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G.G. ALEXANDER, Proprietor. CuMDES^ S. 0., AUGUST 14, IST'.i. | The Yellow Fever. The fever in Memphis continues to prevail to about the same extent as we reported in our last issue?ranging'from tweuty to thirty new cases daily. The spread of the disease is principally among the negroes. The city is almost completely isolated from communication with the outside world now, except by telegraph. JInrt Clary. The Beaufort (irrscmt, says. Wo can never again expect to have another Hampton. Perhaps Gary wouM come next, to him in arousing a universal gusli. Unfortunately his imliviiluality has ma le liim an Eagle. hut for ilaws to peck at. He who is next heir to supreme power. says Tacitus, is always hated hy those who actually wield it. Wary nas uwiuv i.<> many others great for himself to share greatness with them. Tt does us real, genuine, whole-souled good when we read anything laudatory of this noble old hero. Mart. (lary is a trump. IIo has never been in any emergency that required the exercise of great power, but what his cool nerve, his brilliant genius and his true manhood showed themselves. Too much good cannot be said of him. Paws may peck at him, but the grand old JCaglo will yet soar higher and higher, and he will ever live in the hearts of the people of South Carolina as one who never knew what it was to be absent wheu she called the roll of her sons for duty. The Waleree Ilrldgp Again. At the risk of being blown up with nitroglycerine, or tomahawked, we again venture upou the absorbing subject of the Free Bridge. The object of this discussion originally, as it is now, was not to make any reflections upon any one. but (o draw out what light wc could upon a matter which for a long timo had been a vexed question with our people. If we criticised harshly the official conduct of anyone, we claim that wc had the right to do so, provided wc fortified this criticism with the . ".mnrnble nillars of truth, aod this we r have done, and it is what we propose to continue to do?the assertions of other parties to the contrary notwithstanding Occupying, as wo do. the position of public servant?, and being so often asked about this structure?what was its s'atus, what were we to look for, and when would it ever be paid for? we would have been quite recreant to . the duty of a newspaper, receiving public /patronage, if our lips were pealed and 6ur pen quiet. We have ^^v^^j^^herefore fr-y f.. -which we SaTTnot be turncd/amT^^ p;esenc sometfacts now which from time t t to time wiil be followed with others equally interesting, and if wc fail in throwing open to the public exactly how all things stand in this matter, then it will be because our honest efforts have been thwarted and not because we have failed to do our best. First. Wc know that the act of the Legislature authorized the construction of this bridge, and empowered the commissioners to raise ?20,000 to erect the 6amc. Now wc know further, that $20 810.15 has already been collected (this is the amount reported by the treasurer in his statement to the clerk of thi> court as correct) from the taxpayers of this county and paid over to the treasurer of ti.e bridge commission, and it is but right and proper that we should know exactly what rcmaiuicg balance is still due. Where the impropriety ? Again, it is equally proper that we should know exactly what bonds, notes, etc., are outstanding; and - r;p even further man mat?iu MiUn, .. note* arc out. what rate of interest they are drawing. If we stand still and do* (hiDg is suiji or done, how much longer would the good people of this county be taxed for this already overpaid bridge? It is entirely legitimate that the taxpayers should at-k these ques* tionF, and it is equally the duty of the custodial of her funds to answer. No hypothetical answer will do. Facts aud tigures aro what we desire, and what we must have. in the lversnaw wmfc: w i^i. appeared an article which accused us of ruany misstatements, but docs not produce any evidence, other than Mr. Shannon's mere sey so, to prove that they arc false. lie asserts that our report of the financial condition of the commission is entirely incorrect. Wc can only say that the figures arc a correct copy of the statement filed by the treasurer in the clerk's office as a true and correct statement of the commission. lie has said that not a bond has been sold. If this is true, how is it that wc pee in the treasurer's statement where interest is being paid upon numerous bonds that arc held by different people? Por instance, we sec where on July 10, 1379, Baum Bros, themselves drew $20 interest on bonds Xo, 27, 33 and 41. Do tbev pay interest on bonds given as collateral, as well as paying interest on the money borrowed ou tbcui ? If so, it i3 a queer proceeding, and ought to be ' presented by the grand jury at the next term of court. Their "reckless" statements may satisfy them, but they xvill not satisfy the taxpayers, They say thai the chairman attended the first meeting of the commission with the intention of resigning, and was prevented from doing so because he found that it would place the management of the funds of the commission in the bands of irresponsible radicals. The ; act itself renders such a thing practii cally impossshlc, for it expressly provides that in case of the death, rcsigr.ai tion or refusal to serve of any member :of the special commission, the vacancy ; should be filled from among twenty of | tbo highest taxpayers in tho county. I This would necessarily cause a good man to be selected, for there was no ! radical in the county who paid much ! more than his poll tax. We would like to ask a few questinns Tiruin trhinli enmj r>vnhitvifion is j desired : j The statement of the special commission as filed with the Clerk of the i Court, contains, among other items, the following: March G, 1874, Baum Bros, i account for hands in full to date, i -SljlSO 50; interest on same, 850. Are ; we to infer that this interest is paid j on un open account? The county is not going on a lien business that it i should thus be charged with what it ! ought not to pay. Again, What right j or authority did the commission have to ; pay out 8500 to a man just to look over ; and "superintend the construction of the j bridge when they had contracted with j a consptent enginoer to do the work ? It was our desire in this issue to ro { fer at length to the management of the {financial affairs of the Bridge Comtnis* ! sion, hot we could not obtain the ne| ccssary documents until it was too late j for this issue. They will be taken up hereafter, however, and the public furnished all the information that it is possible for us to obtain on the subject. i Colonel TT. jl/. Shannon. Sib : Your pettifogging letter, ad! dressed to me through the columns of j last week's Gar.ette, wearying the pa: tience and distracting the attcution of the public from tbc main points at issue, by a farrago of irrelevant trifles and quibbles, was evidently intended to muddle, rather than to clear up, the darkness and obscurity with which the bridge affairs are enveloped. Few will read it, and perhaps none will understand it. I should not deem it worth my atteution or notice, but for the anxiety you evince to iosult me and asperso my character. Among a great many other things you say: "In your editorial there is not a paragraph that has not in it a perversion, a siKjycstio falsi, or sitpj)vrs$;o rcri?a quibble worthy of your nature and your cultivation." "Your tortuous course through the courts ibr the past two orv tliree 'I in a gcTitlciiTEn of your aavanccUyears. I ft is unworthy of one who professes to be a "follower of the Lamb." It is dc| rogatory to the reputable character you once bore in this community. I say "oner Lore/' for the public arc sharp observers. They have seen you cham| pioDizintr dame Honor, in order that | you might more secretly take unwarrantable liberties with her, ostcntating virtue which yon repudiate in your j practices, until you are very generally I resarded as the ''Philosopher's Square" J of this community. But I return to the points I have re cited from your letter. It paipB cie to j say anything rude to a gentleman of | such advanced age as yourself, but self respect constrains me to repel such as! persions, and to pronounce them, as I ' do pronounce them, false! Falso in ! the fact that they misrepresent. False ' inointinfinriQ tlifiTT ttrrtnlf? 1IJ bUU UPilUIJt.-'li JIJOHI UUVIUHJ Miv; "WUIV* fain instil; and doubly false in the spirit of despicable malice by which they have been prompted. Again, I reiterate it, it pains me exceedingly to use language so rado to one of your age. But while I regret the necessity, I congratulate myself with the reflection that I the gentleman who has thus constrained j me to disregard the reverence due to jago ha? forced this personal issue upon ! nie, despite every effort gpon my part to I avoid it. I will not be misconstrued jifl decline to imitate your%gasconading subscription, ''Yours to command." Yours to command how ? Oh, sir, how much more becoming to one of your y?ars would have been a little of that modesty which you have ventured to claim, without exhibiting a trace of it in your note or your conduct. With you, sir, I shall not attempt to reason. You are incapable of it; aud now, sir, I commit you to that Coventry with which ! I would ouo who has perverted truth, j falsified facts and evaded issues. | Now, I bid you a final adieu. If I your inclination leads you to bespatter me further, and your taste and breeding permit it, tako carte blanche aud vnnp or-ill ml libitum. Tliev will , , O?- ? - J provoke no answer from me, nor bo heeded otherwise than as the follies of aD old i?an who ought to be wiser and better. I have the honor to be, Your obedient servant, T. II. Clarke. News Items. Mr. Gorbin, or South Carolina, was at 0mah3 the other day, and passed himself off on the unsophisticated reporter of ono of the newspapers as an ex-United States Senator. As ho gets farther cast we shall probably hear of him as the ex-Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Utah. During a thunder storm recently, a ! book ag?ut an 1 a mule got caught in i the rain, and they sought refuge in an outbuilding, where the owner of the I house happened to be; and wheu the 1 coroner's jury Came to fiud a Verdict, 1,1, , II I Bill ! ! I II II I r ~ they wi re unable to say whether the owner of the house got struck by light ning, kicked by the mule, or talked to death by the book agent. Mrs. Dorsey's brother, in a conversation regarding her devise to Jefferson Davis, said that if he possessed the spirit of Wade Hampton, he would tear the will up and let the property go to her lawful heirs. This is an allusion to n oirenmstanco connected with Sena tor Hampton's father. The first Wade Hampton, desiring to observe the law | of primogeniture, left his fortune to his son Wade, (father of the Senator) and making little or no provision for his daughters. Colonel Hampton toro the will up, thus allowing all the other children to share equally with him. Mr Havis does not seethe matterir. that light, and he will hold on, especially as Mrs. Dorsey's relatives aro accusing him of hcing too intimate with her and exercising undue influence. For his reputation he has to fight the matter through. West IVateree Items. The weeks pass so rapidly that I can hardly realize that to.day is my day for the Journal lleally things are so exceedingly quiet here that I am nfraid tiy letters may be only a repetition of each other. It is that quiet season now, just in advance of the gathering of the crop, when we all havo nothing much to do, save to lay down in the August ehade, dream of the day when we shall carry nni- r?r?ftnn tn mnrlrpt find eat corn once more from our own fields. I have not for a long while seen the pepplc over here in such fine spirits about their cotton crops. They are really fine, and if the prices keep up, wo can "pay out" and have a little left. Corn is not so good, and wo may have to call upon our friends on tho river to help us out. Religious meetings, among both white and colored, aro very frequent. The j ono at Ebenezer is now going on its j third week, and while I would not for j tho life of me say one word that could [ be tortured into a reflection upou religion, I must conscientiously affirm that in my humble judgement such fits of excitement are not permanent, and Generally end in no good. Crops are neglected frequently,health injured,etc., and all ending generally for the good of no one' I havo read wiih deep interest your article on the bridge; also the reply of Colonel Shannon. I am afraid, how. ever, to say what I think. The people seem generally to bo with you, and for the life of them they cannot see any impropriety in asking the status of the bridge. Don't be frightened off. incf ino nniirf.Q nn H C lia?U liv UIUI J U.VIVV vw?.. -w .r about friend Rabon's locality, but so peaceable and quiet are we over here that wo deserve a chrorao from the county for taxing them so little in tbis respect. I expect to report a wedding in my next. A member of your staff passed me a few days ago on his way to Longtown. I was surprised to see him looking so calm and serene. Blackjack. Mr7Kditoti : 1 am quite surprised to see the turn 'that the diicussion of the Watcrco Bridge has taken, and I think it is time to stop fuss;ng and fuming regarding this subject and keep all parties down to facts. Don't let them evade or dodge the main issues. We (the taxpayers) are with you, Mr. Fditor, and don't want to see any fighting about this matter. Did the Commission do proper in retaining LaSallc in their employ after they found him incompetent from drink, See. ? Did they do the?r duty to the coanty i? roIcciving this miserable structure from him and his bondsmen and allow them to go ''scot free" and thus raddle this "eyesore" and burden upon the county ? Did they do right to pay our friend, j Capt. Villepiguc, 8500 to overlook the' builder pent by the South Carolina Railroad Company, when said builder was considered a competent workman and our friend had no experience whatever in bridge building, tl us taking said amount from the already overburdened taxpayers ? Now, Mr. Editor, I am of the opinion that it is in bad taste to drop the main questions in this matter $nd go i?to other subjects of but little interest to the public. This old elephant, afflicted with all manner of diseases, and built of inferior material until it was so decayed as to allow a Qnc mule belonging to Mr. Gettys to drop through the bottom of his dilapidated frame, and that too, before it was turned over to the county, with all of his joints out of place and sloughing tho sap from his ribs, dropping off so much that he is past all hop* of cure from any source whatever. Gentlemen of the Commission, all that wu taxpayers want is for yea to chow that all is right, and nTT7_ll men wo win oe aengucu 10 i.s?y, - wm done, good and faithful servants." And until this is done, you cannot satisfy Good Citizens. From Another Correspo adent. Mr. Editor : i wish to know something definite in regard to the Wateree Bridge. Quarreling and dodging the issue doc6 no good. Let us know exactly what the county owes, how many bonds arc out, where the treasurer's bond is and to whom the county owes . this money. These are questions that should be answered without oo much I ado. Truth and information is all we i want. Wo sympathize with the Jour- i WAJj UVfi miv, iiiiu nu iiuub jv/v? uviwi . to stop until the darkness is driven < away and everything inado plain. If M you cannot get at it, 1 aui ia favor of ' the taxpayers of this county calling a ; convention, appointing an expert, even I if it is to be paid by contribution, and ' sifting matters to the very bottom of < this whole miserable fraud, which is a ' curse, and which always has teen to the county. Surely, thero woulb uot be so much fuss if all was right. So rliuch dodging of tho issue maket the taxpayers believe that something wroDg ! has been going op. < Twenty-Five Mile Oreeji. 1 r a??? ?a??n?an Ami LAW. jBLply to J. R. M. Messrs.^ditors : As your corres- j pondent atHusscll Place has thought proper to notice the few crude ideas I ! threw ouUkgon the no-fonco question, | I ask spa|f,n your columns to pen a few thougNj in reply. "The situation in this couq,ry ooe hundred years ago was quite different to what it is now." The cause of this has not materially result od^n the present system of fences, out invai various oiner reKuuo, oum u.a coDflictiD^ interest between the North and So?th;A change lrom a controllable labor system to an uncontrollable one; from living at home to living abroad, and from a variety of crops to almost cotton alone. Remove these causes, as far as it is practicable, and our country would ngain abound with peace and prosperity. Qotton is not necessarily king in a climate as well adapted to grain and other crops as ours is. "The virgin forests are no moro ; the old field pines have takenTheir place," making about five or six rail trees where one grew before. "The labor of the country has been changed from slave to frco labor." The inefficient labor system, the improvement science and the aid of commercialjfertilizcrs have considerably reduced the amount of acreago necessary for cultivation, thereby turning out thousands of acres which in fifteen or twenty years produce an abundance of mil trims. "The caoital necessary to employ laker is not owned by tho farmers of South Carolina, hence, labor is not controllable by the land owners." Why not? fori am sure tho laborer pays the interest on tho capital, and not the land owners. If farmers would learn to live at home, and ccnso going info debt, the cupital would belong to them, "fence or no fence."" Then why urge that^|c fence law is productive of all these evils ? Why not place it upon its proper basis ? "We change our com cribs and smoke houses from the farm to BaTtimore and elsewhere, because wc cannot fence our own stock in, and other people's out." Wc think that this laHer clause is Apt the cause of the former, but that tins change has for its cause several reasons. First, the effects of the late war; second our increased desire to remunerate the losses mado by the rebellion; third, the planting of cotton to tho exclusion of grain crops, gi%s8es, Sic. Stock are not returned for their real value, as your correspondent well knows, c - 'm ?.. 1.? lor UO UUtM uoi puicuooc cue cifwft II' Kershaw j^nty for its estimate upoD the tax Ik To find the valae of bacon, butter, &cM undertake to bu^^M^'The no fence law would ret^^^HLbbnrer's, the widow's aud-^^^^^HL/, milk and butter to "clrt^^^^^L^^Iaborcr would have couTd^seasou his "tj^^^^^^^^^Tanrivn^ctathat the p^^^^HjHLpd o^H children b.-- V^^Hcie^K claims against South OaftM^no have a free, open and uninterrupted access to her pasture lands whijthe memories of the late war arc Preserved. Their husbands and fotbeif'&erc sacrificed upon its altar llorthe^^nerty of thoso who, it (til l WJ * 4*-.?*n?x?i J lOTC? of lawnthac in ilk and butter which are^o essential to the healthy growth of those children. Again, who helped to redeem South Carolina from tho awful condition into which she was forced. All this is forgotten while in pursuit of self ugraudizement. It would be a condition too sad for a moment's contemplation. Our calculations were intended for the majority of farmers in Kershaw county, and not for the peculiar, isolated locali'y in which your correspondent resides However, if a change bo necessary for the farmers convenient to Russell Place, we have no objection, provided they make it at their own expense; and if a change is badly needed. They will certainly make it.' Every city, for its better protection, builds its owd walls. We nave as mucn law upon tne no fence as we desire. Wo acknowledge an error in the cost of putting up the rails. It was an over sight on our part. However, we arc glad that it is in our favor. We propose giving what wo think an average estimate of the cost of the fencing in Kershaw county. Ono hundred acres can bo tenced with 1,112 panels, or I1,12Q rails. At 50 cents a hundred, they will cost $55 60 for cutting and splitting. A two-horse team will average 15 loads per day on the majority of farms. Fifteen times 40 rails is 600 rails per day. Six hundred into 11.120 is joj. the number of days reouired for hauling. A wagon and two I ?.# horses are not worth more than. $2 per day. Two hands cost 60 cents, which give us a cost of S2 CO a day for hauling Then 18* times S2.G0 is $48.10. A hand can put up the rails in 11 days at a cost of $3 30. Total amount of cxjfthse, Average expense per year, 817 66 2-3. Any farmer who gives cattle any attention, can sell beef and butter enough to keep his fences repaired. Cross fences are not included in the above calculation Wo do not propose to pay out the moneji to build our fences. It will cost us nothing but our labor, and that too in a time during which wo would do fbut little else. It may be said that wo do uot allow enough for hands. The majority are working for six dollars, or perhaps less. They got 10 pounds of hacon and one bushel of corn per month, i at a cost of $2. Total amount of hire; and board is ss, wnicn auiounrs 10 about 30 cents per day. The advooates af the "no-fence" urge that it would be cheaper to hire a stock minder who would cost $S per month, or $9G per year, to mind a $100 worth of stock that yield tho poor farmer a profit of ?10. What do you think of this for monomy ? Wo would like to say more, cut enough, unless it were better. W. J. Young. Flat Rook, August 9th. An ounce of peach kcmals contains a ^rain of prmsic acid, which is a fatal quantity. Ammonia is tbc best antijo'to, Ellodgett House CAMDEN, S. C. S, IL BLODGETT, Prop'r. TRANSIENT RATES, $2 PER DAV. Having vacated the DeKalb House, I have opened for the accommodation-of the T\nWi/? in tho Inrere building known as the "Snlmnnd House, on DcKnlb street, just above the corner of Main. Locution equal ly as convenient, and opportunies to make guests comfortable arc better. I ask the patronage of the public, with the assurance Ilint whatever reputation T have made as proprietor of the DeKalb House, it will he my study to improve as proprietor of the Blodgett House. FREE HACK to the Blodgett House. ftugG-ly S. II. BLODOETT. WMTED! 10,000 pounds Wool; also Hides, Bags, Beeswax, Brass, Copper, Lead, etc., fpi which the highest each prices will he paid. 1 also keep on hand a good supply ol Di\y floods, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Hots, &c., which will he sold at the very lowest prices. S. WOLFE. may23tjar.l80 Camden lee House. One door north of Ancrttm & Co. Ice delivered at the store in quantities to suit purchasers, at the following prices; Single pound, G cents; 4 pounds, 1G cents; 6 pounds, 25 cents; 14 pounds, GO cents; 80 pounds, $1. Picnics and parties furnished at a small advance on Charleston prices. W. F. MALONE, Ag't. T. XI. CJLARKE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Camden, S. C. Office in the Journal Office, on Rutledge Street, one door west of the poat office. Notice to Trespassers. All persons are hereby warned not tc trespass upon the lands of Mrs. M. D. Ancrum and A. J. Boykin, situated on tbc east side of Watercc river, eight milo9 be low Camden, for the purpose of hunting, fishing, or for any other purpose. All persons disregarding this notice will be pros ccute*l to the extent of the law. " W. A. ANCRUM, jlyl2 A. J.'BOYKIN. Private and Transient Board, THE OSTEEN HOUSE, * 7 vaiuil^ll5 Transient rates .$1 per day. Special arrangements for board by . the week 01 month. Pleasantly located on Broad street, ant convenient to business. Accommodations of the best order, anc no pains spared to make guests comforta ble. jly 12-ly MM K large book, foil of pood things, valuable Becrcta, 1 an (I important information, mailed for two nt/vmpa. Addrcsa. LER & CO., 524 (sixth Ave,, New York. wbbWWW rlsk. Women do us well as mei, Man}' make more than th? amount stated above. No one can fail to maki money fa t. Any one can no the work. You cai make from r>0 cents to $-2 an hour by devotini your eveuinps and spare time to the business Nothing like It for money making ever ofTcrei before. Business pleasant and strictly honora ble. fieader, if you want to know all about thi best paying business before the public, send ui your rddress and we will send you full partlcu Mrs and private terms irec; samples worm *o.ui also free; you can then make up your mind fo yourself. Adtlrcgo OKQHOE ST1NSON ?fc CO. l'ortlaud, Me. R. T. OWENS, Sign and Ornamental PAINTER, Having established himself in Camden, is prepared to do all kinds of .ornamental painting. All his work is warranted. Call on him at Gilbert Brothers blacksmith shop and carriage factory. UPHOLSTERING Done in FIRST CLASS Style, and at short Notice. BARGAINS! The Largest and CHEAPEST Stock of Family and Fancy GROCE RIES In Caraden are to be found at W. A. ANCRUM&CO'S, Also, Crockery & Glassware, Wooden Ware, Dry Goods, SHOES | Tobacco and Cigars. ALL KINDS OF Farmers Supplies Constantly on hand. Highest Market price paid for COTTON BY W. A. ANCRUM & CO. jau2/5tf * A WEEK in your own town, ami no V ?->[? * capital risked. Yon run wive the busiUIWW ness a trial without expense. The best opportunity ever offered for those willing to work. You should try nothing else until you see for yourself what you can do at the bui?ness we offer. No room to explain here. You can devote all your time, or only your spare time to the business, atnl make great pay for every hour that you work. Women make as much as men. Send for special private terms and particulars, which we mall free. $5 outtlt free. Don't complain of hard times while yon have such a cbanco. Address U. UALLfiTT d Co.-, Portland, Me. i f S.A.ARNS" S. A. AKNSTEIN & CO. bog leave to announce that their stock of fasbionablo dry goods is complete, and they are offering great bargains in Muslins, Piques. Linens, Lawns, Swiss, Grenadines, Buntings, Poplins. Sum* mer Silks, etc., eto. S. A. ARNSTEIN & CO. have a largo assortment of Fancy Goods and Notions. Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs, Embroideries, Ribbons, Laces, Ties, Gloves, Lacc Mitts, Fans, Parasols, Cuffs, Collars, Rucbing, Hosiery, Soap, ! Perfumery, etc., etc., all of which must ; be sold, if low prices will sell them. ' i 1 POSITIVE IN! I Our Mr. ARNSTEIN has g ?L A- Bewildei : ? : PALL AND W And our positive instructions are th OUR IMMENSE ! THIS ? JtSig- Jousiness, Cheap Goods Grea 1 I s. A. ARNS CATARI " r? MXJiuigB,Hi9u?R taiU^pXZl^IntotlwuffoBi95fWS|0<J ; jg\ ^ cons' i jhI lUll i S A eomponnd of thi r 5Stfn* Hfttenjt moth DtvOHX't iKHAl^a. StvmA && I potent physician always in charge. Advice free on all I cue will nave immediate end careful attention, and fr jwptr. Address UO.UE MKOICINK CO.. B. , Great Opening OF PDDIMP s. 011a/ia/tcD nnnne ornmu ml ouiviivilm uuwuo ; AT TIE OLD BRICK STORE. W. C. GERALD OFFERS HIS Immense Stock, CONSISTING OP DRY GOODS, Notions, SBOC1BIE8 Of every kind, and FINEST Quality, Hardware, Bagging and Ties, Etc., AT THE 1.(1 WUST HASH PRICK jju h iiu a uuuu jl jluujjwi PAYS TIIE HIGHEST CASH PRICE FOR COTTON. BUIST'S - i _ uaraen ?eeus>.| A.TJL, IiINT>S, For Salc'by j Dr. F. Ii. ZEMP. m % rEIN&CO. We invite special attention to our elegant stock of Gcnrs' Ladies' and Children's Shoes and Slippers, And offer them at cost, a tact which shou.i ins","? them large and "peedv siles. - S. A. ARNSTEIN & CO. During the Month of August our attractions will be great, stoc* complete and prices very low, and w hope no one will fail to visit our es'utlishmcnt. We shall'try to please ant ' satisfy everybody, and upon tbat exter. a heart^invitation to all. S. A. ARNSTEIN & CO. STRUCTIONS to the Northern Markets to buy ping Array 'INTER GOODS! V at wo MUST SELL-every article of * / SUMMER STOCK. IEANS: * * *9 t Sacrifices9 .stonishing* Bajrgain^. . TEIN & CO |B If neglected, may rapidly derelcf ? J8 ha 3 1?to Quick conamnption. OrdiMUfP Omm nAry treatment* wili not onro it. Its effect* are nervous weakness I loa, andjtnaRy conramption and ju-anal UMPTION hayfI^^SI Coagha, Nerroafl and Catarrhal Headache*. Da liseasea of the air-pasaa?M and lamp there ta ni trough, and certain to core and giro *"? '"> rek. MLJ A I ^ linMLCI^It ! m<*t healing balsams known toinedicalacience.vil ' D PINE TREE TAR breathing "or ftY- < - ^ ones'/I Inhaler, is converted into a cleanatng.inTi ... -3 vapor, and taken direct to the diseased cavities of tl. k e air.pae&atfoe and tho lungs. where it acta aa a Ioc.l * seised surface, and lta health-giving power ia felt :-i iod by which these diseases can be permanently core-'. 'REATMENT -tumcd if not aatiafactary. PTAlao for aale b ; ir circular giving full information, terms, etc. A ooc?chronic diseases. State symptoms plainly, and yntJ.eo advice by return mnil. Whm writing,uan^i . W. cor. Tenth and Arch Ste., Philadelphia, Pa. Now Opened. H. ELLIS Begs to announce lo the pnblic and h < friends that he has opened a store for t o sale of Groceries and Liquors, At the old stand of W. II. Ellis, in Clyburii's Block, Aud will keep his place fully suppt'rf with the best brands of Wines, Liquors, cigars aim Tobacco, Family and Fancy Groceries y?^ Always on hand and for sale cheap 'cj the cash. A share of the public patrtnag' is respectfully solicited. II. ELLIS. apllOtf PRESCRIPTION FREE! For the speedy Cure of Seminal Weakness. Cost Manhood und nil disorders brought on by indiscretion or excess. Any Druggist has the Inure dients. Address, I?r. W. JA<iUK.S it to 130 (Vest Mvlb Street, < iiieiunati, OPasturage. Ilaying rented the pasture just belo-v town, known as the Withers pasture, I v !'l pasture cattle for any person, and be responsible for their safety while under ni"" care Dest pasture around Camden R.v* 50 cents per head per month. A go i stock minder to be in charge of tbo cnttio, and gate kept locked. All persons are warned from trespassing upon these premises, or on the plant fields, for any purpose whatever. App y to ANEKE BENNY. Or WASHINGTON BENNY. _?..i te