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, -- F!-< TRI-WEEKLY EDITION.} WINNSBORO.S. C.. THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1878.' {VOL. 2. NO.39 NEW AI)VERT7'ISEMEN''S. ]RE1VOLVER7sho'Ielverwit 3ox Cartrkdgei. Addre'ss, J. BROWN & SON, 186 and 188, Wood St., PlIttsburg, Pennsylyania. 1 16) Soldiers and Wlrdows can now get (1AdPenstitns by writing to John Kirk pat"rick, Cambridge, Ohio. Magistrates wanted as agents. ORGDI A 'NST Highest honors at all tVJ1l L.. 17WorldI's Exhibitions. Lu test, Cataloguo:s and Circulars, wit.h new styles, IEDUCED) 1i ICES, and much information, sent, free. MASON & IIAMLIN Organ COM PANY, Boston, New York or Chicago. P1 A NO '"O R G A N with 11molop'llist, renewed. See lBeatty's latest Nowspaper for full reply sent, free. Before buying PIANO or ORGAN read my latest cir cular Bteatty's celebrated Planos and Organs boantlrul initrulmnt, 1 (hallenge comparison I Itivals are jea lous of my success I Most, success ful hou.ie in America I Commenetcd a few years ago without a dollar, sales now nearly $3, 000,00t anuially. Lowest prices ever given, elegant lIosewood Pianos $1t, lit stop Church Organs, $115. trentndotus bargains now ready. Wil AR AddressDAN F.lIEATT1Y, W A HWashingtun, New Jerse.y. DV Yi. FOR A CASE OF CATARRH That. SANDFOR D'S ARADICAL CUHt fo1" Catarrh will not instantly relIeve and speedily cure. leference, hlenry Wells, Eel, Wells, Fargo & Co., Au rora. N. Y.; Wn. B3wen, St. Louis. 50 Testimonials and treatise by mail. Price, with improved Ilnhaler.$l. Sold everywhere. WEEKS & POTTER, Proprietors, Boston. Mnss. PIANOS AND ORGANS At Factory Prices. Great teductIon to eloe out present stock of 501,1 New and Sea'ond-hia nd Instruments of live tiirst-cl:isi makers. fully warratted and at i'llt'I'S thatI. tEF'Y CO3 Pl, TI''ION for this class of Instrttnents AUE. 'I'S WANTE D for WA''Elte' su11 ie; BR.,L ilt UANS and PIANOS. i'lustratotl naJiloLtues mailed. IIOIACI: WA'iT118 & SONS, Manufac turers and 1)ealers. 40 Rust 1-111 St reet. New York. Also (ti' ual Age,ts for SiIONINGELtS Celebrated Preiluni Or gans. VE G:ET IN E. DOCTOR'S REPORT. Ii. 1. S'r -v s, E{Q.: Dear Sir-Wa have been selling your valuable Vegotine for t hree rears, anti we 11n, t.hat it gives perfect, satLtt0uation. Wc beltuve it, to be the be.St blnoI puri'ler niow sold. Very respecl fully, Di. J. E..tItOWtN & Co., )rugglsts, Uniontown, Ky. P1OItUS PIASTEl was invented to overcome tie gieat. objoction ever found to the old syle of porous pla.ers that. of slow action in brin.ing relief. ilons' n's C.a'acitne Porous Plaster relieves pain at once and cures quickly. It imparts a sensation of gentle and stimulating warmth, and brings rest and comfort to the siiferer. BENSON'S Porous Plaster received the highest and only medal awarded to piasters. Price. 25 cents. Each genuine BENSON'S Capeine Plaster has the word Capelne cut through the plaster. Take no other. may I-lw SPRING HAS COME, --AND Nwr Style Goods -HAVE TUST ARRIVED, including, all t,1o t. novelties of the season, at the Winns boro Dry Goods, Fancy Goods and Fl' illiinery Bazaar. MRIS. RIOAG wishes to return her sin core thankis 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 rnost fastidious. Millinery and Fancy Gooda Stock is complete, French Pattern Hats, trimmnedl an d untrim mod, ttraw~ 1In1t andi ionnets, Sun Hats and Sailors, I<ibbons, Silks, Laces, Flowers, Feathers, Ill usions, Necki Ties, Ruffling, Linen and Lace Setts, HIan d aerchieft, Corsets, Gloves, Butttons, .&c., &c. Secondi lot of Spring Onliicoo.q, also a nice lot of Dress Goods, Mohairs, Alpacas, Japanese Silks, Wash P'opains, and other nice Materials and Trimmings. Call and see, Lad ies, for your selves, A large lot of Alan's, Ladies' and Children's Shoes, Gents' rnd Bo1ys' Fur and Strawy Hats, fine and cour 40. ---0 A ohoice lot of Famuily Grocorins, Oan dies, C'akes, Ilackerel. 'Tobacco Cigars, Kerosone Oil, ha ,rd ware, lWood enware, ST inwaro, Croekory, &c. ------- A quantity of Lumber for sale low for cash. march 8(1 J. 0. BO0A G. MOUNT ZION INSTITUTE. URIG tecotirauaceof the rd Zion, students in the Ancient and Modern Langunges igher Mat.hcmatics and the Dciences will he received into the Institute upon the paymnent 0 $2.65 por soholasti onionth of our week n advance. R. liiEANS AI eb... xtf)Princp al, ESr4ti Q E ion the,out Columbia Businoe Cards. H EADQUAItTEIS for cheapest Gro ceries and Hardware in Columbia to be found at the old reliable house of LOIIOK & LOW1ANCE. TI IX'S, Portraits, Photographs, Store Li... oscopes, &c. All old pictures copied. Art Gallery Building, 1241 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. Visitors are cordially invited to call and examine. CIAtLES ELIAS,formerly of Camden, has moved to Columbia, an 1 opened a large stook, of Dry Goods and Notions, Boots, Shoes, Trunks and Valises. Satis I faction guaranteed. R.CKLING'S GALLERY--Opposito the Wheeler House. Portraits, Photographs, Ambrotypes and Ferrotypes finished in the latest style of the art Old pIctures copied and enlarged to any sizo. W. A. 1EOKLING, Proprietor. 1 TERCKS & DAVIS, importers and dealers in Watches, Cloeks,Jewelry, Silver and Plated Ware, House Frrnish ing Goods, &c. N. B. -Watches and jew elry repaired. Columbia, S. C. oct 27-y PIANOS & ORQANS At lanufacturers' Prices, EVERY MAN HIS OWN AGENT " oAcNrsTrAL LUDDEN & BATES, SAVANNAH[, GA., THE Great Wholesale Piano and Organ Dealers of the South, now sell In struments Irom all leading Makers direct to purchawers on the No Agents, No Commission Plan, at Manufacturer's Fac tory PIIICES, thereby giving purchasers the large commissions heretofore paid Agents. From $50 to $101) actually saved in the purchase of an Instrument under this new system. Write for particulars. We can't be undersold. Spaclal Offers THAT BEAT THE WORLD. 7 Oct. Pianos, $185. 4 Stop Organs, $55. 7.t Oct Pianos, 115. 6 Stop Organs, 60. Oct. Pianos, 160. 9 Stop Organs, (17. Gr'd Sq'o Pianos, 178. 12 Stop Organs,78 MASON & HIAMLIN ORGANS, 7 Stops, $100. 1 9 Stops, $108. Send North iad be Swindled. Not by reputable makers like Steinway, Chickering, Steck, Knabo, but by Bogus Manufacturers who advertise $900 Pianos for $2010; $650 Pianos for $175; $270 Or sans for $65. Deception and fraud are in all such absurd offers. Buy Instru ments made by old and always reliable manufacturors like Chickering & Sons, Knabe & Co., Hallet & Davis, Mathushek P'no.Co., Haines Bros., Mason & Hamlin. And you will have those that will last a lifetime and please you bettor every (lay. All Instruments we sell bear the makers nales and are guaranteed for six years. Fifteen Days Triad If desired. We pay all freight if not satisfactory. Illustrated Catalogues free. Write to LUDDEN & BATES, april1l2-Ozm Savannah, Ga. New Drocorios. IAM RECEIVING daily fresh Sugars, Coffees Green and Roast ed, Tea, Flour, Grist, Meal, Syrups, Molasses, Soda, Soap, Starch, Bagging and Ties, Bacon, Lard--in Bbls., Cans and Buckets Seed Oats, Rye and Barley, Nails, Trace Chains, Horse and Mule Shoes, Axle Greese, White Wino and Cider Vinegar. Fresh Cheese and Maccaroni received to-day. New Buckwheat Flour. Choice new crop New Orleans Mo1usses. New Mackerel in hits, j and j. barrels. *Al1 gooads delitered within VEGE TINE FOR DROPSY. CENTRAL FALLS, R. I., Oct. 19, 1877. D. II. It. STSViNS: It, is a pleasure to give my testimony for your valuable medicine. I was sick for a long Oimo with Drotsy, under the doctors care. lin said it was water between the Ileart and Liver. I received no benelit until I commenced taking the Vegetine; in fact I was growing worse. I have tried many remedies- they did not help me. VEGETrlNE is the medicine for Dropsy. I began to feel better after taking a few bottles. I have taken thirty bottles in all. I. am per fectly well. never felt better. No one can feel more thankful than I do. I am, dear sir, gratefully yours A. D. VAEEI,ER. VEOETIN.-Wien the blood becomes life. less and stagnant, either from change of woather or climate want of exorcise, irregular diet, or from any o,her cause, the Vcgetine will renew the blood, carry olf the putrid humors cleanse the stomach, regulate the bowels, and impart a tone of vigor to the whole body. Vegotine For Kidney Complaint and Nor vous Debility. ILESBORO, M1E., December 28, 1877. MA. II. It. STY:VKNS : Dear Sir-I hadi a cough, for eighteen years, when 1 Conmncetd taking the 'EGETIN[. I was very low, my system was debilitatedi by disease. I had the Kidney Comnpltaint, and was very ne rvous-cough bad, lungs sore. W'len I had taken one bottle I found it was helping me, it has helped my cough, and it streng thens me. 1 am now able to io my work. Never have founi anything like the Vegetine. I know it is everything it, Is recommended to be. MItS. A. J. PENDILETON. VE (1R'1'INE is nourishing and strengthening; puritics the blood. regulates tile bowels, quits the nervous system, acts directly upo t,he secret ions, and arouses the whole system to action. Vegatine FOR SICK HEADACHE. EVANSVILLE, IND., Jan. 1, 1818. MRt. STEVENS; Dear Sir-I hive used your Vegetine for Sick Ileadniee. and iaen greatly beneiitted thereby I have every reason to believe it to be a good. mnedicirre. Yours very respectfully. MItS JAMES CONNER, 411 Third Street. 1IEADACIIE-There are various causes for i ieadache, as derangement of the circulating system, of the digestive organs, of the nervous system, &c. VEUETINE can be sahi to be a sure remedy for the many kinds of headache as it, acts directly upoa L,he various causes of this complaint., Nervousness, Indigestion, Cos tiveness, ltheumatism, Neut algia, Billtousness, &c. Try the Vegotine. You will never regret, it. Vagctine. DOCTOR'S REPORT. Dn. CRAs. M. DUDDMNJIAUBEN, Apothecary. Evansville, Indl. 'I'hedoctor writes: I have a large number of good customers who take Vegetinb. They all speak well of it. I know It is a good medicino for the cornplaints for which it is recoin mended. December 27, 1877. VEGETINE is a groat panacea for our aged fathers and mothers ; for it, gives them strength, quiets their nerves, and gives them nature's bweet sleep. V8gotinc DOCTOR'S REPORT. II. R. Svvss9, Esq. : Dear Sir-We have been selling your valuable Vegetine for three years, and we find that it gives perfect satisfaction. We believe it to be the best blood puriler now sold. Very respectfully DR. J. E. B1RO\VN & CO., Druggists. Uniontown, Ky. VEOETINE has never failed to effect a cure, giving tone ani strength to the system debil tated by disease. VEGETINE -PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, BOSTON, MASS. Vegetiine is Sold by all Druggists. may 1-4w J. E. A&ger&Co. 137 and 139 Meeting Street, CHARLESTON, S. C., FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC IIA1TWARE, Cutlery, Guns, Sad diery, Bar Iron and Plow Steel, Cucum ber Pumps, FAIRBANKS' SCALES. Agenis for South Carolina for the Patent Steel Barb Fencing, and tihe celebrated Farmer'ij Friend Plows, one, two and three horse, at redlucjd prices. Liber'al Terms to the Trade. Large assortment of Agricultural Ims plehmonts. A gricultural Steels aspeialty. Bull Ton g.es, Turn Shiovele, Scooters, Sweeps, H- eel Bolts, also, rough steel Shapes, &e. State Agents Tredegar Horse and Mule Shoes. .,M' All orders shall receive prompt and careful attention. J. E' ADGER & CO,, 187 and 189 Meeting Street, dec 18- Charleston, 5. 0 Notice Final Discharge. NTOTIcEh is giVen to all ho,n it. may IN oneern that TRomas .lond, Ad ministrator of' the estate o- David G. Olda. Ad e4 itl apnly to tke A4ae L UCERNE. Editor Southern Cudtivator :-I send you by mail to-day samples from my lucerne lot, containing almost one acre, planted 25th Sept. 1877. Tho tallest is a fair sample of what I have not out yet, and the other a sample of what has been cut over. I began cutting 28th Febru, ary, and the last cutting shows its growth since the 28th February, and it has been unusually dry weather since then. I have fed two horses, one cow and six hogs almost exclusively on it since I begun cut ting it. I have cut over a little better than ono-half the lot, and the first part cut is now better than when I began cutting it. My stock oat it in preference to corn, and with great relish. I do my own draying with the horses, and they are in bettor condi tion than when I fed them entirely on corn and fodder, not they were not fed on corn and fodder before, for I have a splendid crib of yellow home- raised corn and a loft of fine fodder. The lot of Lucerne is a beautiful sight. Every planter or farmer slIould have at least one acre, and in my judgment it would pay him better in benefit to his stock than any acre in cotton on his plantation. D. R FLENNIKEN. Winnsboro, S. C., April 3d, 1878. The samples sent were very fine that taken from part not out since planted, was 24 inches in length - the other, from portion previously cut on the 28th February, was 18 inches long. The latter growth par ticularly deserves attention--18 inches in about one month, and only one light rain during that period. Ed. &. Cult. rNIQUITY OF CTAR ET PUNCH. WASHINGTON APRIL 27, 1878.-The Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes Temper ance Society at their meeting last night, discarded the name of the or ganization on the ground that al though she discountenanced wine at the Duke Alexis and other dinners at the Executive Mansion, she countenanced the use of claret punch at the dinner on board the excursion steamer on Delaware Bay during the recent Presidential trip. NIJNI Novoonon FAIR.-The great market of the eastern world has been held at thi3 junction of the Volga and Olga Rivers, in Russia, every summer for hundreds of years. Here the nations of Europe and Asia meet with their products for trade. Cossack, Chinese, Turk and Persian meet the German and the Greek with every variety of mer chandise. that mankind employs, from sapphires to grindstones, tea, opium, fur, food, tools and frabrics, and last but not least, medicines. J. C. AYER & Co.'s celebrated reme dies from America were displayed in an elegant bazaar where the Doctor himself might sometimes be seen. They are known and taken on the steppes of Asia as wvell as the prairie of the West, anid are an effectual antidote for the diseases that prevail in the yaourts of the North as well as the huts and cabins of the West ern con tinent.-Lincoln (Ill.) Times, may 2-1w Two CHEMICAL FXPEuIMENmTs.-The engineer of the Northwestern Rail road placed a glass of water on the seat of the Pullman palace car, the other day, and carried it right through from Chicago to Omaha without losing a drop. An Omaha editor then suggested that he try some more susceptible fluid, and so the engineer set a glass of whiskey mn the same place, but he hadn't got out of town on the return trip before he came in and noticed that every particle of the liquor was gone, and the bottom of the glass as dry as a chip ; while just opposite sat the newspaper man who had gone along to see fair play-gloating over his victory..-Ohicago .Journal. A REFLECTIoN ON THlE SEx.--ones was always complaining of his wife's memory. "She never can remember anything," said poor Jnes ; "it's awful 1" "Mine was just as bad," said Brown, "till I found out a capital recipe." "What is it 1" -said Jones eagerly. "Why," said Brown, "whenever 'there's anything particu-. lar I want the missus to.remerobei-, I write it down on a slip of pap4r and gm it on the looking glas8. See t" Jon ms is now a contbtdmn, Sufferint ill1 exhIbWis resej1e byde L'er a e .EIC-A-RAO. Brigham Young's widow is being gradually married off. Carl Rosa has steadily lost $2,-. 600 a week by his London opera season so far. M. Coggia, of Marseilles, dis-. covered another planet a few nights since. Gen. Joe E. Johnston dresses neatly, has a short gray beard and is slight and erect, The Courier-Tournal insults a necessary class of men by calling Ben Butler a hangman. Rev. Jasper, of Richmond, de'. clines to lecture, but he still asserts that "the sun do move." One good turn deserves another, but a shirt collar is only capable of two.- Wleelinq Leader. Elihu Burritt thinks the prayer "Now I lay me down to sleep" is older than the English language. Now that Beecher's usefulness is o'er, how would Simon Cameron do for pastor of Plymouth church ? Captain Eads thinks $1,717,000 will make the St. Johns River, Florida, all right if expended in jetties. The Washington Calpital thinks that George Washington would not have earned his salt as an insurance agent. The Washington Capital thinks that if General Sherman is not a fraud he should begin a libel suit against his face. A baby, thirteen months old, and weighing one hundred and three pounds, is on exhibition at St. Louis. He is called Samson. The Royal baby of Brazil was christened Luiz Maria Phillipe do Alcantara Gastao Miguel Raphael Gonzaga-and didn't cry. The Maharajah of Jheend, has lately had a car iage of solid silver built for him. The Akhoond of Swat preferred a golden chariot. Jennie June says a fashionable bonnet can be had for a dollar and a half. And so it can. It is the from six to twenty dollars' worth of trimming that strikes the pocket. book in a sore spot.-Norristown herald. Upon taking a broad. survey of the country, .the old-line Whigs adopted the following platform and adjourned: "Resolved, That we know we are dead and are glad of it." "What's your occupation, Bob 1" asked a visitor at the Capital of a bright boy whom he met in the corridor. The boy happened to be a page in the House. "I am running for Congress, sir," he replied. An editor's wife never goes through her husband's other trous ers pockets to strike a package of love letters. Editors are not like the wicked, unfaithful men of the wvorld-editors rarely have the other trousers.-askcill Recorder. The other day, up in Minnesota, a circns joke died at the advancedA age of one hundred years. This, we believe, is rather old oven for a circus joke, very few of which, even in thisi country, have attained a greater age than ninety-six years.-. B3urlington Hlawkceye. The Linderman dollar would look well enough, Spikes says, if the Englishman that designed it had put a little more stufflng& around the eagle's wishbone and ad& tied up the chin of the factory girl who is looking out the window on the other side.- Graphic. A young gentleman skydd hiis life by an act of politeness. The steam boat Magenta being crowded with passengers, a young man gave his chair to an old gentleman atia then~ went for'ward. In less than three , minutes the boiler blew up, and the old gentleman was killed. "Be a good boy and don't break your mothe'r's hear't, for th'en you would.be an: orphan .in anj:inlfsane asylum, where you would have to listen to a couple of 'sermons' oh Sunday, and two or three"durinig the week," said his mother, and that boy has been good qver sinoe, -A party of twenty Ohinepe waeh' ernien wore'arrested in B0stotl last j Sunday-night for gain and oRie of eaJ1 in vtertI o fois w- ~ bea/A t