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{1 , -1 TR-WEEKLY LDITIONJ} WINNSBORO. S. C., THURSDAY API1L 2v 1878 {VOL 2.3 NEW Ai)VEiT'ISE IEN'S. AIP TANO Itetail price $00 only $200. . l r Ogns )rice $375 only $105. 'aper free. D. F. EA I"l'Y, Wash ington, N. J REVOLVERf? sh 'ttl ve titl box Cartri. Addrecss, -J. BRtOWN t SON Ititl and 138, Wood St., Pilttsburg, Pelnnsylvanlia. TW A N[;IT11,hest, honors at alt ORGANS World'a Fxhlbltons. La test Catalogues and Circulars, with new styles EItE)UCID I'1IC'ES, and much information, sent, free. MASON & IIAILI,iN Organ CO3I 1'ANY, Boston, New York or Chicago. FOR A CASE OF CATARRH $50 That SANDFORID'S RADICAL CUlRE for Catarrh will not instantly relieve aind speedily cure. lReference, Henry Wells, Esq., Wells, Fargo & Co., Au rora, N. Y.; Win. Iiowen, St. Louis. $5''sTstimonials and treatise by mail. P 0 'rlce, with lnIproved inhaler,$1. Sold everywhere. VEEIS & POTTER, Proprietors, Boston, AIass. PIANOS AND ORGANS At Factory Prices. Orcat leductIon to close out present stock of 5111) New and Second-hand lnstruments of five first-class makers. fully wairranted and at PitCES I hat, .E0y CO\iIPE TI'I' ION fort his class of i nst ruments A(; ENTS WANTEl) for WAT''Elti' Superier 1iEli. OR G.\NS and I')ANOS. Illustrated Catalotrues matied. I101{1ACE '.\''EIS & SONS, Ma,lfac turers alid )ealers, .140 East 14th Streel. New York. Also tileral Agents for SIIONINOERS Celebrated 'reminlum Organs. i There aro a Be are ifraudulent tions of bENSON'S Capeine P'rus Plaster In Ie tatket.. Some of Ilcuc e oltn dangerous mint'ral poisons. Each genuiln Benson's Cap citne Plaster has the word Capeint cut through it.. ''ake no of hei . BENSON'S Caplin( 'orous Plaster was In Veitcd to ovi erou I he slow net Ion of (ie or dinery porus i11:1-ti-r. and to afford qttick reliet from1 pain. Price, 25 CniI s. s Goulds Manufacturing Co. Manuf se of Al Force ai Lift PUMPS roads, eamboatas. wtindn(flle etc FIRE FN INES, H draulio Rams, AnAL.(4Ait[BEI.ifs For Churchi's Schools, and Plantations. Corn-Shellers Sinks etc. Pumaps and Miatorials for Drivon .olls a specialty. alslfacetion ,z:aranted n mn applivntin INQU R n OUL,D3N CMS WAREBOUSE, lb)An P.cE, wkNEW Y0K r. april 2-4w FOR THE CAMPAIGN! HAMPTON AND HOME RULE ! The NeWs and Coudr.'r A LIVE AND FEARLESS DEMOCRATIC NE WSPAPER. Largest Circulation in the City. Largest Circulation in the State. Largest Circulation in the Cotton States. ALL TilE NEW. ABOUT SO'TIT CAROLINA. ALL TilE NEWS A1OUT I'llE SOti'il ALL TilE NEWS FROM EVERYWiI'ERiE. Pureo anid Undeflled Democracy I UNION1 JUSTICE ! EQ UAL 1IGH1TS ! Itecognizing the paramount interest felt in the approaching political canvass by every DJemocrat, who hopes to see the great wvork of the Redempt,Ion of the Stato made complete and permanent. so t,hat the pole may rea p andi fully enjoy the frill of t.heir sacrIices, T HE NE WS AND COURIER will direct all its energies and resources to pro aenting from (lay to day, and from waek to weok, full and interesting accounts of the pr1ogress of the CA MPAIGN. IT- To place the paper it.hn the reach of eVerybody during this exciting contest. we have (leernined to offer to Mall Subscribers Beduced 1Rates for the Campaign : TIlE NEWS AND COURIElR, Daidly Edit.ion, 6 mfonths.- -.-............ $ 00 THIE NEWS AND COUIER,It Ti-.M eckly Edition, S months................. 200 TIHE WEEK LY NEtW8,6 mont,hs..........75 Subscriptions wIll be0 received at those rates, FOR MtAhIL,SUJISCItIIHERS ONLY, until May r'de In all cases the cash must accompany the Friends of the caulse of honest home rule in all the counties are invited to aid us in swelling our Campaigni Suibscript ion List, whtIh ought to include every intelligent voter in the Stato. R IOI RDAN & D A WSON, Pro prctors, March 804tf CHIA R LESTON, S. C. '3. C1mnining, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER, WINNSBORlO, 8. C. LYON'S Patent Metallie STIF?EiNERS PREVENT loots and Shoes 7irom 1Running over, and Ripping In the marh 20 Columbia Business Cards. H EADQUARTERS for eheapest Gro ceries and Hardware in Columbia to be found at the old reliable house of LOtICK & LOWRANCE. T IX'S, Portraits, Photographs, Stere 11. oscopes, &e. All old pictures copied. Art Gallery Building, 124A Main Street. Columbia, S. C. Visitors are cordially invited to call and examine. IIARLES ELIAS,formerly of Camden, has moved to Columbia, an I opened a large stock, of Dry Goods and Notions, Boots, Shoes, Trunks and Valises. Satis faction guaranteed. R3 ECKLING'S GALLERY--Opposite the Wheeler Houe. Portraits, Photographs, AmLrotypes and Ferrotypes finished in the latest style of the art Old pictures copied and enlarged to any size. W. A. REKLING, Proprietor. D IERCKS & DAVIS, importers and dealers in Watches, Clocks,Jewel ry, Silver and Plated Ware, House Ft.rnis h ing Goods, &c. N. B. -Watches and jew elry repaired. Columbia, S. C. oct 27-3' THE CHIARLESTON .Oiullil a . O1nmerc.q THE DEMOCRATIC DAILY NEWSPAPER I- !. tN CHARLESTON. Official o iral o' the city. CHEAPEST IDAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISH D IN THE SOUTH ATLANTIC STATES. ONE YEAR, by Mail.......... $8. SIX MoNTs....................4. TRI-WEEKLY, per Annum ........ $4. -CIRCULATES IN North and South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama. -0 PUBLISHED BY THE Charleston Publishing Company. -o A Democratic paper owned by the peo ple and published in their interest. -0 The latest news by mail and telegraph from-u all quar ters of the Globe. SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE. -t March 16-tf SPRING HAS COME, -A ND New Style Goods -HAVE--. TUST ARRIVED, including, all tae e novelties of the season, at the Winns boro Dry Goods, Fancy Goods and Millinery Bazaar. MRS. BIOAG wishes to return her sin cere thanks to her friends and the p)ublic generally for the past patronage, solici ting a continuance of the same. She will endeavor as heretofore and is determined to please the most fastidious. Millinery and Fancy Goods Stock is complete, French Pattern Hats, trimmed and unt.rimmed,Straw Hats and Bonnets, Sun Hats and Sailors, liibbons, Silks, Laees, Flowers, Feathers, Illusions, Neck Tics, Rtufiling, Linen and Lace Setta, Hand kerchiefs, Corsets, Gloves, Buttons, &c., &c. ----- Second lot of Spring Calicoes, also a nicQ lot of Dress Goods, Mohairs, Alpaeas, Japanese Silks, Wash P'opuns, andl other nice Materials and Trrimlminlgs. Call and see, Ladies,for your selves. A large lot of Men's, Ladio.s' and Children's Shoes, Gents' rnd Boys' Fur and Strawv Hats, fine and coursie. --0 A choice lot of Family Groceries, Can dies, Cakes, Mlackerel, Tobacco. Cigars, Kerosene Oil, HIardwvare, Wo od enware, T1'inware, Crockery, &c. A quantity of Lum.ber for sale low for cash. march 80 J. 0. BOAG. I PENCILS. - A lot of good soft Cedar Pencils, for - sale at the Drug Store, at 26 conta' per dozeln or two for fIve cents. -ALSO GANTZ'S sea-Foam Yeast Powders,at 35 centa per box, or three boxes for $1.00. I have for sale, Ye'st Powder of my own, atG0 cents per lb, or 5 cents per ounce by the single onnce. march 9 W. E. AIkPEN . VEGETINE. FOR CHILLS, SHAKES, FEVER AND AGUE. Du. 11. R. STEVENS: ' ARBORO, N. C., 1878. Dear Sir :-I feel very 'grateful for what your valuable medicinc, Vcgetinu, has done In my family. I wish to express my thanks by In forming you of the wonderful cure of Imy son - also, to let you know that Vegetine is the best, medicine I ever saw for Chills, Shakes, Fever and Ague. My son was sick with measles in 1b73, which left him with hip-Joint disease. My son suffered a great deal of pain, all of the time ; the pain was so great that he did noth ing but, cry. The doctors did not help him a part,cle, he could not lift his foot from the floor, he could not move without crutches. I read your advertisement in the Louisylle Courier-Journal, that Vegetino was a great Blood Puriller and Blood Food. I tried one bottle which was a great beneilt. lH kept on with the medicine, gradually gaining. lie has taken eighteen bottles in all, and he i completely restored to he11th, walks without crutches or cane- ie Is twenty years of age. I have ayounger son, lifteen years of age who is subject, to Chills. Whenccr ho feels one coming on, he comes In, takes a dose of Vege tine leaves no bad effect upon the system like Inost of the medicines recommended for Chills. 1 cheerfully recomnend Vegeline for such comlplaints. I think it Is the greatest medicine in the world. liespectfully, Mits. J. W. LLOY). VEGITINE.-Whcn the blood becomes life less and stagnant, either from chamige of weather or of climate, want, of exercise. Irregu lar diet., or from any other cause, the Voget inn will renew the blood, carry off the putrid humors, cleanse the stomach, regulate the bowels, md impart a tone of vigor to the whole body. Vegotine FOl DYSPEPSIA, NERVOUSNESS, And General )ebility. BEI{NARDSTON, MASS., 187S. We, the undersigned, having used Vegetine, take pleasure in recommending it to all those troubled with Humors cf any kind, Dvspepsia, Nervousness, or General Debility, it being the Great Blood Puriiler. Sold by It. L.. Crowell & Sons, who sell more of it than all other patent patent medicine put together. MhS. L. F. PERKINS, MitS. 11 . W.SCOTT JOSEP'iIIJS SLAT1'1. VEGETINE is the great health restorer composed exclusively of barks, roots and herbs It is very pleasant to take ; every child likes it. Vegetiae FOR NERVOUS HEADACHE And liheuniatisn. CINCINNATI, 0., Aprilo, I877. II. R. STEVRNS, Esq.: Dear Sir--I have used your Vegetino for Ner vous lleadache, and also for itheumatsm, and have found entire relief from both, and take great pleasure in recommunedltng it to all whc may be likewise aillieted. FIlED. A. GOOD, 10S Mill St., Cincinnati. VEGETINE has restored thousands to healti who had been long and painful sufferers. Vegetine. DRUGGISTS' TESTIMONY. MR. II. R. STRvsss : Dear Sir-We have been sellihg your remedy, the Vegetilne, for about three years, and take pleasure in recommending it to our customers and in no Instance where a blool purtiler would reach the case, has it ever failed t.o effect a cure, to our knowledge. It certainly is the ane plus ultra of renovators. Respectfully, E. M. 811EPIIERD & CO., Druggists, Mount Vernon, Illinois. Is acknowledged by all classes of people tc be the very best and most rcliable blood puri fier in the world. VEGETINE -PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, BOSTON, MASS. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. april 2-4w A NATIONAL STANDARD. Webster's Unabridged. 8000 Engravings. 1840 Pages Quarto. 10,000 Words Fand Meanings not in othei Four' Pages Colored Plates. A Whlole Library in ItseUf. Invaluable in any Famni ly. A.nd in any School, Published by G. & C. MERRIAM, Sprlngfiel-l Massachusetta. -WARI INDORBSED BY-~ hlanerof., P'rescott1 Motley, George I. Marsh, Fit z-Greene Hlallock, John (1. Whtitt,ier, N. P. Willis John 0. SJaxo Elthuw Burrlit, Daniel WVebster, Ruf us Choato, HI. Corleridgo, Smart, llorace Mann, More than fifty College P'residents. And thebest American and European Scholars. Contains one-iifth more n,atter than any other, the smaller type giving much more OR a Paltains 900 Illustrations, nearly three t,imes as many as any other Dictionary. [(1W* LOOK at the three pictures of a ItHlIP, on page 1751.-these alone llustrate the mean ing oflmore than 100 words and terms far better than they can be defined in words.] More than 50,000 coplos have been placed in the public schools of the United States. Recomnmendedl by si State Superintendento Schools, and more than 50 Cellege Presidents. Ifas about 10,000 words and meanings not iln other Dict,ionaries. Embodies about 100 years of literary labor. is several years later than and ether large Dic tionary. The sale of Webster's Dictionaries 1s to timei as great as the sale of any other series of Die "August4, l877. The Dictionary used in the Government~ Printing .ffice is Webster's Un abridged." Isittiotrightly claimed that WebstOr is T H NA IrOAL t'ANDA1AD. TRACKING THE TEN TRIBES. TE CIrTn.tlN OF ISRAEL SET TLING IJ FT ELAN). Identity of St. Patrick and the Prophet Jeremiah-" Victoria a Descondent of the House of David- The Milonium. [Prom the Xeic York World.] Rev. Dr. Joseph Wild, pastor of tho Elm Place Congregational Church of Brooklyn, has been preaching sermons Sunday nights for several weeks past to show that the war just over in Europe and the war to come, in which England is to trounce Russia and drive the Turk into Asia, are the working out of Old Testament prophecies, and that the end is to be the finding of the Ark of the Covenant and the lost standards which were hidden by Jeremiah, and the triumph and glory of the children of Israel, God's chosen people. Dr. Wild has the reputation of being a scholar and declares that ho has spent fifteen years in studying Hebrew, Greek and Irish history bearing upon this matter. His church Sun day night was crowded with listen, ers, who applauded loudly upon occasion, after the manner of Mr. Talmage's congregation. The preacher, in regard of personal appearance and occasionally of man nor, resembles, not to say it dis respectfully, a camp- meeting orator of the most approved cut. He wear his hair long and sleekly brushed, and an inordinate and not very pleasant-looking beard he neath a shaven upper lip. His audience giggled right out last night when he declared that St. Patrick was the prophet Je. :miah, and harder still when he turned on the light and cried : "Jeremiah, the saint of the Patriarchs, sainted Patriarch-St. Patrick ! What do you think of that ?" The preacher took his text from Isaiah xli., 4 and 5 : "Who hath wrought and done it, calling the generations from the beginning ? I, the Lord, the first, and with the last ; I am he. The isles saw it, and feared ; the ends of the earth were afraid, drew near, and came." "The true key to the Bible, four fifths of which speaks of Israel, and to history past, present and future," said the lecturer, "is found when we learn that Israel is to be transplant ed, to be a company of nations no more to move, but that in the reset tlement of Palestine the children of Israel are to be there only by repre sentatives. 'I will take you one of a city and two of a family and I will bring you to Zion' is written in Jeremiah iii., 14. The Jews were never to be planted excepting in Palestine. Jeremiah says further : 'WVho are! these that fly as a cloud and as doves to their windows ? SurelyI the isles shall wait for me and the ships of Tarshish first.' Again to thme island lhe will repay recompense; so that they fear the name of the Lord from the 3Vest.' " To prove that the isles of the \Vest referred to are Ireland and the adjacent island, the lecturer gave a history of its sot tloment, gathered from the most trustworthy sources that he could command. "I.t was originally known as Seuito's Land,theo Island of Wan d erers, Scotia Maj or, Scotland being known as Scotia Minor. England was known to the wvritors of Palestine as Tarshish, Dannoii (the children of Dan) and Barac Anac. In the Hebrew, Ireland was known as Yar in Emron, the Land in the West or Setiing Sun. Hibornia is a Hebrew word only slightly modified. Irish tradition points to the conclusion and twenty-three historians accept as a fact that' there wore two settlements of Ire~ land-first, by thme Phonnicians, and second. b'y Tuath do Dannan or the children of Dan. Pinnock formu lates these legends into a catechism. "He says : 'The Irish have over been singularly zealous in asserting their Scythian origin, and describe the adventures of their ancestors from the neighborhood of the Cas pian Sea to Egypt; thence to Spain, whence they proceeded to Ireland. WVe fin d circumstantial accounts o some earlier colonies, called Fomo rians, Nomedians, Tuath do Dan nan and Firbolgs, with one of which came the mnyster ious ston~e now under ihe coronation chair in Westminister Abbey,-called Jacob's Pillar or Pillow in English, Irish and Scotoh histories. Thbese col# rafas. however' were all the Janhe.. tian families. excepti" g the Fomo rians, who describe themselves as being descended from Shom, and as having left Ireland rather than re side among the seed of Ham, which had been cursed by Noah. The author of "precursory proofs that the Israelites camo from Egypt into Ireland and that the Druids expected the Messiah" undertook to show that the Fomorians wore of a higher origin than even the Milosians. He assorts that some of the tribe of Joseph were separated from the Hebrew family at a very early period ; that they were the heirs of very singular blessings for the latter days, and that they were the Fomorians from Africa who made settlements in Ireland." "Students of this historical theory find its confirmation in many Scriptural texts in the Rabbinical writings, in coins, ancient monu inents and customs, as well asin the admitted similarity between the Irish and Hebrow languages. The feature last named is peculiarly marked and forcible. In fact it is a compound of the Hebrew and Phenician. General Vallancy found several thousand almost iden tical words in the two tongues. The Druid circles, which have been a source of so much mystery to antiquarians, the altar stones and cromlechs,all find ready explanation by the hypothesis that they were corruptions of the ancient Hebrew religious ceremonial. "The period of greatest prosperi. ty enjoyed by the early Irish settlers was during the reign of Ollan Todlah, 950 B. C. He instituted the Fes, a triennial parliament which was held at Teamor or Tarah. It was about this time the prophet Jeremiah fled from Palestine, taking with him Tephi, the King's daugh ter, the sced of David, and went to Ireland. He carried also the Ark of the Covenant and the tables of the law. He went to Tara, also called Lothar Croffin. Tephi he married to King Eiocaid. Tara was made the capital of the kingdom, and the daughter of the house of David was buried there. From her sprang Fergus, King of both Ireland and Scotland, and from him came Kenneth, the progenitor of the house of Stuart. Queen Victoria is a descendent of the Stuairts, and in her, according to Dr. Wild, is ful filled the prophecy, 'The seed of David shall not want a man upon the throne.' "At Tara also Jeremiah instituted a degreo in Masonry. He became the Grand Master of the order, and his new degree, it is said, was insti tuted for the purpose of keeping alive the knowledge of the hiding place of the Ark of the Covenant and the tables of the law, which he had buried under nine arches. This Masonic degree is the highest in the order, and no more than nine mem bers can belong to it." Scriptural prophecy for this Dr. Wild finds in Jeremiah iii., 16 : "And it shall come to pass when yo be multiplied and increased in the land in those days, saith the Lord, they shall say no more the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord ; neither shall it come to mind ; neither shall they remember it ; neither shall they visit it ; neith or shall that be done any more." Dr'. Wild said further that Jere miah wvas really the true Ste.Patrick, which name was a corruption of the Saint of the Patriarchs. All Irish, men admit that the reputed saint was a foreigner. The future of Ireland under the prophecies is to be grand, but only for Israel and the Canaantish proselytes. All else are to die or be scattered from the island. It is written of them: "For it shall come to pass in that day, saith the Lord of hosts, that I will break his yoke from off thy neck, and will burst thy bonds and strangers shall no more serve them selves of him ; but' they shall serve the Lord their God and David their king, whom I will raise up to them." (Jeremiah xxx., 8.) TRAGIC END OF AN ELOPEMENT. Fanny Maguire, a young white girl, eloped from Houston, Texas, with Walter Donning, a negro employed by her father. After a marriage ceremony, they went to live in a hut in the negro quarter of the city. The girl's conduct was amazing, because she was educated, pretty, and stood well socially. Denninig was arrested on the charge of carry.. ing concealed deadly weapo~ns, and while in jail was shot to death by . a mob. A man named James James lives in Texas, who is 104 years old, and who has drunk whiskey for eigt years. Notwithstavin~g hispo.. liar name ad his festi' ite was 'never. amloted with : I29 sos~.