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E be _InI aub ___17 TRI-WE~EKLY E~DITION.] WINNSJ3ORO, 8. C., SAT URDAY M~ORNING, JUNE 2, 1877. - [VOL.41. NO. 51. NEW ADVE1TISEIENT-. 2 **" ** ""e"nnt cards all styles wit name 10 cents Nopst aid. J. 1. HusTEp, Nassau, Rens co., R evolver Free wih o oardese. JAMES BOWN SON, 18 and 18x, Wood Street Pittsburg, Pa. H A 1 comio oil chrono, 7x11, mounted, worth 25c., 1 pk. love cards, I pk.comi envelopes, t pack. cornic cards, 1 pack scroll, l 24 pago book FqB all sent for only S Bet. stamps, Novelty Co., Middleboro Mass. OOK see tijs. Only $1.50 Capital required . to start canvassing for sAngK rwAJN's NEW SOIIAU'.BOOK. Apply, ivfth stlznpto John X.* lInloweIJ, 13988 A ~ I~ Mast Street, ., Y. TRIFLING With a Cold is Always Dangerous. USE WELLS' Carbolic Tablets, a sure remedy for Coughs, and all Dis eases of the Throat, Lungs, Chest and Mueous M embraito. PUT VP ONLY IN DJ,UE BOXES. Sold by all Druggists. C. N. CuITTaNToN, 7 Sixth Avenue, N. V, The Black Hills. By I. N. MAOUlIa, who has spent 12 years In 'this region. Latest accounts of Gold and Silver prospects, Agrietltural and Grazing resources climate, hunting, gCaing, Indian.s and Settlcrsl adventures with them, mining anu wili western life, the Waterfalls, boiling Geysers, noble scenery, imimense gorges, etc. With 27 fine Illustrations, and one map. Price only 10 cents. Sold by all newsdealers, or sent post-paid for 12 cents by DONNELLY, LOYD & Co., Publishers, chicago, Illinois. Th Iake the I r et and bostmo IlSgOUt. QQ wtNE uupes ronc. reh-hudr. boad ooPen., Se~t of Elegant Oi'kI Stolle Stoovo Buttons,Oents' Lake Georgo Diamond Pin ime hyst stone Bi , a lnald vit) gold, AmOtIyat Ston eart Ptt Ootdl-plated Wcddlng Rin Seot Riosebud Fu'rlDrops, ale' Flowered and silvered At Pin. Ltdloa' Fancy et Pin andiDnrpi,.Oold-plaioCollarihatton, (itn'.,'tod ThreeOnld ptatod Studs. The .JNVDUCREiNTS TnAGEN7T d. BRIDK, Clinton Plnce, New Yor ,I ''".o'Is The Eureka jew 1r3 casket contains 1 pair gold-plated e n g rave d sleeve buttons, 1 set (3) spiral shirt studs, I Gents' Im. coral iJn, I umproved shape collar stud, one Gents 'ee link watalh chain, and 1 Ladles' heavy wedding ring: puce of 1 casket nnl t~te, fig rents; ti~ree fC'r$12?5:v tar f!) i 12 for $3.50, all sent postpaid by Weall. Six dozeti and a solid silver watch for $20. Agents can make money selling thes casket.t. Rend 50 ct.s. for sample and Catalogue. We save all kinds of Jewelry at low priees. W. COLES & CO.. 785 Broadway. N. Y. City. ?W' We are the "Originals" in this business .and have no "Milton Gold!' or "brass" jewelry. "This Jewelry Ctasket is remarkably attrac tive, and COLES & Co., ase reliable dealers."-, ABoston Globe. june 1-4w SFAOND GRAND DRAWING Kentucky Cash Distribution Co. Louisville, Ky., June 30th, 1877. $310,00 0AS1 IN IIIFT S AR MERS AND D.OVERS BANK, :Louisville Ky., Treas. TlIE Kentscky Cash Distilbution Co., author ized by a Special Act ef the Legislature for the benefit of the PUBLIc Scwcow.s oF FRANKFOUtT, svill have TheSecond of the Series of Grand D)rawings in the City of Louis' Sille,, Ky.,Saturday, Jnm 30th, 1877, AT PUBLIO LIBRARY HALL. .A " A scheme commensurate with the times, $80,000 for only ten. Read the List of Gifts. I Irand Cash Gift, OOOO P Grand Cash Gil L....................$25,000 i Grand Cash Gift.....................5,0 1 Grand Cash Gi...,............ .,.....10,000 a Grand Cash Gits, $5,000 each..........15,000 .5 Grand Cash (Gitts, $2,000 each.... .... 10,000 20 Cash Gifts $1,00 '-eh..........2,0 4' Cash Gifts, $50 eah.............. ....20,000 100 Cash Glifts, $200 each..................20,000 !l00 Cash Gifts, $i100each.................80,000 ?10 Cash (Gifts, $50 each..................25,000 5000 Cash Gifts, $loeach..................0,000 ,1972 'Cash Gifts amioun.ting t. .$310,000 Whesie Tickets $10, Halves 85,Quarter $2. 50. 11 Tschets $I00, .33l-2'Tiekets $300, 563-4 Tiohets $500. Drawing Posiively June 30hi, 1877. And E~very Three Months Th sieafter. CHR'JERIATBs OF Sapsltvrsoit OF DRtAWlNo. This is to certify that the first dra wine of the Kentutcky -Cash .letribmut~ion Cornpany took place on tho 6th of December, in Mtajor hail, Frankfort Ky.,.in ar presence and under our' immediate aurporvision. We futrther state that every ticket and part of ticket, which had been sold, wore repamsented ihi the wvhett, and that the drawing was %airly und( honestly conducted. We further state that we had no interest, wvh Yerian the enterprise, noer .any connoetioni wi a he same, exeept in the 5character of supervisors, whose sole dilt~y was .to -protect the interest, of the ticket-holders and to preside over tho drawing. io . Avi Duvall, late Chief Justice Supreme Courteof Kentu~y. .James GI. Dudiey, Chairman Board of Sch100 Tirustees. -Grant, Green, Cashier Fargars' Rank of Ky. lHen. S. 1.. M. Major, Puhife Printer State of K~y. lHon. .ThloasN.u Lndsay, Vrosldent of the Far 10ank of Ky. Ho.Ttaas C. Jones, Ole*kof Sup. Court of If y. Jndgeo R. A, Tihomlpson, Pm~aitting Judge Frank. ui onty cosyrt, .James (I. Crockett, clerk IFitnklin county court. Remittances cani be mad~e by Mail, Express, Draft, P'. 0. Order or Iteg stored Letter, made jpayable to (1. WV. Barrow &Go. All communicaijons and orders Zor tiekots .shuutid be addriesseld to G., W. BA RROW & CO., Geeaeral Mangg~ors, Courer Journal Blu ing, Louisville, Ky. $IfbiDW4R OCULAR. may 8.41 Shirts!i Shirts Shirts I W ^*A*UT" "Ii iln ad 2200 Li.e., at $8.00 poy af fcdozena Percale and Calleo at$6.00 and *9400 per half dozen. mar 22 L. F. MoMASTERI A 00. THE BALL STILL ROLLS ON -AT TT3E GRAND CENTRAL Dry Goods"Establishment Ic~reery & Brother COLUMBIA, S. C. T HE success attending the disposal of our MAGNIFICENT STOCK, which we put upon the market early this sason at such low figures, convinces us that the public appreciate our efforts to supply them with the newest and most stylish goods. Buying as we do from the first hands and for CASH, enables us to offer SUPERIOR INDUCEMENTS. We are now receiving a new and elegant stock of SPRING AND SUMMER D 'E. Y - O)o a BOOTS, SHOES, 'EEat" axic2. Vaps, which will be sold at the same low ruling popular prices. We expect to do a LIvE PUsING JUHINESs, and bargains will be offered daily. "A word to the wise Is sufficient." ,1' Samples sent on application and expressage paid on bills over $10. McCREERY & BROTHER, Grand Central Dry Goode Establishment. T. A. McCnEnR. B. B. MICOREERY. B. A. JLAWLS. W.i, HIOIIKAN. feb 20 SPRING GOODS -FOR 1877. To-day the campaign's fairly closed, The lucky man is he Who takes his Keat on the 4th of March Our President he'll be : And now the next best thing Just suited to our mind, is where to get the cheapest goods The best of goods to find. My friends and I went out one day, Some New Spring Goods to buy And we resolved,befote we went, Tha different stores to try. We wandered Winnsboro all around Until our feet were sore, And found the very plate, at last, T'was SOL WOLFE'S New Cash Store. Of Hats, Clothing and Boots and Shoes, The latest to our view The very best styles of Dress Goods, And Printa so cheap and new. So then, my good friends, one and all, Now is your time to try What Bargains you can get of mne Or, you need not buy of SQL. feb 17 IT8W G-OODS! NEW GOODS ! WE have just received a stock of SPRING AND SUMMERZ prints of the beet brands at 83 eents, 4-4 (Cambries at 10 cents. Centennial Stripes at 12j cents, .A.Leo, A full stoekc of Shirtings, sheetings and Drilling at low figures. (OLOT1*ING I CLOT HING I ! We have ,just received a large and ee m plete stoek of Spring and hummer Ctoth thing which we will sell as cheap as any one. HATS!I HATS! H ATS i Gents' and Youths'FPelt and Straw Hats of all 'kinds and at any price. CASSIMERES I CASSIMERES ! We have just reeived'a full stock of Cassi.. merae from the Charlottesville Mills. --ALSO Tweeds, Cottoniades, Jeans, ete, J . ~ser&c IMPORTANT -TO -AND A GRICULTURISTS! -0 Emperor William Cabbage. T IE boat, largest, hardiest and most profitable variety of WINTER ;AinAuE known in E urope, and imported to this oountry exclusively by the undersigned, whore, with little cultivation, it flour ishes astonishingly, attaining an enor mous size, and solling in the market at prioces most gratifying to the producer. In transplanting, great carp should be used to give suflicient space for growth. Solid heads the size of the mouth of a flour barrel, is the average run of this choice variety. One packago of the seed sent post paid on recoipt of 5) cents, and one 3 cant postage stamp. Three packages to one address $1 00 and two 3 cent stamps. 'rvelvo packages sent on receipt of $3 00. fy Read what a well known Garrett Co. Marylandor says of the EMPEnoa WIL LIAM Cabbage: BLoOMINGTON, QannET Co., Md., Jan. 22, 1877. Mn. JAMEs CAMPBELL, 6 'Fulton St. N. Y. Dear Sir:-I bought some seed from you last spring, and it was good. Your Em - peror William Cabbage s ijts this climato well. On a mountain side the seed you sent me produced Cabbages weighing thirty pounds each. Very truly yours, JASES BROWN, -0 $4e I am Sole Agent in the U. S. for the famous Maidstone Onion Seed. from Maidstone, Kent Co., England, pro, ducing the most producing the imost prolific and finest flavored Onions known and yielding on suitable soils from 800 to 900 bushels per acre, sown in (drills. Mr. henry Calvin, a large -in'rket gardon er at Syracuse, N. Y., writes, "Your English Oniny Seed surprised me by its large yield, and the delicious flavor of the fruit. I could hove sold any quantity ir. t.his market at imod prices. My wife sav.i she will have no other onions for the table in future. Send me as mluch as you can for the enclosed $5.10." One package of seed sent on receipt of 50 cents and one 3 cent postage stamp, three packages to one address $1 001 and two 3 cent stamps. Twelve packages sent oft receipt of $3 00. My supply is limited. Parties desiring to ocure either of the above rare seeds, swonld not delay their orders All seed WAJdflANTED FnEsI AND TO GERMINATE. Cash must accompany all orders. For eithar of the above seeds, address JAMES C(AMR'E LL, !: V 1-x t Gm 66 Fulton St., N. Y. SOMETHING NEW. o have just received some very fine old ICorn Whiskey, Peach and Apple Bran ly, from Stone Mountain, Georgia, and Lincoln county, Virginia, and various other grades of 6Western Rye Whiskeys, North Carolina Corn and Rye Whiskeys, )onestie and Imported Wines and Brandies, -ALSO A larga stock of bottled. goods, consist, ing ,of Champagne, Lager Beer, for family usne, Ales, Porters, Soda Water &e. One barrel fresh Newark Cider on draught' Cool drinks ok all descriptions. Tobacco, Cigars, &ci. --AT OUR HOUSE. J, D, McCA RLEY, may 3 Proprietor. Ichster & Bhce - -0-. D EIIRE to call the atttention of th pu&bl ic to their large stock of Spring and Summer Goods wvhieh they areosetling at remarkably low figures. Best Prints, 8A eents. 4-4 'amnbrica, 10 cents. Figured Litwns, 1'2 1-2 cents. White Piqucs, 12 1-2 cents. They have just receivedi a fresh supply of Ladies' Collars and (hiffs, Neck rufln~ Silk Ties, Embroidery, fitriped, Checke~ and Plai Nainsooks, Hosiery, Gloves, Fans &e, wvhich they sell as low as can be bommght anywvhere. They have a nice l~ of Ladies' Dress Goods, eonsisting of AMpaeas, Iron Frame Grenadjine, Mohairs, Wash JPoplins &o. The gentlemen are especially invi ted to examise,their Stock of Casshooeres, Shirts, Secks, Drawers, Gloves., Fe-lt and Strawt Hate, &o. They think they can offer the best selootlon of Clothing, at the lowvosLt prices .ever offered .in the TILE PRESIDENT'S POLICY. o 1OW U IT 18 VIEVED BY .IFF.RENT PA UTIES. What a Wise Correspondent of the New York Herald Thinks Ho Knows. Washin glon Corres.pondence . Y. lfcrad. It is no longer denied here that there is a great deal of dissatisfac - tion, and even demoralization in the Republican ranks, in almost all the 'States ; one sees and hears enough evidence on the sub'ject to enable him to imako a study of it ; and I think it would be a mistako to be lievo all the grumbling to come from tho ofice-seekors and profos..' sional politicians. These two classes are the most furious ; they feel and say that they have been swindled by the President ; that had they suss pected what his policy would be they would have taken very good care he should not got into the White House. Indeed, very prominent and inIluenu tial men of this kind do, not hesitate to own to you in private discussion that they never believed Mr. Hayes was elected ; they did not believe that he carried Louisiana, and they are the less reconcilable on this ac count, for they feel that they carried their candidate in in defiance of the right and now get nothing, not even thanks, for doing so, It is amusing to see the rage of those disappoint, ed political speculators who find themselves caught in a trap of their own making. But it is not the politicians alone who grumible. In such States as Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, in some parts of Now York, Pennsyl vania and Illinois, the rank and file of the party, the honest voters in the rural districts, are amazed and indignant at the President's South - ern policy. These simple souls can not soo why "the South" is less dangerous now than it was during the presidential campaign, when every Republican stump speaker assured them solemnly that the I Union was nior in greater peril. In the Northwest the farmers and country people generally belioved what Blaine and Bristow, Inger soll and Morton and the army of orators sent out by Secretary Chan (er told them about the South ; they took it all for gospel truth, and voted for Iayns to save the Union and keep down the rebels ; in fact they were quite ready for a new war rather than not put in Mr. Hayes, and now they see their President acting as though the South was an integral and harmless part of the Union, and they do not understand it. THE COUNTRY VOTERS. Whatever trouble the PIresident may experience from the disgust of tihe simle minded country voters will be of his own making, of course. He was silent all tile suimmer and fall, while tile orators who uged his election told 'the country that the Union was in danger from the South. The farmers and country people swallowed all this frothy champagne trash, andl are naturally alarmed now to see the President "go back on the country",-for that is what it means to them. "It is a very dangerous tihing to deceive the people," remarked one of the most experienced politicians of Washington the other day. "What they once believe, they hold fast to. The old Democratic party made this mistake. They howled for the Union during many years and told th~e people that those dreadful lIe plublicans would break down the constitution and dissolve the Union, and wvhen, after all this Union saving nonsense, the biggest part of the Democratic party turned against the Union in 1861, the people did not hesitate ftve inuites, but eat down on the D~emocrats and smashed them." POLITICIANS nELLIcosE. There seems to be a good deal of truth in this. The President will presently find the people on his side ; but he can hardly help retain, ing the enmity of a large part of the politicians. The Republican party leaders have ceased to be a compact and harmonious bodyr. The voters who -"believe in it"' ar'e all right ? but the leaders Arae jealous of each' other, ready to tear each other to pieces ; each extremely antiius for p ~atronage to maintain himself and i reak down his rivals ; and there is I hardly a Northern State in wh two or threw Republican factious are not at loggerheads. The party has been in power so long that it haa two sets of natural loaders ; the old men, who hang on, and have got: used to public life, and who will not give up if they can help it, and the younger generation, who are anbi tious and very tired of waiting. There are not officors enough to go. around, and there are lots of onmi ties and grudges. Thus we may frequently hoar here discussions among New York: politicians who frequently visit us which show that New Yorkc Repub licanisn is, even mnore than that of Pennsylvania, frothing at the mouth. Thero is a pretty general determina tion to drive Mr, Conkling out of public life at all hazards, but when that is done the family will be no happier. Morgan, Dix, Evarts, Curtis-all want to got ahead, and Bach has a faction at his back. You can scarcoly pick out a Northern State whoro a similar pro 0oss of disorganization is not going n in the party. In Indiana the Hiorton men and the garrison men are fiercely opposing each other. In Dhio the venerablo Taft hopes to be aominatod as an opposition Repub-, Lican, and his followers and those of Stanley Matthews are making each ther unhappy. In Illinois the party some time ago got so tired of Logan that it did not wait for the sew policy of Hayes to split open in the back. In Massachusetts there re-roports horo say-renewed, 3vidcenens of a wider split between bho Butler-Simmons and the anti Butler-Simmons Republicans. When Blaine was here the other lay he told his frinds that the Re, p)ublican party was as good as dead. 'That man has ruined us," he said, :odding toward the White House, tind he thought himself lucky to have full senatorial term to servo out. But behold, Mr. F~ugene Ijale cornea ut as an "unhesitating" supporter >f the administration, and re, port says that lMr. Frye is of the anmo mind with Mr. I ale, and thin uakes a row even in Maine. THE DEMOcRATIC PARTY. So far as the Denocratic party ippears here it is also splitting up into two camps, There are a few prominent Democrats who are de termined to oppose the President in every way ; they say he is a "fraud," ind can do nothing good ; it is a :luty to make him unhappy, to place :)bstacles in his way, to make him feel that he has no right in the White Rouse, and their policy is to regard all he does with suspicion ; to 4 tempt extreme legislationi of different kindo, and, in short, to be irrecon cilables. But a much larger pro portion of the Democratic leaders %ro of a difleront mind. They say that they will support the President cordially in all good measures ; that party spirit shall not load or driva thom into any blundering or uppa triotlo course ; that they will hol4 friendly relations with him, but that they will ask no favors of him, and will at the election strive tQ vote down every Republican candi, nate who did not protost against the fr'auds and wvrongs of the election and the electoral count. They do naot deserve to be in public life, and and it is our duty to punish them. That is the platform of the more sensible and the more numeron a faction. It has at least a method Li it. THlE PRESIDENT's CoHANoFEjt Looking the whole field over, it is plain that the President willge abundant support for any p)ohoy which is right. What he may lack among the R~epublicans he will get from the Democratic side, Hie moves slowly, and is not likely to attoenpt very much at any time ; he has no private axes to grind, and will not feel insulted or embarrassed if the Senate should refuse to confirm some of his nominations. He is not scheming foi' anothey term, and has never contracted the habit of rewarding either personal or politi mal favorites, and the opposition Re.. publicans will flad in him very anoch liko a greased pig-hard to hold on to. He probably knows that what! over he does with the of~ces *i11 make a howl among the politicians, It he gets competent men in ofce he believes he has done his danty to the country, and he dees not appeav to think that he owes any duty to the politicians. He ia not unwilling' to oblige them if it comes inihis way; hie is naturally an amniable tihan, and he. is too old a party politician naob to know what patronagq means ; but Congreawem a A4the will find that if they rommbad 'biad men they will b0 expose4 wiut mercy, and that the Preslinheans otake the whole nountre Jnin hin