University of South Carolina Libraries
The Nose.?There may be fiae eyes in an ugly face, but there is never a handsome nose without the company of other good looking features. To bo porfcot it should be equal in length to tho foroheud, of a regular shape and precisely defined outline, neither too hard, fleshy, pointed, nor broad at the tip, and posses delicately bordered, free and flexible nostrils. The Romans were proud of their stern aquiliues, and the Israelites would probably not be content to loose the smallest tip of their redundant beaks. Tbe Tartars, having no noses to speak'of, affect to consider the deficiency a beauty. Tbe wifo of Jcnghis Khan was esteemed tbe most ebarrning woman in nil Tartary, because Bbe only Lad only two holes whero her nose should have been The tip of tlio nose often reddens, even on the youngest girls, without any apparent cause. Exercise und proper diet, and all their means of invigorating tbe body and equalizing the ciraulation, are the best remedies. The nose becomes often inordinately enlarged from tbe habit of touching it with the band, either from mere caprice or for the sake of squeezing out (a most dangerous practice) little pimples. The nose should never be bandied by ono'6 self ( liia frianrk nr onnmion Tim lifisf. manna of getting rid of the pimples is by washing ( every morning with this lotion : , Sub-carbonate of soda. . . 30 grains. , Distilled water 8 ounces. Essence of roses 0 drops. Mix. Hints to Farmers.?A writer gives tbe following advice, which we fully endorse : Don't buy a piano (or your daughters while your sons ueed a plow. Don't let your horso bo seen standing at the tavern door. Don't give a person a chance to dun you.?Prompt payments make independent men. Keep good fences especially line fences; they promote good feeling between neighbors. 3 e jl/cuuui# auu Buusvauiiai uiuiuiug lur ^ your children, makes tbem think better ( ?f themselves, ar.d keep the doctor away. Don't starve your land ; if you do it will grow lean. Dun't buy patent rights to Bell again. Don't become surety for him who waits for the sheriff. j Buy a farm wagon bofore a fine car- , riage. j "Don't White There J"?"Don't write | there/' said oue to a lad who was writing ^ with a diamond in a ring on a pano of glass of a hotel window. 11 "Why V said the lad. " Because you can't rub it out," t There are other things that we should i not do because wa cannot rub them out. v When some little heart longs for a friend c to love it and help it, and we speak or f met i nkindly it may be tbat we cannot L afterwards "rub it out," It may Jast Ion- e ger than tbe diamond writing on a glass, r It may last forever. "Tbe blood of Jesus t Christ cleanses us from all sin," but even t then we cannot, at least tbis side of tbe a grave, forget tbat we did sin. "We may o be forgiven by God for Jesus' sake, yet p we do not cease to remember that it was tj done. "Don't write there."?"Maybe you b can't rub it out." c I It appears, from trustworthy statistics, L that the aggregate number of disasters of j *11 kinds on tbe North American lakes for r eight years, from 1800 to 1807 inclusive, <j 3,354, being an average of 418 per nn- t num. During the last two years there has t been a large iucrease of disasters, the num- c ber in 1805 being 45l,while that for 1807 j reached tb? startling figure of 931?by far f ibe greatest number of casualties and c wrecks on these lakes ever previously re- e corded for one yeer. f The common mind may maintain its i place under common circumstances ; the ;ruly great alone overcome the trials of jrosperity or adversity ; showing a bumble 1,1 .bankfulnets in one, a generous sympathy 6 lot hardened by its own suffering, iiu the r jther ; not pridiitg themselves on the first, ' lot envying in the last. 1 The best estimates make the wheat crop ^ of California for the present year 20,000,- * AAA - 1 ? wu, mo oaney crop, 10,00,000 and the * crop of oats, 2,500,000 bushels. Some 1 anxiety is expressed that there will be a ' deficient tonnaga for the export of flour \ and grain. ' t \ It is better to raise sixty bushels of corn 8 to the acre than to raise it on two acres* J No doubt there ie some limit even in this 1 direction, but few of us are in danger of 8 reaching and going beyond it in the way I of thorough cultivation. I I AX satisfied that getting up early, in- ] dustry, and regular habits, are the beit < medicines ever prescribed for health. ' i Joen Billings says be will never pa* , tronize a lottery bo long as ho can hire | ...L.J ? ujuLHjy eise to rob bira at reasonable , wages?a roeolvo that is worthy of general j imitation. - * \ Dubtko a s&riea of wet days, a gentle ( man vontured to oongratolate his ombrella j maker. " Yea, that'n all very well, sir/? be ( replied'/1 but then there's nothing whatever doing in patasoW Dbckptxo*, hypocrisy and dVacVtataSaUon j an dinct MDiolimcnu ,u ? ? , ?~ pvw?r ?i i-4 Truth; *od ib? common ctrafen ? ing off Truth's coanlcrfeit for hfcrsetf* J strong tfttimooy in behalf of ber iotrini& , beauty Mid e*c#lJ#noe. . ^ 5 i '4*. LORD ROSSES TELESCOPE. The follow iug account of Lord liossu ami Ilia famous telescope we Gud unaudited in one of our exchanges. It wit! doubtless bo now lo many of our readers, and inay sot somo of them light in their e&liluato of iho scientific value of tliu really wonder ful insti runout ktiowu as Lord liosse's Telescope: "The merits of Lord Rosso are often mistaken, ile was not an astronomer. It war rm! in flu* liirrlmr iii'iflifiinolW ... ?"W kuuv /IV excelled, nor was ho distinguished by tlio power of abitruse calculation and l>y special faculty of observation and deduction. ITe was a mechanician, and he was fascinated by the scope of hij ingenuity in overcoming the iinmcnso dilHcullies which had to bo encountered in the mauufttclure ol optical instruments, very uiuch larger than any which had ever previously been attempted. In the construction ol tho bugo telescope which bears his name, immense labor and very large sums of money were expeuded; but the skill required for tho casting, polishing, and balancing tho great speculum, was much more roinaikablu than the patience or the money. Four tons of tin and copper in definite proportions had to bo cast into nil exact paraboloid in which 1.0 air-bubble3 should lodge, as they do in other castings, and the whole surface afterward raised to .1 faultless polish. The story of the melting, the molding, the polishing (by means of a steam-engiue ol wonderful adjustment), the framing and balancing of this large mirror, six feet icross, is one of the most interesting in the ecords of human skill. " It was completed at last without a law, and mounted with its monster lube ifty-six feet long and seven in diameter veigtiiug altogether, it is 6aid, fifteen tons, rtouuted at last in its great frame work, it >oiuted to the sky, and all the world xvait:d breathlessly the wonderful discoveries it vas expected to uiake. \Ybat it did was o resolve a few nebulce, and assure us that here were 'worlds beyond worlds in ininite amaze.' This was the sum of its liscovcries. It could only be used for tbe >bservatiou of objects very near tbo meridi* in ; for directly it was deflected beyond n :ertain angle from tlie zenith, the weight if the immeubo mass of metal in tbe specilum drew it out of ehape, nirl the figuro t reflected was so distorted as to bo meanngless. No nice arrangements of triangles inu moving balls in support of the rough uiu coukl euro this capital defect, and Saurn, as imaged in (ho groat mirror, was so tlurred and indistinct that it was impossi- 1 ile to tell that it had any moons or rings 1 I all." 1 1 m i? ? i Proof Heading.'?Thcro are a good , natiy peoplo who think proof rcadng oqc of tho casicBt things in tho | world, and who get very impationt , vcr mistakes in tho books and news- | ?apors. A writer in tho Juno unm- j icr of tho Galaxy gives somo inter. ( sting instances of typographical er- , ors. ilo mentions ono edition of j he Biblo which contained G000 misakes. Ho gives tho following ex .mplo of tho difficulties in tho way ! t* AtI - - m ? ii guiiing oui, a periect t>ook. Koine irofessors of tho University at Edin>urg resolved to publish a book which , hould be a model of typographical 4ac- | uracy. Six pro&f readers were em- , tloj'cd, and after it was thought to to pcrfect tbo shoots were pasted up a tho hull ot tbo university and a eward of two hundred and fifty lollars was oft'ered for every mistake hat should be discovered. NYhon the 100k was printed, it was found that it ontaincd several errors, somo beir>g n the title page and another in tho trst lino in tho first chaptor. The xily books that aro bolioved to be ntirol3' f'reo from errors, aro an ()xord edition of tho iiiblo, a London ,nd Leipsic Horace, and an American epiintof Dante. Makino Gi.ass Eyes.?It is said that bere are in New York at least seveu thou and persons who wear false eyes. Tho nanufftcturo of these eyes is dono entirey by the lianJ, and is t!.us described by he American Arthan : A mau sits down belli id * jet of gas lame, which is pointed uod directed as le wishes by a blow pipe. The pupil of he eye is nmde with a drop of' black glass nibedded in the centre of the iris. The blood eBRel soen iu the.while ofibeeye are easily >ut in wilh red glass whilu ihe opiio is glowng with heat like a bull mo( gold. The vbole eye can be made iuside an hour, ind It U as once ready to put in. The The render should know that it is - simply L tllin nlaffa -U-ll :- ? - - ?mim giaw oijom iiueuueu 10 . cover iiic lump of the blind eye. Afier being dip>ed iu tlie wHter this shell is slipped *fu" >Ibco, being hold l>y lbs eyelids. The secret of imparting motion to it depend# upon working the glaBft so that it ihall fit the stump?if it IB too lurge, Jt will not move ; if it fits nicely, it moves in every gfartlcular like the natural eye, Mid it ia quite impoMiblein many- cases to ell one from the other. The operation is iot in the least painful, and tbosS who iftve worn them a number of-'year* . feel. >etter'with them in than .'When tliey are >ut., A glftfa eye ehquid be taken- out ivery night and put >o, in ibe morning n throe or four ??? ?1>? 1? somes-?o worn, that a new one has to be obtained. Man friend* of none in whom yon >?r? not implicit cocftdaftoe-?whom yon tanaot timet Ainll place* and at all- aeasons. The beat friendship you ean make, ia that which is baaed on thoee bating* which ; ipring from the o bee trance of aacred) truth*. ~ i > * , ' " N . ; V THE OJjDEST CITY IN THE WORLD. Datunscus is tlio oldest city in the world. Tyre and Sidou have crumbled on the slioro ; Haalbcc is :i ruin; J.'&bnyra is buried in a desert; Nineveh and Babylon liavo disappeared from tbo Tigris and Euphrates ; Damascus retains what it was before the days of Abraham? a centre o! trado and travel?an island of verdure in the desert?"a Presidential capital" with martial and Kicked associations cxtcuding through thirty centutic?. It was near Damascus that Suul of Tarsus taw the light above the brightness of the sun ; the street which is called Strait, in which it was said "ho prayed, still runs through the city. The caravan conies and goes ae it did a thousand years ago ; thero id still tho sheik, the ass, and the water-wheel; tho merchants of the Euphrates and the Mediterranean still "occupy" theso "with tlio multitude of their wares." The city which Mahomet surveyed from a neighboring height, and was afraid to enter "because it was given to man to huve but one paradise, and, for his part, ho was resolved not to have it in this world," is to this day what Juliau called tho "eye ol the East," as it was in the time of Isaiah 1 "the head of Syria." From Damascus came the damson, our blue plums, and the delicious apricot of Portugal, called damasco, damask, our beautiful fabric of cotton and silk, with vines and flowers raised upon a smooth, bright ground ; the damask rose, introduced into England in the time of llenry VIII., the Damascus blade. so famous tlie world over for its keen edge and wouderful elasticity, the secret of whose manufacure was lost when Tamerlane curricd off the artists into Persia; and that beautiful art of inlaying wood and steel with silver and gold, a kind of mosaic engraving aud sculpture united? called damaskeening?with which boxes and bureaus, swords and guns are ornamented. It is still a city of flowers and bright waters; the streams of Lebanon and the "liver of gold" still murmur and Bparkle in the wilderness of "Syrian gardens." To Young Hol'skkkki'eus.?Bo satisfied to commencc on n small scale. Il is tuo common for young housekeepers to begin whore their mothers ended. Buy all that is necessary to work skillfully with ; adorn your house with all that will rendui it comfortable. Do not look at richer homes, and covet their costly furniture. If socrct dissatisfaction is ready to spring up, go a step further, and visit the homo of the suffering poor ; behold dark, cheerless apartments, insufficient clothing, and absence of all the comforts and refinement of social life, and then return to your own wiLU ft joylut spirit. You will then be prepared to incet your husband with a grateful heart, and bo ready to appreciate the toil of self-denial which lie haa endured io the business worid to surround you with the delights of home ; and you will coapera.e cheerfully with him in so arranging your expenses, that his mind will nut be constantly harassed lest his family expenditures may encroach upun public payroouts. lie independent; a young housekeeper never needed greator moral courage than alia iliioq nfttt* Ia rrtoto* ?t*<* ?"C mv?| ?w a bomb tUQ ?l I UgtlllLO U1 Fashion. Do not let the A'a and It's decide what you shall have, neither let thorn hold the strings of your purse. You know best what you can and ought to hllbrd. It matters hut little what people think, provided you are true to yourself, to right and dot}-, and keep your expenses within your means. Ahvssiman CiiARAcrnu.?A fine trait of Abyssinian character is mentioned in a atory told by tho coirespondent of a contemporary. The natives, it appears, have a great objection to our foraging p.ir ties helping themselves to gr.iss and wool), though they do not mind supplying us with forage at a good profil- They have bad many quarrels with our men on this subject, and more lliuu one fight. On one occasion a number of Hindoo camp fol lowers were found gathering up the dry wood in a sacred field. A priest appeared and culled on them as Christians to desUt, when the Hindoos made some gestures o( contempt or abhorrence at the name of Christians. The priast and his followeis then fell upon tbera, and a struggle ensued The IIindoos retired on tho camp, and the Abjrasiuiaii8followed ; mil the priest was seized by a camp policeman and taken before Sir Robert Napier. Sir Robert, after investigating-the wholo matter, ordered the Hindoos a dozjn lushes apiece f?r insulting the religion of the people. But here i., a i ?ii?" j ?? IUO APjrnaiillB'IB l?nuy fillUWfU lutfllismveo to.be Christians, for the prie?t and hie witnesses all of. whom bore marks of having mifToroil in tlie skirmish, knelt down,, nnd Raid thoy would not rUo until the culprits were forgiven, which accordingly they wero.?English paper. . I.'he Pittsburg Coinmcrcial says that a singular flowing bao't of one of the great current* of trade is indicated by (he fact that-during ttie present month e'.ght large vessels have cleared at the port; of Charleston, loaded with lumber, for Maine. T|ii? is."?a,rrying Qoal to Newcastle,'.' yet the whiteonk of South Carolina i??uperio( fur whip timber to any tree in the forest of MuiitO. whilo tha rnntu nf th? onllnor niiut are far l-ettcr than those of tb* . tsmar^k for *liiji'u knee*, bqil? ip sbap* and dura* bili?y. *" '" - T' ? A skrvjlkt mi vk?d bow H wm so dlf fivnli to wake bios in morning-: ** indead, HMnior, it's becatpe of Ukfrig yOqr owa tfdt ice, always to afuibd Co what I'm "taut; M whaoerar I sleep, I pays at ton Uum to it. r : . . . v.- + i>. * * Y ' ? * ;J' * ' f ?. ^ advice to young men entering college I "Harton, I nin suro of your couree I . .shall lose failli in human nature if you do uol hold hu honorable career. You are moro likely to braek down in health, i You aro loo fiurce in pursuit, desperate f in tenacity; and you have about knowledgo, i the same avariciousness which one sees in men in matters of money?au insatiable ; greed of more, to which money is only as I fuel to fire. Remember that uiuoh knowl- ' ' edge is growth, not accumulation. The life i that one is liviug is the book that mat] . more needs 10 know than any other. Never outrun health. A broken down > scholar is like a razor without a handle I Tho Guest edge on the best Plecl is beholden to the service ol' homely horn for i ability to be useful. "Sleep, food, air, and exorcise are your best friends. Don't cheat tbeui or cut their company. Don't fall in. to tho vulgar idea that the mind is a warehouse and education a process of stuffing it full of goods. Don't thiuk your mind to be a pickax, either, with which a student delves like an Irishman digging for ore If you must have a figure, call it a sen sitive plate, on which nature forma pictures; iho more fine tbe surface and sensitive the quality the truer and belter will be tbe knowledge. Do not study for ideas alone but train for condition. Qet and keep a healthy brain, keep it fine, train it to sbarp and accurate impressions, give it lungs and vigor, make it like a inirror before nature, or a daguerrean plate. Barton, don't mope ; be a boy as long as yon live ; laugh a good deal, frolic every day, keep up high spirits; a low tone of mind is uuheallby. There i3 food and medicine in nerve. Quantity and quality of norve mark the distinction between animals and between men, fiom tbe bottom of creation to the top. Now, Bartou, if you come home with your cheeks sunken and your eyes starting out of a hollow pit, I will disown you Good by mv dear, and God hlpss toii." ?[Beecher'a Norwood.] THE GREAT LESSONS. I The first great lesson a young man should learn is that he knowa nothing. The earlier and tlio more thoroughly tlit9 lesson id learnt the better. A home bred youth, growing up in the light of parental admiration, with everything to foster hie * vanity and self-esteem, is surprised to find, and ofieti unwilling to acknowledge, the superiority of other people. But ho is ? compelled to learn his own insignifioance ; hie airs are ridiculed, bis blunders exposed, his wishes disregarded, and he is made to ? cut a sorry figure, until his 6olf-conceit is abasi-d, and be feels that he knows nothing. When a young-man has thoroughly | comprehended the fact that hh knows nolh: i ?._? :-i : ? ii? r I my uiiu mat, iiili niMC'itiiy, lie la UUl OI lime ' value, tbe next lesson is that (lie world cares nothing about him. He is the sub. jec.t of no man's overwhelming admiration ; ^ neither petted by the one sex, nor envied f by the oilier, ho has to take care of him- ^ self. IIo will not bo noticed till he be- ( comes noticeable ;he will nut become notice* ' able uutil he does something to prove that ho is of some U6e to society.?No rccom* mendations or introduction will give him thiR, or ought to give hiin this; ho must do something to bo recognized ws somebody. The uext lesson is that of patience. ^ A man must learn to wait as well as to work, nqd to bo content with those means of advancement in life which ho may use with integrity and honor. Patience is one of the most difficult lessons to learn. It is ^ natural for the mind to look for immediate results. Lei thin, then, be understood at starting: | that the patient conquest of difficulties which rise in the regular and legitimate ( channels of business and enterprise is nut 4 only essential in sccuriug the success which ' a yonng man seeks in life, but essential in also to that preparation of the mind requisite for the enjoyment of success, and for retaining it when gained. It is the ' general rule, in all the world and in all time, that unearned success is a curse. crabs.?A gentleman at Annapolis fenced iu a cove near the mouth of Llie.Sd- i vern River and commenced the cultivation < of crab on a large scale. lie has put io 1 about 4,000, and feeds them oti coarse fish j and anv bind of rcfnuo mant. A nnnmt nf ^ ^ ? ; a ? them will attack a catfish, devour it in one , night, and pick the bones as clean as a pack of wolves would pick a deer. The 1 soft crab is only the bard orab with bis coat or shell off. Boforo shedding bis shall he.is w'oith only half a cent in mar- } ket; without, he is worth a dime. He gheds bia shell but once a year, and then remains a soft crab but p few hour?, when a new shell is again formed. Put few soft crabs are sten, owipg to the difficulty of finding and capturing them in tbe'<nfck of lime." This difficulty it is " pvofjosod . to * : obviate by the herding process, vgbero the stock can be examined every day, and a* fust a* a crab is fpnnd with bis coat off, be ; aLI" J __ r. ? i is uHiuurcu as n>ou ctrd ana mgrkeiea accordingly. The location of the crab pas- 1 ture it at a point where the tide regularly %?& and flowaj giving the craba a plentiful apply of tlielr natural element. * mi I <? ?? ? Tas EfigiUh rule in regard to live and dead weight in abeep is to weigh eheep when fatted, and divide the weight by '! Wn and eall it qqtorteca. Thai, aheep ^A.'U.U-'l iA ....J. I^.IJ OA '- a I |WHU? "WW ||f ? iW JKianai i r quarter n til* dosd woigbi. if lh* sb?#p ' >. ar? in good ooodfdon, Cbia rule is cafBaprt' :' forftllpurpoMa. Poorsheep will fkll tab* tto iMjrk, tod extra ?4 one* go ow to , * * , ** ? ' * ,.r ; jto.... - JOHN A. TA HAS JUS STOCK O Dry G CR0CKE1 Which ho ih rapidly soiling ftt theasl1 xamino bolbre purchasing. Boauliful 33 j A CllOlCE LOT OF BAC J. A. "COSTAR'S" Preparations EV KRYBODY?Tries Them! EVERYBODY?Uses Them! EVERYBODY?Believes in Them! EVERYBODY?Recommends Them! "CostarV' Exterminators. For Hats, lluai'liM, Ante, ifcc. 'CostarV' Bed-Bug Eacter. A Liquid?Kills?"Sure thing.' CostarV Insect Powder. For Kleaa, Mollis, Iuseots, <tc 'Coitar's'' Com Solvent. Fop Corns, Bunions, Ac. 'Costar's" Buckthorn Salvo. For Cuts. Hum*, liruiaVs, ?ke. 'Costar's" Bishop Fills. (Su|iar Coated) Dinner Pill. Costar's Cough Remedy. For C?U|>li?, Colds, <tc. 3ostar,s Bitter-Sweot and flra n era ~RI ncqnmo ? uqu lteAUtilie* ili?- Complexion. Mukes the ritiu fresh and fair. ty T! I Beware ! !! of all worthiest Imitations 3f~ K one Genuine without "Costttr'a" Signature. 2/>c. ur J 5rtc. aizep kept by nirPrnggsite |3T $1 sizes H?*n t l>v mail oil reccipt of price. 3T" fvi pays tor mi\ three $1 sizes hy Kxprese -W ?> pays for eight $1 bizcb l>y lixpresa. Address HENRY R. COSTAR, 012 Broadway, N. Y. tar For sale bv i DR. E. PARKER, Abbeville, S. C. tar And at Wholesale 1u all the Cities and I rgo tow lie in the U.S. May *2'J, 18t>8, 6, 6in CHANGE OF SCHEDULE ON TUB jrreenville and Columbia Rail road. EBSSQ ?&SfjQ3 s3<ps?fr { ON nn<l after FRIDAY, the 6lli instant, Passenger Trains will run daily, Sundnje xcepted, na follows: -.eave Columbia at * 7.00 a. m. " Alston at 8.66 " Newberry at 10 86 " Arrive at Abbeville ut 8,80 p. di. 1 " at Anderson at 6.16 " " at Greenville at 6.00 " 1 Lrt-ivc Greenville at 00 a. m ' " Anderson at ....6.46 " 1 Abbeville at -..8.46 " " Newberry at 1.26 p. na Arrive at Alstou at 8.00 " at Colombia at .5.00 " Trains on the Blue RiJga Railroad will also un daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with he np and down trains on the Greenvill* and Jnlumbia Railroad, an follows: Leave Anderson at 5,20 p. no " Pendleton at 6.20 " \rrive at Walhallu at .8 00 " Leave Walballa at i. , 4.00 a. k Pendleton it 6.40 ' * Arrive at Anderson at .40 44 The Train will retnrn-from Bolton to Anderiob on Moodily and Friday mornings. JAMES O. MEREDITH, General Superintendent. Doe 18,38 tf SV. A. LES. W. K. BLAKF LEE & BLAKE, .Attorneys at Law. And. Solicitors in Equity) Abbeville C. II, S. C.p HAVE formed a partnership for praetira , of Law and Eqpity in the CuurU of tb? Western Ciron t. TheOffioeof Mr.' BLAKE, for th? nrM*nt. irill ba at Greenwood, 8. G. June 16, 1666. 0 If J. C. NOLAND formerly of A. McKensie ft Co., S ABB LEa"^ ,, .. t > IB . MAKER. . j4k,bb?viHa C-H.? B.C. Ms a,MM, n, l?a t- ^ ? ? * LMAPCE'S OAS! !T RECEIVED A L F SPRING CONSISTING OF rUU(l?9 WOW iY, BOOTS, &m &(& ouiHliintrlv low prices for which ho is ofTcrin colored Muulinu lor 30 conts. ICON, 33 ACO 3ST . >ON can be bought at a low prico, FOIi TALW A D G THOMAS SlTPm7??ftT> TH T?A kj \J \J \J JU kJ kJ \J it/ X \J .Li XI Wholesale one GROCER AND PROV! ABBEVILLE C. I BEGS leave to inform hi8 friends and the receiving a full nnd com pie to assortti SJONS AN J) Liq ITORS, which boing bo lo Hull at a rcduwd prico for the name, ll it CLASS C/ROCJJRY AND PROVISION i montH in Baltimore l?y which ho will reccivc stock. Among tho arrivals for tbo last woeh 3500 lbs. Choice C. K. SIDES, , Cadi yfinn IIIQ sHnm.nifpu I ir;*? 500 lbs. pure Loaf DARD, Cusci 1500 lhfl Extra Family FLOUR, Cake 3 bbls. 1). It. DROPS, (Syrup.) Soda 2 bblw. Groofclyn House SYRUP, STA it bbln. Coffee "C." SUGAR, Spict 5 Sacks best RIO COFFEE, Pick He lias on hand a choici HARDWARE^ . AND A FEW HUNDRE CHOICE HEMLOCK. AN SOLE LE^ Together with a great many other thin llis intention being to SELL his goods, p lino would do well to eull and exninino hit* buioro purchasing elsewhere. Itoapcctfully, thomt NE W F ENMGHT & T~> |,1|> A T?i~? V71T JlJDiJT^VXniliX COTTON GINS, THRESHERS Afi OF ALL KINDS OF CAEF 4 THE Bub?cvilx>rft would inform their friends and th formed a copartnership in the business of repairi doing Carpenters' work. From their long experience t satisfaction, nod trust to merit the publia patronage, terms for CASH ON DELIVERY. They will keep always onhaud a good supply of W JOHN EN RIG HT. March IS, 1888, 47, tf i D. QW ' J/ffBrBBT .VHrag^fT' ^?? ?j - . r \ ' tioD. WOOL I W0OII! WW!!! p The Highest -ttasket Prices PAID VOft .r - Jk$ ' I?- BXCOANQB FOR GOODS. J Blanc ' I "*HF wool mtnt bitrMfroa binucl foreign ft i. rimii.. ?;ii i >? i# ?? I|1 uv w?vu WMIVI WWI|W yr> tiuw**bM- * ' Miller & robertson. { d, * * .* ? * . w \ H HOUSE. ^ w * IL'rf 11.1. # 'Bffal I'. v ^TT*y Hi "I A.RGE GOODS, iries, SHOES, )fa y g thorn FOR CASH. Call and CASH ONLY, at E'S. EAKIIU, KIN * & KNOX, I Retail ISION DEALER, [., s. c., i public generally, that ho is now aent of GROCERIES, PROVIught entirely for Cash, be in able ? bis intention to keep a FIRST STORE, having efloctod arrange) weekly additions to his presont : can bo found : es Green and Black TEAS, No. 1 MACKEltEL. 8 SARDINES. is E. D. CHEESE, CRACKERS, RCH, SODA, *d and Can. OYSTERS, los, Candies, Lemons, Oranges,Sto a selection of CUTLERY, D POUNDS OF D OAK TANNED LTHER, gs too numerous to montion. lartios -wishing anything in bit Block, compare prices, &o., 4o., IS EAKIN. TrmT^ SMITH, IS OF ID FANS, AND MAKERS ENTERS' WORK. e public generally, (bat they have lately ng Cotton Gina, Threabera and Kana, iniit ,hey feel confident of their ability togiv* Work will be done on the moat reasonable alnut and Oak for zuakiDg Coffin* D. B. 8MI HI. , w. hawthorn/ er ana Commission Merchant WALHALLA, S. Ch, ILL b? prepared on tht Firat of Aagnat, 1868, lo.traniMt all bnaineea la hia and purchase Country Produce of all The Highest Market Price PAID FOR IN, WHEAT, PEAS, rerythfog el to produced is thiateoltat > country. will also oouduot tha aama btiiineM at i Path, 8. 0;', and will.ha happy to hare itrooage of hla friendaat either- place. r 10. 1888. 12?Im OTIGE THIS! V-. --V ' E- Not>? and- Aoeeaot* ROOHK A CIHM3TI AJi- are irr mj t?r ?>n?cAH per?t>ua-indebted- are. refuelled to forward1 and Mitt I e, u longer indulgence >t be giyaa v v 0*1 HcBi ffllliTiEXb l?t 1868, ??, tf i w waotT. Jb 'Lftffel's PfttNft; jftjgtit ImAWAflji Tfirbiiw. i/aotorod l>y oom: & Mfirt, , BATiMoat, Ha. so. 20,1867, 96, 6m