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_I -IEIaKLY E I O --- -i*- ------- --- -++ - TRIAV 'EKLY EDITI N.] INNSB01tO, S. C., Tui H C 1 ).DAY MORN[NG.C ()JOTO m R 25. 1877 NEW A)VERTI1SERENTS. 2 l[-VOANT CAUDs, no two alIke, wit name 10CtS post, pild. -J. I. IUSTM), Nassau 2 en1 U011nty, New York. Revolver and Cartrites for :. A fllo 111kI IlaRWA, xeyen shot. pcket r volver: it tlsl-v I 115 al-ticle. Sont. C~ 0. D.. or eil rt:velptl oi) "!rCo. GI. Nv, W11..18,, 1.01olx 2,7111, NEW York. cAl V'ionialls will bear tet iony (anid do It colill)(nos1d) -that . egttin1 Is the *bst mlleal coliv)Iollil yet, plaved before til hpublic) for renovating itild pu efog tre 1b1 pI LaDIZO Eiocant Irm, Itation Itoe Coral Sero Breantyp and Pordant Drco, Cout esgt aid to ay reader of this Paperfor 25 cents. Three sets for 50 cnti. In Cur renicy or 8tnma TRIFLING With a Cold is Always Dangerous. USE WELLS' Carbolic Tablets, a sire remody for Coughs, and all Dis eases of the Throat, Lungs, Chest and Mucous Mombrane. PUT UP ONLY IN BLUE BOxEs. Sold by all Druggists. C. N. CIIrTENTON, 7 Sixth Avonue, N. Y. PI u m HABIT CURED. A Certain and Sure Cure. Large reducil Ion i prices. A trial bottle free. AIts. J. A. DRom,.mmoxit, L.a Porte, Intiana. Box 1038. (Formerly Mrs. Dr. S. 11. Collins). ,The only comnbination of 01th ln tru c Jla m a le a ( in g er S with cholov Arotnlatties and F/rench 11randly, 1;is a(dell.. elOs, liarinless, strength oning sub.titulte for all kinds of sitImulan. It promptl1y relleves Dyspyp sIl, opprellssn after eating and every specIes of In(I .g.-tion, correets ell (listtir '2aiv or tihe Sttoma"l ami 1Iiw%vt, and murms Crampis, I if'i II'~I (hIlls. l".viers, attl Amlla in. Ii [u .\k for 6A.\i"uws (411 RAIJPTU NE. Thnso wishing relief arnl cure for Itupture s':id consult Dr. .1. A. SCI tM AN, 8 road wa., New York, orsond for hi new book. wit.h phot)g.y Itm l %;ne.tie of 'if c:tws bel'or and Wonr cr. Mwar of chwa" who II0relud 1k) rurisj-11 Dr. Sherman's v.rtInenf. Ono of theso fellows, a urman clerk, now calling himself Dr. W. 0. Crebnplen Is Indleted On compltlt, of Dr. 8. and wHAfts tril for rorgery m bad molelleent. OC .i PROSPECTUS. HISrORY of South- Carolina, -BY REV. R. LATHAN. ('0 soon s a suffilient number of sub K-scribers are secured to warrait tho euturprise, I propose publishing a HISTORY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. The work will embrace a complete history oftcState from the first liscov ery of the soil; the settleleit of tlh Ierri tory at djifferent periodls; tle hitory of the Stato under the Pro priotairy Govern men t, undter the Rloyal Govern ment. andu~ througha the Rtevolutionary peoriod, or to the close of the Revolutionary war. T1he movements of the .Soveral1 Whig military chiefs areu accuraudiy t raided, anta the several battles tought du ring the Re~volu0tioni are min utely desc''ibed. 'rThe wihole w.ill make a book of more thtan 7th1 pagesa of the size of IS'tEepes' Hfistory of thre United Slabes. I t wi ll be prlinted on good papter,with cleartyp)o, anid bouind ini substant ita ul cloth. T.Lo sul, scribersa tho book will b)0 delivered for FUR1 D)OILAns paer iop)y. Persons desiring to canvass for the work are requested to commnicafleto with the author at Yorkville, 8. 0., for termzs, Yorkvillo, S C., August, 1877. sep) 8-tf W. G. ROCHE, MRERLCHANT TAILOR, IIAS removed to the store next to the post-office, whore lhe will be glad to re.. cuive his friends ando customers. A full line of Samples will be kept on hand, from which eustomners mafy mtake selections, lie now has the finest line of French and English goods over brought to this marrket. He is also prepared to out or to mak up goods for those who desire. Garments of all kinds repaired and cleaned. &- Cleaning a speciaity. ,Thankful to the publie for past patron age, he solicits a continuance of ,the same, and guarantees satisfaction. sept 18 W. CL RfOHm :TIE ELEPHANT -HAS COME With it Fresh Stock of Fall and Winttr Goods, AT THE DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS AND ----0 miinery Bazaar. --0 IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT. WE take pleasure in announcing to our friends and the public generally that we are now opening tho fluoit and most omp\ete assortment of FALL AND WINTER GOODS, including Millinury and Faney Goo.Is in all the latest style. and noveltie-i of !I season, such as ire generally un. d hi a first,-class Millinery establishment. Fin - cy and mtiaplu Dry Groods, a beutit ii stock of newest styles of Dress Good. Buttons and TRIMMINGS. A full assortment of brown and blea-hed Muslins, Poplins, Caticoes, Gingh:ns, Gents' Goods, Notions, Corsets, Gloves, Hosiery,Bustles,8kirts, Shawls, Cloaks,&e. Men's ;nd Boys' Hats. Boots and Shoes for (ents and1 Boys, Shoes and Gaiters for Ladies, Misses and Children. A FULL STOCK OF Fresh Groceries, Confectioneries, Cakes and Crackers, Cheese, Maekerel, Flour, Meal, Grist, Soaps, Starch, Candles,Kerosene, Croekery, Tin and Wooden Ware, Furniture and Mattresses, LUMBERFOR SALE As low as the lowest. Call and examine my stock and prices. Js 0.oa. oct 3 CONGRESS STREIT N E G 0 D ISSt WINNSBORO, S. C. 500C LBS5. NltW YORK feACTrofY CHlEESiE, Just at hand, and warranted to gi ve satisfaction. U. G. PESPORTES. Sept 18 Mount Zioni CollegIate Institute THlE fall session of this well known Institute began on Monday, August 27th. Theli course of' inistruction embraces M~athemantics, the Classics, Science and the usual En g Ilih branches. Special attention will be paid to elocution, reading, s pelling andl writ. ing, Pupils will receive that careful drill in the rudiments which is essential to scuring a thorough education, Bljack board exercises wvill1 enter largely as a method of instruction. T1he college building is commodious and conven ienmtly located. The Principal hopes, with the political and material impreoement of the State, to scure a liberal patronage, by means of which the Instit-.ite may be re stored.to its former popularity and useful ness. TERMS : Classical department, per session of twenty weeks, - - $30.00 Intermediate, - - - - 25.00 Prliary, - - - - - 200 Payment to be made quarterly in aid, vance,. IR. M, DAVIS, Principal, Mug 146txtf WInbo, 8.0. VEGETINXTE Rov. J. P. Lilow Writes: 178 BAu;ric STIME:T, 111n0OKLY,:, N. Y'., O Y e 1N J t vembV 1 1, i7 I. 'car Sir-1 r0m ru l*S.aIi h it 1I. r lv"d by its aI . i A% ! -v, vi- : ' -m 1i r il,.r of thom whom, . t'hert1by hv'o W tai d al corell.y r*'(*. -1 m n 11 i h- ))I .- Iv. NK for ih i n plaliuts hehlii t ;' t li t 11 Is '0 . -1 A.f 1N P. 1.1 D W . . t or 'a l y i.twh h i to, Cal. 'Alt. .1wSts Well. SOU-T1 or1 n M . Oct. 11, P,,76 Aln. II.R . -r:v:.:ss Dear sir--I have beensiv% two var.i witIt hit h liver voi-1 Ill, '1d) I ' '. t h . have I ahen i, .t InI-11Y diffTerent nders,ht 1non1f 0, i(U,.I 0H i-t' ;ttany g0od, I Was e,l,, li, ig it, to o !f;it(. , 1inC. t tle \*w p;TNp 1' 1* r. t ' wVvl, inti ri sh Iy ot . Can revoillnield t hw Vvget 114i' I' whilat It Is 1,ih done fo t e. Yolt rilspectfud . Mlits. A,m-:fr ieun. Witnegs of the(! above, 'Mr. (."corge L \Vaugh an, Mled ford, Ms. V eg tin Good for the, 1.HIt-n. Otii-rux If -., I lr : r t treA. M n~o -. w l. 11A.p r il, 7 6 . I.o il -l L ,tatr n reoeyae. 0. T. Wlker :. N\ AK, ' vo sf 1 4(.T., 1 T it t11 reel 3 t.miz 11 ]{. Sny 1:a N -v oting E'tu -:wt m igntaeh Dernu h.-flvo ell frmilb.-I Ait w svaro.flh nwh' llit debilri * t t I'.! sh . 1n iv ruec i.. mI 'l -it 4 I a ll o ta l.il. Ii4 inv i i (t rld-!- len 11 us . :. o i ellI cot . -4:1111ts. It to ev ry Had . Yom. STEVENS, Pas. 6,tOrai%N w tr hurh, S os. vege tine. Rom.und &s 14,181. Mhl. I1. It..STvr.,s: i r--)to hav ep'ee t k.Chi w it r ofl' ,v lI ' th e ( VI) II n e I m % n .w g a le n - 1 , tot-ho fOand It t he Vuio gl.- o . itoe id ll iein ti ng Yo tual 11111y, G! e lalus.Can hea i ts recommend Itmit. vey T.XO;. Y t L Hu aR. STzz E .VE.wS.9 No., LagranBe ST A Sl S M. egtlile iSSV 01 eyie, a Dheapr on r---i he io-tl-n.vra ho 'ies ofli yu oct 1-4 remedy fiory,pi, id by oneofmthu lod -~ ngldbil ornfnthes.1tm of tenterj recom8ud wit, to tilesuarestfrmmrovee abtvt romutil Yt ra nL yIceo :u ws Anr VEEREAND. -uo 3-tEPRD A BRILLIANT CAREER. --0 if. 1RK T IVA!N'S MIT1ITAlRY EAP RIENC. lo tolls all about it at a banquot--so canlod. S1'Peek (it the Putwim Ph(dlan Bitet. I wouldn't have missed this for a great deal. I did not assemble at the hotel parlors to,day to be re coived by the committee as a mere civilian guest. No. I assembled nt the headquartors of the Putnam Phalanx and insisted upon my right to bo guarded to this placo as one of the military guests. For I, too, mu a soldier. I am inured to war. I have a military history. I have been through 6 stirring cam paign, and there is not oven a miention of it in any his tory of the United States or of the Southern Confederacy. To such lengths can tho envy and the malignity of the historian go. I will unbosom my self here, where I cannot blut find sympathy. I will tell you about it, and aippeal through you to justiec. In early summer days of the war I steppod out of Hannibal, Mo., by night with a friend, and joined a detachment of the robel General Tom Harris' army (I find myself in a great Illajority here). Up it gorgo behind an old barn in Raills couitY, Colonel Rall sworo us in. le made us swear to uphold the flag and constitution of the United States, and to destroy any other military organization that we calight doing the s:me thing. [Great laughter.] Ii other words, wo were to repel invasion. Well, you sce, this mixed us. We could not really tell whici side wo woro 01 ; but vo went into camp and left it to the God of battles, which was the viistota in that day. I was made seconld lientenant and chief mogul of a company of eleven men. who didn't know anything about war-or anything. We had no Captain. My fricid, who w is nine teci years old, six feet high, threo feet vide, anidl some distance through, and just out of the iifant school, was made orderly sergeant His iiame witas Bo Tiippor, and 1he halld ia hard time. Whenl he wias mounted and on the march he used to go to sleop, and his horse would turn around iad bito his log, and then lie woiuld cry and cu:so and wait to go liomo. The other men pestered him a good doal, too. When they weio' dismouitod they ;id they coildi't march in doubl'e filo vith himl, Iecauso his feet took ulp sko nlichl r-(oom. One( ighrt, whIenl we were atrouid th1e camp-fire, a followr on the outside of tihe circle in the cold, said1, "Ben Tuppor, pult dlown that newlspaper; it casts a sha,;ilow like at blan1ket." Ben said, Ix ain't got any'1 newvspap)er." Then tha,t oItherl follow Slid, "Oh, I see, it's your carl !" We all slept in IL corn eribi OH tile corn, and tihe rats were very thiickc. Ben Tupper had been C:arefullly andl rigidly reared, and,ivwhen lie was ready for bed he wou1ld tat;rt to priay, anmd a rat would bite imI on the hool, and then lie would sit uip anid swear all igh~t and keep everybody awake. IIe was town bred, andi did not seem1 to have aniy correct idea of mili tary discipline. If I comumand-. ed himi to shut up he wvould say,I "Who was yor iger last ycar '?" 01n0 evening I or'dered him to ride out On picket dutty about three miles to the beginning of a prairie. Said1 ho, "Whaut, in tile night ! and thlem b)llaed Union soldiers likely to 1h0 prowling around there at anuy time ?" So lie would not go. Next mornmng I ordleredI him again. Said ho1, "Ini the rain ?" He didn' tgo again. Noext (lay I ordered him oni piet diuty once more. This time ho looked hurt. Said he, "What I on Sunday ? You must be a durned fool !" Picketing wvas impractica ble0, 8o I dropped it from my ulii tary system. We had a good enough timne there at that bai'n,I barring tihe rain, and the rats, and tihe mosquitoes, and things. We lived on b)oth parties with imupartiali in.ader one day we hoard that tho inadr'as approaching, so wo had to pack up~ and move. Inside of twenty-four hours the invader was coming again ; so we moved again.1 And next.day he was after us once more. Weo didn't like it much, but we moved rather than to make trouble Thi wontnon r a w,eek YC,. I Te . .r ten ilays, and wo saw considora )Jo ceonery. Then Ben lTupper lost patience. Ho says: "War is 1ot what it is cralked up to be. ['m going home if I can't over got I, chance to sit downi a minute. Why do these peopl koo) us lumpiig around so ? 3iamo thoir ;kins, do they think this is an ox, mrsion ?" Some of the other town~ )oys began to grumble. They -ollplined that there was an in imflicieney of umbirellas, and then ;hey com1plained that the Worces 'ershire sauceo was out. Thoro was nutiny ald dissatisfaction all troulnd, and, of course, hore camo ht e elnemy pestering us again, two 1ou1s-m0ro than two hours-be 'oro breakfast, and nobody wanted ,o turn out at that hour. This was i little too much. The whole coi .nd felt, insulted. I detached on >f ily aids, and sent him to the brigadier, and asked him to assign is to a district where there wasn't 4o much bother going on. The bistory of our Com11paIIIy WaS laid .)fore him. but, instead of being ouched by it, wihat did lie do ? Ho wit back an indignant message. Flo said : "You have had a dozen 3hances inside of two weeks ' to Capturo the oloily, aild lie is still it large. [I know that.] St-ty vhore you are this time or I will Aourt martial and hang the whole )f you." I submitted the brutal nessage to my battalion and asked ,heir advice. Said the ordorly 3ergoant: "If Tom Harris wants ho enemy let him como horo and et him. I haven't got any uso for ny share. Who's Tom Harris, any may, that's putting on so many ri-ills ? Why, I knew him when he wasn't anything but a durned Lolograph operator. Gentlemen, You caln do as you chooso. As for ine, I've got enough of this sashay in,g round, so as you can't got a hlance to pray, because the time is ill required for cussin'. So off r(Aels imly war- paint. You hear me." rie wholo regiment said : "That's the talk for us." So then and there on the spot my brigade dis banded itself and tramped off home, with mo at the tail end of it. We were tile first mon who went into the service in Missouri, and wo were the first who went out of it ilvwhero. This, gentlemen, is the istory of the part which my livision took in the great rebollion, ind such is the military rocord of ts eommander-in-chief. And this is the first timo that the deeds of those eleven warriors have boctA brought officially to the notice of Imnanity. Trl,easure thesO things in your homrts, and so shall the lotected and truculent historians >f this land bo brought to shamo ma1d confusion. i ask you to fill your glasses and drink with me to lhio revered memory of the orderly 3orgeant and thoso other neglected Od forgotten horoes-my footsoiro td travel-stained paladins, who vore first in war, first in po)eace, and vore not idle during thf Iiter vl Aiat lay between. THEa CONGIIRssmNAL OHIAPLAIN.-TIhe [Rev. Dr. John Poisal, the new chap aim of the House, wais on1ce a shoe naker in Weost Virginia, amnd studied hocology wvhiilo working on the >onlch. Hie is an old1 circuit iridor', md1(, it is sidt, won Oongressman J. Lt. T1uckor from scep)ticismf by an loquonmit sermion pro'acheCd several roears ago. Dr. Poisal has a re na'rkable memClioy-is sad i ndeed, o knowv the Bible and1( Methodist F-lymn Book almosi)t by hear't-and hle good old1 man nooeds all this moin ry, for lhe is ahnaist ontirely blind. [t is told of him that lie is ver'y sen - itivo cuon1crning hlis defectiye si ghp, mId has (don1 wonderful things 'ina ~he way of memlfor'izinig to con eal it. The latest New York horror is the liscovery of the mutilated corpse of mn unknown and beautiful girl in Jon trali Park lake. The body was ihegan thy dressed, and the victim of hlo shocking mnurder was evideqtly i young lady~ of refinement and multure, as well 76 strking beauty. Mn. GEoRoE .BANCoROFT, the Veners ible historian, still halo and active mnd indefatigable in his work, is in Phliladelphia studying the 'ocords of Pennsylvamia in the period >f the formation of the .Federal Jonstitution. Score one more for the :fallon I'woed. Senator WVoodin, wvho Was loiinated for a fourth'term in the0 Roew York Senate by# dt ,;1oPidbli ans of the twepty-flftW'dteilct, lidls oen comnp elled to withdi$w under- ' bhe fire of Tweed. The -pary lead. 3rs could stand .Woodin, but th, >eople wouldn'V swallowv him, ana Voodia~ conrld'n'tstan cfdefe:at.