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THE DARLINGTON NEWS. nirnsDAT. aphil i, ihsa. VnW, APKIL l» EVAM*. KUIYOK- THE MINKKAL DARLINGTON HPBIXG. Thin Spring has for year* been noted for the excellent medicinal quality of it* water and many cun s have resulted from it* use. It i* no doubt much more beneficial than many of the Springs, which widely adve«10NV have become i»opu’ar place* of summer, resor*.. We think the analysis given below, made by Dr. P. 45. Cbazal, State Chemist, from a sampl® ®f Ihe water sent bj E. Keith Dargan, Esq., prove* the existence of valuable qualities, which in combination are certified by prominent physician* to posse * fine medicinal virtue*. ANALYSIS Total solid content*, per U. S gallon, grain* Oxide of Iron, gr. per gal. an office which no one man could administer in detail, has been one of bi« cbiet merit*, but it l* not so great a* the clearness with which he has grilled the geueral princi ple* of the work be has had to trust toother*; and rbe courage with which he has sustained their appli cation.” ton, both have their men in our i in part payment of all its just debt* market the whole season, and pay : according to the spirit a* well as PotSsh, (K20) Soda, (S A2U) Sulphuric Acid, CMoriue, Sand and Insol. matter. Water of Cbry ataUizalion, 2.974 ■site The (»ame Law. The Legislature, at its last ses *iou, amended the game law, and tortlie benefit of our readers we print the section, which is as fol lows : It shall not be lawful tor any per son in this State, between the 1st day of Aptil and the first day of November, in any year hereafter, to catch, kill or injure, or to pursue with such intent, or to sell or ex pOse lor sale wild turkey, partridge, dove, woodcock or pheasant; aud any person louud guilty thereof shall be fined not less than 810, or bv imprisoned not less than 10 days, WJiich fine, if im|>oscd, shall go one half thereof to the Informer and the other halt thereof to the school fund of the county wherein the of fence was committed. and K 0.202i 0.1184' 0.0853 0.63G4 0.3497 1.0356 0.2002 3.0573 Deduct for oxygen, equivalent to chlo rine present, 0.0788 Deduct for 'etroc, .0045 .0833 2.974 Total grains, . The above constituents are pro bably combined in the water as fol low* : GUAINS TO U. 8. GALLON. Sulphate of Irou, Glide of Iron, . > Sulphate of Lime. Sulphate of Magnesia, Chloride of Magnesium, Sulphate of Potash, Chloride of Sodium, Baud and Kusol. Matter, Water of Chry stall ixation, Deduct for error, 0.1804 0.0286 0.5627 0.0571 0.1576 0.3652 0.3822 1-0355 0.2002 2.9785 .0045 Total grains, 2.974 It is the Intent of several of our citizens to get up iu pamphlet form a history of the Spring, the analysis - of-it* woter, with affidavits of eonaft remsrbabfccnreslrom itsuse. These will be used as a means of attract ing outside attention to a Mineral Spring, which, if its virtues were generally knowu, would make it as p^triar a place of resort, as some of the best known Spriugs of Yirgiuia and other States. . i Our Ebenezer correspondent aud aim one of our Lydia subscribers think we ought! in Justice to the question, publtsh the articles in re ply to Dr; Atextnidei**. We have uo objection if our friends will send in the srficlos spoken of. The News has always tried to give every subjefi of discussion, appear iug iu its ooiumua, “fair play.” In this case the News is and has been a staunch advocate of educational advancement, ,uud considering the South. Carolina Coilege, as uow established with “free tuition” a most essential element in that advaucemeut, It has all along writ ten iu favor of it, add expects to so continue, uutil some stronger argu meut of a more convincing na- ' ture than any heretofore written, is brought out. So send iu your ar* ficle*,frieuds, and we wid give them a *‘f|P{e aud opjeu” publication. - )Ve have nothing to do, aud do not ex pect to have, with the stricturea made on Wofford aud Furman by pro-Oollege writen*, »s thwtv we think is a foreign question. But we b«$#ve that the South Carolina. Coikgo»should be' -kept up iu its 4 present, or in fact a more libera) scale, aa by it only we can expect Y a- fail development of •tbe public ; iustnuctiou ■ oystem e&tabliaUdd iu the spirit bfoar laws. arallelLm of Negro Slavery Protection.” TB^it&r Darlington Neict : The New$ and Couritr of the 24th instant, republishes a speech of Onl. J. J. Dargan, of Sumter, S O’, in the city of Brooklyn, on Free T**dc Col. Dargan discussed the bwanllolism of negro slavery and Protection,” to “a small audience.” The whole tenor of the address is, to say the least, remarkable. We, of the South, knowing that slavery t*\a thing of the past, are not sorry thht It had ever existed Not one bit of it. We are tired of our promi neut men saying so in their speech es away from home. Why don’t they say these things at hornet Col. Dargan was quiet enough iu the late Free Trade Convention in Columbia. We do not believe and never will believe, that our people are ruffians aud cut-throats, from the fact that we found slavery ex isting here when we w'ere born, aud being brought up to enjoy its bene fits, should have tried to coutinue the system ; Col. Dargan to thecou trary notwithstanding. Ue may land William Lloyd Garrison, aud build altars aud inonumeuts just like that one at Babel, but we sliall not fall down and bow before them. We know that Garrisou only stall ed the abolition theory to make money. The Colonel may fight Protection as mnch as be sees proper, but we Chink be bad better let the by-gone fftKtitntion of slavery alone 81a very has nothing, nor can have any thing, to do with the question of Protection, and by discussing the two together does not help Free Trade iu South Carolina. Our men or ability, such as Col. Dargan undoubtedly is, are unjust tokheir section as well as to them selves, when they make such ad dresses m the “Parallelism of ne gro slavery aud Proteetiou.” J. the highest market prices for cot ton Mr. Kilgo’s assertions in re gard to these tacts are false from every stand point, and certainly uu becoming and in bad taste, from a professed follower of the “Lowly Nazarine.” Timmoi svdle is and has been for many rears as quiet aud oiderly as any \illage of its size iu this or any other State. There is an Intcudant and four waideus. The lotendaut is a man of the highest character, of the wardens are well men of undoubted integrity, and not one of whom are of intemperate habits. The citizens abound in hos pitality, the ladies are refined and cultivated, and the men courteous. liiar what Mr. Kilgo says : “No town in the Slate, has a blacker moral history than Timmousviile. Profanity, iiguting, cutting, gam bling, were the characteristics of the stieets. Timmousviile has sent as many drunk..rds to its cemetery as auy town of its size in the Stale. There is still drunkard’s room iu the cemetery, and it must be occu pied.” Tbis venomous attack ou vir tue, character, duty aud sobriety, is heinous, uncalled for, premedita ted, aud a w illtul slander ou our commuuity. It is worse than that, it is black aud libellous. And more, he has scratched, like the raveuous hyena, down into the silent tombs of our cemetery, and polluted the sacred spot of our cherished dead, who are buried there. These are the expressions of a man who presents himself as a true expounder of the Divine laws. 1 greatly fear that his chronic, unsavory breath, that he is so habitually addicted to will make a bad impiessiou on the solid meu in the neighborhood of Hock Dili. “Deliver u«, ob ! deliver ns!” Uenry L. Morris. aceoidiug to the letter of its con tracts. At a crisis like the present it is well to reuiemlK-r the oft quo ted aud familiar but proioundly true aud wise remark of Edmuud Burke, that justice is itself a great standing policy of civil society ; JHJ any departure from it under auy circumstances lay sit under suspi cion of being no policy at all. By this broad, comprehensive, far reaching, wisest of all policies, I and three shall govern my actions iu regard known as to this question, be the consequen ces what they may. S. A. WOODS, SR OF- r Vindication of Timmousviile. d notice from thu Temperance Worker ibal a malicious, vindictive onslaught has heen made against the character of the people of Timmons ville, by the Kev. John C. Kilgo, uow of Hock Dili, but for two years previous, pastor of the Timmons- ville circuit, M. E. Church, South. Because we have simply exercised OIU local right and privilege, yes, the fundamental right of deciding whether whiskey should be sold, or not sbld, according to law, in the “unvirtuous and murderous Town ofrTiinmonsville.” The facts are these: In Novem- bety 1834, a local option election > was held in the Town of Tiunuons- ville, for the purpose of determin- ivg, i whether license should lie gi>ntfd for the ensuing year or not. The vote stood 49 against license and 32 in lavor of license, the le gality of the election being held by soioc to be in.great doubt. Gu the 19th Of January, 1885, a few days later, the election for town officers took iithce. The result was the In- tendaut and one warden was of the dry clement, and the other three wardens represented the wet side e a reaction iu «o short a time. Uhstandiug the doubt of the ality of the local option election, the council elect determined not to grant license for the ensuing year. In January last, the next annual elt-offou was held. The total num ber of votes oast was 87, and 64 of these votes were for license, the othetr three had uo expression, mak iug the whole votes east iu favor of license. During these two years of no license, not a single indictment was made out and reported to the council, notwithstanding the fact that the Kev. Mr. Kilgo lived with- iii three hundred yards of where these liquor shops were purported to be. Now, if this be so, why did not Mr. Kdgo get up his evidence, make ont the indictment and bring the same formally before the ooun cil f if the statements t bat be has made are facts, then, I ask a gen erous public, who has been more recreant to duty than the Uev. Jno. C. Kilgo, who has crawled awav up iu the placid rocks of York, aud seat forth his libellous Lva to black en aa iuuoceut community ! A* to Timmonsville’s capital and enterprises, the Kev, Gentleman is vgatly mistaken la this sxstter, as hast in all of bia premises. The business houses command acd con trol an unlimited amount of money aud means. Bows af them do the waruu llgalit On Thursday last Secretary Man ning was stricken with paralysis, while at his post of duty iu Wash ingtou, and it is doubtful whether he will be able to resume his duties as head of the treasury department. Secretary Manning’s Illness is a ua tioual cause for sorrow. Fully ca pable qf pealing with the intricate work of his department, deservedly popular among ' Congressmen aud those who had dealings with him, one of the best men iu the Cleve land cabinet, his sad misfortune is to be rooet deeply felL The New York Timee says of Mm: 8 i: “He'baa shown tn the perform ance of bia difficult duties waagaci- ity, firmness, energy and fidelity tfiat are very rare,- and that were the more remarkable, iq bis case be cause be was entirely t new to the work o(. aCpiuDtratiou, and be- cause a large part of his previous! largest time business uf auy houses experience was of a kind more like i 0 Dar ingtou County ; besides two ly to unfit than'to fit him for that. of the largest cottou bouses in the * ^4., a*. State have their agencies here dur ing the cotton season. Messrs. Ford, Tally & Co., of Columbia, 8. C.. and Kuoop, Frieicks k Co., of Charles- Congressman Dargan on the Silver Question. Dir ing the debate ou tbe Bland silver billiu the House of Kopreseu- tativeson Saturday, Mr. Durgau, declared that the so-called friend* of silver held the light of experience in contempt, aud held that those who differed with their views were enemies not only of this country, but of tbe whole human race. They had been loud iu their deunucia- tious, and had included in tbos< denunciations the President and secretary of the treasury, but all they had done h d been to send forth an empty blastol words. They hail been fierce iu tongue but gen tie iu action. It was now proposed to permit tbe free coinage of silver, while tbe undeniable fact was that, having been tally am 1 L illy tried in this country and Kur< pe, free coinage aud bi metallism bad al ways been and would always be complete failure. Mr. Dargan made a strong plea for the estalitdimeut of a single gold standard and advocated the suspension of coinage under the Bland Act, declaring that the so called debt paying dollar was in reality a debt scaling dol'ar—noth ing but eighty cents worth of bul lion with a falsehood stamped u|>oii it. The difference between the ad vacate of the eighty cent dollar am the advocate of the fiat greenback was the ditlcrence of a degree am not of principle. Why the trieuds of silvt r did not advocate tin (which was as bright as silver) for their dollar, thereby having more fiat am less value, was no doubt a great mystery to hisallythe Greeubacker In concluding his speech he said The device ot Hooding the conn try with depreciated silver dollars iu order to make every body rich seriously threatens to make every body poor, and when it is remem bered how many of the advocates of tree coiuate are opposed to the pas sage ot the bankruptcy bill uow pending, we ina\ reasonably ex peet that the result ol coiigressiou al legislation will be not only to create, bul also to keep ou hand an abundant supply ol these poor men so near to the heart aud so ueces sary to the eloquence of the aver age politician. Awidespiead want ot confidence is especially injurious to the South. Venturing to speak for my ow n State, only emerging from the gloom and poverty conse quent ou a disastrous defeat iu war made tenfold more terrible by eight years of unparalleled violence, pil lage and robbery under the terms ot law. I say that w hat the people need above all things is capital with w hich to develop their resources. This they can never hope to get ou satisfactory terms iu the present unsettled condition of the currency. A sound and stable currency is an indispeiisible condition to our turther progress towards financial independence and prosperity. Our l>eople are not dismay ed by past disasteisor paralyzed by Go and be taken before Winburu moves. The Methodist Episcopal Church will establish another theological seminary ou the western coast. It is to be located at San Fernando, twenty mile* north of Los Angeles, California, and is the gift of Kev. Charles Maclay. He gives a ten- acre plot, and the buildings, which are to be of brick, with stone foun- dations and trimmings, and 9150,- 000 for tbe endowment. In the Prov.nce of Shantung, China the birthplace of Confucius, there were no Christian* twenty- five year* ago. Now there are 6,- 000 adherent* to tbe different mis sions, more than half of them iu the churches established by the Amerieau Presbyterians, there are thirty ordained aud thirty-three female missionaries, and 300 place* of worship. Had you thought about what nice weather thi* is to have the children’s photographs taken 1 Mr. Viett, the contractor for the I'alhoun monument, has a large orcei of hands at work iu Winns- )oro’ cutting the *toue for the ledestal Most of the granite will >e cut and shaped at VVinnsboro’, and when carried to Charleston will be ready to be placed ou the foun dation. Goods, —NOW— OPEN FOR INSPECTION M A N N E INFORMS THE TO 1 i o OF THE Town and County, That he is going to open next SATURDAY, THE PAL’OH BAR, With the largest assortment of kporiei ui Hondk Lip. My Stock has just been purchased in New York, by S. A. Woods, Jr., and myself in person, and is larger and Unusually Attractive, both in styles and prices, and I confidently be lieve that I can serve the public more satisfactorily than ever before. —A LSU— He receives a large assortment of STRAW GOODS, Direct from auction in New Yoik, which will be sold —AT— MW YORK PRICES. BY The line of Staple and Fancy Dry Goods is very complete; consisting of all gradesof goods for boys’ and men’s wear. Dress Goods—a very hand some stock. Laces and Lace Curtains in greatvariety. White Goods, Lawns and Prints. There lias been no C ngress since the war wherein ex-*oldiers|of both Jnion and Confederate armies are so numerous a* the present one There are fourteen Ex Union offl cers in the Senate and seventy-nine representatives In the. House. There ire nineteen Ex-Confederate officers now in the Senate aud forty-two in the House. Clothing, Hats, Shoes Hardware, Groceries, Crockery, and a large Stock of Mattings, all of which will be ex hibited with pleasure, and sold on the most reasonable terms. I am, at all times, pleased to advertise my goods HE WILL RECEIVE 20,000 POINDS OF ICE, And will furnish the Public at 75 cents per Hundred —OR— ONE CENT PER POUND. To be delivered to any part of town SSc-FREE OF CHARGE,' March 25, ’86. ‘•HnckmeUck” * Us’ing nrid fragrant perfume. Price 26 sn<l uO cent*. At J. A. Doyd’t Orujt Store. Lost—Warning, Loel in Itie mail from F:orence to Char leston. about Feb. 7, ISHti, a Note Tir $-2,000, drawn by M. Maree. about Feb. 7, 1880. in fiteor of S. Marco A I,'went hat, and eudortted by liter.. 8.id note amt to Haas & Solomou, Cbarle-luit ahd not re ceived by Lit mu. I hereby want ail per sons from tradine fir the Ka tie. M. MARCO. Lydia, S C. March 26.’86-3t , E. DALLAS. on My Wife. My wife has been a great sufferer from Catarrh. Several physicians and various patent medicines were resorted to, yet tbe disease contiuu ed unabated, iu>tliiiig appearing to make an> impression upon it. Her constitution finally became implica ted, the poison being iu her blood. 1 secured a bottle ot B. B B. and placed ber upon its use, aud to our surprise the improvement began at once, and her recovery was rapid and complete. No other prepara tion ever produced such a wonder ful change, and for nil forms of Blood Disease l cheerfully recom mend B. B. B as a superior Blood Purifier. R P. DODGE, Yard master Georgia Railroad, Atlanta, Ga. the counters. S. A. WOODS, SR. April 1, 1880. Great Grief. (Athens (Ga ) llaiiner 'Vatchinan ) Uncle Dick Saulter says: Fifty years ago I bad a running ulcer ou my leg which refused to heal under any treatment. In 1853 1 went to California and remained eighteen months, and in 1873 I visited Hot Springs, Ark., remaining three' months, but was not cured. Ampu tation was discussed, but I conclud ed to make one more effort. I com menced taking the B. B. B. about six weeks ago. The fifty year-old sore on my leg is healing rapidly, and yesterda.x I walked about HI- teen miles fishing and bunting without any pain, and before using tbe B. B. B. 1 could not walk ex c-eding half a mile. 1 sleep sound ly at night for the first time in many years. To think that six bott es have done me more good than Hot Springs, eighteen mouths in California, besides au immense amount of medicines aud eight or ten first-clas* physicians, will con vinco any man cu earth that it is a wonderful blood medicine. It has also cured me of catarrh. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. COUNTY OF DARLINGTON. JOHN McSWEKN, aa »ui-»ivor, Plaintiff, vs. SAMUEL O McCOWN, et. a 1 . Dpfemiauts Order of Sale. Pursuant Iu an order of court made in the above stated case, I will offer for sale in front of the Court IIoiikc in Dar'iiugtnn County, on the first Monday in April next, the lollowinit ilescrrbe I real e-tal-. All that tract of land situate iu tbe Coun ty and Stale aforesaid, emiatning Two (200) bund ed acres, more or les-, and bounded as follows : Southeast by estate lands of Charles Dargan ; southwest by es tate lands of Wnt. Gee; west by estate land- of S. 3. Wt'san, aud lying on the north side of M ddl'Swamp and hi-sectiug the road leading front Darlington Court House to Efbngh’im, it be Ing on the west side and b-ing a portion of the land alot- ed to John A. Gee by bis lather, Newell Gee. Terms of sale one-half cash, balance In twelve month’s credit with intereKt. to be secured by bond of purchaser and mort gage of Premises. Purchaser to pay for all necessaty papers. J N. GARNER, CC P Ma-ch 16th, 1886. Mouth! H Is sonnd ness aud penetra tion of judgment iu tbe ebofee Of bis principal subordinates, through whom be wa* oompelled to act iu poverty, and whatever straugers and alien* may say about them, 1 know tbat, under ju*t and ejual laws, with an honest aud stable cur rency, they are both able and will ing fo work out their social and financial salvatiou. Never through my lipa will they ask aim* of tbe Federal Government. Never by my vote will they commit the su preme folly of seeking to get rid of the obligatiou to pay their just pro portion of the national debt, w her ever and by whomsoever tbe same may be held. I repndi ite, there fore, the suggestion that it is tbe iuterest of the South to uuite with the West against tbe North iu en- acting such law* as will euable ua to pay our national debt in depre ciated Hilrer doilajs. 1 deny tbat it is tbe iuterest of tbe South or of auy other section, of tbe people of auy section, or of a part of them, tbat tbis great nation abould evade, directly or indirectly, in whole or There is a lady living here, Mrs. who has had catarrh for many, many years. I have known nIic had it tor fifteen or twenty years, and my father ouce doctored her, as she was tbeu a tenant ou our place. For tbe last two and a ball years she has been bedridden, the catarrh or eauoer (the uumemuK present physicians have never decided which), during her two aud a half years in tbe Ded, bad eaten all the roof of her mouth out. She wan so offensive uo one could stay in the room ; she could uot eat any thing, but could swallow soup if it was strained. She gave up to die. aud came so near perishing all though: she would die. Her son bought the B. B. B, aud she used several ItoUles, which effected an entire cure. She is now well and hearty. I have not exaggerated one particle. LUCY STRONG IF you want tbe pictnre of a cer tain young lady have some made of yourself aud abe will exchange with you. SHILOH'S COUGH and Consumption Caro is sold bv us on n guarantee. It cures Consumption For sale at J. A. Boyd's Drug Store. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF DARLING ION. Wliereaa, H. D. Rice of Mid County and State, on ihu PJiii day of J.iuu..ry, 1882. made and executed a luo-tgug ' to John Mc- 8w eu of the same County and State, to secure tbe payment of a note of the said H. D. Rice to the said John .McSwt-eu, of date 19th January, 1882, for the sum of Sevenlr-five dollars, payable on tie let day of November, 1882, which mortgage was recorded in th, office of ibe Register of Meene Conveyance, for Darlington Countv, on the SOthj day of January, 1882, Volume K. Ne. 2- pages 601, 602 and 603, anil tbe sum of *iueiy eight dollars an u thirteen cents is now due on tb- said mort gage debt, aud whereae default baa bee made iu the payment of Hie note secured by the said mortgage, the said mertgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the Haul premises, by virtue of the power contain ed iu the mortgage, which sale will be made by the avbacriber, at public auction, at Darlington Court House, in front of the Court House door, on the first Monday in April next, at 12 M Terms of sale cash. Tht following is a description of the tain mortgaged premises: All lhat trsot of laud, situate iu Darlington County, aud iu the Stale aforesaid, containing Oue Hun dred acres, more or lets, aud bounded on the north i.ud west by ih I right of way of the W., C. & A. R. R. Company : on the east by lands of W. M. Rice, aud on the south and west by lands of the estate ol limotby Lee and the run of Bay Branca. JOHN McSWEEN, Mortgagee. March 18, ’86-31. By the first ot April 1 will be prepared *o furnish ail who are in ue'd of Lumber. Mill licatad oil place known as the Milling plant'll ion. about oil'!- and a half miles lr tn Darlington •Ifpot. Apply at mill or •o J. -I WARD. Darlii'glun, 8 O'. March 16, >6 Sat. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA DARLINGTON COUNTY. Mmlgagee’s Sale. Pursuant In and by virtue of authority vested in us bv a c riain mortgage of real • elate, executed hy L. C. Boltina, bearing dale the 31-t day of eremhrr. I ■ 84, and recorded in ibe office of tliv Register of Mesne Conveyance for Darlington County, in Book X. No 2, page 230. w>- will oH-t for sale, at public auction nr vendue, on Salesday in April nest, between the hours of 11 A. M. ai d o P. M., in trout of the Court House dt or at Darlington, S. 0— the following described real estate, to-w»t : All that true’ of laud situate, tying and being in the County an i S’ate shave writ ten, Containing 8ixly acres, more or less, and bounded as follows, vis: (>n the north by tbe W.. C. A A. tiai road; on ibe east by the Public Road . on the souih by the Public Road leaning ironi Timmonsville to Ca-ierav ille sod on the weal by Sparrow Sw.i nip ieiuisof sale cash — purchaser to for papers CARR1GAN & 8ILC0X by Ward &_ rules their attorneys March )0. ’86. > pay THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF DARLINGTON. F. J PELEER, SB., vs EDMUND EZEKIEL. Jud'jt.tHl for tortdoturt. Pursuant to a Judgmtiit of Floreclosure and sale in the above stated ease, I will offer for sale in trout of the Court Honst in Darlington County, on the brat Mon- iav in April next, the following describ ed reali state : ^ All that irnct of laod situate in the County anil State aforesaid, containing Two Hundred aud ninety (290) acres, more or less, and bounded north by lauds formerly of Oawelf F. Smith and lands of Lucas McIntosh ; east by lands of Dove ; south by lands of Dove and James P. Wi'- son, and weal by lands cf L ’eat Mclnto-h and James P. Wilton, and having such utlisr metes aud bounds as are represent- ed ou a plat of the same made by W. H. Jamison, survey .r, January 25, 1880. and attached to a Deed of tbe premises by Oe well E. Smith to 8. Mareo & 1. Lewenthal. Terms of sale cas'—purchaser to for papers. J N March 15, '86 —NEXT TO — HOTEL INVITES THE BODIES AND THE Public in General TO CALL AND EXAMINE — HER — SBBX18TQ- STOCK. Hoop .skirts, Cursor* him) BustV* a SPECIALTY. Mitrch 18, ’86 ly SHILOH’S VITALIZKR is wlmt y„ u need for Constipation Loss of AppnMiU, Dizziness, aed all sympiouis et Lyspi-oria. Price 10 and 75 cents p«i iwiilc. At J, A Boy.l’a Drug Store. Notice. The County Board of E<|uatix it on will hold a spectul meeting on Tuesday, 'iOib March, at the Auditor s rffioe. The ob ject of rbi« meeting is t-’ give tax pavers who consider their Real B-ute ae*«£ned too high, an opportunity ti> present thnir claims lo the Board. Parlies cut asc-r. tain the assessed val re of their ptopeity by applying a' the County lu litor’s o tioe. H. LIDE L \W, CUrm'u. F. F. NORM ENT, Sew ty. March 11. ’86—3t Why will you cough when will give immediate relief. 60cts., and $1. At J. A Store. Shiloh's Cur Price 10 cs., B.yd’a Drug Cotton Planter- We »re agents for Darlington County for tbis Popular Cotton Planter. They can be supplied by u* at TitnuiouHvillc, 8.0., or by Janie* Allen, Florence, C. W Hewitt, Darlington. C. T. Hayme, Carter*ville. CASH PRICE - - 81200 ON TIME - - - 13.50 TRAXLER & McEACOERN, agents lor County. March 25, ’86-21 For lame bach, sideoroben, use Shiloh’ Porous Plaster. Price 26 cents. At J. A. Doyd’s Drug Store. pay GARNER, C C P. DARLINGTON. Jewelry Store, sipeota.ot.es AND EYEOT. ASSES, which will be fitted up by an ex perieuced Optician. If yon old people want to »ee a* good a* yon ever did, nsk for the Lemare’s Rock Crystal Glasses. JAMES H. MASON, Pearl Street. Darlington, 8. C. Dec 17, ly SHERIFF’S SALES. W. P. COLE, ns Sheriff of fyarllt.f ion Conn- 'y, vs- JOHN McSWEEN, as Trustee of MALTHA J. NORRIS and MARTHA J. NORRIS. Judgment for Fotieloiurt. By virtue of an order of Court mad la the above slated action, of date Mutch the 12th, 1883, I wil sell iu f oot of the Court House of Darlington Couutv, on the first Mon lay in April next, or the Tuesday thereafter : All that tract or pa ceT of land situate, lying and being in the County of Dnrliug- tou, and State nforos tid coal iiniof O ie Hundred and 78 acres, more or less, known as Lot No. 1, of (Uo estate uf Mrs. Ann H. McCown, and bounded ou tbe north by lot No. 2. of said estate ; West by lauds ot R J. Muldrow and J. R. Cole, and on south and east bv lands of J. J. McCnwa. ALSO All that tract or pirosl of laud known as Lot .No. 2, of said estate, containing One Hundred and twenty-seven seres, more or less, bounded north by Jeff ies Creek ; south by Lot No. I,of said estate ; west by lands ef J. R. Dole, said tots being repre sented on a plat of «b« estate of M.-r Ann H. Mot own, made by Klihis Muldrow, sur veyor, the 21st day ot February, 4880. • Terms of sale cash. W. P. COLE. S D C. March 16, ’£6. B. W. EDWARDS, va. E. 8. KILPATRICK, AND J. C. CAMP- BELL. • ' Execution aguunt Property. By virtue of the above Execution to me directed, l will Hell in ff«‘i» of tbe Court House of Darlington Coua'y on the first Monday in April next or the Tuesday therealter. All tbat tract of laud aituate in Darling- ton County. State of South Carolina, Co t- tainin% One hundred aerea more or lees, bounded North by lands of Sarah Kilpa'- riek. East by laada of William White. South by lands of Mary Nettlss. and Weak bv lands ol James Carter, aud formerly belonging to Ibe defendant J. C. Camp bell. Levied on as the property of J C. Campbell, at the suit of B. W. Edwards. Tern • o<'sale cash. W. P. COLB, 8. D. C. March 16 '86. CROUP, WHOOPING COUGH and Bron chitic immediately relieved by Shiloh’s Cure For sale at J. A. Boyd’a Drug Store