University of South Carolina Libraries
-T"-' t’EOPXiE. 'JOHN W, HOLMES, Editor 11, 1879. Wrare net responsible for the riewa of our correspondents. !*• f.eirBCjr. Hie touching bequest of his orphanei Infant children made by Gen. Hood to the Confederate soldiers has evoked s generous, wide-Ufread, substantial sym pathy. It has been •Jtpr?P.iiit$l l x.pro« posed that each ex-Confedcrate soldier contribntd one dollar to tiie support o;‘ these wards of the survivors of the Lost Cause. , f We suggest that eonttibutions throughout the different townships be placed with the club treasurers, who --^»n rtminlWBrtdTbe (^n ty Treasurer, Mr. A. P. Manvillo. The €ulir«rulu Election. The • California election has resulted in a Republican victory. Of course there will be a great bloting of horns, and eongrattilatory predictions of a com ing Republican tidal wave triumph. Wc regard the result as important in two aspects, as shewing that Republican party discipline “is far more effective than that of the Democracy, and more especially os giving to the Republicans ' an equal number of votes in the House of Representatives. If no President is chosen by the popular vote next year and tbe election is thrown into Con gress, Parson De La Matyr, the Green- buck Congressman from Indiana, will be <hc umpire, whose vote will make a President or unmake the Republic. Ueorgla** Crookedness. Investigation U the order of the day in Georgia, and from the startling reve Intiona of official crookedness already troller Guneral Goldsmith now in pro gress will almost certainly result in his relegation to private fife—State Treasr- urer Kcnfroe, by his own confession, has been guilty.of an inexeusablo viola* tion of a constitutional provision forbid ding any official to receive any interest on funds of the Stale. Treasurer Rcufroe attempts to defend his course by quoting precedents and pleads in palliation that his bondsmen made their suretyship con ditional upon his placing the State fuuds in certain banks which paid to them interest on monthly balances. Of the eighteen thousand dollars paid them annually they gave Mr. Renfroe one - (bird, which he pocketed according to the wott known rule of "addition, divi sion and silenca.” Mr. RcnfVoe will step down and auk N«*4i*-order Mr. Nelms, Keeper of the Penitentiary, is tharged by lessees of convicts with hav ing offered, if admitted into partnership with them, to be of great help to them— a promise which he was able to perform because of bis position. Wc sympathise with the Democracy of our sister State in the mortification they must tel un der these disclosures, but wc are glad te scc jhcir fixed determination to u let no guilty man escape-” The Democratic party must bo kept pure. Corruption in high places must be ss rc'cutly exposed and punished in Democrats ns in Republicans. In no ether way can its life and power be pre served, and whenever its policy changes faora protection of the people to plunder of the Treasury it deserves the death that is sure to overtake it. Wc do not consider those Georgia official) as wilfully corrupt and dishon est ; they have been inexcusably selfish, but the lesson that the Georgia Legisla ture is teaching will bring forth good fruit for long years to conic. / - hews. —il Tbe late rise In cotton bas checked the production of cotton goods In.Eag- land., Gen. Grant will reach San Frahdfeco on hlssj-eturn from his great tramp about tbe 21st lust, - The Internal Revenue Bureau re ports that 71,802,017 gallons of spirits were produced In 1870, against 66,103,- 068 In 1878. — - - made and anticipated it seems to b$ sadly needed. The impeachment of Comp- dew, onri a tarwn -proporttCB 'SrTlEe Prof. Nordenskjord, tbe Swedish Artlo Explorer, has arrived at Ifoto” bama, and report* tbe vessel and crew in excellent conditiod. A revolt in Afghanistan wM render a renewal of the war necessary to re store British ascendency. At-last ac counts the embassy was shut up In Cabot. * •• A majority of. the Georgia Legisla tors favor the renomtnatiou of Tilden. Aleck Stephen* says Hancock is the man to win, while Hampton goes for Bayardv A. B. Gomel I, ex-Oollector of the port of New York, a friend of Conk- Hag and an enemy of Hayee, Is thp Republican candidate for Governor of Now York. He la wealthy. The telegraph reports a severe storm along tbe Gulf coast, entaUt.eg a fear ful destruction of churches, ware houses and dwellings at Morganr City,, La., on the 1st Inst. There wai * also considerable damage done to shipping interests. Forty-flvecoal boats moor ed In tbe river above New Orleans wore sunk during the storm, carrying down 8200,q00 worth of coal. The arrivals of Immigrants fov every month this yea'r have exceeded those of the corresponding months of J.&8, and the total up to the close of Au gust foots up 70,809, against but 64,- 155 for the first eight months of h i®t year. The increase comes mostly fro^n Scotland, Ireland, Norway and Swe newcomers are above mmlgrants. the average of aafis tho oath of allegiance and beieg released, I Cassidy, half starved and half freeting,' HELP. would about him bis wrap coat of dev old gray/’ and with a fla«h of chose brave Irish gray eyes promptly answer No, and his face would light up with that same pride and devotion witu which he had often grasped the bittle flag when falling from the bands of the mur- deged ensign. Cassidy was a brave Confederate soldier, none braver and none better; a test of his devotion to the South was witnessed right here in Midway just after the clogg.of the war; he bravely resented the first insult offer ed cur downtrodden old State by a car petbagger, for which resentment ^e was hauled off to Charleston under arrest by the United States authorities, who could not but admire the courage ami unyield ing spirit of the littfe Irish Southerner, and released him. r His devotion to his adopted country (for Cassidy • I Hccronrol* the Heath Holl- 1 A ..lwtaace Aakrfft Far.. was au Irishman) was scarcely surpassed by his high devotion to his friends. Since the war He has lived here among us, and none knew Cassidy like wc; a devoted husband father, a kind neighbor, a useful cititen and fust friend ; he was ever first to bring reconciliation among differ ing and quarreling neighbors, first to aid the poor and give to the needy, first to oaerifiee personal convenience tifid'deny himself for a friend. Wo cannot fill Ids place hero, and his loss will long bo severely felt by this community. Patriot, aoldier, friend, rest ! wo know that thou art happy in the realms above, for it is written, “with what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again,” hod in our times of trouble ns wo look around for a friend our hearts wiH readi ly‘revert to these words, and we will be ahnest constrained to exclaim, )“\Verc is Cassidy 7 . * Gone to that land of pure deligh t, Where saints imm;rtal reign. W. l-leut. Vent John B._lIoo<l. The thrill of sympathetic sorrow that bervaded the whole South at the announcement that General Hood had been stricken with fever bas been fol lowed alas ! too soon, by one of sad ness at the news of bis death. The** fiery soul that delighted in battle, and tbe maimed body that bad left an arm i«t GettJ-sbufg~ah(Ta leg at Chicamau- Mya. Potts, the pedcstrlenne, who undertook some time sines to walk from Philadelphia to New Orleans and back, orrived at Central and stopped with Cousin John Thrasher at 2, p, m., last Saturday, at which tlmo she had 687 miles to walk by the 10th of Mober, before securing her prize of 15,000, to do which she will have to average about 17 miles per day. She Is In good spirits aod weighs only 98 pounds.—Andcrsoo Journal The suit of clothes worn by General George Washington when he surren dered to the American Congress bis commission as comiaander-ln-cblef of the American Armies at ths close of the Revolutionary War, and which. om now to seen tn tlfft PaMnUOffioe at Waahlngton, was made In Charles ton, S. O., by a Mr. John McFall, an English tailor, and the grandfather of our townsman, Dr. J. T. McFall. This bit of history is authentic.—Intelll- gencer. ^ A Trlbate to J wdjte Cassidy. Midway, S. C., Septembers, 79. Editor People—Dear Sir : The death of Trial Justice F. J. Cassidy oc curred not at Bamberg, but at this place, at the reaidcnco of Mr. C. Dueusing, where be had been during his entire ill ness, during which time be was closely watched and carefully treated by a skil ful physician and nursed by kind friends. Ho was confined to his bed for over two weeks ; just two months to the day and almost the hour previous to bis death (on the morning of the 31st of August,) he lost an affectionate wife, and from that time Cassidy was not himself, lie wandered about like a lost child, not knowing where to go or what to do. lie was wholly dependent upon his wife, even iu the most trivial business affairs, and as devoted to her as though she were his very life existence and soul, and his death was not at all unexpected to many as it had been often remarked that Cas sidy would soon follow his wife, wo hope and verily believe, to a better world. Mr, Cassidy was, at the age of seven teen, elected a Lieutenant in Company K, 11th South Carolina Volunteers, where he served with marked courage and with that devotion to his adopted country that wus a marked feature iu his character. ' lie was, often and to- waids the close ot the war, entirely in __ .. . , command of his company, and often The Abbeville Medium thus speaks _, , llL ^ r -tt-rr-T r . , > - _. •... . i when the conflict bid lair to be a fierce With only three or four honorable and distinguished exceptions the South Carolina newspapers have no views of their own on any great public question. —Abbeville Medium. •• Perfectly correct, Brother Medium, and you might add that it would be well for society at large if these “three or four hooorable and distinguished excep tions” would henceforth endeavor to ex press fewer of their own views and pur poses and devote themselves to thegpro- motlou of the general welfare. g*, have yielded al^Jaet to the con queror of all ; but fhe fame that was «‘Oil on a hundred hard fought fields w. ’U still survive while manly courage an. 1 <levotlon to duty can inspire tbe ad&ditttion of mankind. Of ai l the bright galaxy of Confed erate hi >roes none rose to fame more rapid y>u>d more brilliantly'than he who hi * /uBt bidden us farewell. Like Jacksoi t, be made his mark first as a Brigadii T, .%nd Hood's Texas Brigade, or Hood'*« Texans, as they were famil iarly knov m i\o the rest of the Army of Northern Vii’glnia, will live in the pages of hi tto.'y, side by side with the Stonewall B. igu de, as among the most famous bodl <8 itf fighters known to the RLoali of war. . Hood himself was emphatically .a fighter, and won his reputation by pine k and dash rather than by military aktll.. Fearless cour age, quick, bard bio vs stood him in lieu of science, aod often baffied tbe best laid plans of t^e < nemy. Geo. Hood may bosai d to have been a fighter from his blr.vh, for ho was born la Butler county, Kentucky, in 1830, graduated at Wa't P olnt iu 1853, wentatonoe Into active service, and was so oeverely wountled In a fight with the Oommancbes on tht frontier iu 1857 that he was laid up 1 or three years. He resigned his commit vslon in the Federal army April 15,187 I, just after tbe fall of Sumter, and being commissioned a Brigadier in the Con federate army, his handling of Ho od’s Texans soon mads him a reputat ion which, despite his youth, scoured b lm an early promotion to Mnjor-Genen d. In tbe seven day’s fight around Rich - mond, the second Manassas, Sharp*- burg and Fredericksburg, be took a distinguished part. la fact, where- ever hard fighting was to be done, there was General Hood—and no mas stood higher with people as with Pre sident than he. It'vras the popular outcry against the Fabian policy of General Joseph E. Johnston in Geor gia, that compelled President Davis to supersede that wise aud sagacious commander, aod, la doing so, he put a man there who would carry out the wishes of the people and “light.” We all know the result It was Hood’s misfortune rather than his fault that oT Judge Pressley: “ It does our hearts good to see such a man as Judge Press- ley on the bench—quiet, dignified and grave, he la id striking contrast with tbe conceited clowns who bate In tbe very near past soiled the ermine and polluted tbe bench in South Carolina. The air In the eourt room seems the purer for bis presence, and their is none of that senseiee* levity or bully ing bnuqneness we have much too of ten seen displayed by those who have disgraced the seat which be now •dorna” Monumental Association to deliver the eratloQ. at the laying of the corner boy; stoae of the" Jasper moonment on the 9th of October next J. llMBenublicafl. Gem John B. Gordon, known and honored throughout the South,, has uospted tbe invitation of the Jasper [to Msw York, there Ms parents resided one asd when there was occasion to have tbe best commander in charge of the skirmish line, (which occurred often) Gen. Hagood would invariably ride up to the Eleventh' and ask, “ Where is Cassidy," which was ever responded to with' ihaT promptness known only to a good soldier, determined for his conn- hy to do or die. His conrage drew the attention of his whole brigade, officers and men, and it was in the fiercest of the* conflict that yon could see Cassidy. He was once severely wounded in ths neek from which he never fully recover-, ed, but often complained of his wound givjgg him pare. Near the close of the war. he was taken prisoner and carried whom he had not seen'since a small he was not allowed to see though they applied ft>f ad mission into his prison. He was oft if Vi would take the * J forcci oath, and while others were daily taking the opbleat is thin or way other iamL' NE W A DYER tl SEME NTS. Memphis, Reptember 4—The How ard# have appealed for assistance as follows :* “Th« Howard Association, of Memphis, after having battled for tbe past two months with the dread destroyer In thvlr midst, find every dollar id their treasury exhausted, several hundred sick and convales cents.po be^provided for, and a large number ordurses to be paid. We were hopeful la the beginning that with the fund then on hand at the outbreak of the epidemic we would be able to pro vide and care for the sick tbaiPwould be tbrowu on our hands, but.tbe fever has continued to spread and with two long months yet before uS no alterna tive Is left bet to appeal to the charity of the nation for substantial aid. A erous people throughout the Union LADIES” FANCY GOODS: ' I will sell for cash at prices thai~~&ro* wifi not fail m responcTto this cull for 1 '®. 01 t0 close buyers . help. We feel that we are reforming a sacred duty to the Imp* dlstreSqed people e^ong whom - out lot is cast. i.Tho hotlnty of a common people was sBowered upon us iu 1878, and to these same willing givers we appeal. If help Is not speedily furn- Ishw’, we will be compelled tQ abandotf tho work we have been engaged in, leavjng hundreds to suffer and die for wap19.1 a Howard’s helping.band^‘ ; W. J. Smith. Acting President Howard Assu’tjon. Ou September 4 there were 27 new cases, and 10 deaths since last report. Memphis, September 5—The follow ing telegram was received this tnurn- iog : New Yop*. September 5,1879. To W. J. Smith, Acting President Howard Association, Memphis, Tenn.: “I send you by telegraph 8 5UOO to aid the Howard Association. I am certain that the generous people throughout the country wiH continue ttberaTIy to aid your stricken city. At any rate keep on at your noble work till I tell you to stop and I will foot the bill. “What are your daily expenses? Answer. —. “ Jay Gould.” Mobile, Ala., and Savannah, Ga., have Sent 8500 each to tbe Howards. Memphis, September 6.—Nineteen cases and fourteen deaths wereTeport- ed to the Board of Health«iHis morn ing. • • •• STATE Cl&.EASIAGL'i. f Hoticr I CONTINUE TO MAKE THE VVEI.L- knojvn. ' NlebletrAc Cloodrlclk Cotton Cain, and to repnirgins of all tnnkci', at ANTEL-BELLUM PRICES. - />rd«e~«iir}y and prevent dwnppolntmcnt.- IVhen yon codne to the city, you will find me hi my SHOP at tho Foundry of Pendleton A Bros. I have a fev second hand gins of differetit sizes on hand in good order which 1 will sell at very low figures, CorrcspondcnctTSohci- tcd. J. M. NKbl.KTT, ^ ..Successor to Nebleit & O lokrrch, june-i tm Augusta, Oa A sugar refloerv Is being erectedTn the people bad to be taught that fight ing could oot accomplish everything. The dauntless courage that was the marked characteristic ot his distin guished Gen. HosR to the hist On his deathbed, noticing some favorable symptoms of bis disease, he said. M We may yet dislodge tbe enemy.” He failed, bat let us trust with the other heroes of the Lost O&use who have “mussed over the river” before hlm, he now “rests in ths shade of. tbe trees.” They will not be forgotton, though their destiny wss Failure and their doom Defeat. There le a glori ous failure which outshines success, aod a defeat which is even more noble, more memorable, more immortal than victory.—Charleston News aod Courier. te —We find the following in tbe corre spondence of the Richmond Standard, from the White Sulphur Springs: “ It Is bat due to the visitors from South Carolina to say that they are voted by common consent tbe most elegant and courtly befe. Thera Is an ease, a grace and a gentle bearing about tho man ners of a well born South Carolinian that is unmistakable, and which stamps them as at once the highest typs of American gentleman or woman, and Orangeburg, Edgefield county counts ou a slim cotton crop. - Seven thousand tons of guano are stored at Port Royal. In Anderson the retail liquor license is fixed at 3300 Wr the coming year. The Telephone records the deaths of ten white persons iu Horry County. Measles, diphtheria and whooplug cough prevail to some extent iu New- berry. -/ There are ten lodges of colored GockT Templars in tbe District which in cludes Newberry. * The United States Dietrict Court will be in session probably another week In Greeovtile. Platinum, worth $5.00 per pound, bas been discovered on Judge Thomp son’s farm in Abbeville.- In Abbeville a nephew of George ‘McDuffie has been'tried and found guilty of whipping his wife. Cheater’s farmers propose to sow largely of oates this Fall, so us to sup plement the short oom crop, There is a move ou foot to call a meeting of tbe survivors of Edgefitld county before the end of the Fall. TJio condition of tho truck on the Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Rail road Is as good bs it has ever been. A colored man, who lives a few miies below Columbia, a few days a. o cau^bt a live hawk which is perfectly white. Major J. M. Baxter, it is sa:d, is a candidate for the office of State repor ter, madb vacant by the death cf Mr. Richardson. A difficulty occurred recently in Lexington county between » Mr. Gei ger and a Mr. titurkie, in which the latter was killed. Something about the State House bos gone wrong in Columbia. The pra crop around the Capitol this year did not come up. J. H. McGee, while painting the op era-house iu Greemille Thursday last, fell from the scaffolding and died iu a half an hour in fearful agony. Several of the high-toned nothing- ito-do young men of the capital have j -t last found tho true road To success. T’hey want to go West. Let ’em go. The Beaufort Volunteer Artillery ha ve accepted au invitation to go to the Jasper Centennial Celebration at ft.w tnnah on the 9th of October. They will be the guests of the Savannah Volu.Tteer Guards. A t ttoraa In Mt. Petersburg;. St. PirrrasBURo, September 5 —Vio lent sto.'nas in the Gulf of Finland have cam ed the River Neva to rise to tho leveio^ tbeetreets. Tho canals in the centre tif St. Petersburg have over flowed «n(f the fauburge are under water. Iron roofs have been blown from houses and churches in all direc tions. Tbs guns of the citadel have been firiog all Thursday night and to day. Notices have been issued warn ing tho inhabitants to take precautions ngairst floods. WILD MOOR MILLS, 7 lUrom SarnwoU. WHEAT GHOUND FOR ONE-TENTH, Satisfaction Guaranteed—no one goes back ejnpty. * N. POWELL, scp4-2 Proprietor. Mrs. L. Berkman, Midway S- C» UKALKB IX Dry CooJs.Croceries. ConfeetloBcrliS, 11 A. T S . AMD aug'J8-!<ii) e , Ice CHEAP! CHEAP! CHEAP! ICE by the Barrerfor country Uscf" J. S. TERRY & CO., JuaaSft 3m ———Ch arias t «w r -ft, C, GEO. S. HACKER & SOS, MAMTACTl BIBS OF DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, and building Maleri .I Of every description. Home People and Southern Enterprise. Prices as lotv as any Establishment South, and all work first class. (.'linrleston, H. C\ npllT-ly DR. HENRY J. MODWN. ii|* Z Li ♦ J Dental Surgeon, WILL ATTEND CALLS THROUGH- out Barnwell and adjourning CounUes. Lgr C’FFICBAt blaekville, 8. C. “fiS pinH-Biii • , II M. LAHIER, R.OAYLEY&CO- / imroBTir.s or CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, LAMPS, <tc 27 HANOVER ST, ftus2l-3m BALTIMORE. MARYLAND. 267 King St., Charleston, S. C. Fill F10T0CMFII AND A LARGE COLLECTION OF F’Tt. A MICH at modi-rntc pricru. 17-ly OLD RELIABLE. NEW AD VER TISEME NTS. J BOIB50FJBXAMINERS, Office of School Commissioneb, Babnwxll Co . 8-0.. ' Barnwell <J. H., Sept. 8,1879. Aregular meeting of the County Board of Examiners trill be held at Blaekville, October 7lh. 1879 ; Barnwell O. H., October «th, lb79 ; Allendale, October 9th, 1869. Apnltcante for Teachers’ Certificates of Qualification must appear before the board on one of tho above days, as no cer tifies te will be hereafter Issusd, except«t a meeting of ths ” regular T i Board. he school law requires “such examina-VC X>- !->• ’etf every year ; and no tion to be renew __ teacher shall bo employed in any of the free public schools without a certificate from tho County Board of Examiners or the State Board of Exe miners.” By order of the Board of Examiners for Barnwell county. A. BO 1ST. Chairman Of Board and School Com. aull-4 Application i«T Final Discharge. The underaigned gives notie* that she will apply to the Judge of Probate for Barnwell county, on the 12th of September, 1870, at 10 o’clock a. m., for a Inal discharge a* ad- miaiatmtrix of the eetate of Benjamin Hall deceased. SUSANNAH HALL, - August llth-td - Administratrix. H. €. HALL, PRACTICAL SEWING MACHINE REPAIRER, Cor. McIntosh and Bread Street. .ATJQUSTA., OiY. Genuine Needles and Parts. Awning of all kinds, made to order. 60Q-3H^ sep4-8m —GENUINE SELECT— ' BED BUST PBOOF SEED OATS, , "* « ■".( /N. r-—r- 1 —-—- For sale at 73c. per bushel, sacked and delivered at depot JOHN R. HAIR, aug28.tf Elko, S. C. R. R. B. J. Quattlebaum, WILLISTON, 8. C. ^ylLL Attend Calls thonghout Barnwell and Adjacent Counties. » apr3-6mos. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL OF my former customers that I have re sumed tbe Wagoning business, and all orders for hauling of any description left at ipy residence, or that of Mr. J. T. Ingram, will be thankfully reoeiv- ed, and promptly atteoded to. aug7-ly. J. S. BHUCK. XEW ADVERTISEMENTS. GREAT lARfGEHEATS Valences Liic?,’10c. for 12 yjs. | Linens for Ladies’ Dusters. _Gents’ Linen Dusters, Seventy-live cents.- Ladies’ Summer Gauze Vests, iiigli neck and short sleeves, and low Tieck, twenty-five cents, worth sixty cents. . e a mm s . Fifteen Pieces Beautiful Tilted Lawns, Just received at ANDERSON’S. ( . r : G-RE.iSi isr e s, Eight Pieces Black Grenadines, all we have. Call and to*. U X, A G K SILKS, jt,t necw Eltfi Quality torck Silk. JUS T R EC EI V ED The Best Black Silk $1. | The Best Black Silk. *1.29. The Best Black Silk, 31.49 | The Best Black Silk, 81-75. Every. Piece Warranted. O’R tfKKS A K D II.A>71> ]»A-6k8r- —1 LAD IKS' AND GKNTS’ TRAVELINC. TRUCKS, LOW. . Ite m n a n ts . ot* D o t ted Swiss. Remnants Black Alpaca. Itemnauts Table Dama?k. . 7 ,; ; Remnants Boys’ Casslinerea. R mcaots Calicoes. W. T. & i. lira, cl -:o:- WHOLESALE. __ Wo are receiving in our Wholesale Department, for early Fall Trade, 5 cases Kentucky Jeans, 20 bales Homespun, 25 boxes Cnlico, 25 boxes Assorted Notions. Call and get our- prices. Five bales Bunch Yarns. 2,000 pounds Sew ing Thread. ■WTTOT.KHAI.i-: DKP.YKTMKNT. W. T. ANDERSON & CO. READ THIS ! Sellins' Out Ilelow Cost. :0:- r ^ e O- t. i Cheap, Cheaper, Cheapest. — f To make room for my large stock of FALL GOOD 5 , which I will open Sep tember 10th. I am willing to sacrifice inv entire Stock ut Goods, ponsis in* of DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, SHOES, IIAUD and TINWARE, and offer them to the public 10 per cent. J^elow New York first cost. I mean just what I sav, therefore, If you want bargains call at once, as this stock will have to be dosed out before September 10th. . * ? I am unable to quote price*, but will mention, among tire numerous articles, u few leaders, which can give you tm idea how I am selling. -PRICE L. I S T * A good pair of Roys’ Shoes, 05 cent*. A good pair of Metis’ Shoes, 50 cents. A good pain of ChiMrcns' Sliocs, 25c. A good pa r of Men’s Brogans, 90 cents. A good pair of Men's Calf, 81 25. A good Gent^ Congress Gaiter. 81 25. A nice-Ladialf Gaiter, 85 cent*. A fine Ladictf Gaiter, 81 25. — Ladies’ Underskirts, 50 cents. Spool Cotton, 35 cts. per do*. School Rooks, 10 per cent, below Char leston; Spelling Books, 10 cents. ] Slates, 5 cents. Note and Letter Paper, Pins and Needier almost given away. 5 Doz. Parasols, from 19 cents Tip. Tho balance of that large lot of Em* broi^erie reduced 25 percent. Straw lints, 16 cents. A good pair’Heavy Roots, $1 50. Rest Paper Collars, 12 l-2c. per box. Ladies’ Gloves, 10 cents a pair. A large lot of Gents’Whitts, from 25 cents up. To close out 25 per cent, reduced, 25c. off. Good Smoking Tobacco, at 25 cents. Meat 1,4c. cheaper Ilian List quotations. I have this day received a lot of nice BEDSTEADS, which arc so cheap, that' everybody can afford to sleep com fortable this fall. 1 - R :)rc lei Remember and bear in mind that a penny asved is a penny made, and thcro* - •• ■ — - a’s aod then call at th<» UHE.AP STORE qf BERNARD ABLER, LEADERS CF LOW PRICES IX J1ARXWKLL COUXTY. New York Office, No, 35l Broadway, The Poor Man’s Friendin Summer X - - •. Here are Some of M v Prices. ♦ Mena’ Boots from 81.75 up. Mens’ Whole leather Brogans from 81.00 up. Children's Shoes from 50 cts. up. Good Winter Suits, all Wool, $5.09.,' Good Henry Tauts, $1.00 up. —A FULL LINE OF— - DRY GOODS A.T BOTTOM PRICEB* A Groceries, Hardware, Crockery, Hats toil Notions ™ v V- ! AT WHOLESALE .HOUSES. CASH PAID FOR CORN, PEAS AND COiTON^ ^ A. RDBENSTEIN, Buy from him ia Wiater when you have moaey, aud tet ewdit^frli^^U Summer when you have no money. • ..v*. «,«■ 1