University of South Carolina Libraries
J ' L' ?" THIS PAJPEK FT1.K WITH RO Wfcer? AtlrrrtUiuK I'otitrnclA onn bo Miidn, Kinsman &? Howelty Factors and Commission \ ]\lerc/ia?it$? Liberal Advances made on Cotton and Naval Stores. Chariest on, *Y. 6'. HORS^AND CATTI?POW3CRS, \Y>\? * i Will r?'-r<' or provant PlrtoryO. I I BCCCU08 UKYOND CO3tP*TITI01f. Penis' 1 Tio; ; W ' T'? I-1M? ll? I (,f > ?rT Pluni., ,7|m jj ' 1 ? i Iut. ii ft III. 1. A ? t.clo tri.'l tit the OKI K| Pr-v. 't t ?!.? n?J luTlrin* Id MrcurS, merit* t I Sa 1 Mt .nK ?r BIT Id th4 market Wc m ? t : et.ftrr.t Bl , i to .11" V ira-U ?.t tnnrkrt ? r!cr? m*l Va b? i| .j Onlcra romcctfuiljr ftollcllc !. Ad<lrc*? KKj rly A.). NELLIS&CO Pines t?? ba.l - ? V I > m I 4| RM1 |i9j r lu'frs 4rM. SiwM fin! IroniofAll l> * [yl Kill slm *, f ? \ i; i'oii 'i .* ircrpa, H'-ran<?rf# 11 till MR id! * <?\-l?. I* % \ m Cii'i'-n, Fteel M l-f N III*' i'r.Hjcjj to ei iWiU kiuJtof full. i E.B.F00TE,NI.D. 120 Lexington Aybmb, J Cor. K. 2*th St., NEW YORK, i An lnilfinpniip.nl Phmn. i 11 u v |> viiu Wll\ I llJVIV/IUIIj j TIt 13 ATS ALL FORMS OF CHRONIC DISEASE, AND RECBIVE3 JT^cffc's all parts of the Civilized World* BY HI8 ORIGINAL WAY OF Conducting; a Medical Practice 1IE IS TREATING Numerous Patients in Europe, the West Indies, the Dominion of Canada, and in every State of the Union. _ ^ - - ADVICE GIVEN BY MAIL FREE OF CHARGE. N>> mercurial medicines or deleterious drugs used, linn during the oast twenty years treated successfully nearly or qu'to -111,1100 cases. All facts connected with #t'ac'.i eawo are carefully recorded, whether thoy b< communicated by letter or la jicrnon, or obsei veil by the Doctor or his associate J nivalin. xm liiui'r liiu Itil SClVUllUC UlClUC.U men. All invalids At a distanoo are required to nt)8wor aii extended list of plain question*, which will l>o furnUhed by mail frco, or at the office. A complete system of registering prevent* mistake or coufiiHioii. Case books never consulted, except by the physicians of the establishment. for free consultation send for list of questions. A sixty-page pamphlet of evidence* of success tent free also. Aaarctt Dr. 3?. 13. I'OOTE, Box 7 8 8, Now YorFt. AGENTS WANTED. Da. Foots is the author of " Medical Common Bknsk," a book that reached a circulation of over '450,000 copies; also, of "Plain Homh 'Fai r," more recently published, which 1ms sold to the extent of 70.0UU copies; also, of "Scikncr IN tiiouv," which Ir now being published in scries. contents tables of all, excepting the fin-t-mentioned work (which is out of print), will be sent free on application to either Dr. Footk, or the l!urr.t7 mil Futlishiaj Ccapiay, whose office in 121) East 28th Street. Agents?both men and women?wanted to sell the foregoing work*, to whom a liberal profit will be allowed. The beginnings of small fortunes have boen made in selling Dr. Footic's popular work*. "Plain Home Talk" is particularly ad'.pted to a lults, and " fct ienck jn Stoby " is just the thing for the young. Send for contents table* and sec- for yourselves. The former answers it multitude of questions which ladies and gentlemen feel a delicacy al>out asking of thelr.phyMclans. There is nothing in literature at all like either it the foregoing works. "Science tn SronY" can only bo bad of agent* or of the Publishers, "PLAIN 1IOMS TALK" Is published In both tho English and (lerinan Languages. Ouec uioro, Agonta WantodL, ADDKESS AS ABOYIi Rank the highest for Durability, Perfect Work, and Kase of Operation. They arc the rno?t silent, bglttrunnlng and nci viccr.blo, the easiest to sell, and must willingly paid for, and answer every requirement In the family and inauufactory. l.iht-rul tennis to Agents. Address, "Domestic" Kesrlns? Machine Co., Wen-Vorlt. Comprise n large and varied assort merit of Patterns for Latins', Misses', niul Children's Garmsnts of foreign and domestic designs, l>y the most accomplished Mortietet. They aro tho most ncrfcit tilting, must c'ahorite, anil yet tho most simple patterns ever proseated to the public, and take liiu lend wherever introOuccd. Areata tCuntCd. tfcod for illustrated Catalogue. Add i ess, 44 Domestic" Setting Machine Co., New-York. Devoted to I*'ar.iiion, I.itrbatfnr. ani> Atvr. A thoroughly reliable, rotined Mid prattled Informant concerning matters or Fashion in ailji* (lepartments; a repository of choice and eiitertnlnlng literature, handloir illust rat ions, art cril Iclsinr.Hc,. etc., and a .lournal jjieiislly adapted to the warns of the home circle. Terms, l.iO per your. Specimen copies hee. On* pot i. a a (iivxt A Wat to ovcry subscriber in the celebrated "ti<iHeatlc" J'apfr Fathtom a* premium. CuHtUbntM n axled tvtryuheie. Address, "Domestic" Monthly, 44 Domestic" Dnlldingr, New-York* m i." r: * 1 _ has the delicate auit refreshing | - --?frHcrsnrr of geuutne Farlua vQd a,. ' - Cologne Writer, and Is Indlayeusublc to Toit4A<J-oc.Cn^ ^ tho Toilet .7-i^ SOAK ?lOG/l/V every l.u-ly orden,^ .. ??.**. tlem< a. Hold by Druggist* ? nr.d Itralcr* In I'Flfl'UKlt V. TV ? y i,- i->ww>nniT?r i r 2 tV ? ' \it> '*' ?" /< />// ?/*?. victfs of< >r' \'b '(rut* nonnv n.ewb, T. W. BA rVs ! SATURDAY MAY 291 It, IS75. An Ancient Pioneer. Cupt. Johnson, of tli<? Schooner Ilidgewood, has very kindly placed in our hands a very old newspaper, and contrasted with the present day publications, is eei taintly a great curiosity. It is (series) tlJ5. No, LY" of "Tiik Nv:\v Knoi.and WICKKLY JOUUNAU Containing the most Penrirkablo Occurrences Poreign tV Domestic." It. is dated '\Monduy, April 8, 1/28, Printed at Huston, hy S. Ivnccland ?& T. Green, at the Printing house in Queen-street, where Advertisements arc taken in." The whole sheet when spread out is S liy 12 inches, printed in long primer typo, and ol course that cmiic inevitable long s that so puzzled us when a boy, reading in old print books, to designate from iin/. Their la'.ost news items cause one to think that if as the Weekly Journal press was stopped to rush in the latest foreign news, i! a lVophet had st< i?ued 1 I iii and toM tic in thht one hundred and forty seven years hence, tlie news ol the world will he ehroniclcd the same day on this spot, how quick he would have nut the late ol the witches and wizard* we tend ol; or it inclined to believe his report have asked what for the next one hundred and forty-seven years? What :i millennium could the present day have dropped on them suddenly! 1'erhaps they would have ?p>ne into a set ions calculat ion as did the Van* kee loity years ago when he contrasted _ i ? ? rnuroau traveling with staging, and reasoned that as twenty years previous it took a man lour days to go Ironi Boston to X'rw York and now ho went in two, he calculate 1 that at the same rate of impro\emcnl in the next lorty years, a man going ho in Boston to New York would he in New York just two day \ before he left Boston. A late item of news is the "declaration in council the Mist ol January I 7-7-8 ol His Kxeellcncy, Hubert Hunter, Esq.; Captain (iciiera! itc. ol Jamaica." The latest items ol news from England run Irorn October 23 to Novcinher 1(5. Among the items ol English news we lilid the following, that shows how loyal these people w? re, that lifty years alter proved such fierce rebels: "London, October31.?On Saturday last tin* lit. lion, the Earl ol l'omlrel kissM their Majestv's Hands on being appointed Master of the Horse to the Queen." Among the items of general foreign news, we have the following: lif 1 \T - - uoihmmi, i>ov. ii.? 1 liree nun ol War ol the Gth 11>\to are going to be put in Commission. The most Violent Storm in Naples that ever was known, has Destroyed ! Houses, Bridges, Men, Women and Children in great Numbers, out ol 500 Inhabitants in one Village only six Kscaped." We now come down to the local column ami glean the following: %iJhiriuls in the Town of Boston, since our last. Five whites, One Black. Baptized in the several Churches, Nine." Among the arrivals, under the head "Custom-House Boston, April 0. Jintered Inwards f is the nainc ol "Josiuh .1 rtiw.e Irnin V nft l> ' ' " i . viii X1UI lll-VUI'Mlllil, anu IHJ.i tier ttie head "Clarcd Out" are the following: "Robert Luist, James Codings, & Arthur Rowlings for South Carolina." The paper contains eight advertisements, ol which the following is the only merchant's advertisement in the list: Choice Now CoflVo to bo Sold hy Arthur Savage at his llonse : in Ural tie-Street Boston for Kight Shillings per Pound." From this it may be inferred that the merchants of Roston were dull ol the advantage of advertising, and never saw the point until old Sam Adams made a bold strike on the 1Mb of Decomber, forty-fivo years afterwards, ano used the whole sheet of lioston Bay to advertise a consignment of Tea. Ilere is one that shows that the education of the slaves did not meet, the universal approval of New England, no more than it did the South: "Mr. Nath. Piggott intends to open a School on Monday next, for the Instruction of Negro's, in Heading, Catechizing, & Writing if required, if any are so well inclined as to send their Servants to said School near Mr. Check!eg'8 Meeting-House, care will be j ......... iiuioiMn WKKKI ?? ?mn i . ? tulo'h lor -their instruction us aloic-! Nitlt\ ndvertbcinent n mis hi , j us j( there wore but f*".v ho rctfl inclin r</, utiil Irorit the following business u?U eriisement, ii may be interred that uiwr.lt ol Null's business wart U> teaoh tin* servant to forget his native and lo learn to speak Knglish kull; eienlly well lo bo usolul. \\r? : : - ?> u imagine wo can hoc iSatt, a long, lank man w i111 passion* well disciplned to business in tin? school room, worrying witli tho little Congoes to gel practical itleaa ami Bounds in their heads; he wrlks to ilm water bucket, picks up tho dipper and calls out gourd! Then again to show them that tho same article may have more than one name, he stamps on the floor to call attention, and calls out C'ahdtash! To show that different articles may be designated in use l>y the same name, and to practically illustrate he takes a bright tin dipper in 11 * ? one nanu aim tne youril m tho oilier, culls out bring me <i dipper of wattr! Dipping both in the bucket ho carries lhem iillull with water to one of his pupils. Weha\o often thought haw hard it must have been to learn these poor stolen people to forget their native tongue, or which to pity most, them or lheir preceptors. I bit i o the ad vertisernent, and with it we return the W'evJcly Journal anil our thanks to Captain Johnson. 41 l-df' A \rery Likely Negro dirl, about 13 or 14 years ot Age, speaks good Knglitdi, has been in the Country some ycais, to lie sold, impure ol the Printer hereof." The Ship HENlUETTALearning that the Ship Henrietta. thai was launched at Bm-ksvillc on the 29th ol last, month, w??uhi leave Buoksviho on last Tuesday ami drop down to the lowir mill, where the work of putting her in trim tor the Ocean will be completed, we went down on last Saturday to enjoy the sight of seeing the hcuulitul ship decked out. in her sea rigging, a ready embassage to represent South Carolina in the ports ol the great nations ol the world. It was wonderful to behold the great change thai had been wrought since the launch; with her great masts lowering 117 feet aho\e decks, and 171 feet iro 111 the keel to the topmast, with spats and standing rigging ail complete, the no taumrphose was so 1 groat that it impro-s <1 one, w ho hail j not witnessed the dni y i l>ange, as it the ship was animate. There is no part of llio ship that Capt. Nii-hols is not proud of; we vi-iitared the assertion that the masts were lirst class; sir, said he, no ship ever floated with better, nor was ever better or handsomer work done on mast or spar than has been done on those by Mr. (j. \Y. Putnam, our spar maker. We believe Mr, Putnam is ironi Boston, and we boldly make the asser" lion, dull Boston cannot show anything i o equal i hem. The rigging has been done under i he earelul supervision ol Capt. Pendleton ol Soarspori, Me. The nameol tlie Pemh-ltons of Searsport is amide guar- ' antee that any work undertaken by any ol them, will he well and faithfully done. To revert back to tho masts and spars, as beautiltil as they are in all their proportions, the iron work is to be no less admired than the wood. Tins work was done by Messrs. Nicholas Polx-ris of Scarsport, and E. S. Walker of Yarmouth. Who. alone, oil! 111? ' > * "* "to wrought, and riveted in the ship over 05 tons o! iron. As we noticed in giving an account of the launch, ihe building of the hull was under the charge of master builder Elisha Dunbar aided by master builder Jerome Stevens. In her rigg the ship's hull appears more beaulul in design, model and perfection than she did at the launching. In the cahin the Joiners work, under charge of J. A. MoPliail of Huston, was not complete, but enough was up to impress it forcibly on our muni that when completed it will be ihc pride of the ship. The alter cabin, ol which the work and its triinings is from the North, was partly up, The front cabin is finished with cedar, pine and walnut; sawed and manufactured at ilueksville, and the contrast between the finish of the two cabins is decidely in favor of the Southern finish. The dimensions of the bh'ip are 199 feet keel, 210 feet over all, JJ8 feet beam. 15 font lower hold find O A NEWS: MAI )>?. between decks, ami will carry between 1,700 and 1,800 tons*. The ?o?t ot the ship is not yet known, as ike kills nn> not all in, but v up. iMclioln is satisfied he has a jar belter *hip thun ho could have built Ninth l?>r the js:ii<i?* tju5ooy, (For I he Horry News.] Northern Journalism and Kuschsrllle. Mk. Kditor: Tho more relined southerner is apL rather to disregard the defamatory tone of the average northern journals in treating el southern (jU'.'si o is. than ntt mpt t iep< al the slanders. Hut it not unlrmpicntly happens that detainers, however unjust t heir imputations, do HoineUincs provoke notice and arrest attention. Kor months many northern journals have been directing their vjiiam and malice against the unoU'emling Democrats of Louisiana lor at tempt ing to save themselves and party from the lavage ot norlliern plunderers, notably among i lu se journals is t lie i/Wo/ J hues which remarks that the Conservatives of Louisiana are the 4,inost barefaced liars on the faee ot the earth," \ind have hroken their pledge to the Wheeler cornproaiise hy seating lour members oi the Legislature.' To this Mr. \Y heeler, the author ol the compromise, and an extreme Radical renins that, tin / 1 compromise lias not been broken, ami loaves tin? Times man to swallow his own words ami shame ami apply his opprobrious tonus where they are needed. Other eases involving equally as atrocious and cunning falsehoods and misrep'.'esen t alions may be louml in the worn out. story oi 'southern outui^es." An ordinary street ii^ht, at the south is oJten inn^inilied into a T.orrihlo" Ku-Ivlux nut race." llui we iioiliiii<r ol iiorilu-rii outrages as may he lownd in Pennsylvania, w Iuto hundreds <>t nun have organized in i?|)i'ii resist mice to law and governmnil. No, we hear not hint; ol t his as an 'Vnitijuje" or "banditti;" nor *lo we hear l liese terms applied to tin- outlaws on a ininherit eoa>l tin I plunder* i'<l a wreck ami commitLeil murders in tin- vicinity, which ll done on southern -oil would have been spoken ol as a revival ol the "rebellion.** Oh no, th'So acts ol violence were by the "truly loyal," ami oh, 'twas your bull ihat oored my ox," To this inaiiitc^t hatred and pivdjudice even our In lie liurnh is 110 exei plion, and the above is re! erred to i li.it I t lie reader may jud^e ol' Hie eonsisteii ey ol northern j >uruals, ami bow near 'hey appro icii the truth in J treating ol southern mailers, also the comparison in.iy be drawn ol what is said ol lllloUsvilie. l'Ti.-t eoilles the New \ ork Hill let in. In speaking ol southern shii bnihlinu it >,s inueii surprised lo know that a ship so lai^c as lonrit i ii 11111111 ri-iI ???i.o i. i...'... . .. . . . M-im v Hi! ?M* 11II I I I | soul 11* hnl. \viu*ii a suri <i o! I ho laet finds eonstdaiion in tin- rt mailt thai sin j?i)?n!iiiii/ is e o 1111 net e d at 11 u< k - villi1, not because tiiere is euouoni f in it, not because 01 the abundance anil convciui'Mice ol ail necessarv tiinher, but because in extreme cohl weather Hie eastern yards are closcil anil i lie. workmen like a milder climate even il it costs tnor?! The. Bulletin reuiiuils us ol the Irishman, who insisted that his son was not hung, but voluntarily juinpnl In in the jilaMorui alter a rope had been accident, y thrown about his nccU. The Boston Advertiser endorses w hat the Bnlhtin says ol us. 'I he Uepnhiican Journal ot licbast loo is not without taint, and strongly evinces lite tail tiiit truth /rout tin* South is oilen rohbe i o! its essence on crossing the Bo'.otriae. So the tale runs. Not one n< rtheni let. , I - i 1 |Mi, urn o; many i ini nave com men t ed upon i lie shipbuilding lu re, h us spoken favorably t>t the t*111?. i prist*. lint the owners ot \Ihj slop yard at liueksvilk' who know of the comparative economy ot building ships here and in many eastern parts, are laughing in their sleeves at the random calculations and ex parte statements ol our northern neighbors; they likewise remain unmoved by the base misrepresentation ot those who live on lalse clamor and spurious agitation May 25th, 1876. Di oksvilmc. A rinanciul Lesson with the South for a Text, A special Washington correspondent ot the Chicago 'J'ribune says: "Congressman Won. 1). Kelly has returned irom a two months1 trip in Florida, wheie he has boon hunting alligators ami collecting illustrations lor Instancy theoriis. lie tells a gloomy stoiy ol tin; commercial condition ol the South. 11o s there is a gen era I leeling ot distiust anion*; the com-1 inerciul classes; I hat the Slates ami corporations ot all soils are issuing slituplasters, which ale current as cur- j relicy; that the railroads make change j hy giving due-bills good lor tare tor j certain number ol miles; that the cur- 1 ' I reucy ot Male hanks is constantly imposed upon one tor greenback*, and that the negroes can obtain nothing tor their cotton 1ml store orders. In all this Kid lev insist* ilmt ! '? <i.? ! J . ?I\ r?vvo l 111; uluilliiiule tri(iiki|>11 <>1 lii.s liiiarico theo ries. lio liviiirs thai lit- is a candidate* lor llio l'residcnoy. Judge Ivvlli-y slated thai ins experience Hum the \ is. I it u> the commercial cities ol tile Sou;l) is iIihI the financial legislation ol tlio Forty-third Congress in rapidly driving the South toward insolveney, is retarding its prosperity,ami will prevent all substantial reconstruction.' I 1673, Centennials. We are in the midst of centennial celebrations, and in tin? excitement Attending them the casual observer is likely t ? make one ol two mistakes. Kilher from excessive patriotic sensi bility lie will overrate, or in a spirit of sell sulbeieni cynicism underrate, their influence in strengthening and ditfusi11:i lovu ol country among those in whom the lire ol patriotism has burned low. It is well, in order that we may | not he disappointed in the result hoped ! lor trom these celebrations, that both ol these errors should he avoided. It is easy to throw up our caps and hurrah, rejoicing that we are a hundred years old, and still cling together as one people. Increase ol years, however, is not in iisell meiitorious, and only becomes worthy ol honor when accompanied by increased virtue and will to do the riultt,. 11, as we recall the hundred years of oar existence as a nation and count o\cr our achievements, we can strike a balance in lavor ot virtue, Ireedoni, iiitelligciue and integrity (and we think this may he honestly done), we then shall have solid ground on which ha base patriotic hopes ot the future, as well as patriotic pride it the past. We tally recognize the evils, political and financial, from which the country i? now sulh ring, but we are convinced that they are merely the inevitable result of our toriible civil war. - ? - 1 mimI that 1.1u*re is in the people power ami intelligence sullici'jnt to overcome I hem. Hence we are not disposed to croak over the present condition of the country us compared with the past; nor do we think that because, at the end of a hundred years, we have whisky rings, poor civil service, bankrupt railroads, and unpleasant social eruptions ot various kinds, we should take no pleasure in reviewing our past, cr !o< 1 despondent as to our luture. if, in our rejoicings, we can re member our shortcomings without prognosticating e\ll, and only evil, tor \ l.o i'utuiv; it we can boast ot our 11 luni: lis v\ iibout 1) listing ot our sins, ai.d it m all these boastings, triumphs anil r* j iiriugs wo can preserve nieusur:ilily aspiritol humility, why, then, it seems to us, that these centennial occasions/ray be made potent intluencos lor good, even it they do not meet the sanguine expeelalions ot those enthusiastic patriots who think that no other nut ion, ever in a hundred years, accomplished s-,> much lor the wcllaro ot iiiaiikiii l as we have done. Union Herald. I lie South at the Hunker Hill Centennial. In tlm vast column there will he 12,000 to 15,000 citizen soldi.ry, not only all ol the Massachusetts ti oops, hut whole regiments and 'crack" companies lYom many other Mates. Kveu tar oil' South Carolina, lornicrly in bitter t'eud with our Slate, contributes her gallant Washington Light In unit ry of Charleston. Their sppi arni.oe will bo greeted with joyful shouts ol welcome. All that will 110 remembered on that day will be 111?w uoblv South Caioliua stood by Missachuset s in her darkest hours, one hundred )ears ago. Maryland sends her Sjdended 5lh Regiment. New V??rk furnishes the historic 7ih. | Connecticut will also bo represented ?v one i?i her best regiments. The display will be very magnificent, and he Lug remembered.?Boston Journal. There will be no organization in line on the 17th that will be more heaitily cheered than the Washington Light I ilia n try ot Charleston, S. C? It will he gratifying to behold this return of good Ieeling-?Boston IJost. I he companies whose name were identified with the Confederate cause ire among the certainties on Bunker ili 1 Centennial Ray. All are assured a hearty reception in these days of increasing good Ieeling between those who stood face to lace over the bloody chasm.? Boston Aduertiser. UI was blind, hut New I See." If one-tenth of the evidence against Senalor Spencer of Alabama is true, and there is 110 i u.isi>u for doubting it, lie should bo sjiecdily ejected from bis seat in the Senate, and the niCII lor Whom he ohfiiinml nlHiw nn ?." ? ? V.mw auumu UU removed forthwith.? Hartford C'ourant. It. is a great satisfaction to sec the blind restored to sight, and tho dulled moral senses revived to a quick sensibility ot prompting, It will bo kept hi mind that is from the Hartford (jourantt and that Gen. Joseph II. Unwloy is its editor. It need not be torgotten, either, that ten months ago, in tins same paper, wo had under the weather-stained veracity of Anninias Hays, a duly authenticated invoice of Alabama horrors, which, as was intended again startled the quiet North with the phantoms of a new rebellion. It was of necessity that a working majority in tho lower House should have support in returns ot* voting to ti.v and rasten upon the country a stupid, selfish, and plundering despotism; and so long as the people could be held by the necromancy of such leaders as ti ey had, couciencos were drugged and mouths wero shut. Is it not a bare I i(is4l l\l I if rr !"?-?* if " ' ' , .../.iivj viiav it vic'.uut'u consiliumcii-s had not risen in indignation and remanded these madmen ot disturbance and turmoil to a private station, me rod Hag would still float from Gen. I law ley's window und the crossbones be su>pended above his editorial desk? Gen. llawley knows too, full well, that Spencer is no Senator from Al[ b.una. His tenure of place would have been as good if lie had been voted for by a group of Digger Indiana round ncamp fire, a most fit ling eonsiiii|eiioy J for liiin. Why has (ten, ilawlev fellowKhipped wiih lids tirlworthy minion ; in a high pluce? Even Senator Conki lin<r, with aristocratic nostril and a i retincd touch. has been, it is said, warm in friendship with him, ami grasps his hand when there is no hasiiT, soap, and towel near by to wash off the polutiou of the conthct. That Gen. 1 Haw ley's visual organs are now ! healthy, is a matter lor congratulation. It these gentlemen have done iniquity and repented, let them go through a purgatorial lustration, come out oi this wallow of association, and ! seek the companionship ol decent men. Hut they must sit on the cutty stool lor a while. They must purge and fumigate. Sulphur and burning straw cannot be dispensed with. Carbolic aei?l and charcoal must disinfect. Step to the windward il you please, General, your odors are offensive! You are from a laz.tr house of Syrian plague. You have been in the wards of a hospital lor the small pox. Gen. Ilawhy has many admirable qualities, to which we give all credit, lie has ihc power, and wo doubt not the inclination now, to turn from his late error of ways, but he must bring forth works of repentance before ho can be lorgiven.--jV". <S?n. lie v. Dr. Palmer, the well konown Presbyterian minister of New Orleans, has just completed the memoirs ot Dr. Thornwell, ol South Carolina, a work II Doll U'liicli l)n l.oc In.1.11 in..........! 4.... .? .. v ? m v ii t?D u v- 11 v;i vvi i\Ji i some time. FOSTER'IS 2nd Texas Drawing! $200,000 Houses & Lands! POSLTITKLV THE LAST POSTPONEMENT Will draw, without lad, at HOUSTON, TEXAS, JUNE JOrn, 1S7.7. We did not sell qiiilv all our Pickets in time to di aw on t lie Kith of .May; but so certain are we of success, and in evidence of our good faith and intentions, we will receive in payment for Tickets, c.ei tilieates of deposit in a.iy tirst-olass bank in the LI. b., with thisendor.senient: "Payable only ichen Foster's Texas Drawing lakes place." No Scaling of Prizes, hut every one paid in full. Over 00.000 acres of choice land, ccnlially located, near railroads, 17 Houses, 2:i2t> t?old Coin pii/.es, among them one of $10,000. and one of $.7,000. Uur enterprise is endorsed by the City Council, lieliable Agents Wanted, bend for Circulars. They will convince you we are both reliable and responsible. Tickets only $1.00. Eleven tor $10, and 251 tor $20. No connection with any other similar enterprise. Commi'iNdatoky.?-Ilaving, from our long acquaintance with J. E. Poster, every conli.i........ in -- .. .. v.v.;11vv in iiu juuryuiy, we teel justified in saying wo believe lio wnl carry oul his Distribution honestly ami lairly.?Signed by tho Mayor, lion. J. T. 1). Wilson, ami tho City Council. Wo aro specially desirous that parties interested would write to Hanks, Merchants and Cost masters of this place (where we have liv? ?l 1") years), for information as to our reliability. J. E. FOSTEK, .Man ao Kit, Houston, 'lexas. Encourage Ibmo People and Homo Enterprise. DOOR, SASH and BLINDS. Geo. S. it^er, CHARLESTON, S. C. Only Carolinian engaged in tho manufacture of Doors, Sash, liiinds and Mouldings and Turned work in Charleston, S. (J. Prices as low as any other house, and work all first class. imirrlilrt i ?V|U-1J . C O NSUMP T I O N , i SCROFULA, &c. lleiiuoiitiur.H fJemiliic Coil l.ivcr Oil Uni Uud LtYrr Oil il Warranted puie IN10Wt'OUSIItliAXD Oil., It tius stood ihe test of over twenty yeats' experience, :tuil can h? relied on In every particular Manulacturep by Hkokmak Ai Oo., ('hei-nists and DrUKKisit* New York, and sold by all lJruggisis. Jan. join tJino. phappcd Hands and Face Here i.i|iHt llryucM of Iho shin, Ae? Ac. Cured at once uy ( AMF1IOH It i; H ITII hLVIKhlNK. Xi Keeps tne hauiin noli in all We.ith?r Mm that you get lll'.filtMAX'N Sol I by all llrugreal. I'rlco, 26 conist seat ny mail forsoceun, Manufactured only by 11 i.okm*.* Xtoo , ClieuiiM* and lirugKist, I* O. Box Inlj New York. Jan. SOtti dino. e. & etTanthonf&oa, 0U1 BROADWAY, I^EW YORK. [(>pp. Metropolian Hotel.] Manufactures, Importers and Dealers in 1 Chromes and Frn.mA? STEREOSCOPES andVlE Ws!7 Album*, Uraphoscopes, and Sul tabid Vlcwi. 1 P110T0G H A PHIC M A T K RIA LS. ^ MAO 10 LANTERNS AND I'HOTO laNTrlKN SI4DBS A SPKClAMTY. The FresUc.it *nd Best Assortment of Lantern Slides in the World. 07* Cut out this advertisement for futu.e reference. ^sjq march l3-2ui. H i L t