The Fairfield news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1881-1900, April 13, 1887, Image 2
?:\
THE EEWS AND HERALD. J THEtow<
vVIXNSBORO, S. C. ! amusing- (c
I hoc 7-iorl on
WEDNESDAY, APRIL IS, : : : : 1SST. last tCll VC3
- : ; ; | the United
e.\s. a l?*r> lije, ) ; Messrs. lie
> ?d:to?.s t
W. L. 2fcl> 0XAL7>. f have COtlVll
*> ^ yatt Aiken. j - now pc<Ti
A telegram ou "Wednesday morning'! pr Cr.ulorn!
announced the death of Col. D. Wvatt : ',c r-^!nan
Aiken, at his residence at Cokesbnry, <-';C'r''l0rc V
at 7 o'clock, a. m. His death was not! n0
unexpected, as his critical condition has ; en{crl)!lse c
been known for some time throughout ...
the State, his death being- the culmiua- . * f '>l'^
Li * h.? ^1+ r
lion of months of pain and suffering!
caused bv a fall in Washington \n the 1 L
* V 1000 i sionailv to
winter of ISSo. \ f ^
Col. Aiken was a prominent citizen , '
of South Carolina, and in his death j C*CL}
the State loses one of its most honora-: c
ble, patriotic and useful citizens. In ; s ^u^-"
Fairfield countv his death will be cs- i mCl-*0;1
i LH Cllt 1 > yo>'
pecially regretted, being a native of! ^ ~
this countv, and for veavs identified sa_l>i'-tilh
- - . ' T keeping v,
with her neople unci her weiiare. in i . - i
SClGUCv;.
view of this fact and the high esteem j .
in which he was held we deem it pe-1
cnliarlv fitting that we give a short aS.?a"3
,% will do wal
sketch of his life. ,, n
Col. Aiken was torn on 17th March, " 1 i!v>01
1827, at Winnsboro, and received his Preside:;
primary education at Mt. Zion Insti- self to be 1
tnte. Leaving Mount Zion he entered response w
the Sophomore class of the South Caro- ican Fisher
lina College in 181G, graduating there- honorable ;
from in 1S49, being a class-mate of the lion of the
late Col. liion. He was then a teacher the last se?:
for one year in Mount Zion College into accou
with James Wilson Hudson and Col. i relations v
Eion. In 18-52 he married a sister of! ada. To c
II. A. Gaillard, Esq., and engaged in would be si
agricultural pursuits in this county which the J
until 1857, when he removed to Abbe- i in i;o burn
ville, where he has ever since resided. I but little gi
At the breaking out of the war Col. J 01' Canada,
Aiken volunteered in the service of his ; has arisen i
State, and bv his zeal and bravery he ; lion of oiu
i
soon rose to the rank of Colonel, lie ; ernmcnt.
was shot through the lungs at Sharps- j factoriiv a
burg in 1S62, and was reported to i The New E
1 1 ntntnomf IVOC I
Iia\ Utvil ixillCUj U.O 1110 vuivuui; [7vVi \.yj in.
widely circulated. After his recovery talelv in c
he continued in active service until fish,
tbe close of the war, \shen he returned
to Abbeville and continued to'tavm. in There is
which profession he rose to great jg j-lS yet bu
prominence. duce every
In the trying times of 1S7G, Col. ty. The i
Aiken devoted all the energies of applies aiii
body and mind to the redemption of We have 1;
the State, and was elccled to Congress variety ev<
in wnich capacity he has continued to tion, and }
serve up to the time of his fall on the troduccd 1
ice at Washington in the winter of The fellov,
:i.S83, which prevented him from at- Hudson a f
tending the meetings of Congress j that river f
hereafter. drcd and V
Ever since be has been a patient suf- point,
ferer until death relieved him. lion- su-t c];j noi
ored by his comrades in arms; elevated a;lcj a t]oz?
to positions of trust by his Slate; the ice floe
loved and respected by all who knew *t0 exercise
him, he closes his life with duty well -was purple
done and with the sincere sorrow of clung to hi;
the whole people of South Carolina. (he boat, oa
IMBMMMM danger of
It is said that the late Henry AVard ice drifts
Beecher would never quarrel. His drowned.
AAnT /Sn Am. fn/J O I "!, .. L 1
YY VII unc yv Aciuvwi m LJ LI o
neighbor's shrubbery, and the neigh- shore if he
pjHK bor called in an angry mood to have
* a fuss, which he began by saying: k
fc "Keep your cow oat of my shrubbery."
Beecher smiied and retorted: The siay<
"Keep your shrubbery out of my ought to hi
cow." bility wo
-mss ?g under the
Let those who think that the policy was they v;
of Cleveland's administration is rain- each man c
ing the prospects of the Democratic have the p
party ponder carefully the Rhode ing, as Ion?
Island election. In fact it becomes exactly the
clearer and clearer every dav that tlerer.
Cleveland has made himself the iudis- There w:
pensable leader of his party. Any there woui
other man as the situation now stands riage of j
would run aground in twenty-four learn it w:
hours. conviction
? - The lynch;
The possibility of establishing the Jutely with
identity of young lady who was mur- Qnlv twc
PVfiTvfnrr] nic-h- nf '<
VII llil/ UV/OV*U^V V* ^? Vi ? L
way near Railway, N. J., a fortnight flagitious, <
ago becomes more remote, and the that the lav
chances of bringing her murderer to jn gouth C
the gallows would appear to be very zens of the
slim. The situation in such cases is allowances
of course very exasperating, but we vet reac;ic(
can?t see that it is made any better by obliged to
haphazard lynching. order. It
*a . able rage <
The New York Sun savs that it is a ? ...
ranee inat?
curious feature iu pontics that some . j
zeaious juemocrats aave wca iiuoiu5
. _ LUC UOCa.
oi running Gen. Sheriaauas ue Dem- rpi ? ,
ocr&tic candidate tor President, while . ,
, ,, ,> cnargcd ca:
at the same time the General's IIcpuo- as ?,>v
lican friends were talkiusr about him 1,-7, "
or those ea
in connection witn the same office.; t- - . ,,
tim into Co
But as a matter of fact nobodv out iLe ..
? , ? , than a rep
editor of the Sun knows vno those . ..
.t - , , ti;c testimo
zealous Democrats are. lie is doubt- ,, n,.
. , We- *lic
less himself one, ana possioly tne onlv j
. , , ,, , - , * iiiowea no
one of them that couid oe found. I r?. ,
| Tnc iyisc
The Philadelphia Times says that this ' onr clv"iJlza
seems to De me proper ume iui" wmc i
one to disabuse John Sherman's uaiucl
of the belief that he is the mother of The veto
the Kepublican party, whereupon the our writtci
New York Star suggests that he is tive woul<
more like a stepmother. It appears to later years
us, however, that if his maternal than wis i
claims are to be recognized at all, that j few years
it would be decidedly better to let power was
him go down on the record as mother- par;1 lively
in-law. land has ]
Texxysox's jubilee ode for Queen
Victoria had hardlv been cabled to ; ^ ~ '
... , , - * .t .. . ernors oi t
this countrv before our -'poiiceinen of . A .
?\ , i , is to oe oos
the press-' took charge of ;t. It has 0.- .]1C
been subjected to such criticism as a 1
n.i iicdLs oi
common poet could not be expected to
nev?r luu
stand. The Poet Laureate, however, V ./<>. ,
having been raised to the peerage will w l"c i '
not be easily disheartened. But the .t l -~
English will no doubt take it as a
niece of unDardonabie impudence in j, .' l4"'",.'1 7
: * the "Philistines' to criticise their; ,
; , . , , , i eraiiv iove
f . greatest living bard. I. .; ,,
: ? , ! IS hlghl\' ]
Greatly Excited. the biil bac
Not a few of the citizens of Winnsboro objection=
have recently become greatly excited over r . *
the astounding facts, that several of their mere is i
friends who had been pronounced by their allowing t(
H': physicians as incurable and beyond all , . , ^
^hope?suffering with that dreadedmonster 1 - C,1-C:v
Consumption?have been completely cured same lime
by Dr. King's New Discovery for Con
sumption, the only remedy that does posi
tiveiy cure all throat ancl lung diseases, and misuses
Coughs, Colds, Asthma and Bronchitis. ?.unr? >)0
Trial bottle free at Monaster, Brice & ^ V
Ketcnm s Drug btorc, large bottles-M.W. IR J1
111
ambition of the editor , fo'Iy sustained by the country and
York San is not a little ?^c:i irrespective of party. Bat there
? - rr. r.vo monv\riiA Nonrj ? ?.a frrtrniAP/**.*
> rus contemporaries. liC u..,
irrepressible desire for the . w?h which he has exercised the power
,rs to make a President of .iias ?one a great way towaras deStates.
His efforts with ! siroyidg' its efficacy. It has removed
Iman and Cutler ought to ouch of that defcrerce which Coniced
him of the utter hope-' grass has heretofore shown to the obthe
task, hut not so. lie ' jcetions taken to any give: bill by the
ring away at one Coleman, President.
ta. Mr. Coleman is sam to !
. The Irish Qaosticu.
ol some sagacity, ami we i I
re-time that he will be in Salisbury jailers and well he may;
:> put money m this little ' for it is a battle of giants. Ap^arcnt>f
Dana's. ; iy he hath misreekoneu the temper of
? - | the English people. The Irish crimes
as society is afllictcc: Yinn ;5 (00 mnc;, for t];e nation whose
ntninals it will permips be ; constant boast has ever been that it
- => sianus between tne oppressor anct ms
promote ;.;e general wei-; vICti*a. At least this now seems to be
lj spr.iv the o; the tj;2 ca,e_ Tlic Premier vrill know
and oi iiic public it is de-, wjiat {0 (j0 jf j.* should happen to
onr?e i'j :ia\ e tno job done ; x-enie:nber that he v.-cars the mantle of
is possible. Hie present ; u^aconsneld. It was characteristic of
inflict::;;; capual puni-n- ^?cat Jew to be just as bold in
- Ci'i"de and muse ere ioi;^ retreat as ho was in advance. When
.cd by some device more j,c discovered that his measures would
Ith i he ?fi and 11111 oh Of i ,???. .iA l,n tv-is t horr* ilonf*
ihe pennsylvania Senate j [j-c measure?. he would never
:i bin prescribing electricity ; knowingly "bite a liic." It is emiicy.
Tiic hrst experiment riCJi'L]v proper that Salisbury, who has
chcu with irreai interest by gnccccdcd to the leadership of the
l^* same party should ijive due respect
;t cleveland shows him-! l**c sample oi liis oiedecessoi.
level-headed as usual in the j Thc Serais oppose the bill with a
hich he makes .to ihe Amor- vehemence that is unusual even in
iesUnion. He reminds thc political . discussion. Some of the
issociatioa that the apnlica- speeches made will go down to history
reiaiirttinif law passed atj 2S models of oratory. The Irish question
oi Congress must take jtioi! bas indeed as-sn,:ie(i va?1 P Poi-nt
Mic intones f,f all onr ' tion5* cxcitcs P^tbuiid interest
nth the Dominion of Can- j wherever there is any regard for the
!o a> the Union requests principles of unman liberiA.
itnplv a declaration of war, a he legislate e ic?oiution> ot s\m?residen:
will of course be v>nich ha\e been telegraphed
-to make. Yv'e rcaily have f;'01:1 lhis country 10 Gladstone and
eivance- against the people ukim. be unpalatable reading
and the little trouble that i0;"':JC -Lory government. It carries
s now occupying tiic alien- a Pr^tiy clear intimation that there is
own and tile British Gov- but )iltIc ^agreement among the
Ir will no doubt be satis-1 American people a? to the iniquity of
ujusted Iii a snort time.! bin. luc> uiiov., too, tinu ine
" - ! (,f ! his for those
ngiami lisuerman cs.ivt ex- j? "'l'
olre this couutrv precipi- thc>' wa!d f!11 lmU ""
1 great trar ovcr'a mess of Srav^>; ^tho problem.
The iJiflercucc.
j tjiC savjijjy that there is in fact no
atenoenevm nature wsiich L v<r *i\ .? ^ ^
. , *, , r dilicrcnce between the great political
t little understood to pro- . * ' .
, , 1 parties of this country uas latterly
now and then a new vane- : ? " r., >wx
. ... . , become quite common. Oi course no
rnc'P'? ..." good Democrat has ever seriously mlvC"1
;"i;,0i!s a,K- '-nag?. tended for a moment to countenance
.100,s am?1* ?*'? va5t such assertion in the face of the inhc:r
since the dawn of crea- , . ,, ?
rent rascalitv of the opposition, albeit
ct occasional]v we are in- 4. ,
, as we say, it is irequentiy made. x\n
o a positively new ivpe. . 4l ? ,,
. . ; . *: swering this cnarge, toe .vjw lork
t wno lampea into the icv oi ? ... . t,
, - . , * Star presents an or:irinfiJ view. It
ew davs r.2,'0 to swim aown
" ? , savs
or a distance 01 one nun- . . , r... ?,
. .. ... Tins is a great mistake, ihe gulf
ftCiiiwhiee mixes is a case which separates them is deep, and can
It is said Ihat his rubber neither be filled up nor bridged over.
L keep out the extreme cold.' It is in the nature of man. One class
n times he climbed up on i of mcu ai'tc m!ed .wil\ a ?csh'c; 10
. ,. ., X1 \ govern other people. Another class
mine inidalc 01 the river rijercly desire to govern themselves,
and keep warm. His face The" desire to govern others is u.-tiulwith
cold and little icicles ly based upon a firm belief thai it
s moustache. Ice froze on woald.be good . for the others to be
. governed. 1 his is quite natural.-?len
a::u ne sometimes ran 1111 ~v|10 jiaAC opportunities for educabeiug
drawn under heavy j tion and travel/ who live at case, and
\r. d.rt .?i ~a < ovn rc<.!! cn?r?iiv.r?.'l hvlnoirown Sell
vv uiu uuu uuu utijg ?> "
There would nerliaps bare appreciation, ;ae likel} lu think that
r,,. , . ~ .. their less lortunate ieilow<s who have
liuie lamentation Irora uie fcgeu the-schools, c.:;d
had went under. whose daily lot is one of toil, "Will hot
^ govern tnems6ives as weii as they can
? , _ . be governed.
lor.-.vi-.i: ^ync..tn~. jg cj(j s?ory. Js ji.g attempt
?c 71 ~ A to make other men good, iiut it has
J t/0Jluni^ v-oode j3Cen the iiarc{esL j0t> that man has ever
ive been, and m all proba- undertaken. Wt arc often to id of the
uld have been, executed evils which alcohol produces, but the\
sanction of the law. As it arc il0t a tithc ot'tli0 evils. which have
, -iii been wrought bv the effort to make
ore simply murdered, and otbcr mm- ^ T1)a, sccllliu?|y
ngageu 111 the business may praiseworthy motive has caused most
roua sausiaction 01 Know- oi inc wanaa', iumuiu uj;u manuj
X as he Jives, that he meets ^;C human race has endured,
law's definition of a mm- gainst Pharisaical^ motive the
Democrats announce the simple rule.
Let men govern themselves!
is no 1 eason to suspect mat xiiis is coining down to ultimate
d be in tuis case a miscar- analysis, and it most be allowed that
iiscice. bo far as \v c can {<}C distinction here pointed out is
is t;?e general opinion tnat fundamental. But it is not desirable
was a lorcgone conclusion. t0 rost o:i g.lc5l u broad ^ncraiity.
tug, laeiefoic, stands a'oso- There are other specific differences
out pail:a:ion or excuse.' that the near future will bring out with
> \ie\v a ma_? oe fa^h taken ujj possible emphasis. On the great
c.Cc \sas euliCi iiuerh qayition of tarill' taxation the parties
31 *c ^,J0'^ declaration uyc rAa]>,- cilvlilod by whole diameters,
\ is uielne\ab:v impotent aiK] ?jie issue has been smothered only
a.okna. i>iu ihe bc.?i citi- 5ecau;c a feVt- liepttbiicans have been
oil /l?o . .. . , , :.ur?
cwic, uiiti aiuttiuS uit ?uv unwillingly UiiOWCU iu v.nuiu
. do not tiling that wo have ^.,c Democratic party. Bat these "will
,t lhat ponii, where v. e aic ^ required shoriiy to move on or over,
ic.ax adegiance to iaw and aiK] tiien the counlrr will see whether
was simply the ungovera- 0r not there is any diSkrence.
Df ignorance, of that lguc- .
can never realize thobencfi- "Tslic the Gut of Tiitir o?':s
w until it is itself placed in ?ye."
The JYews and Courier criticises
tiliar atrocity of the crime ja.j?e Prcsslev v. ith some severity, on
Elliot in tiiis ease be invoked aoooullt of ce,:laia romrks which his
'''' exciiic. It .Us .!oto:.e Honoris alleged to have made from
?c??i!;cieto bi;ii^ J;e ric- ,jiC jjgm-ij 0:l ;![/. morning after the
art w#rc more heartrending yorj?vjUc ]pncbing. Our contcmnostition
of the offense. All
.. rary sa}s:
?ir ,0 t r?a i>ica vir-ie fivmm- 1 _ . ... .... .1
"* . **' \ ! Judge Jfressieys statement irom ius
Court was in session and bench, at Yorkvilic on Tuesday, that
symptoms of paralysis. an investigation of the recent lynchiiiiiL'
is simp! v a disgrace to i'?g affai.t ul that place or an attempt tu
t-0; 1 ' = bring the perpetrators of the deed to
the bar of justice would be a useless
expense to the county, was an unforcto
Gro-.vir.z ;n s-'avor. tunate plea of weakness and of a lack
i i i . i of faith in the ubilitv of the ordinaev
power which ? vested by; raa(.Mnel.y of thc CourU t0 el,forcc
i constitutions in theExecu-1 the law. Il will be used to our disaa:i
seem to be growing of; vantage.
; into greater importance I Yfe do not know whether Judge
ormerly attached to if. A ' Prcssiey used thc language which is
ago the exercise 0? this i attributed to him or not; but what il
very rare. It is now com- ; he did, is thc statement degraded by
common. President < leve- ! any suspicion of falsehood? This is
perhaps vetoed already as ! the point. If it. is the truth, why
as were vetoed by all of bis should Judge Fresslcy be censured icr
;s together. The Gov- j telling it? Our contemporary will
he different State?, too, it! have to give abetter reason for its
;erved, arc becoming very censure than that?"It will be used to
prerogative, and the oppo- our disadvantage/'" This maxim is
any proposed legislation i flexible enough to justify haif the sins
to appeal to them to oxer- of modern mendacity. The truth
>wcr. Many of the news-; about the matter is that we have in
sew York are now entreat-1 South Carolina a public sentiment that
fill to veto a high license condones crime and hunors criminals,
j been passed by the Legis- j and nobody is more responsible for it
at State, and as men gen- ; than the public press of the State.
if. ! iiven the ^.sctcs uiid Courier, which
probable that he will send j is usually ouUpokeu against lawlessly
to the Assembly with his I ness of every description,, has with
j respect to lynching for one ofTense at
no doubt much wisdom in : least shown a disposition to spare ti:e
> the Executive this salu-j mob.
on majorities. But at the I It locks a little hard that the press,
it may be seen that the which has contributed its pr.rt towards
be very easily both abused reducing the Courts to ;i:c* condition
1. In almost every case 6i_irapctence. should come fo.iward to
tas vetoed an Act of Con-! reproach the Jndgcibr having the
dent Cleveland has been candor to acknowledge the truth of
\
I the situation. Let the truth be told, wisely so, to seud their money intc
i the evil will never be remedied until community to develop and build it i
t xu where the people livinsr in it are afra
j . . LCl 11 .t0ld. unUI the to, or will not, put their own mon
j principles of the constitution are re- in it, and this has prevented sevei
'stored; until every citizen accused of enterprises that promised well fro
S crime, however humble he mav be, being carried out, to my knowledge
~ * i. 1 thisstate. Capitalists want the peor
untl even friendless outcast that &t bome iar^|v identified with a:
I siiivers in the clutch of the law will enterprise they put their money ini
I know that he will be accorded a fair They want this to protect it agair
I and impartial trial bv a Court learned local prejudices, adverse legislate
|, * . , . . and that it shall have the moral su
j| iii ti:e ia\v and capable of examining people living1 around it.
i evidence. * * * *
! When the State has been brought If this mill is built andlis skillful
I before the bar of public opinion and and successfullp managed, t.ie ac ya
. , , . , _l. . _ . tasres of it to vour town and conn
j triect for its deGciencies, when the ^ hrrly be estimated and you nev
; truth has been driven home to the will appreciate it until it has be
i neople that there is but little securitv done and you have realized it.
! r.?. i;<:>i.?u The neonle of this country mu
1 xvi WH- ill .JWUH1 vyai uiina, Liicn J V Jtuu , . * ,, ... , . ,i_
..., ? , ' * and eventually will, learn that th
iaw will be put down. never can attain to that high degr
Condoning: Crime. of prosperity and independence
which they are capable by followi
The lynching of the five prisoners 011ly ?|ie occupation. _ Agriculture
in York, as we expected it would, the basis of all prosperity and shot
excites a howl of holy horror from be encouraged and assisted in eve
our Charleston contemporary. possible way, but it can t Pl*o?l
Nobody who has anv regard for well alone. The pursuits and lndusti
ordered civilization can endorse or of every community must be divci
condone i\ uching. fied, and it is so done in eveij pre
* * * * v perous country in theworid. Lai
Xcvert!:< !(. ;>, we cannot go so far is the capital of the countrj, a
as so - iy with our contemporary, should be applied 111 all the puisu
"Ti:'.-!:;ui fler of young Good was bad which any particular location, c
ctioii'ji;. Inn the ivnehinar of his mur- mate, and facilities favor and m\i
ck-n-rs wa< worse." * * tl'No apelo- Then each pursuit aids all the othe
or excuses can be urged for the and I hey all grow and prosper toge
perp.-tration of this later and greater er- We pay at Piedmont $120,00'
crime.*' year for labor and service?, all
Wc do not think with our contem- money. Land has advanced in tl
porary that the lvncbing of this brutal immediate vacinity five hunaret. l
band ot murderous thieves, who*put cent, since the mill was built, and I
lo death the innocent child who caught people for miles around are i prosper!
them in the plunder of his father's as thev never did before. Iheyunu
fields, was worse than or ever com- stand 4the meaning and effects ot
parable to the crime that these diaboli- versifying the pursuits ot a comu
cal thieves committed. nity.
* * * ? No inland town in this country c:
Does net this consideration of the or ever did, or ever will grow a
c:tse plead extenuation of the violence prosper beyond a limit measured
exercised bv the Yorkville Ivnchers? local demand for the supplies requn
I As to the lynching of these murderers by a _ limited area oi country aron
being" worse than the murder of the it? without diversified industries in
boy Good, along with its concomitant We sommend the above to the cc
felony, who besides the JSTezcs and sideration of our Ijsiness men. I
Renter Ca" thi"k so?-C'oton6ia cotton factory will pay at Laurcus
'Vc can, and we do. And we arc, will pay also at Wmnsboro, and th,
. ~ , is no doubt but that it will pav at b(
morco\ cr, surprised that our Colum- , - .
i ? - . ... -nr places. Let us put our shoulders
but contemporary is not with us. We ' /
, the wheel and build a cotton factc
are more than surnrised; we are mcr.
f n* i j- in Winnsboro. \ve can raise mor
titled at the discuverv that a leading . , , .
, t.. , P, , enough at home to do it. Theee is
journal at tnc capital of the State can , , . , ,, ,
. tU. , . , , , doubt about that: a l that we wain
rise up in this dav to condone lynch '
,, . _ ? . , c , . sornebodv to push the matter,
law?to preach a gospel of such mam- 1
fest unrighteousness. letter jfroji north carolix
We deplore as much as any one the
horrible murder of little John Good. Mews. Editors: As^thia is holid;
No one would have rejoiced more than ine us give. u?. ^
we to have seen his murderers brought closing his books and amusing mm
to justice and made to suffer upon the 0Cltside of the3r covers* ^nr
galiows the just consequences of their Pc,nc*eiit thought he ^ou co ec
unparalleled crime. But with all few dots from this place for Toe Ne
this, we arc compelled to agree with AI,D Herald. . ... .
"our Charleston contemporary," that ^theiing news here is like hunt;
the later,is the greater crime. for flowers in lhe de?ert; cvc[y!h:
There is no way to measure the swings round in its accustomed cm
atrocity of crimes, but by estimating ma^u? lhe 10nti'ic cacl C?".
t-ie consequences which they entail to=ethei' almost seam esb. ou t
upon humanity, actual and possible, the easy, quiet and somevi at mono
.'m eet and indirect, and we hold that nous life of this p ace, won for it
whereas the crime of the murderers of ^alf truthful n?c name oi ax
! Qnod?oven admiffincr thfi Home.
coiisoiracy?inav have tended to jeop- thrifty old farmers,, and > 01
* - ,, .. . . r, ones too, are lending all their cu
arcuse .he lives of all the citizens of gies t0 the farm, such as is rarely c
\ork county* the crime of the lynch- played by the average Fairtield faru
crs tends to jeopardise the lives of all at this season of the year. This is :
the inhabitants of the State. Their intended as a reflection upon the go
... . ~ . , . . industrious larmers of Fairoeld. 1
crime is a serious offence against social - snpposed to be from the fact that
order; it boldly sets the law at aefi- cotton cannot be raised as a crop he
aiice: -it is a crimo iTt the Jiatnro ^-rnin crop rcauiro-earlier ult>
- fcason tion and a thorough mode of cnlli
' ,, . , _ tion. Wheat and oats receive a gc
It should not be forgotten, more- ratio of attcntion, the hill sides
over that in discussing the crime of already richly and beautifully carpe
the lynchers, before we can set down with growing grain.
ar.yrhiftg iu extenuation we mnstas- The fruit crop, especiallv peach
' *.* ^ . . .. , . are lost, owing to the late killing frc
cruris* fha m?i If thmi* T7ipfi7nc ann to _ . . ' . n ? , , _
C""*V"W """" ~ xLus place is uniavoraoie ior uie p
do tins we must accept the conclusion dtiction ?f peaches, it is sheltered fr
of a drumhead court. There has been the cold north winds by the B
110 judicial investigation of this mat- Ridge Mountains, which accelerate
tor?none whatever. b"drtj"S of th? treff',.but ,.docs ,
, ,. . . , ., afford an equal Drotection trora 1
And fiiis brings us to the considera- Spring frosts.
tion of another of the hard features Apples are plentiful here and
of the case. At the time of the lynch- manner of selling and buying difi
ing the Court for the trial of the ease ^aftf
was in session, and over that Court worthj or such a matter, the sel
presided the venerable Judge Pressley, hands out his vessel containing
; learned, painstaking and just. In- apples and bids the customer h
deed, in our opinion a more learned himself, and the amount taken denei
, . , . , \ . .. upon how much of a hog he 1?. x<
and upright Judge never sat upon the c?rresponde?t on sncb occasions h
1 bench. It cannot be urged that this rjght good size shoat
Court was unable or unwilling to ad- Some of your reader? may be
minister justice. There is no excuse terested in reading a description c
c A peculiar character who lives one n
for the lorkville lynching. _ The >rom the ^ he is nof a hcra
lynchers have trampled the law in the for he lives in a house and occasions
I rlnst. Thf? Sfafe of South Carolina goes out amongst other people. 1
has been unable to give five of her occupation is fishing. lie is a sto
citizens charged with crime that fair jeav-u SCu ma:i ?-^ seve.n\-'
" J . , . does he show msnv signs ot decli
and impartial trial which is guaran- except the silvery whiteness of
teed to them in the constitution. hair and beard, and it would be
It is a little too much to assume now easy matter to convince the in
that these men were guilty. This is skeptical _that his hair nor beardi
? , , been cut m the last nftv veurs; bo
(ne very thing thai we wanted proved, imr out on each side of his face a
and it is the very thing which has not reaching down to his waist, it is
been proved. And for ourselves we object of fright, while his hai:\ e\
respectfullv decline to accept the judg- ?re^tcl" j*.1 Pr?POi'tion, hangs do
\ _ .. n against his beard and forms a cc
ment o( the court' that tried them. D{ete and picturesque frame for
A Cotton Factory at Winnsboro. Strange, wild face. He walks \y
firm, steady steps, seemingly obhvn
"VYhv can we not have a cotton fac- ofa11 surroundings as a statue,
tory at this place? Why should we "ever dares to speak unless spoken
? , and then his answers are in ten
sjip ail of our cotton to the North to possible words; and often vague. W
be manufactured? It is needless to measured tread bearing fishing equ
. argue the advantages of an institution ments, he makes his way to the bai
of this sort, these are apparent to any ,wiiere' wj1^-tlic Iuck
> Allah, the fish come at his comma
i one. The subject of building cotton An all absorbing question in t
factories is now receiving the atten- State now is the Prohibition mo
tion of the people in many parts'of the ment, and it is thought by the time
Siate, and Fairfield should not be Dex^ campaign^comes, that the li
1*11 i x l x x prohibition whirlwind which is n
behindhand. Let us put up one too. stirring the leaves, will have taken
In Laurens the work of building a cyclonic force in North Carolina p
factorv is well under way. Uol. H. P. tics. Preachers preach prohibit!
f? -- 1 .,l!i
Ilammett, the veteran manufacturer, Jawycrs prouiDiuon, uuu cuu
. <"? president of the Piettoon,MUls, S3S
being askcct his opinion on the practi- with warm and common sense ent
cabiiity of building a factory at Lau- siasm, but must cross the line and
reus to be operated by steam, savs in moncmaniacs on the subject. Th
? t are some who have made such w
' * P1" " urensville derfnl researches in connection w
Herald: the evil* of dram drinking, that tl
Some of the best and most success- are prepared to prove to any man
ful cotten mills in the country, and at "common sense," that the reason -n
the South, are now being driven by Adam and Eve were turned out of t
steam power, and that is likely to in- Garden of Eden, was that Eve
crease as the country grows older, and drunk and then made Adam drun
that industry increases with it, as well Cain also got drunk and killed At
as many other industries that are likely Another startling situation: r/
to be developed and that can be profit-1 Vance, United States Senator, the ir
- ^ xr?cfrlrlIn r\ f
able here. I OI i\unu UftlUlAlia Xs7 ouuuutv v*
it strikes me that Laurens is a fence,, his .stomach anti-prohibition
favorable location for a cotton mill, his head prohibition, which will v
You have there many of the elements remains to be seen. w. k
necessary to success, such as an abun- Rutherford College, X. C., March
dance of the most desirable kind of
labor, a ijood cotton market, a healthy Wonderful cures.
climate, cheap living, good railroad W. D. Iloyt & co., Wholesale and Re
facilities, etc., and if I were consider- Druggists of Rome, Ga., say: "We h;
in? investing in a cotton milLthere, I been selling Dr. King's New Discooc
should not obipof ^orioimlv if xcoc Ei6ctnc JBittcrs srid 13uc1c1oti s .Arn
^ J " uJ + } uat " was Salve for two years. Have never hand
r,n iven s i - x . remedies that sell as well, or give si
1 he first thiug to do is to raise the universal satisfaction. The have hi
capital stock, and you must get a large some wonderful cures effected by tb
part of that at home. It will be idle medicines in this city. Several cases
for vou to attempt to raise it, or any pronounced 'Corsumption have been
aMarffhi* n!,rf of it elsewhere tirely cured by use of a few bottles of:
1~' iiic/>nr(>n- tatpn in conn
j unless your own people go into it ^on^th^ectocTBitters. We guaran
j i'reely and liberally themselves. Capi- them always. S;)ld by ITcilaster, Brici
J lalists are too cautions and timid, and Ketchin.
*
t _
i
\
) a legalized robbery. the middle classes who spril!
np , 7 * * i * "individual exertion," ami \
id Messrs. Editors-. I Ins article re- have "driven forward am
ey suits from my perusal of "X. Z.'s" talncd the civilization of tt
"a^ correspondence on "Taxation for teenth century."
'P Railroads." Perhaps if that writer J. M. Ste^
were to subscribe his own name, itsay
stead of robbing the tail of the alpha- \ J ,1 > ; ail
:o* bet for a disguise, more importance i w"a< -?*? * k"s"k*
^ might attach Vj wifat he thinks, or1 ~ ~~
pi what lie thinks lie thinJcs. Average *%..! 01 Ijj
Most of his communication is either ! creasing?Not i'i'Sliiene
what he thinks or what he beiieves, j Famine All OU
and he seems to infer that because X j ,
ity and Z are employed as symbols for |
'er arriving at the highest mathematical! ~ MODERN CCOKING- AND
CM truths, ut their logical correct- j;RN IIVING have brou:
ness mu-l inhere in anv conclusion -r.
5t> , , ,, - on. Jc comes upon us
ev asserted under their authority. 1
ee Really, the communication deserves wares. The patients
ot no notice, it*it were not for the preva- pains atoutthe chest and
V-S lencc of the idea attempted to be ex- , . ,,
plained; to generally assert that his- &nd sometimes 111 tile
tlcl tory proves a pomt, ignoring alto- They feel dull and sleep1
gether details, needs other authority J c*
>er than algebraic svmbols to convince": mouth'lias a bad taste, (
ies and to quote Bacon on the moralitv of ju iifl t
si- the question,is rather unfortunate. The ^ ^ mornin^. 1
>s- "bright young- nerr' who "arc led of Stickv slime collects
,or astrav" require a clearer source than ,T , ,/ m-, ... .
ud Sir F ranees, the man who deserted theteetil. 1 lie appetite IS
|fs his benefactor in his need, who used There is a feeling like a
;ii- the barberous method of torture to _ ,
te. extort a confession of guilt from a load Oil the stomach j SOHl<
poor preacher, and who", by his own ' o]l <y0ne sermti
tli- statement, was convicted in court of 1 . > ^ sone sensaxi
J.a twenty-three acts of corruption. the pit of the stomach
1,1 ''X. Z.'' must, also cite better^ au- r j j . . z
ia^ thority than the X. G. Legislature, food dees not satisty.
ier '-Bright young men" who are familiar eye9 are sunken, the
ne with the methods of that body, will , r , ,
n= not be convinced :i thiiisr is right be- and feet become COld an
er- cause approved by the "collective clamiw After a \vh
ill- amnim r.von CiaiIZI2JJ. XU-ltl <i VV II
1U" the thii;g in question bo the expen'di- j cough sets in, at first dr
tore of half a million oi tne people's ! , ,7 '
ull> money on a canal, that benefits only a a lev/ montiis it
[ul smail percent, of the said people. tended v,*ith a CTeer.isll O
oy "X. Z." says, "History will show . fx?
'e(l that it is the dutv* <>{ government to expectoration. ike p
f d0 f^cvcr will conduce to the fee] t; d n]l the whil.
" wealtn, power, moral and intellectual
;n- elevation of its people." Even Her- sleep does not seem to
1'a bert Spencer will admit this, (though , , c.
t I imagine with an alteration in pbsi- S,ny rest, A> u:l' a time .
' tion ot the words "wealthand morar*) conies nervous, irritable
-1L "obscured as his views are by a quarter 3,
)th of a dollar." Spencer and his foe, gloomy, and has evil 10]
to "X. Z.", however, arc at varieuce as Tljerc : y:
to the manner oi exercising that duty. 1DSS' . &lUUU
- The latter proposes lor our financial sort of whirling sensati
1GV am/1 /lorrtl/infMrvnf ?. ? . **'
Uiiu UiV/i ??i ? OtVr/UiU<<i? wwv?4?vkvv f I , ,
no from the public treasury." The form- .head win;il using UJ
t is er relies on that i Tresis table combina- denly. Ti)C bov/cls b
tion, self-interest and altruism, or /'
sympathy; that unaided, even fettered costive; use sk.m is dr
by government, has given to us our hotat times; the blood be
reluion; an immortal literature, a ,r- t : . ,1
av science almost divine; means of com- thlCK and the '
" I murtication and transfer wonderful of the eyes become tifigec
BTen for ibis age, that has worked oul yeUow; the kiJl.oy seCl
,e11 to its xmnute?t details the complex ? ' , ..
es- problem of supplying the daily wants becomes scanty and big
ta of a million people in one city; that ored, depositing a se<J
has reduced philanthropy to a system, rf .i ::nff '"TI (>? < i
AVS and has reared and maintained for edu- 211161 . xl'u<- 1
cation her choicest seats. quently a spitting np c
ing If government were infallible, more fo0d, sometimes wila a
;nfr reliance for our ethical and financial . . j ,
. D nroinotioii miiriit be placed in it. Even tabte and SOmem" \S v.
'l<;' its recognized function of protection sweetisil tns'tt.*; tirs li
fit to life and property is sadly neglected. quently niterAA with
ess The starving wretca who steals to / . r *? . i l
,t0. allay the pangs of hunger, is thrust in tiltion ot trie and
jaii, while he of standing who appro- luatic symptoms; tliovisi
priates thousands, goes unwhipt lo onm(^ j .5TV
?py enjoy his spoil. Proof, if yon require corneal Jipau eu, \\.Ui .,p<
it, is near at hand. Estate? arc swal- lore tuo eyvsj tiii.TC 'is ;
lug lowed up in the lega! methods of set- ingr of <vreat "p: o>'":itioi
er- tleincnt. Monopolies are allowed to ... a">; ; <<
lis- ride rough-shod over the community. ^Vtiakiie.s.s.^ Ail o_ t
ner His pets?the railroads?by their un- toms are in turn "pivscnt
not j^t discriminations, are "killing all js thought tLat v-arlv or
od, points of no competition. Taxes are ? vu0u?, - 'V
his levied year after year upon a most 01 OUT popubron has t.ri
, as unequal" assessment, and if a person ease in soukm:! its varied
:re' SSf'fJif ]?',d'.th? ShakerExtnu-t of tfout;
pcuixU? Id <i? A 1<*A. U(AO Xk
v*a- confessed absurdity. Convicts are s byni])} oii:ir??r* tl
>od leased again and again to wretches mentsof tiio V>\y -sLvtVoi^
t.T-1,/% ot.rtnM Vio for murder. --j__ * . ;
aTC ii -/ OllVUiU ^ ^ - _ _
ted Lunatics are fed 011 rejected beef. The 3^ couv *n c 11: ?.ka : r u
expense of obtaining justice so great a form tnat \v;li g:ve IK
es, that the wronged arc often prevented ment to the feeble bod^
,st. ^*om applving for it. Let govern- -? ?
t'o- ment rectify a few of these things? good Ilea.'til is txie conseq
om "recognized 1 unctions''? as "X. Z." file effect of tills rem
lue tei ms tuem5 beioie he attempts our cTnrnlv iiT^vwlrtnc TVI
the "moral and intellectual advancement'*' bJJ1Fv * ,
not bv "bounties from the public puree." "upon mucous Ot bottle
ate Whenever government attempts to been sold ill tills countr
stimulate commerce, in nine cases out +rt?>+- .i? r the
of ten it commits either a fraud or a testimonial ,11 fa\Ol
ers folly, and generally both. History, curative pOv.T.l'S are
r0- of which UX. ZP i"s so abstractedly whelming Hundreds
e's foud, will bear out this statement, from n j y?
ler the common laws of England down to ' diseases un^tT "V
the the fixing of the rate "of interest in names are the result of
cip South Carolina. Bat as ho is familiar gestion, and when tLL
ids with it lor the last 4,000 years, it ^ , , ' . , ,
>nr would be useless to mention any of its trouble IS removed tlie
- ? rpcords. "X. Z." says tnat in o.u* diseases vanish, for the
country the people will contend that , e
in- the majority have the right morally to ^ SJUlp.01113 Ox tH<
,i a do what it* pleases regardless of'the maladv.
>!' "??or.i7- TC jJear sir. Testimonials Iromtiiot
lit, be misleading and obscure. What ? , , . :
lly you mean is, I suppose, that the P* peop?e Spt-.^iUg Jiigi
[lis majority and not the people will con- its curative properties
mt, tend for that doctrine of might. And +L'0 w^,l J1/,',]-; ' e
,01- ret I doubt if the proposition, as flS beyond a uOuut is
ne, framed by yourself, of the right of the druggists.
his majority would be sustained even by ?
os't a Encoin-a^e everything hat the hard- MflfFfltt'C! I l frjlt
iad working man who is trying to make If I Ulifl L L U JJliLl
ilg- an honest Jiving, seems to be the pau- ?
md sicca for a periodic depression in busian
n ess, offered to us by the. disciple of it ki .
ren the new commune. LOllOU PI ZLVl
vvn Prussia seems to be "X. Z. V model W WVMA A ?
>m of a government. Paternal in the
Iiis extreme, aiui yei, suangc iv cai,
ith children are fleeing' from her to people "WILL OPEN, DROP AND
ous the rest of the world, with not even (vnt aw t avd
He the Chinaman's desire to ever return
to, to the Fatherland. Prussia?the home
est of despotism and its child-socialism, ?
ith voar future requires 110 prophet to
in- reveal, "lour present status depends wur
nks for existence 0:1 the hand of the old 1
of man who created it. Bisinarok alone
nd. can maintain it. t) r /\ trr q nn /~\
;his "Columbus would never have dis- i L U V> O JL w
ve- covered America if Ferdinand and
the Isabella had not given him the people's
ttle money to further his project/' savs LOXG- HANDLES, BOLTED T<
ow "X. Z." LIow does that strike you as FORWARD OF THE FO<
on an argument? Columbia gained
oil- chains and a pauper's death from the .
on, monarch who was so liberal with the
ors people's money. The people had
ry- been si> paternally cared for they had The following Jiue of goods I
tim itinc.k' fa retain what had been gains in:
.ut. ..V,,. ,.,v ?
hu- discovered, and the fairest part of the r,. ^
be new world was peopled bv the indi- FirejP?Ss> S ovels, 1 ongs,
ere vidual exertionol those whom govern- ""clothes Hampe^Uanc
on- inents had forced into exile by its Lunch and Market E
ith tender solicitude lor theu spiritual
ley advancement- * Special: One New Dining-Rc
of One 31 ore quotation from "X. Z.'', and Two Wash Stands?nice ho>
iiy <4Weii South Carolina may sit still fa?ture?l ^<1 cheap.
:he in poverty and ignorance, and sneer J. HCLM3II
?Ot at a rich and powerful people and at Headquarters for Stores, Tinwa
k." the methods by which they acquire wa? ai"*' <^00^s' ^arr'a^e an<
>el. wealth and power, but the world will 4 <TI
'eb not concede us the importance tnat
ian we arrogate to ourselves."' POPTV "K"TT T 1
the Allow me to somewhat change this
ist, senteucc. We in South Carolina may
i*in endure our poverty and ignorance, "" **"
and despise the methods by which a
24. rich and powerful people strip us of A SAFE AND EFFECTUAL CL
the pre coeds of our labor to acquire HARD AXI) SOFT
wealth ind power, and it the world tails
tail to concede to us its admiration, there
ive remains for us the still higher consola- ^ORXS, BUNIONS, WAR1
!?7j tion of banding down to our posterity
lj?*1 a heritage tarnished by no dishonor, ALSO,
iCk and an unalterable conviction that
2en poverty and ignorance are not the A LOT OF TOILET AND L*
ese "worst of crimes, nor wealth and power
of the highest virtues. DRY SOAPS, JUST RI
en- Fight! you "bright young men!" CEIVED WD FOR
^r* No mat:er who leads, whether Herbert \
Spencer or the Devil, fight monopolies f SALE BY
and communism?the upper and nether
* millstones that are grinding to dust ? AIH
|
v a vr s r i ptt a t t>t?tyfi_ ?1.10.000.
' a * B
I ? II111 I
" JVc do hereby certify that ire supervise
i;jj; j the arrangement* for all the Monthly a Jid
Itiiu Sani- Annual J)rating* of The Louisiana X
State Lottery Cu.'Wny. a id i,i personmanage
and contrvl (he JJraicings themselves,
ife DC- and t'nat the <;re conducted with hoiiesty,
fairness and in good faith, toicard all
6? partus, and >cc authorize the Company to
use th is certificate, with the facsimile!) of our
* .. signatures attached, iii its advertisements."
B
jiovp ^
Commissioners.
bide*., We them dersigned BarJ:s and Banker* J
tack. tciU pay all Priz^x dra-m in The Louisiana. '
State Loiteriex which may be presented at
the our counters.
J . J. H. OGLF.SIJV, Pre*. Louisiana. Xat. Bk. .
JSpeCl- PIERRE I.AXACX, Pres. State Xat. Bk.
k c/-jt4 A. BALDWTX. Pres.Xew Orleans Xat. B k
bOI l CARL XCHX, Pres. Unioa Xational Ek. L
about ? M
i , XPKECEDEXTED ATTRACTION! V
i pOOr. ^ OVEK HALF A MILLION DISTK1BTTED. *
heavy Louisiana State Lottery Company.
)times Incorporated in 1SGS for 25 years by the
T-A/vicIO+IITV* fnv oi->/l OliarifilWo
OIL at purposes?with a capital of $1.000,000?to
-i - r which a reserve fund of over $550,000 has 1
wnicn since ->een added. >
rpi _ By an overwhelming popular vote its
i.ue franchise was made a part of the' present
"U^nrlc State Constitution adopted December 2nd,
nanus A D ls79
li feel The only Lottery ecer voted on and endorsed
by the people of any State.
tile S j It nctzr scales or postpones.
.r ly.-..*- *ts Grand Single Xumter Drawings take
) j DUO place Monthly, and the Senii-Annnal
, Drawings regularly every six months
IS at- (.June and December).
, a SPLi::ii>II) oi'fciitixity TO
olored wis a fobtixk. fifth ghaxd
drawing. class x, in the academy of u
atient music, new oh leans, Tuesday, may
j . 10,1887?20ith Monthly Drawing
e, iuiu UAJt*?TAJLi ^ioV,UW.
iFord STXOTICE.?Tickets nre TEX DOLLAKS
ONLY. Halves, $5. Fifths, ?2.
he be- Tenths, ?1.
j LIST of tsizes.
1 aD<^ 1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF $1.30,000. .?150,000
vl"Knr) 1 GRAND PRIZE OF 50,000.. 50,000
I GRAND PRIZE OF 20.000.. 20,000
10SS a - LARGE PRIZES OF 10,000.. 20,000
\ 4 LARGE PRIZES OF 5,000.. 20,000
OU in 20 PRIZES OF 1,000.. 20,000
50 -do 5C0.. 25,COO
) sua- 100 do ."00.. 30,000
2oO do 200.. 40,000
ecorne 500 do ico.. 50,000
1 1,000 do . 50.. 50,000
y APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
COineS 100 Approxi't'ii Prizes of $*00.. $:w,000
vli'teS 100 (1? 1:0 200.. 20,000
i . . 100 do do 100.. 10,000
I with ?.? .
etioilS 2,179 *>rizcs> amounting io $.335,000
. 1 Application for rates to clubs should be made
rll COi- only to tl~.e oili.-e of the Ccmcaay in New
f. Orleans.
iimeilt For rurtlier Information writ* clearly, giving
full address. POSTAL NOTES, Express
S Ire- Money Oraors. cr v.-York Exchange in ordi- ?
r ,i nary letter. Currency i>y Express (at our ex- .
>1 tile pense) ncdrcs&d
M. A. DAUPHIN,
SO Ul New Orleans, La.,
\*"K o | cr M- A. DAUPHIN.
?* v. asmiigton, u. v.
> fro
palpi. Maks P. 0, Money Orders payable
Asii. and address Registered Letters to .
' ' NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, 1
Oil be- New Orleans, La.
>ts be- P "P,\'TFA4"R1^"P Tliar the presence of
r i XS.J2.XL 1\. Generals Beauregard
it K.'cJ- and Early, who are In charge of * lie drawings,
, | is a guarantee or absolute fa mess an-J lnteg1
<1I-U rity. iliat tiie chances are ail eoual. and that
Syill])- J|0 onc ^n_ r^slSly divine whaz numbers will
If REKJIjIBER That Four National Banks
'* ? guar.-iHC-e tLe payment of Prizes, and that all
if-lv 'f Tickets bear the Signature of the PresIdentOf
an Institution, whose iranchlse is recognized
US (i;s- is ihe hlgh-cSLCourrs, therefore, beware of any @
imitations or anonymous schemes. ApH3 - zm
forms. ? I
5 Who Pome? i 'tt H
10 Ur" If? ilU itliliB* Qj
;:m:s so J
>::nsli
U and
nencc. r *
nay is T APPEAL TO TISE STRONGEST
il)inn-- -* seutiuifuiyou knew in asking to try
..iiio.ls my tailor-made suits and my low prices.
S lifive ^'s t0 y?Ui' ov;u interest. "You will be *
j gainers by [ in the satisfaction of long
y, and wear and* the secyrity o/ my guarantee.
" ,.f no It's beyond the ability of an expert in
cloth to lc?:iw what is in it by looking at
'OV<,r- it. Only one oi" long experience in th? r ^
r work kiiows ;o\v to ferrit out whether the
Ol bO- ^ cloth!::*: is carefuily made. You may be a
rni"'o!is i judge or uiay not. *1 take both risks from -j ?
. .' .. I vour shoulders. *
llidl- " It's thu fairest bargain I know?to make
S one you sure of the quality and the work: tell
you plainly what sort*it is, and make you
Other feel safe in trading here.
Can you fare as well as that anywhere?
y Could i do it if I did not have confidence
0 real *n t-ie manufacturers that make these
tailor-made garments? You shoot wide of ?' _ !
the mark and miss getting the best for
1WT!,] > your money if you buy without seeing my
5* ^ beautiful stock of clothing, and what it ' sm
Jiy of sells at.
idby THE Horam
Do no!, neglect this opportunity. I have
received a quantity oi' knee pants suits
from four y^ars to eleven years, and.they *
?"!! r*.v of
?.0 ^ ? hi ti- ?i j . > i- i 'iin n j - i j? vu, <?w
H r Ml! lllst -ou Vv'-' )UV:'li:;'^ Vi'"r,c to keep from
1 Ub li buying 1 v.iii not name the price
here, but p r e f i' r y o "u' > h o u I;' call and see
these suits ana "lenrn the price. This is
the b?'sr o:)p:)' tuiiity you will have this
a:?iM season to secure a bargitiu fora mere trifle.
wJc ?a No such barons ever offered in this city
' beforr. These suits are well made and
cut in the latest style. Now, don't wait
until the last moment and expect to get
rnVFR your choice. If you do you will miss it,
for these suits wiu go with a rush. When
you are here ask to see the DE^KEHONT
and DEAN Suits, the latest novelties'1 in *?
j boys' suits.
55 ATS.
>T You will find the latest styles. The
YEOMAN and theDUNLAP BLOCK are
among the novelties in this line. Justre/"*<
T7" ceived a line of silk hats?Broadwav style.
L TV, I am the agent fvr the celebrated ?)unlap
Silk and bull nats.
-^- This line cf goods must bo. scon to be
appreciated. Ail thy Ir.ading styles of
fine {rents' shoes can he found here. The
Waukenphast and Broadway iasts are the
favorites. Call and 2ee this magnificpnt
stock of Clothing, Gents' Furnishing
offer ->ar- (^00(j3t <?tc., before you purchase elsewhere.
Yet: will save time and money by.
trading here. Kespectfnlir,
31. L. KIXARD,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
trybaskets.
? ,j
a?ga rT^irs^-r2iS7?r.v^wga3Bg?g;e3^ J
om Safe '
?e rnanuSGS.
re, House '
1 | ADVERTISERS
can learn the exact cost
- of any proposed line of
TF FOR advertising in American
papers by addressing
t.s, &< . Geo. P. Rowel! &. Co.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
10 Spruce St., New York.
^Snd 10c ts. for tOO-Pacje Pamphlet.
BLUE CASTILE SOAP,
'* WHITE CASTILE, Cutieura and Carbolic
Soaps, Elegant Toilet Soap, Handkerchief
Extracts. Cologne and Toilet
Water. Also to arrive, Colgate's Toilet
Soap and Extracts. f)
EX. McMASTEK, BRICE & KETCHIX.
'