University of South Carolina Libraries
VINNSBORo, S. C. T'UESD1Y, FEBRUA RY 1$. 1871 R. ME .A J)A18, Enlo. ,JNU. Y. R1':LQLDS. ASSOC1ATE EDuITOK. IT 13 s.AI that through famine an Slall)ox, in the province of Cear in Brazil, one-half of a total poptuhl tion of a million souls have perishe in two years. Letters from tl stricken region bristle with horrors. ZACu CHANDLER has been nominal ed by the Republican caucus to su< ceed Christiancy as United State Senator. One by one the old Gran hacks are getting back to Washing ton. Zach Chandler and Logan wer shining lights in the era of violene and fraud. The Grant movement i booming. FItED DOUGLASS objects to Senato Windom's scheme of colonizing thi negroes in one of the Western terri tories. He says that Massachusett fifty years ago was is bad a place fo the colored man as Mississippi I to-:lay, and prophesies that publi opinion in the South will change as 1 has done in the North. PETER CoorEa's sixty-sixth anni versary was celebrated on the 14th b a large number of friends who gavi him a reception. At the same time hi was invested with the degree of LL.D in recognition of the aid he has givei to science and learning by his educa tional benefactions. Mr. Cooper re ceived the honor very modestly. SEVERAL CASES of yellow fever ar( still reported in the Infected district They are said to be caused by thi( disinterment of bodies that wer( hurriedly buried during the summer. It has heretofore boen believed that frost was a specific for this fever, but these cases occurring in n(i-wintei are very alarinileg. Grave fore bodings exist of the possible re. appearance of the epidemic nex1 N1111e1' C. 'IE I)tilocut.vs in \Washingtoi have had several caucuses to deciId. upon the question of repealing tll test oath and the supervisors' law All are agree upon the advisability o tacking the former, if necessary, t< an appropriation bill. But sentimen is divided on the second proposition It is urged that only California wil elect Congressmen this fall, and tha Congress next winter can repeal thn law in time for 1P80, without corn pelling an extra session now. Whil we have advocated an aggressivi course, we must confess that the op position of' such meni as Uinyard am Kermnan, especially tihe former, shouk make the D)emocrats weigh the conse quences carefully. The Black Death. Europe is much alarmed over I i< appiearanlce of the lague in Russia where in a few months it has imadi great progress, dlepop)ulat ing several vilhges and t owns ini tile southeast ern p)ortion of' the emapire. Cordom of' troops) surrmound the infected vii lages and1( prevent all igiess am egress. Other na:ions areii nforing1) rigidi qularantinie laiws. The plagui or black death, as it is caIled, is scouIrge t.o wIch tihe yellow fev'er i as nothing. Its lirst. appearance wa in Athens during the Peloponmnesiam war', several centuies before Christ But not until the foturteenth centur, did it. become a scourge to the enti' world, travelinlg, as it did then, firom the eastern b)oundaries of' Asi through China, Indi and 1tussia, an' puiishi ng with equal sever'ity th inhabitants of thme Pyvrenean p)o1nnu and the hardened peoples of Scanid navia and Iceland. The Indians < America evenI had a tradition of dreadful eplidemic that on1ce visite their shores. 1t raged in Asia an Europe at that tinme fotr twenty-fly years, anid destroyed over fifty mi lions of peole. 1t dlevastated Lou (d0n ini tihe sevenlteenith century, ani was only checked by thie conflagratio that alnost swept that city awa: Since that time it has not appeaired ii a plague, butt it has always existe moreo or' less, ini thle swamnpy regioi around the Causpiani anid Black Sea The ap)pear'ance of' the plague at thm time is well calculated to make ti world shudder', and to cause the el actment of' the most, rigid hyglen laws. Executive Peculiarities. Hlayes heats Grant to death muak inmg unexp)ected aplpointmlent UnderC1 thme administr'ationi of tI formuer, 'every obscure individual wvi compelled to read tIhe papera ea< mnorning to see whether greatness hi not been thr'ust upon hinm the di before. Now, great men, (ini the own estimationi) scan the telegraph niews daily in treopidation lest thn have been remanded to the foot of t1 ladder. A spnnlmuon al)oiIjA 0onies froin Peni !ylvania. Cven Jlartranft aved m ' c viil'1 Iia to tit {lrpuablicans inl i "2. te-c i;.rtod ii 1876, he wvas at , )aainrlnt P'residentia eandidate in 1876, receiving on on ballot twenty votes more Lan IlHayes His friends still iushcd his claims a a possibility in 1880. On the deat of Bayard Tavlor, a few weeks ago the entire Penusylvania delegatio pressed Ilartranft for the Mission t Berlin. Gossip gave him the ilos prolinent place in the contest. It a f'ew days ago it was announced tina e Governor IIar'trauf't had been ap pointed-postmaster of Philadelphi . This is a nice plum, five thousand . year and patronage, but it was quit s 'a step below the executive mnsiU1iO t of the second State in the Union, ait( .. all Pennsylvania rose in arms at th LllihtiHrtranfult, however, COnl eluded to accept the place, and he is now licking stamps in the City o Brotherly Love, instead of qualliinc sehooniers of beer with Wilhelli ani Bismarck. The true inwardness o this appoilltlnent is said to be a deirt - on the part of laves to put a thoriit in the side of Don Caimeroni a'.d t< raise ani anti-CamlleroIn party in Peuni sylvania. The collectorship and the directory of the itil. will also b filled by enemies of Cameron. Doi and old Simon are both very angry, but the former sided with Coikling in the -New York appointment em broglio, a.d lis no rights llayes i: bound to respect. This is but one o many ilnstancies of the pecuhiarities ( the Presideiit, anid his appioilnietti in the next twenty days will be anxiously looked for. This story is brought up to the Chi cag~o Tr'ibunel's minid on exanii nt the New York 'Tribu:e's Aiiantaec Horace Greeley was found, on one memorable occasion, snathinilg til e'liairs and inakincg the atmocspher< sky-blue with profitnity." "What is the iatter, Mr. G reelev ?" asked a frienid, aid Mr. (;reelev piped a reply: "Matter'? Why, the -- -- - - --- that edits te Alnanae has made out iha. Calaveras Co., Cal., gives a Democratic majority of 1our, andin every' ---- inl the American Unioni kiovs that il never w; ent .)ituoerutie by miore tlai Some months +iince a sensational ac count was telegraphed t a tinhtcor that desC(cde tiiiouigh the roof of i house and killed the owner thereof as he lay asleep. It was an easy tiin tfor atn able-bodied, energetic meiteol to do, but subsequeut, inavestigutior see'is to throw a cloud over the prob ability of the story. '"he hIouc, i seems, stands at least fifty fiet away from where the ineteor fell; the mal was away from home that ighit; and lastly, the meteor didn't fall. THE CHARLESTON T'HE WVcoly Now~ contains live edito 1. rils, te haes cctcmon, carefull1' seleted ailNews 1 a. -a the jOe lowinj SP~ECL1L TiE: Prizo stories, ca chcer. e nn,. an -igri cultuoral deparltiut, 6.; ..:,c e ma: r'iagcs and Oict, .s. TilE WJEEKL Y NEWI~S Glivts mior'e tor the im ner tha ii1 u~i other boritauern Weekly. Sina pri,:e Single subscriptLions.. pecr canu a hi 2 i Five hIsubsc,iun at $1 7T-. -h T1eni e.ubscripionsj ati al ..1 - . .-. T1wenltyl u i pti, nei.s atl I i , - -..-.> E *iftLy b ci auna.it cat. I - - - . Ii.) T1he W~ee{ly- New s wii b,: sint, t'> veCar ly sub:t, cri ';r oc . ) i,i' ..' ; to pi inoi 0111s .suc 51 re r . to vearl i' subicri ter'c of tce I .- A eekl y f , 'el *Chaa~'.t ,n, S. C. 3'The proprietor. of the News and Coci rieor offer $100!, inyogld, f'r thie best scerit story, written1 by ai rociiuent, of Monti [1Carolhna, illustLrative of So,uthern life I beoe uigo sin1co the wari. Th .Tlestory to conisist of not1 less tha twenty capters; thce capters averagici ton pacges 0f foolseapj or' tue eqtieie t' 2. '1hIe mcanot*:ipt to be senlt to th a pr'oprictors of I no A e n Od Courier ii laohnAl-r.l 1 neOt, i 3. E.chl inanucscr'ipt to be .i-~omtpancie cl b)y at scaled enveleopo con< at uin~i cuo re: flname anmd theo addrie*s of' thec ci tior, ant beaing on thce ouctsido a moutto, wvhic - shll ieiso be p laced uipon tho mamn 1- script; the sealed er.volojeo to bo 01)ene Sonly when the award heas beenI nado. I -I. The stories to ibo readc b'y ai commi13 ltoo of throe residents of' Charleston, s hooeted by tho io t. ois of' 'IhIo .No Sand Coiirier', who wi.i niako their declhsio on or betorco April 15ith. *The story whica shac 1 be1 declared s he th3 best to be the absotuto prop)ori R. of the pdicprietor's of theo TIho News atL Courior, anid published as ai sera. in tL iW~eosly Nwi Eje.tod mnulsocriptsi C be rojturnedl for'thwiith to tho author i- feb I18 n MILK B3ISCUITS, *, GINGER SNAPS, hi CAKES, &C y o ~ J. M. B3EATY & Co. e jNOfTHERN APPLES. Y IUHOICE, Rod Kings & Baldwln 10 I . $2.00 per buNhel. *t nv 28 U. d . DE8PO1 TES. PLOWS! PLOWS!! (e ~LTE havo just received a lot of . T Steol Turn Shovels, Straight s Shovels, Bull Tongues, Scooters, 1&. ALSO, A lot of Hool Bolts, Plow Rods, Lap Rinngs, Clevisos, Open Links, STraces, B:k Bands, Plow Lay Iron and Plow Steel Buying the above goods in quan tities, and from firSt hands, we are prepared to sell them as low as any one. LEATI[HER. Just arrived a lot of Harness, 3 Upper. Kip and Calf Skins, P:anta tion and ole Loather. fAT COST. As it is lato in the season, and we have a large stock of Andirons, Shovels and Tongs on hand, we will close them out at cost for cash. feb 4 F. G ERIG & SON. FACT. TN order to prepare for our spring stock, we from this day offer extra inducements to CASH CUSTOMERS. Dross Goods. Shawls, Jeans, Blankets, Flannels, Cassimeros and Clothing at prices that will ASTONISH YOU. McMASTER & BRICE. jan 28 CI EARING -OUT [ROM this date we offer our en tire s.tock of fall and winter goods at very low prices, to make room for our j SPRING STOCK I Persons wishing any goods in our line will do well to give us a call beoo purchiasing elsewhere. We can make it to your advantage to P~URCHIASE. FROM US; Sso como and see. J. F. McMASTER & CO. jan 29 FOR SALE ! I- -L a-One light Two-Horse Wagon. n SOne heavy Two--Horse Wogon, di One One-Horse Wagon. tO *0 One Top Buggy. .. One Open Buggy, second hand. Prices of all work reduced. ov 28 DESPORTES & MONTE O[HEESE! CHEESE! OHEESE~ ~\LLBS. Ohoice Factery Cheoe As low as .the lowest, o.t lq U. G. DVJSBOWE. DISSOLVED BONE. 1ON'T buy Guano, but get Dissolvoe J3 Bone to mix with hour oompoa hreaps. FEtiwan Dissolved no for sal, by McMASTER~ a DRIOE, HARD-PAN T -------- r IlIE bottom has been reached at last, and Sugonheimor & Groesoltol are still ahead in LOW PtI3ES. We have this day consolidated the stock of goods recently purchased of S. S. Wolfe with our stoch at the old stand, and for the next 30 days will oft'or bar gains in every line of goods that will convince the closest cash buyers that we intend to maintain the well-earned repu. tation we now enjoy, of giving our cus tomers the Benefit of Our Bargains. Weextend acordial invitation to the oitizens of Fairfield to call and examine our #stook and prices, and be conviuced that they can now buy goods at prices that defy competition at home or ab.-oad. We offer special inducements in the following goods for 30 days only--in crder to make necessary room for our spring and summer purchases: 50 Pieces Standard Prints, 5 cents. 50 Pieces Standard Prints, 6 cents. 10 doz. Gents' all linen bosom Shirts, worth $1.60 to $2.00, 50 cents. 5 doz.*Gents' fine Fur Hats, worth $3.00 to $4.00, $2.00. 100 pairs Gents' Pants, worth $5.00, $3.00. 100 padirs Gonts' Gaiters, 50 cents. Children's Shoes 25, 50 and 75 cents per pair. Ladies' and Misses' khoes at greatly reduced prices. Dress Goods 10 cents to 25 cents, worth 16 to 40 cents. Our entire stock of woolen knit goods without rescrve tot and below New York cost. One piece Back Beaver Cloth, worth $5.00, at $2.01). Ladies', Misses' and Children's Hosiery in white and fancy colors. at greatly reduced prices. Ladies, Misses' and Children's Gloves in all col ors at 5 to 10 cents per pair. Double-Barreled Guns, Stocklocks and Padlocks, Table Cutlery, &o., at half price, to close out. These goods wore purchased for cash, at vury low figures, and we intepd to give our customers the benefit of the Immense Discounts that we saved in the purchase of them. Very respectfully, SUGENH1EIMERt & G1tOESClIEL, February 6th, 1879. feb 8 -THE BEST SEWING MA1HINE EVER PRODUCED, Whether for family use or manufacturing, is the double-thread, lock-stitch light-running TDW -D.A.VIS. It will last a lifetime--every Machine .warranted. r lHiE Vertical Feed is the greatest ad ..vance made in sewing inechanism since the invention af sewing machines. WVe invite a careful examination of it, believing no one dan fail to recognize the fact that it is the most perfect Rowving Machine made, combining simplicity strengthI, durability, and economy. We (d0not hesitate to claim for the IMPROVED DAVIS, in addition to its superior principles, more ab)soluto perfection of workmanship and more complete adjustability than portainisto any comnpetin g machine now in the market. Among the various im p)rovemenits is the Impllroved Shuttle, Milled Shank Needle, Adjustable Needle Plate, New Patent Thread Controller and Automatic Bobbin Winder. Every Ma. chine is on good substantial .rollers, for which there is no extra charge. For tucking, cording, braiding,quilting, ruffling, fringing, embroidermng, shoe fitting, tailoring, dress-making, and family use, THE DAVIS HAS NO EQUAL. References to theme who have the Im proved Davis Machine in use in Fair field county: Mrs. William McNall Mrs. William D. Aiken. Mrs. A. W. Ladd. Mrs. J. 0. Rowe. Mrs Dr. TI. T. Robertson, Mrs. Dr WV. K. Turner. Mrs. J. W. iloliek. Mrs. William Stevenson. Miss Margaret Aiken. Mrs. A. P. Miller. Mrs. Eliza Williams. Mrs. James Q. Davis. Mrs. Robert Crawford. Miss J. Harvey, and ethers. Just think of It--a machine Rlling fo: $60 a short time ago you can now pur. ehaso for $30, from J. 0. BOAG, Agent for FairAcid County. Also agent for two other first-clam, machines-the New American, and thi Im proved Weed. i all on J. 0. BOAG. and get the bea Family Bewing Machines made. DRY GOODS. Great reduction in p rices of Dres Goods, Shoes, Hats, Clothing, &c. Always a full and complete line c Fanaily Groceries. Tobacco, Oigars,. Comn feotionarles, Fruits &c., as cheap as tb 1 cheapest. , Lumber and Furnitur, for male 1o' for cash by jan11 1.a 3aar IIii IVEi This important organ weighs hut about three pounds, and all the blood in a living person (about three gallotw) passes through it at lcrt once every half hour, to have the bile and other impurities strained or saltered frutn it. Bile is the natural purgative of the bowels, and if the Liver bccoutec Wtorpid it is not seg.arated from the blood, but car ried through the veins to all parts of the system, and In trying to escape tharoul;hi the pores of thae skin, causes it to turn yellow or a dirty brown color. The stonach becomes diseased and Dys pepsia, Indigestion, Consti ation Headache Dili ousness, Jaundice, Chills, M1alarial Fevers iiles, 4Sick and Sour Stomach, and general debifity fol low. M1aaase..'s Hruratu, the great vegetable discovery for torpidity, causes the Liver to throw off from one to two ounces of bile each titne the W blood passes through it, as long as there Is an ex cess of bile; and the effect of even a few doses upon yellow complexion or a brown dirty looking skin, will astonish all who try It-they being the first sysptoms to disappear. The cure of ail bill. ous diseases and Liver complaint is made certain by taking HsrArra In accordance with directions. Headache is generally cured in twenty minutes, and no disoase that arises front the Liver can exist if a fair trial is ivcn. SOLD AS K SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Price 25Cents and $1.00 LUNGS The fatality of Consumptioo or Throat and Lung Diseases which sweep to the grave at least one-third of all death's victims, arises frosn the Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu pefies as the work of death goes on. $to,ooo will be paid if Opham or Morphine, or any preparation of Optuna, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be found in the GLs SFLOwEa CoUo SYaup, which has cured opeo, who are living to-day with but one remain ng lung. No greater wrong can be done than to say that Consumption is incurable. The Gr.ons FLOWna CoUcGt SYRVP will cure it when O all other means have failed. Also, Colds, Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis, and all diseases of the throat and lungs. Read the testimonials of the Hon. Alexander H. Stephens Gov. Smith and Ex-Gov. Brown of Ga., Hon. 6co. Peabody, as well as those of other remarkable ctres in our book-4ree to all at the drug stores-and be convinced that If 1you wish to be cured you can be by taking the GLoss t LwRn Covo SvauP. I Take no Troches or Lozenges for Sore Throat, when you can get GLOss FLOWRn Svut at sane prise. For sale by all Druggist. P ice 25 Cents and $1.00 B llD Grave mista.kcs are made in the treatment of all diseases taat .arise from poison in the blood. Not g .one case of Scroftula Syphilis, White Swelling, Ulcerut.s Sores an<l Lisn lscase, in a thousand, is treated without the use of Mercury in some form. Mercury rots the e, and the tiseases it pro duces are wc.r:,c 6::.it a:av o'.her kin<d of blood or skin disease e.n Itb. O i II.':sra-rirvsStL.x CIA or Q;-.-N's I.+.t.t is the only medicine ttpon whi.:: a !itp.: .i r;ovary from Scrofila, Sy philis azul Merc :i:.i <:iscscs itn all stages, can be r . om.aI :tn-i *hat will cu:e Cancer. S,t -w.-Millh: p:'. by the liproprictors i iercury, or any i::redibent ut p.i:ely vegetable and harmn Filleas ca:+ he t;In:ul ir:! .. 1'rice 1-y :' l.O', a.- t,.t o. Gi 0.: o_ ..,: 0 '..;n SvcRV and Mnat..LL's lsIr."A-ram .:: -2-Mu I,ivnt for sale by all I,'rug. gists in a. cent and $r.o bottles. A, F. XERBELL & C0., Proprietors, PHILADEILPHIA. PA. THE C )LUMBI A REGISTER. DAILY, TRI-WEEKLY AND WEEKLY. Rest Newspaper ever Published AT THE CAPITAL OF SOUTH CAROLINA. CIncULATION LJARGE AND CONSTANTLY INOREASING. XTE espctfllyinvite t.he attention V fteraigcomutnity to tho excellent newiepapers we are now publishing In Columbia. THE REGIS TER is the only paper ever published at the capital of South Carolina whiob is con ducted as sre the leading datilies of the p)rincipal cities of the e,ntry. We have atn able and distinguished corps of editora- genhlenmon well k-nown all over the State for their learning, ability and sound Democratic printipl es;-men who have serv-ed the Stata and the South on every oceasion whe~n the demand arose for their seri(e,t, and who maty be safely deopened upon as reliable leaders of the Democracy in the line of journaliasm. T1HJE DAILY RtEGISTER is a twenty. -i it column paper, 2-ix38 inches, print. ed~ on good papter and with large, clear cut type,. containingt the lateat telegraph tc news, full market reports, editorial matter on the leading occurrences of the times, and repleto with intoreniting mait cellatneousi readling. The LOOAL NEWS is full and interesting, one editor devot ing hisi time exclusively to that depart mnent. Our correspondence from Wash ington mnd other places of note gives an entertaining resume of all the important events of the day. THlE TRI-WEEKLY REGISTER, with some mitnor ehtanges, cenmprises tile conl tents of the Daily at *2.50 less per year. THE WEEKLY REGISTERI is a large, handaeomely-gotton-up eight p)age paper, 29x42 inches, containing forty-eigh t col umns of reading'matter, embracing all the news of the week and the most im p)ortatnt editoria lad local news. -TERMS--IN ADVANCE, Daily Register, 1 year - - - - $7 00 " " months - - -- 680 " " 3 " - - - 1 76 Tri-WeeklyRiegiaieor, 1year - - - 5 600 " C months -- 2 60 us , 8 3 " - -1 25 Weekly Register 1 year - - -- - 2 00 " " 6Omonths - - ,, 100 " " 3 " - - 605 Any .person sending us a club of ten subscriber,, at one time will reeeive either of the papers free, postage prepaid, for one year Any person sending us the money for twent subscribers to the Daily may re tain fr hie services twenty dollars of the amount; for twenty subscribers to the Tri-WVeekly, fifteen dollars of the amount; end for twenty subscribers to the Weekly, five dollar. of the amount, As an'ADI'ERTIK1N MEDIUM, the Regis ter affords unequalled facilities, having a large cireulation, and numbering Iamong its patrons the well-to-do poo of he iddle and upper porI ion of the State, T1erms reasonable, fFor any itafbrmation desired, a'ddress OALVO & PATTON, S PBoParBToDs, A'Parties desiring copiles of Tnu vRtorsas to exhibit in Oannesuihg will be supplied on applicatfion,.. 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