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J -L-L..1 i. UumnrottB.-' D*ddj's BoyT ^ In a certain small town en tbo Mississippi lived a man who inado horso trading a business. IIo bought up horses for a city markot, and was considered pretty good on a trado. Ono day, a long, loan, queer, groon looking specimen of tho western country arrived at dock with a boat load of horses, lie inquirod for tho horee-jocky. * D.iddy sent mo down with some horses/ ho said, in a halt idiotic tono. 4 Who's he ?' 4 Daddy.' 4 What do you want for your horsos 1' 4 Daddy said you could sot your price,' was tho response. 4 Let mo go down and look at your horses,' said Brown, and accordingly they woro soon at the boat. Brown cxamLod the horses, and named the price ho would give for this ono and that, and the country bumpkin made no ohjoc tion, although somo of tho oifers were not moro than one half tho roal prico of tho animal. One of tho bystanders gently suggested to the countryman that ho was being cheated, but ho returned : 4 Daddy said Brown would set tho prico himself,' and 60 Brown had it all his own way. At last they cumo to another animal which did not look much superior to tho rest. 41 must have more fur that an ermal,' said tlio fellow. 4 Daddy says lie can run somo.' 4 linn?' said Brown, 4 that nag can't run worth a cent.' 4 Daddy said so, and daddy knows.' 4 Why, I've got one up at the stables that would beat it all hollow.' 4 Guess not,' said the follow.? 4 Let's try 'em. I'll bet the whole boat load of horses on 'im.' Brown Smiled. 4' I'll stako fivo thousand dollars against your boat load,' said Brown, winking to the crowd, 4 and these men,' selecting two, 4 shall hold the stakes.' Brown's fivo thousand dollars was entrusted to one, and the other went on board the horse-boat. One of the crowd started to remonstrate with the poor idiotic fellow, but he only responded : 4 Golly ! daddy told me ho could run some, and daddy ought to loso 'cm if ho was sich a tarnal fool as to tell me that when he could not.' Brown's sleek racer was brought down, and Brown mounted him. The countrymun led out his animal and climbed on his back, look ing as uncouth and awkward as the horse he proposed to ride. The word was given, and they Started amidst the laughter of the crowd. At first Brown was ahead and it looked as though tlie poor fellow was to be badly beaten, when suddenly he plunged tor ward and the horso jocky was left far behind. Such going had not been seen in these parts for a long time, and poor Brown was crest fallen, as the cheers of the bystanders fell on his ears. 4 I'll take the sjiortdulix,' said the countryman, riding up.? 4 Dad was light. The anermnl /?/i m rrff tvtnttrl n little ' piuycu, .? tweeti them afto?IPl,"? lady boserve as a table. Tbc w)ibife*p_ to was hustled out. Brown tried to say it wns a j-?lce, but. tho fellow would have his money. 'I guess I won't trade to-day,' ho said, as he put it in his old, rough, leather pocket-book. 4 I'll go back to daddy.' In vain Brown tried to induce him to trade, but ho pushed off his boat, resolutely saying, 4 I'd better go back and tell daddy." Brown was completely sold, for ho knew at once that ti e gre-n countryman was a little shcwder than people imagined him, and had just come there purposely to win his money from him. Next time he did not ridicule a horse that daddy said could run some. ? 4 <M IIow Dick took, the Tuiikkys.? A story is told of Dick, a darkey, in Kentucky, who was a notorious thiol, so vicious in this respect that all thefts in the neighborhood were charged to him. On one occasion, Mr. Jones, a neighbor of Dick's master, called and said that Dick must be 6old out of that part of the country, for he had stolen all his (Jones') turkeys. Dick's master could not think so. Tho two, however, went into the field where Dick .was at work, and ac? cased him of the theft. 4 Von stole Mr. Jones' turkeys,' said the master. 4 No, t didn't, massa,* responded Diet. The Master persisted. i W..11 > of U.nr.H, ao lit TI'.I.L 4 I'll tell you massa, I didn't steal dem turkeys, but last night I went across Mr. Jones' pasture, and saw one of yonr rails on do fence, so I brought homo do rail, and, confound it, when I como to look, dare was nine tin keys on do rail!' ?- ?? A raw in a I^ong Island Church was, Inst Sunday, the sceno of a ' uchro i>artv. Two vonmr men P jr If' ~ '51 j - ".^.U '.'IL.. ' ' '-i'> -JL'~ '-? Influence of B*d Company. Oh JM- KoItAriV fnihu i.:.. playing with soma boy* who were rude unmannerly. lie had observed, fo somo time, a change for the woifo 11 hi* son, and now he knew tho cause.? lie was very, sorry ; but he ?aid noth ing to Robert at the time. In the evening he brought from tlx garden six rosy-cheeked apples put then on a plate and presented them to Rob ert. He was much pleased at his fail) er'e kindness, and thanked him. 'Yoi , must lay them aside for a few days that they may becomo mellow," s?h the father ; and Robert cheerfully plac ed the plate with the apples in hi: j mother's store room. | Just as ho was putting them aside , his father laid on the plate a ceventl ! apple, which was quito rotten, and de sired him to let it remain there. " But father," sail Robeit, " the rotten apple will apoil all the others." ' Do you think so ? Why should noi tho fresh apples rather make the rotten "one fresh ? said the father. And with these words lie t-liut tho door of the room. Eight days nfiei ward, ho a;-kud hi* son to open tho door am] lako out the apples. But what a sight presented itself? Tho six sound apples which had been so sound and rosy cheeked were now quite rotten, and spread a bad smell through the room. 4> Father 1" cried he, " did I not tell you that the rotten apple would spoil the erood ones ? You did not listen to me. *' My hoy," said the father, 44 have I not told you often that the company ol bad children will inako you bad, yet i you do not listen to me'. See in the slate of the apples that which will hap pen to you if you keep company with wicked boys." Robert did not forgot the lesson ? When any bad boys asked him to play with them, ho thought of tho rotten rtfptiD, and kept himself apart bom lli^W. ^ California Cherries Undo Ned is a character, a I genius, a philosopher. With all his professional antipathy to everthing certain, he is occasionally surprised into an acknowledgment of the in c r i ts M something brought to his notice. It may be nothing more than tho cut of n garment, the speed of a horse, the architectural beauty of a building, or tho quality or 6ize of some specimen o f vegetable prodnc tion ; but he immediately qunli fies his remarks with : " Oh, ft docs very well for these regions ; it wouldn't bo much in California though." Wo bad some very large, fine cher i^es on the table one day last summer. After surveying them for a moment, Uncle Ned remarked that they beat anythtng he ever saw, and then there was a short pause; " that is to Bayaround here." "Uncle Ned," said I, "you never saw a cherry in California larger than those." " Well, perhaps I didn't." '4 Why," paid I, 44 how large arc they in California, .and how do they sell them 44 Well," ho replied, with all the giavity of a judge, 44 that de; pends something, of course. upon , the season of tho year- They va , ry in size as well as in price.? IT hey sell them hy tho pound, and if you only want a few pounds they generally charge about 25 cents a pound ; but it yon want u ; whole cherry, they'll let you have it for 15 cents a pound." ? * ? 1 A LONO PjKANI II LETTER SAVS 144 I am informed that at How ; land's hotel there is a very unhap py husband. His wife, of one o the first families in Philadelphia a lady of rare beauty and aceom plislnncnts, has an ungovornabh appetite for strong diink. Sin has to be watched as closely as t candidate for the lunatic asylum to prevent her from disgracing herself and tamily at the dinnei table. When wine is being upo< she suffers the 44 torments of tlx j damned." The very eight ot ii I excites her much in the same wai that a red flannel petticoat stir: I up the cussednees of a mini bul j ?the figure is coarse, but ex pros isivo. She has no control of Imr self, and in order to keep tempta tion out of the way lier dinner! arc usually served in iier room.? I pity her, and fier husband more." Tint Exploration ok Palestine.? TIio quartet ly statement of itte Pal estino Exploration Fund state* that i new expedition for tho completion o the surviy of Palestine west of tin Jordan ia to leave England early in tin autuin, under the command of officers o tho Royal Fngineers, assisted by aap pors. Tho American Association wil fit out an expedition to carry on limu Itaneoualy a similar work east of tin Jordan. Rodtid Pasha, Governor o l>ama?cu?, i# aUo about to uudertak< and expedition, crossing tho desert hitherto unviaitsd by Europeans, be I ween Damascus and Petra, to the eai of Moab; and Mr Tyrwbilt Draks wil accompany tliis expedition if po&sitU | jv^balf i f the Palestine Kxploratioi k st' w i f j 111 U 111?li- J -LEngland has Uken another lo?.g > ?tep toward republican in?titulion*.? Hitherto promotion in the army bae r gone nominally by aeniority, really by 1 DUrellUHA. Th? Inrdt luia mirntina. r -" * r-'"? - ed the beat comuiiisiom for ibe vouu ger tons. Government 1ms made a neat little incomo by tbia mean*, but e (bo army ofHcers have been notoriously i incompetent. Tho house of Common* . passed a bill repealing the purchase system, and the Lord* rejected it.? i Thereupon the queen, by right of her , royal preogative a? constitutional bead 1 of the army, abolished the system by her warrant. The act of course, was j really that of her primo minister. Mr. Gladstone. Ilia bold defiance of the , aristocracy, and his abolition, by a i stroke of the pen, of one of their most valued prerogatives, has created no ?mull excitement iu Great Britain. The fact that the terms of twen1 ty-four United Stales Senators CXi pi re a year from r.cxt March, i lends coneidei ablo interest to tho . elections of tho present fad, inasmuch as eight of tho Stales, viz.: Kentucky, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Maryland, Wisconsin and Vermont, the Legisla 1 tares chosen will he elected with I reference to tho selection of Sena- j ? tors. The contest will, therefore, be a sharp one, and both parties j , will make every possible effort to carry theso Stales. A patient complained to his pysician that he was pursued by a ghost the night before, as ho was going homo from tho tavern.? , " What shape was it?" asked the I doctor. " In the shape of a jack- ( ass," 6aid tho man. ,4Go homo j replied the physician, "and keep sober. You were drunk last night | and frightened at your own shadow." A Lowell man, who had taken out a marriage certificate one day last week, wtie 6o disconsolate at finding tho brido to be dead drunk when he called at her house, that he at once proposed to another woman ten ycars-youngcr, was accepted, got a new ccrtiticafo. and was married, all on tho same day. ; B. WEHRLE ! fill AS just returned with a well , [jj selected Stock of 'WATCHES, CLOCKS,. JEWELRY, SOLID SILVER ASD PLATED Mil Table Cutlery, &c. 1IIS Stock was personally so lected from the best houses in his line, and can guarantee satisfaction. Oct iv 22 tf No CJood Health Without Flirt* Illootl. DR. C? LAZKNER'S s i' i k i; i\ a it i> 1 AND QUEEN'S DELIGHT ! | WILL PURIFY THE BLOOD ! i AND REMOVF. Liver Complaint, Kheuma' Scrofula. Carbuncles. I y&iM Skin Pusenses, Pains in the > I rTf--A Bones, Dispopsia, Diseases o > the Ki'lneya and Bladder, pain in tluf L Had? anu Loins, and all the various > Ailment* produced by Impure Blood ! and Vitiated Secretion*. J Buy one Bottle and try it, and if it : fails to give any relief, buy no more. DR. GLAZENER'S LINIMENT or TAIN E | EXTRACTOR is goo.t In Rheumatism, Neu, ] rnlgin, Headache, Puin in the Buck, . i Sprains, Ac. j| DR. GLAZENER'S FAMILY VEGETA3 RLE LIVER PILLS are sate remedial agents t to overcome Derangements of the Liver and o Porify the Blood. ! PR. GLAZESER'3 COUGH RELIEF s * f excellent for alt case* of Cough of any kind, | from Croup to Consumption; although not recommended to cure the l*U< r disrate, ' g*e<?t relief will (ollow it* use. t w The above Medicines are prepared only by PR GILES L. GLAZENER, Manufacturing Dmggist, 1 Oieenvil'e, S. C. f?f Sold by Druggists generally. May 10 1 tf i WM, j. Randolph! STONE CUTTER AND BUILDER. ' LOCATED on Falls Street, ono I m-j* 1111 " uower, Uox A ' t&Wl'f |\ MsrkUy'e. | |TEEr\ v* OllANITE of til dcacrlptiona furniahod and cut to order. TOM II' STONES, with Oranile or Marble W I'cdeetala nr.ajr be had on applioation. 1 Special attention guaranteed to all f work. jetr Ordera for TOMBSTONES lcfl with p Mr. It. Wr.nRt.ie, Jeweller, will receive my ? prompt attention. I Jan IS 86 tf DOOLBT'S ; YEAST POWDER llaa long been regarded aa the heat and 3 . cheapest Flaking Powder in tiar. Perfectly f pure and healthy. It make-*, at aliort notice, delicious liiectiita, Holla, Ac. There B , need he r.o waale of food prepared with It, I, aa it is elweya of the beat quality. Ws would aay to thoae who have never need 1 | it that a very few trials will enatde their I nto use it, not only with entire satiefeotiop |i hut with economy. Pat up h i.i,, nit weight, aa represented, Orocera and DealS, I era acll it. _ I DOOLEY A BROTHER, Trap's. 69 Nrm Sir ft, Kr* York CV/y. I April 6 49 6m # * UJ ?. JJJLJ '.J 'L^LLJjJlL1 JLMI CONSUM PTION. It* Cure and Its Preventive BY J. H. SCUENCK, M. D. MANY a human being hu passed away, for whoa* death there was no other reason than the negleet of k no tan and Indiaputably proven meant of enve. Those near and dear to fhmily and fHeada are sleeping the dreamless slumber into whleh, had they oalmly adopted 1>R. JOSEPH II. SCIIENCK'S SIMPLE TREATMENT, and availed themaelves of his wonderful effloaeloua medicines, thev would not have fallen. Dr. 8cbenk baa In hia own ease proved that wherever anffloient vitality remaina, that vitality, by bla medicine* and the direction! for tlielr use, la qnickened into boaltbful rigor. In this statement there ia nothing presuinptnous. To tbo faitb of the invalid la made no representation that ia not a thousand times substantiated by living and visible works. Tbe theory of the cure by Dr. Bchenek's medicine* is aa simple as it ia unfailing. Its phh losophy require! no argument. It ia sell-assuring, self-convincing. The Seawood Tonie and Mandrake Pills are tbe first two weapons with which tbe eitadel of tbo malady ia assailed. Two-thirds of the cases of consumption originate in dyspepeia mod a functionally disordered liver. With this condition the bronchial tubes Msympathise" with the stomach. They respond to the morbific action of the liver. Here then eomes the cuiminatiug result, and tbe sotting in, with all its distressing symptoms, of CONSUMPTION. Tho Mandrake Pilit are eomprscd of one of Nature's noblest gifts?tbe PidopblHlum Peltatum. They possess all tbe blood-searching, alterative properties of calomel, but unlike calomel, they 'LEAVE NO STINQ BEHIND." The work of cure is now beginning. Tbe vitiated and mucous deposits in tbe bowels ' nod in tho alimentary canal aro ejected. Tbo liver, like a clock, is wound up. It arouses 1 rouj its torpidity. Tho stomach acts responsively, and tbo patient begins to feel that bo is getting, at last, A SUPPLY OF GOOD BLOOD. Tbo Seawood Tonic, in conjunction with tho Pills, permeates and assimilates with tbo food. Chy lification is now progressing without its I previous tortures. Digestion becomes painless, aud the cure is seen to be at hand. Tbcro la I no more flatulence, no exacerbation of the stoI \. ?-- In I ""/ft"" Now comes the greatest Blood Purifier ever yet given by an indulgent father to suffering uinn. Seheuek's Pulmonic Syrup comes in to perform its functions and to hasten and complete the euro. It enters at once rpon its work. Nature cannot bo cheated. It collects and ripens the impaired aud diseased portions of the lungs. In the form of gatherings, it prepares them for expectoration, and lo ! in a vety short time tho malady I anquishud, the rotten throne that it occupied is renovated and made new, and tbo patient, in ^)l the dignity of regained vigor, steps forth to enjoy the manhood or tho womanhood that was, GIVEN UP AS LOST. The second thing is, tbo putients must stay in a warm room until they get well|; it is al? m >st impossible to prevent taking cold when tho lungs are diseased, but it must be prevented or a euro cannot be effected. Fresh air and riding aut, especially in this section of tho country in tbo fall and winter season, are all wrong. Physicians who recommend that course lose their patients, if their lungs are badly diseased, and yet, because they are in the house they must not sit down quiet; they most walk about the room as much and as fast as the strength will bear, to get up a good circulation of blood. Tho patients must keep in good spirits?be determined to get well. This has a great deal to do with the appetite, and is the great point to gain. To despair of cure after such evidence of its possibility in the worst cases, and moral certaiuty in all othors, is sinful. Dr. Schenok's personal statement to the Faculty of his own euro was in these modest words : " Many years ago I was in tbo lost stages of consumption ; confined to tuy bed, and at oue time my physicians thought that I could not live a week ; then, like a drowning man catching at straws, I heard of and obtained the preparations which I now tffcr to the public, and they made n perfect cure of mo. It seemed to uie that I could feel them penetrate my whole system. They soon ripenod tha matter in my lungs, and I would spit up more than a pint of offensive yollow matter every morning for a long time. As soon us that begnn to subside, m/cough, fever, pain and night sweats all began to leave me, and my appetite becarao so great that it was with difficulty that I could keep from eating too much. I soon gained my strength, And have grown in flesh ever since." ' I was weighed shortly after my recovery," added the Doctor," then looking liko a mere skeleton ; my weight was only ninety seven pounds ; iuv present weight is two hundred and twenty-five [225] pounds, and for years I have onjoyed uninterrupted health." Dr. bchenck has discontinued hit professional visits to New York and Boston. lie or his ton, Dr. J. II. Sohenek, Jr., still continue to sco patients at their office, No. 15 North Sixth itrcct, Philadelphia, every Saturday from V A. M. to 3 P. M. Those who wish a thorough examination with the Kespirometer will be charged $5. The Kespirometer declares tha exact condition of the lungs, and patients can readily learn whother they are curable or not. The directions for taking the medicines are adopted to the intelligence oven of a child. Follow these directions, and kind Nature will do tho rest, excepting that in some cases the Mandrake Pills are to be taken in increased doses ; the three medicines need no other ae* companimenta than the ample instructions that accompany them : First create appetite. Of returning health hunger iac the mutt welcome symptom. When it comes, as it will come, let tho despairing at or to be of good choer. Good blond ut once follows, the cough loosens, tho night sweat is abmteil. In a short time both of these inorbid symptom* are gone forever. I)r. Sclienck's medieines are constantly kept in tens of thousands of families. As a laxative or purgative, the Mandrake Pills are a standard preparation ; while the Pulmonic Syrup as a curer of coughs and colds, may be regurdod as a propbylacteric against consumption in any of its forms. Price of the Pulmonic Syrup and Seaweed Tonic, $1.40 a bottle, or $7.60 a half dosen. Mandrake Pills, 26 cents a box. For sale by all druggists and dealers. Wholesale Agent, JOHN F. IIENRY, No. College Plane, New York City. March 22 4G 1y Spring and Summer MILLINERY. MI89 MuKAY haa returned r^H^from New York, and opened an elegant assortment of " JKH M t L L I NBRY, consisting of Bonn t? and ilats of the la 0/?S i"l st)l a for Ladies, Chlldren and Infanta; also Rib* fill bona of all widths, Flowers, Laee, Set and Ilair (foods, Ladies and Chll* drena Suits. A?. AH order*. will receive careful mod prompt attention. April 2? 51 tf The Southern Hotel . II AH been refitted and A^l^s pot In complete order for accommodation of the ?j.?yW3H^rtmeeHne public. Rate* of Board reasonable. Call and giva ma a trial. J. O. YEARGIN. May 8 58 8m private Boarding, I CAM take soma POARpjCRS, ?<**?' by the day, yse> or month. The situation a dealrabla one pp Maip pfjraet, between T. 1 W. Davly' Wooden Store Room and tha Brlek > Stora Room ooenpied by W. D. Goodwin. A good TABLB will be faraiahed. RATB8.?Per Day * t 58 " Waak 7 00 " Month 25 01 T. B. ROT1BRT8. Greeneille, S. C., Jaly 12, 1871. 18-tf ..., " ? ... .v, -4 , .. .. _ * >. WM. P. PRICE, ,ATTORNEY AT LAW Wttt DAHL0NE6A, 0A., ILL pnotlet in the Counties of Lamp kin. Daweon, Gilmer, Fannin, UdIih Town*, White and Hall, Jan 10 S3 TOWNC8 Sc. EAST, ATT0RNIR8 AT LAW. OFPlCB in the OLD COURT HOUSE Middle Room on the Sonth Side, Lowe GREENVILLE, B.C. 9. r. towrh. olii t> near. Jan 4 33 tf THE HILLS HOUSE, ?2J&3UbS?*?3Jf C. ?. PARKER A CO* Proprietors. FIRST-CLASS HOTEL. BOARD. TER DAY |4 OO. Deo 8 30 ? CHARLESTON HOTEL CHARLESTON, S. C. | R H. JACKSON, Proprietor. A KIST1XT8 a niiTrrnrmn <(.. roerly of the Pavilion Uot?),land W S. MILLER. PAVILION HOTEL, ?m^i3iL,jastip?sy, s? ?. BOARD, Per Day - $3 00. R. HAMILTON, Superintendent. Mrs. II. L. BUTTERFIELD, Proprietress Sept 29 19 tf South Carolina Railroad Company* Vice President's Office, Columbia, 8. C., January 19, 1871. Chang* nf Schtrfule. ON and after Snuday, 22d inat., Passenger Trains upon this Read will arrive and leave as follows: tram no. 1. Leave Charleston at 8 20 a m Arrive at Columbia at 3 40 p m Leave Columbia at 12.15 p m Arrive at Charleston at 7 50 p m Leave Camden (Sundays exe'd) at...9 60 a m Arrive at Kingsville at 1 20 p in Leave Kingsville (Sundays exe'd) at.2 30 p in Arrive at Camden at 0 00 p in The above trains run In conncetion with Wilmington, Colombia and Augusta Railroad, connecting with trains for Wilmington, North Carolina an J with trains for Augusta, Georgia ?making close connections with night trains of Georgia Railroad and Central Railroad, for all points South and West. train no. 2?night ex press. * (Sunday night excepted.) Leave Charleston at 7 10pm Arrive at Columbia at 8 00 a m Leave Colombia at 7 50 p m Arrivo at Charleston at 6 45 a m This train runs in connection with up Augus'a trains, making close connection with Georgia Railroad and Central Railroad morning trains, for all points South and West. A. L. TYLER, S. B. Piekixr, Vice President. General Ticket.Agent. COLUMBIA, 8. 0 , March 1, 1871. ON and after thie dale, the following schedule will be run daily, Hnndaya excepted, connecting with Night Trains on South Carolinu Railroad up and down ; also with Trians going South on Chailotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad: Up. Leave Columbia at 7 00 a. m " Alston 9 10 a. m " Newberry 11 15 a. m * Cokes' ury 8 00 p. m " Belton 6 00 p tn Arrive at Greenville 6 SO p. m Down. Leave Oreenville at. 6 15 a. m " Be't?n..... 8 15 a. m " Cokesbnry 10 07 a. m " Abbeville 8 15 a. m " Newberry... 1 60 p. m " Alston 4 05 p. m Arrive at Columbia 5 85 p. m THOft. DODAMEAD, General Superintendent. M. T. Bamtlett, Genetal Ticket Agent | Schedule Blue Bidgo R R I /^V V ?.! tkl. J.sa. ? U? >< .>? iui> u>i<i iug miaowing rcneuulo % all be observed by the Puiengcr Trains over this Bond : Up. Leave Anderson ? 4 20 p m " Pendleton & 20 44 44 Ptrryrills t 10 44 A nr. Walhalla 7 00 " Down. Leave Walballn 4 00 a m " Perryville _4 45 " " Pendleton & 80 44 Arr. Anderson 0 10 44 In eases of detention on the O. and C. R R., the train on this Road will wait one for the train from Helton, except on Baturdays, when It will wait nn til the arrival of the Belton train. W II. D. 0AILLARD 8np't. E. P. JONES, AWWdDiaOTSgT? JSW MW, AND SOLICITOR IN EQUITY. WILL PBACTICK IX ALL COURTS OF THIS STATE ALSO, IN THE UNITED STATES COURTS. # Offlce Oreenvllle C. H., B. 0. Joly 7 lj* DENTISTRY! DENTISTRY! JQ. McDAVID graduate of the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery, session 1800-07. lesoeetfallv offers hli nrnf.?i/>n.l services to the cltixens of Greenville end surrounding country. Having acquainted himself with the modern improvement* of bis profession, he hopes, by strict attention to business, to be able to give sat is fae lion. Office on the corner of Coffee and Main Streets, in II. A. Canhle'a former residence, np sUira. J. Q. MoDAVID, D. D. 8. Mar 3 46 6m HI ON ET CANNOT BUT IT! FOR SH/lIT 18 PRICELESS I / BUT THE DXAMOVD 8PECTACLE* WILL PEB&KBVB IT. If Y?n Yalae T??r Eyeilihl USE THESE PERFECT LENSF^. GROUND FROM MINUTE CRY81AL PEBBL|8, Malted together,. and derive their nam* " Dltmond " on aeeount of t|i?|r Hardneee |Bd Bril)laney. They yill lift many without abanga. ami or* warranted or to all otoem. peoofaeipryd by n 'r J. E. SPEN8EK * CO.. N. V. Catmow ?Nona genuine nataaa atamped with otir trade mark. , J. C 0. TURNER, Sole Agent lor Greenville, 8. 0. Prom whom they ean only be obtained. No Pedlere employed. I May 10 1 ly . 'I'lULJJL'J?Ji-1!!1 !'?i. [JJUIL!iL"i ?. ?JL_ 8iXty-Fivo First Prize Med* ale Awarded. THB ORKAX bBH Southern Piano Jj' MAHorACTonr. W1W. KNADE 6c CO., Manufactnrers of Grand, Square and Uprigb PIANO VO H TE8, Baltimore, Md. THKSfi Instruments bare been before tbe publie for nearly thirty years, and upon their eaeellence alone attained an Nap.rrAa.rd pr.-enn'ncner, which pronounees them unequaled. Their Tone combines great power, sweet, ness and fine singing quality, as well as great purity of Intonation, and sweetness throughout tho entire scale. Their Touch la pliant and elastic, and entirely frco from th? stiffness found in ao many Planoa. In Workmanship they are unequalcd, tninr none but the very best tcatoned material, the lnrgo capital cmployed in onr business enabling ua to keep continually an iminenfe atock of lumber, Ao., on band. All our Square Pianot have onr New Improved Overstrung Scalo and tho Agraffe TroWe would call special attention to our lata improvements in tirand Pianos and Square Grands, Patented Angnst 14th, 18(1(5, which bring tho Piano nearer perfection than has yet been attained. Every Piano fully Warranted for 5 Yean. We have made arrangements for the Sole Wholesalo Agency for the most Celebrated Parlor Organs and Melodeons, which wo offer Wholesale and Retail, at Lowest Factory Prices. WM. KXA11E A CO.. Baltimore, Aid. Dec 7 29 6m IIllPoitTAftT NOTICE TO CONSUMERS OF DRY GOODS. All Ilttail Order* amounting to $20 and Off Delivered in any Pari of the Country Kit EE OF EX Pit ESS CHARGES. HAMILTON EASTER & SONS, OF BALTIMORE. Ml)., IN order the better to meet tho wants of the Retail Customers at a distnnce, havo established a SAMPLE BUREAU, and will, upon application, promfitly tend by mail full lines of samples of tha Newest and most Fashionnblc Goods, of French, English and Domestic Msnufaclurc, guaranteeing at all times to sell os loir, if not at let j>rtYr?, than soy house in tho country. Buying our goods from the largest and most celebrated manufacturers In the different parts of Europe, and importing the snmo by Steamers direct to Baltimore, our stock is at all times promptly supplied with tho novelties of tho London and Paris markets. As we buy an<l sell only for cash, and make no bad debts, wc are able and willing to sell our foodi At rr?m Ten to fifteen percent Left Profit than if we gave credit. In tending for samples specify tbe kind of gooda deaireti. We keep the beat grade* of every class of goods, from the lowest to tbe moat costly. Orders unaccompanied l>y the ensh will bo sent C. O. D. Prompt-Paying Wholesale Buyer* are Invited to inspect the Stock in our Jobbing and Package Department. Address HAMILTON EASTER A SONS, 197, 199, 201 and 203 West Jbiltimoro Street, Baltimore, Md. Dec 7 29 ly Ijggjg 9. Wiliib, rreprWtor. II. II. MeDo*AL? A C#., Drvniilt a 0m. AptU, Sm FrMKlvo.Cal .aud #4 CMiuitrrt SI., N.Y. mLLI?FT? Bear TatllMsay is tholr Wsaderftal Carailve BiScla, Tlassar Bitter* are *ot a vile Patty Drink, Mode of P**r Bast, Whlekrr, Praef Spirits mad lafaaa I.loaors, doetared, spiced and awsetensd to please the taats, aaUed " Tonka," " Appetisers," " Restorers," dee-, that lead the tippler an to drunkenness and rain, bat are a traa Medicine. mada from the Native Boots and Harba of California, free from all Aleakalle Htlmulmata. Thar are the QR1AT BLOOD PCRIPIKR mad A LIPK UIVINO PRINCIPLE, a parfaat Renovator and Invigorator of tha Brstam. canrIng off all polsonon* mat tar and reatortng tha blood to a haaltbr condition. Mo person can take theao Bit tars according to direction* and remain long wall, provided thatr bono* am not destroyed br mineral poison or other manna, and tha vital asotas wailaA kooanil tka m^lnl a# *?wa lea Ther are a Geatle Purgative aa well ae a Tealc, possessing, also, the peealler merit of Mtloi u a powerful agent In nlleriac Congertion or Inflammation of the Liter, and of all the Tlietril Orftoi. FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, whether In rout er old. married or ainele, at the dawn of wemenhoed er at the tarn of life, theee Toole Bitten bare no anal Far laflammaterr and Chrenin Rhenmatlem and (lent, Drspopeln. ar Indigencies, Bllleae, Reaeltteat and latormlttent Fewere, Diseases af the Blaad, LI ear, Kldaere'aad Bladder, theee BlUere hare been moot successful. Sack Dtaeaeee are ceased by Tltlated Bleed* which Is generally produced try derangement of the Digestive Organs. DYHPKPSIA OR INDTGBATION, Headache, Peln In the Shoulders, Coughs, Ttghtnets of the Chert, Dleilneee. Bonr Kruotatloni of the Stomach, Bad Taste In the Booth, Billons Attacks, Palpitation of tho Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain In the regions of tho Kidneys, end a hundred other painful symptoms areltha offsprings of Dyspepsia. , They Invigorate the Stomach and stimulate the torpid Liver and Bowels, which render them of unequalled efficacy In cleansing tbd blood of en Import ties, and Importing new life and vigor to the Wbolt system. FOR SKIN DISKAHKK, Eruption a. Tetter. Belt Bhenm, Blotches, Spore, Pimples. Pnetnlee, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-Worms, ScaM Head, Sore Byes, Krysipelaa, Itch, Scurfs, Diacotornttoniof tho Skin. Humors and Diseases of tho Skin, of whatever name er nature, are literally daw op and carried out of the svetetn In e abort time by the use of there Bitters. One bottle in ench ceeee will conVinos the most Incredulous of their curative effect. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood wherever you Had IU impurities bursting through the akin In Ptroplee, Brnptlons or Bores; cleanse it when you And It ebetraeted and ataggtsh In the veins: cleanae it when It Is foul,and yonr feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pons, and the health of the system will follow. % riM, TAPS, and othar WORMK, nrklaa to Um ayatemn of no many thouaanda, ara a {facta ally olobt'uIl DRuaoirrs and dbalcra. J. WiLUR, Proprietor. R H. MCDONALD * QQ.mnlau and Oen Agent*. Han Franotaoo, ?M , and TQ and M Oomjuaroe Street, New York. ptf For sale in tho City of Oreonrille DR. M. A. HUNTER A CO., Wholfaala and Retail Dealer* Drag Mediciaa*. Chemical*, Ao., Ac. Hay 10 1 GBORGB PAGB & CO. Bo. 6 V. ScbroodeT St., Baltimore. Mannfaetorera of Portable and .Stationary 8TKAM ENGINES AND BOILERS, PaUat In.nrored, fortabla CIRCULAR SAW MILLS, Gang, Malay and Sash Hatr Mill*. GVial MlUa, Timber Wheala, "Shingle Machines, 4e. Dealers in Circular Save, Palling and Mill aupntiea general!* ?n,t nten?fae?nmr'a egnnt'e Jot IVT*I'? Celebrated Turblee Water Wheel, and every dneerlplion of Wood Working Machinery. AORICTLTURAL IHOIRM A ratlAtTT. Mr Send for dreoriplir* Catalogues and PrUr Lists. tf-ly I ? ?-L - 1 1? J "ILL.. JJ.'.J?Ull Ayer's Cathartic Pills, the purposes of ? ItnttT* ^ Perhaps no one medt? oine Is so universally required by everybody as a cathartic, nor wu ever any before so universally 1 ) adopted Into use. In 1 A B/ every' country and lAvVfiTf^B/ among aU classes, aa tflVTWlMW this mild but efficient purgative JPWl. The obvious reason is, tkatittaamore rellable and ftr more ef^gyjaafefg^gss; ES hot, know that It rurestMhr nstghbors ami friends; and all know that what H doee once It does ift> ways?that It never ihUs through apy fhalt or negK loot of its composition. We have thousands upon thousands of certllloetes of their remarkable cures of the following complaints, but such cures aro Known in ?tb?7 neignuornooa, ana we neeu nee publish them. Adapted to alleges end conditions In an climate*; oontalnlng neither calomel nor any deleterious drug, they may be taken with safety by anybody. Their sugaoooatlng preserves them ever fresh,and makes them pleasant to take, while being purely vegetable, no harm can arise from their use In any quantity. They operate by their powerful inflnenoe on the Internal viscera to purify the blood and stimulate it Into healthy action?remove the obstructions of the stomach, bowels, liver, and other organs of the body, restoring their Irregular action to health, and by correcting, wherever they exist, such derangements as are the first origin of disease# Minute directions are given in the wrapper on the box, for the following complain to, which these 1HU* rapidly cure: ? For Byapepalak or Iailgsitlsa, Ustlsss ' sms, Isuigaor and Loss of Appetite, they 1 should bo taken moderately to stimulate tho atomach, and restore its healthy tone and action. For Liver C ens pi win t and its various symptoms, ntlloas Hsadache, Mck Head" nchr, Jaundice or dress Slcksess, millens Colic and Blltoaa Fevers, they should bo judiciously taken for each case, to correct the diseased actlou or remove the obstructions \fbich | cause It. For Bysontery or Dlarrhsm, but ono mud dose Is generally required. For Rkenmatlins, Gonl, Gravel, Palpitation of the Heart, Pnln In tho side, Back and Lslns, they should be continuously taken, as required, to change the diseased action of the system, with aucb change those 1 complaints disappear. I For Prepay and Bropelcnl Swelling*1 I they should be taken In largo and frequent dose* to produce tno effect or a drastic purge, i For KupprrHloa a largo aoso shonlu bo taken as It produces tho desired effect by sympathy. As a Dinner Tilt, toko one or two PIKs to promote digestion and relievo tho stomach. An occasional dose stimulates the stomach ana bowels into healthy action, restores the appetite, and Invigorates the system. Hence it is often advantageous where no serious derangement exists. One who feels tolerably well, olten finds that a dose of these PUU makes him feci decidedly better, /Tom their cleansing and renovating effect on the digestive apparatus. Dr. J. C. AYEEJt CO., FrmotitaJ Chex*Ut?, LOWELL. MABB., XT. 0. A. J2P~Eor as Is in Greenville by M. A. HUNTER A CO., Agents. Aug 31 15 ly | plantaiiun bihms This wonderful Vegetable restorative is tho shee- -anchor of the feeble and debilitated. As a tonic and cordial for tho nged and languid it has no equal among stomachics. As a remedy for tho nervous weakness to wliich women arc cspccially subject, it is superseding every other stimulant.' In all climates, tropical, tern pcrate or frigid, it acts as a specific in every species of disorder which undermines the bodily strength and breaks down the animal spirits. ??Vlierever it is introdaccd it becomes a standard article-?a medicinal staple. It is to-day the best and purest tonic, and the most popular medicine in the civilized world?be sure and get the genuine. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Country Stores. June 22, 1870. 6 1 EDMONDS i\ BROWN, * ^ rmr m* * *1*3 ITIATO3 SVSUBHMl, OPPOSITE CHARLESTON HOTEL CHARLESTON, S. C. Bept 28 19 17 A. B. MULLIGAN. CHARLESTON, S- C. MESSRS. SULLIVAN & SON, ARE MY AGENTS AT QUEEN VILLUS. C., And will make liberal cash advance* on nil COTTON BblppnJ to m? through (hem. * A. B. MULLIGAN. Sept 28 19 iy THE NtrKERNON HOUSE. *? *" ^ t1 f r? y r f ?-i COLUMBIA, 8* 6. Wj ILL not be *IWtd oa iMontl pf the f T deeih of tkt Proprietor, Wit. A. Wbight, but will bo eerrted on ? heretofore, by Mo widow, Mr*. 9ARAH L. WRIGHT, ond her ma, WM. 0. WRIGHT. The blende of the lot# proprietor ore invited lo cell et uauel 8ARAH L. W RIGHT. ' P?b 1ft S9-tf WM. C. WRIGHT