The Camden journal. [volume] (Camden, S.C.) 1866-1891, February 26, 1878, Image 4
BFAITIFI L TIIIXCS.
Beautiful facc9 are those that wear?
Ii matters little if ilatk or fair?
Whole souled honesty printed there.
Beautiful eyes are those that show,
Like crystal panes where earth fires grow,
Beautiful thoughts that burn below.
?
Beautiful lips are those whose words,
Leap front the heart like songs of birds, |
Yet whose utterance prudence girds.
Beautiful bauds ore those that do
Work in earnest and brave aud true,
Moment by moment, the bng day through.
Beautiful feet are those that go
On kindly ministries to and fro?
Down lowliest ways, if God wills so.
Beautiful shoulders are those that bear
Ceaseless burdens of homely care,
With patient grace aud daily prayer.
Beautiful lives arc those that bless,
Silent rivers of happiness
Whose hidden fountains but few may guess, i
Beautiful twilight at set of sun;
Beautiful goal, with raco well run;
Beautiful rest, with work well done.
Beautiful gravas, where grosses creep,
Where brown leaves fall, where drifts lio
deep,
Over worn-out hands?oh, beautiful sleep'
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Mankind worship success, but think
too little of the menus by which it is attained.
We could not endure solitude were it
not for the powerful companionship of
hope, or of some uuseen one.
Most ol the shadows that cross our
* path through life arc caused by standing
in our own light.
As riches and favor forsake a man we '
discover him to be a fool; but nobody :
could find it out in bis prosperity.
There is no man so friendless, but that
he can find a fiicnd sincere cuough to
tell him disagreeable truths.
It may serve as a comfort to us in all j
our calamities and afflictions that he
that loses anything and gets wisdom by 1
it is a gainer by the loss.
Pride is like the beautiful acacia,
that lifts its head proudly above its
neighbor plants, forgetting that it, too,1
like them, has its root in thodirt.
Stories first' heard at a mother's knee!
are never wholly forgotten?a little
spring that never quite dries up in our
journey through scorching years.
T. :r 1.? t._
1C 19 anoincr b n itu vc uiigi?t< i?>,
but it is mine If I do not give. To find
one thankful man I will oblige a great
many that are not so.
That farmer understood human naturo
who said: "If you want to keen
your boy at home, don't bear too hard '
on the grindstone when he turns the
crank.''
One beautiful trait in a woman's,
character is her invariable readiness to
soothe her husbtnd's temperament,
even if she has to do it with an aching
heart.
Great men leave two different impressions
of themselves on their contemporaries?the
one the result of their pub-1
lie career, the other of their private life.
A gentleman who keeps a store in i
Wheeling, W. Ya., will not sell an article
of any kind to a cross-eyed man nor
to a man who wears It is hat <>u the side
of his head. If he leaves his hotue to
go to his place of business and meets a
cross-eyed man, he will retain home,
take off Lis hat and coat, and remain in
tLc house a considerable time.
vr iuurv
A' Mstsn
Strong butter?an old livery italic ,
goat.
"Hewers of wood and drawers of:
water"?Wood engravers and rnaiiue;
painters."
Good partners at carus?A chimney
sweep and a bugler. One eao follow
soot, and the other can trumpet.
A yankce recently ate, for a wager, a
pound of sawdust. 1 his is anew wuy
of taking board.
The fool scekcth to pluck a fly from
a mule's bind leg; a wise man iettetb
the job out to the lowest bidder.
Some husbands, it is said, write "W.
1'." in tie corners of their letters,
which meaus '-wife permitting."
When you have a fellow down and
be cries out lor an armistice there is
danger that he wants to get up and try
it again.
"What is wisdom?" asked a teacher
of a class of small girls. A bright-eyed .
little creature arose and answered: "Information
of the brain."
Josic Fowler, of New Haven, snuff's
candles and cores apples with a revolver.;
The young men are exceedingly respectful
in their attentions to her.
Dancing is lovely?for children, hut
a man bobbing up anu down, ana ma
perspiration streaming from his face, is
u pitiable object.
A man who attended a nitro glyce-:
rinc explosion said, after war Js, that his
first impression was that his mother inlow
was arguing with him.
' I wonder what makes my eyes bo
weak," said a rop to a gentleman.
' Tl.ey arc in a weak place," responded
the gentleman.
i
The fool killer could assemble in almost
any Ohio village and knock at
least a dozen i'nsidential candidates in
the head without going out of town. |
A young thief, who was charged with ?
picking pockets, demurred to the indictment
beeuuse he had never 'zactly
picked them, lie always took them as
they came.
The latest and wickedest on dit
about the clubs is to the effect that a i
married lady in this city, well known
in society, but name not given, has re- ~
cently fallen in love with her husband.
A stick of word loaded with gunpowder,
chnrged by a farmer whose pile
was too often visited by thieves, exploded
in the stove of tho Congregational
Church at Jiellvue, Ohio, recently,
much to the confer nation of (he people
and tbi scandal eff tire cknermr, |
Suffering From Cramps.
These most terrible of pains arise
from the veins being so full of blood
that they swell out, press against the
large nerves, and thus impede the'
circulation of the vital fluid. In
smaller nerves the distension pro"
duces neuralgia, which is literally
"nerve-ache." The cause of this
unusual fullness of the vein is, that
it cannot flow by nature's ordinary |
agencies. In proportion as it is!
thick, it is cold, and this abnormal
state is indicated by the feebleness
of the pulse. In cholera patients it
is very marked, and exists days ar.d
weeks before the attack. The following
is a simple method of treatment:
When a person is attacked with
cramp, get some hot water quietly
and expeditiously (for noise and exclamations
of grief and alarm still i
further disturb the nervous cqilib"
riux); put the sufferer in the water!
as completely as possible, and thus
heat is imparted to the blood, which i
sends it coursing along the veins,1
and the pain is gone. While the
water is in preparation, rub the
cramped part very briskly with the
hand or a woolen flannel, with your
mouth shut. But why k->ep the
mouth shut ? You can rub harder,
faster and more efficiently, beside
it saves the sufferer from meaningless
and agonizing inquiries. A man
in pain docs not want to be talked to
?he wants relief, not words. If all
could know, as physicians do, the inr
cstimablo value of quiet composure,
and the confident air on the part of
one who attempts to aid a sufferer,
it would be practiced with cca elcss
assiduity by the considerate and the
humane.
Fish Culture.
American enterprise and industry
arc continually discovering and developing
new channels of industry
to increase the income or add to the
comfort of the people. Of all tlie
new fields , of enterprise, however,.
that liave opened to our people in
tl'c last ten 3*ears, none promises
greater results than the artificial
propagation and culture of fish. A
few men at the North have been
experimenting in this branch of do-1
mcstic industry (I use the phrase
advisedly) for a number of years, i
and have succeeded in reducing it to
a science so simple and plain that
any one of ordinary intelligence can
comprehond it, and it seems that
it would require only a very reasonable
amount of skill to practice
its manipulations, and carry out
successfully its most intricate detail*.
Any one possessing water
privileges of almost any kind can
engage in the cultivation of some
variety of the finny tribe. An ah
most stagnant pond may be stocked
with catfish ; and it only icquires a
spring witli an even timperature,
" n % 1 1 1!'
ami a liow oi auout one ami a nan
inclies square, to raise an abundance
of the finest trout for family
use.?Planter and Fanner.
The National Timber Law.
The requirements of an act of,
Congress giving land to settlers who
should plant a certain proportion in
timber, have been modified hv an
amendment reducing the number of
acres to be planted. The original
law required that forty acres should
be planted to entitle a settler to a
quarter section. The amount wasi
so great that the law was inoper.v I
tive, and has been amended us follows
: Every person who plants,
protects, and keeps in a healthy;
growing condition for ten vcars, ten
O 13 ' * '
acres of timber, the trees thereon
not being more than four feet apart
each way, on any quarter section of
any of the public lands, shall he entitled
to a patent for the whole of
such quarter section, at the expiration
of ten years, on making proof
of such fact by not less than two
creditable witnesses; provided, that
only one quarter in any section
shall be thus granted." This would '
require the planting of 25,000 trees.
Within ten years these would need
thinning, und there should he pro*
vision lor that.
The Cost of Fencing.
The ftnccs in the United States
are reported to he worth $1,800,000,000,
or $M5 per head for each
inhabitant. The expenses necessary
to keep them good is at least $100,000,000.
Major lirisbane, of the
United States army, estimates the
destruction of timber in the United
States at $5,500,000 acres, and that
nno.liulf fliis immensearea is rcouired
for fencing alone. However true
this may be, ami we cannot help
regarding it as a wild statement, it
is nevertheless true that fencing is
one of the most expensive items the
farmer lias to deal with. The increasing
scarcity of timber in the,
West has caused the total abolish"
mer.t of fences over large areas.
Barbed wire, in its various forms for
fencing, now constitutes an immense'
and constantly increasing business.
y a
It seems to be the best substitute
yet found for either post-and-rail
or board fences.
The Age of Wonders.
A large establishment lias been
. T
opened in St. Louis for drying eggs,
and is operated bv huudruvs of
thousands of dozens. The eggs, after
being carefully inspected by
light, uretbrtfwn Into an itmntmrt
receptacle, whore tl.cy arc broken,!
and by centrifugal operation the j
white and yolk arc separated from i
the shells, very much as liquid honey
is taken from the con.b. The liquid
is then dried by heat by a patent
process, and the dried a?ticlo,
which resembles brown sugar, is put
in barrels and is ready for transportation.
The dried article lias
been taken twice across the Equator
in ships and then made into omelet,
and compare with omelets made
from fresh eggs in the same mariner,
cr ' j
and the best judges could not dc-j
tect the difference between ihcm.J
Is not this am age of wonders?!
Milk make solid ; cider made solid ;
apple butter made into bricks.
What next ?
Jllind Staggers in Swine.
Ilogs, like horses, are subject to
blind staggers. They arc suddenly
taken blind and staggering, and in a
short time go into spasms, especially
if it be a sever case of the disease.
These spasms or fits last but a short
time only, but recur at short intervals,
and in cue of these fits the sufferer
usually dies. This disease
makes sure havoc among swine <
where it prevails, and no farmer
should be ignorant of a remedy to
apply when needed. Cold water
frequently dashed on the head, the
administration of cathartics and injections
of turpentine and oil is one
kind of treatment recommended, and !
we know of tio better. Hut in treat-,
ing the disease particular attention j
must bo given to the dieting of the
o # t # n
animals?a mild, laxitive diet being |
required forsotr.e time after the sub-!
jeet begins to recover and regains)
an appetite for food.?Factory and \
Farm.
Alleged Iteiuedy for Diphtheria.!
I)r. Field, an English physician,]
when visiting his patients afflicted j
with diphtheria, took nothing with
htm but a quill and powdered sulphur.
lie put a tenspoonful of sulphur
in a wineglass of water, and I
stirred it with his finger until tho-:
roughly ini*ed. He then used it as a1
gargle, and in ten minutes his patient
was out of danger. The garP
O
gle was also swallowed, not spit out.
When the disease was so far advanced
that the patient could not,
use the gargle, lie blew some dr*
sulphur through the t^u'ill into the
throat, and when the fungus had
shrunk, used the gargle; or, pre-1
vious to using the gargle, hp put
some sulphur on a live coal, and
mado the patient inhale the vapor. ;
WEBSTER'S
Series of Dictionaries! i
I
Unabridged, r.oval Quarto Illustrated
Edition, 18-10 pages, 3,000 illuslions,
$12 00
'ftio Itoyal Octavo, sheep, marbled
edges, 5 00
Nation il Pictorial Dictionary 1 i.O j
Counting House and Family Dictionary.
3 50
Now University Dictionary, 3 00'
New Academy Dictionary 2 50 |
High School Dictionary, 1 2."> j
Common School Dictionary 00
Primary School Dictionary 00 \
Pocket Dictionary, 75c. to 1 00 j
Popular School Hooks.
Primcts, Spellers, Headers, Ilistoiics,
Ph.losophies, (ieogi aphid.
< < . j
{iiauoiiiT^.
Paper and Envelope;', Copy and Report
Books, M?rchants' Account Books, Memorandums,
Ink, Pens and Pencils.
Any Book published in the United
Stales csn lie had, at publishers' prices, on
short notice.
J. A. YOUNG.
febl2tf
Jacob Elias
Begs to inform his friends and the public
generally that he has
opened store
1
)ne door north of T. J. Ihirefield, Esq., |
where he is offering a stock ot"
(tioiientl ^Iprcliantlisp.
at astor.ishly low prices
FOR CASII ONLY |
lie has Pry Goods, Boots and Shoes, 1
Hardware, Groceries, Ac., kv. A call is
respectfully solicited.
declS-Sin JACOB ELIAS.
o a nrr a ft a riff i
I HAVE ilio pleasure of announcing tomy '
friends anil patrons t'lat 1 have rcuioved to |
JIY OLI) STAND,
where with far greater facilities and conveniences
than I had before the lire, 1 am
prepared to conduct a
FIRST CLASS BAKERYj
in every respect, and the patronage of the [
public is cordially solicited.
Orders For takes|
of any description promptly and satisfacto- j
lily filled by competent bakers.
Fresh. Broad
ulwuys on buiid.
tfttltfrf MRS. IU CROSBY.
x o xrrrz?:3
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS,
prereot
TTo nn*?Bwlll die of Colic, Bottb or Lvvo F?
fxB, If Koutz's Powders ar? need la time.
Fcctz'g Powders will euro and prevent Jloo CnoLBtu
Pouta's Powders will prevent Gates ia Fowl, especially
Tnrkeys.
Foutz"a Powders will Ineroata the quantity of milk
and rieam twenty per ccnu, and make tlio batter firm
aiui awect. v
Fontz's Powden will rare or prevent almost itkt
Diseass that Horses and Cattle arc heir to.
Fotttz's Powdees willoxvk SATiryACTTCjr.
Sold everywhere.
BATED E. yoxrrz. Proprietor,
aiLTIMOHB.Wd.
I- the int.-i genial balnam ? * used i>7
sufferer* from pulmonary dlaeasea.
It is comi>oseil of herbal products, wliirli
Wuvn uin.rifli* effect on the throat ami
Inn?*; (Ictai'hen from the air colls all irritating
matter: cause* It to bo expectorated,
and atone* cheek* the Inflammation
which produces the rough. A single dose
relieve* the mo*t distressing paroxysm,
soothes nervousners, and enabled the sufferer
to enjoy unlet rest at night. Being a
pleasant cordial, it tones the tvenk stomach,
and is specially recommended for
children.
What others say about
? TutVs Expectorant.
Had Asthma Thirty Years.
Bai.T1MOJ?*, February 3. !*;$.
"I have had Astlnna thirty year.-:, and never found
a medicine that had such a happy effect."
W. F. HOGAN, Charles St.
A Child's Idea of Merit.
New Oh leans, November 11, 1*76.
"Tutt's Expectorant is a familiar name in iny hou.-e.
My wife thinks it the best medicine in the world,
and the children sav it is 'nicer than mnlujscs
candy."' NOAH WOODWARD, 101 N. Poydras St.
"Six, and all Croupy."
" I am the mother of six children ; all of them have
been croupy. Without Tutt's Expectorant, I don't
think they coul.l have survived some of the attacks.
It is a mother's blessing."
MARY 8TEVEN3, Frankfort, Ky.
A Doctor's Advice.
" In my practice, I advice all families to keep Tutl'i
Expectorant, in sudden emergencies, for coughs,
croup, diphtheria, etc."
T. P. ELLIS, M.D., Newark, N.J.
Soid by all dritggitl*. Price &I.OO. OjJice
' 35 Murray Street, New l'ork.
"THE TREE IS KNOWN EY ITS FRUIT."
" Tutt's Till* are worth their weight in gold."
REV. I. R. SIMPSON, Louisville, Ky.
"Tutt's Pills nre a speuaThlcssing of the ninetrenth
century."? REV. F. R. OSGOOD, NgwVoik,
" 1 have used Tutt'n*ds7or torpor of the liver.
They iuc superior to any iiicdiciuc for biliary diserJc'rs
ever ni.ule."
I. P. CARR, Attorney at Law, Augusta, Ga.
" I have used Tiitt's Pills five years in my family.
V'u y are uncqualed forcostivenessand biliousness."
F. R. WILSON^ Georgetown, Texas.
"I have used Tutt's TTcIHciuc with preat benefit."
W. W. MANN, Editor Mobile Register,
!i\V? sell fiftv ItoaeJTutTi: I*ill? tc. five pf ail
otherj."'?SAYRE & CO^^Cirtersvills, Gj.
"Tutt's Pills have only to be tried to establish
their merits. Thcv work like magir."
W. H. BARRON^96Miummer C'., Boston.
" There is no nicdirine so well ndnjitcd t j the ct.re
cf bilious disorders as Tutt's Pills."
JOS. BRUMMEL, Richmond, Virginia.
AND A THOUSAND MORE.
Sold I;/ dpiggisls. 25 cent* a bar. O/Jleo
US Muri-ay Street, Jrcut York.
TUTTS HAIR DYE I
\ INDORSED. I
HIGH TESTIMONY. |
from the pacific jom.r.il. E
-A CREAT INVENTION _
hs? been made iTv l?;t. I I'TT. of Ni-w \ nrk,
whleh re-tops \ oti'lifiil beaut;. to the hair. B
That eminent ehemlst ha" surreeded in
I imeiarlne n Hair live wlileh linilates D
I nature to i erfrctlou. Old bachelors may
I Price $1.00. OJfloo 3 J Murray St., I
2 9 .Vrir l'or.'f. Sold by all druggl?t$. a
J. R. B030ALE.
Stoves, Stoves
A IIKAVY STOCK OF
Cook, Parlor and Office
STOVES,
OF
A1 ulu STYIjKS,
.IL'ST RECEIVED, AND OFFKItKD AT
PRICES LOWER
THAN CAN HE HAD
Elsewhere in Camden
GUTTERING, HOOFING, &c., ntlewled
(o at shortest 110Iice nxt<l on uccutniuo^iilinu
term?.
A full Hoe of
Tinware & House Furnishing
Goods.
i*opl rn'islatilly on li.'llul.
{jay-All work giiaran'ccil.
JOHN II. GOODAI.Edec4tf
All liimiK
Of CniiiiPil Goods, of Im'mI i|iiulity, and
warranted full weight, for sal by
febllitf KIRKLEY & SMITH.
l'lulii aiul rinioi Candies.
Of nil kinds. ('nickers, Diseuils, Nuts.
Ilnisins, Spiers, fic . \c\, for sale by
feb12lf KIT.KI.I'V \ SMITH.
The Kesl Kiiller.
riieeso, Muecaroni, &c , for sale by
fib 1211 IMRKLEY & SMITH.
.1
J. W. McCURRY
i
IS* OFFERING
I
I
Rare Inducements
i
TO PARTIES WASTING
IDIR/Y.'O-OOIDS,
CIOTHIKG,
BOOTS, SHOES, HATS.
HARDWARE, CROCKERY,
!
Groceries, &c.!
1 1
A'ivivu in flip mnrL-ot nml vvill'nnv I
ns J " ,1?J f
.the
! I
Highest Prices for Cotton.
Don't fail to givi me n call.
J. IV. JIcCliRBY.
i deelltf
GILBERT BROTHERS,
(NEW ESTABLISHMENT,)
CARRIAGE, WAGON
AND .
BLACKSMITH'S SHOP
AT THE
Old Stniidoi MIchiH Bro*N.
We are prepared to do everything in our line
in the best st\ le, at short notice, and at the
I cheapest cash lates.
j :*TI.AN'rATJOX WORK a specialty.
1'uhiic patronage resptctfully solicited.
GILBERT BRO'S.
! Jan. 29-fitn
!Riddle's Hotel,
LANCASTER C. E., S. C.
Having purchased the Hotel formerly occupied
by Mr. Jones Crockett, situated oil Main stieet, I
nisi |>ri parte 10 receive irausieni ana pcruniaeui i
i>na r?l-i a.
(tood uiTOinmodattons at reasonable rates. I
.Stables and Lota free to drovers.
JanlMf J. M. 10DIU.E, ;
11 J. MtlPJEGHT & SON,
UNDERTAKERS
I
Keep constantly oh hand, ready made
Ci tfins and ('uses, (onsistirg of 1'ine, Poplar.
Wa'nul and Metallic < uses, at prices j
frc lu $1 to $12?).
Fun era Is attended to with "promptness j
and dispatch. j
Allvrderi fills 1 at any licit**, day or !
1 night.
Shop on llroad street: Residence
j on Littleton street janl!9-ljni
At or Near Cost.
t
Having on hand too largo a stock of!
LI <41'OILS of best qualities to carry througn j
| the dull season, 1 am determined to turn
it into uionev. and in order to do so rapidly,
have concluded to sell nt the following
very low prices by the gallop ;
Old Crow Ky. llyc Whisky $4.25
Dickey Ityc 2.50
Miller's llyc 2 50
1'riJc of Ohio llyc 1.75
North Carolina Corn 2.50 j
Ilaltiuioro Corn 1.75
Apple 1'randy (the best) 2.75
(itnj.Tr liiumly 2.50
Dlaekhcrrv llrandy 2 50
Cognac lira tidy 2.50
( in (best) 2.50
Hum (pure) 2.50 j
Port Wine 2.50
Tobacco and Cigars in variety, at low ;
1 pr ecs. Also, a fine assortment of
Family Groceries
of I lie best quality.
Call and see mc, and price my goods be
01 e purchasing elsewhere.
J. H, LQLLIS,
at "Old Uriel Corner," liro.id St,. Cunt
<len, S. ('. jan 1-if
r'EED AND SALE~ST, BLES.
Every convenience on the spot. Always
: put up at
j ARMS!HONG'S OOMMODIOMS
STAPLES
!
on DeKulb Street. Good pump well on ,
premise.'. Animals well fed and properly '
cared for by accomplished hostlers.
PRICKS VKR Y MOPKRATKHorses
and mules always on hand and
for sale cheap. Don't forget the place,
J.A.ARMSTRONG. 1
ral lies indehted to me are rei|iiestlo
he prompt in making seMlemeiil. Collections
must be made or I shall be compelled
lo adopt severe measures.
W. c. YOUNG. ISAAC YOUNG. I .
YOUNG BROS.,
Harness, Hoots, Shoes, \c. ,
Mmle or repaired lit the shortest notice i:
nnd injilie wont durable wanner. ;,
The highest price paid for 111L>HS of nil J 1
descriptions. j'
Give lis n call, one door west of the
Postoffice, Camden. 8. C, declllf 1
t
iSnKUiiifr and Tien.
12,000 v?*W?hw. |
600 Bundles TIPS,
For sale low by
nct'2?ltf B.\I'M BROS. ,
< aimed Corn liocf. j
Potted llntii, Salmon. Oysters, Pickles,
Surdities, S;c., &c., by
fchWtf KUIKLGV & SMITH, |
SPECIAL irsi
o
I Will Off
NEXT THII
My Entires
Greatly Red
REAL BARGAINS Will
H. BAF
jon22lf
CHEAP
IS
T H R EARBAIi
I WILL THEREFOR]
MY 8'
dry goods,
:ha
E CI O f S M
Are Equal if
to any I have ever had to offer.
ALL OF WHICI
AS CHEAP AS THEY CAN
The Stock has keen most carefully selected
Robe
<femr
<pivV
WORTH C
TO BB
At Astonishii
CONSIST
Dry Goods,
Clothing, Hats.
SlioeN, Hardware,
Saddles, llanu
Groceries,
Ties.
We Still Pay; Above 31,1
B
THE OLD CnRNER STORE.
W. C. GERALD
Would invite the attention of the public
to hi*
Immense Stock
FOR THE
Fall and Winter Trade,
Consisting in part of
Dry Goods, Notions,
Hoots. Shoes, Hats, Clothing, j
Gents' Furnish ng G' ods,
Fancy Articles, Groceries,
Provisions, linen. J^ird,
Cheese, Crackers, Sugar.
Coffee, Ten, Molaeses,
Gunned Goods, Salt,)
Pernor. Seears. Tobaccos, Ac.
which he has just rcseived. fandjwhich is :
linger Mini far superior to any previous
dock he has ever exhibited.
1 would ask a careful examination of my
took In-line purchasing, as I am confident
that 1 'can save money to all who need
;oods.
Highest cash prices pnid for
COTTON
tnd all kinds of
Country Prodnro.
My stock of
Hugging and Ties
s extensive. ep. 10.
Molasses.
| Aiv BAHKKLS New Crop New Orleans
M'v Molasses.
For sale low by
Jimltf UUL'.U DR06. 1
JUCBMENTs. J
cr lor the J|
t
HTY DAYS ?
I
Stock at
uced Prices!
be Offered, tall Early at
tUCH'S.
GOODS
A
IE SU BJECT,
5 ONLY ANNOUNCE
rOCK OF
CLOTHING,
TS,
FD SH0?8
not Superior
11 WILL SELL
BE FOUND ANYWHERE.
I, and an inj-j cctioi. i; ao ijiled."
rt M. Kennedy.
),000
>F GOODS
I SOLD
lg Low Prices;
ING OF
?8,
Bagging,'
irket Price for Cotton.
IAUM BROS.
JJST OPENED.
Fall and Winter Stock
AT
James Jones.
I have the pleasure of announcing t*
my numerous pa'rons that I have
Just Returned from the Northern
Markets
where I purchased a heavy stock of
FALL AND WINTER GOODS,
which I propose to sell at pricescomspe
ding with the low price of cotton.
My stock of
HARDWARE
cannot he excelled in market, and as I
inline my pure napes ' a t his line, under the
most favorable circumstance*, 1 can afford
to sell the same ui the
Very Lowest Prices.
COTTON.
I mil always in the market, and give (L?
highest market prices in cush.
The patronage of the puhlic is solicited.
Polite and attentive clerks on hand to
serve customers.
sep 10?tf JOIES JOSE?.
Candy, Candy.
BOXES assorted Cnndv for sale bv
i <) BAlW BROS.
Nugar.
rt\ Barrels of different kinds of sugar
OU for sals by BUM BH05.