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m THE-tJA , v m •. 7- P W, CluwllflaU'. It forte the f Amor Well. AM mile him hop«rt Grur^cr, ^ AHSTvowi to admiration clae ii’fprtlUketo Vho to It lorea Asti rows his ®n freenbooks, And sweats ho’st.lh ^ ' ’ -is" d - Wbolbn tolls the itoor Ho worts for his Apcl jiovr the bloated He'll fepeodlly brln^ to r Vho Is It In the oeirspaper r Puts "cards” which ho Intend* i>Hq to think are written by r Voters” and "Many Prlonde?” The Candidate. Wh6 is ft ptemtses—everythipi t That hte oonstltuents aak, ' ’ot, when ha trots elected, claims 'fta too much ot a taAk?” The Candidate. AND COURIER K 'W » ■« • Candidate. :V ' #.,* iWrhl . national debt, :htf Candidate. v V ■ i Lire sad Fcftrlcas Democratic News- ph|»er. - / lor The Candidate. T' . ' ¥ '¥§ ■ - ‘ 1%. 71; • 'Hz • i > who la it that belleres all tht*, on whom the candidate dotes; who ifoupon election day put lu their honest rotes? We, the People, ... i |n hte paper on anu, read before the British Association, Sir John Lubbock said that ants of the same nest not only knew each other, bat re- to ember each other after more than % . year’s separation, in at toast one base, the Blare-making ants are en tity dependent on their filaYM and Wodld perish even In the midst of pldhty It left to themselves. He had ^ kept Some of these ants, however, alive tor months by giving them a slave fot an hoar a day to clean and teed them, People Coaid find in the different species of ante various con ditions of life curiously answering to the earlier stages of hiiman progress, namely, the hunting and the pastoral. and even the agricultural Borne species lived principally on the pro- I mP-a duce of the chase, and they probably detained the habits once common to all ants. They resembled the lower races of men, who subsist mainly by hunting. Like these, they live In com paratively small communities; they hunt mted singly, and their battles were single combats, like those of man In hte early history. Another species might be compared to the pastoral Stage of human progress. Their com munities were more numerous, and they acted more In concert, their bat tles were no mere single Wombats, but they knew how to act In combination. Sir John’s opinion was that they would gradually exterminate the hunting •pedes, Just as savages disappear be fore more advanced races. Lastly, the agricultural nations might be com pared with the harvesting ante, it generally stated that the queens Slone laid eggs. This, however, ap- peated not to be the case. The work era did sometimes lay, but these eggs Always appeared to produce water, Edison, the magician of tbe hlne- feenth century, has returned to bis Menlo Park Workshop from his West ern trip td witness the eclipse and test hte taaimeter, that feels the light of atars and measures their beat, to apply himself to divesting some means for deadening the annoying sound of New York’s elevated roads. While In Nevada Edison made an Important dis covery, obviating the necessity of dig ging blindly through the great clay Walls that divide the deposits of ore, by using the resistance offered a “ground wire’* to ascertain tho extent of any particular deposit. On his re- ’ turn trip the inVentor was the Hon of the hour St the St. Louis meeting of the Association for the Advancement of Science, before which he read seve ral papers describing his Instruments and theories. He told the St. Lonls reporters that In a year ho expected to send Waves of light through a tele phone, So that a man one hundred miles aWay can bo seen as well as heard. He alto told them that he had an electrical machine shaped like a timing fork, Which would run a pump or sewing machine, and he hopes to apuly its power, to navigating the air ; the reoentiy exhibited alr-ship^f Prof. E. P. Richtel, of Bridgeport, Ct., ho bo- floves successful as far as It goes. Since hte return Edison has turned out A sonorous voltameter to register the . strength of telegraph batteries and an fbk that raises letters on paper so that the blind can read them with their dhger*. Experiments are being made With tMA fluid oa w’ood; and It Is thought possible that some variety may tie found on which artists can draw their designs add from which stereo typed plates may he token without Sending the blocks to an engraver. SkI. The prloe of quinine is now higher than it has been at any time since the ***■ This to said to be due to the -fldliag off In the Sbpply of the bark, awing to the quarrels between the tibutk American tribes who gather it. discovered, he i Ah Alabama inventor has applied ' a patent for a chalk mark. He that ants will t, and his idea the pests by around them, »Han been refused. WHTTi T ' liflif J — ; cross a line of fine Ktisaicin ^ m ... rouble, at par adotiar.^anow depre- B&' Latest Circulslion in : tl»e City. Largest Clroalatioii in ihe State. |^ e gt w |,i c i, {j w ;|| be Largtet CircuUfion in the (>Uou Statee. is far below its actual valae. All the New* AboutSenth Carolina. All the New* Abeni the Sonth. All the News From JJrVvywhcro. WlaE AND UNDEFILED DEMOCRACY- UNION! JUSTICE!! EQUAL RroriTsni ^ RtoOgnidug the Paramount Interest felt in The AppmcMsg Polltiral Cant ass By every Democrat who hope* to see the great work of the Redemption of the • State mode complete and permanent M that the people may reap and fully Shjoy the Fruit 6f their Sacrifices, the Newe and Courier will Direct all its Energies and Resources to Presenting from day to day, and from week to week, Fnll and fnteresting Ac- „ counts of'the Prbgrers of the Campaigft Hiver an north of Williston, for salo. 6n this trtet there is a good mdl seat with a substantial dam, an ample and unfnilipg water power. There is no let ter location in the county fora Merchant Mill or Cotton Manufhctory. Titles For further information apply to JOHN W. HOLMES, jan3-tf Williston, S. C. JOHN W. HOLMES, • . , i, ATTORNEY AT LAW, mnsamm, & t. Practices in all theOourU of the S ta and the United States. sepG-ly National House To place the paper WITHIN THE REACH OP EVERYBODY during this exciting contest we luvro determ ined to offer to mail subscribers the following REDUCED RATES FOR THE CAMPAIGN : THE NEWS AND COURIER, Daily Edition, 6 month* $1 00 THE NEWS AND COURIER. Tri- Weekly Edition, 0 month* $2 00 THE WEEKLY NEWS, (i months . . . 75 Subscriptions will bt received at these Htes for Mail Subscribers only, until M&y IGfh. In all cases the cash must accompany the order. IViends of the Cause of Honest Home Rnl* ip Oil the counties are invited to aid us iu swelling our Campaign Subscription Lists, mclude ovary intclhgert whloS ofight to voter in the State, RIORDAN & DAWSON, Proprietors" Charleston, S. C Centennial Medal Awarded. • ✓ U —THE FAMOUS— r&ON KINO- cook: stove IS THE LARGEST STOVE IN THE South with Reflecting Oven Doors and Patent Flues, with large Oven, meas uring 91 1-9 by 19 Inches, weight 340 pounds, guaranteed to bake In ten minutes. Don’t buy until you write for particulars. rjl/CE REDUCED, Prices 8 in. with ware, only 821. 7 in. with ware, only 823. 8 In. with ware, only 829. We sell eight other patterns and sizes. T. CAMPBELL, Opposite Pavilion Hotel, lieetlog Street, Charleston £. C. aprl8-Gtn Columbia Register- James a. norr, editor. Term- of Hubttcriptiom Daily Reyister. OwYear.... $7 00 Six Months 3 50 Three Months 1 75 l\i- Weekly Reyister. One Year;.; 5 00 Six Months 2 50 Three Months 1 25 Weekly Reyister. One Year. 2 00 Six Montha. ...— 1 00 Throe Months .....4F: 50 Jl^-Our Terms, are Invariably Caeh In Advance. CALVO, PATTON & CO., w } Proprietor^ C. A Cltvo, Jr., ,T. A. Patton, W. B. M’Danrl * J. T. Well*. H- M. LANIER —wn it—S’ : RPBayley&Co —IMPOlFTEf^S or— CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, . * Lamps, &c. WT HANOVER STREET,' BALTIMORE, Maryland. feb21-fim Mantoue & Co, Liquor Merchants, ’ ^ AND KAKUFACTORERS OF SECAKS 118 East Bay Street, ^HARJL.EHTON'. W. C. sSpl8-ly TAKE NOTICE. I would respectfully solicit my friends and the public to call and examine my fine Liquors, Beer, Segars and Tobacco/ I can be found under the Patterson House. Old Crow Whiskey A specialty. So come along and you Will not l>c humbugged. 8a G. WILLIAMS* febT-lP King Street’ (BET. GEORGE AND LIBERTY.)|' ( Board, SI 50 Per Dav CltAULESTON. S. C. MRS. if. M. BAKER, I'Toprictrcss,’ scp20-ly JAMES M. RYAN, .TTOSNIV AT LAW, BARNWELL, S. C. »ep8-ly 4, A •A-TTCmNlfiV AT JL.AW. BARNWELL, S. C., Practices iu all the Courts. sepG-1y I L. tobust. ATTORNEY AT LAW, ALLENDALE, SOUTH CAROLINA janlO ly Gt "W • AT- W illiams IATTORNEY AT LAW, MIDWAY, SOUTH CAROLINA. Practices in all the courts: -A., n. CUISTNISR. Attorney at Law, ALLENDALE. S. C. sepfi-ly Central Hotel Broad Street, AUOXJHT A,*OTSOTtC4 I A Mrs- 2VT- "W• Thomas, Centrally Located—Convenient to Businem; J. M. SKINNER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, I^amberGr> S. C. sep6-ly vmwmi ATIORNEY Ai LAW, WITTISTON, B. C. Practices in all the State aud United States Courts. Mantoue & Co.. Proprietors of the Charleston Branch OF THE HAVANA SEGAR FACTORY “ La Yalentina.*’ Fine Havana Tobacco Manufac tured exclusively by Cuban work men will, with skill, produce Segars equal in quality, style and fragrant to the best brands known. 116 EAST BAY STREET, Charleston, B- C- 8cpl3-ly A New and Interesting Feature. — OP TUB— Edgefield Advertiser. South Carolina’s beloved sons in Photograph and Biography. Many worthy nantesand noble li cued from oblivion! live* ros.. Abctut the first of July the Advertiser S ill begin the publication of a series of ic ' ‘ ‘ ographical Sketches, giving, in synop sis, the lives of many prominent and dis tinguished sons, slead and living, of South Carolina. In connection with these, there will appear iu Our Columns each week a portrait of (he tndividMal Whose'lffe is sketched, done in the high est style of modern photographic Sri. From the great and good men of the past such selections have been made, John 6. Calhoun, George McDuffie, Judge A. P. Butler, Chancettbr t. ' H. Wardtaw, Governors Pickens, father and son, Governor P. M. Butler, Colonel of the Palmetto rogi. ment. Senator Louis t. Wigfall, Judge O'Neal, General Waddy Thompson, General Jamee Jones, Edmund Bacon, £sq., alias “Nod Brace, ’ef the “Georgia Scones,’ 1 Ma jor Jack Jeter, Hon. Preston Brooks, Gov ernor S. D. Miller, and others whose names we have not space to mention just now. ‘id* MARKET ST., NEAR JklLlSffi; WIVES, LIQUORS A It I> C I CJ A R S , r Lnnch From Eleven to One OVlock. Oysters Served in Every Style.- Call and see me. I 28-Iy 4 ; ruirx Viol.I.r.tm r.R, Agent. Williston Lands lor Sale. :o: - Lying on tho line of the South Carolina Railroad, within one-half a mile at its nearest point to the corporate limits of Williston, Is A body of land containing about TURKIC THOUSAND ACJRKH. This land is unsurpassed in fertility by any in Barnwell County, being suitable for either cotton culture or for rich crops of cereals. To those who desire to-engage in peach culture it affords a splendid or*uohtuitv iron, iproKitauuk invkhtmicnt. as it forms part 6f that limited territory around Williston which produce the finest peaches in the United States, While the facilities for transpor tation afforded by the Railroad running through the tract 'places the great markets within easy reach. To those invalids who are in search of homes t where HEALTH AND, AHUNDANUE^ combinp to render life pleasant and endurable no better location can be found. It is within a short ride of Aiken, and on it there is a I WONDERFUL MINERALHFRlNfi, which boils continually forth With gi-eat Strength and volume. There are also several fine fish ponds on the tract entirely free from malaria, and suitable for fish raising. About 1,000 acres of this tract are cleared', the balance abounds in fine pine, oak and hickory. The lands will be sold dt private sale in lots to suit purchasers. For particulars apply to W- Y± Kenned^ or A.- J-!.Weathersbed Williston, South Carolina. maySO-tr James A Gray & Co., xj JUuly m* A Georgia. Mm THE OLE KELIABE lS Cash Dry Coods BEGS AGAIN TO CALL YOUR VERY SERIOUS ATTENTION l6 Ilia nianjfhoth and Matchless Stock of I irst-class , ^ SPRING AND SUMMER DRY GOODS p Which he. ,K*er before r™che<I f? ch $?&$££. ta? frtrr.SSS’&’S,to eo U S,er.te -I ^0 thtag.^ . Dry Goods Store. My customers can rely on my btoclLeuppiyWg anjWteg .1 . .. _ La . « _ _ J J O /> /1 vv/Mir > i^ry Liooua otora xviy ouhluiucio ^ ~^.r'’ rvr , Ar | f n 7. onvthini that they can think or desire. Send your c^n what you want—you shall not be disappointed. Describe as nfia y y yon want, and aboqt the price you want,to pay. 1 ' ♦ mo \,'ha Wllod on • Exceptional Lipes and Prices In the following-departments maybe Kllott on . Drtss Goods, mite Goods, Hosiery and Notions, Cassimeres, IIouse-Keepiug Goods, Domestics, Paris Trimmed Hats. Small Wares, Ladies’ Ready-Made Suits, Lace Goods, Handkerchiefs. ■ nA an.t avV'p will be delivered Free of Chi Lip Parrels amounting to 810.00 and over will be delivered Free of Chary. James W. Turley. fhaylG-^m ■ YOU WILL FIND —AT TIIE- ni AG NOLI A SALOON, , l Ms Broad strEeT, AUGUSTA GEORGIA, A FIRST-CLASS RESTAURANT, i AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Our Stock of Spring and Summer Dry Goods is now complete, and is the largest and best‘assorted in the South. Bountifully supplied with all Jthe delicacies of the season. THE BAR Will be found to contain tho best Beer, Ale, Whiskeys, Brandies aud Wines id the city. MAT E. NELSON, may Id 3m Pro prietor. Our Mourning Department contains everj-tbing from the lowest price to the finest goods imported. Our Black, Colored, and Fancy Silk Stock is universally acknowledged to be he fiqcst iu the market, a glance at its contents will convince the most skeptical. All the latest Novelties in Colored Dress Goods—“Chenille Jardiniere,” “Res- illc Cypres;’’ “Beige Sylphide,” “Hornby” Victoria Suitings, Boui’ettcs &c. Do. signs and effects in Neckwear to be found nowhete else. The handsomest Scarf Laces and Embroideries ever offered to the people of Georgia or Carolina; Everything pretty and desirable in Parasols, and in Fancy Goods generally. A Splendid Stock of Linens of every descriptiou Towels. Napkins and Doilies, Ac Embroidered Piano Covers. CIUM HILL, J. P. Browne, Agent, A full line of Cassimeres; Cottonadcs, Homespun and everything needed by !S and Planters. Country Stores The only complete stock of Ladies’ Underwear south of Mason and Dixon’s line. Ladies and Misses suits in great variety, Buys suits (from 3 to 8 years.) A full line of Infant’s wear, Cloaks. Dresses, &c., &c. Everything will be sold at the very lowest price—in fact so low as to astonish even buyers themselves. Orders filled promptly aud carefully. apr4-3m James A. Gray & Go. HART & CO. Agricultural Implements. No. 1 LAPPING, “ 2 GREENVILLE SWEEP, 3 PLOW OLEVICEv 4 BATESVILLE SWEEP, 5 PLOW CLEVICE, 6 ORANGEBURG SWEEP, 7 HEEL BOLT, ii u n ii No. 8 GRASS ROD, • “ 9 SOLID SWEEP, “ 10 SHOVEL PLOW BLADE, “ 11 BELL TONGUE, “ 12 DI’M’D FT BULL TONG’E, “ 13 CA8T-I1VN TURN RHOV’L, “ f-1 STEEL TURN SHOVEL. ADJUST A HUE DLCfW STOCK. V : Later we will take up such men as the Iloa. J. P. Carroll, Governor M. L. Bonham, Gen eral AbnOr Perrin, General M. W. Gary, Gen. era! It. G. M. Donovant, General* Kershaw, Kennedy, Logan, Connor, Wallace. McGow an, Hogood and Bee. Colqnel Thomas G. Bacon, Colonel,Thomas G. Lamar, Colonel Joseph Abney, OoloneT W. C. Mortgne, Col onel Arthur Sinjkinn, Speaker John C. Shep pard, General James Chesnut, Hon. W. D, Simpson and others whose names shall occur to us in the ftiture. Subscription price, S2.W per annum, hi advance. Address: ADVERTISER. Edgefield, S.C. ■- V - ’ . * jjVtr 4 ' 7^'- ■ J- Charleston, 8. C. J. E PARKER & GO, Factors aijd. Commission Merchants. COTTON AND NAVAL STORES, Accommodation Wharf and Vender Range, Charleston, South Carolina. * Liberal Advances made on Consignments. j*nl7-ly IMPORTER AND DEALER IN CROCKERY, CHINA AND GLASSWARE Corner of King and Liberty Streets, Charleston, South Carolina. fOrdore solicited for the above goods, and prices guaranteed with Baltimore, Now York or Boston. ap!8 6ra DAY, TANNAHILL & Co WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Carriages, Wagons, Coach Materials, Harness, LctUhcfj SHOE FINDINGS, BELTING.- The attention of the public is called to our large and complete assortment of go in all the above branches, which we are offering very low to suit the times. for our prices. t * - .A Carriages, Buggies, Rockaways, One-Horse Wagons, Three aud Four Horse Wagons, Buggies Umbrellas, Children’s Carriages—all prices, Combs aud tlip- pers. Saddles, Bridles, Whips, Fine Trunks, Rack Rands, Bits, Harness of all des criptions, Collars, Ilamcs, Traces, Satchels, Hamc Strings, Horse Brushes, Buckles kt. Oak and Hemlock Sole Leather, French and American Calf and Kip Skius, Linings; Pegs, Lasts, Boot Trees, Crimps, Cramps, Tools and Findings of all kinds. Leather ahd Gum Belting—2 to 14 inches, Soapstones, Hemp and Gum Packing. . , The Famous Jackson Patent Truss Rod Plantation Wagon—wide or narrow Tires, hind (he reliable ISwectwater Wagon— 1 o-8 Axle, all at bottom prices..' Day, Tannahill & Co. „ “ar28^y AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Augusta Hotel, Corner of Broad and ■ "Washiiigton Street* ASf&USTA, &Si©B©SA. ■ ■ * * • • ' V* . Has been Thoroughly Renovated,' Remodeled and Newly Furnished jj^rTho Office of the Hotel will be open during the night, anl gu6stS, will be received, or called at any hour. RATES OF BOARD, novl 6m $2.00 PER DAf. W M MOORE Prot>’r. Terriberry & Brickie ? */ Manufacturers of Doofs, Sash, Blinds, Mouldings, Brackets, Ac., at Charleston 1 Contracts for House Building made on favorable terms and all work guar anteed. Wo will either furnish all material and, put up houMs or sell partlei . u . •-*< *- fBarn the lumber and mouldings as they prefer. Will take jobs iu *uy part oi ", Colleton, Orangeburg or Aikea counties. Address TfiRKiLEKRY & B1U.CKLE, Bamberg, g, 0. abvS'6h — V **►•*?. • v..