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} " . .. ' ' ' ' ' * ' - . k - ' <>,. , * * - . . '" \ ' * -A? ' ' ?> * k. & * - " ? . J*--- *>* ;! * * *k ' t*v * * - x* ' ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ' j ! *_ ? . . . . . ?*' , .. ^ v . vTT 1 An Independent Family JVewspaper, devoted to Politics, Literature, and General Intelligence. Our motto is?Truth without Fear. VOL. 2, NO. 23 BEAUFORT S. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1*72. ~ , ' r*~" {limfulwe??. . - ?S_^l- . . 4 *. t . /4^: * . . * .. I-* X * ' m ' . ? ! ? m ' ... ... - . - geaufort Countii Republican THURSDA^EBRUARY|29, 1872. * ~ THE ROTHSCHILDS. Money-making was the one pursuit and eoie enjoyment of Nathan Rothschild's life. When Louis Spohr, the great German mualc-ian, culled on him in the summer of 1830, with a letter of introduction from his brother Ams'hel, of Frankfort, he said to him, " I understand nothing of music. This"?patting his pocket, and rattling the loose coins therein?" this is my music, which we u d rstind on w 'Change." It was in the scramblings nnd fightings, the plots and tricks of money% making, not at alt in the s, ending, and much in the hoarding of it? that his a M1 hope," said a dinner companion oa one occasion. *' I hope that your children are not too fond of money and business, 10 the exclusion of more important things. 1 am sure yon would not "wish that/' " I am sure 11oou'd wish 'that," repl ed Nathan ; ** I wish them to give up mind and w body, heart and soul, to business. This is the way to be happy. It requires a deal of caution to make a good fortune, and, when you have got it, it requires ten times as much wit to keep it. Hence, when two eminent e'orgymen, who took a warm interest in the dews, called upon him with a view to induce hiiu to aid in the restoration to Palest:ne, as his great wealth, it was thought, might influence the Sultan, Nathan declined, ujonthe ad-potent plea that " London was his Palestine, and that he could not further such an object in any Way." On another occasion a German prince Visiting London brought letters of credit to the house of Rothschild. He was shown Into the private room of the famous counting-house in St. Swithin's Lane, where Nathnn sat absorbed with a hem of papers before him. The Dame being announced, Rothschild uo.lded, offered his visitor a chair, and went on with the work before him. For ill's treatment the prince, who expected thnt everything should give way to one of li's rank and dignity, was not prepare 1. Standing a minute or two. he exclaimed, u Did you not hear, sir, who k 2 am ? I am" repeating his titles at 9 full lengths. "Oh, very well! "exci dined ? Nathan, with aly humor, " take twocuairs, then." At another time two Strang >rs were admitted into the same private room. They were tall foreigners, with bearls and moustaches, such as were unknown in the City before the beard mania set in so powerfully as it has d me of late; and ! Nathan was frightene! at their appearance. lie put his own interpretation upon the excited movements with which they fumbled about in their pockets; and, before the expected pistols could be produced, he had thrown a great ledger In the direction of their heads, and brought ! in a bevy of clerks by his loud cries of " Murder! " The stran rers were pinioned, and after long questionings and explanations, it appeared that they were wealthy bankers from the Continent, who. nervous in presence of a banker so much more wealthy than themselves, had found some difficulty in producing the letters of intro duction with which tliey were armed 1 A terrible anecdote of another sort is r corded of Nathan's son during his elect on asoneo" the Members for the City. We ail re ollect the persistent way in which /.lai-tnrj rotiirnwl liim to Parliament for years before the Legislature threw open its doors to the long-despise 1 Jew. At his first election, when on the hustings, he boasted that he stood there as the free choice of the people. " So stood Barab bas I" deliberately exclaimed a deep stern oice from the crowd?a sarcasm which, for its cruel vinlictiveness, perhaps stands without a parallel. The same intense spirit of money mak'ng appears to have been equally the mania of all the Kothschilds. Of James, the youngest son of Meyer, and head of the Paris house, who once entertained Napoleon III. in such an imperial manner at his Chateau Ferriero, and died in IS 58, leaving, according to public rumor, the collos. sal fortune of 41,800,03J'., it is related, as a proof of the strength of the ruling passion within him. that f >reseeinghis death would cause a great fall in the shares of the Lombard Coin| any, of which he was the president and chief support, he specifated largely for the fall just be'ore he died; by which means the immense profits accruing therefrom went to the benefit of his heirs. English Synonyms. A little girl was looking at the picture of a number of ships, when she e\claim(d, ** Fee what a flock of ships/' We corrected her by saying that a t'ock of ships is called a fleet, and that a fleet of sheep is called a flock. And here we may add, for the benefit of the foreigner who ia mastering the intricacies of our language in respect to nouns of multitude, that a flock of girls is called a bevy, that a bevy of wolves is calied a peek, and pack of thieves s call d a gang, ?uu ca ^ati^ ut ici v?uiru a f imiu a host of porpoise is call, d a elionl, and a shoal of buffaloes Is callel a herd, and a herd of children is called a troop, and & troop of partridges is called & Corey, and a covey of beauties is cnlled a galaxy, and a galaxy of ruffians is called a horde, and a * h. r 'e of rubbhdi is called a heap, and a hw>p of oxen is called a drove, and a dr^ve a of blackguards ia called a mob, and a mob of whales ia called a school, and a school of worshipers is called a congregation, and 0 congregation of engineers is called a corps, and a corps of robbers is called a band, and a band of locusts is called a swarm, and a swarm of people is called a crowd, and a crowd of gentlefolks is called the elite, and the elite of the city's thieves and rascals are called the roughs, and the miscellaneous crowd of the city folks is called the community, or the public, according aa they are spoken of by the religious community or the secular public.?American Educational Monthly. ,, ,, , Moscow Street Scones. A picturesque view of the st-eet population of Moscow is given in the following sketch Neither cathedral, nor bazaar, nor hosp'tal has more charms for the stranger tlwn the out door life of the city. The streets are of varying width ; crooked, paved with sharp, flinty t-tones. and lined with buildings of every style of architecture. Churches, palaces, and the pink or yellow whitewashed cottages of peasants are jumbled together, and fro.n whatever point yonlook, srme picturesque group of domes and towers delights the eve, or perhaps down the vista yon catch a glimpse of the Kremlin walL Through these avenues pours the varied population. Princes pass in their swift carr ages, and perhaps the Metropolitan, hidden in his stately coach drawn by sleek, bla<~k horses of noble breed: merchants J 1 man U TfH. IT ll?? UH5U uj ill ninr ur??aivic.->?ui^u, ? ?I of enormous wealth, and wlnst transactions are now with Paris and now with Pekin; drays and cotxntry carts lumber along, driven by peasants with wide blouses tuctted into liiyrli boots, or tied with a string?tlieir feet incased in shoes made of plaited reeds orvstr ps of limetree bark?a blouse, like shirt ot' pink calico :why, with thedr florid 'ares, they should choose pin*. I cannot understand.) over the trowers, confined at the waist by a sash or a be1! of le ther, and abore this, unless in heat of j noon, a wrappor of sheepskin reachingbelow the knees?while often there is no covering for the head hut the yellow, matted heir, bound with a fillet, and falling low on the shoulders as the full beard falls on the breast. In the open spaces s'an 1 tho coochmen with their vehicles wa t'ng to b? hired? dressed in loir, broad crowned, blsek hats ; CAf'ans of dark 'doth fitting close '.bout the neck, but without a collar; padded at the hips, double in front, and fastened under the eft arin with six metal b itton*: while thn'r thick, whits gloves. when not in use, are soi un?d bv the thumbs to their girdles. Men carry about buckets filled with salted ; cucumbers, seli ng them one by ore to tho peasant crowd as a rel'sh for their hla k 1 bread, which they eat as th**y go. At the churches find the Ptreet shrines of the Virgin, pans rs by raako the s'gn o" the cross, an I even pro trate themselves In their reverence. Nurses appear elad in the Russian nations' cstuino?a white undergarment, rather low in the neck, with full, short s'eeves: a dark skirt, gathered into a band just above the boaom. and suspended by straps over tho shoulders, and a belt above the waist, from which depends a long, white apron. Ear-rings an I a neck'ace of lx a'a are worn, and on the head a high, turban like rap of *ome bjig .t color. Tills striking but rather formlers attire seems now to he given over to nurses and court ladies for state orca-lons. when the bead-dress bla es with jewels. Merchants' cleiks. when not busy, may J>c seen sitting in the shoopd*>rs playing chess or dominoes, and perhaps holding a pet cat the while. Loads of birch wood go by, sold at twenty rubles a c??rd?a iar -e sura for the peasants ; but a little wood lasts them long, as their br ck ovens are not allowed to ; cool, and air is exclude 1. Soldiers, cons ious and unbending in their uniform, are always In view, and the dark faces of Gipsies. Tartars, Persians and Jews area pleasant r lief after the fair monopoly of the v* tt'l _ ?_ ? 1. 4l..A _ c average missions. ny is it mat men 01 the Slavonic family are so mu li cwnelier than the women? Handsome men abo :nd, and doubtless there are lovely, graceful women here, though they aro rarely visible in church, or stree , pr bazaar. Do Not Ridicule Children. Children often se in tosiy very absurd things, for which the are ridiculed or 1 abashed. Xothiug, however, can be more cruel than this, for the child has merely , done what many a philosopher has done before him? utaped to a wrong conclusion : and if, instead of being ridiculed and made to distrust himself, and avoid the venturing his little speculations befoto i s in future, we had been at the trouble of carefully examining his notions, we should have discovered liow naturally, perhaps, the idea had arisen, or how ing niously, through a lack of knowledge, the little mind had put together incongruous things. Enoch Carter, of Newburgh, Is the hapI" po-sess r of n wntth which was g ven by George Washington to hie betrothed, Mrs. Maitha <"us is in 1758. It was made t.. f 1 _ t ui ? ?A4 jii i uimoii, is <u me i-uii s ye p morn, and lias the letters of the iibove lady's n?ine on th" lace of th?- dial?onele tei over each figur". The watch was in the pnp-ession of some of the rcla" v* s in Virginia. hut as one of the results of the !at war.it had to be sold, with other rtlics, to starvation from ^ lie door. % 1 FOR SALE. Soda-water Machine and Bottling Apparatus Office Furniture and Desk Fixtures. % 4 \ Velocipede, Piano, &c. 1 ? r Apply to S. B% WRIGHT. Feb. 15-81. COLLETON ADVERT7SEMENTS7 PROBATE NOTICE. The State of South Carolina, ) Colleton County. j By D. H. Farmer, Esquire, Probate Judge. Whereas, Abraham Dun made suit to me, to grant him Letters Disroissour from the Estate of and effects of I*. E. Dun. These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and Creditors - ? ? n TV J } ot t&e saia u. r>. i/uu, ucwaot-u, that they be and appear, before me. in the Court of Probate, to be held at Walterboro on Monday the 8th day of April next, af-s ter publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Letters should not be granted. Given under my Hand, this oth day of February, Anno Domini, 1872. D. H. FARMER. feh.8 lm. Judge of Probate. The State of South Carolina, ) Colleton County. j By D. H. Farmer. Probate Judge. Whereas, Daniel W. ''anidy, for Mary Ann and Jacob Lewis, has made suit to me to appoint Diniel G. Canidy their guardian, These are therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular th* kindred and Creditors of said named Children to appear. before me. in the Court of Probate, to be held at Walterboro on Monday the eighth day of April next, at 11 o'clock in the foreuoon, to shew cause, if any they hfrve, why said Petition should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal this oth day of February, 1872. D. II FARMER, feb 8 Judge of Probate. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL ACADEMY. ? ? ?'wl 1 n#?n ai? Hncivtncc LHM N pri'jmiru iui vvurgr ui i#uuuiv.?>< Second Session begins February 16,1S72. For Catalogues and information address, CAPT. AVM. II. COIT, 3Iuy?ville, 8. C HISTORY OF The Great Fires In CHICAGO and tho WEST hv Rev. E. J. Goodspi-ep, I). IX, of Chicago. Oulv complete history. 700 8 vo, pastes: 60 engravings. 70,000 already sold. Price S2.50. 2.000agents made in 20 days. Pnfit? go to sufferers. Agents Wanted. II. S. UOODSPEEI), A CO., 37 Park Row. New York. AtlKXTS Wanted.?Agents make more money at work for its than at anything else. Rusiness light and permanent. Particulars free. G. Stinson A Co., Fine Art Publishers, Portland, Maine. RBD Hiw i PROOF O \T * S3 a Bushel; [ Orchard Grass $3.50 a bushel. Send 3 cent postage stamp and my complete Priced Lists of all kinds of Grass Seeds. Field Seeds, Garden Seeds, Flower and Tree Smls Agricultural Implements. .Machinery,Guanos, Chemicals, Livestock, Ac., will lie forwarded you. These Priced Lists contain much valuable information as to time and quantity to plant, Ac. MARK W. JOHNSON, Seedsman, P. O. box 230, Atlanta. Ga. THE BROWN COTTON GIN CO., .NEW .LONDON, UONN., Manufacturers of the "Brown (iin.'' Cotton seed Ilullers, Machinery and Castings. Manufacturers of Harris' Patent Rotary Steam Engine for plantation purposes. Cotton (lin makers and Repairers furnished with all kinds of materials. Saws, Kib^ Pullies, Boxes, etc., of any pattern, to ordci at short notice. Have had long ex,peri -nee in the busings, and guarantee satisfaction in every particular. Onlers solicited. Address as above. A SERE CUBE for this dlstresssng complaint is now ( Made known in a Treatise (4S octavo pages) on Foreign j . and Native Horhal Prejiaratioiis, published by I r. (?. j Phki.ps Brown*. The prescription was discovered hy j him in such a providential manner that he cannot con- , scienciously refuse to make it known, and it has cured crcrylxvJy who lias u#~d it for Fits, n -ver havingfailcd in a single case. The ingredients may lie obtained from any druggist. A conv sent free to all applicants by mail. Address J?r. O. l'llhLPS BltO\VN, 21 Cranil Street, Jersey City, N. J. 500Laborers Wanted' Five hundred men can find immediate pninlovmpnt nt Onlr Puint Mines Rail road bauds preferred. Liberal wages paid. ! Apply to the Mines. feb.l-lOt. j ~ M, S. HANCKEL, M. D? |' DENTIST, 1 Offers his professional services to the citizens of Beaufort.?Can be seen at the Saxton House. PORT ROYAL R. R. EXTENDING FROM Port Royal Forty Miles towards Anpti. Trains will leave Port Royal and tbe end of the Road, connecting at Yemassee with trains on the Savannah and Charleston Rail Road, to and from Charleston and Savannah. % Time Table. Leave Port Royal, 6.SD A. M. Leave Beaufort. 9.00 " * Lfcave Springhill, 9.33 " " Leave Frasers, 10.15 " " Leave Sheldon, 10.50 ** " Arrive at Yemassee, 11-50 " " CONWRCT WITH S. k C. R. R . Leave Yemassee, 12.00 P. M. Leave Ridge, 12.20 " " Leave Searsons, 12.40 " ' Leave Altaian's, 12.55 " " Arrive at end of road, 1.20 " " Returning. j Leave end of road, 1.40 P. M. Leave Altman's, 2.00 " " Leave Searsons, . 2.25 * " Leave Rldp?, 2.43 " " Arrive at i cmassee, 3.10" " co.nxkct with C. A S. R. R. Leave Ycmasst e, 3.20 P. M Leave Sheldon, 4.00 u " Leave Frasers, 4.20 " " Leave Springhill, 4 50 " " Leave Beaufort, 5.20 " " Arrive at Port Roval, 5.50 " u \ S. C. MILLETT, Nov.30.ljr. tienl. Supt OLD ESTABLISHED. yyEEKLY LINE TO SAVANNAH, AND SEMI-WEEKLY TO BEAUFORT, S. C. Tlte Steamer PILOT BOY. Captain W. T. McXklty, Will leave Beaufort every m o x d a y Afternoon, a! 3 o'clock for Savannah, Hilton Head and Spanish WclD Returning will leave Savannah every Tuesday Morning at 8 o'clock, Beaufort every Tuesday Afternoon at 2 o'clock. Will leave for Charleston. Pacific and Chisolm.s Landings every Friday Morning at 8 o'clock. Making close connecfion at Charleston with New York, Baltimore and Philadelphia steamships. Freights received at all times, stored and forwarded free of charge. Tor Freight or Passage, appv to WM. IIARRISSOX, Ag -nt at Beaufort. BAVENEL, HOLMES. A CO., Agents at Charleston JNO. F. ROBINSON, Agent at Savannah. JOHN COOPER7 B A 1* ST RK T, DEALER IN pOREFGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS. MILLINERY, clothing, bo'jts and shoes. HATS AND CAPS, Ac. IIE is constantly adding to his large and elc gant assortment of of ttie above goods which he will offer at the lowest market prices, an 1 respectfully invites the attention of the citizens of Beaufort and the surrounding Country. flt-S COOPER HAS IIAD MANY YEARS EXperience in the Millinery business both North and South, and still devotes her special attention to the same also to the making up for wedding ami evening parties, and ! to which special attention is respectfully invited. Save Your .Money! Farmers can save tiieir expenses to Beaufort, Charleston or Savannah by first calling on paul & webb and price their goods. a full assortment of everything necessary for the use of man, can alvvays be found at their store, at HICKORY HILL, Beaufort Co., near the port royal rail road. A Mail. Colorod Lacly, or G-ix-I, | WlaitOi Eoy can be supplied from top to toe with the i best of everything out of their store, which j is the largest and best supplied between Oharhston and Savannah. They will sell Wholesale or Retail it Beaufort Prices. Give them a call be- ; fore going to the city or elsewhere. Prolific Cotton Seed, We have a limited supply of HOLMES' j PROLIFIC COTTON SEED on haud, which will pay planters to purchase and plant in preference to any ther. PAUL & WEBB, Hickory Hill. Beaufort Co., S. C-? near Port Royal Rail Road. feb.l-5t up . BLANK DEEDS. Legal Cap Paper, etc. FOR SALE AT THIS OFFICE Jpeciat Ton are Troubled with a Bad Breath, it annoys vour friends as well as yourself. You woaid like, to get rid of H, bet scarcely know what means to adopt. We will tell you: Use the fragrant Sozodont; it will cleanse and beautify your teeth and leave your breath pure. Burnet's Standard, Flavoring Extracts.? Lemon, Vanilla Ac. Charge your servants .and dealers and observe that they do not substitute in their ttead any of the pernicious unpalatable extracts with which the market is flooded. Burnett's Standard Flavoring Extracts are established as the strongest, the purest and (he best made. The Terrific Dnel Between Prussia and France is oret, but thousands of battles between Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters and Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint are now noing on in every State of the Union. The issue of such contest is never for one moment in doubt The conflict may last longer in some eases than in others, but the leading Vegetal** tonic and alterative of the nineteenth century, invariably triumphs. To owners of Horses and Cattle'.?Tobias Derby condition Puwders are warranted superior io any others, or-no pay, for the cure of Distemper, Worms, Bots, Coughs, Hide-bound, Colds. Ac., in horses, and colds, coughs loss of milk, black tongue, horn distemper, Ac., in Cattle. Price twenty-five tents, depot 10 Park Place, New York. Carbolic Salve, recommended by the leading Physicians and the President of the New York Board of Health, as the most wonderful Healing compound ever known. Gives instant relLf to burns, cures all kinds of sores, cuts and wounds; and a most invaluable saive for all purposes. Sold everywhere at 2o cents. John F. Henry, sole Proprietor, 8 College Place, New York. Mvapnla is Opium purified of its sickening and poisonous properties, discovered by Dr. Bigelow. Professor of Botany, Detroit Medical College. A most perfect anodyne and soothing opiate. John Farr, Chemist, New York. < brtatadoro'a Hair .Dye is the .safest and best, it corrects the bad effect of inferior dyes, while tl>e black or brown ttots it produces are identical to nature. Factory 68 Maiden Lane, New York. I*ratt'* Astral oil ?Safest and best illuminating Oil ever made. Docs not take fire or explode, if the lamp is uj>*et or broken. Over 130 000 families continue* to use it, and no accidents of any discription have occurred from it. Oil House of Charles Pratt, established 1770, New York. The purest and Sweetest Cod Liver Oil In the world is Hazard A Caswell's made on the sea-shore, from fresh, selected livers, by Caswell, Hazard A Co, New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients | have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians | have decided it superior to any of the other oils in the market. douvln's Inndornus Kill Clove Cleaner restores soiled gloves equal to ncW. For sale by Druggists and Fanev Goods Deawrs. Price 25 cents per bottle F. C. IValls A Co., New York. ItNli ys Plitlotoken is an established, warranted rem (ly for painful Menstruation; and equally efficient as | a Nervous Antidote in a!' cases of Nervous Excitement, Stomach aid Sleeplessness in male or female. Sold everywhere for $1.00 a bo tie. Morgan A Bisley. Druggists j >}ew York, General Agents. A Youthful Appvaraner and a beautiful,clear j complexion is the desire of evervtiody. Tiiis effect is product*! by using G. W. Lai rd's4'Bloom of Youth." a harmless b^autifier of the skin. will remove all discoloration, Tan,Freckles and sunburns. - The use of this delightful toilet preparation cannot be detected. For sale by all Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers, Depot. oGoll .SiNew York. Mrs. Wlnslow's Roothlng ?yrup?It relieves the little sufferers f.oni pain, cures wind colic. Regulates the Stomach and Bowels. Corrects Acidity and during the process of tccthiDg it is invaluable. Perfectly safe in all \ cases, as millions of mothers can testify. _____ All persons having claims against the estate of Dr. Henry M. Fuller, late of the Town of Beaufort, deceased, are requested to render accounts thereof, and those in 1 debted to said estate are requested to make t payment to me at Gardner's Comer. Henry M. Fuller, feb.l5-3t. Qualified Executor. NOTICE. All persons having claims agamic jesse i Mount, late of Beaufort, deceased, are hereby notified to present the same duly attested to W'm. Elliott, attorney at law, Beaufort. Eliza S. Mount, feb.lo-3t. Administratrix. NOTICE. All persons having claims against the estate of Charles S. Kuh, late of Hilton Head, deceased, are hereby notified to present the same duly attested, and those indebted to said estate, will make payment to the undersigned at Beaufort. M. PoLLITZER, feb.l5-3t. Administrator. State of ] Socth Carolina, ' in court of County of Beaufort I Trial JusticeJieuben G. Holmes, Plaintiff, Against Daniel Bird, Defendant. To Dauiel Bird, the Defendant. You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complalr. in this action which ?<"? t Urt r\P a 1 T iloti/tA D i/1 1/itr in liicu iu buc wni'.u wi x & lai o uotitc ii'uiry < H Carlson at Beaufort, in said county, j within twenty da>s after the service of: this summons exclusive of the day of i service. If you fail to answer the said complaint within the time herein specified ! the plaintiff will take juc^ment against i you for the sum of Fifty Dollars, with interest thereon, at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, from the second day of April, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-eight. together with the costs of this action. Dated, Beaufort Feb. 3rd. 1872. R. G. HOLMES. Plaintiff. To the Defendant, Daniel Bird: Take norice, that the complaint in this action was filed in the olliee of Trial Justice Rully R. Carlton, at Beaufort, in the County of Beaufort, on theeighth day of September 1871. R. G. HOLMES, Plaintiff. feb. 8 Gw. Beaufort, S. C. 1 I The Greatest Discovery of the Age. Eati Franoaiso, Du DOCTOR L.U RE.M, of Paris. Art i rt f<> M i I rrt Atr oil Tutitf .t.a?pc av rt.. C*.w ! well as oMinatu Ehi piions. Tills preparation Is univer- | sally used among the higher claaaoa in France and Exo- | land. A bottle of the Eau FraXcaISE will be sent to j an v add sees upon the receipt of one dollar. W. E. FLORENCE, I Sole Agent f r the U. S., Rlchmoud, Va. Fcb.is-tt. SIX HORSE POWER ENGINE J and boiler in complete running order. For particular! apply to George Waterhouse, Beaufort, or to the Proprietor at Lonzwood plantation, St Helena Wand. Nov.?: H. B. TAFFT, J. JJEGS TO ANNOUNCE THAT HI? r constantly receiving the finest and best stock of DKf AND FANCY GOODS, BOOTS', SHOES, and CLOTHING _ J ever offered IB this- market. Also a fine assortment or Kid Gloves. Mny.6-ly. PAUL BRODIE, AftOEClTfiO T. .,BEAUFORT, S. C. Drawings of Models prepared for Patent Office. Studies for special purjwses, made at short notice. Bos M, P*. ?> Dee.l.lr. PORT ROYAL SAW MILL; . BEAUFORT, S, C. D. C.'WILSON & CO. MANUFACTURERS or AND DF.AI.RRS IS ^ YELLOW FINE AND CYPBESS; T.ITWRF.n A Vn SHIVFLFfi. Builders and Contractors, ORDERS FOR LUMBER AXD TIMBER BY TUB CAROO PROMPTLY FILLED. TERMS CASH. D.C. WILSON JOHN RICH uov28 V DOORS, ~ SASHES, BLINDS, . Wood Mouldings, Stair Rails, Newels, &c., Enamraelled, Embossed, Ground AND CUT GLASS. A large and well assorted stock of the above goods constantly on hand at the lowest rates. Order work promptly attended to. Builders and owners will find it to their advantage to get our estimate liefore purchasing. Special attention given to Black Walsct and other FimtCiass work.Estimates and Price Liste furnished on application WniTLOCK A CO., 'Apl. 22-ly 254 A 296 Canal St. New York. J. A. EMMONS . Dealer In FRESH MEATS, VEGETABLES, FRUITS, ICE, Ate., Which will bo furnished in any quantity. Dee. 1, J. E.McGREGOR. House, Sign and Carnage Glazing and Paper Hanging promptly attended to. * Office corner of C and Seventh street, BEAUFORT, S. C. HOUSE AND LOT IN BEAUFORT FOB sA LE. The House and large Lot owned bv Mrs. W. II. Danilson. at the corner of G. and Seventh street, is offered for sale at a eery low price and on easy terms. The House contains seven rooms, has a new roof and is good repair. The Lot has a very fine orange orchard in bearing condition, and a good garden. Inquire of feb.l-tf Geo. Wateriiouse. TOREXT, A SEA ISLAND COTTON PLANTATION. . The undersigned proposing a change in business, offers for lease the Plantation occupied and cultivated by him for the past seven vears. known as Lomrwood. on Sl Ilolena Island. It comprises 1200 acre*, two-thirds arable, fi<Xi acres unsurpassed for the production of Ska Island Cotton. Fronting over one mile on Station' Creek, affording uncqualcd facilities for procurring the richest and most economical fertilizers: two miles from i ort Jtoyal harbor, good wearf for vessels drawing from eight to twelve feet?Charleston and Savannah steamers receive and deliver freight at the wharf; one of the most comfortable and commodious mansions on the sea islands; Two Stores well located for business; mod' ern built Stable ; (Jtn Houses and Cotton II uses recently erected; thirty good tenements for laborers. To parties having in view the purchase of sea island cotton, particularly of the finer grades, this location is unsurpassed by any upon St. Helena or the adjacent islands. Lands and tenements can he rented to tho people living upon and near the place sufficient to cover the yearly rent of the whole. ()ne of tho most healthy locations in tho world, command in? a lino view of the magnificicnt harbor of Port Royal and of tho ocean. Stock, Utensil*, Machinery, House Furniture. Boats, (t-c., dr., for sale, together with stock of good* in two stores on the place. The whole presenting an opportunity for an enterprising man with a small capital, to ensagc in a safe and lucrative business? seldom found. For further information address or anply to the undersigned at Longwood, St Helena Island, or to A. S. Davenport, Esq., Real Estate A^ent, Beaufort, 8. C. H. 8. TAFFT.