f de Cime?! mb Bmmmt J. L. SIMS, Editor and Proprietor. Terms, Subscription R ytes.?One copy, one year, 81 50; od} copy, six months, 75 cents: one copy, three "months. 50 cents. All subscriptions payable in advance. Advertising Rates.?One square, first in sertion, stl 00; each subsequent inser tion, 50 cents. Obituaries and Tributes of Respect charged for as regular adver tisements. Liberal contracts made for three, six and twelve months. CoMsruxic.vnoxs must be accompanied by the real name and address of the writer in order to receive attention. No com mini i cation of a personal character will he pub lished except as an advertisement. For further information address JAMES L. SIMS, Lock Box No. 116, Orangeburg, S. C. A farmer in Condon, Xebraska, ad vertises for a wife, and specifies that she must be about six feet tall, weigh 250 pounds, have red hair, and bean atheist. Col. J. G. Clinkscales, of Anderson, is mentioned as a candidate for State Superintendent of Education. It we are to have a new deaL we know of no better man for the position. MAJOR W. H. Brawley, of Charles ton, S. C, has written a letter to the Hon. Samuel Dibble in which he says he will not be a candidate for Congress from the First District this Fall. The announcement that Judge Coth ran would be sent to Congress from the District now represented by Col. -Uken has brought out a legion of candidates for the judgeship to be thus made va cant. Maj. W. Z. Leitner, of Camden, is being put forward as a candidate for the office of Secretary of State. He is a noble citizen as he was a brave sol dier, and as he lost a leg- at Gettysburg it is hoped that his record will help him on to get the office. A i'komixext citizen of EdgefieU having been nominated for ('overnor, the Barnwell People is moved to sug gest : "We respectfully say that it would save time and suspense if the people of Edgeiield countv would meet in convention, decide upon what they want and 'take it.'" California** are asking what the Presbyterian general assembly at Min neapolis meant by commending "the stand of the Christians on the Pacific slope" on the Chinese question. The papers say that if the Presbyterians think the Christians out there favor Chinese immigration they are wofully mistaken. Such is the disgust people have for ex-President Hayes, that a thief who a few days since stole his overcoat from a restaurant in Troy, X. Y., on find ing out whose it was, returned it to him and fled. Hayes is the man who enjoyed the stolen Presidency and pocketed .$200,000 salary really due Samuel J. Tilden. The recent accident on the North eastern Railroad by which so many valuable lives were lost should be rig idly investigated by the Railroad Com mission. In our judgment the acci dent was caused by an imperfectly spiked rail. Let all the facts in the case be brought to light and the re sponsibility fixed. Col. Richard M.. Hoe, head of the firm of R. Hoe & Co., printing press manufacturers, died suddenly recently at Florence, Italy. This name is familiar to every newspaper man in America, and was a tower of strength among them. What ever machinery this firm put its name on could be re lied on as alright. The United States, having .success fully married oil" its President, is in about the predicament in which St. Louis is, now that the Maxwell-Preller trial is ended. If some, one could start another story, for instance, that Hose Elizabeth is to found an orphan asylum for the seven hundred babies named after drover it might prove a blessing to journalism. A vOI'X?j man named Kohlcr, resid ing in Sh'iuandoah, I'n.. recently went into the milk business as a means of earning a living. He had been some thing of a society swell, and when he dropped into milk his society friends proceeded to turn up their noses at him. He couldn't stand the snub, ami committed suicide. The world is bet ter off without such a fool. TlIE sticklers for etiquette who are shocked because Mrs. Cleveland went to drover to be married, and because { the latter chose to make the affair | private, are gradually cooling down. They are the mugwumps of society, who indorse nothing unless they are allowed to Loss the job, but in this instance they are confronted by the frigid fact that it makes no difference whether they indorse or not.. SliNATOH Hau Ivy of Connecticut is said t<> have the president ial "bee in his bonnet.*' Well, In- is a handsome man, vastly better morally than Blaine, and Iii- record as :i soldier, and Ins liery de nunciation id' the South during the re construction period, will perhaps cause Iiis party to forgive him l'or the grave fault of being a native of North Caro lina. The Republicans would do well to nominate him; but they will not do it. They will go further and fare worse. Inexcusable Ignorance. Ex-President Hayes' long-promised article on the subject of ??Federal Aid for Southern Schools" has appeared in a magazine. The Xation handles the effort without gloves. It styles it "A plea for some scheme similar to the Blair Pill, based upon the same old vague assertions, of which the fallacy | has been so thoroughly exposed." "Four millions of people in the South," says Mr. Hayes, "are unable to read and write." And at this point the Nation adds that the Sage of Fremont does not apparently understand that three fourths of these people are too old to get any benefit from the most liberal system of schools. "Almost three mil lions of the young people of the South are growing up without the means of education," says Mr. Hayes. This is the same as saying that half the children of the South have no chance to go to school, whereas the reports of Southern school superintendents show that even in States like South Carolina and Mississippi, where the negroes are most numerous, the proportion of children of the school age who attend school is as large as in New Hampshire. The only bit of evidence, which Mr. Hayes cites in support of his theory, is a statement made in a speech "a few years ago" by Dr. Ru-ffner, then School Superintendent of Virginia, that, in his State, they were not able to educate the people "in any tolerable sense," as he had shown by statistics "a few years" before this speech. Regarding this, it is sufficient to say that Virginia has increased the amount of her school ex penditures from $946,109 in 188U to Sl.428,678 in 1885, and now keeps her schools open 118 days in the year, against only 104 in Maine, and but 100 in New Hampshire. There might, perhaps, bean excuse for somebody else who should write an article upon so important a question without making the most elementary examination of the facts; but we do not quite. Pee bow an ex-President of the United States, fraudulent though he be, leading a life of leisure, can reconcile sue-' careless ness with his conscience. Where the Fight Should he Made. A correspondent of the Baltimore Sun writing from Columbia says the late meeting of the Democratic State Executive Committee in that city was called for the purpose of organizing the Democracy to thwart the farmers in their movement for a new deal, which is tending to disrupt the party. So far as the committee meeting for the pur pose of thwarting the farmers or any body else is all nonsense. The com mittee could not thwart the farmers if they wished, for the simple reason that the present committee only "holds over," until the convention meets in August, when a new-.committee will be elected. The simplest way to pre vent the "thwarting" of the farmers' movement is for the farmers to capture the convention and elect an Executive Committee to suit themselves. The representation in the convention will be double the representation of each county in the Legislature, or some 300 delegates. The farmers should be able to control a majority of those dele gates. "We agree with the correspond ent of the Augusta Chronicle that this course would be agreatdeal more man ly than threatening to bolt the party unless it does certain things. The far mers claim to constitute the Democra tic party in South Carolina, and if this is true they have nothing to fear from the few lawyers, politicians, trades men and laboring men who compose the balance of the State. But it may develop hereafter that all the farmers are not in favor of drawing the line too sharply. In any event let the fight of the political farmers and the pro fessional politicians be inside the party lines. That is the place to settle all disputes. Committee Meet lug. The State Democratic Executive Committee met in Columbia last week. The meeting was a lull one, only two or three of the members being absent. The. chief business which called the committee together was to fix the time for the meeting of the State nominating convention, and issue the necessary call to the county organi zations preparatory to the meeting of the convention, The agreement of the committee was reached after consider able discussion that the convention shall meet on the the 4th day of Au gust next, and it was determined that a circular should be issued to the sev eral county chairmen, urging an im mediate and thorough organization of their county organizations. Henrd From. AMOXfiST the, messages received by President Cleveland, congratulating him upon his marriage, was one from the '?headquarters" of the National Greenback party, alleged to be located at Des Moines. Iowa. After expressing their joy over the happy event, they proceed to request him to "make the whole nation happy by orderingt.hr I immediate call of one hundred millions of bonds, and thus give new life to business, new hope to a nation of deb tors." They might ju>t as well have asked Grover to turn out a hundred bales of new greenbacks, and distribute j a car-load of seeds, and present a farm and mule to all men over twenty-one years of age. Such a petition would I have been practical. Imbecile or War, Which ? N ot long since General Sherman was convicted of lying by General Wright, and previous to that time General Wade Hampton fastened a lie on the doughty barn burner in reference to the burning of Columbia, and now news comes from Indianapolis, Ind., that the great prevaricator has again been cornered. It appears that he re cently asserted in a public address in that city that he did not attend Vice President Hendriek'sfuneral because he had not been invited, and also that no place had been reserved in the funeral procession for the army and navy. This statement coining to the ears of Gen. [Fred Knelller, grand marshal "of the Ilendricks obsequies, that gentleman confronted Sherman and told him that he had pe .mally addressed him an in vitation, and, handed him a newspaper published at the time, showing that the army and navy had been provided for. Sherman, evidently embarrassed seemed glad to escape from Kneffler and the gentleman accompanying him simply with the remark that "it had escaped his notice." We regret to see a man of Sherman's prominence in our country's j history with so little regard for the ! truth, but it is about what could be ex pected of a man who acted as he did, in making war on defenceless women and children. As he stole everything then that was portable, his blooming but now as a liar of the first magnitude only confirms the old adage that a man that will steal will lie. Carlisle's Presidential Prospectri. There is a buzz of talk going on;,now about Speaker Carlisle being a Presi dental candidate in 188S. It is strange how that old woman's superstition about the Speakership of the House being a short cut to the Presidency still prevails. Mr. Blaine thought so? every man who ever sat in the Speak er's chair has thought so. The fact is, the Speaker of the House stands just one chance in thirty of fretting in the White House. There have been thirty Speakers, and of these only one?James K; Polk, and he was an accident?ever became President. Mr. Clay comes first with the greatest length of service in the Speaker's chair. He was elected to preside over six Congresses. He had the Presidential rabies badly. Next conies Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, who was elected four times, and was also bitten by the tarantula. James G. Elaine, Schuyler Colfax and Samuel J. Kan 'all follow, each of whom served three Congresses.. Everybody knows how Brother Blaine and poor Mr. Col fax raved and cavorted when the virus got into their blood. Mr. Randall has more nearly escaped than any man who ever sat in the Speaker's chair; but he, too, has had faint symptoms. Now that Mr. Carlisle has been^n^cu lated. a case of more or less developed mania may be expected. But td be Speaker is tovtake one chance in thirty of ever being President. The Keason Why f The Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette is of the profound opinion that Mr. Blaine is a greater man than Mr. Cleveland, and that his unofficial utter ances are of more importance than the official utterances of the President. It suggestively says that these unofficial utterances go rattling round the world. As the York New Star says almost any man can attract attention by being sen r .onal. Even the Commercial Gazette has suc-eeded in doing that in days gone by. There are several reasons why Mr. Elaine's utterances go rattling round the world. In the first place he repre sents a political party composed of almost half the voters, and whose leaders are bad enough to nominate him for the Presidency. In the second place ho is generally picturesque and insolent, and in the third place, people are interested in trying to guess what Mr. Blaine will deny on the following day. Wc assure the Commercial-Ga zette that its leader's utterances go rattling about the world because they arc light and not because they are Im portant. Ideality in Journalism. The New York Herald says it is not prepared to accept the statement, re cently made, that the newspapers arc killing the magazines, just as maga zines have killed books, but it warns professional romancers that the; arc mistaken if they fancy that imagina tion is confined to men who write novels and poems. Only a few days ago the Galveston News told of a far mer who had cut down a maple tree a hundred years old and found a live toad in the centre of it. Such a brilliant imagination would stagger Jules Verne could his eyes fall upon it, but it did not frighten the Flushing Journal a bit. The editor of that paper merely stated that he might have doubted tho story bad be not seen a live codfish taken from the centre of an anvil that was melted down. Novelists and magazine writers must not put on airs about superior ideality if they do not wish journalists to show that they can dispose of them in a single round. Tin: trial of lludzinski, the Milwau kee Anarchist Alderman, lias brought out some strong evidence against the accused. What else could be expected of a man name lludzinski ? The "skis" and "oil's" arc a nuisance in our poli tics, and they ought to reconstruct their notions and file down their names before they are chosen to oilice. General News. K is estimated that the recent wreck at Santee trestle will cost the North eastern Railroad Company 860,000. Mr. Willie Driggers, near Summer ville, shot himself in the head five times se/eral days ago, hut none of the wounds are fatal. A colored woman found dead near Inman, Spartanburg County, on Tues day, is supposed to have been murder ed by her husband. Col. Christopher F. Hampton, brother of Senator Hampton, died at his resi dence in Columbia on Tuesday last in the 65th year of his age. The press stand fell at the St. Louis fair grounds on Monday, killing Char les Dyer, assistant sporting editor of the St. Louis Republican. The boiler at the saw mill of Dodson & Co., in Hampton County, exploded Wednesday, killing the engineer, Mr. T. D. Richardson and badly scalding his son. Messrs. Childs and Drexel, of Phila delphia, presented the International Typographical Union in session at Pitts burg with $10,000 unconditionally on Tuesday last. President Cleveland has written par ties at Buffalo that he no longer con siders that city his place of residence and will transfer his citizenship to Washington. Mr. J. II. Ezell, of Spartanburg, was sawing a pine tree, 92 inches through, cut from the Cowpens battle field and his saw cut through a musket ball, 'which was evidently used in that battle. C. A. Price, express messenger on the Northeastern railroad train which went through Santee trestle on Tues day, has died of the injuries he receiv ed in the accident. The total number of deaths is seven. The rains of last week caused higher streams in York than prevailed during the late freshet. The cotton crop has been badly injured and bottom crops ruined. The same report comes from most of the upper Counties. Annie Bree, wife of a noted gambler in that city, has been brought to San Antonio, Texas, from El Paso in an in sane condition, caused by domestic troubles. She imagines that she is the bride of President Cleveland. The police force of East St. Louis, Illinois, has been mustered out on ac count of the discovery o! conspiracy on the part of two or "three professional burglars and the police to plunder the town and divide the proceeds. An Abbeville negro boy a few days ago was out minding a cow. He tied the rope around his body and sat down to play. The cow suddenly started home on a run and dragged the boy with her. His leg and several ribs were broken. Joe Brown, white, formerly a citizen of Newberry County, was killed on the 8th of May last, near Gallatin, Tennes see, by being shot in the breast four times by John and James Dunham, with whom he was drinking and play ing cards. John Hit/, late president, and Char les E. Prentiss, late cashier, of the Ger man American national bank, of Wash ington, convicted of making false en tries on the books of the bank, were on Saturday sentenced to five years in Al bany penitentiary. Jim Black, a colored boy, while play ing on the railroad turntable at Suin ter several days ago, met with an acci dent which caused his death. A num ber of boys were pushing the table when the "boy's foot was caught and his leg terribly crushed. Bread riots are threatened in Con ception Bay, N. F. Crowds of unem ployed men are parading the streets. The police with ritles and fixed bayon ets so far have prevented shooting. The British war ship Lily has been ordered to Conception Bay. At 6 o'clock on Thursday evening last the streets of Aiken were enliven ed with a shooting affray between Mr. McBee Williams and John Ganey. Five shots were fired, Ganey receiving a slight flesh wound in the groin. The Mayor laid a fine of $10 each on the belligerents. Mr. Sam Williamson, living three miles from Greenville, on Wednesday unearthed a pot on his place contain ing over 83,000. During the war the place was owned by an aged bachelor refugee from Charleston, and it is said he told people in the neighborhood that he had his money buried. He died and his body lies buried on the place. The coroner's jury that enquired into the recent disaster at the Santee trestle beard a mass of evidence chictly from railroad men. all of which was to the effect that the trestle was sound and the track in good condition. No hint of an explanation of tin- accident, was given. An open verdict that the disaster resulted from unknown causes was given. Iir. Sil rider land received a fee id' i for performing the President's mar riage ceromony. It was a brand new bill which had never apparently been in circulation. 11 was handed to the doctor by Colonel Lainont immediately alter the President's departure. Dr. Sunderland made bis wife a present of the bill, and she will keep it as a me mento of the occasion. Miss Cleveland's forthcoming novel. " The Long Run," will be issued next week. It is a love story, the hero be ing a somewhat eccentric clergyman, the heroine an unconventional young woman, and the locality a summer re sort. It is said that Miss Cleveland recently received from the same pub lisher 8600 for a ten-page Introduction to a book published by him. The night express on the Georgia Central railroad was wrecked at Rogers, eighty-live miles west of Savannah, Tuesday morning. A block of wood tightly "wedged between the j rails at the switch threw the engine and three cars from the track. I'ire I man Charles Maddux was killed and i Engineer Win. i'. Prciidorgust was severely injured. IL was a deliberately i laid plan to wreck the train. A negro who borrowed money enough of a Raleigh merchant to get a mar riage license explained hi< action by saying thai lie had a pretty good sized I cotton crop, and had beard thai I lie i farm bands talked of demanding more j wages. He had therefore looked about, and having found a healthy widow with three aide-bodied children would marry her next Sunday and put the children to work on the farm on Mon day. , Holiness H:in . On.VXGEKURG, June 11, 188(1. ) \ MEETING OF THE COUNTY Democratic Execntivo Committee will be held at the Court House, Saturday, June 19th inst, at 11 o'clock A. M. Members will take due notice and govern themselves accordingly. By order of the Chairman. L. H. WAXXAMAKER, _Secretary. Snmmer School of Specialties To open in Prof. Mellichainp's School House on the first Monday in July. Ger man 5-.00, French ?2.00, Geology and Min eralogy s3.00, Military Tactics 81.00 Cadet rifles, accoutrements and knapsacks for boys in the cadet corps?10 to 17 years. Hours from 4 V. M., to 7 P. M. Patronage solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. For testimonials, circular, etc. Address. A. CHAS. LAUGHL1N, Professor of Min. Geo. German and French. June 17 ZVolice to Creditors. The State of South Carolina?County of ? Orangeburg?In the Court of Common Pleas. Gertrude Corbitt, Plaintiff, against J An gus Salley, as Administrator, et ab, De fenders. Under the order of the said Court of Common Pleas, made in the above entitled action, all persons having demands againtt the Estate of John J. Salley, deceased, are required to present and prove the same be fore me. at my office, in the City of Orange burg in said County and State, on the fifteenth day of July, 188?, at 11 o'clock, A. M. AXDREW C. DIBBLE, Master. Master's Otlice, Orangeburg C. IL. S. C, June 17, iss.ons having demands against the Estate of William Golson, deceased, are required to present and prove the same liefere me, at my office, in the City of Oraiigeburg, i;i said County and State on the fifteenth rtav of Julv, issi?. at 11 o'clock, A M. ANDREW C. DIBBLE. .Master. Master's Otlice, Oraiigeburg C. IL, S. ?... June 17. IS8(5.-St. .\olicc lo Creditors. The State of South Carolina?County of Oraiigeburg?In the Court of Common Pleas. J. D. F. Vice and R. W. Riser, as Adminis trators of the Estate of James M. Vice, deceased, and J. D. F. Vice, in his own right, Plaintiffs,against Mary I). Vifie, et al., Defendants. Under the order of Hie said Court of Common Pleas, made in the above entitled action, all persons having demands against the Estate of James M. Vice, deceased, are required to present and prove the same be fore me, in my office in the City of Orange burg in said County and State, on or before the fifteenth day of Jufe, 1886, or they will debarred pavinent * AXDREW C. DIBBLE, Master. Master's Office. Orangcburtr C. IL. s. C. June 17. 1s80.-?L Slier i IP Sale. Slate of South Carolina?County of Orange burg?In the Court of Common Pleas. L. A. Wright, Plaintiff, against W. Clark, Defendant. Ry virtue wf an Execution issued in the above ease and tu me directed, I will sell at public autioii at Oraiigeburg Court IIoti.se, ??!! Hi'- first Monday in July next, , during tin* legal hours of sale, all the right, I title, interest and estate ?>i the Defendant, W. Clark, in and to all that LOT or PAR CEL of l.AXD situated on the north side of Amelia Street, in the City of Oraiige burg. in said I iunity and Mate, containing j one acre, more or less, and bounded by said I Street and lots uf Ann A. Louis, Charles i Thorn and Je*sie E. A. Cannon. I Teims Cash, and purchaser tu pay Sheriff I for papers. A. M.SALLLEY. Sheriff. O. C. Sheriff's Office, Oraiigeburg, C. IL, S. C, I June lu, 18S0. REL'AIOA. 1 TO THE SURVIVORS OF THE SE COND REGIMENT S. C. V ARTILLERY. Comrades :?After twenty-one years sepr eration, you are eordialy invited to meet once more in a grand reunion at Branch ville, S. C, on the 1st of July, 1S86. Let ? each Survivor of the old Regeinent who shall see this invitation ask or wait for no ' further instructions, '. c come and bring i some other comrade along with him. All ! arc invited to bring their baskets with 1 them, (not their guns.) Speakers are in vited to address us on that day and we , trust that we will have a large attendance. i Came comrades one and all and we can I once more talk of Scccssionville, Battery , Wagener, Bombardments on Stono, Life on 1 James Island, our long marches into North j Carolina, our bloody fights at Averysboro and Bcntonville, and our leave taking at j Greensboro, and our ups and downs in ; getting hack to our homes and how we j found what Sherman had left us during our I absence, and now of the peace and hap piness that reigns in our homes and country. W. T. LIGHTFOOT, JOHN W. FAIREY, JOHN J. WOLFE, N. N. HAYDEN, - BUNION AMAXER Committee. Sheriff* Sale. State of South Carolina?County of Orange burg?Court of Common Pleas. TD Y VIRTUE OF AX EXECUTION 1) to me directed, I will sell n Monday, 5th July, 1886. in frout of the Court House, during legal hours, a certain track of land containing two hunt1 ed and fifty acres more or less. Bounded on the north by W. T. J. Phillips, East bytSoodland Swamp, South by A. C. Porter and West by H. L Phillips. Levied on as the property of W. I T. Phillips at the suit of J. S. l'hilllps. Terms cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. A. M. SALLEY, Sheriff. Sheriff's office, Orangeburg County, S. C, June 17, 1886. Notice. Office of Comptroller General, ) Columbia, S. C, June 1,1886. $ I CERTIFY THAT J. II. LOBYEA. X of St. Matthews, Agent of the NA TIONAL FIRE INSURANCE COM PANY, of Hartford, Conn., has complied with the requisition of the Act of the Gen i eral Assembly entitled "An Act to regulate the Agencies of insurance Companies not incorporated in tho State of South Caro lina," and I hereby license the said J. H. LORYEA, Agent aforesaid, to take lisks and transact all business of Insurance in this State, in the County of Orangeburg, for and in behalf of said Company. Ex pires March, 31st, 1887. (Signed) W. e. stoney, June 10-lt. Comptroller General. Mutual Aid Association Special Meeting. \ MEETING OF THE ABOVE xjl Association will be held at Way's Hall in this City on Saturday morning June 19th, 1886, at 10 o'clock A. M., for the pur pose of considering notice of Amendments to the Constitution and By-Laws of the Association, and such other business as may be brought up. A full attendance of the members in earnestly requested. By order of the President. KIRK ROBINSON, June 10-2t. Secretary. Lam! For Sale. ATRACT OF 200 ACRES.. ON Two Mile Swamp, Liberty Township. There is 50 acres of cleared land and on the place there is a good dwelling house and all necessary outbuildings. For terms &c, apply to ? J.G.SCOTT, May 2Q-1L_Orangeburg, S. C. Notice of Dismissal. ON THE 15TH DAY OF JUNE I will file my final account with the Judge of Probate for Orangeburg County, and ask for a discharge ?s Guardian of William F. Murphy. WM. S. ASH, May i>o-4t._Guardian. A'oticc of Dismissal. O' X THE 20 DAY' OF JUNE NEXT I will file my final account with the Judge of Probate as Administrator of the Estate of Mary Ann Till, deceased, and ask to be discharged. JOE P. FERSNER, June 3-4t._Administrator. Office of City Clerk and Treasurer. I . Orangebubg, S. C, May 28th, 1886. S APPLICATION FOR THE Posi tions ot Dog Catchers will be received at this oltice until Tuesday, June 8th. C. D. Kortjohn, June 3-_Clerk of Council. For Sale. ""THOROUGHBRED J ERsEY 1 Calves. One yearling registered Jer sey Bull. Registered Ayrcshirc heifers. Several grade heifers as also several Milch Cows in milk. Apply to E. N. CHISOLM, Kowesville, S. C. Wanted f ?> i\t\i\ l'??? C Y PRESS I ' Shingles to bo used for covering a Church. Shingles to be ;V inches thick by 4 or IN inches wide by 24 inches long, to be delivered at Fort Motte, S. C. IJids will be received until the 15th day of March, iss?;. Address S. A.JONES, St. Matthews, S. C. Notice. X KOADS BELLY!!.!.*: AM) STATE ROAD. HAVING -BOUGHT THE RIGHT to sell t'ne AMMON'S PATENT PLOW GL"AGE AND GUIDE in Orange burg County I am prepared to furnish them and solicit the patronage of all the farmers jn tliecountv. M. M. METTS, Aprij l.'i-::nto_St. Matthews, S. C. Notice. i LL PARTIES ARE HEREBY i V wanted not to employ or harbor one Moses Randolph, who is "under contracl with me for oiu year. Parties violating this notice will be*prosecuted to the fait extent of the law. II. W. HEANER, June :;-it. Orangeburg, S. C Notice to Creditors. 4 LL PERSONS HAVING DE i V. mauds against the Estate of the late Jane M. Easterlin, deceased, will present the same, duly attested, to the undersigned, or will leave tlieiu forme at the office of Andrew C. Dibble, Es.j., Orangebtug, S, C. William A. Easterlin, June l-:;t. Qualified Executor. Tsilining:! Tannins'!! H.\ VI NC ItESUMED THE TAN uiug Business near Orange-burg I am now prepared to Tan and Dress all kinds uf IIides on halves. In front of Dr. Mur ray's ?esideiuv. WM. PRUSNER. March IS t'.'AX? !'???- Ssile. i Wl I.I. SELL A FEW SETTINGS 1 of Prize Mack Hamburgh Eggsat?1.50 per setting of 10. They are the best breed fur laving and an' adapted to the South. WM. BENNETT, March 25 Oranseburg, S. C.