The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, August 14, 1879, Image 2
4 «
1 "
—
\ "
r
4
,
the peopee.
JOHN w. HOLMES, EniroR.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 1A 1879.
" Wb are not reaponstble for the views
of odr correspondents.
I 1^1..
I>«‘uili of Dr. I.iiIon-
On Tuesday lost, after a short but in"
tensely painful illness, Dr. B. W. Law-
ton dcpaitcd this life at Allendale,
deeply regretted by a large circle of
ftieuds and relativss. Dr. Lawton was
born in Beaulort, rftnoved 4e Biirnwcll
in his eafly youth, ami continued to Re
side' at Allendale untiTTiis deoth, with
the exception of a few years spent in
Georgia. During his life he filled nacr
ous responsible positions with credit to
himself. He was elected to the Legis
lature in 1856 and represented Barn
well District in the House and Semite
for several terms- He was also a mem •
her of the historic Secession Convention
which carried the State out of the Union.
■ As a planter and physician Dr. Lawton
was very successful* For many years
before bis death Dr. Lawton was a con
sistent member of the Baptist Church.
Dr. Lawton was about 58 years of
» ,gc - /
Th® (’ainpHitfn Opened In Ohio.
General Ewing, the Democratic can
didate for Governor of Ohio, opened the
campaign on Thursday, the 24th inst.,
at Lancaster, Ohio. His speech on that
occasion was a masterly effort, replete
with statesmanlike views and patriotic
sentiments. It is a terrible arraign-
ment of the Republican party for its
treasonable murdeious policy. It strips
from the party the flimsy" veil or sophis-
trys with which its hideous principles
have been so long concealed from the
jaundiced Northern eye.
Opening his discourse with the finan
cial policy of the government, he shows
the people that the claims advanced by
John Sherman for success in his man
agement of the national finances arc
without a shadow of foundation and
that so far from tbo Republican Trcas.
urer having effected a reduction bf sixty-
one and a half millions of the public
debt he has in effect burdened the tax
payers with about eighty-six millions
more; that the readmes- and eagerness
with which the 4 per cent. Government
Iowa was taken up chiefly by our own
people arose from the depression of trade
and the uncerteinty of all commercial
investments, and is a bane instead of a
blessing to the country. Ho show’s that
the resumption of specie payments has
been accomplished by strewing the
country with wrecked fortunes and
blasted hopes. He warns the people
against the unho’y alliance between the
Government and the National Banks as
a conspiracy against their rights and
liberty, lie culls attention to the in
sidious steps by which the Republican
party has been gradually advaucing to
centralized power.
1st. The destruction of popular inde
pendence by debts, taxes and smothered
industries.
2d. The al’.iaucc between Govern
ment patronage and plunder and the
power of capital.
3d. The corruption of the ballot.
4th. The misuse of tho standing
army.
5th. The encroachments of the execu
tive in the shapo of military despotism.
Ho shows the people of Ohio that not
only tho form but the very spirit of our
institutions is in danger by the coalition
of these terrible forces, and that unless
the American people awaken at once to
a sense of their imminent danger, they
will boob be reduced to tho alternative
of anarchy or military despotism.
F.Iectl«aa la Ohio.
It it generally admitted that Ohio is
the pivotal State, and that much de
pends upon the result of the October
election therein. The struggle between
Ewing, Democrat, and Fester, Repub
lican, will ba the first opportunity of de-
tennioiag before the people of tbo
Northwest the issues joined by tho con
tending parties at the late special ses
sion of Congress.
It appears to us that the same law.
•which has in past ages regulated the
migration of tribes in the old world,
holds good iu the new. Wave* of mi
gration in the human family proceed on
parallels of latitude ai)d not on meridian
lines, and slnost invariably from East
to West Northerly or Southerly
tides are exceptiona' and poly eddyitigs
ef the great currents.
In obedience to this law the North
ern coon tics of Ohio are peopled by
immigrants from New England of the.
Puritan type, the middle, by Scotch.
Irish frpm Pennsylvania and the South
ern by mixed nationalities from Virginia
and Kentucky. Now, each of these dis
tinct migratory hordes is distinguished
by race peculiarities influencing more or
less their political tendencies. To point
out these peculiarities and
would be to enlarge this article to limits
suited to a magazine than a news
paper. It is sufficient to say that, ac
cording to this ethnical division of the
State, the Northern counties will be
found giving large Republican nuyorb
ties, whereas the Middle and Sonthcrn
will be found affiliating on an average
with the Democratic party.
Let us now see how this theory is
borne out by tho returns of the Ohio
election of 1876, as shown in the an
nexed table constructed by us carefully
wnd laboriously. In this table we have
divided Ohio into these belts to corres
pond with our theory.
No. 1. Embracing all counties on or
South of 40° North latitude—Demo
cratic.
No. 2. Counties between 40° and 40°
45 min., N. L., Democratic-. ——-—
No. 3. Counties from 40°, 45 min.,
to 42° N. L., Ropublicnn.
If in the October elections the green-
back element
should operate
in the
Northcru counties as a means of diver-
sion upon the Republican majorities
the Democrats will carry Ohio, and the
country will probably be soft
; if aok
nothing but a
miracle will save
tho Re-
public, and
its account will
wo fear
shortly be closed ip tho Ledger
of Fate
by a broad
red line drawn under (he
sum total of it* opportunities.
presidential election of 1876.
Counties.
Tlcra. Moj. Rep. Mnj.
No. 1.
Prohle
453
Montgomery
1050
Grccnc
1994
Madison
40
Franklin
]x2f,
Fairfield
1K27
1 Pickaway
824
Perry
— I'M
273
Muskingum
225
Noble
129
Monroo ' -
Zi!4H
Butler
2078
Barren
1587
Clinton
•
1452
Fayede
1452
Harking
,._m ———
Adams
405
Athens
1218
Brown
1112
Clermont
407
Snllin
900
Hamilton
582
Highland
18
Jackson
508
Lawrence
1020
Meigs
1189
Pike
031
Ross
251
Scioto
* 384
Vinton
284
Washington
131
10,149
11,749
Democratic net majority in No. 1.
4 400
No. 2.
Hancock
404
Van Wert
12U
Wyandot
540
Crawford
205:4
Itiobland —
75R ..
Ashland
584
Wayne
580
Stark
3G2
CarroTl
500
Mercer
1212
Allen
1087
Auglaise
2039
Hnrdin
128
Marion
CM
Morrow
304
Ivr. ox
150
Holmes
1930
Harrison
544
Jefferson
1165
t'lark
1000
Shelby
1150
Logan
973
Union
800
Delaware
428
Leeking
1511*
Coshocton *
7'. 4
Tusenroa
971
Darke
1090
Miami
*
079
Champaign
(V 0
Guernsey
G40
Belmont
48 ..
18,083 . .
■8,476
Democratic net majority in No. 2,
9,008
NO, 3.
Williams
155
Fulton
1100
Lucas
309
Raudueky
298
Erie
40
Lorain
2407
Cuyahoga
8773
Lake
1800
Ashtabula
4477
Defiance
1303
Henry
918
Wood
834
Seneca
722-
Huron
1490
Mcdma
927
Geauga
2190
Portage
fc. ft 4 06
Trumbull
3103
Mahoning
230
Paulding
133
Columbiana
1417
4173
25,223
•ft r
-
-
Republican net majority
21,060
I.alcNt Yellow Fever New*..
Memphis, August 8—Fourteen new
eases of fever were reported this
morning,including eight colored. Five
deaths from fever have occurred since
last night. The weather has been
damp and chilly, some rain last night.
A strict quarantine has been enforced
to keep fever subjects and beggars
out of tbs city.
Memphis, AuguA 9.—Up to noon to
day fifteen cases of fever were report
ed to the board of health, ten white,
five colored. Three deaths have oc
curred since last night. The weather
continues cool 11 p. m.—Six more
cases were reported this afternoon, all
colored. Two deaths since noon. Au
gust 10—11 p. m.—Twenty-nine pases
were reported to-day, twelve white and
seventeen colored. The latest intelli
gence reports 880 cases and 80 deaths
since the breaking out of the fever.
There are only 19,000 people In camp,
12,000 negroes in the city and only 100
in the camp. The Howards are doing
all they can to suppress the spreading
of the fever, August 11.—Five new
cases of fever were reported this morn
ing \ four deaths have occurred sfnee
last night 11 p. m.—Thirty-four cases
in all, twenty white, fourteen colored.
Two additional deaths have occurred,
both colored, «
CIEYEBAF. IWWfl.
The sheriff of Newberbe, N. O., was
overpowered and robbed of $650, and
left gagged and tied to a tree. The
robbers wero white men blacked. The
sheriff Is In a critical condition.
Professor Nordenskjoid, tho bravo
Arctic explorer, is expected to arrive
at Japan soon, from which point the
first detailed information of bis voy
age from Sweden to the Pacific, -via
Behring’s Strait, may be looked for.
A terrible whirlwind vicited the town
of Buctouche, N. B, bn the 10t.ta ihst.,
destroying some eighty buildings, kill
ing three persons and badly injuring
fourteen. The town is a mass of ruins.
Tho riamngo done will amount to fully
a hundred thousand dollars.
___ __ » ^
Savannah received the first bale of
new crop Georgia cotton on last Fri
day 1st inst. It was classed os good
ordinary, and sold at 20 cents per
pound. New Orleans recsived the first
bale of new crop from the Mississippi
Valley on the same day, and paid 10
cents per pound for It. It was classed
low middling.
The Democracy will rejoice to knQW
that Blackburn Las been elected Gov-
erner of Kentucky. There was little
doubt during the canvass that he
would be elected, but even those who
most cautiously forecast tho result in
a political race are too often disap
pointed. There was a serious lulling
off lu the Democratic vote.
Tho entiro White Sulphur Springs
property in Virginia, consisting of
7,000 acres, was offered at auction last
Friday. The highest bid received
was §300,000. The commissioners
would not accept this and tho property
was withdrawn. On Saturday the bid
was accepted. There are over one
thousand fyieatw-af thy flppjflgy,
The political drouth that has pre
vailed throughout the country for
some time it is predicted will be now
broken by copious showers of oratory,
when political wisdom in solid chucks
will bo hailed elike upon the just and
tho unjust, and the thunder and
lightnings of rhetoric will blaze and
reverberate on the hillside and in th#
valley. Look out for signs and won
ders about these days.
C. Ilyllcsted A Co., cotton brokers
of 7 South William street New York,
sent notice to the Cotton Exchange on
the 8:h of their inability to meet their
engagements. Southern easterners
are tho principal creditors. The fail-
are is. said to bo due to a decline of
about three cents per pound since the
failure of Williams, Birule & Co., and
the fact that Messrs. Hyllested k Co-
wero "long” oa tho market.
POIQ
DUt;
rict Attorney for South Carolina,
Dr. Christopher G. Bechtler, who
bad beetl living at Gaffney City for
several mouths, was arrested last
Thursday, a few miies from Spartan
burg, on a charge of counterfeiting
United SbaUflOoin, and was committed
for trial at thanext term of the United
States Court, at Greenville.
One of the white convicts at work
on the new hotel in Spartanburg,
whose sentence Is for life in the peni
tentiary, was elocing "Sweet By-and-
By” while at work a few days since.
It seemed very appropriate to bis con
dition, and he sang it with consider
able pathos. Poor fellow, may he re
alize tho promtse of his plaintive song.
One Prof. A. W. Jon*, who professes
to be a horse-tamer, came to Ander
son during lira tatter part Of fast week,
and remained in our midst until Mon
day, when ho demonstrated the fact
that ho is a first class humbug and
swindler. He succeeded in raising A
class of about twenty farmers, each of
whom paid him fifty cents tuition,
who were to receive, in addition to
valuable oral instruction, small books
containing valuable information con
cerning the horse, and how to break
him of bad. habits, &c. One of tho
duped farmers informs us, however,
that the remedies given for breaking
horses of bad habits are worthless,
and the promised books were never
received. He Is a trifling fellow, and
should be punished for his rascaiity.
He is a low,- well-built man, with black
hair and thin black side-whiskers, with
dark complexion. He should be pub
lished by every paper iu the State. He
left Anderson on foot, last Monday
evening.—Anderson Intelligencer.
“ Vir’’ and vereatile “ Homo/’ in their
fervid zeal and dUfeapcct a‘ud jealousy
of the law, say that wc are auf-charged
with legal respect, and intimate that wc
should cross the boundary known as
Mason and Dixoft’s line and forsake the
land of the cavaiter, being unworthy to
claim an abiding place there. Lot us
hops, as tho writer firmly believes, that
public sentiment regards such expres
sions of opinion from tire bench as hurf
fill iu tho extreme, for to change the
order of-Judge Aldrich’s words wc say,
“ It is not murder, but who dare call it
law.” - tLex.
NE\V ADVERTISEMENTS.
IBE STATE OF SOUTH CMOLI.YI
Times go by turns. It is not so very
long ago since the commercial and in
dustrial news In the daily papers was
but a common story of failures and
the closing of factories of various
kinds. Now one can hardly open a
paper without seeing an nccauutmf
good crops, the resumption of work in
woolen and iron mills, tho revival of
industries and trades of nearly every
class, and the prospect of good limes
once more, based, too, on a solid
foundation.
Tho Confederate Survivors’ Associa
lion of Augusta held a meeting at
their hall last Monday evening, and
communications accepting the honor
of being elected honorary members
wero received from Governor Nlcholls,
of Louisiana, Governor Colquitt, of
Georgia and Senator Vance, of North
Carolina. The letters pf the two
Governors, however, were written by
their private secretaries, and the As
sociation decided that since tho wri
ters did not consider t^ie honor con
ferred on them worthy of an auto
graph letter, they should not bo pre
served among the archives of the As
sociation. —
STAT^ OLKAItlNGS.
•The tide of pleasure travelers to the
mountains is still on the increase.
The regular Republican ticket was
elected in Beaufort on Monday last.
The heavy rains in Anderson county
last week did great damage to the
crops.
Glenn Springs, in the upper part of
tho State, is the popular teeort for the
Summer.
Fifty colored people were baptized
at Straw’s creek, in Edgefield county,
on Sunday last.
Greenville will soon have one of the
finest opera houses in the State. It is
rapidly nearUrg completion.
The Pickens Sentinel says more
people are visiting the mountains this
Summer than any Summer since the
war. ,
A small trestle on the Greenville
and Columbia Railroad, About fifty
miles above Columbia, was' burned on
Thursday last.
Capt W. Scott Allen has been elected
to fill tho vacancy occasioned in the
delegation from Edgefield by tho death
of Representative Thomas Jones.
Within the past five years Camden
has given five young men to the min
istry—Rev. Meeers. John Kershaw, J.
C. Bissoll, T. S. Hay, A. £. Lee and
Julius Mathis.
In consequence of the new jury law,
the United Stated District Court In
GreenviHe, did not convene on the 5th
inst, and was,' by order of Judge
Bryan, delayed till the 2&th last. -
Warren R. Marshal, ex-United States
Commissioner and Clerk to the Dls- , .
trlot Attorney, baa received the Vjniou* delay of the law, to my aothiug
intment as Assistant United States ^ further obstruction to justice
It is Not Vlurder. Imt Who Dare
AdslI Itdbf*W?
Au.endale, S. C., August 8, 1879.
Ma. Editor : My brief notice of Judge
Aldrich’s charge to the Grand Jury of
Greenville on the subject of the Spartan
burg lynching seems to have excited the
virtuous indignation of at least two of
your rwadere. “ Vir,” in an article pur
porting to be a defence of the Judge and
a reply to my communication, speaks of
the latter as a misguided attack upon
tiro Judge; “Homo” now commiser
ates the man who in this civilized ago
will consent to voluntarily put himself
on the record as dpposod fo thf lyneh-
Ing of a fiend who would first ravish and
then rob ami murder innocent woman
hood.
I submit it to your fair-minded reader,
Mr. Editor, thst neither *‘Vir” nor
u Homo” could gather from the language
of my article any intention or derire on
the part of the author to write a treatise
on lynch law in general jp which a prin
ciple is to be explained or discussed.
The language of the text is confined to
Judge Aldrich’s extra-judicial, extra-of
ficial, extraordinary position as take!)
upon the occasion referred to. Our dis
cussion of this subject was entirely upon
the hypothesis that a Judge of the law is
vested with no power under the bw un
der any circumstances whatever to ex
cuse its infraction.
It is simply begging the question to
aaamaa any oilier premUya, V our ooim
respondents would be more interesting
if they would touch upon tfe point iu
who, Neitlmr “ Vir” j.or “ Homo”
dare venture to. assert that there is to be
found within the Lex-scripta or Lex
non scripts of the fathers a branch of
the law distinguished by such a name.
Wc arc not, while we feel a just pride iu
our law-abiding principles, willing to be
enrolled as “ Vir” would have us among
the Disciples of Theodore Tilton and for
the sake of filthy lucre accomplish our
own moral a«d, social degradation ; but
wc do claim as high regard for the honor
and virtue of our women as they who
boldly proclaim their disregard of tire
life and liberty of the citizen ; and we
further contend that is hue loolx
beyond which Judgq Aldrich could not
go, he can find uo sanction for r.is vindi
cation of lynch law.
In Kent’s Jurisprudence of the United
States wc find the following oil the Ju
diciary : ‘ As the judiciary power L en
trusted with the administration ofjnstiee
ic interferes more visibly and uniformly
than any other part of Government with
all the interesting concerns of social life.
Personal security and private property-
rest entirely upon the wisdom, the sta
bility and the integrity of llie courts of
justice. Laws, however, wholesome and
necessary, arc pregnantly the object cf
temporary aversion and sometimes of
popular resistance. It is requisite that
the courts of jnsticc should be able at all
times to present a determined countcn-
anc3 against all licentious acts,”
We find Section 30, page 571, Re
vised Statutes South Cimdina, under
title, Qualification of Judges, that the
Judges of our Circuit Courts shall take
the oath prescribed in 30th section, Con
stitution South Carolina, Second Article :
“ I will faithfully discharge, to the best
of my ability, the duties of the office to
which I have been elected or appointed;
recognize the supremacy of the Constitu
tion and laws of the United States over
the Constitution and laws of any State ;
that I will support, protect and defend
tho Constitution of the United States
and the Constitution of South Carolina,
as ratified, etc;, ete., so help me God.”
Constitution South Carolina, section
13 : “ No person shall be held to an
swer for any offence until the same is
fully, fairly, plainly, substantially, and
formally discrihed to him, and every
person shall have the right to produce
all proofs thlit may be favorable to
him ; to meet'the witnesses against him
fuae to face, to have a speedy and pub
lic trial by an impartial jury, am] to be'
fully heard by defence by himself, or by
his counsel or by both as ho may elect.”
Now do wc hear a learned dignitary of
law expressing sentiments that virtually
ignore the Constitutional right of trial
by jury and sanction “the practice of
punishing men for crimes or offences
by private unauthorised persons without
a legal triaL”—-Webster.
*• Outraged humanity can no4aod will
not brook the law’s delay 1” That we
ore not in sympathy with the Judge’s
views as to sowety** requirements of out
raged humanity and the difficulties grow*
oat of the niceties, technicalities and
To the Commissioners of Elections
FOR THE COUNTY OF BARNWELL.
WHEREAS, Mr. Henky HartZoo. who, at
the General Election hold in November,
1878, was chosen a Member of the House
1 of Representatives for the Election Dis
trict of Barnwell county, to servo for
two years, has since said election depart
ed this life; and, whereas, the Constitu
tion of the State of South Carolina di
rects that in such a case-.a Writ of Elec
tion shall be issued by the Speaker of the
House of Representatives, for tho pui-
posc of M int? the vacancy thus occas
ioned, Tor the remainder of the term for
which the member so deceased was elec
ted to serve: •
NOW, THEREFORE, you and each of
you, are hereby required, alter due adver
tisement, and with strict regard to all the
provisions of the Constitution and Law*
of the said State, touching your duty lu
such case, to hold an election for a Mem
ber of the House of Representatives, for
the Election District aft resaid, to serve
for the remainder of the term for which the
said Henry Hartzoo was elected: the noils
to be opened at the various nlaces of elec
tion In the said District on YVedHeedRy
the 1st day of October, A. 0.1N99,
by the various sets of Managers for those
places respectively; and the counting of
the rotes cast and the declaration of the
result of the election to belli accordance
with the provisions of Sections 2 and 3 of
an Art to amend an ;Act artHled “An Set
providing for the General Elections' and
lira manner of (yrndocUo* the same,” ap
proved March 12th, 1872.
This Writ, together with your Return of
Election to be held under it, have befoye
the House of Representatives at its next
meetfnjr after the election.
WITNESS the Honorable JOHN O. SHEP
PAKD, E«q.. Spcakerof tho House of
Representatives, at ColumHa, 8. C.,
this the 29th dey of July. In the year
of our Lord one thousand ei>?ht hun-
* drod and seventy-nino.
JOHN O. S-HbPPARD,
Speaker House of Rep.
John T. Sloan,
Clerk House of Rep. 101-102
&
PATENT
known as “appeals.” The chivslria
BUGGY TRACE
o
K
o
M
O
c
9
0
£«
3ft
<
O
3
o
s
M
0*
V
9
-3
S’
o
0
A
? *
P
-1
O
B
C
0
XT
O
2.
(£'
0 r
d r-
= a
f*
0
A
I
H H H ?
'i
cx z.
« S
ri
3
(9 2
§1
? 3
o
■"1
9
O
9
<9
O
9
-t
C
=
9
3
= *
l
: «
a a
° i’ 1
s “
ET.
3
(W
o 1
u—
c—•
C*3
*
o
<
<8
V?
<
A
|
to
*0
3
3
0 -
-•> T
O
« C
s
s
29 9
3 2
2 •
0
5
3
§
ft
0
2
pr
o*
tn
to
9
C-
3
9
cr
o
to
•o
3*
(L
3
99
to
3
9
9
O
2!
p
9
3
r*
(9
o c»
a S
O ■
a
to
4 ^
c. 5f
90
9
r o
2 ^
5 ^ g
3 ' 3
i l
ft
£
fid
a
OB
9
0
Burclclialter, Phillips cC* Miller.
jun!2 Sm Willistori, S C.
FOR SALE
NE W A i) VER tis E'MEXTJ.
*
W. T ANDERSON A CO.’S.
Valences Lace, 10c. for 12 jj'ds. | LinbnS ferf Ladies’ Dusters*
Gents’ Linen Dusters, Seventy-five Cents. t
Ladies’ Summer Gauze Vests, high neck and short sleeves, and ~
- - low neck, twenty-five cents, worth sixty cents/
LA W K Bt ' • - -
Fifteen Piecea Beautiful Tilted Lawns, Just received rft ANDERSO'N’S.
Q R E IST A ID IN E S ;
Eight Pieces Black Grenadines, all we have. Cull and see.-
BLACK SILKS,
Eight Pieces Extra Quality BUck S:lk.
JU ST RE C EI V E D .
The Best Black Silk $1. | The Bcst Black Silk,
- The Best Black Silk, 81.49 | The Beet Black Silk, ffl.75.
Every- Piece Warranted.
TRUNKS AND HANDBAGS/
LADIES’ AND GENTS’ TRAVELING TRUNKS, LOW.
Remnants oi’ Dotted S*w i s sv
Remnants Black Alpaca.
Remnants Ttfble Damask.
» - Remnants Boys' Cassimeres.
- Remnants Calicoes.
t'-'- ‘ - .V. • *
W. T.
&
A
Hi
-:o:-
WHOLESALE.
We are receiving In our Wholesale Department, for early Fall Trade, 5
cases Kentucky Jeane, 20 bales Homespun, 25 boxes Calico, boxes Assorted
Notions. Cull and get our prices. Five bales Bunch Yards, 2,000 pounds Bew-
log-ThreaiL ; •
WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT.
W. T. ANDERSON <fc CO.
-OF-
BARNWELL
-AND-
0 E jg ® R G
COUNTIES,
FEELING DEEPLY INTERESTED IN THE WELFARE OF THE
Public, I propose to nuke efforts never before cutored into for I lie benefit of tho
community. To this end I have purchased my Slock, and knowing that earnest
and honest endeavor will meet with that success which should attend it. I Voultl
ask ail who are seeking Bargains iu ,
Dry goods, Groceries, Sheet, lets;
Tinware Crockery. Etc-
Not to make Purchases before examining my Stock, rthd f can assure them rtiaf
they will save money.- Big Prices will not do in these times, when even the
wealthy cannot afford to waste their money, and ilia poor require double duty of
every dollar and every penny.
Linseed Oil,
Caster Oil,
on,
Paints, famishes,
Brushes, aad 2
Full Assortment
—W—
DRUGS•
and
MEDICINES
*
AT THU
Williston
Drug Store.
WilUstei, S. 0.
aug7-3tn.
Prints, goody5 eta*-; best, 5 3-4 «ts.
per yard.
Granitcville “C.’’ & 1 -2 ot4\
GraniteviHe ‘-R. R. ” G 1-2-ct*.
Bleached Shirtings, 5 cts. up to ^cts.
Striped and Plaids, 8 cts.
Colored Linen Lawns, C cts.
Pique, from 5 cts. up.
Ladies’ Hose, 5, 7 and 10 cts per paif.
Mens’ Half Hose, from 5 cts. per
pair up.
Large assorfntenf of Corsets, from 25
cts. up
Handkerchiefs, Cambric, 5*cts.
Handkerchiefs, Ltncn, 12 1-2 cts.
Handkerchiefs, flilk, 15 ctg.
BestT^ns, 2 1-2 cts,- per paper.
Best Needles, 2 1-2 cts. per paper.-
fonts’ Spool Cotton, 55 cts. per do/.
Ball Thread, 3 cts. per bail;
Dress Buttons,- 6 cty. per db»v-
lycad Pencils, 10 cts. per doff.
Envelopes, 25 for 3 cts.
A large assortment of Embroideries,’
from 3 cts. per yard up.
A large assortment of Shoes at aston
ishingly low figures:
Best Smoked Sides, 6 3-4 cfs. per 16.
D. 8. Sides, 6 cts per lb.
A good barrel of Flour, from $5 up.
Good Coffee Sugar, 18’lbs for 81,00.
Good Coffee, 8 lbs for f 1,00.
Shoe Blacking, 2 cts. per box.
Ijye, best, at 8 cte. per box.
I will pay Cush for all Country Produce, oral yoU'can trade where you please.-
All I ask is, give me a trird when you come to ouv town, and you will return homo :
satisfied. 7
BERNARD ADIaER,
Grahams, 3. C.
aliz S-.'lm.
• —
I DON’T WANT TO 00 TO THE ,
LEGISLATURE
But I do wish all persons who ctesifc to buy Cheap Good# to
coine and see me. Here are some of my prices—
Mens’ Boots from $1.75 up.
Mena’ Whole leather Uroguns front $1.00 up.
Chiidrtn's Shoes from 50 cU. up. — -
Good Winter Suita, all Wool, $6.00.
Good Heavy Panfa, $1.08 tp-.
—A FUEL LINE OF—
DRY OOOI>S AT BOTTOM PRICEB.
Groceries, Hardware, Crockery, Hats and Notions
AT WHOLESALE- FIGURES. ‘ -
CASH PAID FOR CORN, PEAS AND COTTON.
pjjh-jn<i«i*L0»r prices. ^ HUEENSTEIN,^ c
~T'
■■■■■■
Jtt
4. .0
~ V
T
:t
* --