A SOWS REXEXBXIXCfi. ! Mi' father, I can see thee now, As in my youthful days. When hope across inv pathway tlirew j 0 Her bright alluring rays; j ( I see thee now, in memory's glass, t Just as thou lookest then, Though falling tears are on my cheek ( Ami stay my faltering pen ; t I see thee witli'thine eyes of love , Fixed smilingly on me. ' While brother with a childish laugh Is climbing on thy knee. I r That brother, dearest father, has Bright manhood on his brow, , And only now in memory * Can we gaze on thee now : S Jet often, when Isir fortune's wheel I Has turned us good or ill, . We feel thy spirit walks tlio waves, [ And bids the storm be still; ? And tho' thy friends ruay strew thy grave With summer flowers lair. ? We two, who loved ihee more than all, * Know well thou art not there. f 1 I still with that dear brother live, ^ Within our old abode, And we both feci that thy pure love S Is keeping watch with Hod; I And when at night we kneel to pray , At heaven's holy shrine. flfV tintou mil- MiiWer's snored name Is half confused with thine: t An-1 though thy early loss to us j We ever shall deplore, We feci indeed thou art not lost, 1 But only gone before. I FLASHES. c 1 The lost binding fur a borrowed , book is homeward bound. j A colored postmaster is now called a ? black-mailer. t A8am was the odIv man that was 1 never tantalized by a mother-in-law. i The Detroit Free Press says that { Ann 0. Domini is the oldest woman in existence. 1 j Nothing is so fatal to the romance of a kiss as to hare a young girl sueeze j at the very climax of osculation. Ah Jams is the name of a Chinaman j in Nevada. Fie is addicted to the , flowing bowl, and sumo days it is im- j poisible to recognize him from his brother Jim Jams. When a youug lady has to stay at home from a party on account of a sty on Tier eye, it is useless to ted tier that | Providence docs all things fur the best. A little beggar girl in New York has j ^ got hold of the wrong paper, which J certifies that "the bearer is a widow [ with five children, in destitute circumstances." Cynical Thought.?A man is never so old in the outside world as he is made to feci when in the bosoui of his family. Smart.?A paper .'ays, "Ma.-saebuchusctU is noted for two things?intcl-! ligence and patent medicines." We presume the intelligence m displayed in ! selling, not taking, the physic. August Lconare dressed up like an : Indian and descended on the cabin of a 1 Missouri family fur fun. They kept; the body en ice throe da)s for his father: to arrive. ' Mammy 1" said a precocious little boy, who. again*t his will was made to rock the cradle of his baby brother, "if the Lord has any more babies t? give away, don t y?>u take 'cm." *7 Tiic intensely poetical editor of a Texas ! piper describes a recent gorgeous suo*'t! in that vicinity as resembling a ripe pumpkin wrapped in the American} flag. A California piper tells about a boy climbing tip a tomato tine to get away from a mad dug. Tomato vines attain : n i.nnrmo'js siz-' in California, so do; lies. A nice little girl in Clinton, 111 , was learning her little brother the Lord's prayer the other night, and when she had said,''Give us this day our daily bread," he suddenly called out: "1'ray for syrup, too, sister." Chinese Maxims. The Gncst roads do not go far. It is the rich who want most things. Raillery is the lightning of calumny. Ccremocy is the smoke of friend* ship. Attention to small things is the economy of virtue. All is lo*t when the people fear death less than poverty. He who lets things be giveo to hiui is not gond at taking. Who is the greatest liar ? lie who speaks most of himself. Man may bend to virtue, but virtue ; cannot bend to man. The court is l.ke (he sea?everything | depends upon tho wind. One forgives everything to him who forgives himself nothing. 't'k_ nf >1..i>icr mnd i* f||,? ] I lie fiirusuiu vi uwmc , . only one thai never wears out. i Tire tree overthrown by the wind ] had uiore branches than roots. lleceive your thoughts as guests, and ' treat your desires as children. 1 One never needs one's wits so much as when one has to do with a fool. For him who docs everything at the j proper time, one day is worth three. He who wishes to Fcctire the good of ^ others lias already secured his own. I A fool never admires himself so uiucli , a* when lie has committed some lbIIv. I * / Towers are measured bv tlieir shadow, and great men by those who are envious I of them. * ' lie who finds pleasure in vice and 1 pain in virtue is a novice both in the 1 one and the other. The truths that we least wish to hoar c arc those which it is most to our advantage to kuow. The wi-e man decs not speak of all 1 he do'S. hot he does nothing that can- ' not be spoken of. s We must do quickly what there is no a" hurry for, to be able to do slowly wliut f demands haste. o What a pleasure it is to give. Thrre t would be no rich people if they were ca- o pable of fueling this. 1 .Tlio Pines. The pine (uresis that cover the, astern and middle sections of the Jarolinas arc a source of great realth to onr people. Millions of lollars are annually received for itnber, lumber, tar, pitch and tur>entine. Resides the enormous conumption of pine timber in the man?: ifacture of these articles, there is ;reat destruction occasionally by1 ire in sections where the trees have >cen boxed. If the present coirj utnption continu?3 we know that he great forests will disappear and ( >e supplanted by a less valuable growth. In regions where the pines have )ecn destroyed from any cause, it is nticeable that there is hut lit:le re" tewal of growth. This is owing to lie tact tliat liogs are auoweu 10 run . i it large, ami, besides eating the | nast, they destroy thousands of foung pines. Where fields arc allowed to renain fallow for a number of years, lie pines spring up with astonishing apidity. Trees of rapid growth are nost valuable for turpentine. If our fence laws were abolished, >r modified so as to prevent hogs Yotn running at large, pine forests | vould soon cover the waste places, i [n States to the north of us, tlic | make fence disappeared many years i igo, and the less expensive cattle; "etice is only used. We may re nark in this connection that a successful farmer in South Carolina, ivho raises a great many hogs, ktcps them in a small enclosure, and assures us that, having tried the ex- j periment for several years, lie is in favor of abolishing the fence law. Wc must save the pines. Where it is necessary to destroy them wc should endeavor to replant, for in the coming years they will be of exceeding value. English Views of American Farming. Mr. Mechi, the eminent English farmer, lately read a paper at the Central Fanner's Club, London, in which the following passage occurs: " I have had very extensive communication personally and by letter with American agriculturalists, and have had also many volumes sent to me year by year of the transactions of the New York State Agricultural Society, and the impression on my mind is that there is a great deal of intelligence, enterprise and progress in American agriculture. As the farmcis nearly all occupy their own i i .1 -??* ? i .*. i r. IUIMI, llieir U1CIUUI energy mi'i unuucial means arc quite* unshackled, and they are free to enlarge or imr prove. The mere knowledge that their improvements are their own property, and will be inherited by their widow.? and children, acts as an extraordinary stimulus to their exertions and progress. The fact that no gatiic^kccpcr ?r stranger dare put a foot on their land, and that tiic game is their own, adds heavily in the scale of advantageous considerations and independent feelings. Imagine the feelings of a man O o n who can say at any day or hour,41 will sell my farm and buy another, or add to my farm, or do in any oilier way what I like with my own,' and compare them with those of a British farmer, who, like that model of a good farmer, the late Mr. Hope, of Feti ton Barns, was rousted from the place of his birth by a mere after-dinner speech expressing sentiments opposed to those of his landlord." Texas, Talk about emigration to Texas, the Nashville Banner says the great bulk of the people who leave that section come hack again with all spent except for the payment of a railroad ticket. Speaking to the same point, tueCliattanooga Bis patch says that during the month uf December last it was estimated at Little Rock that four hundred immigrants from Texas passed through that city daily, and they came back in a mo.it destitute condition, some byraii, some in wagons and on foot, carrying what little household goods they have along. Most of them looked as if they had gone through hardships, hunger and cold. They generally told ihe same story, and id vised their friends who talk ot going to Texas to stay where they are. They say that they found Texas the uest place in the world for hard >vork, and no place for poor people. Value of Different Foods. The comparative valuo of horse 'ced is found to he as follows: 100 )ounds of good hay is equal in alue to 50 pounds of oats, 57 rounds of corn, 275 Ids of carrots, il pounds of rvc or barley, and 105 lounds of wheat bran. Such tables, lowevcr carefully prepared, are too ndefmite !o be of any practical raluc, anb besides, they arc too bade to be affected by attendant eir'timstances to be accurate. One thousand shingles, saws n lewspaper paragraph, will cover one lundred square feet of surface. One hingle, by tlio way, will cover six quale inches of bad boy, and, if iropcrly applied, will be productive fas much benefit ami more noise ban tbo one thousand shingles or no hundred square feet of surface, "igures won't lie. Swine in the South. The New Orleans Price Current | says : llog raising in the South has, i (wiring the past yca?\ increased to i an extent which will shortly enable a large majority of Southern farmers to become independent ot the Western packer. As law and order have once more become the rule throughout the South, the security of farm stock from thieving laborers has much increased, and we do not now continually hear the formerly so frequent complaint that it was no use to raise hogs, as none were allowed to conic to maturity. In a great many instances, now. the laborers take an interest in the raising ot hops, sheep and poultry, as they begin to appreciate that their own rations are greatly improved hv a variety of home raked food. Hop*. If strong hop tea he applied with the palm of the hand to any surface rtf ? i . . i . * . anncien wit.a pun. tue p:?i?i i;i most cases will instantly disappear. Have the tea milk warm; dip your hand in the tea, then ruh briskly up and down several times. If the pain is chronic it will require more rubbing to banish it. This treatment cures rheumatism, neuralgia, disease of the spine, congestion, pleurisy, kidney disease, disease of the heart, and a great many other diseases. Persons who arc weak and debilitated can be put on their feet in a few days by tins treatment. The rubbing must he done by a person of nervous t'.i:ipr.ra;nent to insure success. Haller Pulling. Take a small rope (-ay about half an inch, nothing heavier) about twelve to fifteen feet long, as the case may he; making a loop in one etui about the shape of a harness crupper : slip the tail through the trrrit of the back pad, thence to the hamo or bit ring, then bitch your horse and let him pull. One puil of the tail will be enough, or two at the most. Few horses can be made Jo pull after a few trials of tiie tail bitch. Farm NoPs. John IIohr.es. of itu>li county, Iud., rai.-cd ninety hogs that averaged five hundred ami fourteen pounds gross," At a rec?nt fanners' meeting in Massachusetts a speaker gave a re* eeipo J'or making farming pay, as follows: "Have but one business, ami got up in the morning ami sec to it yourself." i A ball of waste cotton, saturated ! with con! oil, rolled in sulphur, and set on lire under a tree will not burn , rapidly, but sends up a dense smoke that wiil kill the black lice with which the tree is infested?so says a Penssvlvania fruit grower. | GILBERT BROTHERS, i (NEW K.3T.VBI.ISIIMKNT.) | CARRIAGE, WAGON AND [BLACKSMITH'S SHOP am rriiv Old Stand of }3i'lits JlroN. i We are prepared ti? <1 > everything In our line i in the ti->t style, ut short notice, ami ut the t'tn'uii'-"!* cash iates. :"-|'I.ANTATIOX WOKII a (specialty. Public patronage respectfully solicited. GILBERT BRO'S. ' Jam. *29-Cm I Riddle's Hotel, LANCASTER C. H., S. C. Having purchased the Hotel formerly occupied by Mr. .Innu* Crock. :t, sltiia'edou Main street, I am prepared to receive transient aid permanent boar<l?*n?. (ioiul iici-oiniii :i|:iiioMs at reasonable rates, i Stables iitul Lots free to rlrovers. | jint.v.f .1. M. KIDDLF. : R. J. McCRIEGHT & EON. fJJ?LlWlWim AM llflU ! U UNDERTAKERS. Keep eonstantly on Ijttn'l, ready made j j Collins and Cases, co:isi-lin;r of I'inc, Poplar, Wa'nttl arid Metallic < as-.s, at prices from c I to Sl'J-'i. I'liinra'-- attended to wit!i promptness :tlid <li-'pn!ili. All ordert lillc.l at tiny liott", day or night. f_v- stt?>,. . .. .1 jieoi.t- . on Littleton street jan-t'-t'.in Jacob Elias ! . Itegs lo inform !>is fiit-nus nn>l the lie generally that lie has OPENED STORE IllC J.jiil* north of T. J. It.ircfieM, llsq.. i where he if ollering a slock of Oosicral Mcrehaiulfae*1 at nstot.ishly low pi ices i-OUCASHOMA lie has I My floods, Jlools and Shoes, Hardware, (jrocerics, Sic., tie. A call is ! respectfully solicited, dec18 Om JACOB KM AS. S. WOLFE Ilnys ami pays (lie highest market price for crcen ami dry cow lii?1sheep, fox. otter, mink, raccoon ami rnhhit skin.-. Also, rags, wool, tallow, beeswax, old iron, . bra*?. copper, A.o, janltf | .1? O IT *v z - Q ^ORSE AKD CATTLE PO\VDL*!?C. or p^OT?nt | ' Ko Tlottre -rill dlo of Colic, Both or Lruo Fi- i Tan, If FoulzV Powders nre nsed In tun?, FontzVPowderswill core Mi'l pi event Koo Cttoluka ! 1 Foutz's Powders will prtvrai Gafcs im Fowl, c* i ' perlally Tnrlrcys. Font's Powders will twere.-.*? fie rin.mtH? of milk , I and n rani twentyptr cent, and make the batter firm ! I ud sweet. . ,i l ojt/'i Powders will rt:r-> rr prevent r.ltr.ostSTitr.T , , Di??.\se that lloiv* end (artlc ar? 1:>-Ir to. ForrT.'s I'ov.-iutEa will oivr. Satisfaction. Solftevetrwfeere. I i /.V t.i v. I 01 : ' - Tb the most genial balsam ever used by sufferers from pulmonary diseases. It Is composed of herbal product*, which have a specific effect 011 tlio throat and . lungs; dctnchc i from the air cells all Ir- ; rltating matter; eauses It to bo expecto- | rated, and at once check* the Inflammation 1 which produces the cough. A single dose relieves the most distressing paroxysm, I soothes nervousne-H, and enables the *uf- ' ferer to enjoy oniet rest at night. Being a pleasant cordial, If times the weak stomach, and Is specially recommended for children. . j What others say about e TutVs Expectorant. Had Asthma Thirty Years, Baltimotif, Februarys 1S75. | "I have had Asthma thirty years, and never lound ' a medicine tliat had such a haiipv effect." W. F. UOGAN, Charles Sf. 1 A Child's Idea of Merit, i New Okleans, Xovtmltr 11, is-fi. "Tutt's Expectorant is a familiar name in my house. My wile thinks it the best medicine in the* world, nn'd the children rav it is 'nicer than molasses candy.' ? NOAH WOODWARD, 101 N. Poydraa St. , "Six, and all Croupy." ' " I nm the mother of six children; nil of them have 1 been cronpy. Without Tutt's Expectorant, I don't j think they could have survived some of the attacks. \ It is a mother's blessing." MARY STEVENS, Frankfort, Ky. A Doctor's Advice. " In iny practice, I advise all families to keep Tutt'j Expectorant, in sudden emergencies, for coughs, croup, diphtheria, etc." T. P. ELLIS, M.D., Newirk, N. J. ! Sold by nil druggists. Price. $1.(10. OjJico 35 Murray Street, AVie York. "THE TREE IS KNOWN BY ITS FRUIT." 44 Tutt's Pills are worth their weight in cr'ld." i REV. I. R. SIMPSON, Louisville, Ky. "Tult'a Pills nre a s|?-. i.il"li1rs?injr of the ninetecnthcentury.REV^F^JR^OSGOOD, Now York, i "I have used Tutt's J'ills for torpor of the liver. ! They are superior to any medicine lor biliary dis- I orders ever made." I. P.^CARR, Attorney at Law, Augusta, Gs. " I have used Toll's 1'ilB Jive years in my family. I They areunennalcd forcnstivcnc'ssand biliousness." F. R. WIUSON^ Georgetown, Toxas. "I have ttcc<) Tutt's TTednTm! wilh [Treat henefit." ( W. W. MANN, Editor Mobilo Register. | " V?*c sell lifiv boxcTrlut's Pill* to five of all I others.-'? SAYP.E A CO.. Carteraville, Ga. ' Tutt's Pills hate only to he tried to establish their merits. Tliev work like tnntric." W. H. BARRON, 96 Summer St., Boston. 41 Tin re is no medicine so well adapted to the cure of bilious dh orders ns Tutt's Pills." JOS. BRUMMEL, Richmond, Virginia. AND A TdoOSAVlD MORE. Sold by druggists. SS cents a box. OJfies 33 Murray Street, Sew York. ffOnfSoYEl g ENDORSED. | i HIGH TESTIMONY, S y FitCM THE r.U iVIC JOl tlXAL. 'A I A CREAT INVENTION S 1 In. tieen in %il? liv lilt. It l r. <>i New y orlr, M 3 whirl! restorer youthful liennty to the hair. M 2 That eminent rheml?t lia? -nrreeded In B I producing it II:tIr live tvhlr'i imitates Eg >1 nature In perfection. Hid bachelors may B . j J'riar $1.00. Office 33 Murray St., I I " i 'V f, aiWT JbL , L Kr> , ",'J1 ni'.T-T hundred other things cheap. hH | Mia Aa Illv ^ CualofK fi?i w kit ifplcu^ t& i l&ol Alao. an Immense Stock of Fruit FJJ; & Ornnmentnl Trees. Evornrncr.s. El iJfl fihrubs, etc. An-p??"cauWncofi- ?.bm MB etc., nr. I IC-| acs yrica li.-t 1 r- . 24th W Jxy year. 13 Croenliouaes. 4UO Acres. eM I Js Hi B9i]QAL?. Stoves, Stoves J A HEAVY STOCK OF Cook, Parlor and Office -3* $ v j?-- ^ ^ s uvm, sr OK ALL STYIJCS, .!c.st i.i?, and om:i:i:i> at PRICES LOWER THAN CAN ni: HA0 Elsewhere ill <'umrieii lil'TTKi:INC. I'.OOFINC. &c., ntton.lo.l to at vliorlcdl iinlu'i* au'l on (u'coiiiinuuiitiitg I eiiii?. A full lire of Tinware & House Furnishing Goods. Vcj.t cnnsfunity < n liaii'l. tyT'Alt Work i-l. JOHN 11. COODALi:dcc4tf , ; Town Ordinance. ! IN ORDINANCE to liaise supplies for the Year of our Lord lsis. He it ordained !?y the Intendant ami Wardens if the Town of Camden, tn Counell assembled, md bv the authority of the same; That the folowlnir taxes he ami the same are hereby levied or the current year?that is to say : Section i. six (6) mills on each ami every dolar of (he value of all rc i! estate and personal irop'-rtv within the corporate limits of the Town if ( auidPii on the first day of January, A. D. tsts Sec. '1. That each and every male person beween ihe aires of eighteen and fifty years, other ihauor niucii ministers, students and numbers f the (Ire department, shall pay, on or before fhe 1.1th day of March next, live dollars (15) for road and police exemption; and if any person liable for this tax shall fail to make payment at the time spcoifled, ho shall he liable to work on the streets for six days, under the direction of the Town Marshal. Sec. s. There shall he ten do'.lais (Jifi) pai l annually on eace omnibus; live dollars ($5) on each carriage or hack drawn by two or more horses, run for conveyance of passengers or hire ; three dollars (it) tor each one-horse buggy or sulky kept; for hire; ten dollars (fltn on each four horse '< gnu, dray or cart run for hire; five dollars ($5) on I each two horse wagon, dray or cart run for hire. The taxes due on omnibuses, carriages, hacks, lingeries, wagons, dravs and carts kept for hire shall be paid before they are allowed to run. Provided that nothing herein contained shall be construed so as to extend to wagons, carts or other vehicles going to or returning front market. am' owned by non-residents of the town. See. a. All keepers of livery stables within the Town of Camden, shall pay an annual tax of twenty-five dollars (f2.i) before it shall be lawful i 'or them to ki ep such Ft tble. Provided that said i livery sr>?l Ic keeper, upon the payment of said ' tax, shall t>c privileged to keep and run any or > all of the vehicle* enumerated in the preceding! section free, and discharged of the taxes charged . thereon in said section. See. 5. Twenty dollars (f2b) per day shall lie ( paid bv every itinerant auctioneer otfering for j sale within the corporate limits of the Town of | Camden, at auction or otherwise, any goods, wares or merchandise, to be paid each day in advance, and any Itinerant auctioneer liable to the tax aforesaid, and who shall fail to make payment. shad be lined forty dollars (fM)per day for each duv lie muv bo offend, which said line the Marshal shall enforce and collect by the seizure and sale of the goods, wares or merchandize of the person or persons liable to the satd line. Sec. Ail peddlers or transient persons dealing In fruits, nuts, butter, lard or meats, shall pay to the Town u tax of five dollats (fci) per week. <<r one dollar (*1) per day for periods of time le>s tnana week, in all coses where butter or lard is offered in smaller quantity than by ihe tub, kit or llrkin, or fruits or nuts in smaller 'inutility than by the bnshci, or meat In smaller quautitr than by the plec, ami sold from wagons, stands or otherwise on the streets: and the Town Marshal enforce the payment of this tax by I lie seizure and sale of the goods, wares and merchandize of the person or versons falllngor refusing to pay said tax. Provided that this section shaii not lie construed to extend to nnd Include the people of this and adjoining counties, ?f whom camden is the market town, who shall oe at liberty to vend their produce upon the streets, except a may ha otherwise provided by ihe ordinances regulating the Market. kcc. 7. There shall be paid an annual tax of twent v-ll vc dollars ($20) on each and every billiard table; five dollars <fft) on each and every bagatelle table, and ten dollars ($10) on oach arid every nine or ten pin alley, kepi within the limits oi the town, for profit; said tax to be paid before license to use the same shall be granted. Sec.s. That no equestrian exhibition, mrnagcrieorother eqhlbitioii of that nature, ami no theatrical exhibition, minstrel performance or other show of any kind, shall he held in the Town of Catuden, for gain, without a license therefor being tirst obtained from tbd Intendant, aud payment for said license belug made to ine town U-tIt, as follows: l or each equestrian exhibition, mcnageileor other show of that nature, such sunt as (lie intendant shall determine, not to lie less than seventy-live dollars tier day; for each side show, such sunt as the Intend uit may determine, not to be less tlian twent.v-tive dollars per day; for each theatrical exhibition, minstrel performance; or other show of that nature, not lore than live dollars nor msrethaa twentylive dollars per day. Each and every person giving any of the exhibitions aforesaid for gain without having first obtuitied a license therefor, as provided above, shall be lined for each and every day so exhibiting, a sum not li?*s than double the highest tax above Imposed for such exhibition, said litic to n& onion ed and collected t.y the Town Marshal by seizure and sale of the property of the person or persons so offending. Sec. ft. An annual tax of twenty dollars (|Mt shall be paid by each and every express company i doing business In the Town of Camden. sec. lu. Every person who may wish to engage in the business of an auctioneer within tits Town of Camden, shall pay to the ltee?rk\er'of the ; Town, as a license tax, before ijiasgmg in such i business, the sum of ten liiV.lurs uniititd.v. Anv person violjitlmj this section shall Is? fined by the Town Council live dollars for each ami every offence, sal>! line to he bollected by the Town Marshal, upon the warrant of the Intemlant, by the levy ami sale of any ami all property liable to leal proves*. sec. 11. Any person or persons who shall violate sections ;taml -t of this ordinance, shall be Until by the Towu Council a supi otpial to double the tax therein impo-rd :n each specific instance. I said tax to ho willcetod by the Town Marshal, upon the warrant of the lutemlant, by the selz! tire and sale ot the vehicle or vehicles* animal or ' animal.-, used in violation of the sections aforeI said. i Sec. 12. All ordinances or parts of ordinances 1 inconsistent wilnthe provisions of this ordinance are hereby repeal, d. limn ed in Council this 'rd day of January, A. I). tsTs. .1. C HOLMNuS, lutendant. K. k. Sua, Clerk and Utcorder, JaniN4t At or Hear Cost. Having on hand too large a stock of LIQUOK8 of host <|tinlitics to carry through the dull season, 1 tint determined to turn it into liionev. and in order to do so rapidly, have concluded to sell at the fallowing very low prices b.v the gallon: Old Crow Kv. llyc Whisky $4.2.') Dickey llyc 2.f>0 Miller's Uye 2 50 1'ridc of Ohio ltye 1.73 North Carolina Corn 2.50 Daltimoro Corn 1.73 Apple lirandy (the best") 3.73 Cr merer Dtandv 2.50 JJlackbcrrv K randy 2.50 Cognac Hrandy 3.50 (Jin (best) 2.50 Hunt (pure) 2.50 Port Wine 2.50 Tobacco and Cigars; in variety, at low tvtv.ii>*! \ 1 u.i it I'iIiii n v'Cfirt loniil <tf I"'"-' . ?. Family Groceries of the lieu quality. Call and see in.*, ami price my goods boil re J mvhtisin.,' elsewhere. j. H, LOLLIS, at " OM llrick Corner,'' Broad Sl? Camden, . C. junl-tt r'EED AND SALE STABLES. I'very convenience on the spot. Always put up at A KMSTROXli'S < 'OM MODIOMS STAMPS on DuKnlh Street, flood pump well on premises. Animals well fed niul properly cared lor by accomplished hostlers. 1'KICKS VKK 1' MODKRATKHorses and innlrs always on hand and for sale cheap. Don't forget the place. J. A. ARMSTRONGS. ft. A . Parties indebted to ine tire reqtioUtn be prompt in making seMloment. Collections must be made or 1 shall lie compelled to adopt severe measures. \\. C. Vol'Nil. ISA.\o YOUNU. YOUNG BROS., Harness, Hoots, Shoes, A;e. Math* ?r roj>niic.l ntlhe shortest notice t and in tin* niusi durable manner. 'I In* highest juice paid for 1I11M1S of nil description:'. (live ns a call, one iloor west of the JV.slodiee, Camden. S. (', declltf StaR'jjiiiS ami Ties. 12,000 '"rJ"BA0GINC* ' r?0(t Bundles TIES, Fov snlc low bv ect'JEtf liAUM BKOP. j SPECIAL INI * oI Will 0fl< NEXT TJHIJ My Entire ? Greatly Red REAL BARGAINS Will 1 H. BAF j?n22tf CHE IP 13 T H H EADBAE I WILL THEREFOR] MY S DRY GOODS, :ha Are Equal it to any I Lave ever had to ofTer. ALL OF WHIG AS CHEAP AS THEY CAN The Stock Las been most carefully selcctc Robe $1(H WORTH C TO BE At Astonish! coxsis: Dry Goods, Clothing, Hats, Allocs, Hardware, Saddles, Hani Groceries, Tios. We Still Pay; Above M; ! E "THElLD GHRNERSTOl. W. C. GERALD WonlJ iuvite tlie attention of the public 1 to his Immense Stock FOR THE Fall and Winter Trade, , Consisting in part of Pry Goods, Notion*, i Moots, Shoes, Hats, Clothing', Gouts' Furnishing Goods, Fancy Articles, Groceries; Provisions, Paeon, Lard, Cheese, Crackers, Sugar, Coffee, Tea, Molasses, Canned Goods, Salt, Pepper, Segars, Tobaccos, Ac. which lie lias just reseived. 'andjwhich is larger and far superior to any previous .stock lie has ever exhibited. I would ask n careful examination of my stock before purchasing, as I am confident that I "can save money to all who need goods. Highest cash prices paid for COTTON and all kinds of Country Produre. My stock of Hugging nml Ties is exlenstve. ep. 10. Sfolanes* I aa PARRELS New Crop New Orleans l"U Molasses. For sale low by jvnltf BAlWl BROS. / t )UCEME!VTS. or for the iTY DAYS Stock at uced Prices! be Offered, call Early at tUCH'S. GOODS A < tE SUBJECT. E ONLY ANNOUNCE TOCK OF CLOTHING, TS, v& ssom not Superior 1 II I WILL SELL BE FOUND ANYWHERE. J, and an inspection is solicited. srt M. Kennedy. ),000 )F GOODS I 2 SOLD ag Low Prices; riNG OF I cs?, Bugging,' arket Price for Cotton. 1AUM BROS. JJSTOPENED. Fall and Winter Stcck AT James Jones. I have the pleasure of announcisf to my numerous patrons that I have Just Returned from the Northern Markets where I purchased a heavy slock of FALL AND WINTER GCODS, which I propose to fell at p icef correspon ting wiiii me low puce or eottiu. My slock of HARDWARE cannot bo excelled in this mar. nnd aft I mailt' my purchases in this line. i nder 'lie most favorable circumstances, 1 can afford to sell the same at tbo Very lowest Prices. COTTON. I am always in the market, and give th* highest market prices in cash. The patronage of the public is solicited. Polite niul attentive clerks on hand to serve customers sepl't?tf JAMES JONES. Candy, Candy. BOXES assorted Candv for sale bv i O BAC.V BRO.S. ^lugar. ytA Barrels of different kinds of sugarOU for sals by U I'M BROS.