University of South Carolina Libraries
TRI-WEEKLY EDITION.] WINNSBORO, S. C., TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 17, 1877. (VOL. 1. NO. 33. NEW ADV)ERTISEIlENTS. Ladios' Favorite Cards, all sty les, 0with name, 10c. Post paid. J. B. lv-rED, Nassau, Rens. Co., Y. SF You will agree to distributo some of t circulars, we will send you a IN oU/r FRAME, and a 16 page 61 column illustrated pa per, free for 3 months. Inclose 10 cents to pay postage. Agents wanted. KENDALLI & CO., Bo ton, Mass. TRIFLING With a Cold is Always Dangerous. USE WELLS' Car bolice Tablefs,.. a sure igem d InQal' - oasens of e og Che 1, Mu~cous il naaA .-. .3.Ie PUT UP ONLY IN BLUE DOXES. Sold by all Druggistn. C. N. Cdr-i-nTiro,I$iith-Anutt$, i; Y. 200gc a'"*zt AoENTs WANTED q1J)200J O.Tn ' o'nr RjilEE oREAT $2 BooKs. The Story of Charley Ross, a full *accQpnt of this great mys tory written by his Father, beats Robin son Crusoe i $brilling :jntQrest, The Illustrated IIAND-nOOk 'to all RELIoIONS, a complete account of all denominations an1d sects. 300 Illustrations. Also the ladies' medical guide, by Dr. Pancoast 100 Illustrations. These hooks sell a sight. Male and ' feinale agents coin money on thet. Particulars free. Dopies by mail $2 uceh. JoHN E. POTTER & Co. Phi ladelphlia. A HOME AND FARM OF YOUR OWN, On the line of a great railroad with good markets both East West. Now is the Timea to Se'cure it. Mild Climate, Fertile Soil, bost Country for Stock Iaising in the United States. Books, Maps, full information, also, "THE PIONEER" Sent free to al parts of the world. Addrese. O . '. If""iw"E m 10, Land Con. U. P. It. ILt. OMAHA, NEB. the Lorgost and boat TAKE OE. W gallIng " tatlenerl Package fu Ste TAKEWorld. It contalue I shoots of ipor. 18 envelnpes. otioncli, pnhtoldr, gi.dn on ud dier~ of vi uable eawelry. Comnplete eu14po p A itor I egat lId platol alooro buttons nod la lahonailok~r )oS , and drops. p~ot paid, 25 cents.i poarkal,.-ew" a ss~ orts g J dry, al, bot'! no Ale,t I.etir larch froo to alltt a . BRIDE &r CO., 706 Broadway, N. V. TWELVE rtcloes In tine. Tl, I.l.OYI)4Q W1ATIONI. cao br orual as n Pencll .Penhoeldot g,id .h', Eriaaer.ntunlIb, IEtwelopno nior,l'ui ur~el toletubbur, Sewing MaobtflQ Tihrea utulClor. no.1 flr Ripping Roanse Cutting elI ilomia usuivEes, Mitttens. Erasing Blots. kt. Size ore coronunonlll. Is bontuiy malckol pluil. and w~tll leil a ltfotlio. Agents Bracomeinng moneyC aund say It Is the bolt uBolling Artk e out. hum ul'o 5 ceuts, Rix for $1 *Extra~rdilnary Indlucenos t,! gune. Bend for sailu liutl*,ogcn 14d cAnya uY Sewn. BRIDEW&Cp 760 r ay, N. Y. BRIIS&h AraOssR 1 CKAORI sid IS of the 1.1..1 COM1Nh A. ONI Nor yO &OLLAR6. SIX )V Det 709 Sroad ay, N. v. sept 3 LAI)D BROS. 1E have now ompleted one of the best sto9ks of DRY GOODS, BOOTS and SHOES, HATS and CAPS, YANKEE NOTIONS, CROCIGRY, &c. IN THE COUNTY. We will not be utnlersold. Let ns say, however, that our hs& Calicoes are 10 cents a, yar'd. "We cannot. soil them lower and have a uniform-.prgfIt en all Goods. GIVE US A CALL rTO GUR COLOIED FRIENDS As you hye always put poinfi-. denc4 in us, wo wilk.tte tat you may dlepend on getting goods at a regular eveni pri~ce. No.baits held out to'any one. navR .0. - . . CONG1ESS STREET E w G 0 0 D WINNSBORO, S. C. NEW GOODS AT' U. G.t DESPORDTES' - GAND BARGAINS IN DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, 'BOOTS AND SHOES, WINES, LIQUORS, Etc., Eta. fdab 3' Cofilor & Chaudler CALL ATTENTION TO their large and elegant assortment of GLASSWARE, lspoeially their Berry, Fruit and Preservo hlowls. -ALSO, To-their variety of LAMPA, which, for beautf and cheapness, excei. -ALSO, To theirlarge stock ofOROeKEIIY, which they offer at low prices, to clos ont their GOODS in this line. JUST RECEIVED, A..full stock of Plain and Fancy G ro eeries, which wvill be 50old at low a.t price for the Caish. ALSO, A fine steck of liquors, such as WHISKElY, .BRANDY, WINES in gre~at variety, ALE, BEER, eta., eto. The patronage of the publio is solici tod. fb B. ROSENIHEIM. fb10- f ' J. OLENDINiNG, Boot and Shioo Manufacturer, WINNSBORO, S. C. THLE undersignaed re .~..Jspetfully annoances to tho eltizens ofFairfield that he has removed his Boot and Shoe Manufactory to one door below Mr. O.Mullor's. I am prepared to manufacture -0l styles of work in a substantial and( orkmnanliko manner,; out of the very beet materials, and at prices fully as low as the same goodsI can be manufactured for at the North or elsewhere. I keep eonstantly on hand a good Stock of Sole and Upper Loeathor, Shoe Findings &o., wiceh will be dolal at xeasonable prces. Reairing prompt4 attended to. Terms striotl Qash, , rico Hfides bought. 'jet 12 J. OENDIING. IN E n li AVDiMA~Da O . IMPORTANT -TO ca- .aX ta E3 N' E3 R 9 --AND AGRICULTURISTS ! Emperor William Cabbage. rp E best, largest, hardiest and most 1 profitable variety of WINTER CADIAOE known in Europe, and imported to this country exclusively by the undersigned, whore, with little cultivation, it flour inhes astonishingly, attaining an enor mous size, and selling in the market at prices most gratifying to the producer. In trans)lanting, great caro should be used to give suffibient tapace for growth. Solid heads the size of thO mouth of i flour barrel, is the average run of this choice variety. On package of the seed sent post paid on receipt of 50 cents, and one 8 cent postage stamp. Three packages to one address $1 00 and two 3 cent stamps. Twelve packages sent on receipt of $3 00. p.t Read what a well known Garrett Co. Marylander says of the EMPEtiioVi Wu.. IIAM Ca bbalge: BLoOMINGTON, GaRRE;T CO., Md.. Jan. :2, 1877. Mn. JAMr.s CAMPBErL, 66 Fulton St. N. Y. Dear Sir: --1 bought soie seed from you last. spring, and it was good. Your Em peror Willitam Cabbage suits this climate well. On at mountain side the seed you sent mo prod ueed Cabbages weighing thirty pounds each. Very truly yours, JAMES BROWN. -0 f' I am Sole Agent in the U. S. for the famous Maidstone Onion Seed from Maidstone, Kent Co., England, pro ducing the most producing the most prolific and finest flavored Onions known and yielding oi suitable soils from 800 to 900 bushels per acre, sown in drills. Mr. Henry Colvin, a large nvrketgarden er at Syracuse, N. Y., writes, "Your English Onion Seed surprised me by its largo yield, antd the delicious flavor of the fruit. I could hrove sold any quantity ir. this imarket at good prices. My wife says sile will have no other onions for the table in future. Send mle as much as you can for the enclosed $5,00." One package of seed sent on receipt of 50 cents and one 3 cent postage stamp, three packages to one address $1 001' and two 3 cent stamps. Twelve packages sent on receipt of $3 00. My supply is limited. Parties desiring to secure either of the above rare seds, should not delay their orders All seed WAIRANTED FRESn AND TO GERMINATE. Cash must accompany all orders. For either of the above seeds, address JAMES CAMPBELL, mar 1-xtfm 66 Fulton St.., N. Y. THE BALL STILL ROLLS ON -AT TIlE GRAND CENTRAL Dry Goods"Establishment -OF Ic reery & Brother COLUMBIA, S. C. T HE Success attending the disposal of our MAONiIF.NT sTOt K, which we pu{1 upon the imarket early this season at suclh low figures, convinces us5 that the public applreciate our efforts to supply them with th e newest and most stylish goods. Buying as we do from the first hands and for OAain, enables uis to Oor SUPERlIOR INDUCEMENTS. We are now receiving a now and elegant stock of SPRING AND SUMMER BOO0TS, SHOES, which will be sold at the same low ruling popular p~rices. We expect to do a LXI PUspRNG BU8INEss, arnd bargains will be offeted daily. "A word to the wise :n sufficient." peSamples sent on ap)plicahtion and expressage paid on bills over $10. MeCREERIY& BRhOTHlER, Grand.Central Dry Goo ds Establishment. T. A. MeCREERY. BI. 1B. MeCmsEERY. B3. A. R.AwVLS, WM. HIOnKAN. fob 20 IL. 3. cCarley BEGS to call attcntion' to Is nton Stock of Bloots and Shoes, all siyzes and styles, at ulnprecodenatedly low prices, ALSO, Au entirely now. Stook of Groceries. Sugar of all gra'sdes, Coffee, Rico, Hlominy, Meal, Soap, htarch, Sod a,1Pepper, Toa,etc. Fine Sece 1rish Potatoes. Choidest BrandA of Flour. Best Corn and Rtye Whiskey in town. Tobacco and Cigars, Molasses, Lard, Bapon, H1ams, &c, Lowest market prices or cash. mar a . J. Mef'ARLEY. BLOWING IOT AND COLD. -0 110171 Tll1. C (ll'E7'-BilitiltiS ARE VI EIWED BY OLD F"IENPS. A few wholesome truths from inflential Radical Journals--Blaine still bowing the pregnant hinges of the knee to the political Baal. Now that the sceptre has for over passed away from Southern Radical ism, none are more severe in their denuncitions of carppt-bagislm and negro domination than those very journals which were howling negro philists ad foul-mouthed celumi niators of the Southern whites as long as such a course brought grist to their mill. Hero is what the Chicago Tribune has to say in corn menting upon Packard's recent defiant letter : "Mr. Packard mistakes the value of the services of the carpet bag governments to the Republican par ty. They have boon a disgrace and a reproach to the Republican party. They have been a burden under which the party has staggered for several years. It was the reproach that the Republican party was coercing the people of the South at the elections by the use of bayonets that caused the wide-spread do fu'tion of 1874 and 1876. It was the disgraceful character of the carpet- baggers and the reproach of 'bayonet rule' that cut off 30,000 of the Republican majority in Illinois in 1876, which rendered Wisconsin a doubtful State, reduced the ma - jority in Ohio to a handful, and lost to the party the electoral votes of Indiana, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York." .'he Now York Tribune, which was founded by Horace Greeley, and which for years has been the special chaimpion of abolitionisin and uni versal suffrage, now boldly abandons the cause of the down-trodden African,"and literally flays him alive. We quote from one of its recent editorials, giving a retrospect of Radical rule in the South : "The result is before the world. In one way or another, by fair moans or by foul, the control of several of the States has been secur ed to the colored race. They have occupied the bench and the jury box, made the laws, collected the revenue, voted the appropriations, handled the mnoney-dono every thing except pay the taxes. They have had ample op portunity to develop their own latent capacities, to get an educa tion, to make fortunes, to acquire land, to rise in society. What have they done of all these things? Our correspondent in Charleston drew a picture of the condition of the col ored people of South Carolina, and it is about the same in overy State where the negro has held sway. As a race they are idle, ignorant and vicious. They neither learI nor save. They were fond of their books in the first novelty of freedom but they care for them no longer. They were eager to get thleir little farms, but thley have let them fall to ruin. Why should a man go to schlool, asks the usual type of South Carolmna fr'eedmnen, whlen it is so much nicer to go to the Legislature or get elected Justice of the Peacei Why should a man work when he can make a living by stealing chick ens, and sit on the fence for amhuse mont? Let us face the truth. Our Southern policy has not only been a curse to the whites, but it -hs been a curse to the freed peop le for whose beopefit it, was adoped . 'It has not made them good citizens. It has not taught them how to use the ballot. It has introdnced among them a demoralization more dangerous to the country than -the violence of the white league, for no Regublican government can stand winch is not founded upon the suffrages of the virtuous and in telligent." Other Radical journals and politi cians have similar unlkind words for the carpet- baggcrs, while few apologists are found for them any whlcre3. Yet they are not totally bereft. Tile Malssachusetts Metho dists and Beast Butler and a few kindred .sphi~s still wal low in the inire. And last but not least, Jim Blaine, the bond thief avows himself their special chanw pion. He has penned the following characteristic epistle : "To the) Editor of the Neto York H~erald: : iYour Columbia correspondent is ierror In his statement that-I .had a confere wvith Governor Chand helain in New York. I have seon Governor Chamberlain but onco for a year, and that was in the private Cabinet room of President Hayes on the 27th of March; nor have I written or telegraphed him or heard from him in any way. Tho same is true respecting Governor Packard, except in the matter of one tologram received from him, which I road publicly in the United States Senate, but I am sure that Governor Chan berlain knows that he has the pros foundest sympathy in the heroic, though unsuccessful struggle ho has made in South Carolina for civil liberty and constitutional govern. ment-am equally suro that Gpver' nor Packard feels that my hbart and judgment are both With him in the contest he is waging against great odds for the governorship that -ho holds by a title as valid as that which justly and lawfully seated Rutherford, B. Hayes in the Presi dential Chair. I trust also that both' governors know that the Boston press no more represent the stalwart Republican feeling of New England in the pending issues than the same press did when it lomand el the enforcement of the fugitive slave law in 1851. Very respectfully, i AMES G. BLAINE. Augusta, Me., April 10. T he Radicals North and South, are a queer lot:, and it is a matter of rejoicing that their ;power is irre trievably lost. SOUTH CAROLINA NEWS. The town of Lancaster proposes to amend her. charter. Court sat in Spartanburg four weeks. It has just adjourned. The people of York have struck "hard pan" and gold is on a par with 'greenbacks. A Division of the Sons of Temper ance vas instituted in Aiken on Friday evening last. Some of the farmers of Aiken county have corn large enough to be ploughed the first time. All the poets, in and out of the State, are writing verses in honor of Wade Hampton. Nearly every negro on the streets of Charleston swears that ho voted for Hampton. Dead rattlesnakes are again as suming importance in the local columns of our oxchanges. The elk belonging to Howe's menagerie was pitched off the train last week by an elephant. It has been recovered unhurt. Ex-County Commissioner Joo Massey, colored, of York, has boon convicted in a trial justice's court of stealing shingles. A locomotive made out and out by the workmen of the S. C. R. R., in Charleston, is pronounced a por fect success. As Lexington failed to secure the location of the Lutheran College she' proposes to erect a first..class high school. The Abbevillo Press and Banner gives a swell description of the recent nuptials of Enigeno B. Gary and Miss Tustin of that place. Eleven hundred and fifteen tar payers in Laneaster, fifty ofs them colored, paid $2,527 to the Hampton Contribution. Fifteen negroes in Edgefiold county who refused to work on the road or pay the legal commutation, have been ti-ied 'and sent to jail. Chamberlain's lmate egristabulary are begging the wite pple to givA them werk. .Tlwy opg t to be~ pros vidod for at oney;-iy the postegn, tiary. Mr. Willis, a farmer residing ass Aiken, recently caught f~ur wild turkeys in a trap.' Thy ybro hit two dollars each in tho'town mar t, Chief JusticeWaite lhas appointoed little William Stone V. S. District Attorriey for"this Ste until mri ap, > ointment b6 nWhdo ' out and coh' irnmed by the Senate. The Ca4rolina Spartan and the Spartanburg, Iter'ad are having a lively contet over the~ o1~cial ad-. vertising of the county, The Democrats haveo been mak ing a clean swoop in the r'ecent municipal elections throughout the State carrying' eveni Ge*orgetown by .a handsome majority. John H. P1 kett, cofo~red, is ise" lug a solor'e mlif~arf~ compenyat Columbia, to be knpwn as the Hl mp to'n Light Infantry. A number' of colored men' havb alrpady enrolled their names.