University of South Carolina Libraries
V / ??^ ^ '^^^_~^~> ,^> ^^_~~^~L_ ' J<wtyl to Ss^nMurf. iortKullur^ gomcstiq (Kqonoimj, golift fitqatuvi}, |)olifirs, ;iik! the O'liirrnt ^hir of ik |):n?. mi- - n . ? ? j. iie ixreat isargain Store # CiO WIIKKK YOU CAY BUY THE M0S1 ?FOR TIIE? LEAST MONEY \ -AND BargJlU I? Print,. /" Bv|M? hi llress Goods from t6c. v Bargains ft* Bleached Shirting froae^**^ Bnrgains in Brown Shirting ? ? '- W ^ Bargainain. Jeans from ,160 up Bargains in Ticking " ? 10c " Bargains in Fluuuels " 20o " " Bargains in Li nssye' " 15c " ^ ^ Glomes. ' V'!' J^ ' Bargains in our Ladis*' Linen Uaadkercbiel at Go Bargains in Hosery at 6 and lOo. per pair. Bargain* in Neck Ties. . e. Bar gain a in Coata, and Clark's Cot tan at 5c ?i - Spcal. ? ' Bargains in 8hoes?Women's Pegged at f t ; V* and ft 25. bargains in Lediea' and Gent's Hsnd-Satr* Shoea?CTery pair warranted. BARGAINS IN CROCKERY, * . It is whisoered about. and'M>ermllv wc will be pleased to show. We guarantee t duplicate any bill bought from surroundin markets. All we ask is an examination of ou goods and prices. Cftpt. H. C. JOHNSON and J. A. FA NT wi extend a heartv wclcomo. SPUAltS.sfc C OLTON. Oct 4 40 tf hfMiriT t *r OrJiUlALi TRADE --J Induc^enfs Kfi!r~ramnrruuitr WK lmve on hand and to nrrivc the mo: complete Stock of general Merchandifl wo have over ollered to the trade. Consistin of I>oi1108(ic8, I>rc?H Goo<1m, Shavln, Cawiiinem, mwfti&eiM y and Flannels Kid OloYes, Hosiery, in a 'lc ?w a i< io BOOTS AND SHOES. SPECIALTIES Lade's and Gent's custom Made Shoe dent's Hand-Made Nborn. THE CELEBRATED ftTAR ftUIRTQ ANI1 PHI I ARI w nn wiiiii w nim wvbkrvni Also our No. 50 Shirt, 2100 Linen Bosom on Cuff's, at $12 00 per dosen. Come and see us before purchasing elsewhei as we are determined not io be undersold. ? Seed Oats I Sewl^eaTr^ HIGHLY Improved, for sale. Apply Foster & Wilkins' store, to C. R. ROBINSON. Oct. 4 40 tf ft if HEADS OF AMILIES ARRAIGNED., i " Bcvercud Dr. Tuluiadge has recently made a still hunt, iu company with the po- I lice and two elders of his Church, "through the New York dance houses, gambling hells, I ^ and other haunts of vice," and has made I tho facts which it brought to his knowledge the basis of several sermons iu tho Brook;- I lyn Tabernacle. One of then was in part I devoted to asculhiug arraigumeut of "heads I ? of families," from which wc quote thoYol- I lowing as "makiug a fearful exhibit of the I social vices of tho groat cities of the j North:" . ..r ,( ,.{n awful perjury ujpton thoHi of broken * aM^inge' vows^hd while many ?f thorn * keep thei on a niggardly portion - fM^my eoougk to sustain life, have for the diamonds and the WWttrobe equipage of iniquity?? In /bp umbo of high Heaven I cry ? gains*' mis pofulat iDi^uitjf^.Sucb met* must be cast out frohs eoeial lifo and business tefotiono, lfthey will not reform,* overboil wifch .them (Void all decent circles. 3 ju^ of .gMrfodleti^D ? jro^n and tori t> anathema!lJjt-what law of justice doe* the burning excoriation of society pursno " offending woman down off the precipices while offending man goes kid-gloved into respectable circles, invited up if be have m money end meata, forwarded into^poltfcioal kebdgnitt^i, wud^ the doora*ot high Kf?;. 1 opening to til* rap of hi* gold beaded ?ene? d If y^d^ ifce fan demand that' you I take both back; if one moot go down, C then let both go- "dow^?" [Appkuse.J^ ^ . I think tho eternal perdition of *H other I sinners will be heaven oonipdred with the if everlasting putHshmeUf. of. that maawho, h urKTupon nis cnllarou, whose destiny his 0 own example may dctcrmiue, goes forth to g seek atVcetional uUiauccs clscwhorc?fire r and hail and tempest and darkness and 11 blood and woe and anguish and despair for ever and ever. I tell you there must be reform in this matter or American society will go to pieces. Under the head of ''iucompatibility of disposition" nineteenths of the iniquity of the day is committed. What j did you get married, for if your dispositions are incompatible ? Oh, you say, I rushed 1 iot<> the marriage relation without thought. 1 Thjttt you ought to submit t" , [ yoiTclcservctor making a fool of yoursclt.? ? You have uo business to havciucoiupatibility of temner. To sav tho least, vou are rosjmu sible for at least one-half of tho iucotppuU-1 7" ring fo'ggfiTggr-Hint yon-eitner brittle trol your own temper or tuut you have al- ; ready broken your vows? Incompatibility ! ^ of temper is, in niuo hundred and niuety- ! g nine cases out of a thousand, a soft phrase to cover up wickeduos already enacted. I tell our cities and I tell the world this morning that the houses of dissipation are supported by tho wealthy heads of families.? Would to God that by some raid of the poly lice, lasting for the next 10 years, every morning the frequenters of haunts of iniquity could be marched out to tho police court, ,g ii^kiBsd^by ahoufrjtweuty reporters to take PWJlWT^SifoSnnd give them in large capitals our newspaper*. It i* atot so much tho m ??. .?< wjm ut vui viiin uiai ni't'ii to bo looked after at presents their fathers 9 and motb*cg. [Sensation among the elderly men.] Without the ibpport of tho heads cf families in one month tmftfthost of tho haunts s of siu in New York, Philadelphia and lioston, would crumblo into ruin. m What Five Siieep Will Do.?Five J sheep will ourich one acre of old, wornout d mowing land in three years, so that it will produce ono and one-half toos of hny per ? year, by a alight sprinkle of seed each year own in early spring. Five sheep will proJ duee manure in winter to tho vuluo of $10 : Lkff givtug them suitable bedding. Five ' * SSuep Will get th^ir living through the ... summer on one acre of ground ; tho pasturing of tho same would be $2. Five sheep a will raise five lambs, worth $15. Five sheep will shear twenty-five pounds of woo), worth $6.? Selected. We do not think, til I do I not, that Rev. Mi% 'ruokeWjTnuy right to go around talking about Oftjfr thn way he I docs. Of course wo are ^&iuci:ta admit that this whole busiucs* ^qBUUpleas- I uut for biin, but it hutl hWft' iMipifcftunt for I us, too, and it would be n?"fBor?tb*|^kris tian like in Mr. Tankedkp' jfflBU?''t he I he 'g;^in and give u.s are willing to Keg his pavJB, awThfc^tAjfht to apologize to us for tafliiug the up yur 8 K v ouo B*' J ,a nnn frota Cafc ifornia. I do not kn?i<wrjete be got it, but the parrot bad be^ii careful lj trninod, come from?" It woplcf* repta-"Yuba Dam ?" just like a u^mbor^ojt' kfWijfcress.? Indeed, from hav It seoiried just A few days after I bought fhe paipot; SnIihd Jane (jho is Maria AnrtVyouoger sister) came iu looking vety much pleased, him into the library to have a cigar, bat be refused, antd tho parrot remarked "Yuba | library, I sat ]^rldr**jtoe?ter j taioed him |he best way I could foatil D O^elock^whep , he fcentoff very, hurriedly, and slammed the frout foot so f^djfnitly that it was rather a rclUf to ia? WMe noise roused tho parrpt asf&eio^thw^HhiU he ooujd, uiurmjlr> l>^?^Pg?ttan done did not spoflt for toibe r^aou, I of a conversationalist, perhaps wo had better have a little whist or cribbago to outerItain him. ''You old fool," said my wife. "Yuba Dam," said the parrot. Then my wife explained that Scissors did not care anything nt all about me*t)Ut fee was coming to sue Susan Jatns. "Why," said I, "he ain't courting Susan Jane, is he?" and then Susan Jane looked as blushing and happy as ati angel, and the parrot yelled "Oh, IIo, Ha-a-aa; Yuba Dam." So I did not go iuto the parlor that evening, and as Maria was busy darning stuck-, tugs, aud ^vtr^UOllrri later Maria woke;?BWM|ffj\>. rt:tcu. "J. Joshua forks," go home iiveuch a storui. lir'otf bs to stay all night." \ ~ <-*?j **<or thai it appeared to tie lie had stated ail night, but she bushcu uie up, an ' .L&uirted for tho parlor. She grabbed mc by tile coat skirt, just as I was about to ope-i the parlor door, saying, "Well if you ain't the biggest idiot! ' Then she knocked chairs together, aud hit her hand agaiust the door knob-once or twice, made a variety of noises, aud then told me I could go iu. All lior triable was needless, for when I went fa Susan sat on one side of the parlor and Scissors on the opposite side, aud they were talking about a war in Mexico. Scissors Uraukfully ac ceptcd my invitation, and I showed him to n r.miii lint, lio ?11?1 nut lni>? ? " ?"? .1 ? 1 ? .Ww...| ? ?v. Hv/v (Mit v U ^lUUl) UUill of time to sleep beforfc broukfaRt was ready. >; :" I brought tho parrot out of the parlor, because I thought it would bo amusing to hear him talk while wo wore eating, and that ill-omened bird stjuintcd at Mr. Scis sors a few moments and then went off: "Ah-a-n-a" just as fast as be etnild jabber. "Scissors, Scissors, Sc-r r-r, iYuba Dam. Oh. vou ouit. You're mnssiiitr mv - ?? hair ul! up. Yuba Dam, Scissors, Sc r r. Ob, I'll scream !" You never saw any one blush so red as Susan Jane did, and Mr. Scissors was so embarrassed that he put sugar on his hoof steak, and dipped mustard in his coffee.? Maria kicked my shins under tho table until she abraded tho cuticle in several places, and finally she told mo to take that horrible parrot in tho wood shed. I did qot gv. at once, because tho parrot was saying things that I had never heard him say before. 1 remarked that tho intelligence of parrots was wonderful. That bird," said I, "must tbitijc. Ho never heard any one talk that wanl' But just then .Maria kicked inc so hurt! that 1 stopped talking to feel of my leg,- and sec whether it was brokcu in one place or two places. t ? As V The parrot went right on, "Oh. Susnu ! Darling Susan Jane," and then ho made a smacking noise, with his bill. "My Susan, sho should have.a carriage and a diamond ring, and go to Paris. O-o o o Yuba l>am." < and then he smacked his bill as though he were crazy. Susan Jano began to cry, and Scissors threw a biscuit and knocked the oago off of the chair, where it stood, and yelled, "You bo damned your own self. 1 never wrid so." ^ ,4b You did," said Susan, and with that she Hfeuled away, and Mr. Scissors left. jHSlold Maria that 1 would sell the parrot. ViMnic^^^a^u^^imtelhgcnco than 'tfee dour,lull of her trials;'and began : "Oh, Mr. Tinker," "Yuba Dam" replied the parrot, * and, H . sounded as though Maria Ann made tbo whole remark. Mr. Tunkcr looked very mnch horriGed, and Mnria tried to explain. "Why, Mr. Tunk'er, if you tbiok I could usesudh language?,""Yubft Dam" yelled the parrot, aud Mr. Tuuker whirled ?nd walked away, pulling his hot otcr his >yea with both hau-ls. i' I set the cage in the back yard and turnled a barrel JtnJ l-nn?. ni? ?' ? >? J/U* &VTV VWUi W ,'cu bread nud wfyer until I got a^Wnca to sell him, but neitb$? 3Ir. Tuukbr nor -$lr. Scissors ca!Icd?at our... house any more.? StiUwater Lumberman. ,Brides and BaiDKUROOMs.r-Tbe na tgDid^Hpnal is the gresvfr Tesort for the city in tjbe tfc dove business. The fall is the great sea sod for the newly married. Nearly every train now brings several couples. A hotel oletk off guard the other day coudesceudeg to impart the information that 'uearly onehalf of their guests from now on to the 1st of November were newly fledged married ,'peOplc. Hotel-kcopers like to have them come. They are extravagant in their tastes, and so infernally happy that they never preiauuK^Midiaputo bills. Last Sunday ^n the diutpj^ifcrtn of a public.botel hero, T coupled ton new 1 y wedded couples. There is an air of prosperity about these traveling people that speaks well Ibr the p'rospcrity of the country. t am yet to sco the brido who is uot stocked up with the regulation diamond 'geutcel stari. Tm: wonieu.all .look better aud more at case than the men. who show plainly their country training. Nobody but :i fo il or :i rniintru --1 ' ? - ? vi f^uca uuuui on the highway of life in a white tie and a shiny black broadcloth suit for traveling.? For weeks these couples have been coming and going, and you can hardly tell one set from the other. 1'hoy are also molded by the one look .of serene satisfaction that covers all-their faces, that their individuality is lost. I heard a grave, cynical old army officer the other day rebuke some friends who were laughing at the peculiar actions of sonie^uewly nmrried^v/ig tf-ftfeNvorld.' liet them alone. God knows it will be short cuough with thorn at, best.?-Cor. *rt "W'l 'Possum Shipment.?One hundred aud fifty 'possums, confined in a box car, were received at the Greenville and Columbia Railroad depot from Walhallu yesterday afternoon. They were consigned to a wellknown colored caterer of Columbia, who proposes to put them up, fatten them, and deal them out to his customers, where they would do the most good ' The shipper has evidently made a mistake in this business venture; he surely forgets the fact that Mr, Chamberlain and his followers arc institutions of the past, and that ' 'possum meat" will not he as popular in the future as it used to was. Charleston Countv bids fair to cotno out all right ; the "Santce orator" ami his friends have be m retired to private life ; and the 'possum trade, as a natural consequence, will be dull in Columbia this fall, There was a "gnashing of teeth," even if thcro was an absence of j "weeping and wailing," when the 'possums arrived and were inspected, as though even they seemed to read the writing on the wall. ? Columbia Ilrf/ister.. England has lately lost a prodigy of learn ing in the porson of the ltev. William I?inwood, aged sixty-one, whom Dr. Kennedy, head muster of Shrewsbury School, himself a famous scholar, dubbed the best scholar of his ago in Knglund, and probably one of ( the best in tjic world. When he graduated [ lirst class in classics at Oxford, on being I asked what books ho brought up for examination, ho replied, '*Tho whole range of Greek and Latin literature," aud his pro-cm iuencc was so conspicous that the exam iners were reported at the time to have considered whether, departing from tho rule, they ought not to place his name, conspicuous and alone, at the head of the first class. V'ct this man never got beyond a curacy? lie did not take priest's orders?and for thirty-one years his life was passed in seclusion, devoted to preparing works in the classics, and latterly to the study of astrol|ogy. _ ?. vi'XlVAiAH "*? ? ? V - ?5-7=?>ff- yr?'Jt V ? lasi-HL'- * C/AU8K for Di vorck?A funny divorce j suit, which is affording (lie aged citizens of [ 11 art lord great amusement. is ?hat ol' I'Mj ward Cook against Minervn Cock, now in progress at the city named. One of Cook's complaints is that in 1871 his wife propelled him out of the marital couch with her little feet. Ou this particular occasion she had told him to "move along," which ho did until he hung on the ragged edge, as it were. Not satisfied, his spouse made a further demand for more room, and when he told her that he could not move without falliug out of bed, she braced herself up, plunged her feet into the small of his back, and lauded hiui in the middle of the room . not sleep with hi? face towards her for a whole year. She denied kicking him out of k bed in 1871, and said that she got up ono night and in gettiug back to bed accidentally fell upou his lcot. * Wherenrinii Rn clured that she did it though malice, and > .said she was the euibodiiueut of hell itself, ^ and that he would ueVer sleep wftb her again, and he kept his word. It is plain to^ec .that a decree should issue in the case of Cook rcrsus Cook. - *Some one gives the following table of the order In which men give np t^eir luxuries under tho ptessuro of hard times: Books go first?the book trade flattens under a panic?illustrated papers next^ and then daily papers. If the pressure continues, th^ trade in pianos and fine furniture falls off: but tho laboring classes begin to oon-.^it begius to ctft ofr'fiuc clothes find jewelry, , and thou it's getting pretty tight^JPuton another screw and tea and coffee suffer; then all the nicest kind of produce. * If tho screw still tightens, when the worst comei to worst, and there is no help iron} God ot man, the whiskey and tol^cco begin to be cat off.^.But the dog's about dead, when it comes to that. ?r ' A Watekmelon Case.?A poor fellow was before the Inferior Court on the pharge of stealing a_ watermelon out of a brother ^ colored man's patch. The case wefJt through the usual ?? ?_:_i ? j * ?u> u inuiHuu was bud* mitted to the jury for a verdict,. After a trd that they had found the prisoner guilty of the* charge ; also, that every member of the jury had at some time been guilty of the same offense and they uuauimously recommended the prisoner to the clemency of the Court. The members of the Court consulted a moment, and then coiijcsscd that they, too, had been guilty of that offense, and that they had decided to discharge tho prisoner on tho payment of costs.?Salisbury Watchman. ? ^ au, - - *" * 1 ...JlQK be drink any move?" asked Mrs. B. '-No." said Mrs. A. "About two months ago be caute limno 5 T '' * *" ^ -- , mtrnc To mi, ana no don t driuk now. ? ' That accounts for it," said Mrs. 11. "The other night my husband met hint in tho street hanging to a lamp-poet, and asked him why he didn't go home, and lie sa'uUho would as soon as he cot sober." When Mrs. A. and Mrs. B. pass each other in tho street now, the coldness is as thick as a quart of ice creaui. A New York clergyman says he "doesn't know himself." He shonld gwt wouuopted and run for a political office if he wants Co be told all about himself and more Wao.? [The newspapers and speakers on the other side would crowd more astonishid^mid a1**fc." ' ful things iuto his pedicrec than he ever dreamed of. lie wonl^f be surprised to learn that he starved his granfuther to death and threw his grandmother down an old well. A lawyer once asked the late Judge Pick ens, of Alabama, to charge the jury that ' ii is better thut ninety and nine guilty ?, . men should cscupo than one innocent man should be punished." "Yes," said the witty Judge, "1 will give that charge, but in tho opinion of the court the ninety nnd nine guilty men have already escaped iu this county." To Oi;re Horses from ItunniNO Their Tails.?Tako 2 tablespoousfull of sulphur, 2 of lard, and one of turpentiuc, mix well together, then rub the tail well with it; in two applications the horse will be entirely cured. 1 have used this remedy And can vouch for it being a sure cure.? Youno Planter. _ . _ ?? J- ,s A young man, hired as a clerk, was told by his employer that nil his clerks slept in the house, and that it was closed punctually at 10 o'clock every night. "Oh, don't apologize," said the youth; "I dou't care what time it is closed, if it's only opened early ouough in the morning."