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-FAIRFIELD WMRALD Published Every Wednesday -At WINNSBOJO, S. C., ' Jr WILIAMS ' .DAVIS. TERMS-IN AD VANCE. Dae Copy one year, o- - 5 800 five " " " - - 1200 S'en " " " - - 2 660 iLCSliC V-S crcWS. Videtto, in the News and Courier gives the following report .f a Feeno in the House during the debate on the redemption of the State Bank bills. The ides.of Leslie accusing Crews of di.shonesty is inexpressibly fuinny. It is pot calling .kottle lack. A committee should be up. ;-,inted to investigate Joe Crows. "B1oston, of Newborry, was surpris. ed at the captious opposition to -the bill. If there was niy favor shown to any body by this measuro the State was the r3cipient of that favor. No .MoNl IN 'IT. Turing his speech he was frequent. ly badgered by the Crews Ring. Indeed, to such an extent was this carried on that llHamilton of Beau folt, arose, and in a sardonic tone and with a grim humor that can only be lppleciaed by those who are familiar with the dark wxy's and -vain'tricks of average South -0to .lina Soloiis.f the latfor day, asked Mr. Boston to inform thw boys that there was no momey in tho bill, and they needn'i kick ag-kinst it. This shot had a telling effect, and the member from Newberry was allowed to proceed and finish his sreo;h. To him succeeded Leslie who inad. one of those exquisitely serio..comic speeches whioh.have m11ade so success fiul us-a politioian. 'Thim, said he, is the most important bill that hIas been .presented t'his session. Tle member from liurei ((rows) has been industriously trave.ling around the ilise mindeavmringf to pr.Jwtlion -certain .mne'bers againlst it, and I see that certain Reipublicans are de .ttrmnined .to .sneer down this bill which has real merits. Crews. Its the merits that we ar feFter. Leslie. I know what yon are after but I tell you and these other mem bers that unless th.i ieasure pa.-is this government will stop. A Voice. Let it top. Le5li 0. Its all very, well to pa let it stop ; but I warn you R(pub. liens not to liateln to the Incimbei from Laurens. If you don't pas this bill, what will be the result I'll tell you. There will be a oom bination of taxpayers to tender thi bills of the Bank of the State fol taxes, and then what will you di about it'i The highest trib-nal in ti land has decided thlt you've got t4 take them, and the plain truth of tlc natter is that the bill holders HAVE YoU BY TI THRoAT. Dfcat t'iis i.i. if you pleas, Ifilven't thov gtt the army ind tit navy of the United States at theln back 7 Defeat this bill,. t say, and you'll not have one dollar for you schools, not one dollar for your ini torest tuoney, not on dollar to pay yourselves your salaries next year, I am ait a loss to uinderst and hon men wvho profess to support this Stati government eau stand herec anid vot against tilis bill. The attorney geri era!, the .la'r oilieer a f the Stat e, has given u:p the light, anzd a nnoune, that he can't stave oil thlese bills bul a little whil-o loi:-ger.. Now the mem ber fromn Laurens hmas boon going around telling 3 ou tha:t ther-o art seve a! mnillioiis of' these bills out TJhere may be, for I tell you that there are very serious doubts whiethi er the committee appointed in 1 8d6 to fund the old izsuo of the bill ever did fund themi. RlAKitNG UP Tilit ASItiEs. Cre ws. I)o you mean to in'sinn.Itt that we di't fund the billa Leslie. Goddlemighty only knowl whethle r y on fun ded th Ior n 1 ot, ant lie won't tell. I only know that after these bijls weie saidt to h mv been fundced by younr commnittec that you deposited $.l0,(000 of them in S'cotQ's bank I as celblit oral scenr i t for a loan, and that some thief camen along and atole them. 1 know also that you borrowed $25,t000 f'rom tie assets of the ilank of the Stato and paid it back in t ht'e very sa mc bi Ill thait you were appoinited toi fuid and destroy. I don't, know where you got them. I know that a comnmit tee consist ing! of .air. Crews and several other re,pectable genitlemen were aplpointted by the L,egislature in 1868 to fund thes'e bills, and that when they got thim aill in and issued S:ate bontd for thenm they went down the stre'et and built a hot Iii-e--it was a very hot lire, and there wits tho muem be'r from, Laurens and t he other re reLCtable' I .embers of the commiiit tee withi big suceks poking these funded bYlls in the lire, and stirritig, and stirring, atnd stir ring themi up until they were aill burnt up. But still there arec very strong eusj'lcions t hat all thi- st.irrinig aniounted to nothing alnd t.hiat most cit te bills that were put ini the tirec by thIiis respecta:ible 4oinnittee wore wafted out, &od are stil ouit :and it is a little strange that Mr. Crowts shiotl stibsequehntly hiave used 4-35,000 of thode- ttmot bills which hiis respectable coiimnittee aire suppo-edl to bas e burnt up to bor row $:5,000O from tte assets of thme B.ihk of the State. [P>rolonged laughter.] I know, too, that the member troet Lauitrens had a perfet horror of -his btll, and why 1 I'll tell '.I)on' t youi Ss that there is a be0ionn i inructing this oom. mission to intestigate n'nd -rd)ort what amoudt of'tbe old isaxe iiurnt up by his-respedtable committee are still outstanding. This specoh, wrhieh lasted until after eleven o'clook, was frequently interrupted by numijerous qiuestions from thi.boyp. At the conolpasion Simkins moved to lay the motion to indefinitely post pono on the table, and on this the vote was as follows yeas 30, nay 56. Floods III ile.Up County. The recetit heavy and conAtant rains'hve done a good Uewl of dame age in North Georgia and Tennessee The Western and Atlantic railroad has suffered by the washing away of three bri, ges over the Ghickamauga river, and in soeie places or. Wednes. day the water was two feet deep. Both ends of the tunnel at Tunnel lill, about three -miles from the river, are blockaded by the water rushing in and throwing up a pile 4 f dirt live feet high and very long on the track. No train has arrived in Atlanta over this road since five o'clock Wednesday evening. The Chattanooga and Nashville road has suffered from the flood, and is block aded. 'I'hij damago to the road is estimated at $80,000. The Albany Argus says thAt 'frost has penetrabed into the -earth 'to a greator depth 'han ever before known in that oity-in some inbtances full six feet below 'the street bed. Many of the lateral water mains,-conduct. ing water -into houses have been frozen, and theso mains are laid five feet below the surface. Yamilies have thus been deprived of their supply of water, and it has required from forty eight to seventy hourn to get dowa to the mains thro,ugh the earth, frozen almot as solid as a rook so as to thaw out the -oundu.its and secure water again. The water in the flume of a grist mill at Franilin l Mas., fre into a solid block on Saturday and Sunday last. The 'flume is six feet high, eight feet wide and fifty feet long. An Wttempt to thaw it out by burning wood was unsuccessful. 'Tire i -e on the Mel rinae at that place is report ed as fou, feet thiek. s. 16 "Andrew Juhinson will always be a candidate for something vhille he lives,"l sais tho iuriington llawkeyo, '"and when he finds he is going to dio he will want to itn for corone'r." Yes, and when Andy is summoned before his Maker he'll still contend that he is a self-made man. And now conies the startling in telligenceo from the lands to the north , of us tha-t ice will .be dearer next s.inmer than ever before, bccau o it i, so think and bulky that it will re 1uire an extra force of men to handle it. "Too thin, too thin.' The Loui.villo Courier-Journal says that the prospect if an increase ii the tax on tobacco haa greatly in Creased orders, iand given a general i impetus to the factories in that ne ig), borhoeod, The Sentinel who did not slee.p on his watch had left it at the pawunoro" k ers. Jdlenus is thie pa-rent of namelsa vicea. Give usefuj em.ployment, and they are not in bad company.. TIme lRaleigh l)istri-ot N. (, for thec month of Fecbruary, paid Ai 10,000 lnternal revenue tax. Judge Settle's $l2,000 bridgeover the l)an river, N. C. was washed away a few days ago. FAIRFIEFD HERALD: - . MlEANS MAVIS, Editor, Wednecsday Mlorning ?Iarch 10, lV/5. The Preside u t has signi&rd the civi righmts bill, an d it is now a law. As thoe section regarding mixed schmools was stricken out the bill iamoun ta to hut littlo. The rad(ioamls have. just about succeeded in raising the ire of beolh whites and blacksr. We are advised by a conseu vative member of the Legislature that we erred1 in saying that conservatives are rnarely cal led upon to preside over the liou .. On the contrary they are frequent ly ca !led to the chair by 8Sierker- Elliott. We make the ame n'he honorable. Beast Butler has been iinterviewed, lie is oppressed with grave appre. henmsions that the nation is going to the devil. As Butler is doubtless going thiero himself, an-I as he re gardls himself as thne 'nation, this inelancholy is but- riatur.al.. l'oor Ben I What will lie d6 when he can no longer sit in the,.house and receive a weekly cursing~ i The dne privat ion of this accustomed stimtu Ia i twill be to ,,ti,,i fr. The Rev. Mr. Johnson of --Summer. ville who left the Epizcopal Church and accepted a ca1l to a Cummins Church in Louisville, ky., has aban. doned thb new moveme.t and petitions for readmission to-tho regular Episoo. pal Church. 'Old brass.'button Iloland has re deemed himself 'from the odium incurred *by the gag law by the man ly stand he took-in defence of Ar. kanaas. .t is atrange Tlt d ~who de fended Akatrsas, and Phelps and Carpentor who chanipioned Loui.i. 11na, were all three defeated in the late elections. Their courso my he explained on the h5 pothesis that they realize most feelingly the ex i6tenceo of the grout politicul ground swell.. The Charlotte Obberver has shown us the courtesy to.publish our ewpla nation of our renarks.conoerning 'the suppres.sian of the New Or}-)ons .Bul. lotin. -In so doing, it hai evinced a .knowledge of ti ne journali8tio etiquette, which we regret to istate has not been wanife-ted by -sotno .of ,our State A Exchanges. Severti df thesq:.have-nund.e utriet'ures itn 'u4 ,or asked-. us -quostions, and thea neglipted .entirely to notioc -our; r p'ies. Tbis is unfair as it pluaes us i'a false-posk-ion. 'Give to every .one his due. 'The so -called 'force bi'll pnired the louse'on .Saturd ay af'er midnight. About thirty republicans voted w-it-hi vho demoorats,against 'it.. The bill, 'regulates elections, that i-i, t'hrow.s ithe ele::tioi :iacthinery in the South into t.he hands-of t1he radicals. .It al.o aithor'ies the President for the next two yeara to suspend the 'habeas coriin lllississippi, Alabama L-ui<iana and Arkn'sas 'whzeneer ,ho may deem it necessary. One member proposed to CLti'l the bill, "A bill to provide for the oleo ion of a president for a third terin," ' The bill goes to the Sct-ate, where the democrats dvolare it bhall be killed. They will fillibuster over it until the 4th March. There have becr. exciting soonod ii Congrss d.uri.the recent debates ever -the oiv,il riights and *te force bill.. The -Iou.e sat th-rough the entire iight-, many of the mio bers dierobing thoniselves a'nd sleep ing on haily. im-provi..d pallet.., being awakened at intervals to vote. Durig tho debat litler and Poland got into a controversy. in - which the latt<r culled the. Yorer "a liar, a d-:d liar."' laine ulso called But. ler a scoundrel. Fraud.ulent Olaima. It was ,proellaimned all along the line last Summer that all the v'illainy in, the Str.teo was confined in~ the' small fra-me of P. J. Moses Jr., and that it' he were thrown overboard the other radicals cou'ld carry the old ship of the Statoe into s-'ooth water. We'll, Moses was pitchsed out hca d forem-ot w ith'nt eremon.y, and fell among whIales in the &.hape of hungry creditors who have relentless 13y gone for him vnd awallowed him. lle is now strantded inl the bankruptcy court with a scheduile of debts, amnounting to $92,000, and a list of dessets wvort.h about a guarter of a dol -las. We breathed more freely as we saw his ambroai-al looks disappear beneath the surging waves. But it appears that lie is not the only political Jonah. The recent torimmiage betwe en the Legislature and Treasurer Card ra has brought forth some stiart ling developments. The last legialatunre appropriated $112,000 for the pay of employees . nd contingent expenses. But the Presi. dent of the Senate and the speaker of the llouse drew orders for $ 140, 321. Cardloza paid $1 12,000, leaving unpaid $28,321, besides $50,000 of orertlms. Now the law punishe's as a felony the over issue of warrants, and there oiTicialIs, in the lang~uago of Cards za have been guilty- of '*a con temptuous dlisregartd au-l wanton vio. lation of thme laws."'' (Of thihe warrants many are issued to perronms whlo have no claims (in ti-e fnud whatever. Several old eta'gers such as Crews, Owens, liurley, Sim.~ kcins, 8 nalls and W 'hittm.r besides many others appear ont thu lists, Then too there arc many names here tofore unknown to 'ame and fortune, OneChristopher drame. $2,500,the said Chistopher being the mythical..uamo it is said of Ithe Sub Comnmittee who went to WVashington to reply to the taxpayers. Many of the so called emuployees doubtless exist only in the maginations of dishonest radical official,. That there has been much rascality in this matter, there can be but little doubt. Tfhe question then arises to what extent are Gov. Gleaves, Speaker Elliott and Treas. urer Uardozm 'implicated -1 -Lot -the matteribe tho-roughly nifted. 'In the meantimon wo say to Mosei, "Be cain, bidu thy time, thou ablt bavb lovely company some day. Thou art-no worse than thy radical accusers who have nrade of 'thee .a suape goat." The News and 1Courier replies'to our assertion that it-bas been "bull ing" Caidit and the londs, and sutis to take our article as a covert insituntion against its principle. The News aid C urier is too eensi tive. We merely mentioned a fact, and stated that we differed from our ontemporary in its ex.pre.-sed opin. ion. -Wo did nut.inpeach ,its.hones. ty. The fact-ij thatin 'linodt every isstm presented to the public Oinoe the kcalling of the taxpayers convention we -havo tken Pidee with vhe News and Courier. But wo believed tht a conservative newspaper would be unwise in vouching for the condut of awty .radical official unless his acts ,were.patent to-all. Trhe -Newe and 'Courier thought differently, and has .gotten 'into a little dirfficulty. It assoted, we preuwe upon the au %hority-of Treasurer Cardoza, who was an interebteel party, that t-he funding.ofithe bond, was being buc cessfully accomplished accord-ing to law. 'Tiis.ga.vocotifidene to opera. totR. No w, i logislative committee olaiu.s tihat frauds ba've been commit ted and that illegal b-onds have -been isrued. Where -are tihe .gtiarantees of the News and Contir .1 We du not churge it w-ith com:plicity in frauds. We m-rely askert that through ill advised haste, it ha-9 plated it self in an ankward position. A gain. When the rem oval of Onrdoza vas proposed, the News and Courier hastely threw itself into the brench and deinounced the movcm,nt as an attook-by corrupt men upon the governor. it pronounced Cardo za's letter an almoet complete refu tation of the charges of the committee. Then when the committee -reiterated their charges, the .News& Cot-rier wat compel'led to reced-e from its forlorn bope, qnd now 'that the 'entire con servative 'de.egation are opposed to the treasurer, the News and Courier will have to bcome a "bear." We do not mean'that the party lash must be oboyed. Conservatives have nI lath. But the conseiv,,tive legislatorb are o4title 4to confidence, and they are in pos%ossion of the facts, nd the Newt and Courier must )ield to them. Now, had our contemporary not been so kasty in -bullin," Cardt.z and the bonds, it would ne-t now be embanrruassed. We give it full credhi for incerity, and nierely r'emark that it is a victim of misplaced coinfidenice in conclusion, we will offer a little friendly ad vice, which we hope will be rceeived in good part. In future be cautious about "bulling" radicaln and radio:al measures, anid moie es pecially don't .bull Caidoza. \e '-bulled'' Carden once, but it was a long time nrgo, an-d we had net beenD ini the t.euspaper busin-ess more thai & few months. We didn't bull bim long. We expected hi-m to pay up promptly F'airiield's quota for free Schools. Hie did not do it. Bc, paid other Counitica more i-n propor tion, and lie did other t,hinsgs we (lid not approve of. So we eased bull ing him. And if the News and Courier take otir advice it will here after leave the bulling of (Cardon~ ahd the bonds to their paid organ, tI.e Union-Heorald-, Treaanrer adora. The contest bet ween the fiegisla. ture and the Treasurer is waxing hot. It will be rceembered that a joint comnitttee upon which were Messrs. Mlentze and Trenhb~lm, was appointed to examino the bok(sk of the~ Treasu rer. TIhey reported that he had been guilty of grave fTtenees, in funding conversion ,bond coupons, coupons of bond. that were cancelled unused,of bonds that were illegailly hjpotheca ted, and of diverting to othier objects the moo-ey appropriated to pay in terest on the debt. The tre;':urcr in a lenmgthmy letter denied these charges andl charge d thle commnittee with igixoH ranco and malice. The comemitten renewred their charges and several men,bers -defended their reports Messrs. Mectze and Tronholm deliver ed telling speeches. TLhere is an i8sue of fact between the committee andl the Treasurer, and the legislature believe the former. I t is highly probable that in a week or two Car doza will be requestod to step down and cut. lie will not be impeacbed because in such a case, a majority of two-thirds of the members elected to both houises will be necessary. ihis dej Osition) will be bronuh abut. i anothor way. The constitution provides thdt whodver n offieil has not been guilty of any crimo deserving ir pealahment, and yet good reasons exist why he should no longer fill his posi tion, the logiilatureoau biy in ad. dream aoause the governd*r 't6 -reiovb suoh official. This is -about tho-gist of the attiolb uniler whose proVisLns' the removal is to be attempted The house adopted a joint resolution to aI point a coimrittee from buth huuses to proparo an addro--s. The rebol-ution was adopted by a vote of.92 )eas to'20 nayo, all the conser vatives voting in the &afirnative. The same resolution wa-s adopted ia -the Senate by a vote 19 to 6. From 'tUis it :kpplaars.tbat -the -Logi&Liture is in -earuoat. 'Card(,za protests hislsinoceu:ee, and denies that h6 can be roi..v.d by the presenbdtidn di an add.e,s. lie olaitus that this provision has in oo7 tomplation the afliction of any (fli cial with old age, or imbecility or else insanity and that his unisfurtune, if any to 'hafe, i3 none of these,-a-and that he should be either acq'iftted hoi.orably or impenched. He evi. dontly differs from -latItor -day psychologists Who mainta'in t4hat kleptomania is a speoies of emotional iosanity, or cl:a his argument would be without foiee. -Inthe-figirt between the ltgisla. I 'ture a'id thn ireasurer wo-can deliver no ex eathedra opiuion. The finan. oics of the Stato have long been to uuddled as to require diligetit-study to understand a-nything about them. As the issue-, too, are of fact-s and we have no means o,f becoming cogni zant of thes fiLets, we cin form no opinimon of our own. But we place cotfidence both in the abi'ity and integrity of our conservative leaders and as they, on the spot, wiI all 'le fact, bcfore them 'iavo decided agaii.st Mr. Cardozi, we have become coo. vinced of the truth of the charges pre fetred against him.. We have .ndt yeen been hasty. We havit waited for both sides to testify. And in rccording the moral obliquity of the Treasurer, we are filled with sort ow that our state is not yet purified, and nith a feeling of commiseration for the radical party as it sees fall, one I-y one, the blatant jackdaws who with borrowed plumage have paraded ten>selves be fure the world as bluotied pe-coch. represeniti g all the ierir a,d i tii. goodness of :he po!it.i-cal ,Pwi yad. Life in tho 011 Land Yat. We are -10r6wly coming to believe that there's life inl the old land yet i or severs. I ye-rs thei man-se-s have been atpparently dead. T[hey hsav permitted a gang of cut throat p'.liti cianis to ride s'oighslmd o'ver th con~ *ai tut ion r.n'd the r.g his of te pel, in their lu.-t for power ad unr~: Since roco~n.str u ction the rad tical passy htave almost rniced thme re put lie. He gin ni ng ait first caut ioiiin thIer intcreased-( in aiudacity, uti t hey Slal iy thrts w off the mak itt adv, eatsi.g nmeasuires practiedily .subverting~ me publicaiema. Tho (Congress which ex piredl on thte 4t.h, was a reomsa kable biody. Egg-d emn by G,rnnit, and buhied by Morton, Biutler and the whole genus of carpet.bagg-ers, it seesm ed to know no limit to its aLggres.ions. Measure after measure was propozcd looking to the establish ing of a des potism) tvith Gr.ant as dietator ani Pnil Shserid an as caspt asit of thet Jansis sarios. Somec of thec?e paaed. Th. force bill was carried ini the House. But t! is intoxioaitions prolnsee,l ma revulsion, Radical leaders on gee ond thioughtbstood aghsait at the ont look. Oin on san sd wvas Use stutbburm President with the arumy and navy at his back, and millions of paitronaige Oat the othser> a writtent coanstitut ion, and the well being df the mnaises whose interest they were oben,ai to subst rve. It was rn awk warad a ilem-. ma. But fortunately some~ of thoie leaders wvero po.ssed of that rare article--a consscrco. When the is sue was presented f..irly an~d squarely to them, they, with a deep drawn sigh for* the presidontial fleshp.ts, about to be forfeited, east ther votes on the side of light and duty. The force bill was jinored i'n theo Senato. T1hien the Saentato at the( eleventh hour, repodiatedl Pi nehh,,ck and seated lSheridlan, whto wvas elected by the Moi'nery btegislattero. Ini the house, 8ypher, the radical memnber from Louisiana who has been hold isng his seat, and supporting villainy and drawing a big salary, was ousted for thte admsissions of Lawrence, his eon test,aut, who held his seoat just thir teen hours before his term expired. The comnpromise, recognizing Kol. logg and giving the legislature to the eonservatives, was also pas.-ed. In the louse, th Aa as q. tion was brought. up. It will be re meibered that'whoh Grant was toy. ing with Southern conservatives in the hope of receiving -from thon .up port for his third term aspiratiou's, he recognized Baxter as the legal Gov Drnor of Arkansas, and iy his Attor noy Generwl, utterl-v repudiated the olains of Brooks. But recently he sent a mteirsage to Cotngrews without the knowludge of a single meniber of his cabinet., in which he eKpresied a belief that Brooks was retiy el bted, and intimated that if Congret% 'did not take some deciAivo step ihl tle matter, he would upset 'the 41mrlind guveItnitnt m-nd'iorite Drooks. Thia was done in -spite of the fact'that'the Polanl inve,tigatilig eU14ittee, with Lhe oxceptitn of Wtird, had adv.r, d Congre s to let Arkansas- alone. -Oin Tuesday the Arkansas question it.a brought up in the Hkiu,c, and thie tuotiou of Ant'd hen.1hin an, W arkd, of Illinois, to recognizo -Koaks as G-)veror wa- defeted b.y a vote of 153 to 89. Tne rsolution of thi. Poland -cominittet, that no iLiterfer ft retto-with the existing State (v eruinent on tivo .part of ithe inited States goirernment is <xpediot, was adopted by a vote of 149 to '8. TIhis was a most cutting rbuke tpb . Grait. At least sixty re,ubli-eins must. have voted againit his revoln. tionary eeheme, and'these republicans were men df stading and respeota bility. The Butlers and Wards and Syphers and Ilayses and others sf that ilk'oommiand the respect of no decent men -of either paitrty. The ipeople re. pudiated Granti;m in November. Ilis Congressmen are -turuti-ig against him at the last moment, j At as rats desert a tinking ship. lHit Or nt will not yield wiihout a struggle. flis main oharactoristio i6 bullhead edness. H1e will fight it out oin this line all suminer, and wiiil make it pebaliatly warri for the South. We begin, howcver, to have canfi.lonb, in the sober 'second thought of th e A nmerioan nation, and it dues seem that the lung looked for day is beginning to dawn upon a cauntry for four yea s oursed with internecine .ar, an.l for ten more, with partizau, strife-engender ing legislation. CARD OF THANKS. I ioturn to the white and colored fire companies my grateful thanks for their I.riampt a.sia3,ice in putting !'%it my lotite uen ,., tire on Wed t dla evenit.g,. it .: w h . I It a ! -l d . liu fU C . - I !I ac it1j. 114 I'D caill ill -E 0 .' t;: %V oU acu,. '1 .. x l a ctns 'ia le w I uu I would have been honiele,i by the raphsY.i .I , st.. et,ion of the fire. N betet fceeling betwveen all eC!atsse, ein be foumii than exts in W i ln.-,bori between the t.hite andt e.,-ored lire comllpansies atnd the hite ansd colui es ei.cizens when ti,e alavin tuf fire is giren. Ii a :. y fe-eling oif uots'.sat ire helt~ st'idas ,h'e .- is, e-td .dl are bset, on doling whtaever thely i1-t ii.w.vrd., tbe ~a in -ol ihe .p ros erty ofl whoi, ocver it m. a) Le. Evr nay thu. feel ing con1tinesi, and mn,t Wi nn,b~ bo be nouted fur the prompl1t etis. nI of ab elasses tin-d liire compj.I.is whet any ptro,perly may he~ in (at ger ofi being cou~u nmed byv lire. Yours Res.pectfully, meh 6 1). G. Fi'LNNlKE~N. SEED POTATOES. .Jts't re-dved, a rres.h supplry ti Irist l'>,t,itites also, lhest atnd D) .u. Fe rry & Co t. Garsiten $ecails. WY. Hi. FL,ENNl(iEN & CO(. 1WOTICEa A L r, rsont twmg thit sutbscriber nro requested to cone fotl rwar nseit it le upi at osnce An.i save e .s1, ni lie needs mioty, atld mli tI ba e it /IUFTER thh da.te t will discontinue sellitig Whil.key by thu drnitik, antI ofrer my liar Fituttres, &o. for sale. Winnsbor.o, Feb. 3rd, 1875. feb 4iR. J. McCA RLsy. DIRmo NEWV .ORL EANS .3 Ilhds. N- 0. larijfied1 Sugar, 10 .Bls.N. .Moas Os (Choice.) N. .Moa. A foriner lot of th"se goods have givezn general stisfctjin. Give Thtem a 'Trial. JIEATpY HmO. & SON. HDVE WH AT.1 D A N N E B E ' F1ull Stocs of "pring Good01. qew Calicoa ! New Cadicoo ! Piques '' l'.ques! The Big Boianza Stripe.--j. Something New. [omxphaite sbek of Waih Popli:ns 151 p-r yard, Nansooks, .8wi;4 M1astins-, V,at-iritt Lawts, Plaid '11JAVhn81 A L-TTI I-DEA OF OURS. HOUN) ' PLEASF! OUR STOCK -of NOTIONS -AND - CL 0 TIiNG! inar 9 W E fnre ageni for a large New York TIA-Ik i , 1ti t41 -ae now on hand unrowder nud Young llys.n Tena ptit tp in one lb. andi j b. lin canist rs, warrinted full weighi and Io .give satis. faction or ilth purchase Money RefundeA! Pricis. low. (;vo .1tem.a I rial. 1:EATY A RO. & 80N. mar 9 ESTA BLIS H ED: 11i 'A H'IIE RIT A N RX' RIENCR 1"a Iv' RHA l'u- .4,v C1,0CIC IB (IVESS. NEW 6001A. taebest 'into epers) Sali-l GJold (:han ino .aall Plinteda '1:hn,i..s 1i lar sa nId Si ret' u. 'naias, whai'' I eeIn5I5t '5. 'o, BrDt'i Pine~ Colln- ad Shl i R t anas of all deFL P'nn A pa er l henntajra,t ( ek a het nnla he;at I h--t ? RePpnirang aifnet in A aw orkaian-like manner. MI5a, t i. ia- gua rank teed. (I1 AS. .11UI1.:L,it * TE GREAT REMEDY FORh CONSUMPTION which can be cured by a' timely resort to this stand& ard preparation, as has b)een proved by the humdreds of testimonials received by the pr'oprietors. It is acknowla edged, by many pr1ominent physicians to be the most reliable preparation ever in troduced for the relief and cure.of all Ling complaints, and is offered to the public, sanctioned by the experience of over forty years. Whoen resorted to in season it sela dom fails to effect a speedy cure in tihe most severe cases of Coughs, Bronchitis, Croup, WhVlooping Cough, Influenza, Asthma, Colds, Soro Throat, Pains or Sor'ea ness in the Chest and Side, Liver Complaint, .Bleeding at the Lungs, &c. . Wistar's. B~alsam does not dry up a Cough, and leave the cause behind, as is the case with most prepariationls, but it loosens and cleanses the lungs, and allays irritation, thus removing the cause ol the complaint. SETH W. FOWLE~ & 80NS, Boston, a A nd aold by l>ruggsts and r.a1alr geneoralJ,