The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, August 28, 1879, Image 2
JOHN W
• -tr—
THDHSDAY, AUflUSI 2». 1879.
W* are not responBlble for the views
f fcnr comwpondents.
-V
Clly Homlcldr.
• While we deeply deplore the unfor
tunate occur^poe which hM given to
Yasoo City so unenviable a notoriety,
yet in the face of such facts as arc at
present supplied to us, we enn distin-
but little to give political signiQ-
ance to the transaction.
Politics sppoar to have entered but
very incidentally into tbe quarrel at all,
and a correct understanding of the dif
• Acuity cannot possibly be reached with
out a full realization of the characters of
the chief performers iw the tragedy.
Briefly, then, we regard the killing of
Dixon as the direst outgrowth of two
salient fhets;—the bad reputation of the
, murdered mait^-and the personal rela
tions subsisting between the slayer and
-r the slain ; tbe presence of -the political
element a pure accident.
Thore is no justification for homicide,
nor will there bo suy security for life, or
peace or prosperity for society, where all
deprivation of life other than by the
Ijgitimst* authority of law is not pun
ished by death under all aud any circum
stances. No extenuation for this crime
must be admitted fbr lastly in the ad
ministration of justice, if read aright, is
so far from being mercy that it is down
right cruelty to society—a favoring ol
the vicious at the expense of the
multitude, and in times of great public
end political excitement, such as those
in which we live, when the most violent
of human passions are stirred to their
depths by the friction of party hate,
executive clemency becomes a high
crime and misdemeanor, judicial weak
ness and judiciaf bonding to social dk
iinetions a betrayal of pubUo trust, aud
failura to'convict in the face of the
oiearest testimony on the part of juries
~ a wKful act of perjury in thc face of the
world.
But, as long as human nature remains
subject to the weakness inherited as a
birtb-right by our race, society may ex
pect to bw startled by the homicide which
results from tho frenxy of passion. Am
bition, greed for office, and a variety of
motives essentially personal, create an
tagonisms more or less bitter—and un
less these antagonisms arc curbed by
the wholesome fear of a terrible Nemesis
in the shape of public law, whole com
munities will succumb to the terrorism
of the desperado and the ruffian.
We prejudge no man’s case. The
hsxe of contradictory statements in the
Yasoo City murder hides tho truth from
oar scrutiny; But enough, wc think,
is revealed to convince the most scepti
cal that Dixon's very character courted
a violent death at the hands of some
body, and that tho unfortunato com
munity in which the crime was commit
ted is no more responsible for it than is
the present generation for a murder
committed in the last. It was not tuc
murder of s Republican by a Democrat,
or of a Democrat by a Republican, hut
it appears to be the very natural close of
a career of insolvent bravado and reck
less Muster, but not the less a horrible
crime for all that.
We deeply deplore it as a blotch
upon the fair fame of our country, biit
while entertaining this sentiment of
hitter regret that such domestic troubles
should arise, we confidently anticipate a
speedy vindication of tho majesty of the
law*.
—
Carwll^fi < oai.
A Bibikov of Coluu^hia, graduate of
two Russian Universities and F. S.
Holmes, of Charleston, profersor in one
college, furnish another illustration of
the old doctrine that “doctors will
differ.
Bibikov, championed by tho Columbin
Register, claims to have discovered an
abundant supply of lignite or brown
coal, and to prove it manufactures gas
from it. Holmes, on tho other hand,
backed by tho News and Courier, de
clares that tho discovery of the bed of
“lignite” was made years ago—that
“lignite” is not coal, and that South
Carolina is too young geologically, bv a
good many thousand years, to produce
coal.
In this scientific mill, wo think, the
Russian has the hotter i>f the-Charles--
Ionian.
DIoxham, admittedly good authority,
in his work on Chemistry, page 100,
recognizes “lignite'’ as a variety of coal
producing a mueh larger quantity of gas
under tho action of heat, aud therefore
burning with more flame than the other
varieties. yv.
Further experiments will he necessary
to test the value of this deposit of black
diamonds, so-called, Wo regret to see
the heat with which Prof. Holmes has
attacked Prof. Bibikov, and bv way of
retaliation, wo ask our school hoys to
investigate the truth of the following
proposition of Prof. Holmes :
“Should tho Mississippi send down
one tree in a minute for a century, with
un average length of forty feet, and
foot in diameter, and these he laid to
gether side by side at the bottom of the
sen in a single stratum, they would only
cover a space of two hundred acres.”
A I.Hrle CJnme.
The appointment of Fred Nix, Jr., to
the BInckvillo Post Mastership need not
surprise any one familiar with the history
of the Republican party.
The object of this and other appoint
ments of similar character already 'made
and fo bo made, is evidently to secure
the vote of South Carolina in tho Re
publican Presidential Convention, for
John Sherman, and if possible to goad
the Southern Democracy into the adop
tion of the so-called “shot gun policy.”
Forearmed with a knowledge of Re
publican purposes, and foreseeing n
speedy deliverance, the Southern De
mocrats will patiently bide their.time,
and in the election of a Democratic
President in 1880 have ample compen
sation and revenge for this and all other
outrages.
I*rocceding* of (lie Democratic
Executive Cnnimitteci
The Chlneoe Eanguage.
Our knowledge of Chinese langurage
nnd literature is very limited. Time
aud again, in our younger days, we have
oumosly but vainly examined tho un
couth characters that, cover the tea
chest and cracker boxes shipped by tho
Celestials to .outside barbarians. No
interpreter has ever rcvQaRcl tfl# moan
ing to us, and wo snail never know
whether they invoke a blessing on the
head of the tea drinker or call for a
curse on the hands of the popper of fire
crackers. Within the hist fortnight
our regard for the Celestial Empire has
been deepened, widened and strength-
eoad. Hereafter we shall never favor
puUing a taboo on tea or heap maledic.
tions on the small boj i^hoinakea the
r an abomination. Wc
class among the benefactors
nan family the Chinese
beatings of tom-toms am]
of gongs, has unsealed the
ant, the American sphynx,
and forced him, at the very antipodes, to
ery out in all the agony of a persecuted
•oul, “I have had enough of the Presi
dency, and don’t want a third term.”
Had this wonderful specimen of East,
era eloquence been treasured np in a
thousand phonographs for the benefit of
the great army of American
seekers, we might have
deeency in
o politics and the
the Republic, We can
the opponents of Chinese
will see the error of their way
ua in welcoming the heathen Chinee to
fw shores.
At a meeting of the County Demo
cratic Executive Committee, held in the
Court House, nt Barnwell C. II., on
Thursday, 21st August, 1879, it was
resolved that a convention of the party
he held at Barnwell, at 9 o’clock, a. m.,
on Monday, the first day of September
proximo, for the purpose of nominating
a candidate to fill the unoxpired term of
the late Hon. Henry Hartzog, in tbe
House of Representatives, and for the
transaction of such business as may
properly come before it. Presidents of
new Clubs are requested to funmh a
list of their members to ti»e Secretary of
the Clubs from which they f-prar’i:,
that tbe old roils may be revised, Clubs
will be entitled in this convention to one
delegate for every twenty-five members,
and none for the Club at large, or for
any fractional part of twenty-five. A
resolution was passed, calling upon all
parties who have not received their share
of tho funds raised to defray the expen
ses of those prosecuted in the United
States Courts, at Charleston, to present
their claims to the convention for pay
ment. Mr. Robt. Aldrich was paid $50
out of this fund, and the,following reso
lution passed :
Jietolved, That tbe thanks of this
committee are due, and are hereby ten
dered to Mr. Robt. Aldrich, for his able,
intelligent and zealous defense of our
citizens lately prosecuted in the United
States Court at Charleston, for alleged
violations of the election laws of tho
United States.
Mr. Aldrich's report of his action in
the above matter was received as infor
mation, and will he read at the ap
proaching convention, in connection
with the Treasurer's report of the re
ceipt and_ disbursement of tbe funds
above alluded to.
G. B. Lartigue,
UEAEKAI.
English grain crops arc again re
ported as ruined by rain storms.
Gen. J. B. Hood’s wife dlod of yel
low fever In New Orleans on last Mon
day,
Ban Francisco Is having a little shot
gun policy. An,editor shot a preacher-
candidate, and the militia was called
out.
A terrific storm swept the Atlantic
coast from North Carolina to Massa
chusetts. But few lives wcie lost; the
destruction of property was unprece
dented.
Railroad Commissioner Bonham lias
decided that freight on cotton must bo
charged according to weight and not
measurement, and has so notified the
railroad superlntcndcntw. *
George W. Childs, of Pniladelpbin,
gave Georgia’s groat statesman,-'ilon.
A. H. Stephens, a grand dinner at bis
residence, Bea Cliff Villa, New York,
on Friday last. Several othor promi
nent gentlemen were also present.
A letter was received In Washington
Saturday from General Ewing. He
says ho is very confident of his elec
tion as Governor of Ohio; that the
vote will be largo. Ho says, also, that
ho believes ho will get the whole
Greenback vote.
A gentleman from Mississippi says
that Jefferson Davis will make a mint
of money out of his book, which Is to
bo published this full by tho Apple-
tons. The general expectation la that
it will have a tremendous sale, and
bring the author a handsome income.
Wc tnk^tho following item from the
Abbcvilo Medium ; A prominent Radi
cal politician of this county says that
they “intend to carry the next election
by violence.,’ Those of our people
who claim that there D no danger
should make a note of this. Yiolence
hnd fraud are the only cards the Radi
cals'can play, and they understand
their use.
...
General Grantbaaonneumoed- from
China that ho will not re enter tho
field as a Presidential candidate. That
opens the way for a Republican suc
cess next year. As a Grant party, the
Republicans could not succeed. As
the Republican party, with a good
candidate, they have a chance. Now
for tho Democrats. Let Mr. Tildeu
decline also, and then the Democrats
will have a clear field.—N. Y. Herald.
“Oar Neighbor Wives.”
SCGOCSTKD BX A PRRKOUMANC8 Of THE MID-
WAT DRAMATIC TROCM. - ’
How strange it is that man should laugh
And woman toe, his better half,
At what is acted in n play . •
And yet wc see it every day.
Repeated in our own sdd cases,
Hut altered somewhaf in in its phases;
Happy the man, and free from strife. -
Whd ncYor loved hjs Neighbor’s‘Wife.
Keeps Cupid in his own dear homo,
Nor e’er permits the God to roaeji ;
Rut ah ! what ills beset -the way
... (if.him ahono foetstepa-waHeastriiyr;
Alldred'by passion—pleasing maid,
Deserted first and then betrayed^
An ogle or a glance may lead
To that-whiten maRes tii’o bosom bleed.
Remorse unfclt till all is lost,
Now follows like some haunting ghost ,-
Oh love I when poisoned in thy spring,
What-woRS a#gojl, my nurse w<J«id sing,
Thy charms beguiled old Priam’s boy
And cost the Greeks a siege of Troy :
There bleeding heroes strewed the plain
tbARlAhu.
Tans tire cause orall the strife.
And fair-haired Helen, Ncignbor’s Wife;
... Thendove but Hkerhe dove, but one
The object lawful and thine own,
And when her smiles invite thy sails.
And woo thy barque with favoring gales,
• Accept the offerings which she brings,
But steer not where tho Syren Sings.
W.
Midway, S. C., August 23th, 1S79,
Tho
A Good Sng:s;«** Eon »
Columbia Register says that
Tho yellow fever is still raging In
Memphis, and has been spreading Into
Mississippi, but only a few deaths re
ported out side of Memphis. Ten deaths
were reported to the Board of Health
jjft. Uio IhLL Mail eomnmaioatlonM
have been re-established. Several
burglaries have been committed, and
the authotities have organized a white
military company for the protection of
property.
Thirty-four new cases of yellow fe
ver and eight deaths reported in Mem
phis on Monday.
General Kennedy and Judge "Wal
lace have been spoken of as possible
candidates for tho Governorship. It
is also said that Hon. J. C. Sheppard
will aspire tho Congressional honors-
From Abbeville county it is said tbe
following gentlemen will bo candi
dates : For Governor, General Samuel
McGowan ; for Attorncy-Generul, Col.
J. S. Cothran ; for Adjutant and In
spector-General, General R. R. Hemp
hill.
Tho reported death cf Mrs. Nellie
Sartoris, formerly Miss Nellie Grant,
put ail of tiro Grant organs In this
country into a bereavement which was
too gushing to bo sincere. 1 he next
day’s cable, however, Informed us that
it was a different Mrs. Sartoris, and
hence this little ruse to use the sup
posed death of an excellent lady as a
means of stirring up a sympathy of
General Grant, which might help to
put him In tho White House again,
has had tho whole bottom knocked
out of it.—Auderson Intelligencer.
Tho Republican campaign In Maine
Is not flourishing. Even the New
York Times correspondent affirms
that tho party cannot obtain a majori
ty on the popular vote, and in this
case a combination between the Demo
crats and Greenbackers will make tho
Governor. The Radical leaders are
all at sixes and sevens. Sherman
scored a failure in bis campaign. The
Maine Radicals are stalwart, and are
Injected with soft-money theories.
County Chairman,
in a speech of aelcomc, J»o- B. Bellinger, Sec’y Ex. Com.
. mduflk. tongue, aocom- „
Rats.—A writer in a New York jour
nal discourses In the following style
concerning tbe treatment of rats and
mice: We cleaned our premises of
these detestable vermin by making a
white-wash yellow with eopparfcs, and
covering tbe stones and rafters of tho
cellar with a thick coating of it. In
every crevice where a rat might tread
wore put crystals of the copperas, and
scattered the tame In the ooaners of
tbe floor. The result was a" perfect
stampede of rata and mice. Since
of that time not a footfall of either rat or
has been heard about the
Every Spring a coat of the
waah is given to the cellar, as
as well as a rat exterminator,
!<>ld, djrsen
NT ATP. €1EEANINIG!I.
The rice prop in Georgetown county
la very promising. ^
Newberry has a colored watch to
palrerand Jeweler. U
There are seven young men study
ing law in Anderson.
Two little colored children were
drowned last week In Edgefield county
> »
There aro thirteen active working
Divisions of tho Sons of Temperance
In Anderson county. - - v
There was a reunion of the 12th
South Carolina Regiment at Wians-
boro’ on Wednesday last.
Camden has forty-threo marriage
able young ladles-who do not belong
to the Old Maid’s Society.
Tho County Board of Equolizers of
Lexington raised the value of property
Gov. Simpson, Gen. Moiso and other
distinguished speakers will address
the military at Anderson to-day. V
Ex-Congrcsoman Robert Smalls has
been appointed a special inspector of
customs for the District of Beaufort,
The Hampton Guardian reports the
looking up on the line of raHroad, and
all tho mills are working full time on
orders.
After tho 1st of September all cotton
• sold in Spartrnburg will be weighed
by regular weighers appointed by
Town Council, at ten cents.peUbMu.
Thopeoplo of Hampton are agita
ting the removal of the Court-house
to a more central point of location.
Varnviilo is said to be the desired
place.
The Beaufort Crescent is Informed
that a largo'"European steamship is
expected about the first of October at
Port Royal for a cargo of cotton. She
is said to bo able to carry 9,000 bales
of the staple. ,
Dr. Thomas E. Powe, father-in-law
o-f Judge Mjlvcr, and one of Cheraw’s
leading eitiz -ns, died on the 14th. Dr.
Powe, previous to tho war, was one o f
thtr largest T^Hterg ’gtgTrg thC ’FCe
Deo, and was well known throughout
the entire State. '
‘ TherelireWO Confederate soldiers
lying in Magnolia Cemetery, Charles
ton, aud certain leading and patriotic
ladies of that city have inaugurated
measures for erecting a monument to
their memory. The interior couuties'
will be called upon to help lathis work'
Abbeviilo Medium : George bhillito
discovered a fabulously rich gold de
posit on Little Mountain, about seven
miles from town, last week. He
brought a specimen of the rock to
town and it far surpasses anything of
tbe kind ever seen by the oldest
miners in our midst. The rock was
literally full of gold. The rock forms
a - perfect indy, bftlds dul [.» I ^ »*** p» held
like the specimen discovered by Mr.' after the county fairs, and the articles
“the off year” In politics.“Is fairly thVa^
Fair .year,” and suggests to the people
of ibo State to endeavor to make our
agricultural fairs this fall more inter
esting and attractive than usual, aud
wo sincerely trust they will act upon
the suggestion. There are many good
and sufficient reasons why our farm
ers, mechanics, housewives, and every
body, should contribute to the In
terest, support and encouragement of
these annual gatherings of our citi
zens and the exhibitions of their in
dustry. enterprise and progress. There
is nothing that conduces more to the
development of the resources of our
countiy than these exhibitions of tiia _
products of the soil, of tne work shop
and of tho manufactory, and the
greater tbe Interest taken in them the
greater the good thqt fcllowa.. lly
reason "of their CfttTTfTg tho farmers can
cohtrlhuito moro than any other class
to the soccers of these icstltutlons.
Show us a farmer or mechanic that
takes au interest and { ride lu his
county fair and we will show you one
that is both industrious and enterpris
ing ; show us a county ytith a good,
'agricultural fair and we will show you
one, the farmers aud mechanics of
which are enterprising und prosper-,
ous. The State fairs are also Import
ant, and while we may not realize and
appreciate to the same extent the
good that results from the-State fair
as wo do fn m the county fair, it is
Just as important that it be sustained
and improved. Every county should
have an agricultural fair at least one •
Shillito it will beat Dorn’s Mine at its
best. -- -— *
Just after daylight on the morning
of the 18‘.h, when the incoming train
on the Charlotte, Columbia and Augus
ta Railroad was passing a point about
orro mile this side of Ridgeway, the
first and second class passenger cars
jumped the track and rolled down an
embankment Into a ditch twenty five
feet below. Tho engine and tender re
mained upon tho track, tho .“sleeper” j
was pulled off also ond turned upon
its side, but did not follow the two
passenger coaches. Threre were thirty
or forty passengers on board, aud that
the casualties were not greater Is al
most miraculous. The Rev. Dr. E J.
Meynardle had a rib and a cellar bone
broken. Captain Newcomer, the con
ductor, was severely cut about the
head, and several others received
slight bruises. The passenger coaches
aro a complete wreck.
receiving the premiums nt the latter
could be sent to tho State exhibition,
which would always Insure a larg<
representation of the varied industries
of the State.
was not vindictive enough about the
South. The election In Maine comes
off on the Gth of September.
Tho body of the late A. T. Stewart,
the late millionaire merchant of New
York, which was stolen several months
ago from the family vault, has not yet
been recovered. Parties In possession
of the body have made a proposition
to return It on tbe payment of $250,-
000,' and no questions asked. The
parties are In Canada, and have estab
lished tbe genuineness of their offer
by sending to New York the silver
plate and handles of the casket in
which the body was burled. Tho
magnificent mausoleum on Long Is
land for tbe reception of the body is
nearly completed. It Is said that
Judge Hilton and Mrs. Stewart refuse
tcry or fever never. comply with tbe terms of tho body-
snatchers.
A IHexv Ocparturc In tbe Eiigjit
direction.
Tho Louisville Courier-Journal le
jubilant over a new departure about
to be taken in tho cotton growing in
terest. Two important inventions
have been made, tbe ono in picking
aud the other In ginning and spinning
as it is brought from tho field. This
new Improvement proposes to dis
pense with living pickets and gfuners
and balers, as well ns with bagging
and ties. Tbe thread they produce—
from a long fibre, unimpaired by the
sharp teeth of the gra saw, undried by
sun exposure, unmacerated by press
ing, and saturated with tho vegetable
oil from the seed—wo aro assured will
bs Incomparably smoother aad strong
er than factory yam, either IJPRlish
or American, and must supersede the
latter. The Increased facilities for
gathering tho crop furnished by tho
Sherman ad vocatea hard. mcmey, and mechanical cottop picker removes the
grand obstacle to on indefinite in
crease. With the .mechanical np-
pianc&s, which the Courier-Journal is
confident have been secured, “the
Northern States,” It says, “should
they desire, may remove tho great
bulk of the negro population without
serious prejudice to an Indefinite ex
pansion of the cotton industry; and
cotton shipped in the form of thread
will have double the market value of
the raw lint”
TT-
- Printers, as a class, are Innocent,
unsophisticated men. “Do any of
you gentlemen know anything about
gambling?” asked tho editor of the
Oshkosh Christian Advocate of his
compositors, the other day, and a
cemetery stillness reigned throughout
the office. And then the crafty editor
cried out, “First bail, 27 T and six
teen printers laid down their sticks,
and inquired bow much there was In
the pot.
It rihould be Stopped.
All of the Southern States ought to
combine iu the passage of a law pre
venting speculation in futures in cot
ton. O! course this would only pro
hibit citizens of the States enacting
-5«ch laws from participating in this
gambling operation, but it would eave
to this section a -large amount of
mone y every year. In the first place
these speculations in futures to a very
large rxtent control the price of cot
ton, greatly to tho detriment of the
farmer, whose crop is bought and sold
before it is made, and the piloe is
thereby regulated in a measure by
other causes than supply and demand.
In addition to this reason for the pro
hibition may also be mentioned the
fact that the Southern men who go
into this branch of speculation are a*
a class the Insets. Northern capital
combines and frequently causes the
forfeiture of coutracta, entailing heavy
losses upon those who have dealings
with them. It is asserted, by those in
position to know, that Southern men
lose annually about 843,000 000 in this
waj'. It should be stopped, und if tho
Southern States would combine in api
priate legislation it couid be brought
speedily to au end.—Auderson Intelli
gencer.
Not Deseeving ox Fury.—Beggared
spendthrifts, ttf- whom money bas no
cxchaugo value but "pleasure.
Persons who will persist In dying by
inches with dyspepsia aud liver dis
eases, when Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery and Pleasant Purgative Fil
lets aro uufdiliug remedies for these
maladies.
Parents who spare the rod and ruin
tho child. Fast young men and wo
men aro generally spoiled children to
begin with.
People who suffer from catarrh, when
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy ts a sate,
reliable, an;! Weil-lested remedy for
this loathsome disease.
People who marry for money, and
find too late that the. gelden glitter is
all moonshine.
Women who suffer death every day
oj their lives, when Dr. Pierce’s Favor
ite Prescription will effectually remove
those painful weaknesses and impart a
healthful tone aud strength to tho
whole systew.
People who live beyond their means
and find that stylo and pride, like ev
ery thing else in this w,orld, unless
placed upon a secure foundation, are
subject to the law of gravitation.
Invalids who do more toward fos
tering disease, by living and sleeping
lu tho low, unventllatcd rooms of the
ordinary house, than the best medi
cines can accomplish foward recovery,
when at a moderate expense they can
secure all the hygienic and sanitary
advantages of the Invalids’ Hotel at
Buffalo. N. Y. Every physician knows
how much recovery depends upon
good uurMLig and the hegienlc condl-
tluus of tho sick room* Chronic dis-
aro especially subject to these
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
u 4
"X ■
INDUCEMENTS.
wm tee moem
AT
>
W.TrANDERSOirS:
•r
Valences Lac3, 10c. for 12 yds. | Linens for Ladies* Duster?-.
Gents’ Linen Dusters, Seventy-five cents.
Ladies’ Summer Gauze Vests, high neck and short sleeves, and
-low-- ueok, twenty-five cents, worth sixty cents.
X A W IS S ,
Fifteen Pieces Beautiful Tilted Lawns, Jmjt received at ANDERSON’S.
a.RE]NrADINES, f
Eight Pieces Black Grenadines, all we have. Cull and 8«i\
BLACK SILKS,
Eight Pieces Extra Quality Black S:lk.
JUST RECEIVED
The Best Black Silk $1. | The Best Black Silk. *1-29.
The Best Black Silk, $1.49 | >ho Best Black Silk, $1.75.
Every Piece Warranted. .
O^RITKKS A K/p 1 r a -ntt^ :
-LADIES’ AND GENTS’ T HAVE TIN u TRUNKS, LOW.
Be mn ants
Remnants Black Alpaca.
llctunants
oi‘ L) O t t C d S W
I s s
Table
Damask.
Rciuuuuts
Bovs’
CasdtneVes.
R-mnants
Calicoeo.
W. T.
US. Hit, 11
-:o:-
WHOLESALE.
We are ^receiving in our Wholesale Hcprirfmont, for early Fall Trade, 5
coses Kentucky Jeans, 20 bales Homespun. 25 boxes Cullen, 25 boxes Assorted
Notions. Call and get our prices. Five bales Bunch Yarns, 2,000 pounds Sew
ing Thread. ’ x .
WHOLES A LE 1 HvIWRTAlKMT.
W. T. ANDERSON & CO.
READ THISP
-:o: *
Celling
Below Cost.
-:Q;-
m&mim r bargains
o-
Cheap, Cheaper, Cheapest.
To make room for my large Mock of FALL GOOD?, winch I will open Sep
tember 10th, I nm willing to sacrifice my entire Stock of Goods, cmiais ing of
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, SHOES, HARD and TINWARE, and offer them
to the public U) per cent, below New Pork first cost. 1 mean just what 1 say,
therefore, ifymi want bargaius call at ouce, as this stock will have to be closed put
before September 10th.
I am unable to quote pnec?, but will mention, among the numerous articles,
a few leaders, which can give you un idea how I am selling. i ,
i
LIST.
Ladies’ Underskirts, 50 cents.
Spool Cotton, 35 cts. per doz.
School Books, 10 per cent, below Char
leston.
Spelling Books, 10 cents.
Slates, 5 cents.
Note and Letter Paper, Pins and Needle#
h'most given away.
P RICE
A good pair of Boys* Shoes, C5 cents.
A good pair of Mens’ Shoes, 50 cents.
A good pain of Childrens' Shoes, 25c.
A good pu r of Men’s Brogans, 90 cents.
A good pair of Men’s jlMf* §1
A good Gents’ Congress Gaiter. $1 25.
A nice Ladies’ Gaiter, 85 cent-.,
A fine Ladies' Gaiter, $1 25. _!
A good pair Heavy Boots, $1 50,
Best Paper Collars, 12 1-"2d-per Lux.
Ladies’ Gloves, 10 cents ja pair.
A large lot of Getrfs’ Shii^s. from 25
cents up.
-
To close out 25 per ccnf. reduced, 25c. off. Good Smoking Tobacco, at 25
cents. Meat 1 ilc. cheaper than lost quotations. I have this day received a lot of
nice BEDSTEADS, Winch are so cheap, that everybody can afford to sleep com-
d’ortablc this Tail.
Remember and bear in mind (hat a penny sa\'cd is a penny made, and thoro-
fore let everybody go to Graham’s and then call at the CHEAP STORE
5 Doz. Parasols, from 19 cents up.
The balance of that large lot of Em*
broideiio. *
Straw Hats, 10 cents.
liiEJHMARB ADLER,
LEADERS Q.F LOW PRICES IX BARNWELL COUNT#
New York Office, No. 351 Broadway.
nngiKBm
I DON’T WANT TO 60 TO THE
LEGISLATURE.
But I do wish all persons who desire to buy Cheap Goods to
come mid see me. Here are some of my prices—
Mei» ! ~Bottfcrfrmn $1.75 up.
Mens’ W hole leather Hrowans from $1.00 up.
Children's Shoes from 50 cts. up!
Good Win tor Suits, all Wool, $5.00.
Good Heavy Pants, $1.00 up.
—A FURL BINE OF— - -
LILY GOODS .A.T BOTTOM TLICLS
Groceries, Hardware, Crockery, Hats and Notions
AT WHOLESALE MGUUES. - t
CASH PAID FOR CORN, PEAS AND COTTON.
A. RUBENSTEIN,
" V . WILLISTON, 8. C.
I’nth finder in U> W TRICKS.
102-114 r
-v-jc-*-