The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1877-1900, May 22, 1877, Image 4

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m1i.as and Ti-ra1d TIt WEERbLYEDITION. TERMIS OF SUBSCRtIPTION. FrI-We 1y One Year. - - - - .00 4 Six-months. - - - -- 2.00 '' " Three months. - - 1.00 RATES OF ADVISRTISING. Ono square one insertion $1.00. For each subsequent insertion 504. Obitua ries and ''ributos of ltespect charged t'for as alvertisomouts. Liberal liscouint ,ld f or coutract adartisoments. --0 ---- JOB WOlRK. Bill Ieads, Letter Ieads, Envelopes 'oster., Cards, Invitations, Tiokets, &c. neatly executed at this oflic,--CHEAP YOR CASi1. A Roportor's Vengeance. A difficulty arosO between a Chi cago reporter and a native of sunny Italy who kept a peanut stand in that city of big fires and keen enter prise. One day the reporter, with the daughter of a millionaire hang ing on his arm, passed the stand of the mnarehese, when the latter ex .claimed.: "Hi-a, cully, when-a you a pay 1.)e zose vifo cents, horn ?" What happened after that the -Chicago Tri/mne relates as follows The reporter Went to the office and took an oath on the assignment book to be avenged-to be fearfully avenged ; then he wrote a little item headed "A City Romance," in which he stated that the narchiese was an eccentric 1Roman prince who had given all his estates to the Church in penitence for murdering his brother who was his rival in the affections of a beautiful countess, and .that by econony,pokor, dice and speculation in suburban lots he iul accmuulated a fortune of nearly $,300,000 in Chi cago. Then ho smiledi a fiondish smile, and induced the city editor to give it a big display head, and went on his way rejoicing. That poor Italian nver knew what ru1iined him. When ho go{, to his accu;tomed sta tion next n;orning there were about two lundred men waitinig for him, to borrow money from him on ample security at ten per cent. a month ; to get him to become a partner with $650 in a well lestablislicd business that would pay '26,000 a year if the additional Capital coul-1 only be secured ; to sell him somo Calumet real estate ; to sell hin, a trotting horse that could show 2:64 cvery day in the week (price $150), and for various other ptl'poses. His knowledge of English was very im perfect, and lie was an excitable man, so wh n the eleventhi.skculator cameo up and asked him to lend him $15,000 to start an oleomargarine quarry h blaclied his eye, and in the cin fusion, that alrs() his pot t tblo stove was sacked and the peanuts scattered tothe four winds o' hi 3ave i The1 puolico restored order, anid thien lie wvas notified that if lie persisted in colletinug such crowds around 1im and hoeomning a public nuisance, his license would be revoked. Then the collectors for various societies boegan to besiego him, and whilo lie was driving them away with a club his last lot of peanuts biurned. Then a delegation from tho Chicago C~om muno~i visited him, anio, whenu he refusea to divide, according to iho lprincip~les of liberty, fraternity mad equality, fell upon him as a traitor, and miaahid him as flat as several pancakes. After the police surgeon had Sewed on his car, and stitched his nose together, the marchmese started hpme, wheeling his cart, which hand only half a shaft and one wheol left, and surroundodl by a bevy of anxious mothers who wanted to securo him and his title $300,000 for their daughiters. After a while he placed himself under the pirotec tion of the p)olice, and about1 ten .o'clock .the coast wasi sufficeiently clear for him to ventpre 'out. Wh'len hie had nearly reached home lie was sand-bagged and gone through by ai highwayman, wvho had tracked him all day, and wvho, wvhen lie only found two nicklos and a door-key on the mnarchose, sand-,bagged him till he wvas black-and-blue an~d sore all over. After lying sensoless a while lio managed to crawl to his lonely hiovol,,.antl. found that a gang of en terpr'ising burglars had. already boon there and torn upi the floors, and ripped u~p the bed, and .'mashed up the furnmture and dug out the chimis noy with pickaxes, looking for his $300,000.' The poor Ital ian had morely strength enough to crawl to the river and p)itchi himself in, and as the reporter was going home about two a. mu., and a-iw the splin, tOred poanuttcar, .ho knew that his von guance was com~iplete, and, hurry lug back to the offhce, p)ut a littlo itemi in the 'Personals" to say that thme Italian miarcboso and millionaire, wh980 .vealth had booen described the .jhay befor'e, had purchaed a palatii residone~o at Naples, and left Chicago the ,evqning before to ocoupy it and spend the0 romnant of his (lays inl oplOno. Such was the * ~roportor's vengeulino0. Tho throatened Morimaioni uplising aS chiaracterizedl by Genoral Shieri Rev. Thomas Harrison is the revivalist of most note at present. His sOcess in convorting sinners is said to be something marvelous. Some of the "hardost cases" have boon imelted by him and plucked like brands from the burning. Ho is only twonty--foir years of ago and of a frail constitution. His nervous energy is ioinense. Since his seventeenth year he has been an ox - horter. He is a Methodist. Dur ing the past four months 1,400 per. sons have been turned to grace from sinfulness, and 1,100 of these resid ed in the city of Baltimore. The employees of the Vermili on Company's mines at Streator, Ill., struck last week, and a now set of hands were employed. These werd poisoned by soi of the strikers, by means of arsenic put into their coffte. Sixty are exp.ected to die. The iethodists and Mctlodist Protestants, who have bon in session in Baltimore for several days pathing up a reunion have succeeded, and the separato com mittees are in joint session. VEGETINE V ~EGETINE has never failedl to eeet a cure, giving tone and strength to the systeim debilitated by disease. SHE RESTJ.S WELL Sourii Po,. t' I, IE., Oet., 11, 187f. Mnt. 1. Rt. 8-rtxv> .s: l)ear Sir-- I I.ve beeni1 sick two years with the liver complaint, and during that time have takeni a great many ditferent muediciine butt none of the m didl me any. good. I was restless at nights and had no appetite. Singe taking the Vegetine I rest well and relish my food I. C aln recomil melunld the Vegctute for what it has done for me. Yours res pet fully, .lis. ALmBErT RICER. Witness of the above, Mr. Geo. Ml. Vaughan. Medfird, Mass. YEP fEJTIN E. ''hlousands wvill bear testimony (and do it voluntarily) that Vegetine is the hest medical com1pound yet placed 1e:foro the public for renovatinlg and putitying the blood, eradicating all hum11ors, iip puri ties or poisonous secretions fromt the systcm, invigorating and strengthcnin g the system debilitated by uisease: in tfit, it 1:-i, ats 1n11y11v have called it, "The Great Health licitorer." SAFE AND SURE, Mn. II. R. STs'v:s ; In 1872 your Vegetine was recommend ed to me, and yielding to the persearions of a friend, I consented to try it. At the time, I was suff'ring from general dcbili ty and norvous prpstrations, supcrin duiceed by overwork trnd irregular habits. Its wonderful strengthening and Cu rntive properties seemed to affect my debilitated system from the first dose, and hunder its persistent use I rapidly recoverc'd, gain ing more than uszual health 'aud good feeling. Since then I have not lesit ;ted to give Vegetine Illy most unqualified in (loriement as boipg a sate, sure and. pow erful agent in promoting health and ies toring the wasted sy'steml to now01 life anld energy. Vegotille is thle onily iipedicine I use, and as long as I liv'e I never expect to find a better. Yours truly, W. H[. CLA RK, 120 Monterey Street, Alleghany, Pa. .VEGET1INE. Vegel in1 thoroughly eradicates eovery kind of hinimor, and restores the entire systemIl to a hlealthly cond~itenl. Th'lo following letter froml Rev. 0. W. Mansieldjormierly pastor of the Metho dist Epiiscopal Churchl, lHyde Park, and at pre~sent hod ied ini Lowell, Jpaust conv uince every 011e who reals this letter of theo wonderfuIll (iurativ quaj1lli$des of V'egetint as a thoroughl cleanser and purifier of thie lbood: l iwm: PAmtI, MIass , Felb. 15i, 1870. Mu. II . R. S-rxvcss: D)ear Sir--About ten years ago my health tailed thlroughl the dep'leting effects5 gf dyspep~sia; nearly a year later I was at ioked0( .by tyhoid fevert iu t wrtforim, t settled in1 my ba1ck and14 took the fdrmof a largo deep)-sealted abscess, wichl was1 surgical operations, by tile best skill ini thle State but received no4 permanen11t euro. I suiil'red grea2.t paiOn at time~s anid wa~s constan~tly' wealkened by a1 profuse d isebarge. I a'se lost small pilees of bonoc at different times. Mlat ters ran onl thtus about *seven years, t ill May, 1874, when a friend reconi menided mae to go to your oilic rand I z I wvith ynu ofth~e virtue of V'egetinie. I did so, and by your kindness passed 'thvcughi your ma1'nfactory, noting the ing'red'ients, etc., by wh'lich your remledy is producedl. By what I saw' and heard I gained squn conltidepyce in Vegotine. I comllneed taking it soon after, but fell, worseO fromi its effects; still 1 per severed apid soon felt it was honctittingi mo in other respects. Yet E didl not see the results I dcsiredl, till I had taken it faith fully for p uittle more thlan a year. wh'ien thle dilillty in the back was eured, and for nline tuwnthls I have e:njoyed the best t f health. I have in that time gai;ped twenty-fiveo p)ouids of fleshl. being heav'ier than ever b~eforo in may life, and I was never muoac able1 to perform lab~or than no0w. During thle past fuw y;eoks I have a1 scrofulous swelling as large as myl .fist gather on another p)art of my body13. I took Vetino faithfully and it re miov'ed it ?cvel with thio surfaco ini a mnonth. I t,hink I should have been cured of my main trouble sooner if I had taken larger dpses, after hiavirig becomo accustomed to its efreects. Lot your platrons8 troubled with serpfub or kidney dligease und~erstan1d ,that it taikes time to cureochroio diseases, an1d if tlaey will patiently take Vogetino, it will, in uiy~jggmopt, cure thiemi. WIth grceat obligations I am, Yours very truly, 0. WV. MANSFIEL~P, Vhistor of theo Mlnodist 14 Church, -v'1REP ltED BY H. R. STEVENS, BOSTON, MASS. Vcgoiun is~alhv by 1111DnugIsts SPRING GOODS -3OR ~87 'PA-day the campaign's fairly closHd, 'he lulcky m:'n is he Who alil's his seat on tlIo 'ith of Marol4 Our Pr.esidcgt he'll be : And now the next. best thitg Just suited tq our muigd, Is where to get the cheapest goods-. The bestof goods to find. My friends and I weni out day, Some New Spring (Goods to buy; And we resolved,before we went, The different stores to try. We wandered WV innsboro all around Until our feet were sore, A 4d found the very place, .t last, '1~was SOL WOLFE'S New Cash Store. Of Hats, Clothing and BootU and Shoes, The latest to our view The very best styles of )regs Goods, And Prints s) cheap and now. So then, my g(od friends, ono and all, Now is your time to try What Bargain; you can get of mc .Or, you needt ;sot buy of SOL. feb 17 JUST REC EIVED A fil 4.ck of Plain and Fancy Gro ceries, w h it h will be sold at low.t price for the Cash. ALSO, A fine stock of liquors, sulh ;,s W IuiK1 Y,. BjANDY, WINES in great variety, ALE, BEER, etc., etc The latrnage of the pgblic s solici ted. $. ROSENHEIM. feb 10 FURNITUR E, ~ ~T INDOW Shadeu, icture Frames, .V Children s Carriages, Lumber and Shimgles. Use0 eo~nmy b~y buyin~g the best, and buy where y ou (gmL get thei cheape st. ap)ril 26 R. W. PHILLIPS. Ettenger & Edmond, RI~cBMOND. YA. M ANUACTUERSof Portable ana .. StFatnrEngins anud Boilers o all kinds, Ciigular Saw Mills, Grist Mills Mill Gearing, Shafting, Pulleys &c. AMEnICAN .TURBINE wVAT~1R wUEEL. Camer1ol's Special Steam Pumips oc 9Send for Catalogpe. MVerch-ant Tailoring. HrP1 undersigned informa. the c'itizAens of Wjitnsbaro aind the cou11pty genlerally, that he has opened a Tailoring Establish. men~ft;i,the store next to Mr. J1. Clenidin ing's. lie is prepa~red to do all kinds of work in his line at short, notice and1 on reasonable tenius. A full line of samples4 kept cons;tanlhy .on haind, from which c ustomiers may.miake selections. Special attention given tos GUTTING. feb2-t-txnm W.<G. ROCHIE. Established 1859. OHIARLES MULLER Hasu removed to the store .next to France Grig's. WX A TCUJES, Clocks and alowelry re V pa ired, and satigfpotion guarantoced to everybody. Those indebted to .moe for work ,04 jeolry wvill please pay at opeo, for H~aimpton is Elected. CHARLES MULLFMR. feb J- If S:hlrts ! Shirts!i Shirts ! WAMUTTA Muslin and 290O Ignon, at$.0por half dozopl Poenao and Calico at$6.00 and .$9,00 por half dozen. war 22 J. F. MoMA8TER & ML. TO OUL CUSTOlYIERS 110 IL are iud1ebted to us fg 'ROVI4s. IONSccr 1 1 PATES, we wo.1,ld respect fully call attenutiop, that your bi)@, are due on or before the airst of Novemelr. Wo are depending on you for pay ent AT ,ONCE, to enable un to iuet obligations mude to assist you, andi , which are. dgeo at that tine. In ordl.l for us, a: wil aow you, go main tain our credit, it ary to meet o.u; ifrouiscs promptly. Beatr, Broa & Spn. oct 1.3 NZF'+W TOOJDS ! NEW GOODS ,! WE haVo just received . tock of SPRING AND SUM3JER pnts of the best brandls at M ceuiL.. -1.4 Cambric~s at 10 cents. ,Centennial Stfripes at 121 cyg~ts. A.LeO. :1 full Stock of Shi1rtmns, Shletings andic Drillin~g at low figuyes. CLOTHING ! CLOTP/ING! ! i~e have .just received a largo and com.. plete stock of Spjring and Suuummer ('1A'h ,thing which we will sell as ekt.4p as g HATS ! 'HATS !! tI.TS !! CGents' and Youths' Felt and I~trawv Iats of' all kinds and at any prico.. CASSIMEJQES ! CASSIM1ERES ! W~e have just .received afulsokfCp - moasfoiie CJharlottewillo Mills. -ALSO,.. Twoods, Cot(tounados, Jeans, etc. 1. F. IVcMaster & Co. J. OLGENDIN!NG, .SOOt ald S]h0n Mpuipfacini'er, .QTNS3ORlO, 1S. C. TH1-E undersignedu .e s.pectfull y announcs l p~CN the Shoe Manniho~tory to one dpor below Mr. .0,Mulr's. I aun prep~aredl tp mnanufacturo 'dll styles of wcugk in a substantial end orkmnanlikc naunner, out oftheo very best materials, and at prices fully as low na the same goods een Uo. manufactgred for at the Nortlh pr else~where. I koop gonstantly on hand .a .good Sto~ck of Solo' and Upp'er Leathgr, Shoe F"indijngs &c., which wvill be 50old at rensnuable prices. Ropairipg plrompltly attendledto. Terins strictly Cash. oct 12 J. CLENDINING. P'anhttion11 tor' Sale. Iloentedi in this count-y, seveni mies fromi Winnsboro, and formerly owned ,by Bilas \Y. Rluff. The tract contains live hundred and forty (540) acres,.at goodi portion woded. On the place is a .conmmodi oys dlwelling-house, together wijki thle necessary outbuildings--all in . good repalir. TIh~is property can be purchased at a low price ni1 upon npost accommodating . terms. rW No cash required until the first, of Dacemaber. For further particulars apply to the under Ssigned at tihe law qfflee of Gaiard & Reynolds. Tmy 8-txt(f .TQn 8. ImvFrmnOL8 N qr~rs -_ G~ -PS TRE1', w AT U9 UI DESPQJTES' ANfl DRBY Q(Q1)S, CLOTHING? BOOTS AS.NAO ?400%S, WIN ES, LIQUORS, fcb Etc.? Etc. I(LEPS c. stautly "(% jinn1( it iji u ply of Choice FAlMIIJY GJOCR.lM nn VLANTATI O; SUPPLIE8 . }Ijfl sit] talcin recently bcik rO1plxleshrcLQ 1( v i~o ready kp ,Q 8.JTly theO w nuts of .aI. 9Ctl