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R-'MEEKLY EDLITION.] WINNSBORO, S. C., SA'LIIDAY MORNING, MAY 26, 1877. NtEWI ADVI EU'IISEM jNTS S I pac~k n . tlal1inncn cards, 1 pack F UN 11unL1erhller Ilirtl I')l, 1 puc0k scrioll t sorts, for only 10 centsa lull stampl FnCard Co., Middleboro, Mass. 2O Lade~s' Favorito(3arjH, fill styls4, wihnmnoll, lW. Post ganit. J. 11. )IUITLI). Na sa, itcxs. Co., N. Y. New pieces sh.'eI, nudie, retails for $1l. 5, sent Gfor lit, cs. tied t~l sap. Cep ~Music M ddleo ro, Mass,.'hp Revolver Free Wil rx(11t"drs ,JANII*1 BROWN & SON, 1tly .aJ?L 138, %oud Street 1'1ttasbirg, I'll. 43Q., Middleboro, Mass. I ";~on will a gree to distribute some of our cireitrs, we will send l oiU It chromlo IN (111T jeIm1AM, and1( a Is f$ jigo mionths~ IiieI.ic I t) cents to pill' pyttalge. Agents wnteid. 10,N))MAL & C()., Bos toin, Mass. tfV - See' tIll . Only $1 .511)el Ialtll reqireit OO to ll ailva1'ss!Ia fill 31A I TWA".IN'S NEW SCSIAI'-1100K. Apply, ft;tuu .~oll C N ASSERS, (0.,Sid ,N.Y WEith . Cold is Always i~hmgo ous. Ii, 11r1e roInledy or Coughs, and all ])is ('u1ses of the Th~lroait, Lui''s C;lient and Miuco ,l l (lmhlrdIe. I PUT 111 ONLY IN U.t'3 BOXS);.. Sold by all i)roigists. C. N. ('m'r'r:x'rox, q S stll xortiuc, N. Y. H coi oil Cliietlil, Txti 1, moitnltl, wIIrli 1'"et , I Ilk. loves cardls. I Ilk CI 11111( (H~ A) eneos I pack~i. entil ca itll. I pack scol apage toCK IFull. 11l1 so1i. fr on~ly 5 3et. stamips, Novet 1C\1., MtddIcl or()\ixs Thm IIp Tnp Pnc1l.1gf is !h E. lorgest 1-1*0 Jetlij ot. kA D AND fl~'o~'I (u~ltil:!.F. 7I ahiIVl it\411.Pprl 0~i~j~~ ,,j .,1v, ", 'cull 1'uhor. uz.' I Hit.t; ni-))ewd e l tlI.,. tIr.,,l n 1 : I gw (I iiI,'il a.11 d n~ ivc~ I I I 7 tI'i I n ll3. 311 uiadso '1 1111. .J 1 'll I i1/,/. Is , h 1 I'knv 3!I I J,.nt (f -li D,V Cton P:1 o New 1claju cl /))80) 6 (,'lo/je.'l 1 ' ':1VF!4 (;eaota s 111 selatin on thcu, 'lii t f l II'c 11 11 0W~" t 11il exts lii ie't t itt \tl t1 ojusItvlv iti to o iii, Wico . ;m o( ti(71llUl)0t1 \ ood '1--. slihae lit ortlln Igoos tor~~a. filtt '. "1'III friedelan I n .I elaiy't tu on da , - 'J\"l, (nlifcLtt :.to. r c lo al try. l.." Unsft il or ooj wresoe SPRId fon h 'r tao, a l s 'f'~sSQL--FUR-N-- ah too Of 7as Clti 7adBot n Io~ Kentlucky CashI IDistriJnlo 11 co, Loulsvj!lo, Kcy., Juano 30th, 1877, $310,000 CASIX IN GIFTS AIIMERS AND DROVERS BANK, rjT Il1;I(cot wt:Y '.1 1 )t1.ri ht too ('o., nut hor 'the blt'ielit of Liti' i'Uui.ru $cliooz.s ii I. u"N K oiti. will ll'o he X'wcoln( oif I be Series of' (x ratii li'awvingS in lhe (City of U~ ills, 1 illi,, Ky J.Sll iti'dy, .Juite 30th, 18 77, Air PU1!LIC LttIttAIt(' HA..i~ C- A Ht'heme volollcs'Ixot with Ilte tIi~i ; $00,000 for only ton. It ead( the List of (Rifts. 1 (:,nandl (as~h G..ift. ::(1.(!(31 I. G rand ('n.11lh ;r. ........................!tru I. (lr iald ('a. 1 Giftr ..................... 1,11 I (irdin1i (':out (;iiil..511111, eac............ u.. :t211 Il ('as ili (11,llf~ ll e th..... ............1,I) :1 o ('axti(l (1,lt ll~i .' 1r.1 1':I1 eloh..... ....... .. ..I+1' 2111 (',ti (':11S $1,1111 in h ................... "11!1 .10 (',1111 C) rt . $m(tll . . . .. 11.1 110 C li (411 s, $>" :lcllt....... .. "........... .11 51))(aI ,~ (.i1~t S. ) $ l /'1'11 S , u t .. .III. II) 6972i(l u Is loeiit l ir 1:1ttletird; t(l.)~ . $:31,u1e 11111 le tll'ie'. Wtt'I iilnl t5,ieI? at I :"- . 11 'Ptoiket $,1 wit0, :1-Th e k ts' $x311) ;'t I -ie tiltl~cul lt It'leI.' l5 ii 11 V W1 11111 Alvtr i lt l 1: ' 1ilf '111s 1 e8 h CouIt I('TKt O h t't'I t VJ~ 111k)(11'1I) .Tac x lf~lI . IItih (' 11:111'0hlll11 I11 1 : or 843111 I G1: l' ' Ilk.11 (1 111.It1I1, 11 .d t lit Ny. 'I toll )'ilola 1 '. 3ill .* '11 1 I' 1' 11 1. '1):t 111d'1 (til' 1Jtcg i(.1.'1''tlll 111)1 cSI 'Ylhl .Jlzig'1 11:111!of lit 0h''. an 11 BIUIO& ( '01%le(1::;11. nl iil~ ~'iO~ ll ti'. & Bh-thkl-o iG. 11 o ? ( 5 1O(t Ir to) ('liiitl i ('l trs o lion 1'C Ittl1 llou' Lialt u1ifln:c .u)r~ Cour of 1)ll'I,10 ccii1. Iigls(1 lrc l . I I 1 lal 111,1) or 5')); ('al. it.' "I 'aex, 12 1 iu ce oft(iv. li .S. 1-' .%1i. d ) t hey.111111 1'011 aI .l I i Y.~ Ti111:' 11i't'Ci af 11(0lioo Lte' )' (J'tlge I, A.11)1 1 51111, 1'Cli A lllt ul gi t it r tlm Grni ne),1N Mi~tllI',tl111 Po l s 'I1'lte(1 ('Ctk01tI(' tir.'palll i nuted IQl1't (i n)lll n . 1' S ok )1' :04 by l55 til' , SKt. its. Socksf, 1'.(l.(awes Goo~ Fe"}l.t. d SIitruad I 111th, 1)I.1.( 0:r o G1ho "h n 1' l;te can o11 e 0 11 ' & o iest.t1 L118 , l' ClourirlIl louina] lit. IIIOlowst l)le, Hy 5ll~ 1 ": I ) C u :.i't fo:S~i Mlton thf Plai i F of tpo,' forthe11n!' Ca:h.1.5wlu h} leSii Bet :''lit, ALSeenO,' AWfie Piues, of 1 1.2r~ scnt s ThISe'- Y,~nfrc'~elafehspl of BRANDCul'i n .ais ek 1111li ikT e, Ill(tily, ti e1,Cl'lal ((1(1 111111 W111NJef:S i roat.. ('r.....y. IMPORTANT _c* >>+. M_ I~ :i J% 31 3E3 I AGRICULTURISTS! Emperor WfiIlam .Cabbage, L i itililo : ~ 1' ITRIto1 if)F ritt v 1(1( ixln'ri 11) illsoI ci ut y txi lusi vtly byli th litiiIilerii t1, WVi tie, wvithi little ottltivtutioii, it hlour. islics istoi sh iii ;l\", oftiii iiil ani eiin". 11otl:; s;1-', til( sellinlg in thet umarket ati prices iticst f,'il ill to I( the ,'ir l e. liIn tr~lilti lin t , )! 'at cure sh (Dl 11 lac tised t(> gi '' X1l hiitt. XjpilC for t~ltoVt ii Solid lea~ 15s the siret ilt liei 1124) Ii of it lI~ir i 1lrrel &s thei iiVvrugate run of th ~ isi chice vatrivt. Ot. ( uwi1('ki g(' (of tle st .1 sthtt host jwaiul ()11 1.ci jtt 1 o 1f :((illns, :iii d oil( 'I'wc"lve I 'ockages sejil oil receipt ol $:3 (U)i. ('.oo. \a"":1 l t l" sav (t el i'la t ( r~ 1. (.111 0 i.atiiaiisu hest itIn Iotdn. ( ecat\ (Li it ."1 Cotil,ii \ 1111s '\ tl il.", ;GF lo S.N tis s lt ii i ' ;ut : wa good. mitt';.1 rn ilasn 'h.e O nion thsccd.ut( \II Ott t l i i t ; '(titist~~ v nlt ' 1 atll ol( .N . W t , oi Maidstontiio ee Onl'Jion: Seie it I:11gc i , ath I1t 1 .1-:i cti t~ I ll,~ti ofIth, jiit tllit'. :110 fines tilt' 11 iiiiichi s kttO tol ni t i n il s i lt e Si.l 5$f 5U)t "Ir 1"r (' .-ie a large i0 rt oil 1 (I..' on .i.c'i t Oion '-we no. rid Ii'h\ t lttrge rilk tt t it ((it i0ii ity ltt f sttis S "ut I enot. cd I licil 1 1"o order sAll sii this a. 1(it t ,it, o iit all rtde; ::1\l cithewil itii ;iii ho~rtili'tIoit i he ul ClueI VSe,:' , t' . l sent nil 1. (" titre' I xj t o ex 1'i hojis .,l 1. 41.1 ti hAeel~ of :3 no. , 'u iii t)2. "1e"ntippiiii il t i'stat l.~ cexiti. (':111! to 111 S(''ttcilkt of lihe higs, Sl et hil'l sc iln eil I' f hiliiig .;e1 ;, lia 1(1s. ~~~Vc ~ .. \iv j i . j ccoi '.1 a l It rin coil wj)1t4 1 - xtfck o 1;1;ii ii tl Siiilnc ;;t.,N. lY 0N11 W '.T 1' kind a .\"1(s at:,iy pi'ce. t tite, o CASIMRNG AN CSSI.MEIIE eliiiofe est c'v 1).1:(t01k oelfAis YOUNG CAROLINA. ---o H1I:IlEF SKE'lI "S OP 031, Or' OURt LA~ W ~ 31.-i KEA'S. A fow 'of the Rheing Generation of LStatoSmon--Who and What they Are. -'hrnn (/h' .Jl U 'II'd l mni u r':c. Co.umiim., May 20.--I have al reay given to the readers of tho JI~nernal o* C'onnterec brie f sk~etchles of the life and career of each of tho leaders of the House of Represen tatives. By leaders, I mean of courso those whose official positions gjVo them that pre-ominenco. There are many other young mien whose intelligence and ability have I Ilacled them idready far in advance, and who are destined to take a p"ollinet, part in the future his;tory of the I'alnt to State, and it is of these that I now desire to say somc tlling. lION. .ITIN J. uIEM'lriLL, of ('ester, was admitted to a seat il'e, the '(:n'n11 11g of the extra session. Ale is the sceoliold sol of H1.4 Jumes Hemphill, of Chester, ia (istiinuished lawyer, and for many years it reIprescltative from that county il the State Senate.. He is alm I he lephiew of t he Ito Hon. John Hemphill, for fifteen years Chief Justice of the Supremo Oourt of Texas, and also Lnit ed States and Confederate States Senator. Coining from (sneh stock, young HImli phill has a bright political ecreer before him11. Mr. Hmcllphill is 011v tweinty-sevecn year s of age, but Ias beon a close student, and is a line lawycr. Ie grad'uiOated with dis' tinction at the South Carolina Uni. versity. 1He loe:; not speak often, hut wlen he does it is always to the 1)oint. He is clear and logical in ar'gunent, has ia fine delivery, and atlway coinands the attention of the House. Ho is unmarried, a strikingly handsome young mlan, and a nativeo of Chester county. Mr. Hemphill's able argument on the appropriation bill last week is' acknow1uloegl by all who heard it to have eDen one of the most eloquent, c.ear and logical speeches of the sesin. n1ON. Ioni:ilT R. fmlI'IILL, his cousin, heads the delegation from Abbeville anl is atn acquisition to the brains of the House. Ho is kn n as the '"handsomnest editor" ll the Siate. Mr. }cem)Iphlill is tirity-seven years 01(1 and graduated at I sk ine College, in Duo Vest, Abbeville county, in 1859, with the highest honors of his class. Ho went into the war in the 7th South Carolina Volunteers, as a private, and after serving one year,re-enlist ed in Orr's Riles, and for the last two years of the war was the Ser~ geant-Major of that regiment. He was wounded at Chancellorsville Geittysb urg and Petersburg. After ins return he stuidied law under his unce, lion. Jaimes Hemnphill, of Chester, and wvent to Texas, where 1h( pra'lctised his prof~essioni with great success for' two voar's. He r'eturnued, married in 1870, and1 set.. tied in Ahbevile, his native county. H~e hats line literary tastes andl at t iinents-.has the honor'ary title of A. M., and some years ba'ck doe liv'ered add(ress's before N~ewbor'ry and *Wofford Collegos at their comn mnencemients. 1-e is one of thole Vice-Presidents of tile State Press Association, andl editor' of one of tihei v'ery best wecekly newsp~apers in the South, (thie Abbevillo .Aediumn. Hoi< wvields a trenchant pen and is master1 of rhetoric. He is a good orator anid a readly debater, hats self-pos sessonf and a perfect comfmandl of elegant English. He is as true as Iteel, andl Abbovillo may well b~e pr'oud of her young representative. lION. J. w. OjiAY, a member fr'om Greenville, was boen , in Edgefiold in 18415, and was' graduated at Wofford College. D)uring the war, although under age, lie entered tile famous Hamp toni Legion as ai private, but was subsequently made a captain in a Geor'gima regiment. Mr. Gray moved to Greenville in 1871, and after proeprinmg himsei~lf for the bar at once ontoredl upon a growing and successful practice. Ho was elected to the present Legislature in the fall of 1876, and soon made his mark as a gentlomnan of rare dis eriintation andc of careful thought. He is an earnest worker both in the committeeo-room and on the floor of the House, rarely inisses roll call, and is untiring in the discharge of the important and yesponsible iter ests intrusted to his keeping. THE ION. it. W. sIigst, one of the representatives fronm Andorson j county, was born at Pensleton, September 11th, 1840. Hie is the second son of Hon. Rt. F. Simpson, who represented the Third Congressional District for a number of teris in the United State's Con gross, colmanding the respect of all and the warm confidenco of the Southern meubers, and who was succeeded by the lato ex-Governor J. L. Orr. He graduated at Wof ford College at twenty years of ago and inmediately thereafter volun - teered into the Confederato service, and remained in the service, though broken dowl in health, until the close of the war. In 1863 lie naar ried the second daughter of the lata John Garlington, Esq., of Laurens. Since the close of the war ho hmts devoted liniself to his busine (planting), and has always imanifes fed a deep interest in everything temding to the advanceinejt and elevmibon of his chosen profession. That his services are appreciated is sho;)wn by his being selected to this his second term by a largely in-, creased majority. Mr. Simpson is a h-ird worker, liberal in his views, a staunch Demiuocrat, and 'a devoted sniporter of Governor .lnpton. His motto has always bpen' that the white people of this Mtiato could accept, no favor u from the Radical party without putting themselves upoli a level with the individuals of that party: hcr eo ho has been over an advocate of the Straight-out policy. Mr. S. was admitted to thQ bar at one of the recent terns of the court in Andcrson county. The Legends of Plants. The rose of England becamo es pecially famous during the ivars of the roses, after which the rod and white were united ; and t p rose of both colors is called the York and Lancaster ; but when tlheso flowers first became badges of the 'hounpa we cannot discover. The thistle is honored as the (lm)lemn of Scotland, from the cir cumstance that once upon a time a pa)trty of Danes having approached the Scottish,'enyp, unperceived, by night, were on th~e pomnt of attacking it, when oneo of the soldiors trod on a [histle, which caused him to cry out, And so aroused the enemy. The shlamrock of Ireland was hold by St. Patrick to teach the doctrine of the Trinity, and was cljoson in re membrance of him. It is always worn by the Irish on St. Patrick'a Day. The lock, in Wales, as a 'pational lovice, ha11 not been satisfactorily explained, otherwise than as the result of its having the Cymrio olors, greoin and white. In France, thefleur) de his is so alled as a corruption of fleur do Louis, and has no connection with the lily, but was an iris, chosen as n emblem by Louis VII. when he went to the Crusades, and fterwards na-med after him. The olive is deemed an emblem of peaco prnobably because, on account If its durability of growth, it was [)lanuted both in Italy and Greece to nark tihe limits ofllanded possession, When the question of corporal )unishmment first camoe up hero flfty years ilgo, tihe only voice raised igaimst wvhipping children in the Boston association of mninis, ~ers was that of a young divine yhoso rep~utation for veracity was o botter than it should be. -'What rood does wvhipping (10 ?" argued hoe young man, 'Punishments are ften unjust. Why, take my owmg sase-my father never whiipped me ut on1ce, and that was for telling the truth." "Well," said Dr. Morse, .rimly, "it cured you, didn't it ?"*~: Sprin~1/icld Republican. Judalh Peter JDonjamnin, the most popular lawyer in London, whose in.. lomo is over $100,000 a year, was formerly Secretary of State of the Southern Confederacy. He is sixty five, was born in St. Domingo, is a F-Ibrow, went to New Orloans after graduation at Yale, was a whig, Lhen a Democratic Unitedi States Benator, and then a Confedqerate. The editor of a Weatorn paper recently stigmatized a rival quill dlriver as "a bushwhacker, a inur.. duror and a yellow dog." To whica the canine editor retaliates that his. assailant is, "an unhappy wreok, a poor lost soul, a flshwoman, ta maniac and an unnliannered sot." A neutral neighbor, the Miami .Repun lican, protests thus :"Whit a miserable, mulo-cheeked, cowvardly set of libellous dirt slingers these newspaper crews must be to resqr t to such porsonalities."