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lU-W1I+ELY ED1ITION.] WINNSBIORO, S. C., UTHURSDAY MORNING, JUNE~ 28, 1877 [O.1 O 2 N I(; V C.ellegallt cants ail tit i"1(', ICill name it) cents )po t. i aId. .1. 11. Ill a11:I , Nassau, It(:ns co., ell" York. evoly r p r F r e S5'(i vl.llt'n1) S()xhot,:,I 1 1 t "i t(11 ;te VOL i.151ia Itlu 11'N i. Sos, I::i ,1111 I:;s, wood street i Icon l 25c.. I pik. 1nl'e Cl ltls, I pkcontle H lz 1 c'ontic oil c'hrrnnn, Txi1, t nn111ec1, MP2 em'elopl's, I pack. (onile cards, I pa-l: serutll. 1 1.1 page book Full, till sent, for only a:;tl. ila mps, Novell yt o.,'Iilhileboro Nnss. O!C See lilt . Unl} 1,su capital re(}1111'1:1 II) Slat'- e:t111SAIII!; 101 MARK B O I'SYAIN'. \IM' $CI(.1 C" 1 Ut)K 1\1)1)11', 55'I"ll Il;tllll ,itt,;Ir II,.("ANt At ( JERS. K. 11a11"t55'ell, 13"1 Iota sl I+ "'t, \, 1'. 'j hit I.IN(i .ti\itll it Cold .. s .'t1\vtl.v 1)angc1'O1lS. Utii: W EI:iS' Carbolic Tablets, sere I11)eli'" for (,'on-lis, alai all ])is "U 44'1".1N 01 1,110 ']'liroi'.l, jells:.[;S, (Iit'tit .411(1 1lucuus ,11ulnbruntl, 1'1"r 1S "' ONLY IN IIT.t;J' ;..."Ox E.S. Sold by all 1)rit;r';ists. C. N. ('1:rr"rl:x"rttx, 7 ) is:Ili 1'tt"etltm, X. T. The Blac.&c Kills. I:y Ii. N. Mnr"l 1111":. 51, r1 :tsi)rIll. 12 years In i)1is r(',inn, I~;,t:t'onnts of 0) 111 .11141 slLS'er Itrn.11' e1 K, 1\ (rIt'II111111 anti (il'ilIL I'1'Sn111"I'0S, eliul.114'. Itt- LII.Io-,t. II.411III"'. IIId1aI is, altul SeI I Iv nil :1,lvt"lt;111"4,i 5.liIt 1114'111, IL"111l11!! mid 5t .111 we.tel'n liil', the \\';"itrla Is. ;'01110;.; (403s.'Is, 11nI1141 1-ul )wry . tl!;Alit Ilse 1nl'ges. etC. With 27 lint, IIIu:Oal!t"ns. 111111 (l10 uLup. I'rice (.111% to Veins, oll. 1w all It"'Its(Icalers, or se1)I, post- pall. for 7 1"('IIts 1.. i)oNNhl.l.Y, LOYI) .\. Co., i'tl1)Iishl'1:1, Tp Pnckn~e i% tho Inrge.t tn.I Ltytr, l11u1 1 -tit. AND SEC. l iSht-utit" READ 'nin'r ]ti Iatt. Ioprs, 1'."114 ii. 1't"n hul-ter. liuld c:t 1', n, Nct to(F:lor:u;t 6,041 Stuno st."."t.. 1:Ili v; .,4;. nt,' l.ako (ionrgo I ;s11:un.I 1411 linw t'It'.t stuu.r l(iu.It11n141 ttilh 8.41.1. Atutklt t"l stut. " $. nrf pill, liul.l lrt.ut l 11'c.l.linl: ltlu"tS, t. )tn.,"r.u.l )::ItIhnpv, I.:vlh",' M utt'tun.I +ulI NiItrr, ,l 1L& I Ill r1. In:1, F'.t uu . t ]'Ill nn.I llruu'. (..d.l-Illttnl..ll t.' I'ut1""n, <;."I'I H at. t'.1 15'uh4t 1'11~111 nu.1 : ut .f '1'hrr.,,liul.l"phtt,;,! !ul+. 'Ti:r PFW& t-rt/ertl.v/sirl /'.../.,.t: l%,.." Cl /N!ll'('/'.IJ/:.5'/. %(1,4(:/x:\'/'t J. Ui Ip13. Clinton Place, New Yor for all. 's'he i.nrektl jt 1 J t';,sk-el t'( illlli' I' I 1titI "".jjjj(((( ; olll-plut('1l en}, rat' "4 sler5e LIM(r41", I iht.(.4) Spiral shh'- stn(Is, I l;t ll Ili. e1"1 . al till:, I improved Shape wrtiar st11(1, ooe (71 Ills line 11111: 11;11111 chain, iful) I i.:.hies' 1118:y SV('tllling rill !~ price ofI e;lslir.t. ('olnpllle. 30 et'llts; I,::n t' loI'$1.2a; Nix I01'11, illnl 1121 ml' :1 au, all scut 141st. ;till ))y mail. six Ilnrt"Ii ;11141 :1 ' t).4 silver' W., It 101 ' .$211, o:\Il hake mou("i ,t ll;ng Iti'st' casket,. solid ,n fol* ":, , 111 lit .11111 ("iliatok'ue. We have till kili 1.-, II .Ie55el1;5- of lo\\, -S x C( \5e 111'1 the "Ors! 11,:11s"" in I11v 1)ilsinrs, Mill 14111.1 nil "1iillA Il (tuitI" or "brass" jewelry, '''Putts .1('ll'elry ('aske- Is milt:rka11ly HI) rae t it"e, :uut 4' O EM k co., are, rellul)le dealers."; A Xf(11( (/lnbt'. 11110 1 4w 8O11ET1IING NEV. The Aulomt/alic Fly Brush. AN OI NAIiEN'.j . A COlIi4'01IN. NECESSITY. 'S 0 U O HT, ' rT 1) A q1 T. A S'I' --PUBLISHEI) - Daly, Tri-Wookly and Wookly --AT. COLUMBIA, S. C. H,0YT, EMLYN & McDANIEl4. JAMES A. IIOY', Editor. r j.R 1)mir Lb1i:sTrta con tintis the latest n eliwS of le dsaty, nl coi mercial, political and other matter sent by tele graph, f'ull local rt ports, editorials upon all current topics, apt Grange and Agri cultural Depaatnients. Tim TaMiif-WILR RICi.:a is issued every Tuesday. 'I'lnidaiy and Ssturday tuorn ing, and co1tatimis;dl the news of two hays in one nse. '.1' %% 1-- :,xv li(1EsT!r is an eight page paper, conl taini1g forty-right columns, em lvaniing tibu cream of the ni.vws of each week:. TEr. ] -:oT5rT. is now the organ of the ltate Granige, ril all matters of interest o the Patrons' of llusbandry will be treated inl their appropriate del'mrtmaent. .The Agricultural an d (range articles will peiair in each of our publictions-Daily, tI ri-Weekly and1 W'ekIly. 'TERMS OF SUI3SClIPTION: 1'IlIY ICEIlSTEI. On" Yeanr, $7 n Six Months, 3 50 'lhree Months, 1 75 TII W17J'KLY ItF.GIS'T'EII. One Year, ; 01) 6 x Months, 2 5f) I'lree Months, ,1 25 WE'1I f,Y REGIS.s'mt .)One Year, 2 00 Six Mfonthls, I og 'Three Mothts, 50 Ilay 20-tf hr ali for Haffmipoll! GRAND SPRING OPENING, -AT THE .D i y Goods, Fancy Goods, aiid Milliler*y Bazial, F a beautifal {tad full line of latest .I novelties ini Spring and Suimmmer Millinery and Fan Goods, consisting in part of11ad ies', Misses' and Children's trimmed Hats, Flowers, libbons, Silks, Nets, &c. A large lot of Ladies' Collarottes,Fichus p:d other fancy articles. Inspection of the Ladies and publie generallysolicited. We will endeavor to please the most fas tidious. All we ask is that you call, and .see for yourselves, and give us a trial. Now Spring Prints. Centennial Stripes, Press Goods, White Goods,D)rese Improv-. ors, Corsets :1.oiory, Gloves, yNotions, Clothing, IHats, Shoos, &o. Agent for Butterick's reliablo paper patterns. Ladies', \Misses' and Chldren's new patterns in store. GROCERY DEPARTMENT, Just tilled up with fro hi Groceries, Con feetionaries mind every'thing usually found in a first class house of thme kind. A lot of Furniture, Lat~bs, Shingles, &c. Lumuber low for Cash. J.. 0. BOAQ. You -can find all you want by cal3ling (in april 14 ,J. O. 33ag ELivun CURE. VFAY FAMILY SHIOULD. USE AND~ _.)4 keep .it on hand, because ,of its siperiority over all other Liver Modicines or ~iver lIegulators. Operates without Nausea pr Griping. Not unpleaisant ti , ike It Cures :Diseases o h ie n iSpioen. o h ie n It removes Mercury from tllo System. It is thme,. only Miedicino known thnyt ,ceures ConstiLpation. It cures N ~uralgia, Sick yeamdachio and Rhmoumiatism. It is an exellent Laxativc for delicate females. -.Tihe oftener you take it, the smaller the tIoH(-4he0 very opposite of gll ot~her Pur gatives. It is always ready for useo, a d ,never countcrioriaites indicate m i qy case. ;sIts is the be.4~ ef all Purgativos for chil dron. All persons should ..so it whpo ar gfiliptod wvithi11iles or Cjpnstipation. WV. E.-AJRBEN, MohIA5TER &:Bnxon, VWinnsboro, 8. C. -R, V. Burien & Co., Wood waird's, S. (I DOWIF, & MOISE, Proprietors, jnne 21 Charleston,.S. 0. SECOND GRAND DhIAWING Kenitucky Cash 1)istributioi Co. Lgilsvillo, Ky., Juno 30th, 1877. $310,{00 CASTL IN GIF T S NEW QJRGANIZATION, NEW S3CIIEME, NEW MANAGEMENT. FARMERS AND ,PROVERS BANK, ILouisville jy., 'Treas. T1II- Kentucky Cash ,Distriut iton Co., njuthor 1z7.0 by a Spectial Actof t he 1.elislat.ire for I 1he be' nett. of t.he 'UiiLiAp i c~Iool.s oF Fn'IANKFO~rt, will have 'I' e Necond of the Series of Grand Drawings in the City of Louis, )ille, Ky.,Saturday, June 30th41.877, AT PUBLIC LIp1tARY HALL. $60,000 for pnly ton. Read the I4ist of Gifts. I (i'and ('ash (Dit, $60,000 1 (Gr'alt1tCb (tdft.....................$25,000 1 ria (:asi ift.. ..................15,0(0 1 ro u C. ( ifi ............................11,01o S(;randi l ('ash (lifts, $,00( each....... .15,4) C Gir 1nd UC l.sh (it its, $2,1110 ('710 1............111,000 20 :ash (ills, 1,Il00l each... ... 211011 40 :ash (airs,11u each....................244,004 140 .Cash Gifit. $21 each................... 141 300 Cash (ii l4, $i1n each... ... ........$ 0 51111 Cash (; 11'1, (I ):lch'....................25,000) 01110 Cash (aits, $lo each...................6a 6072 Cash Gifts amounting to $310,000 Whole Tickets $10, IIalves $5,Qu4rter $2.50. 11 Tickets $100, 331-2 Tickets $ 'i0, 563-4 Tioctes $500. Drawing Iositivoly Juno 3oh. 1877. And Every Threo Months Th e fter exw1'ri-rO. or 1'lt; ar t?n OF OInAwINo. The presortt manage,; a it cfmphatically not ify the public that there W ill b no postponement of tlhs drawing, as is usual in such enterpr es, but that it will positively and unequivocally take( place op the (lte named. 'T'his.. 11' S econ1 Up)ving, will be con ducted liic tlie first, to the fiirrcss of which tl Mlxulowing ;inamed gentilemen have testiticd: 11(0. Alvin Duvall, JA,0 Chief Justice Sypremne C'urIt,of Kentucky. .11m's (;. Dudley, Chairman Board of Schoo ''rustees. Grayil Green, ('ashler Farmers' clank of.) y. IInlm. S. 1- M. Major, 'uiblic 'iinter 'L' 14 of KY. 11on. 'hom:as N. Iindtsay, P'rosident, oft 1. Far inwrs' Bank of Ky. Iron." 1'honas C. .JOm's, Clerk of Sup. C'ofu; of Ky. . djge I.' A. ''hon1' , 'residing .Ju(''F"rank fin llt;nt co11 -, James U. Crocket4A>lerk Vptnklin county court. 1temittances Can be madc. by Mail, Express, Draf;t, P. 0. Order or Registered Letter, made payalYe to (1. W. Harrow & Co. Tickets paid promptly pnd without dis cou. Itliable Ageytts wanted. All coilmm1Inime*:'lls and iC<ders for lgckets ,4oul( be address!id to G. W. BAIRROW & CO., General Managers, Courier Journal Bu ing, Louisville, Ky. SEND FOR CIRCULAR. mely 8-tf Shirts .t.hit . .JU S T MtE C E IN Ei D , '1O dozen uiinilunred .refay madte Shirts, guaranted to be made ,of best muslin and 22-100 linen, wh~ich..we sell at the vory lowv price of half dozen for $7 the cheapest and begt shirt in. t1 market. We cont'.uo to sell iiho best Calicoes, at 83 eents per yard. Piqjues, .pt 12X "'and up. Dexter's IKnitting Cotton 5 cqnts a .;1 and many other fresh andidosirptblo g9pds at prices to suit tho _hard tjmnes. McMAjTER & BRIOSI. juno-7 JJST3 13ECkVED A..full stock o. Plain an#.jancy gro cories, wvhich will be sol d at) ows t rgeo for thq Cash. ;LSO, A Apegookofliqttprs, such ans .VHISKEJ~Y, }pRANDY, ;WINE~S in great ygriety, 'ALE, BEFER, etc., etc. Tfhe pft\trona~g6 pf. the publio .a. seli tnd. FRED DOUGLASS AT HOME. -0 Mf4( STE'R A 4) SER VANT ---O UND ADVICE TO COLORED P1EOPL A Return to the Eastern Shore after foi ty-one years--Cordial Greeting #.ilmen are not Equal. A special despatch from Talbot county. Maryland, to tho Baltimore Sun of Juno 18th says : Fred Douglass, United States Marshal for the .District of Columbia, paid a visit for the first time since he left here, forty-one years ago, to the scenpa of his youth. Mr. Douglass somp time ago expressed a wish to visit his forprcr master, Captain Thqpias Auld, a resident of St. MicJ)ael's. Captaji Thomas Auld had oxpressel his .willingness and desire to moot his .old servant, and this visit of Douglass to St!. Mich nol's was mtinly for that purpose. ;Ho was received by Judge Willianm 1. Brufl, Captaip Auld's son: in-law, who addressed him as .,Marshal Douglass." "No, no," expostulated the Marshal, "I am Marshal Doug lass in Washington ; here let me bo Fred Douglass again." The meeting between the former master and the former servant was very affecting. The interview was very pleasant throughout. Mr. .Douglass stated that in his book, wrtten soon after his escape, he had ipade somo state men ^ that lapse oftime Anil rolef, - tion l1 caused him to feel he had better left unsaid, and for aught that be said that was unjust to his old master or had wounded his fcoI! imtgs he begged forgiveness. DoL04ASS' ADDRESS. ;In the aftoppoon Dougless ad, dressed a large audience of both white and colored people. He began by adverting to the difficult and em barrassing positiqn in whicli he was placed. He said, ho (lid not come here to make a slp,cch. Ho was not here to fan the lames of sectional animosity,. nor to create ill foolig, nor yet to recount the wrongs iii flicted on his race fpr two lu r drvd years, nor to go into antiqpitiy for atter to stir the blood and rouse ,e passions, nor to indulge in a political harangue, pior to expound te constitution of the United States. I como, first of all, he said, to. see my old mnastrr, from whom I have been separatedl for forty-ono yonrs, to shake hig hand, to ;look iito his kind old fpco and see it loaming with light from the other w;orld. I have had great joy ip ghaking that had, yin looking into that face stricken with ago and diss epso, but aglow with the light . that cgines fromi an honest heart, and reflecting the glory from the spirit wor~ld, upon whose border .he is, an4 whoere we shall soon again me9gt. Forty- one ryears ago I left him. I left him, . "not because I loved Ciosar less, but because I loved R~orpo more." Mr., Douglass then referroed briefly to his cscape and t~o the nzotive tin1t actuated him. His, second reason for making this visit, lie said, ,was that lie :lovogl Marylanid and the Eastogni shor~e. Eastorn. shore c9rn and Eastoijn shore pork had given him hp muscle. 1 BLACK MfEN PRAoTIcALLY IN'ERIol Mr. Douglass tljon passed into .a eulogy .of the whiyte race and its achievements, n~tad said to thie coloroai people thet they were in con tact .with the mes~t indomitable,. thm most, onlightened'rado .of mon in'the world, and that lhe would be falso to his own race if ho hid' not tell thom just yhere they sjtood ; what ani im-~ menso distance they~ were beijimd the wv; te people. 'He did not pob lieve go colored people were fuiida mentally inferior to the whites, but they are, nevortholoss, pr'actically infer' pr. Wao mnust got talk abiput equay .until we capi, o what wlyt peop . can do. As J ppg as they can build .vessels and w~p,cannot, we ogro their @nferiors ; as ,topg as they ,.cap build railroads and .we caninot, ,we are their inferio~s ; as5 lqng as they can fqupa govecippesits trnd.,we can. not, we are their 'inferis. If in twenty. years froin now thie colored race, enA a' race, has not advanced beyond the point wvhere~ it was whg einancipated, it is a ,doorped race. The question now is, will the black man do as inch nowv for his master (himself) as he used 'to do for 'his meaite- Do you, mv'y colored friends, got up as early now to work for yoursolves as you used t9 9 ork for the stern old Roman, amnuel Hambleton ? 001D ADVICE. He was quito severe upon Pro. fessor John M. L-mgstou for main taining that the mulatto is the superior of the black man intollec ually. He told the colored peoplO Lhait they must get money and keep it if they wished to elevate thm solves. One trouble with thom is that they always want to be going somewhere, and do not stay in one place or at one time long enough to accumulate. A poor people are always a despised peopl . To by respected they must got money and property. Without money there is no leisure ; without leasure there is no thought ; without thought no progress. Their preachors should tell more about what to do and less about what to feel. Thoy should cultivate their brains more and their lungs less. They should not do1)epid upon being helped, but should do for themselves. He was tired of Ethiopia holding out her hands. They should not dopend upon the Lord for everything. The Lord is good and kind, but is of the most nso to those who do for themselves. No man has a right to live unloss ho lives honestly, and no man lives honestly who lives upon another. ljo gave the .colored part of his audkonco sonrp of the best advice and.Sounlest instruction they have had for many a day. The only political allusion he made in his spooch was in saying .that the Southerners could control the vote of the negroes in the Southern States far more completely than Norther nors could. The colored man turncd instinctively for advice and assistanco to those who had boon raised with hin. Amnong others who sought Mr. Douglass out after his address was Mr. William W. Bruff, who taught him reading, arithlnatic and geography fifty years ago. Marshal Douglass learned his age from Cap tain -Auld, who has a record of his birth, wherein it appears that "Fred Bailey was born in February, 1818." A. CIUnpCJr NAum.--Tho Diocesan Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Wisconsin adopted the following resolutions the other day: Jcsolvcd, That the Dioceso of Wisconsin, sympathizing with the efforts being made to j'emove the wor4s "Prdtpstant Escopal," for the Jegal title of "The ,Church," do request its {oputies to the General Convention .to aid any and all efforts inado toward the restoration of her catholic and apostolic title to "The Church in America " Rcsqolvel, That the (cputies to the Gonoral Copivontion from this Dio e.oso be rogno~sted to ask of the Gen oral Convention the apointment of a condJitutional . CgMilssion, to which t e question of a change in the logil title of the clurch, as well as simiger questions, mmy be referred. A EARIFUL MURlDER.-A triple murder has occurred near Gore, Logan county, Ohio. ,John Woerdon was found in the field, yith his head split opjn, and his sister andl daugh ter woroe discovered in the houso5 with th ir 1heads1 smashed. It is sulppos% that the. murder was com mitted 9~r money. No clue to tile murderers has yetboon found. Judge.,Hilton, executor of A. T. Stewart,- has. ordered the exclusion of Jews, frogn the Grand Union Hotel, Saratoga. The af'air has created gront excitement. Hilton claims he 4os not include ,Hebrew gentlemen, but only thme lower' class, with who'm his other guests will not assoegato. . SnroT- YonE CORRiESPoNJjI T.-:!'Who,'s tliYat ?" asked the czar of pds aid, the otier day, pointing to a ghap 'with a chasnck of hard tqek in one hand and a goto book in tipo other, whgo was hanging qground ijoadquai-ters, oyoeing hism rather closelj . "Thlat." said the til-"thipt's an Ainerican newspaper corr'espop.dent from Chicago.' " oot him at gunset," replied his imnorial majesty, retiring withinl his tent. It i now proposed to annex tllo Mexican States of Sonora, Chihua huna, Sinalos, Coahuila, Nuovo Leon, Durango, and Lower California, o" bracing 375,000 sqn ire, miles 900,000 inhabitants. Mexico fv ,1 not yield themn without a fight. A little girl's idea of a plane : A thing 'that scrubs isnagcs ,out of