The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1877-1900, November 27, 1877, Image 1
nu-wE EL rEDFmON.1 AV IN INo, S1.109S. C., IT Usu , 1v-u 27, 17.VOL .N.1
N EW A 1) VERT*' ,ISIe1ENTS.
B A TTV )ANO. OttOAN best..*ok!
B A l-TT.YWsartlig I wev I Orgatis, 12
siop ,i$51, P o ily .141 31. mcirc ars
freo. DA NIE.L F4. BE:.r'rY, \".1InI1g(l, N. J.
till Ri evolver.-;. Ill1sIated P'rlc
.! -A f.st rei..e,cmt l'e.'di11 Gupli'k
UIE W ELLS' Carbolic Tablets
For all ainasiois of :
2''1.* :.,t an d .A - - IL .
USHt NOXL BUT
WELLS' Carb)lic Tabl ts.
Sold by all Druggists.
C. N. Citurrr-ro%, 7 Si-dh Avonuo, N. Y.
pw"Y aMrve-41 for Agonts, Wesoi-nd
. i,. otw. now -Iop;lgo 1l11IMra'
. 1: 4- .14welry a lit %%;IIlvatI -
looz11, with 11t t I nlis llow to in1:Ike. lonon y.
Adhlro-.m, .11. CR ONl;t HU' & 11.. Phlilatlelphiail
l'e Ilisy lvailt, or .N"ihwaukee, W-kcontin.
Agronts Wantoa i .1rasalnpoa
Fo2 awaAdt'
Fo I, ~N~ i PICTORIAL
200 11lust ral ione,. '_3 T " A .. c *F
A direi,s for nbw eliul:tr.i, A. .1. IM.ilAN &
CO.. 1'.\ Aet Solee, 'i lade4lia.
f rv:s i. rison by '
an.o we:k 0 b. 11rh d:ie tlonHu tchl
stres,st r' n i pi 4 4. h."o e n reast. 111y1 jI~ S'l?44
n1ut'' .'a' I he44:'la4 eet' 'a41!4 * a nr4l11 touti ha ce
4h.,a a n14. 1)!"e II 44 i e ' hli ter4 I ' t ANi4V4lungs
.ti h 1 n . , pw e 1 1.4 t1a t Im ale 1,4) A Illyo ne.
E'X\TRsA T OP-' -"l IrZ' A,3;;1 AS! frn 1, lwc'tilso
WIWh * - -'.1 hV \.V l y W I-'* S It POvTI:Mt,
iol 'I, .:III -- !
J;ostwl,
- 64 ' r 11 1 n 'I , ie 4)' f w it
.") I I vo 1;l e l- . .. . .'I,iL ..iA N, 'lii Broad
441 r "* or. I t flow b) o . WVII_h
341'I *i.~' 0, ' :- " ' s w,4 1) 1.1 4'1 1,0 1 1 illill
phoo V:'1*41. ! :-'. , i '1 '1. h 1 t- ) 1r1r4w id to
Ill-'l ,t;rl. "hor' If IC -:i wh !'t*.h I l"1
II', or I 'i '- . 1 a Germ lin (ier|c. now
vli 1, .' hlin -,el !:r. WV. It I(r m l ., 110in;411-d
011 '1 .011. f i' . S. 1&,l awatl trial for
wg r ol1, 4.11wAin" L 1.W )04E
I-'()t P1AHTECUTLAt UN A.\ 1. ES3
COM PAN Y,
S: ' IrIa I, w. I y N v,rX-Vy:vl; ;IN
111 . N )II i"ilIs, L.t.; ue lin FranIcizcx
Iai . n.1
IL-ABT CURED.
A <'oe:.ia u;rlS r.
I. .: nda o' M p :0 A ti al h)II IQl frec.
l a .'. . - . .4...:: .4. 1.4La PortE , I1n;,1l la.
('Or*.jn * . d .,Irs. Dr. S. B. Cllins).
o-RLAND
INTER NATITONAL
E(could hi no") othrIA
pro(pr'iat(e hIe7ading to ilidicule~ 144
Ltrge Stock of DRY GOOD'XE
SHOES, UATS, &c. &c., thatw
are nowv daily receiving. 'We
tihought of Hcadquar'ter's, Emupo
rium and Bazaar. All too tamno.
Come One ! Come All!
We are dotermined not to be un
dersold by any house in South
Carolina.
The Best Prints in Town at 6i cts.
Th'le very best made at 8ft ets.
Coats' Cotton, all colors, at 75 cts.
We intend to try to please you in
prices, goods and polite attention.
CALL AND SEE.
-LZADD BROS.
oot 9
Augusta Advertisements,
1~) EXT Dry Goods IIouHO in the South.
) All express fit. paid where thr
order is $10.On. Writo a Postal for San
pies ai(d prien List.
V. U1HARIDS &- 11m.,
oct 27- August, Oa.
G. V. Defmf
-A D
UndertAking in till its Bnmlics.
147, 14-71 and 1491.) Broad St.
WALNLT . BURNAU SUITS.
Teln pieces, enclosed. Wash Stand, X 35
Marble top,enclosed Wash St;ad,-1
it 6S 4
" " upwards, to1
DEUlP%IUS.
Imiation Walilnit anm Gtlass, $ 7 7.
Walmut and Gb1ss, . .
"5 "5 1.;.5
" tlu111 inarble anl gla.ss, P'
"9 Ill " ", C : 0
0
n pwairds to 1ji 0
BEADSTEADS.
No. 1 Pied, Q 2 24
2 "6 -, 71
3 " S)1 1 :De1, d . * feet, 6
ines biah, 3 71
4 " solid oa earv'd top, 5
Fell. 4; inc;it..,b, .4 (11
5 solid hed carvedl to),
801
I Wall. varved top. G fect
mia .sigh.s r 7 7i
2 "solio -i fol. evrmed top, 6
I'vet 6 inrihen hi-h o7,
3 ";)N olw adl. VA:-Ved top,7
fee hi.th11 7,
4 " o hem,carved top, 8
feetih, ,
G. V". DeGMZA AF,
nov27- -1o - rd t.
. No charge for Idri t.yage r i.a hkinII
Columbia Businoss C.ards.
1-AD>4UARTjEJ,1s for cheapt-st. ir.)
ceries and Hardware in Col.nii
to bec found at the old reliaible house of
LORIlCK & LOWRANCE.
1X'8,, Portraits, Photographs, Str
. stoS-VO , ) . All obil t urt1
-vsiulc cl i u;. - e f te ii.
c .ie . r i aler U ildinlg, 14.M.ail
Ciu111, Co Ithilk, S-. (I iiur r
co-lill-ivid to call and examinle.
{~'11lA R IA."SL A,frmryofCu
C hals mloved to Coumia,t ;''optnt
a large stoci, of Dry Go.1s nd Notions
Boots, -Shoe, Tulnks and Valise. atis
faStion guaranteed.
'1)C"C'LING'S GALLER11Y-Opposi f
(I' w th Wh olr Iltount:e. P o rtra it S
P"tographis. Amhlotyps wnd Fcrrot p:
fidi lled i tos elivtyleof theil1t
ol prate, l iomis .1 , Il - to -n
Sugrsh ChKees e and ~acRos
e, Buckwheour FlorsM. l
Mlsyrus,. oass oa
Soap, Stach,Baging3~
S:.v,;a Bodoit phivA.-.m. "*11:1.i no v(s,ull w;n :
blu .lI lti:iA..O. Il'i-:s'vlrfof 1:kal mI MlY -; t
fill 4.1liv . -1 , ; I0 al l IV.h r':nI. 1 i it l- ,
vi,itt-fl 2 h 1 . Lot 1k; tory%a , Ii o v I m ..
11 s g , kilill Ilv-it . 11 ), I p-i-;lA iroak h:tri;,
ror-,s :tnl ho. hle, v:'"11 of whIv!I ks h11:hty 1.:,(u
it\,v . ali th-\ V o;ll .:p-v l il ilk -;Iiun at Ilianly
as to prudilve astn.its lis."
VEGETI ~NE
Is the great BloodI Pu liter.
Will cure tihe% wor.4t ca.Cs ' of I-croftila.
1N revomjimenedl<lb ph:2Ilns atl niaot hecarles.
11as effiIet. iti c marvellou-i viure,hI. n cas.;e of
Cures the Worst cases of C:anker,
NIPM 11th wonl)cful stev; tin lereurdal
w2': rV' 41 T1 F."2 11'f1
will or i et
- '2 221'l1-h '1fac .
- t- .p Ilhowel!4.
\VIll e ' 2
VnG a
I"CIloves tile calso of D>ZZItl-.s.
eieve F2:ivtill'ss of thle on,h
VE( ETE
CUreS Pa1i Il Ithe back.
'Effeetti' 1tIMs Kind IIVY ('1111)[l t.
- Is effeetive Inl It.jecit! of fvem.11I weknss
Is till' gre11a r'emedy t,r goneral debilty.
Is -1: .0 u e rl. -i o parpleo
In the m Qkld.
-~ I
-PREPARE'D BY
whr a h w m -
J. D McC IU..
2 vlei t et t ' W1'2' . 0.12 . 2t11 ';fht2 n 221
ft jh). Ov-iI.. - f- l'. m21l21i. ('I is; t i ~ .'
- ltJ I) 1 ( , U. U s01W(6
P:th!2. 2 b. , 1'ne N.izC.
011 p 2~ . 1 --I .1. I.t -ItO iJ1'iI rto'
>uroI1 N. C. A;oi - ' 1Lnt!, oh i(20 Stone
N. (I. $Sweet M'i14b 'oru~ Whistkey, My
Cabinet RIyu--the best whliskcey in town,
-and a full sttock ol'alil other good Liquors.
;Also, the celebrated Indian Pale Ale,
frs Lgrrand sweot panrling Cider on
draghtlTe largesit andi bes t socod
stock of Havana Cigars and CI garettes in
IIt,own, Blackwvell'ai gonninQ.Smuoking To
bacco, Messina Oranges And Lemnons fai
le low for cash by .
JoFn9 12 F, W HABEMOBT,
TlE fUTURE OF PARTIES.
----o
NO SIGNS O A BREiAK IX
A NI' o; ii 1OTHRKSTA TE.
Fympnthy vIth tho Soutoh Carolina
o;;uies Prot.y much Wastod--Tho
Stato MusL Bolong to the Thioves or
tio Democrats--Saft) to Label the
L.ato Slavo S.utcs "Domocratic."
Cne-r.oon1,Novombor 1--I
soc it) indientions of a break-up in
p:-u t ics Smuth, with tho exception
thA Ihe Replilicall party is prel.
mcll b!-(kvin up and played out. .in
Geor,(gia it is formally (isbanded.
1kmi.C inl "Miss:s-ippli. In South
C.rol most of the leaders have
boeen rin (Ar or a1re lodged in the
poli,ten11iary, whe, e jorc of theld
belong thanu will over g0t there.
Right here let m11 say that, sympa
thy for the South Carolina Roipubli
can leaders is pretty much wasted.
They were rascals anid plunderers
froi top to bottom, vith now and
then an exception that made the
surrounding darkness only more
dark. That fellow Patterson has
no bisi)ess in tho Smuate, and
should be kicked out, no matter if
his vote is necessary to Republican
sul)rem1acy, as I believe it is. -e0
bought his place, buying the pur
chasable darkeys in the Logislature
aS the slave-drivers did in the old
time, only under Patterson's die
pensation the darkeys got tho
money themselves. Don't sympa
thize with the "persecuted South
Carolina Republicans" more than
you would with an ordinary gang
of convicts, or mourn that tho so
ealled DemocraLs aro in power
there. That State must belong
either to the tiieves or the Demo
crats ; thcre is no half-way ground
and it is better to let the Democrats
have it. Wo can ahnost cry out,
"Anything, Lord, but what has
for the past ten years."
in Al-bama there is no Republi
eaa party to speak of. There is
Spencer in the Senate, but he soon
goes out and wvon't go in again, and
Willrd Warner ulnIn1ing an iron
ful imee, tand ex Governor Parsons
aHvndilg courts, and Sam. Rice
l'ttiln on the fence, and ex-dov
e1or1 LcNwis down on the other
side, ain,k t halt is all there is of the
Republican party in Al'balma..
In FoP[ida thure is a sigh of life,
growmg out of a collection of
Northern consumptives ad nativo
negroes, but they cannot carry the
State. In Texas the Republican
party is so roduced that a short
s,ring of omnibuses, oderately
lodud, (nIl caury it all ont of the
St., nid they b Iu haq ItS well
4nbar. -r the o(mibulses so far' as
f11u-e suin nmey is ecrned. in
-'If: Ii Ih par1y i so de:ad that
i t : i 'I Tr.l ed11ll a inon te
he d the eam 4y appear~ edh
1,1 (. VI idii hwI- C meai O s har1 -01
paH 'ii pa.ti that pefhLtom
Ta lse ha l i,j 1:0 t.l iI sis d of(
and i'i sh1:l a 1.:iurno Die.m.it ot
*Pen:dc anwn'g foin again.y tnd
thiy tcoinpd. tht insr of qeton
'i teub party in nteha quatr
Tneso 'only ut" theri ainy ofe
Suotial Reubtantie. buisetinly
r ead of Theuck es willenormain
her n.:ereingf aome tom by1U ma
jorgees rangring afrom thity Stto
Buevener thousand Ith condiuetion
i ate aorbto nRennesseias nrot,
ifr "gitoe up" thnin the oatye
Suthorn Si ot igts o rtainly
aboutdall Ktaty the tDumocrte
retrogring a t plagou as
nary al maoite asinthat State.
Yet ite ior wor sstanhly eniaions
ji m oranbleo. blcngrwh
if anywhoo, wofd ath pary
makig norealprogess.If w sa
the futuro of parties and the like,
a good deal of which is now going
On in the press, it is well to bundlo
all the late slavo States in a parcel
and label them "Domoeratic." At
present certainly there is little
room for speilation herv and loss
room for hope. There aro no signs
of a "break" inl the Democratic party
in aIIy Southern StatO 1dd'ICiQIIt. to
give that Stato to [ill opposition
party. In 1880 you will see the
Solid South in volid oray for the
Nationd Dumocratic nominee, who
ever ho mIny be. With this and a
conple of larger Northern St-rtes
New York and Indi'ma, fur instanco
-they have the Cloction. Inl the
face of sueii enculralgcNeent as this,
it is useless to look for the Solid
South to bo otherwise than solid.
A BlLUI-|E' MS DY.
A very sweet story of lovo coines
from- CiliiIAi, whelco very few
mwe ehigsor vomlo, and probat
bly We' lever shontlIi, havo had this
chCIanting talo hdd not the hero
and the heroine been imported for
the occasion from Kentucky, a State
which is abandoned to tho raising
of heroesi and Deinocratic majorities
Illi heroinsilIS and superior whiskey.
Professor Pio has taught school
across the river from Cincinnati for
many Ilyars, and devoted his even
ings and Saturdays and Sundays,
and much other time, to Ituldah,
who was a school-marm, and this
pleasatut thing VeI. on v il the
professor was lifty and Iildah was
forty-five. After to or elevon
yeIrs, Huldah's folks, beginning to
think they were going to altogether
too nuch exponso for fire-wood
and coal oil and extra dinners fo
the professor, and feeling tha
there never would bo any wedding
after all, began to toll naughty
storiies about the professor. This
made Hfuldali cry and love him the
more, and the strategy failing he
wis forbiddon the house. Then ho
climbed, in the parlor windows, and
the boys pounded him with fonco
boards as ho went through. And
thon they fired blank eartridgos at
him in the still darkness of the
night, and finally loaded their guns
with beans and afterward with
bird-shot. The professor endured
this excitidg exciting amusement a
few weeks and then ho got mad,
stole Huldah out of the house, ran
away with her to Cincinnati and
they were married 1 Young Kon
tucky strategy had suceceded with
the invaluable aid of fence-boards
and shotguns in bringing a pro
longed and weary courtship to a
happy termination. The professor
was forg.iven and invited back with
his brido. The aft'air wss a little
novel and sensattional, oven for
Kentucky, but in spito of its pro
nounced [iuccoss it would hardly be
desirable perhaps for every lady
wiLh a hesitating lover to start. a
lot of untamed nophews on the
warpath with shotguns and fence
boards.
A LuxuitmouSiPAIsIAN EsTA .lt
ME:NT. -A in sense of lo luxury
that at prcesent prevails in the fur~.
nishinig of expen!fsiv(o l'aiis houses
maly be ga'inedl fromi the description
of a few r'ooms inl the mnsion in,.
habiit.edI by at newl~'y miarriedl M~ u
qis. 1 10 bed )('-room)1 is driapod in
roh'')cld veivet'of th' o mii'a con
IyV and exqu:i..o tex uro, and( tlhe
w lh the same nateial ; the~ dra
perrics9 are r'eliuved by execeedingly
fino silver ehisolinig ; the pauocls,
which aro' do('rat.ed in tho loveliest
mannIiier, are also dhividedt by silver
lines ; the inn.er31 bedl curtinis are of
Venet.:an p'o it haco, and(1 t,hie ou(ier
on flt Ii roe,-eo ored satin, wVi th Lt
armriail bearings~ in sil ver. In an
anIgle 0f this charinig boudLolir thero
is; a small relinary, anid a golden
bLop conlst-mntly burning boe>re it,
1tu:eian fashion. Another room,.
a kind1 of p)rivate p)arlor, near' by, is
hung wvith white pouli des soie ; and
here also are floods of expensive
lace. The wvholo must have cost the
income for a year of 5,000 Paris.
wvor kmen.
Swearing on the Bible was first
introduced into the" judcial pro.
ceedlings by the Saxons abmout A. D,.
6i00. It w.is called a corporeal oath
because the witness, with his hanod,
touched some part of the Holy
Scripture. There have boon great
improvements in swearing within
the last 1276 years.
Agassiz says that in certain Ama-,
zonian tribes, on the day of his mar
riage, while the wedding festivities
are going on, the bridegroom's hands
are ied up ini a paper 'bag with
fire-ants. If ho bears this torture
smilingly and unmoved he is con
'sidend4 lit for the trials of matri
pony,