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r-xr^j - ^ mmssmmm ,»i THE NEWS AND HERALD. WLNNSBORO, S. C. ‘ the last, clecti'in, but Liicy have since ,attends its cultivation, which is that T?AT?]M -M been withdrawn. . wlien once well rioted it can never be J-ilVX • "“ J ' ‘ J by flooding and; CHARLESTON ADVERTISEMENTS. w TBCRSDAT. November 8. : 1883. eradicated, except A whiter in the News and Courier' freezing it ont. , * ! For bc^ pasture we. find no plant ' better. jyn. a. uKTXOLns, CII.IS. A. VOVGLA8S, } Editohs. Pkominent New York cotton deal ers think the failure of Morris Hanger, orLiverpool, will have a tendency to secure better prices, as his peculi;.r methtfy of operating kept the prices down. Augusta Chronicle: “As usual, the would-be assassin of Bismarck is an insane man. The leaders of Europe never admit, as a rule, that men who seek to slay monarchs are sane. They were very anxiefifs, however, to fasten that reproach upon Republican Ameri ca, by clamoring for the blood of Guitcau—a craze loon.” complains that the titles to land sold by the Sinking Fund Commission are bad—one at least having just been con sidered so by the attorney of a loan as sociation- in Charleston. Thu lands sold by the Commission are chiefly such as have been forfeited to the The almost equal ft vyill flourish in any soil and climate whose temperature does not reach more than twenty degrees below rezo. The ground shotild be put into good order, and be weil harrowed and pul- ! verized. Sow twenty pounds per I HAVE tor sale, direct from the manu re honey made from it js- facturers, all kimls of AgriculturalMkchin- d to that from white clover. "T, Implements etc., etc. Engines of all i'lsh in anv soil and climate sizes, fron^three to one hundred and fifty horse power. / If • V ' * SAW MILLS A^D GRIST MILLS, *TnE Philadelphia Press is vigorous ly wnouncing aufl demanding the re moval of Frank Hatton, First Assist ant Postmaster General. Frank Hat ton comes back through the National llepublican with the charge that Mr. Charles Emory .Smith, of the Press, was one of the principal movers of a big job in securing & fast mail be- tweu Philadelphia and Washington, for the especial benefit of the Press, which cost the government $8U3,479 37. Which leads the Charlotte Observer to remark that they arc both Republicans lu good standing. Trie New York Herald says that on October 15, 1881, the lute growth of cotton w’as destroyed in some locali ties in the northern part of this State, and iminenso damage done to tobacco in Virginia by untimely frost. In 1875 and 1376 the first killing frost was re ported in Alabama and Georgia re spectivcly by October 17, and in 1880 frosts injurious to vegetation extended to North Carolina as early as October 18, though “killing frosts’’ were not general in the South Atlantic States till the middle of November. Even in the mild adtumns of 1874 and 1879 the frost belt reached the Gulf States be fore or at the close of October. The Southern Telegraph Company, it will he remembered, was recently consolidated with the Bankers’ and Merchants’ Telegraph Company. This company now operates ‘23,000 miles cf wire, with a pole mileage of 4,650 miles. The pole mileage of the three companies is as follows: American R^p’.d, 2,800 miles; Southern, 1,500 miles; and Bankers’ and Mcachanls’, 850 miles. The system extends east to Boston, wCsl to Cleveland and Pitts burgh and south to the outskirts of Charleston anti Savannah. The com pany is now stringing six new wires between New York aiid Washington building an entirely new’ line of ten wires to Boston by way of Springfield. Contracts have been signed for the ex tension of the lines from Cleveland west to (Chicago and south to Cinciu- n-ifi, Sf. Louis and Louisville. These extensions will increase the pole mile age by abotffr3,000 miles. State for non-payment of taxes. In acre, and cover two inches deep, in these cases the validity of the title de- £l" ** ol ail< ^ cu * ^' c , ,, , firsr vear. A. E. Blount. pends upon the regularity of the pro- Ajfl . icnl , tinil Col!egPf to , ora(lo . ceediugs incident to the assessment and collection of taxes, and the sale or A Sknatok Thheatknf.d.—A W ash- forfeiture'for non-payment. The very iugton Ictier says: Mr. J. II. He<Zcr, slightest irregularity, it, lias been re peatedly held by the Courts, will ren der the title a mere nullity. The Su preme Court of tills State has decided that the same strictness must be ob served in the case of forfeitures as in ’ sales. 'And it is safe to say no title in this State derived through a sale or a forfeiturc of the laind for non-payment of taxes is worth the paper it is written on. There may possibly be an ' occasional exception, ih the titles made since 1877, but all the chances are i against them also. The, remedy for the trouble lies in a simplification of i the laws for the assessment and collcc Manufactured at the Metropolitan Iron Works, Richmond, Virginia. From the York, Pennsylvania, Agricul tural Works—all kinds of Implements, from. a.IIeel-8crew to a Thresher that wttl thresh and clean sixty bushels of wheat per hour or two hundred bushels of oats per hour. * 7 Sulky Ploughs, Cultivators, Harrows and - . .. Ploughs and Plough Stocks of all kinds ot Woodstock, Va, here Tuesday, says and s ! zes. Also Reapers, with self-dropper that Senator-elect Riddleberger, since or self-binder. ' his return home, met the mnn who I carries the letters of the citizens of' Woodstock to the postal route agent e LEMENS CLACIUS, \* • |V 4 —IMPORTER AND DEALER IN— WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS, TOCACCO, • GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, No 175 EAST BAY, CHARLESTON, S. C. X E W FURNITUR JIOUSEHQLT). DECORAT16N 'A’RRiVkD AND to ARRIVE! lam agent for the ..* > ■ . DBDHICK UAT AND COTTON PRESS* on tho railroad train—thov fearing to ..... ... and ordered hi.n to take the lettois | Cftn C jp an an( j ^reehands back and put them in the postoflice. j ca »j bale cotton faster than a sixty-saw gin The man refused, and, upon having can turn the lint out. the order reneated to him in a neremp- i I have also some of the best made COT- torv manner, told tl.e Senator if he ; TON GINS, rrith alt the modern improve- h diicrcrt him he would club him : ntente, with PRE.^Eft from the factories, the spot. This ended the interference at once. —The paymaster-general of the army reports disbursements during the la-t i fiscal year aggregating $13,382,164. 'The duplication of pav accounts by . rT . . officers *is referred to, but it is urged turn of taxes. Cnder the present sys- ; |n |ie|lM|f of , h< . arrnv ns a wh( , k , thut tem it is of course possible to make a ; considering the number of officers the good title under a sale for taxes, but percentage of irregularities is exceerl- the circumstances of the sale offer uo * n gly small. Tbe deposits made by . , .... . .I* enlisted men, under the act ot Mi>y 15, inducement to the parties interested to 18 - 2> „ umb( ; i . cd 7) 9 0?> amounting to take the trouble to see that all the pro- ^407,5f^. ecedings are as they shoultl be. In deed, in most cases, there is some fatal irregularity previous to the sale. In the present state of our laws, lands are not sold for non-payment of taxes. They are leased for a term of years— the person offering to pay tlm taxes and penalties for the shortest term be ing tho lessee. But it is c! COTTONSEED OIL MILLS. Scales of all sizes, that will weigh from one,-half pound to five tons. Carriages, Buggies and Riding Carts, of all sizes and prices. • '• If anyperson wishes to purchase any of the above-mentioned goods, they will ..please call at Mr. JAMES Q. DAVIS’S office and leave word with hin», and I will call and show catalogues, etc. JAMES PAQAN, , AGENT. May 17-tf QTTO T1EDEMAN & SONS, . WHOLESALE GROCERS, ’ —AND— r PROVISION DEALERS, 102 AND 104 EAST JBAY STREET, CIIARESTON, S. C. B OYD BROTHERS, Wiiolesblk Grocers, Liquor Dealers —AND— ..... ' • V . V» . COJiTMISSION MERCHANTS, 497 EAST BAY, CHARLESTON, S. C. S. B. THOMAS, AGENT, No. 320 Kino St., Opposite LibertJT, WINDOW SHADES, PAPER HANG INGS, LACE CURTAINS, CORNACES AND UPHOLSTEKV GOODS, CHARLESTON, S. C. Window Awnings-Made to Order “It Wa» Only an Accident.'' A fish-hook in your flesh, a scissors blade in your left thumb, a sprained ankle from a mis-step on a loose stone, a bruised shin by a slip from a car platform, a cut on your cheek by a clumsy barber’s razor, a contusion on your elbow by poking it through a street cur window, a swelling on your nose from running against an open dorr in the dark—these arc likely to hnp- ... in.,* n.o l"' 11 a moment's notice. To be u u * :u l " e I aeady for them, have a bottle of Perry same principles are applicable alike to j Davis’s Pain Killer ready, these leases and the former sales. Any irregularity w hich would vitiate the one woijId have a like effect upon the other. The necessity for siinplif\ing the tax laws is therclore quite as «..reat now as it was Indore the recent change in the mode of enforcing collection. The matter should receive the careful attention of the Legislature. Policy of Insurance ▲OtADfTST * Accidents From the telegraphic accounts of the elections on Tuesday we condense the following: In Virginia the Democrats claim to have gained control of both branches of tho Legislature—by a ma jority of not less than twenty in the House and'five in the Senate. The leaders claim a gain of teh thousand in , . . . I (‘liillt the State. In Massachusetts Beast j j^~ Butler is beaten by at least ten thou- j sand majority. In New York the Re publicans seem to have won. They claim that their entire State ticket is elected, and that Carr, the candidate for Secretary of State, lias 30,000 ma jority. Brooklyn elects a Republican mayor. In Pennsylvania the Republi cans claim the State by not less than 20,000 majority. They have doubtless carried the State. In Connecticut the Republicans carry the Legislature. In Net¥' Jersey the Democrats claim Abbot’s election as governor by about IjTOO—the Republicans, however, ex- prcssiiig themselves, as still hopeful. Thc'Dfcmocrats have doubtless carried Maryland, and have won a sweeping victory in Mississippi.—The election i n other Stales had no special interest. ALFALFA AS A FORAGE CROP. The Kiiperlence of a Fr irtlcal Planter with What We Call Lucerne. Editors Country Gcntlbnafi: Few if any forage plants have yet become so valuable lor stock as alfalfa. It w as introduced into California from Chili many years ago. It is the -nine as the lucerne of Europe (Medicayo saliva). It must have been cultivated, as its name indicates, by the Celtic nations. Even as far hack as in the days of Columella of the first century, one or t wo historians notice it, and another mentions it, without name, as having been known in Greece 500 years before the Christian era. Alfulin belongs to the clover family, as a perennial, and is found at the present day growing America. Its growth is wonderlul, enormous and rapid in some soils and localities. Its roots, some say, extend down until they find w«iier—even twenty feet into and through the hard est subsoil. The plant is not only a pefenuia 1 , but perpetual in every sense of the word. The roots are so strong and large in sandy soils, that to plow them up, or even turn the sod, i* next to an impossibility. They easily stop a double team. After becoming well set, it will thrive in almost any climate and soil. The product from its culti vation is greater lu value and size than any known forage plant, and the suc cess attending all the efforts made at raising is simply wonderful. In the cotton States, after the first year, the average yield is reported to he six or ton’s of dry hay per acre. In ern county, California, one further keeps twenty head of sheep per acre the year round. Another near tsan Jose pastures six cows on three and one-half acres. In 8an Bernardino F-D-P-E which k to my, Perry Davis’s Pain Killer ‘ Otptta Ckrsi ABM, ct W«rr«etn (Mam.) Fin Dqnrt^uat, «*y»: After the doctor sot Cm LroSeo bone I us«4 Fain Killer as a Uni- ■mot, aad It aend la a abort Umo." I Captala D. 8. Goodeil, Jr.,, of Scare pert, Maine,asya: - 1 know cf nc ^ G. CUDWORTH & CO., —WHOLESALE— 'BADDLLftY WAREHOUSE, 155 Meeting Street, Opposite Charleston Hotel CHARLESTON, S: C. . BIG INDUCEMENTS-NO JOB LOTS OF OQDS AND E BUT BARGAINS IN S STYLES AND BEST QUALE TIN SETS—none prettier. " if ] SEWING MACHINE* AS GOOD AS CAN BE M. AND AT PRICES LOW ENO TO A T T R A C T ECONOM1 BUYERS. t \Y '• •- » My prices will surprise you. It will cost you no si ve — — — YOU 2 to come and see, anil if I cannot S A VE YOU MONEY, time and trouble, buy wbere _you.'need not feel that you are under the slightest obligations to puroha me. So get your ticket via this POP ULAJl RO UTE, and come straight through i v FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE STORE.^ b * You • will get GOOD Rare Aim IN HONEST GOODS at the Z0B PRICES. The WISE and the ECONOMICAL GET OFF HERE. R. W. PHILLIPS. Oct IF- GRAND FALL OPENING -BY P. lattsr & Bro. GBtOCERIElS, J£ENRY BISCHOFF & CO., WHOLB^AK GROCERS AND DEALERS IN CAROLINA RICE. PROPRIETORS OP THE CELEBRATED CAROLINA TOLU TONIC. . , . ' t 199 EAST BAY, CHARLESTON, S. C LATEST STYLES! L JRGE8T SELECTION! LOWEST PRICES! Fcrtruieaa. apralna and cate, no madlaina that to mere affectiTe.” ! Datrld Pleroa, Utica, N. T.. asyp: " Per ento, I bruleee, burn* and apntoaa, it kaa nartr failed taadaLlacuia.” ^LVA GAGE & CO., CHARLESTON ICE HOUSE, . Market, Corner Church Street, CHARLESTON, S. C. JST’Iee packed for the country a specialty, S. A. NELSON & CO., —WHOLESALE DEALERS IN- BOOTS AND SHOES, No. 23 HaYne Street, CHARLESTON, S. C. ALWAYS FRESH AND CHEAP A i AT HARDE We have just received a fresh supply of WESTERN FtiOtJR of all g and more to arrivejn a few days, v * . < ■ - t • We keep constantly on hand SUGARS, COFFEES, TEAS, SYRUP MOLASSES. • t V-”.•••• <•' - ’ Also, SHELF GOODS, CANNED GOODS, CHEESE, and in fact i thing usually kept in the GROCERY LINE. BAGGING AND TIES, - JBOOTS; SHOES AND HARDWARE. , _ -W* A - t : J. H. HARDEN & BRO. An accident may happen to-morrow. Bur P*»RT Dawm’a Ptrw ITtt.iwd to-day of any Druggist IN THE rimr HOUSE. “Yes, sir: this kind of work obliges a man to keep sober as a judge. Of all men in the world, steamboat pilots and railroad engineers should let liquor alone. For on their clearness of sight and _ coolness of head depends the safety of Hfc uud proper- ty. ” Keeping his band on the wheel as be | said this, Mr. A. Brockman, of No. 29)^ Silver street, Chicago, added: “Of course, some of ’em drink; but the sober ones have the best positions and the best pay. Yes, the work and exposure sometimes tells on us: hut for my part, I find Parker’s Tonic to he all the invigorant I need. I’ve got a bottle aboard here now; never go on a trip without it. When 1 haven’t any ap petite, or am in any way put of sorts, it sets me up in no time. If drinking men would use the Tonic, it would help ’em V> i break off. (No, that isn’t a light-house; it’s a star, low down near the water, x As 1 was saying, the Tonie is new life bottled up. You see that flag-staff? Wed, with t bottle of Parker’s Tonic in the locker i Valiev eight cuttings are made nfimi-1 eanheep iiuvlariH as far from me as teat, ally. Another farmer in the same'; a tlnt.me. Ay wue has use 1 it for three , „ . . . . yeaistor summer complaints and colic, con ity grazes 1,500 sheep upon Ms. f irM , as a „ h , viB) , ni . tt hhe . s tired out airalta y giving them ouiv «>nt‘aero ja*r | fht* .^.iva iht* Tonic is a day, and when they are upon the daisy, th/xl-hyc: Don’t break your neck twentieth acre, the hurdles ate re- going below ” turned to the first acre, w here he finds Tins preparation, which has been known the new growth eight to ten inches I »•»‘’-M'Kkk’s Ginger Tonic, will hereafter high. In Dallas county, Texas, it is a success, two crops of two tons each We beg to inform our friends and pa trons that we can confidently say that our FALL AND WINTER 444444*—4 . »«.»iineie m every depart ment, and defies competition. DRESS GOODS, VELVETS, HOSIERY, and GLOVES, All of the VERY BEST MAKt's and Styles CLOAKS! CLOAKS! CLOAKS! in all the newest styles. 0_ W. AIMAR & CO , WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN CHOICE DRUGS, MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS. Perfumeries and Toilet Articles, Cor. King and Vanderhorst Streets. CHARLESTON. S. C. FALL Mil MITER =AT= FAIRFIELD COUNTY. L I have just returned front the Northern markets, where I have carefully select* irehased onepof tlie handsomest stocks of DRY GOODS ever brought,this n invite my customers and friends^to call and examine my goods before makin he advertised and sold simply mjder the name o Parker’s Tonic. As unprinci- pled d> alers are constantly deceiving their cuetouiers by substituting inferior articles under the name of ginger, and as ginger is realty an unimportant ingredient, we drop tin- misleading word. l l-ere is no change, hmeever, in the prepa ration itself, and all bottles remaining in the hands iff dealers, wrapped under the name cf Parker's Tonic, contain the genuine medicine if the facsimile signa ture of Iliscox A Co. is at the bottom of the outside wrapper. . * Among the contests for seats in the next Congress there will be several of peculiar interesf. Papers have already been filed with Mr. McPherson, the Clerk of the Ilous**,* in the following cases: From the Second District of Alabama there will he two contestants G. II. Craig auiPJ. W. Jones—for the seat of Charles M. Shelly. Bonj. F. Frederick will contest the seat of James Wilson, of the Fifth Iowa Dis trict. S. N. Wood claims that he was elected frotn Kansas, instead of Sami. Peters. George F. Garrison challenges the right of Robert AI. Mayo to the seat belonging to First District of Vir ginia. In the Seventh District of Vir ginia the certificate was given to John Paul, subsequently appointed United States judge. Tbe Governor of Vir ginia has made no provision for a special election to fill the vacancy, and it is supposed he prefers to wait and fee what action the House will take on the contest made by C. T. O’Ferrall for the seat. The most interesting contests will be between Chalmers and Manning, of the Secopd' Mississippi, aud Win. McKinley, Jr., and Jonathan H. Wallace, of the Seventh Ohio Dis trict.- These two 1 cases' ate likely ti occupy considerable time aud cause warm discussion. There were several etIter notice# of contest filed soon after The UNDERSIGNED ARE PREPAR ed to furnish estimates and to do all kinds of Kloase Building and Work. Carpenter being cut nnimally. It) Nebraska and Nevada it thrives as well, making, even on sage brush land, where, noth ing has ever been known to grow, over six tons per acre of good dry liar, and seed enough from forty acres to amount to $2,000 more. So much tor its productive qualities. Its value is incalculable. The testi mony of hundreds, as well as the care ful experiments of many practical and scientific farmers, proves beyond all I II/AITCL 1 RHIi controversy that alfalfa for h'orses,-|'A-*-'“* U A I A/AixvA. cattle (milch cows especially), sheep, and even hogs, as w ell as bees, is ex celled bv no plant. This is putting it pretty strongly, but it is neveitheiess trite in many sections. In (.'alifortiia immense herds of cattle are fattened exclusively upon it, they being far superior to any brought from pastures of the native grass, or even from clo ver pastures. In its green and dried state it is equally good for all kinds of stork. For milk it excels all other clovers,'both in increasing the milk and butter and improving their flavor Wycoff says: “For milch cows, it is superior to all other hay; it excites tlie secretions.” The State Board of Agri culture of California savs that the tes timony of all their dairymen “is that cows taken from the native grasses and pns.ured upon it will increase in product of milk, butter and dice-e from sixty to seventy per cent., and that sheep growers state that jbeir flocks grazed upon it are entirely free from the skin disease so prevalent in California.” ,.i, u ... From California alfalfa is being pushed rapidly eastward. Colorado is fast becoming’green with it. So far it lias failed nowhere where it has re ceived any attention the first season. Three and four cuttings, producing from five to nine tons per acre, were made on a farm adjoining our college grounds, last summer, and tbe hay has been sold, baled, at $18 and $2Q per ton. Our eastern friends will find alfalfa, in their alluvial soils, much more profitable and better than clover or tbe grasses. Only oue difficulty WINTER CLOTHING AND FURNISHING GOODS ! ! For Men, Youths, Boys and Children, at EXTREMELY LOW PRICES. W HITE GOODS. —• A’ • ^ i Our stock ig.quite full of all of the best brands of Longcloths, Shirtings, Sheetings, Twills and Drillings. Ail of the above goods are offered at the Lowest cash prices. , Therefore an early call of inspection is cordially solicited. N . P. LANDECKER & BRO. II MACHINERY, OF ALL KINDS FOR SALE BY We invite every citizen of the above- ’■*- 2*- ’ named County, to call at our Store and ex amine our new FALL AND WINTER GOODS. .u tv./ One of our firm has but recently return ed from New York, where the utmost care was used in order to get the best , BARGAINS. We have succeeded ih buying a good stock and buying them so cheap that we can sell them at SHORT CROP PRICES. Our stock is too varied;to quote different articles and prices,' hut we ask you to call and see for yourselves. In DRY GOODS We have everything- from a common Checked Homespun,.At three cents, to the nicest DRESS GOODS and NOTIONS in great variety. The cheapest and best HOSIERY, for the money, to be had any where. Our STOCK OF CLOTHING Is fuller than ever, and at prices that .can’t be BEATEN- Nice quality, nic6 styles. ..A good suit from $3.00 up. Hats in all qualities and styles, so we can suit everybody, from a twenty-five-cent man to the most fastidious. ■p. ' t , ; r We have used more than ordinary effort to get a — examine my gt purchases, feeling that I can suit tlie taste4 v of the most fastidious. LADIES’ DRESS GOODS in-all the new styles and colors, Changeable Wo: Alpacas, Cashmeres, GinghdmS, Shirtings, ^Domestics, Flannels, etc , etc. Otu of PIECE GOODS is complete, and at low figures. , ...... .a Our Goods' will satisfy tlie most critical demands, and prieds favor tlie pure These Goods only need to be seen to be appreciated. PRICES TO SUIT THE T .iM^IlsTTS I jPE^IISTTS I ' • . -4. . * ii a . ■ • • . . Ladies are cordially invited to call and inspect pur mammoth line of PRINTS, never has been such a handsome and extensive collection of new and desirable i placed on our counters. All standard and reliable bra (ids.. Prices will be entire isfiictoiy, and'the only difficulty the purchaser need experience will be to make a tion from such an immense variety of desirable patterns. TSTOTioisrs i lurcTJonsi r i Novelties in Nottingham Yalenciennfe and Linen Fichus, novelties in Cream, an/ White Ties^ and ah styles of Laces. Also, a beautiful line of Ladies’and ( A good s Silk Handkerchief*; real 'Torchon Lace (Spanish) in Cream and .Black, in Pink arid Blue Mull, suitable for ladies’ neck wear. ‘ GIVE ME A CALL. Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. No trouble to show t Polite attendants ready to serve all visitors. ' L, SAMUELS. J3ST RECEIVED AGAI TEN THOUSAND “SUGENHEIMER’S CHOICI * - **’4 V * * * L . .S ~ CIGARS. A GOOD TEN CENTS CIGAR SOLD F FIVE CENTS A PIECE. TEN BARRELS OF VERY FINE PURE NORTH CAROLINA CORK .wfrlSKE THE OLD CROW W HISKE ALWAYS ON SJND. -AT- .\11 work entrusted to us will have PROMPT ATTENTION. Satisfaction GUARANTEED. W. A. ROMEDY, Oct 25-fxtf W. II. SMITH. * Defclr»bif Residence for Sale. T HAT FINE RESIDENCE, with out buildings ami magnificent grounds, belonging to Mrs. Boyiatou. Ternis liberal. Apply to : v. JAS. H. RION, Attorney! Oct 2Mxlaw4w* J. F. McMASTER 4 CO. STOCK OF SHOES That will lust exactly please the people of this COUNTY, and the way they are selling proves that we have got just the right kind. Every pairGUARANTEED— Men’s, Ladies’ and Children's. FOB £.4XE. I OFFER for sale my house and lot Ih , Wiunsboro, on Garden Street, contain ing one and a quarter acres, inoie or less, and adjoining lots of J. W Bolick, P^ed Steele and others. For terms apply to Jas. G. McCants, No. 6,.Law Range. ' •*•’* * JOHN W. PURCELL. Oct 30-fx2w # —Fay up your subacriptiou/ WATERTOWN ENGINE. BALL HAND COTTON PRESS. LITTLE GIANT HYDRAULIC PRESS. CHAIN AND ROTARY HARROWS. OLD HICKORY WAGONS. WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE ■ • . 1 , • -* 'i - v CORTLAND WAGON COMPANY, MANUFACTURERS OF PLATFORM SPRING WAGONS, BUGGIES ami , PHAETONS. 4" . •Give us a call, and we will sell you what you want CHEAP. J. F. McMASTER ft CO. We have a large stock of TRUNKS, VALISES, Etc., which can’t be heat. Also a full stock of CROCKERY and GLASS WARE, as cheap as the cheapest. STAPLE GROCERIES Of all kinds We endeavor to give the best possible value for the money, and to all who .accept our invitation we guarantee a just fCturn for every dollar they spend. COME and see. NE W SHOES -AT- TIIE CORNER STORE.* CALDWELL Oct 9 LAUDERDALE. TOOTH BRUSHES, H AlYt Brushes, Soaps, Bay Rum, Per fumery. Lung Balsams, LinajnenU, Warburg’s Tincture, Elixir Quinine and Strychnine; Extract Buchu and Pareira Brava, Eye Salve, Quinine, Cinchonidia, Blue Mass, and a -supply of other drugs and medicines, Just received by fc Kbtchih. McMabtkr, Brice &. —Bay State Shoe Soles secured by. tt genuine McKay Screw. J. M. BEATY. the GENTS’ AND LADIES’ FINE SHOES, ALL MADE^ OF GUARANTEED STOCK. TRY A PAIR. OFE FOR NEW YORK ., t TO PURCHASE FAEU HRY GOODS. THIS SPACE WILL BE RESERVED FOR NOTICE OF MY STOCK. 07 IMI. BE .AIT'S*/