 months. Incloso 10 eonts to pay postage. Agents wanted. KENDALL & Co., Bos ton, Mass. TRIFLING With a Cold is Always Dangerous. USE WELLS' Car bolic Tablets, a sure remedy for Coughs, and all Dis Cases of the Throat, Lungs, Chest and Mucous Membrano. PUT UP ONLY IN BLUE BOXE6. Sold by all Druggists. C. N. CIUTTENTON, 7 Sixth Avenue, N. Y. d14)0 a uonth. AGENTS WANTED 2 J on our TIr.EE (OREAT $2 DooRS. The Story of Cohailey R tos st, a full acco-un t of this great mys tory written by his Father, beats Robin son Crusoo in thrilling interest., 'he Illustrated HiAAo-noont 'to all ELtrIooIINs, a coniplete account of all denominatiorhi and sects. 300 Illustrations. Also the ladies' medical guide by Dr. Paucoast, 100 Illustrations. 'lgogo books sell at sight. Male and femalb agents coin Ioney on theu. Particulars free. Copies by mail $2 each. JoHN E. POTTER & Co. Phlliladelphlia. A HOME AND FARM OF YOUR OWN, On the line of a great railroad with good markets both East West. Now is the Time to Secure it. Mild -'limate, Fertile Soil, best Couintry for Stock Raising in the United States. Books, Maps, full information, also, "THE PIONEER" Sent free to all parts of the world. Address., Q. ',s TyA,--jgB, Land Con. U. P. R. It. OMAHA, NEB. 2theCWl We bhol Al 1argest rnd best Packaeo in the Qsrhoots f or In envelops tote, ci hl o tr, U. o eadi lC fvaluablo e woiry. Comoplete and ea s' fashlounble neyu , ,in and drops, post. paid, 21$ cenits. 5 pakeks,~e with aserted Jewelry, .'.l oInt Pa~cn, I.,,cr e 'v tale free t a a ngents. BRIDE & CO., 709 Broadway, N. Y. TWld~a~ ELVE articles in ono. 'rho 1..OYt) uOMillNON. Can bo rie saPencil .Penhlo and Yon, Eraser, Penknife, Cnvolo e'punerPe )er-euilor RIubber, Bewing Machine TrasCutter, nd for Rippi~ng Seas. Cutting oil )looks andl Ear's,Blins. Eroelsig ints. &e. Size ofat emsuon pencil, In hoesty ni rckel lated, aind will last a llautclnte. Agents sire cointg money andi say It. in the best telling arlicio out. San 'o 5 to ea, Six for $i. E "truurnltnarc iaditcenta to Agents. Snd for t~aunts,, laalf.daaten and caners~ your town. BRIDE & CO. 709 Broadway, N. Y. IxATIONERiY PACE.Aflr g. anid $ of the LLOYD COIfINA O ar.O pOLLiARS. 709 Broadhay. N. V. Fpt 3 ilurrali for ilaffptoll! GRAND SPRING OPENING, -AT THE Dty Goods, Fancy Goods, and Millinery Bazaar, )F a beautiful and full line of latest novelties in Spring and Summer Millinery andl Fancy Goods, consisting in part of:TLadies', Misses' and Children's tr'immed Hats, Flowers, Uibbons, Silks, Nets, &c. A large lot of Ladies' Collarettes,Fichus and other fanny articles. In51sCtion of the Ladies andi public generally solicited. We will endeavor to please the mtost fas.. tidio us. All we ask is that you call, and ae for yourselves, and give us a trial. New Spring Prints. Centennial Stripes, Dress Goods,Whito GoodsDress Imnprov-. cr8, Corsets : Hosiery, Gloves, Notions, -Clothing,.Hats, Shoes, &e. Agent for Butteriok's reliable ae patterns. Ladies', M sses' and Childre~n's GROCERY DEPARTMENT, Just fIlled up with frech Groceries, Con foctionarics and everything usually found in a first class house of the kind, A lot of Furniture, Laths, Shingles, &o. Lumber low for Cash. J. 0. BOAG. You can finid all you want by calling en april 14 J', 0. - NOT1ICE TO ClREDITORS. A. Mi. Lee, Trustee, against 3. A. Cald well and others. .L)Court of the United States, for the District of South Carolina, made the 29th day of March, A. D. 1877, all peOrsons claiming to hold liens upon the estate of J. A. Cald~well, a Bankrupt, are callect upon to come in and make proof of thbir eflims before me at i. ofice, Nio, 83 Broad Street, Chalrloston,'Mo. Ca., on or before the first day of May, A. D. 1877. A. M. 1HUG2, anl 12-txlaw3 ulfeee JUST RECEIVED, One car load seed Potatoes, One " " " Oats. -ALSO, A full line of Plantation Hard ware consisting of Lay Iron, Plow Steel, Steel Plows, - Flow Moulds, Spades, SLovel s, Traces, Ha mes, Clovices, Heel Screws, &c., e&C. which will be sold low for -CASH. I keep constantly on hand a full supply of PLANTATION and FAMILY I have on hand several brands o first class FERTILIZERS which I am prepared to sell for Cash or on time with well approved securities on a money basis, or with a cotton option if parties desiro. All parties in want of Fertilizers will do well to call on me before purchasing. foF2 . ELDER. feb 20 E~ *Sewing-Mahne. MARk 4? S *c PAW. Jutv I6. 1681. WE CLAIM FORl TE IMPRoVBD WHITNEY SEWING MVACHIN ES .The following specific points of supe riority: I-Great siplcity ini Con.. t runtiton. 2-Durability. 3-Exceeingly Light Run ning. 4--Still Running. NoIsecless. a-Performns all Varieties of W~ork. 6--Beauty of Fihnisla and W orkmuanslalp. ''-GREAT REDUCTIONV IN Hinglo Machines sent on orders direct from the Factory, written guarantee withi each Machine. WHY PAY OLD PRIOESt fa#Send for circulars and particulars. Address, The Whitney Mf'g. Co., fob 17 Patorson, N. J. VA W. ifABEN1CHT -0-O-- - BEGS leave to inform hie friends anda ..)customers generally that his stock of Im~ported and Domestic iquiors and Wine is full, and the purity of his goods war. ranted. A full enuppl y of Chewing and genuine Durham Smoking ,Tobacco, 6lgars and Cigarettes. * &zao, Soors' Pure Double Str'ong Bltown Lager-Bleor, alway a fresh on draught ATr OENTBmNNIAL Ban. IMPORTANT -TO-, -AND-, AGRICULTURISTS ! -0 Emperor William Cabbage, r jIIE best, largest, hardiost and most proiltablo variety of wzxrwrn CA32nA0s1 known in Europo, and iupoirted to this country exclusively by the iindersigned, whore, with little cultivation, it flour isles astonlislitigly, attaining an enor 1110u size, and selling in the market at prices most gratifying to the producer. In transplan tbig, great care should be used to give sufficient 'space for growth. Solid heads the size of the month of a flour barrel, is the average rui of this choice variety, One packago of the seed sent post paid on receipt of 50 cents, and one 3 cent postage stamp. Three packages to ono address $1 00 and two 3 cent stamps. Twelve packages sent on receipt of $3 00. p0- Read what a well known Garrett Co. Marylander says of the EPEnont WIL LIA Cabbage: BLOOMINoTON, OaiIrT Co., Md., Jan. 22, 1877. Mn. JAMES CAMPIEJL, 66 Fulton St. N. Y. Dear Sir:-I bought some seed from you lst 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 weighing thirty pounds each. Very truly yours, JAMES BROWN. -0 11 r 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 1nd yielding on suitable soils from 800 to 900 bushels per acre, sown in drills. Mr. Henry Colvin, a large inirketgarden. er at Syracuse, N. Y., writes, "Your English Onion Seed surprised me by its large yield, and the delicious flavor of the fruit. I could heve sold any quantity ir. this market at good prices. My wife says she will have no other onions for the table in future. Send ine 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 talp, three packages to one address $1 00( and two 3 cent stamps. Twelve packages sent 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 WAlInANTED FIIESI AND TO (ERMINATE. Cash iust accompany all orders. For either of the above seeds, address JAMES CAMPBELL, mar 1-xtGm 66 1ulton St., N. Y. 1 0111101r1 Uhlildio1 CALL ATTENTION r ' .. O their largo and elegant as:iortmnent of GLASSWARE, Especially their Berry, Fruit and Preserve howls. -ALSO, To their variety of LAMPS, which, for beauty and cheapness, exel. -ALSO, To their large stock of CROCKE RY, which they on'er at low prices, to 010se out their GOODS in this line. NOT[0E. WJ~~ENT-FIVE per cent, in addition to ..our regular cash profit wvill be added en all groceries charged on account after this date. No deviations will be made from this rule. Sapril 19 13. SUGENHIEIMER & CO. J. CLENDININ9, Boot' and Shoe 'Manufabturer, WINNSBORO, 8. 0. THlE undersigned ro spectfully announces to the citizens of Fairfield that hes has removed his. Bogt and Shoe Manufactory to one doot' below Mr. C. Muller's. I am prepared to manufacture 'all styles .of work in a substantial and orkmranliko manner, out .of the0 very bess materials, and at pricos, fulily as low ps~ the samen goods can be manuifactuf'ed, for at the North or elsewhere. I keep con.tAitlf on hand :a good Stook of Solo, and Upor Leather, Shoo Findings &o., which~ wil be) sold at 'reasonable p rices. Repairing promptly attended to. Termeattictly Cash. Upar Dried Ilides boutght. eet 12 J. CLENDINING. REI)PATIH ON TIE WARPATH. ------ IIE iNDLIES '1'I POLIC l'01'' A YES 1ITI0U'1' ULOVES. A traitor to his party--Radicalism for ever dead--What the future cou'so of the colored vote should be. James Redpath, an original Abolitionist and freedom shrieker, has writion a letter of advice to the colored people, and sent it to every newspaper south of Mason and Dixon's line. The first part abounds in abuso of Hayes, who is denounced as a traitor to his party and to the cause of liberty. Rcdpath assorts that Aledk Stephens is President of the United Statos, as far as the Gulf States are concerned, and con I tinues: "As Lincolu will bo known as the Liberator of the slaves, and Giant as the Preserver of the Union, so Hayes will bo remembered as the Betrayer of the Southern lepubli cans. Lincoln freed, Grant con, quered, Hayes surrendered. Do you forgot that it was to "save Ohio"-that is, to elect Hayes as Governor-that Grant was induced against his own judgment, to refuse the call of Ames for troops to pro teet the RepublicanS of Mississippi? That was the inauguration of Hayes' Southern policy. Ho is acting to-day in entire consistency with his history in preferring the bandit chieftain, Hampton, and the Ku Klux cyclops, Nicholls, to the law fully elected representatives of the Republican voters of South Carolina andi Louisiatna." He then draws a raw-hoad-and bloody-bones sketch of "General Chalmers, who, openly defying the Constitution in the "Whip-Cord District" of Mississippi, calls up by his own act the black spoectres. of Fort Pillow ; as General Hampton, by his arrogance, uncovered the graves of the national soldiors whose dead bodies wero exposed in the streets of Charleston with a decisive placard on their bullet rid dled breasts." The exact meaning of the above sententious bombast it is difficult to catch, but Mr. Redpath evidently felt better after delivering himself of it, for he then follows in some advice to the blacks, in which, amid all the chalt there is a goodly sprinkling of wheat, and which therefore they will do well to hood. He asks "WHAT SHOULD THE BLACKS DO and proceeds to answer it thus: First of all, they should be taught that they can now freely and honora bly choose their political associa tions without reference to the past history of their race. They should be taught that the mon who fought for their freedom are now in a help~ less minority in the Republican p)arty ; that the blacks owe it no allegiance whatover now; and that its recognized loaders, who wield the powver of tihe Government, are to-day the recreants who advocate and defend and decree their aban.. donmi~ent. It is true that the Democratic party resistLed their on franchisemnent but it is equally true that the Reo publicain party refuses to protect them in the exercise of the franchise that they gave. Thoro is absolute ly no difference whatover, now, be tween the Democratic Party and the Republican Party, (as represented by hayes) on the question of the rights and condition of the negro, excepting in one important particu lar. That exception is a vital one. It points out the path of safety to the black voter. It points out, also,' the path of duty. We owe all~egi, ance wvhere we receive protection. The Democrats protect the Demo cratic negro ; the Republican aban don the Republican negro. For myself,' being a white man, and a Northe;:n nyan, I proposp. to remain in the, Republcig party to do my part to purge it from the~ thieves on thme one hand andth pedagogues on the otheo . hand avhi nowv infest 1t; but if I wvore a negro and in the South, I should join the Democratic party at once and vote fqr its .candidates whenever they were rep~utable men. Whenever they wore bandits I should refuse to vote at all. I wvas a member of . the first Republican. $ational Commit toe and I have qways bcqrn ,p Iadh. cal Republican in my. pplitic ~. mac tion. t t 1 wvaspyoro thamv m~i~.k.-a "Kansas 'Rogniblican," .a "John Brown abolitiopist;" and through good repnnra and: eyil ranort T, ha 'never wavered in advocating the rights of the negro, There is no man so black that I am ashamed to look in his face, I fool that I hav o done my whole duty to the black race. And with this record, un brokon by a single word or act con servative, I should urge the black men of the South, if my voice could reach them, to join the Democratio party. If they wore to do so in a body, what would be the result? Abso lute protection, to begin with, in th eir rights of life and property. They would not be drivqn from theW homes by the thousands as t by wore driven into the highways of South Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana, because of their loyalty to tho Republican party. The DEMOCRATIC IRGItO Is T14 sAF!sT male creature that 1 know of in the Gulf States. All other malos must fight for themselves. Foghim onl, every white shot gun if rady te do battle to the dea thI The exodus 'of the blabks 'to the Democratie'party woulzreake- tab powerful organization e olnpige of negro rightsr Thore1is a. n~ove. mont growimg rapidly in the B') .. lican party that soks to lihit 'the' I franchise to the educated class n4 to the holders of proporty. ' ' sentiment has sprung out of the corruptions of shillolah rule in New York and other .Northern cities that are controlled by the Irish vote. The democrats will resist this Ineas uro on behalf both of the Irish and the blacks, because the negro vote gives the South thirty--nino mom., lors of Congress which the Demo crats have now gained forever in consequence of Mayes' Southern policy. It will make no difference to the friends of the negro in the' North whether he votes for the Demuoprate, (and thereby secures safety and justice for himself and his family in other ways,) or'whether h& persist' stolidly voting fo' the demagogues who use him, (as rHayea as4one,) as. a mere ladder to.politigal,power-tQ be kicked aside ah sody as' ho is uses. If the black man does - %f foi' the Republicans, his vote will not be counted-and he will gain the ill will of his white Southern neighbors without aiding his friends in the Northern States. . If there are colored men who cannot vote for Domocratic candi dates lot them refuse to vote at all. It is a wickedness to try 'to keep up a Republican party in tho South excepting on the basis of t large native white vote. It will ond only in still further troubles to the poor and misled and too-grateful blacks. The best thing that every black man can do in the South is to consult, his own individual intorest without regard to : party platforms, (as. President Hayes has done,) in mak-. ing up his mind for whom he shalb vote in all future olections. The allies of the administration, will urge your people to repudiate. my advice and appeal to them.to,bo "loyal" to the Republican organiza tion. Lot .them turn a deaf 'ear. to these deluding de1nagogue-or . ask them, at least, before listening. to them, whether they hold. an ofiled or are seeking an officei It would, be a great triumph to the Admillis; tration if the blacks shoulhd'otitidae to bo-true to the Presidleunt. who hq betrayed them. But let the colored. people seriously ask themselves, whether it wvill be a. good fjng for their race ? and let. thoem act as they shall honestly answeor this' questiog, I care nothing for~ jpitied~ p~rtes, but I do most profoundy yrpa thize with defencoloss classee i. anid, familiar as I am with tdliai histbry of the last catapaign in Southa Carolin. and Louisiapa, I. shonl) re ,so to, believe that God governs $hI wvold if the dastardly -treachery of tiie adnministration to then blacka~ is Adt visited with t4he. dostructip, th party that shall sustain its, '.he I pubhican party, if it sub idt Wt Ieadership' of Hayes, wtvi ot'bo t to ' live; because its Will therebg \abandpn both (t, p e3 U4 i savio0r8j the prigipl eaO gover1 mont -6 f the oepl foF'thd i people by 1Whhl 'Tolh'eitw' nouncead and the nedqs of Sotit Carolina 'andl,ILouisism ho, when. the roadl wore pickpto~ ar4~A'e mnon, eraw1od, at peril ok tfi litde,. through tiio swainp~a atid m'oiss and thick-woodsI; in or derK to' roach tha ontmtyt eas .wherQt prescoo of tlo,b nI~bo IadQi safe o oven pos l- .Ir' thou', 'i 46te It' was thissient-heroidithI thblime6 devotion iof thei blacke to - thdl 1 I tej brse