University of South Carolina Libraries
FAIRFIED HERALD WINNSHORO, S. C. Wednesday Morning, July 21, 1869. D)spv'eos, Williams & Co., Props Utter Degradation. To what a pass have we come 1 Bad any set of executive officers in nny State in the Union, attempted, be fore 1860, such an usurpation as the aissessmont and collection of $230,000, without warrant of law, and in the facc of a most positive prohibition, they would have trembled in fear of impeachment and expulsion from of. flee. The vengeance of any Liegisla. ture at all worthy of the name, would have tern them down from their be tiotted presumption, and humbled them to the dust. Bnt the plunder. ers now in office, treat the Legislature with the contempt it richly deserves. It is but so much clay in the hands of the potter, and they do not pretend to oonceal that they look upon it as such. Far fro'n fearing impeachment, Scott impudently ncknowlodges that the law prohibits a tax of over a million dollars. The law, however, he im plies, was a mistake. We nood i I, 230,000. We, therefore, contrary to the prohibition of the Legislature, h ivo coolly assessed it.. "Factious op. p-sition in the Courts," will do no good, lie continues, for I "will be cmpellodl to call the Legislature to gether," tell them about tie 230,000 they forbid being collected, a set of woolly-boadod dunderheads that they are, and get them to pass a law that it must be collected notwithstanding. Did insolence ever go beyond this I Can any Legislature fail to winch be ticath such an exhibition of the scorn of its own creatures ? Do they gnietly accept such utter degradation ? Lot. them, if they choose. But let our people try the courts, to divide the republican party for the future, if for no other purpiose, We tire told, however, that we are, for the flrst time living under "a truly republican form of government." Yes, and we propopse to reoimbor that, for the sake of show, we have been left.the power to vote. We are, therefore, a minority that cannot al ways be trifled with, and which will, one day, wreak summary vengeance, by sotting tip and supporting one snake, to bite off the head of another, "which, if not victory, is at least re venge." Remember the past, and look, thon, to the future. Remember the in fluence which overthrew Mackey-not that, it hated Sawyer less, but Alackey more. Such in flucuices, when the ntex( strugglo for stealago comes, will be stronger than before, and like a fly in the pot of ointment, will cause the whole of it to stink. Trrcnt the Liegisltiture wvith contemupt. Giood. The .Judiciary as corrupt. Ihetter. Sweet souls, thiey will draw their sala ries, but neverthieleni, wvill, though rotten, sF.cnP.T.Y resent it. Property holders as slaves, to do the bidding of the carpet-bag Trinity, Scott, Tomilina .son & l'sakor. Best of all. Affetionate love, of course is, the natural conso We can come ourselves to but one conclusiot, and it is, that these mcen hope to make hay while the sun shines and then take their departure. Some have supposed that, from the amount of their extortions, they were contemn pltiting a credit business and the giv ing us a little iinme. But they ovi dien tly mean cash, aind immendit/y, aiid it is a source of merriment to ourselves, wh'lo can't be hurt uchol by a tax upon propeaty of any sort, (fot they stole all of our property, and lefi us dheep in dhebt, "long, long ago") tc see, that the barest faced impudence and hectoring bullying upon the re cords of American history seem. about to cow aitd intimidate a once free people itito abject submission. Our wonder is, why did not they assesi $2,000,000, whetn about it, and ."al, low" a million, instead of $230,000, "FOR DEFAUILTF.n 1" Weo are aston. ished, when woe think upon it, at Boott's mnodoetion. We take back our threats WE WVILL voTE FOR HINt FORl THlE U. 8. SENATE. Folly Spreading, 'deas, undoubtedly, rule the world, but, just as undoubtedly, take oven centuries of time to prevail. All civ ilhzed ommiunities were astonished, the other day, after ages of argument1 at the vote of over or.o fourth of the members of thme Spanish Cortes against religious toleration, a principle which comm~nends itself clearly to every con sideration of hiumatnity and reason. Still furthrr are mankind fromu the equailly humane and reasonable prin ciple of political toleration. There mauy be thlose in Fairfield, for In mit~neo, wuhio would willingly spit in the taco of the edit.or ftisua0eo were it not (bat there oelstsj:a glittot. s ing little peaco-making eylInder thAt I puts the weak mpn, en'lrtrag, I upon an equality with the trong. It j is not principle, that is to say, but E coward ice, that would restrain them. i It was of one of such men that an Un- f ele of ours, when drawing up for a v client, an inoffensive cltizen, a petition E to court, then in session, to have him v bound over to keep the peace, made a i mortal enemy for life, but one who, t nevertheless, carefully kept out of his t way, by making his client pray "for protection, not from the bravery or F courage of - , but from his un- t principled and dangerous cowardice." There is, in short, a large part of I every generation of mankind, who are 1 influenced to action, not by ideas or I principles, but by narrow-minded pro- L vincial or party catch-words and war- t cries, and by personal whims, crotoh- f ots and prejudices, and who regard N an earnest idea, because new to them- 1 solves, or coming from a certain quar- r ter, as a visionary hobby, or as an un heard of folly, impracticable in the extreme. Yet such ideas prevail and I bear fruit notwithstanding. We have been struck with these reflctons, upon reading, that in Jef- i forson County, Arkansas, at the very t first meeting of some of its citizens to < form an immigration society, "two hundred and thirty.soven bales of cot ton were immediately subscribed to wards the objoot.'' Ahom! thought we, so iLho visionary hobbyism of the editor of the NEws and hERALD is spreading. There are hobby-riders i elsewhere, who believe, as we do, that the business must commence by "joint contributions," and who are not de. 1 torred from action by indigent apathy and povorty-striken indifference and I despair ; who antually believe in the < power of money to hire hirelings, and < to purchase what can be bought. They have not waited for Newborry, for example, to crook her finger, that Fairfield might jump, but have "flung away their money"independently and i at once. Ah ! it is a great pity ; the world is becoming a set of hobby-ri ders in Arkansas. But there is com fort in oven the sevcrest dispensations of Providence. This permission of evil yonder, is intended perhaps for I our consolation here. We have com. < pany at last, though at a great dis tanco. No longer do we feel ourseves i a solitary curiosity, like a sparrow i upon the housetop of Winnsboro, nor I like a pelican in the wilderness of < Fairfield. Despite the hasty conclu- I sion of nur citizens that we can do i nothing jst ime, the world moves, i elsewhuere, folly is spreading and it is E natural for one hobby-rider to re- j joico, when ho hears of the folly of 1 others. if the expeted lettors and < news from Newherry, do net develop 1 the fact that hobbyismi has been at work over there also, as well as in Arkansas, our joy at sympathy will be moderated, but cannot be destroyed. We now wait andi live in liope of comn pany~ nearer home. Our hobby cavorts. Flyit sproading and will pread slowl'y, i ay bo, but suey eare happy. Tfhree cheers for Arkansas! The Virginia lection. We regard tho triumph of the Con. bervativos in Virginia as the nucleus about which future parties, with their antagonisms, for several years to come, will develop themslvs. There arc, indeed, no parties now in Amerioa, the triumph of the Radicals having for awhile destroye 1 all party organizations. The issue on which thay triumphed, the issue of the war and the characer of reconstruction has been settled. It Is past. It is dead. And now the genius of the Southuern white man for government, his eminently practical turn of mind, has come to light once more, in this Virginia election, in a perfect blame of glory. In the Southoe white race is the best hope of the national govern-I ment. They have THE OREAT ADVAN TAO?. OW ALL 1NTELLIoENT MINORITI~s* viz: they will continue to love liberty, because vnEr oREAT PRINCIPLES OF LIBERTY ARE ALWAYS ON TIEaIR sIDE. A Oonservative Union Republican Party Proposed. If those sufmagans who have hither. to virtually flung away their votes, would give up the foolish motto, "Aut C'aesar, Cut nihil," upon which they have all along been acting, and would borrow a motto from the Bible ; viz: "Lot every man do according to hsis sereralabilitiy," and spreading it to the breeze, would concentrate their efforts upon encour aging, developing, and even positive. ly creating conservatism within the Republican party itself, they would undoubtedly meet with the most mark. ed succe'. Even before the next election, their Influence would show itself in the debates and votes of the next session of tbe Legislature. The excesses of extreme radlahism,- 'asI 06);p t4e mitl a ,bill, and in othq* sws now An th., tatute book, would, egin to bo reoshelned. Bids for thb oworful iflueno an solid vote of a fty thousitid minority destined to nereaso, would- becomo a striking eature of the session. For If few ill accuso the present rulers of the Itate of consoientious patriotism, all rill unite in giving them credit for nordinate and solf-interested ambi ion, which is just as good a principle o bear down upon. I observed, Mr. l'ditor, that you rinted not long sirce, an ext ract from he Mobilo Ti/,tn-, ipnii the evils of Mongrelisn." Thiis is a; it onght io io. U is well to have both sides heard. Cet be careful, Mr. Editor, that you avenot mistaken the sides oif this ques. i ion, and introduei a third conridera. ion that has nothing to do with the acts of the case. I agroe, Sir, ith every word written by the Mio tile Tribune, but I assert that it. has o tearing whatever on thn subject. I is useless to argue for or against a ;overnment by mixed races. That is dead issue for the present. The imple fact is, that our government is /rcady such a govern ment, and the irmi nediato question is, can we do any. hing to moderate its evils ? Can we ixerolso any influenc. upon .it for Pood ? True statesmanship, while it ,ats its glance to the future, ever leals with the present, and urges each nan, not to be "like dumb, driven attlc," but to "act in the l'ving pres. nt, be a hero in the s'rife.'' We nay, with reason, hope for blessed hanges in the ftiure, (and a strong nind is ever hopeful) but ean wo do iot.hing to hnssen those ehanges now ? Che policy of "mnsterly inactivity is he other policy urged upon us, and iertainly it were a good poliey, if it mly were possible. It wouli surely lmd always succeed, wvern it not ever iltogethor and exactly contrary to he constitution of human nature. rbis thorough contrarioly to titture a the only weak point ilhout, it. In onsequence, it invarially f/iils ; for vbile men sleep an enemy sows tares i their field, and reduces them to the lccessity we are at present under, of etting both the wheat and tie fares ,row together until harvest. God, it, >thor words, Mr. Editor, ' never in Onded ind ividuls and comnainities, it any time, to do noIhing, but it do hat they coul/, and trust to Him for uture opportunities to do more. Ile ommends~to our imiti tion an humble senitent in the words, "she hath (10110 rhat she could ;" because, though un ble to shield her Savior from the aoriflce of the great atonement, she ret "anointed hii for his burial ;"' >ocauso, though n nable to prevent his tress and passion, his agony and >loody sweat, his betrayal and death, he yet "washed his feet with her ears, and wiped them with the hairs >f her head." Self-righteo"- disci ,ls scoffed ; but God coiimiendedl, and ~hat was enough for the unpretending lIagdalen. Let us now address our elves, therefore, to the present press ng reality, and do what we can. Vi e sannot overthrow, bnt we can restrain ad moderate, if we do not thereafter >ast away our votes. It is bcause we Save persistently refused to do any.. ~hing, so distasteful and odions to us save been the demands of our con luorors, and very naturally so, which mas given extremo radicalism its ape sions pretext, and secured its exces tive triumph. Downward, downward, lownward have we sunk, until it is sew full time to use our remaining power and reverse the direction of our progress. Extreme hostility but irives republican conservatism into the arms of triumphant and extreme radicalism, so that those are the mest blatant, who are really the most fear ful. The olive branch of compromIse and concession, on the contrary, will bring it over to us, and secure us'the mucess of TunF r'oI.IeY OF COMMON SENSE. Mir. EdJior : For a set of young men to be brought uip with it constantly being ling-donged into their ears, that there is no prospeet of their taking any of. rective part in their own government, that they are under the heel of an un principled and ignorant majority, wielded against them by. still more unprinoipled leaders can end but in two resulta ; either: In the high spirit ad and anmbitious leaving the State, or in their romaiiing here always dlwarfod, and frequently degraded. Because an element d iflcult to deal with has been forced upon our politi sal arena, there are those who counsel sullen inactivity, and a trust In thn ruture based upon such hopes as the lying out of the negroes, and white imamigration, andi a change in federal poli'ti.' Vain refuges all, if relied rn In themuselve, I. Ausplpious pros. Pootelf acoompauled by active- work 'n the prmn / I rat, r.. Edior it theart:f umility and wisdom tf bandon the policy of despair, and q menOo at once to d, what we can. The cry will be raised, that I %dvooato voluntary "AFFILIATION WITr NF.GROEs," by those, too, perhaps, who throughout the State, [ow sit ,on the Jury with negroes, and who 'approved of 'the Columbia (1868) Convention, which gave up the prinoiple of an unmixed white man's governmont : and by those of this District, who, in one of the largest of District meetings, unanimously re rueMsted C'aptain S. B. (19owney, last fall, to serve, as a patriotic dity, with two legioes, as it Com In is.ioner of lect ions ; by those who--who, In short, Mr. Editor, are inconsistent. I regard with calm indifference, this fharge of "affiliation with negrocs." I will not he intimidated by so flippant [n innuendo. I will yield to argu uient, and give up my conscientious impressions to fair presentation of fact, but if it comes to .1 simple ques. Lion of a just pride of raco, put me be fore a Jury, together with my oppo nente. at the earliest practicable 'fay. I shrink from no test of that. htind. And, sir, it is the only answer that. I havb to make to any simple snear without argument, from those who do not realize the necessity to which the bayonet has rednced them. Sir, the White minority must com bine with republican conservatives,; without regard to color, and in the combination, give up cheerfully, for th e present, their party name ; or the nummber of useless offices will continue to increase ; the taxation will ad vance ; white immigration be driven oiT ; laborers become more unruly and rearce ; property be more and more depreciated ; the spirit of our young men be broken ; their cnnrgies dwarf ed and degraded ; misgovernment %ap our prosperity ; and gradual decay jread tie pall of despair and ruin over every commendable enterprise : whilo we, like idiots, stand upon the bank of the stream of adverse circum stance, waiting for it to run dry, in i! cad of plunging in and boldly strug gling to the other side, which can, in [lood, be reached, but reached in no other way. The ball.t never will be taken, in. our generation, from our former slaves. Shall we always re iso to don4iliate their votes? No. it is tolly any longer to do so, is the immediate and self-evident reply of COMMON SiENSe. Mr1). NdWitor : In my last article, your typo made ie say. that in our sable class there was a sufficionoy of brain and muscle for agricultural purposes. Now, it should have read, brawn instead of brain~-that there was a sufliciency of brawn and muscle. EX, in one of his art icles, seems to think that it is doubtful if the white oman oan be induced to cultivate the lands of another in this country as an hireling; and in this, 1 am inclined to think ho is correct, and believe, wherever it is tried, it will result ini dissatisfaction and disappointment to all concerned. I here refer to the employment of an hireling, where the work performed isi on a cotton planta tion, and is exacted from January to January. That condition of things which ren ders this necessity for the white man to become a hireling has not yet been reached in this country, nor is it de sirable at this time. But I believe the time has arrived, and an urgent necessity exist, to make the effort to get the immigrant here, either as an honest punctual paying tenant, or as an honorable eilicient corpartner, un til by his industry he has accumulat ed the means whereby to become the purchaser and proprietor of his own farm. Here, Mr. Editor, many may say, that they neither want the one, nor will they have the other. Let such pause for a while and view the present state of affairs. The way things are drifting 1 awn inclined to think, un less a change can ho effected, so as to correct the false ideas and notions that are now progressively filling the heads of those who have, or are the muscle requirerl to carry on planta tion operations, the former will be forced upon us, and I am satisfied that four-fifths of the acres in Fairfield now under cultivation, are worked under the partnership system. Where parties make an agricultural venture, the one supplying capital and material and the other muscle and Ia. her, and egree to share the lesaes and pronits of thme venture upon an agreed scale of division, they must be copart ners, and nothing else. Now the ques tion arises, if the one (tenantinmg) may, from the very existing stato of affairs, be forced upon us, and the other is already practiced, would it not he hetter, wiser, to make strenuous ef forts to fill their places with the white immigrant, who will be a white citi. sen 1 Mr. Editor, I read "Traveler" in the NEWs of the 0th, and am satisfied that he has permitted himself to fall into error, when he asseirts "that the holder of large tracts of land are un willing to sell.". To prove his asser tioh, he'-says that a friend of his tried to buy threse aeres of eld ' field upon which to build asmall house, and the owner asked ent.-iae dars per acre. le does not ita where that '-old field" was; perhapa it was in the corporate limits of the Boro, if so, seventy-five dollars was not too much. Locality and the surroundings, have a good deal to do, in fixing the value of even "old fields." Three acres of old field near the growing end of-the city of New York is now sell. ing for one thousand dollars per acre, and a waste lot even now, in Columbia or Charleston does command a high prico. And the one hundred acres, unfenced, uncleared land, alluded to by "Traveler" may be in or is near suburbs of Winnsboro; if so, ten dol lars per acre, is not too high a price to abk for it. Perhaps the occupation of the person who tried purobasc, clay have led him into error. I touch upon this as it may orente an erro neous opinion, as to the willingness of the holders of large tracts of land to sell. A holder of a large tract of land may be perfectly willing to sell a portion of hia land at a saorafice or a reduced price to an immigrant to in. duce him to settle here, and thereby increase the roll of white citizens, but would he unwilling to soll, except for u/ ralue, to a person who is well to do, or who wishes to speculate, and is already here by fixture and interest. MORE ANON. The Chi ese Movement---The Other Side of the Question. Now, while Meniplis is holding pub. lie meetings inviting Chinese labor to th, South, the following protest against the further iniportation of ,hese people into California, published by the Anti Coolie Associat on. is of special inter et : There are atbonti 110,000 Chinese in California, 100,000 of whom are in a state of peonage or slavery, and are rented out by the compatv owning theni to the various parties by whom they are emoloyed, in gangs of from 50 to 5000. as they may be rezpired-their wages beming paid to the agent of the compalny, who is responsible for the performance of their labor, and for the return of the slaves, dead or alive, in the Celestial Ei'mpire. The bulk of the h-male portion of them are scattered hiroughout our towns and cities, de. moralzing our vouth and laying the loundationt of future disease anid sorrow to an unlimited extent. The importa. tion of these slaves has already led to Scenes of conflict on our wha'rves, be tween the rival companies owning them, and threatens to assume gigantic propor tions. The employment of these slaves displaces a like portion of uhito labor, and more particularly of the rising gene. ra ion.0 There are itt San Francisco about 18,000 to 20,000 boys and girl, of from ten to. twenty y ears of aig, the majority of whom brought up in idle ties-, as there is no emnlovment for them, and no opportuntity for their learn. ing trades, as all the inirior work in our mills, factories, store, workshops, &c, that is elsewhere done by appren tiees, is here done by Chinese labor. The consequence is, that our boys are but preparing for the State Prison, and a. vast iiumbe.t of our tirls must, alas I sink to the lowest depths of degrada. tion By the general emrployment. of this slave labor itn every branich of industry, immigration of deservmng white people from lho E ust and Europe is retarde~d, and w ill ultimately cease, while many now here must leave. \Ve may in stance the cigar makers, five hundred of whonm, with their famnilies, who were earning good wages, and investing and spendmng them here to the advantage of the counitry, were compelled two years ago to retire before the Chinese labor and leave the State. In this connec ttoon it is a noticeable fact, that theo mn trodntet ion of chenap labor hans not cheap. ene~d the price of a blanket, a cigar, or any other article of home mannfacture, one single ccent to the consumer. The employmient of Chinese labor on the Cenitral Pacific Railroad may have expedited its completion a few months, but we contend that the injury dono our State can never be balanced by the gain in time. Had white labor 'been employedl, hundredsa of acres would even now have been reclaimed from thes wast's and become the homesteads of happy families, who would have ptm. chased the land and increased the reve. tneo of the railroad comnpany, and also of the entire State, while the mioney paid to Chinese labor has been drained out of the country for export to Asia, and on the retirement, of the Chinese slaves from their field of labor not a' vestige of improvement will remain-. not, even a bone of them will be. left, in the soil. For twvelve months an epidemic has been raging in our midst, which for a long time banfled the skill of our medical men and the sanitary re btlations of onr city ; and this smallpox or black plague, is generally attributed to the Chinese. From the density of their population and their pectuliar mode of living, they are subject to many diseases almost unknown among the Caucasian race, to which we are rendered peculiarly liable by the irodnction- of' Chiinese into our hotels, restaurants ane private dwellings as cookrs, washers and domestic ser vante, i lias been objected to our associa tion that it is an Irish, ornesado against cheap labor ; but on the contrary, we embody in our own ranks all classes creeds and polhtical parties, imbued not with hostilhty to the Chinese as a race, but fully believing that all the vast re sources of California can be fully devel oped, and, her railroads, canal*, and other public works, carn be as well and profitably completed by free white labor as they have been in the Eastern States, and that the future greatness of Califor nia . depends more upon the general prosperity of her industrial classes, than upon the vast accumnlations of a afew capitalists. Byv order of the tr a Stat o-, cil of the' -Coolie Association of th Pacific Coadl. F. D)XON1 9'y Local Items. 0::) Extra copies of the NEws Cal be obtained at this office, on the day of publication. Price only five cont; per copy. New Advertisemen s. Tax Notice-John W. Clarke. Strayed or Stolen -R. E. Craig. Masonic Meeting, 19th instant. The Delay In the publiention of the Nnwi and IIERAD, has boen duo to the exces, sive heat having melted our rollers a many as eight times. Hearta and Home, One of the very best family pnper pubiisied in America. Price, $4,0( per annum, in advance. Address Pettingill, Bates & Co., 87 Park Row New York. g-ir Subscribers will plcaseremeni ber that we do not publish communi. cations unless the real name of thc writer accompanies it. Cool Drinks. Those of our friends who are loverr of Sherry Cobblors, Claret Punches &c., will always find them fixed up ir stylo by our old friend A. P. Miller. Godey's Book. Goday's Lady's Book for August l:. arrived, and is a capital number, Engravings, fashion plates, and pretty things make Goley everything that you could desire. $3. per annum, Address L. A. Godey, N. E. Corner 6th and Chesnut streets, Philadol, phia. Confederate Blockade Runners. Read their thrilling adventures in the XIX Century Magazine. For sale at this office. Single numbers 35 cents. Death of Mr. John Johnston. We regret to record the death of Mr. John Johnston on Wednesday evening last, in the 67th year of his age. The deceased was born and rais. ed in 1% innsboro, where he has always lived, and was an accomplished schol. ar, but was afflicted with palsy during his entire life, which rendered hini unfit for active duties. Southern Life Insurance Company. The advertisemtnt to day published speaks for itself. The readers of th! Nxws and H ,ALD may recollect omi editorial "Unwilling to Prosper," ir which we called attention to the subject, and inqired why not keep our money at home ? Signifit. We observe that "the antl-Massa. ehusetts party" have aehieved a tri umph in the election to certain city offices in Charleston, by the Cit3 Council. Will similar splits develor themselves in State politics ? 'We believe they will. A Cirreotion. Wo inadvertently stated lately, that property for which the owners were willing to take four dollars an aere, had been assessed .'by the County Auditor" at six dollars, &e. We de. sire to say, that the property alluded to was assessed by one of the thirteen County Assessors, acting under the general instructions of the Auditor. Old Soldiers I R'ead the graphic stories of Con federate Camps and Fields by "P'er sonno,'' in XIX Century Magazine, published at Charleston, S. C. Price $2.50 per annum. Several copies for sale at this office, 35 a copy. Southerners!i 'Read "Personno" Reminiscences of Confederate Camps and Battle Fields, now being published in XIX Century at Charleston,'B. C. Copies of the July number for sale at this office. Wasting Money. The Court now in session in Winns bore is the slowest we ever witnessed. Judge Boozer allows the bar to waste time, takes him too long to charge the jury, and adjourns at 4 o'clock, There was a time when Judge With. ets ow O'?elil 'nxod to say : "Gentle men, I will adjourn this court on-. at --o'clock. P1ease proceed with the business." OBSERVER. rnilisers. The Charleston Courser of the 10th instant, containsp the following notice : Cotton planters are invited to nli the farm at the Etiwan Works, of thea Sulphuric Acid and Super Phosphate Oomspany, about three miles from the city, tot e the cotton .produeed by theit -tertliser., The seed were planted on the 22d of April, and the forms. oamany of sie splasts exceed eigty. an onone plaut due hundred and sxty-W ere counted. The at. tontlon of visitors is particularly call. ed to the fact at th Et._ For tilizer, No. 1, which consists of Su. per-Phosphato alone, shows finer cot. ton than No. 2, which is mixed with Peruvian Guano ; and also than that portion which has been manured with Peruvian Guano alone. Dent Fal Worth a Oent I "Brick" Pomeroy has ploced the business management of his papers in the hands of C. P. Sykes an experi enced publisher, and now devoles his entire time to the duties of the sane, tum, whore, relieved of business cares, he is making his giant weekly, Pone roy's Democrat, the most rodable pa per ever printed. It is sharper than the La Crosse Domocrat ever was more than red 4hot, and full to the brim of laughable humorous articles ; Saturday night chapters, and those peculiar editorials, none others can or dare write. Send for sample copies, or subscribe by sending for it to the editor or publisher, P. 0. box 5,217, Now York City. Ho pays five hun. dred dollars cash, for the largest e ,j sent in before the 16th September ! The reports of Pomeroy's failures are simply stories started by those who do not like his giant paper or his red hot style of editing a paper opposed to bondholders and official corruption. SPESCIAL NoTiON.-To parties in. want of Doors, Sashes and Blindr, we refer to the advertisement of P. P. Toale, the large manufacturer of those goods in Charleston. Price list furnished on application. july 20--im Half way up Lookout Mountain, the place where memory i % stirred "by a thousand thrilling associations, and where the bravo boys of both armits met and fought hand to hand, where the blood of both friend and foo was mingled togethor and ran down the mountain side in rivulets, is a smooth-faced rock, upon which a poor, wounded soldier inscribed the following: "S. T.-1860-X.-Early in the battle I was wounded, and carried to this spot by two olever ' Yanks.' They bade me farewoll, and as they supposed, to die, for I was so weak from loss of blood that I could but faintly thank them for their kindness. They left in my canpteen a part of a bottle of PLANTATION BITTARS, to which I owe my life, for it strengthened me, and kept life within me until help came and m woni I was dressed. God bless them or their kindness, and for the PL.ANTATION BITTERs." HluNna DAVAOL, Company 11, 10th Ga. MAGNOLA WATE.-Superior to the best Imported German Cologne, and sold at half the price. july 8-txlw A Family Medicine. The PaIm KIt.Lan is a purely vogetabl compound; and, while It is a most efficient remedy for pain, it is a perfectly safe medi cine, even in the most uniskillful hands. For Summer Complaint, or any other form of bowel disease in children or adults, it is an almost certain cure, and has, without doubt, been more successful in curing the various kinds of Cholera than any other known remedy, or the most skillful physi. clan. In India, Africa and China, where this dreadful disease is more or less preva lent, the Pain Killer Is considered by the natives, as well as European residents those climates, a eure remnedy'. Tuti PAIN K3LLF.R.-We have known the high character of this medicine, and that It is used with gre It success and satisfaction in our very best families. It is the favor ito medicine of our missionaries In heat'en lands, where they use it more than all else together for the diseases that abound in . those warm climates. It shoul~d be kept in every house, and be in readIness for aud den attacks of sieknesu.-fAristian Pries. July 0-1m P. P. TOALE, Charleston, 8. C., Manufacturer of .DOORS, SASH, BLINDS. H AVING THE LARGEST AND M~W CMLEITE FAt 'TORY in ibe So i ern Htates, and keeping always on hand a large and most complete stoek of DOORS, SASHES, BLINDS, Sash Doors, Store Doors, Shutters, Mouldings, &e..- &e., I am enabled to sell low and at, manufaeturers' prices. N. B.-Strict attention paid to sbipping In goodorder july 20 Strayed or Stolen. Ttt AYED or stolen on T'uesday evening, U18th Instant, frota my plattation, a gray M tRE, about eleven or trelve years old, blind in the right eye--no other marks remembered. Any Information concerning her whereabouts will be thankfully re-. ceived- R. E. CR A10 8 Mi'es South of Wiansbovo' july 17 tlx2 ' TAX NOTUJ0K 1will be ai the following plaeos for the Ipurpose of colleting 84toand County -Taxes: Gladden's Grove, July 2i ' Yonguowville, " 27. Feasterville, " 28. Monticello, " 20. *enkiestile,, " 30. D~oko, August 8. Ridgeway, " 4. MoCarley's Store, " 6. Iloreb, " '. JOHN W. ChA RlE, .)ul 17County Treaeurer. FMoney Saved is Money Made. RENOJI (A LP and lip Skims, Ameriean, an~d English Hemios 11o1 Leather, a Tolnsnamony by buying your Boots and Shotis from juno 14JOIIN MJoINTYRE & CO.