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-- v 4‘^ > W » 2 i- ; mkl ; ■ | kS? 1 , * - •* tet^UlDAt. AH?tL ll. no. 8. MXYNOLnft VHAS. A. botoBLABti } Bichard CrO'vtlky, Esq., of New York, who had been retained to nssist Melton in the political prosecntions, lias Withdrawn from tlie tiaseS; The canae of his action is not known. At torney General Brewster declines to say anything 1 about the matter. Ex it c present a tive Butterworth, of Ohio, has been invited to take Mr. Crowley’s place. Thb gtfoWth of gold and silvbf min ing Ih Arizona in the past three years is as remarkable as that of any other State or Territory in the Onion in the best days Of eithet' df them. Up to 1879 the largest product of the tnines of that territory in any year was $3,- 500,000. In 1882 the amount reached was|8,757,000.. Arizona has produced all toklj over $98<000,000 of gold and Silver. V_. ^ i A farmer in the Atlanta Soutkerli World, writing from Alabama, insists that the use of gnano is a cm sa io the agriculturist—first, becahse it stakes hint careless about home iftWffUfflm, second, because it iiltaOsts- (he 1 Mfilt unduly, thh-d< because it donees the cotton crop and depresses the price, and,- fourth, because it leads to inevita ble and inextricable debt. Tlrts doubt ing Thomas wihds hp by dbdarrng that court-house records WHl show Whether gtrano p»\*s-or not. SOMEppDf fond of statistics Has stated that the barnyard denifens of France number 45,000,OOP,' to which a vahie of $24,000,000' is attached. The annual chicken yield is lOti,'000,000, of which 10,000,000 afb reserved for pur poses of reproduction, 10,0005000 are lost by flisttise or accident, and 80,060j- 000 are marketed. The sale of fowl and eggs realizes aboutveventy milKbtl dollars in the year, sW thto does not satisfy France, and the jbtfrnals devoted to poultry interests are point- lug out how the industry can bo quad- rnpled, and an effort hi fhtif direction is to be nudertaken. We wish some enterprising poultry-raising French man WofridTscttle in this vichtityv it was stated some days ago that Messrs. Ivy, of York, Fant, of New berry, and Johnson, of Union, jurors drawn for the April terui of the Unit ed States Circuit Court had, npon their own application, been excused Kditojs. frond serving. The gronnd of Colonel Ivy’s application was that he is exempt as a school trustee; of Mr. Fant’s that he is a licensed drnggist and therefore exempt; and of Mr. Johnson’s that he had a physician’s certificate to the effect that bis health will not i ermit his serving. The places of these jnrors will be filled “according to law”, audt there is a certainty that the new jurors will be quite according to Mr. Melton’s wtfy of thinking and quite up to doing the dirty work he will ask aud expect of them. The object of Brewster, Melton and their pimps, is to manufacture testi mony and manipulate juries so that some Democrats may be convicted, whether guilty or innocent. The presence on the jivy of gentlemen of character and intelligence, such as are Messrs. Ivy aud Fant, is necessary to thwart the designs of the prosecution, and insure a fair trial. If by the absence of such ^ei^lcmen, Melton shall succeed in so' pack ing the jury as to couvict some Innocent man, the responsibility rest ing upon them will be very great. We are satisfied from the character of these, gentlemen, that they have neither in tended nor anticipated such a result. They have, doubtless, wraply lost sight of the fact that under the operafion of of Melton’s “stand-aside” trick, the presence of every good man on the panel is essential to prevent the pack ing-Of theory to accomplish the ends of the prosecution. It is of the utmost importance that every juror be promptly at his place when the Court opens. We trust that no others of them will apply to be ex cused, upon any ground whatever. In the language of the JVeicarend Courier, “their duty just now is a plain and sim ple, bftf very important one—they -must stick!” Amui^.-nioiits MmIo with * Furt-lgr. Com pany to FurnUh Money bn Reasonable Torus. [iSpsetot to the Augmta Chronicle.] Columbia, April 10.—As you have already been iiifonbedi Col. John B. Palmer returned from London last weak, aftf having perfected arrange ments for the investment of foreign . Tint fickfsrtow TrUi*.—tTuJjre T. J; Mackey, or 6 ;ii.h Cii.i olina, lias had a j conference with the A' ;>n ; ^y-Ceneral, touching the .: : nut!i 1 chC ion fraud trials. The coj’nplnipt is made that the special Unihrii iStnfes a!trtnicys cansed the. arrests o be made upoq “information And belief,” and that these thus arre ted were compelled to go aor.iB dist.incc to appear be far? ft. " * 'mh* ‘ “ mis; imitates officer.to give bail, | Mnckcy thougbt, should'bft cov- fcapital in South Carolina. He siTc- j ceeded in indneing the Dundee Mort-. recL g d h ^ tss phould not be gage and Trust Investment Ci.utmrty; mJwle excc ,^ ific allegatious of Dundee, buotlaud, and the fecolisu i„i v ‘ American Mamtfactaring; df Edln- Wiy swpriito. burgh, Scotland, heretofore •operating in the uortluvest to commence oi*era- tions in this State. It is expected! that if first loans are satisfactory large sums will be advanced to pi litters. Tliese companies propose to make loans on five years* tin.^, and as they do not wish in any ev .it to become prop'rio- tore of the land, nor to' cripplo the planted, tl»ey will limit their advances to oue-thfrd the casli vAlde of the prop- erty pledged. This is a vVfse policy, for while it will grant All needed relief, the farmer will not be tempted to run the riA of losing his plantation'. Cof- onel Pal met has also succeeded in having a new 6omp*ny, the Southern States Mortgage Company, organizt'd in London,' and the first mUethig of its directors was held prior to his depart ure from Lofftfonr hut whether it will avail itself 6f the Soutlifirn Land Loan Association charter, granted at the last session of thi tagtsfetuTe,* hi its'pres ent form, is not yei decided. WALKER’S SPECIF tji/M tr] JtEJtEl TLT WOXDFrllFTJt EU ^ KEVl ir HAS 1*0 jcoiry vmpH Its speedy action upon all Brcnchial ana PulmOnio Affections is beyond belief to those who have never tried it or seen it nsed. If Hpeedily aUave Bronchial monic Fevers. It is a wonderful EXPELTOEANl’ HE A It IteoptiRe digestive and urina/y or gans in a hsnirftl and healthy condition— it V ALWAYS BEEN APPRECIATED BY TIfEQntiA f MAf’AES, AS TKtiiBE ABE FEW WHO HAVE THE VERVti 4*6 STRIKE ROTTOft, Iris not generally known that lep rosy has existed to a; cWsiderablfe ex tent hi Norwifj' for many years, and we confess that we are among those who are unaware of it. Recently pnblished statistics acquaint ns with the fact that in 1856 there were 2,863 cases there, and that by a system of isolation, strictly enforced, this number was reduced to 1,682 cases in 1880. Between tliese two dates 4,891 victims although it is generally understood that the discase is incurable, these pub lished statistics show that 10? ciSes have been cured. If this be true’Jhere is Some ground for the hope (hat the disease may yet become manageable. I’m; New York Herald of Thursday Contains a long aud interesting report 1»y Lieut. Raymond P. Bogdre of the United States navy, upon-the Panama Canal which he'passed over aud exam ined under directions from Bear Ad- ffiiral Cooper. The report is accom panied by drawings of sections of the canal; and skeletbii'maps of a part Of the country through which it; passes. The couclusio isdraWn by Lifeut. Rogers are: that the company certainly intend to carry out the proposed piau of the canal, but he doubu Whethef thtty* complete the work at the time fixed by DeLesseps, 1888, or for tlte stith esti mated j- $120,000,000—that subscribers Will have to increase their subscriptions or lose all, and that the '.new stock holders will reap the profits. Twenty- five million dollars have already been (Depended, and he thinks that With the work well begun and advanced the money can be raised, and that the cli mate will not prove t6o‘ deadly to the laborers. fHESH ORAKGK BLOSSOMS. The Ulnrrtase of a Popular Younff L»«ly of Keiitoch;- toft Well Known Merchant of Winmboro, [From the Mr/tokicvUle, Ky., Journal.] Married,-at the residence of Win. L. Steele, about three miles from this city on the Versailles pike, on Tues day morning at 10 o’clock, by the Bev. T. Warren Beagle, of Mt. Pleasant Baptist church, Mr. Wm. B. Doty, of Winnsboro, S. C*-, to Miss Alary iWk- ,lcy. of this county. Miss Alary was one of Jessamine’s most popular young ladies, and has won for herself an innumerable host of admirers wherever she was known. Her kindred m’n vefty numerous in itiiis countv., and arc among oar best people, 'the groom is a native of Kentucky, and an elegant gentleman of large fortune, being a commission iitiwlam—aA—— A short while before the hour an- nonnoed-Tor the ceremony, a small number of relations aud friends gath ered nt the residence of the bride’s brother-in-law, Air. Wm. L. Steele, tand soon the handsome groom with his ‘‘'eautiuil young bridge at his side en tered the parlor preceded by the offici ating clergyman, the Bev. T Warren Beagle, who, in a most beautiful and impressive manner, united their hawft and hearts. The congratulations then began and were numerous and hearty. Aivetagnttt repast was spread, and the Wedding feast was one of Old Ken tucky hospitalitv. The bridal party then drove to this place and took the Cincinnati Southern fur their home in WHITTIER jtXO ttlb frOVTU. III one of our Sonthehi cities on the 2nd of March,- Was celebrated a festi val of song and 1 poetry in hohq.r of the Quaker ptiety John Greenfeut* Whit tier. This is surciy ifeWetliing novel —that this bitterest of all writers, lie whose brilliant and soul-stirring pen Was ever active in ft s’ way Kgaiut oiir ante-bellum civilization—that his mem ory should thus be honored by a South ern community, is indeed passing strange. But why. not? .We ding with strange tenacity to the realities of bygone days. We live—as a people —we live too much in the past. I fear that the old civilfearton, the hnbiti of father customs that formed to a certain extent that civilization, are not entirely obliterated from the minds of onr fathers, and that the sentiment and thought of the rising generation :V colored and moulded bv the strength of that attachment for the past. What a blessing it would be for ua as people if we could cut ourselves loose—as unpatriotic as this may at tii st sight appear—from the past in sJI but to learn from it lessons of wisdom 1 Ours is a land of memories, hut must we brood over them? Ours is a land dotted with fields of carnage, but do not their monuments |>oint onward and upward? They tell us to shako off despair, to wrest our spirits from the environments of the memories of irrevocable bygones, and -to call oiif Sunny South a “Land of Hope.” That tliis event is a clear demonstra tion of the entire absence of sectional hatred, we cannot doubt. We rejoice to see that a spirit of reverence for genius, and of veneration for a noble man, who has spent his life in one •continuous battle against -what he con sidered an infringement of human lib erty, and a debasement of immortal spirits; we rejoice to see such a man -honored' Thy onr people and by onr institutions of learning. It speaks to] us of better days, when our minds will! ttncVwffen That is what a great tnany people are doing. They don’t know just what is the matter, but they have a combination of pains and «iJie$, and each month the/ grow worse. . Tb? Only sure remedy yet found is Brown’s Iron Brrfqtff, and this by rapid and thorough assimilation.- witH.the' blood purifies and enriches it, and rich, Strong blbod flowing to every part Of the system repairs the wasted tissues, drives out liscasc and gives health and strength. . This is why Brown’® Iron Bitters will cure : kidney and liver diseases,' consumption, rheumatism, neuralgia, dyspepsia, mala ria, intermittent fevers, Sea 803 S. Pan St., Baltimore* Nov. 38,1881. . I was a great sufferer from Dyspepsia, and for several weeks could eat nothing and was growing weaker every day. I tried Brown’s Iron' Bitters, and am happy to say I now have a good appetite, ‘ And am getting stronger. Jos. McCawley. PURIFIES THB BBOOtj, Infitantly retjerfs night sweata, gonenWs cf appetite and general debility. It him 1 100 , ); been known only four years and _ j yvoixl Has neVek failed to perfect A cube; * • -’i Any one afflicted with whM.ia generally considered death's avint cou-ier. oouaump- tiou, can be eijrpd , ter $2.50. $5.00 or $10 00 according to the stage which the disease has reached. No patient has yet taken $10 worth beforeacure was effected. The.hrECJFIC is recommended only for pulmonary affectiofts, and those desiring to use it can do so by sending their orders to the proprietors of this paper or direct to me, stating that you saw this advertise ment in the Winnsboro NewsaVp 11 skald MOO yards Standard Print* ftAW rente., . - ’ > . 5000 yards different brands Chocked Homespun at 8 <*nts. jooo yards Brown Cotton at 4)4 cents. - , BOO yards Nun's Veiling, in popular shades, at 12)4 cents. 3()t)0 yards Colored Lawns at 5 cento. • • • 5«0 yards Lubin’s Black Cashmere at 7B rente- . . "’1 •.. 1000 yards Lubin* Nun’s Veiling, a'! wool, the best vdlue in Arqerica, at rents. made Jlanilla at sold last season in tins town at M.oo. . v > ono SHOES, SIIOESViOO pairs Jlen’s Plough Shoes at 75 cento, ?°sl^ Bloimh Shoesa.t $L 15 and *1.25, worth $2.00. A nice Hue of Men s Tine sno pairs Ladi^' Wtppers at 50, 75 and $1.25. 200 pairs Ladies’ Clotli Gaiters at <3 ceu NOTIONS, FANCY GOODS, ETC—In thisTtopartruent I have a fticftseJecUon. lave no old stock carried ever from last year, as fids I cloned out last, winter, want real value Mr fhe Almighty Dollar-, don’t fajl te examine my stock. I ex- icoiu- hand- If you LtT cr. l. * •» •. t ’ ' V ’ rJ * .* All kinds of approved county paper bouglit at my office. THE EVENING STAR; * > Wallfer’s RHEUMATIC REMEDY Cutes Rheumatism, either acute or chfoh- T io. in from eight to ten days. Price by Express, $0 per Bottle PR. J. VV. WALKER, \ FRANKLINTON, N. C,' June 13 ESfeusn Saddlks von $5, 5«, $7 and $10, Kentucky Spring Seat Saddles for $10. ULYSSE C. DESPORTES. s Iron Bittern is rat a drink and does not' -contain whiskey. It is the Only preparation of Iron that causes no' injurious ef fects. (jet the genuine. Don’t be imposed on with imitations; SPRING A HSTOUJIC^MESIT! THE STAR I/SSTlih SHINING WITItA FINE ASSORTMENT OF wateS; ifcANfMEs; iioyoRS and Cigars; 6f the cit&iCR&t fre&h Systems and Fi$it every day. meals hai; A r i* all hours'. Tf Respectfully/ J. GROESCHEL, Agent. • -1 i< power, and wflen we shall “love our 'neighbor as ourselves,” and when in consequence of these things, prosperity will smile as thc'snn upon oar homes t and peaceful, Valleys, and intelligence | and virtue shall characterize the masses j of onr people as it has always done in i a distinguished degree onr higher e.ir-1 eles. It also speaks of political cn-j franchisemeut,*-d?' Virtue in politics,' anil of a Huai cessation of the wrongs and indignities proffered onr people by the officers- of the general govern-1 inent. Tlrcso -celebrations have the double, good effect, of inspiring a love ; of poetry, and of preparing the way | for the final destruction of all ill-feel-! ing between the sections’ of-our coun try.- .S/sA-tnc Student. ACCIDENTS HAPPEN EVERY DAY in the Year. During the winter 280 persons cfttF* mitted suicide in- the United States December is credited' with much the largest number. Dissipation was tbe chief cause, - followed closely by busi ness trouble, eiokuess, insanity, family jars aud love. Grief- and'religion* delusion contributed'’ but ten and twfr cases respectively. • Of theseR'vuicides 104 shot themselves, fifty-eight tried poisoning, forty-five- hanging; -thirty- four tlic razor and fifteen drowning. One jumped from a height, one inhaled gas and five threw themselves-auider railroad trains. Ohio, . Illinois and New York contributed thn leading innmbers. Tbe South is meagrelyfrep#- resented in the list- The victims were 222 men and 57 women. Americsue flirnished 148, Germans 79, Irish 2f, English 11, Scotch 7, Swedes 3, Afri cans, Bohemians, French, Italians, Spanish and Swiss one each. Mostbf the self-slaughterers were farmers. Fourteen were merehants, thirteen clerks, five tailors, four saloon keepers. Several occupations, including politi cian and tramp, furnished one each The ages of these suicides range from -eighty-three to thirteen. Seventy-six - of tbe unfortunates were husbands, thirty-five wives, sixty-seven bachelors, eleven maids, eight widowers aud four widows. tbe Snhby Southland, where the beau tif&rspring flowers will greet them, and as their numerous friends hope, will blootn and blossom on all their future pathway. Several of the guests attended them'as far as Danville. The presents were iftnr.crous and hand- •fiUfiFB.- We giVe the list below: Gold, watch and chain, from tbe groom ;chcck for $100, Win. L.-Stoele; set Cffina, Mrs. Wm. Stecie; hand some picture, LizZicrStetfle ; silver but ter knife, Sallld Ste'ele; Shakspcare and Longfellow’sToems, Miss' Alice Barkley; handsome Saratoga trunk, Sami. Barkley; set silver forks, Geo.. Barkley; -.large^BifVerthtdte, Joe Bark ley; silver ice ladle, Mrs; Sffirri Mc Dowell; silver butter dish, Mrs. and Mrs. C. C. Chrisinan, Madison; silver spoon holder, Mr. and Mrs. David* l.',V ( >'I J .V' Bell; set silter knives and'Torkto. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McDowell, of Wood- fork; silver iflower stand, Mr. and Mrs. Doty, of Gerrard; -lace bod set, Mr. and Mrs. McKinsey; handsome parasol, Mrs. Bettie Muir; pickle cas tor, D. B. Walker; silver cake basket, Miss ■ Dora .Arnold, of Woodfeirt; handsome parlor lamp, Miss Carrie Knight; silver card receiver,-i.MtSS Josie Ball, of Woodford; sot sflver forks, J. J. Walker, of Garrard; Toilet bottle set in silver, Thos. Deering; set silver knives, T. B. Walker, oi Uer- rftrd { check for $50, from a friend; morrocco portmonte, Miss Susie Mc Dowell, of Wpodfofd; silk PEftRY DAVIS’S PAIN KILLER IS THE GREAT REMEDY FOR Burns, Cuts, Bruises, Sprains, Scratches, Contusions, Swellings, "Scalds, Sores, - v Dislocations, Felons, Boils, &c., Ac. DRUGGISTS KEEP IT EVERYWHERE. I have now in atop!? a f«M line of Farming implements,'6&ch as Plows, Trace Chains, devices. Shovels, Breast Cltai-ns',' SfeeV Screws. Spades, Buck Bauds, Lap Bings. Swedes Iron, Grindstones,' Axes. »- . Ferguson & Blount’* Iron Foot Plow Stocks. SEED IRISH POTATOES AND GARDEN SEEDS. My stock of GROCERIES will' al ways be kept up with nothing but’ FIRST-CLASS GOODS. A large lotof FINE FLOUR, bought before the recent advance, cheap by ! * the barrel. Fresh supply of “Snow flake” Crackers. ONLY CASH TRADE SOLICITED. R. M. HUEY. GREAT MY WINTER STOCK MUST BE SOLD. AND WILL BE OFFERED FOR THE NEXT SIXTY SAYS At prices unheard of in Wfmisbbro. CLOAKS AND DOLMANS AT YtiSS THAN COST/ Come rfhd See LOW t am offering goods, and you will be sure to invest some of ypur spare Change.' Respectfully.,' - , J. nROESCHEL, Agent: IT STANDS' AT THE HEAD.- 1] JlMPED FROM A ^ATt’-Wt^^OW — Among the travelers oni board the Western North Carolina train last Sat urday were a couple of guards takii g a body of prisoners to .Marion from Old Fort. A colored woman was among the prisoners. The train had encoim- i-wiiTrivi » xtix n i i tered a big vo<Sk that had roll&T'down a A1 N J b* AN i ' Uliju ! ! on the track and which had to be blast-1 ed away, causing a delay of five hntrrs, i Received and for sale, a good stock of and the train after getting under bead-'Atlantic and Kentucky White Lead, also way again, was skipping along at best White and Catered Mixed Paints, fortv mites an hour to make un f.U- Co °rs in Oil, Linseed OH, Kerosene louy innos an nom 10 n.aKc up 101 Kp(t r- 0 il, Machinery Oils, Tanners mSffu-s, Window Glass, T A FRESH SUPPLY OF VERY FINE FLOUR JUST RECEIVED. EVERY SACK WARRANTED BY D. R. FLENNIICEN. T-. I THE LIGHT-RUNNING - ‘‘DOMESTIC.’’ i • * - ‘ I'! Tliat it is tlie leader in'. .the Trade is a fact that cannot be dis puted- t . MANY IMITATE IT—NONE EQUAL ITt The Largest Armed, . The^raost^Bcai^rf’ Woodwork. AND IT 18 WARRANTED To be made of the best material: £ To, do. am- and all kinds of work. To be complete in every respect. For Sale by J.M. BEATY & Col, * • Wipusboro, ‘S. G. ?,>. Agents wanted In unoccupied territo- rv Afttlruss « DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINE CO.''' Richmond, Virginia. lost time. Tlie woman, taking advnn tage of a window, and no one knew' anything of it until a passenger, who had been standing on tlie rear plat- forro, came rushing np to tlie conduc tor with tlie information that the train over a woman, as he had seen her kicking on the track like a chicken with its head pulled off. The train was stopped and backed, but the woinomdmd gone. The guards took to tlie woods after her, and when the train catde bftck next dnv they had tbo woninp anChftvero waiting to get on boarfl- with "her again.—CAariofte Journal-Observer. Vwf and Oil, McMabtkr, Brick & Kktchin. t^HOOl, BOOK». We ke^p.on hand a largo stock of School Booby, 4nk».; i Ptars',' Pencils, Blank Books, Writing Tafilcto, Bibles, Hymn Books; also tlie popular Hteniture of the,,day, as the Seaside Librftry; Franklin Square Library, etc * , McMaster, Brice & Ketchi'h. MEAL, MEAL. rassii QfotlfeT SECT ONION GETS. AND chief, Sain Muir; traveling ;8atcb?l, ; Mrs. George Oldham; kid gloves, Henry Muir. CloVer Fertilized—Two or even tlfrerel-qps of vnmifcgrain can Jbe rais ed in succession to advantage on aiiv piece of land provided clover is sown with'every crop’of sffiall grain. Then handker- a crop of clover is 'urhea .nniler for We have on hand a- largo stock of Gaff den Seeds; also stfmlyneld Sebds arid Flowfer Seeds, from Buist, '•l.efftdtetli, anibltectk &6 ail eus'toniers nidybc plehsnf^ McMaster, Brick & Ketchw," WR APPING pater: A FRESH SUPPLY OF THE VlfKY* BEST QUAALITY, ^usrJlECEIVED -BY- D. H. Plennikea. NEW TIN-SHOP1 & J V ARE NOW —As a true and efficient ‘thatexcels all other Iron ^Biowu's Iron Bitten. tonic, and one andteines, teke A Nimv-Quf.en ok thl Parl< Mob.— A Paris dispatch says a new heroine has made her appearance and threatens to dethrone Louise Michel aud Panic Mi rick) tbe two fanatical female lenlicrs Of tho-.Armee de la Revoitition. The new qtteen of the mob is Mile. Per- nande Foirieux, better known by her staae’iiaHie of Darlincuurt. She is a graduate-yd' the famous Paris Conserv atory, -and studied declamation under Tftloot, ex-secretaire of the Oomedie Francaise. - She hre a fine contrulto voire and considerable dramatic abili ty. • k 5hc appears in cafe concerts aud -At the'. public meetings of the couiinu- nists, cftliectorists, anarchists and oilier ’ revftlntionary societies that she honors With her* encouragement. She sings lh<& '^Marianne” with telling effect. This yOtftfg Ssfdy has suddenly come to the front «s v m leader, f ,t the simple reason that foe Other night she broke a chair aver tbe heafl of a tntiriieipal councilor named Tfoes 'Gnvot. The latter was presiding at a political I HAVE recently comnssnccd bnsi- ucss opposite Mr. j. M. Elliott’s Gin- We call the attention of merchant? 'Shop, wliere w ill be found Cookiu 1^. e €3 My v rm e- i every crop of small grain except the others 10 0 ! ,r J ar K e 8 , tlx 'K., Q L' W v^L 1 ^. .S' Heating Stoves and Tinware of af first," and upon this llypothesis She,, a and G|ltterinff donc in ft farmer w ants,to ehweli Ins land wish and Paper Bags ‘ , I Roofing and Guttering done -111 a iiliail grain for two or three years in ,We suggest that .if mwclia’rto A»n. buy good 4 ft.nd-substantial mtuuicr, as clicap succession, al wavs sowing clover .ig-these articles from us as low as frjjn, attend, as the'cheapest. 1 the spring uml ploughin'' in the fall, freiffl’-t addcA it will he an advantage to| Signs Psthted ki the best style and then If lie’chooses to put the land Cheap. „ t . ;find it to jlieir inter- scliing light ’Yankee Tin-, wafe. poorly aolderedi and sell my. TINW ARE,'Afrit is abont as CHEAP, and is made of GOOD MATERIAL. THEJIK, he chooses to nut tho land retain within tewn the small commission; cheap. , ^ "• r r" i C "" 8CJ s, and HicTi put it back in cease scllin in corn'he i two seasons, and tiich put small grain and clover. After a field t bat'bad clover sown in.it for sav, aix j or eight seasons it will sejkdvitsd?, atid 1 after every crop of thifill grain a crop of clover will spring’hp from the sccil in tbe ground e.'j poked to tlie action of the elements by'ploughing for the cro"* of small grain. Another .feet we known is that a crej on fall ground is ' WiTHKYII^E f! ! steff'orwhftAt grown 1 1 'greater and tlie grain STOCKv Q jkX.Xi E-ttJR/XiX j5wIs3‘jys!ESE3-T^:B3SJ:. SAUL.. IE FAJIT. NOTICE. fr^N March 1st inst., I bought vl 1 " TlIE second, term of this Institution will larger-ttlaii that grow n on coni grouiifT.' : commence on the 0th day of February, “ which time re-organii^rtion of classes'-nni ... ...., denartmento. Tuition and board as low as gtandard kinds atclose —***“ r .i.„uT -i\airie Fanner. the entire stock of goods of J- it BEATY Sc . CO and expect to continue'the busDasaf -as heretofore at the old stand, “THE will CORNER STORE.” Tlianks to all fori C. BART & CO., Mac::er«0L*t D«r BoardlOR-Staiite. Few peopfe wfibbat salt mackerel stop to tlmiK of the adventurous life led by the men engaged in ’ edtetofog ,-foe creatures. , flrW ~ These men are subject to ham Kfficks and every kind of exposure. The celebrated fishery house of Jas. G. Tarr & Bro., Glou cester, Mass., say: “We have had on board our vessels frequent erases of bruises, Bents. lumon ana ooani as tow p v>f standard kinds at close profits, I shall obtained in any first-class institution rfoel confident (grthe continued patronage dn«L For further information, ad- v ^™any throughout our town ana county. MW. MARY H. MEANS, . .Principal, Wythcvllle, Va. Mrs. Means teters, by permission, to ex-^ J M. Davis, aud Col. J. J. M. BEATY. Indebted to the old firm of Sc CO. are .-req nested to once and make settlement to the All accounts to March 1st inst must tte.paid. MPhVf J.M.,BEATJ7' All 1 «j, M. « mne at 1 .endersig a well APPLBB, , HAiolNS, 'The Largest Importcraof Forelgn; FrcU in the Sioth, offer for sale 8040Ctca 8tOCfc Oi and everything else that a first-class Wliolesaio'Frcit House should have. COVNTRlr ORDERS FILLED ' WlTS OdtlY-txfia* II