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TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM, y GOD A.TSTT) OTJ1R OOXJISTTKY\ ALWAYS IN ADVANGJ2 VOLUME 11. SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 25, 187T. V NUMBER P, DeTreville & He y ward I ATTORNEYS AND C? tjNSE LI .OlIS AT LAW Orniigcbtirx C. Iff.. S. Will practice in the va <' ? irti "of the State* W..J. DoTrovillP, James S- Upward junc 23 i ". ATTORNEY AT LAW, Orangcbiivg, S- CL Office in'rvar of MaVouie Hall. March 3 Sv Enowlton & Wamiamalcer, ATTORN E Y8 A SI) COUNSELLORS AT LAW, Orangeburg Gi II., S. C. Aug. B. Knoulfon, F. }L Wannumaker. Orangeburg C. II. St. Matthew-, inav 5 1S77 tt* DENTIST RY. DR. Ii. F. MUCKEX PUSS Dentist lxoonis over Store of Mr. Gee. II. CornelHon'n. ff?f" Charges Ilca-ovah'o. DENTIS TRY. Dr. L. S. Wolfe c:tti be !<'iiii<l a! Iii? oHieo over Kzckicl'H ^t?r?! where Ire is jiii'p.iicil to execute work on i? ><? mo.si in',, nvol styles, at short notice ami at rca-oaub pr'ces* All work guaranteed. <jtine 30 if. NO MISTAKE! take HEPATINE The Great Remedy lor all Diseases of the Liver. TAKE HEPATINE The Great Cure for Dyspepsia and Liver Disease. take The Great Cure for Indigestion'sind Liver Di.scaso. take HEPATINE .The Groat Cure for Constipation and 1 iver Disease. take HEPATINE The Great Cure for Sick 11einlache & Liver Disease. take HEPATINE The Great Cure for Chills, Fcvcis and Liver I lisease. . take HEPATINE . The Great Cure for Bilious Attacks and Liver Disease. take For Sour Stomach, Headache and Liver Disease. take HEPATINE For Female Weakness, General Debility and Liver Disease. WTHAW !H DYSPEPSIA? |flf H U I IA A state- of the Stomach in which VU lift 1 Ik) hs functions tire disturbed, ofie-u I uib H Brw will tout the presence of other diseases, attended with loss of appetite, nausea, heartburn, sotir stomach, rising of food after eating, sense of fullness or weight in the stomach, acrid or fetid eructations, a fluttering or sinking at thepitof thcstoiuach,palpitations, illusion of the senses, morbid feelings ami iineaKiness of vari ous kinds, and which is permanently cured if you take ZE3I IE iE^A-TIlsT IE Constipation or Costiveness? A state of the bowels in which the evacuations <!?> not take place OS designed by nature and are inordinately haul ami expelled with difficulty, caused by a low state of the' System, which diminishes the action of the muscular coat of the stomach. This disease is easily cured if you will take IKE IE PATI IsTIE WHAT I! INDIGESTION A condition of the Stomach pro duced by inactivity of the Liver; when the food is not |>rnpcrly digested, and in which condi tion the sufferer is liable to become the victim of nearly every disease that human llosh is heir ta? chills, fevers and general prostration. It is positively cured if you take ?EiZEZPA-TIILSriE Sick & Nervous HEADACHE? It war. at one time supposed that the seat c.f the brain was in the stomach. Certain ltis awondcrf.il sympathy exists between the Iwo, and what effects one has an imme diate effect on the other. So it is that a disordered ?stomach invariably is followed by a sj mp.ithclic ac tionof the brain, and headaches sill arise bom this cause. Headaches are easily cured if you will lake ZE3I IE JPJkJ-FT ZEsTIE Sour Stomach? Koartburn ? The fon ,er is the primary cause of the hitter. A sour t.tOlll.ich creates the heal and burning sensation, 'J'he con tents ot thr stomach ferment and tin it Sour. Sick ??'inmach, followed by griping, colic and diurrhcea, often occur. When the skin is yellow, TAKE mam When the Unique is coated, T.A.2rEI2! HEFATIIE DEATH TO DISEASE! For bitter, bad taste in the mouth, TAilE flB-A tenspooiiful in a wineglass full of water, as directed on bottle, and you never will be sick, This is saying a great d< id, b i we MAKE NO MISTAKE! k FIFTY DOSES IN EACH BOTTLE. * VOU S?LU ItY A. C.IDUKICS, Druggist, may 10 1877 ly The Rebel Yell. The Music Unit Stonewall Jackson Loved. About his Dyspepsia' (Col;.;Kyd Doug! can iu Philadelphia TsincsJ I have referred to Maj. Jackson's ill health. It took the form of dys pepsia, and once during the warjhe told me. he had suffered with it for twenty years, and he know of no misery which attacked, as it did, physically, menially and morally, and was as likely to drive one tu suicide. It produced in him that simplicity of diet which was as con spicuous as his simplicity of man ners; He never was a hearty cater, but often ale of one or two things on the table plentifully, eating some things ho did not like and liking many things he did not cat. in the army he rarely accepted ah invitation to di nor, and when he did, it was merely to oblige his staff. Ho once said tu me that, he was fonder of whiskey and brandy than any man in his army; and yet be never tasted it. Jlis discipline commenced with hiihhclf, and lie controlled his appe tite as firmly as ho did bin troops. Jn lace and figure Stonewall Jack son was not sti iking. Above the average height, with a frame angular, muscular and flesh less, ho was in all his move mcnts, from riding a horse to handling a pen, the most ungrace ful man in the army. His expression wn.? thoughtful, and generally cloud ed with an air of fatigue. His eye was small, blue, and in repose as gentle as a young girl's. With high, broad forehead, small sharp nose, tbiu, pallid lip?, deep set eyes an 1 dark, rusty beard, be was not a handsome man. His face in the draw ing room or tent, softening by bis 5\v<ei smi'e, wns as different from itself on the battle field as ri little Iah?' in summer noon differs from the same when frozen. iWalking or ti 1 ing, the General was ungainly; his main object was to go over ?ue ground, without regard to t.he man nor of his going. His favorite' horse was as lit lie like Pegasus as he was like Apollo; he rode bold I)- and well, but certainly not with grace and ease. He was not a man uf style. General Lee, on horseback or off, was the handsomest man 1 oversaw. It is said of Wade Hampton that be look ed as knightly when mounted as if he had stepped out from an old canvass, horse and all. Ii recken ridge was a model of manly beauty, und Joe. .Johnson looked every inch a soldier. Nouu of those things can be said of .Jackson. Ak iii to Iiis dyspepsia, am! perhaps as a consequence, was> Iiis ignorance of music. Unc moriiing,at Asli'atid, he .-tattled a young lady from her propriety by gravely asking her if she bail ever beard a new piece of music called "Dixie," and as gravely listening to her while she sang it. He hud heard it a thousand times from lie: arm bands, and yet ii seemed new to him. Judged by the Shalc spcarcau standard, who could be mere "lit for treason, stratagems and spoils?" And yet there was one fciml of music which had always interested ami delighted htm. It was the ' rebel yell" of bis troops. To this grand chorus lie never failed to respond. The difference between the regular '?hurrah'' of the federal army and the irregular, wild yell of the Con federates was as marked as the diflcrcnco in their uniforms. The rebel yell was a peculiar mixture id' sounds, a kind of weird shout. Jack son was greeted with it whenever he made his appearance to the troops on the inarch or in battle; and just as invariably ho would raise bis old grtiy cap from hi.-, head in acknowledge inunt, und his "Little Sorrel," know* in^ Jiis habit, would break into a gallop and never half until the shout bad ceased. 1 remember one night, at tattoo, this e?*y broke forth in the camp, of the Stonewall Brigade, ami was taken up by brigades sind divi sions, until it rolled over field and wood throughout the whole corps. The General came hastily and bare headed fr?iii Ina tent, und going up to ii fence near by bo leaned upon it and listened in quiet to the rise, cli max und conclusion of that strange serenade, raising his bead to. catch the last sound as it grew fainter, and until it died uway like an echo in the mountains. Then, turning toward his lent, he muttered, in half soliloquy, "That was the sweetest music I ever heard." A Remarkable Invention. Another invention pertaining to electricity, quite as wonderlul as the telephone, though perhaps less calcu lated lo attract popular attention, has recently been secured by patent in the Uuitcd Slate* to a Swedish in ventor. The apparatus is an automa tic railway signal, which enables the station officials to know the precise position of any train at any timo. It gives sounds signals to tho engineer, and at the station before the train enters, thus enabling switches to be cleared and arranged in time to pre vent accident. If two trains appro ach each other, whether runuing in lUc same or opposite directions, the engineersi jpf both trains receive sig nals in time to prevent c dlisions; and the station people arc at the same time automatically informed of the position of both train*. Any train may, by stopping at certain points of the road where "contracts" are arranged, open telegraphic com munication with the stations at both ends of the route, and two trains may in tho same manner, telegraph to each other. A complete record is automa tically kept at each station of iho speed of each train, and of the exact time it enters or leaves the station. Stop signals may be sent at any timo from the stations to any trains while moving. The appiuatus may bo ar-" I ?ranged to send stop or danger signals to trains approaching swinging brid- j ges which are not properly locked ami fastened. When this invention shall have been generally introduced, railroad accidents will almost be im possible. Pj.kahanx Bki>uoom3.?There is nothing more indicative of refine ment uud a genuine culture in a family than bright, cheerful aud taste fully decorated bed-chambers. Taste ful decorntions do not necessarily mean expense, and it is possible to make a chamber look very pretty at a very small outlay. Indeed, in many instances, no outlay at all will be re quired beyond what would be incur red under any circumstances. The womeu of a family, especially, are apt to pass a good portion of their time in their bed-chambers, and in some households the sleeping apartments are used alike for sewing rooms, sit ting rooms and nurseries. It is worth while to obtain all the pleasure we can in this life, and there can be no doubt that life is pleasant er if most of its hours are passed in cheerful looking apartments. llOW THE YYOitLI) DltL'cs ! I isi-;].i-\?It is estimated that uoffse, both beans and leaves, is drunk by sixty millions of the human family. Tea of all kinds is used by live hun dred millions and opium by foiir hun dred millions; alcohol, in its various forms, by five bundled millions of hu man race. Tobacco is probably used by seven or eight hundred million-!. There startling facts indicate a large proportion of the human race using some substances that are. either stint? - hints or narcotics. The work of the physiologist in the future wili be to determine the true place in nature of these substances, and indicatewheie their use ends and their abuse begins. A Western paper has improved >ii tlie original plan, and now says : ''No communication will be published in this paper and accompanied by (be full name of the write*' and a live dollar bill; these are not requested for publication, but as a quarantee of good faith." ? Mll-.-.-???? Italy recogni/.od Gonoral Diaz as Frcgidcutof JMoxico. Buying a Bridal "Trossy.'' One clay last/week a powerful young man, tcwhose right-arm was linked a (all,, thin young girl of eighteen; with o^ajiacp nose, pale blue eyes and hair (the color of an old knife bandle, euljercd a Lake avenue store with both ;ju.ycs filled with busi ness. As the tool: Beats, the clerk intimated /that be was ready to make bottom prices on any goods in the store, from* the iinestsdk to the gl a zi est caljjoo. ; 'This is landet? delicate business for us)' replied tjj^ young man, casting sheep glances toward the girl. 'That is to say--that is?yes, all em !' stammered the clerk. 'Hut I guefcf'we'Jl live through it, Molly, und so here goes. What we want is aitrossy for this girl?a brid al trossy, I belpfvc tboy call it.' 'That's exactly what they call it,' replied the cl?k. 'And if you will please tell iue?ial articles you want,' 1 will give y online bottom prices.' Tbc pair looked at each other ill a half foolish way for .a minute, and then the girl* hid her face behind a pile of goods. , 'A little sktviry, but she'll git over it,' mused the lover. 'The first thing, I suppose, is a /fress.' 'From one ..Jto sixteen d resscs, as you like,' said the clerk. 'You'll take black silk, perhaps.' 'And perhaps I won't. There's no style about mister. "We marry fur lovo, and: (we'yo got to make a little monoyljgo a long ways. Is calico purtyjmv:?' 'Ob, ZekoJ.IJ gasped the girl, su 1 denjy showing her face. 'Well, we'ljp'go a little bettor then, tho' calico i^::iny motto. Hand us down something about thirty cents a yard. ^Givej'.is. dove color, for d ives ?&?i tf\J Jz-ytlQkVS.W Molly..' ^ Twelve yards of dove-colored Bufrn1 as cut oil'and Zcke looked around and sab I: j 'Less see; I .suppose a back comb, two yards of blue ribbon, a bunch of hair j ins and two or three collars ought to ligurc in somewbere.' The clerk agreiTd, and the articles ] were figured in. 'Less see. she'll -wear her sister's hat to stand up iu, and her shoes won't show if she has a long dress on. I guess that's about all, aiu't it, lMollie?" Tbi; girl blushed very red, beckon ed him closer, and after a minute ho turned to the clerk, und said: 'It's kinder thro win' money away, but she's party good and gentle, and I don*t mind. She thinks she ought to have a fifty cent corset and a couple of pair of stockings.' The articles were inspected, bought, and placed with tho 'trossy,' and after the lovers bold another consulta tion in whispers, Zekc observeil : 'Well, that's all. Kigger'er up and ther's your cash. We've got to go and get some hair oil, and i dollar gold chain with a locket to it, and a pair of sleeve buttons and some shoe string-, and you see the outfit is going to squeeze niii bad.' * When does the marriage come 611*,' sa'nl the clerk. 'In about ten days. She's a good girl, and loves me, and I'm trying to I'd6 the lair thing by her. 'Tain't many young men who would put up seven or eight dollars for a b.idal trossy for bis girl, but when I makes up my mind to marry one, I'm almost reckless as to wealth. She didn't need that corset any more than I nceil gallowses, but she bail a sister married with a corset on and she don't want to be behind her.' 4 hope you'll bo happy ' 'We shall be?'can't help it?this 'ere girl can sling more 'thusiasm in to a mess of'inters than any tpieon in Europe, and as for her fried pork? yum ! .She can composo poetry, chop wood, paint {deters, milk a cow, build a i-uit of clothes, or spoil down any body that stands oil legs; and when winter howls mound our little homo we'll sit with our feet in the oven, and chew apples, and remember that I had to take her old dad by tho collar und jerk his heols to the ceiling before die would consent to this wedding. Well, good-bye. Come, gal.' -m ? ? -? Kow Far a Greenback Will Go. Mr. . Brown keeps boarders. Around his table sat Mr. Mr. Brown, Mrs. Brown, Mrs. Andrews, the village milliner; Mr Black the baker; Mr. Jordan, a carpenter; and Mr. Ilardloy, a Hour, feed and lumber merchant. Mr. Brown took out of his pocket book a ten dollar note, an 1 handed it 4o Mrs. Brown, saying : 'Here, my dear, are tho ten dollars towards the twenty I promised you.' Mrs. Brown banded it to Mrs. Andrews; the milliner, saying: 'That pays lor my new bonnet.' Mrs. Andrews said to Mr. Jordan, as she handed him the h itc: '?Thai will pay you fur-work on my counter.' - Mr. Jordan handed it to Mr. lladlev, the /lour, feed and lumber merchant, requesting his bill. Mr. 11 ad ley gave the no'.c back to Mr. Brown, saving : 'That pays ten dollars on my board.' Mr Brown passed it to his wife, with the remark that paid her twenty dollars he had promised. She in turn paid it to Mr. Black, to settle her bread and pastry account, who handed it to Mr. Iladley, wishing credit for tho amount on his flour bi'l, be again returning it to Mr. Brown, with the remark that it settled for that mouth's board. Whoreupon Mr. Brown put it back in his pocket book, exclaiming that he never thought a a n dollar bill would go so far. Thus, a ten dollar g ecu back was made lo pay ninety dollars indebted ness inside of five minutes. Who says that greenbacks are worthless. ~~ Sir 'John Aruutt, propriety!.,of the Irish Times, has dctomined ' t'? erect in a healthy p >rtion of Dublin, for the use. of the priircrs connected with Ids Journal ; cottages which he will provide lor them at a mere nomi nal rent. As soon as practicable, from forty tj fifty suitable houses will be completed, so that the steady nii'd indmtrious among the employees will become occupiers of well-built well drained and moderately rented cottages, instead of residing in crowd cd and unhealthy teument houses, where neither comfort nor cleanli ness exists. - mm i An ingenious method of adverti sing Victor Hugo's new volume of poetry, "L'Art d'etre Grandpere," was hit it poll by its publishers, Cai man Levy Ho spent the day before Publishing visiting tho newspaper offices ami distributing to each a different sheet of the forthcoming book. Each journal felt happy in givitig its l eaders the first sight of a new poem of Victor Hugo, and all the l'iiricinus woke the next day with an appetite for the new book which was only appeased by the sale of an unusually large edition. Coffins are now made of exhausted books aud spent newspapers. This goes lar to ameliorate tho condition of the dead, for whom, by the way, invention und discovery have done precious little. So far as concerns coin fort und convenience, these paper codi us aro probably no better than the wooden boxes in which one is ac customed to b.j buried; but tho mau of literary tastes will feel a certain satisfaction in being surrounded by what he died ? f. The newly instituted Board of Pub lic Health in the German Empire I commenced its functions with the (year. It publishes a weekly paper in which all the epidemic illuesscs I picvniling in any country will be ! inserted the figures being furnished I by imperial agents. It will also I publish tho statistics and mortality in all German towns of more than fifteen thousand inhabitants, and de tailed meteorologic reports. -m ? m Dculal science is called "Tooth carpentry,a? a fine art." 1 a ?-. ? 1 ??\?. ?-ggj Nothing can smile but hunian be'-i1"0 j iugs. Gems may flash reflepted liglitf 4 I hut what is a diamond flash to a mirj>bv& flush ? A face that cannot smitoda like a bud that cannot bloMompftnnL'; dies upon the stalk. Laughter W88 day, sobriety is night; and aVmjleTflT' the twinkling that hoversgeatly be tween both, add? ,mo^,e!,. bewitching than cither. ?--? .? A man iu Austin, Nevada) did no work for nineteen years. This %?9^? in accordance with a solemn oath never to work again. Oue. day hU , resolution wns overcome by his wifa'a argument, and he went to work on a uew building. What was the' result?0 He fell from a scaffolding arid \vaa' k 1 cd. ? 1 o Uift : ?? , ? ? j ;r 1 be compositors in tho office of the Stafford Advertiser, an EJn'glish'1 country paper, have commemorated the four hundredth anniversary of the introduction of printing into^n^; gland by iorming themselves- ^0-a "Caxtou Club," and eslab^ishjn?* ^a library for their craft. .???a i?? la fiiaww When the foreman of a Cleveland .paper calliopes down tho tin te)e-} phone for "more copy," the editor calmly blows the foam back frorn' the edge of a half gallon measure, and replies in u or lifted tones, "Hams iner another Black'sea on. the _wac map, and give it to 'em again*. ^ The Holy Syhod baa published a Russian Version of tho Bibler^-tke res? suit of twenty nine years' labor., The. St. John's press, is<;rising Phoenix-like?Boston type-founders have already forwarded the material. An Oswego County paper issued an extra to announce the killing of a big black bear near Sandy Creek. If ev^ry man would take the advice he gives to others, he would bebapr-"" py- . w.{ The horse '.SnatH'* fwnad^$^r? Boseberry won the Liverpool Cup,in the race on the 12th, ' it! t- wilil j ail I .tr-, ? i John H. Keyser a member of the old Tammany Ring, went into bank ruptcy John McMelta, of Illinois, was ap pointed United States Minister to Brazil. Over 700 Mormons recruits reach ed New York from Europe,.and start ed for Utah. The New York Open Board of Slock Brokers was formally dissolv ed on the 11th. Employ ees of the New York Cus tom House, recently discharged, are exposing nllenged frauds. Tlie Georgia Constitutional Con vention assembled at Atlanta on the Uth. On the 9th the Merchants' Loan and Trust Company of Patterson, N. J., suspended business. The City of Richmond, Va , has over340 factories that give employ ment to 11,000 persons. Of the one hundred and fifteen candidates for admission to West Point, fifty-five passed, and sixty-oue were rejected. Watermelons, peaches, figs and plums nre more abundant this year than ever before, in San Antonio, Texas. Six thousand tons of coal a day is the average amount now carried to tide over the Dcleware aud Hudson Carnal. The French Miut has struck 10,000 francs worth of centime pieces in bronze, each representing about the twelfth of on American cent. Philadelphia is to bo'presented by ill-. Japanese Government with a collection of at tides representative of the Kchool system - of that country. TAKEN?TICE. The umlcrMgnei respectfully informs tb? 05 r7en? of the Towo and Conniy that be is prepared to do up and mate Mattresses on ? he s|iorto?t nntic*: A1?o will conduct ?r? Upholstery busiuoss. Prices will be a* low ns possible. Orders solicited. JOHNOEQEN. ' June 0 U ?>