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. THE NEWS AND HERALD. W1NNS13U1UL, S. L. _ __. TUESD.1Y MOILNINO, July 22, 181 11. IJ1 ANS D. rI, EDIToR. JNQ. S. UREYWOLDs, ASSOCIATE EDITOR Ta CANVASS in Maine is said to b progressing satisfetorily. AND Now it is believed that Buforc who;murdered Judge Elliott In Kei tucy, will be set free on the groun of insanity. Are the jurors insate? SECRETARY EVARTS takes a ver hopeflll view of the situation. II thinks the Rladicah> will carry three i four Southern States in 1880. I saves himself, however by not tellin which they are. WHEN Mr. W. 11. Smith, the fire lord of the admiralty of Great Britait was invested with the degree c D. C. L. at Oxford the other day, huge Pinafore was lowered from tb gallery, and a crowd of students strucl tip the song, "I am the Ruler of tli Queen's Navee," much to the amuse mient of everybody present, includin Mr. Smith hiniself. Poon MEMPIiis seems destined t further woes. The yellow fever I assuming the proportions of an epi demic, and the panic which had sub sided, has broken out afresh. Every body who can is running away. It i said a woman named Mulbrandon ha saved some clothing belonging to relative that died of fever last year and.that sbe gave a coat to her hus band to wear. -his was the first ens this year; and from him the contagioi has spread. Reform in Georgia. Georgia may be regarded both a fortunate and unfortunate; unfortu nate in having charges of 2orruptioi brought -against Comptroller Genera Goldsmith; and fortunate in having i Legislature that is determined to sif the charges to the bottom. The it regularity ie said to exist in the sale of the wild lands belonging to th' State. Comptroller Goldsmith do mands an investigation, and his friend are confident of his acquittal of al charges of irregularity. The attempt ed bribery of two members of th' Legislative Investigating Committe< will also figure in the investigation It is very unfortunate, however, tha even the breath of suspicion shoul rest upon the public administration o Georgia. Corrupt Legislatures an< dishonest officials are common enougl in the North. But it is a sad day fom the South when the reputation of he chosen officials should be not abovc suspicion. We hope the day Is fa distant when any such charges can b ngade with reason against any one ii South Carolina. "However Could You Do It?" The Abbeville Mediumn takes upoi itself the task of reading lessons to th< Democracy of other counties. Oceen pying this position, It should be ver; careful. Yet It hlas evidently mist.akei the spirit of,the Chlarleston contest -fo tile mayoralty. Major Gayer distinict ly announced hImself as anm inidepend ent candidate. Captain Courtenay I thoroughly and unequivocally pledgel to abide the niominiatOin of the bleme cratic party. Tme Mediumn, however calls it a "ramnily light," and seems ti see only that the former represents th working mnen, and thme latter th moneyed Interests of the city, an adds: "Both mnen are very good an reliable citizens, we believe, anid wit favorable surroundings either of ther would make a good mayor. Majo Gayer, though sot so well knownm t the .general p)ublie, hlas some loca celebrity, but does not stanld all chancee of election that we canl set The moneyed men are backing Courte nay, and they generally have thing their ownI way in Charleston. -Hoi this happens, we do mnot know but It true that Charleston.has masters all that her voters.do their bidding wit blind and unquestionling .obediene Personally Captain Courtenlay is a fill man, so far as we are informed, but 18 the company lie keeps that we ol ject to; it is his plolitical aRsociatiomi and not his private relations. lHe I in the hands of Philistines who ii put him in the Mayor's office if he wi but serve thorn, and who wlljdrop hir when he has done their -pleasure c failed to meet their requirements.] Captain Courtenay would hear firIendly voice from the up-countiy wv would seriously warn him againmi going into the municipal eamnpaign t thm standard bearer of Blroad strei then and measures." Tis is thme wvay Iin which ti Jledium throws cold water upon Ii organized' Democracy of Chlarlestonm 1 its fight against Independents. '1 denonnce the Democrats. who ai fightin~g to save time party as "masterm *and "Phlhistinbs'' Is to use precisel tie argumnents of the bolters and ind pendents. 'If Major Gayer anld Captal Courtenay both stood on the san platform, and both had announced Prpose to abide by the decision of ti * ar,ty,,the Mefaim might choose bi tWepln the.candidates. Bunt how sm( a strict censor of Democratiec. mora *a the .Iediumr .professes to be ca eglin hthe pi%s9nit.0.s Charleston, Wye cannot .se., With .candidge runling on au Independel Platform; and With thorisands of Rad for thorDemocracy. And such eon zents as the Mfedi4mn uakes canna "fisionists" of Charleston. Now is very good time to fire some an fusion brqadaides, and to resurre some of the "ant.l-kampton-polic arguments, eso3lally da aJr :Gpy announces himselfa 'flanIpton ben crat. THX YELLOW P FVJR. 0 WAsHINOTON, July 19.-A telegra from Dr. Mitchell, at Memphis recei by the itational board of health 1n night, declares the city to be. dange ously infected. Another dispatch r d ceived at noon to-day, reports " new cases and the disease spreading.' MEMPIIIS, July 19. -Three new cas y of yellow fever were reported to il e board of health this mortilng-Louh ,r T. and Viola Godsey, two sistQrs, r e siding at 48 Bradford street, and To Kernan, passenger agent of the Mei g phis & Charleston Railroad. The I ness of the Godsey sisters can be trac to inflection from the Tobin famil The voti ladies were in attendann ' on Mrs. 'lobin until her case was pr f nonned yellow fever. These cas a dispel the 6poradic theory. Hirai C Atiy, son of the chief of police, is d1 k ing, although his case has not vet bee reported to the hoard of health as ye e low fever. The chief's residence is I the neighborhood of Tobin's dwellini as is also Tom Kernan's. The repo of the death of Fred Eckers was pr< mature. He is living, but lies in a extremely critical condition. Th weather is warin and sultry, with oc Casional showers. The developnioiei - of new cases has giveni a fresh imupetu - to the exoduIs of citizens. NEW YoiKi, July 19.-Chrich Ecl man, a waiter, taken from the steai ship City Merida, which arrived fror i Mexican ports last Monday, died I the quarantine hospital, on Swiiburn Island, yesterday from yellow feve1 This is the rc;ond death from th dreaded diteaso at that hospital withi a short time. About eight other su ferers are at the hospital, but it I thought that all will recover. No nei cases reported either ycsterdty or t< dav. 'dlle Memphis correspondent of th 9 New York 1'imes writes: "A grav . question arises in the minds of thos who think about the evacuation of th ' city. What is to become in case th I disease should develope in epidemi t form, of the poor, whose poverty an helplessness prevent them from fleein . from the pestilence I No sane man ex pects such a spontaneous outpourinl of charity as was given to the poor o the South last year. Repeated appeal - were made to the rich of this commu nity for contributions to a general r< 1 lief fund, without a response. Ye their property-stores stuflbd wit goods and household effects-is here a the mercy of thousands that may b driven to most terrible extremes b want and hunger. The police, fire an military departments of the city wil be deserted, and not a hand left t even warn away the rabble. A fev cool heads and brave hearts weil l through the ordeal last year, but fev of them survived the plague, and the have profited by that experience t learn that self-preservation is the firs law, and no power on earth could hi 3 duce them to undergo those terribl scenes and privations again. Few c those whose faces Were familiar to th Times correspondent last year will rt main during another epidemic." NOT Poln 2ACnA.The opinions < Mr. William El. Chandler on Presideii tial chances, as set fbrthi ini our Waah ington dispatches, Ihirly embody wha passes for wisdom among the 'peopi who either make their living by poll ties or' spend3 a good deal of timo in thi attempt to do so. While his tbrcast ar~e by no means destittite of plaust bilhm Mrl. Chandler exhibite the usual incapacity of his class to a ppr'eciat the strength of the forces wich comi - stitute the brain and conscience of th R lepublican partv. To place Mi I Washburne and senator Chaindler~ o . about the same level as "neutral meni, who mig~ht prevail in 'the Natioma 'Convention when thie strife over th i loading candidates lhad exhausted itseli 3 is a curious illustration of how gi-ossl a (lie merely "shrewd" politician ma miaprhn the popular impulhse whc eis sup >ased to study wit untiring itssidin ty. While tenate 1Chandler is not precisely (lie kind < 1 personU which Democratic newspapei r. describe him to be, lhe is certainl Iy n< Sthe type of candidate likely to securl Ithme majority of'a Republican Natiomn Convention whIch had faith in th ability of' the partyr to elect the nea .President of the Un ited States.-Nci .York Times, Recp. B3ONDs FA LING 1uE.-Ten milior ' of United States. bonds mnaturedI o a Thursday, and one hundred and eighta I five millions more will mature durhn I the present week. Of this total of or hiundred aind niinety.-five millions soni *fifty-three millions have been airead a redeemed, and the redemption of tIl t remainder is not expected to cause anii .perceptible dlisturbance of (lhe mone a market. The national banks throug a which the largest subscipt ions has Sbeen miade for the four' per' cent. bond it will stmply tender the called bonds I I be plaedu to the credit of their subscril a (ions, anid there will be but little actu: r. transfer of cash in the financial tran actions of the tirstmagnitude which tl government will be required to mal a dutrinig (lie presenit month. Weu e there no other arguLment for the exis 'once of national banks, a very stroui one might be fouiid in (lie safe ami efficient agency wvhich they furnish f< tsuch enormious transfers of capital 1 have marked the course of thie oper e tions attendhn the retnmding of tI e United States ebt. n SOUTHERN KIND E8s.-TheO death o the Rev. Dr. Alexander Clark, of Pitt e burg, Pa., at the residence of Govermn n, Colquitt, at Atlanta, Ga., has been a nounced. A letter has been publisho Y writtoin by Dr. Clark to a f-icud ~-Baltimore, only a few days before bi n death, but at (lie time when lie thoug e lie was convalescing'. lIn this leot a Dr. Clark -says2 "The kindness theseSoutern)eople is without lrni 0 Some.time I have to tcii you of it; it 3too sacred to ,write. Governor C< hi uitt has taken mo to his own homn a (ie Executive Mansion, a p)aradli Samong the trees, and hero 1 have ovei possible. attention. 'The Governe n amnidst all his official duties, has time a be thme Ohristian brother.", It may. 1 tadded that Governor Colquitt he Snevet- seen Dr. Clark until ho heard his illness at the Atlanta Hotel, asi visited him.-Baltimore Bun. Tim Flus? MnTTEN.--Said W ~oms Swho liad refpsed her lover: "+uhis 'I peI'rha not theoars mitten oi hai ree , Dr rown,"a "I ,perbas o Smith," ho rotot ted a WEIJOFTHrnDAr. E-;E les upon Colonel Aiste c were, ltd;'ouncel in the Georgia Let t9lature last week. er ..-The trade mark of a certdin bra1 of w islcey was sold for $51 050 publ c sale last week in Louisvlilo,'K h Countess do MontUj, moth of the'Ox-:mpress Eugcnie, Is eight two, and was much afflicted by he m grandson's death. v- --Governor Talbot, of Massachl at setts, a strong Sabbatarian, has indu4 r- ed the Legislature to forbid the rui c- ning of Sunday trains on the Stat lx railroads. -It is now stated positively thi 0s Mr. McCrary will be succceded t e secretary of war by ex-Senator Ratn sa soy, of Minnesota. The statement 0- contirmed by information from tli IN Executive Mansion. t- -Johnson 0. Whittaker, of Sout - Carolina, is now the only colored cad< at the West Point Military Academ It is stated Ie has a room to himsel . and is "thrown entirely on his ow resources for fellowship and anust ment." -Sheldon 8. Norton was assailed i n Spring street, New York, early o I- Wednesday morning, by tour men an a robbed of an overcoat and a $40 gol ring. One of the robbers was arresi t ed. Mr. Norton Is lecturer attached t the Woodruff expedition. n -The Louisiana constitutional cor e vention has adopted an amendment t the State debt ordinance, providinl it that the ordinance shall be voted on b s the people separately, and to become part of the constitution if a majorit - of voters favor the ordinance. -In the Buford trial on Saturda ni morning Col. Philip Thompson opene it in behalf of the prisoner, and was fol 0 lowed in the afternoon by General Rod man for the State. The impressioi o prevails generally that Butord will no i be hanged. -A new cave at Newsom's Station STena., seventeen miles from Nash ' Ville on the Northwestern Railroad has been discovered. It has been explored for miles, showing wonder 0 that rival the Mammoth Cave of Ken e tucky. A farn.or named Hutton is th 0 fortunate owner. -Sonic of the Washington corre spondents have demonstrated mathe matically that Mr. Hayes saves $40, 000 a year out of the $50,000 salart of the Presidential office. At this rat he will have $160 000 of Mr. Tilden' money, to say nothing of interest, a the end of his term. The excessive frugality of Mr. Hayes verges on par sinony. t -About three o'clock on Thursda) I morning a row occurred at Chicagc t on aboat devoted to the vilest purposes o and owned by Bill Murray, who keep , it anchored in the Lake about a miic i from shore, and entertains in it the I lowest classes of the city. The resul 3 of the row was five men shot, noni , fatally, and the arrest by the police o t about ia dozen persons, Including threi , women. r -The mystery which has lon shrouded the death of Jennie P. Clarke t whose body was found in a trunk ii - Lynn, Mass., some time since, ha s been solved by the arrest of Madam< f Goodrich, a bamule physician wl< u performed a criminal operation upoi - the girl which resulted in her death and Dr. Kimball, who was accessor and packed tihe body in the trunk. f -A Quebec special says a yacht con -taining fifteen people capsize<d at Point -Aux . rembles dluring a squall on Sat t urday. Eight of the party wer 3 drowned. The body of one was re - covered floating on the water. Al 3 the other bodies have gone to the hot 3 tomn and may be washed to sea. Thi - yacht turned comp~letely over,.1J steamer and several small boats wven 3 to her rescue, but could only save sev *en of the fifteen who were aboard. 3 -The trial of the negro, Christin 1Cox, at New York, for the murder o Mrs. Hull, closed on TIhursday after 1noon. The ease was given to 'the jur: at 6.15 p. m. They returned to th court-room at 6.25 with a verdict o ~ ulty ,of murder in the first deorce lhe prisoner appeared to be enti?rel: unmoved, except that Ils face blanclh ed a little when the verdict was an r one.Judge Cowing then sell tecdthe prisoner to be hanged 0: the 29th of August, and lie was take; tback to the Tombs. e -Soon after four o'clock last Wed .1 nesday afternoon a stormn of terrii e violencee burst over Boston, do!ni t ,reat damage to life anid property , hAe:schooner .Ayrtle, of Charlestori having o1n boarid six persons, fou women anid a man and a boy, wvn e capsized off' Bird Island, and all es cepting the mani were' drownled. A boy was also drowneod by the cap)sh' inigof a boat off' uall ad a mani wa' e burled in the ruins olia building strue o by lightning. TIhe damage througt out the city will p)robabJly amount t a many thousands of dollars. y -Josoph J. Sanford a circus poi v. former, wvent into a N'ew York gyrr h naslum last Weodnesday, to "take th e perspirationi out of him." lie ra' ~, around tile rig, where circus horse o are exercised, wvhich has forty-tw -. laps to the mille, about twenty timet 1i and then went iunto the washl-room t -. rub off. A minute later he came ots e and prepared to take a "turnl" on th e horizontal baar. Hie had hardly declai e ed his intention wvhen he fell to th .. floor and died, lie was well know as a clever bar performer anld tumblc1 adhdtraveled wvith many of the cli r cuses now on the rQad. LS -The Georgia House of Represem I- tatives hlas voted to instruct the jud Lo clary committee to prepare articles < impeachment aiga ist Comnptr'olleu General Goldsmith, based on the ri >f port 6f the committee of the Genera B- Assembly, which has been investig'i r ing the transfer of titles to the wvil n1 friend of the comptroller who offere Is to bribe two members o/ the Legish It ture. >f -Emil Bausch, of Winliamsbur t. New York, who has been suflferlng f esome time from heart disease, fell Do 1the dining table, last week, apparen ~ y dead, and preparatins were mail e b an undertaker to remove the bed yo the ice-box. The jar of remova r, startled the supposed corpse into life eneezilnfrs,h gse for breath e and in a' very fbw minutes ofroulatiot d ti)at h~id beein temporarily suspendec t'e~sumed Its course, and, fhoplgh weal d Mir. Bausoih became once more a ma among the living. -An explosion took place on th nI steamer Daniel Dr.to on Saturda ', night, while on thu way firom Nei 0 York .to Albany, 8everal cans o S powder had been placed in the -state eroom pud the Alse, attaehed to ;each The State-room wa sattm.edan .. wood-work In the vichnity of the ex plosion badly damaged, but fortunate ly no one was injured. 'he lights were all extinguished and there was the 1wilest oxeltniont for a few nonents. d . vi i, wlgave his name as Henry it Eve4H, wos arrested on suspicion of being the poison who caused the ex r plos n. o - - -An extraordinary escape from r death Is reported from New York, where a boy named Henry Shin, nine t. years old, fell from the top of a five story tenement house to the street be 1- low, a distance of eighty feett and was e not serlously Injured. - He first struck on a slate roof forty-five feet below the I point whence he fell, breaking several s of the slates and making a percept.ib]o . indentation in the roof, and then bound s ed oil into the street, thirty-flive feet eI lower. Fortunately for himl, a pair of horses stood beneath the boy, and he h first struck these, fell upon the car t ringe-pole and then dropped to the ground apparently not at all frighien ed and, beyond a few bruises and cuts, 1 unhurt. SAltATOo1 BETLE8. t Southern GiS--The Difference In the Styles -How to Fluo a Spring. Nyn Crinkles Letter. I mention all this to show you that Saratoga is unusually bright ti's sea son. Brighter by far than it has been for years. A good many of the South ern people have come hack. You know how much they added to the spirit and character of the place in the olden times. There are two ex-Con federate Generals here, and I believe five or six Southern statesmen. And above all, there are two or three Southern belles. Don't you wish that I may tell you their names? You be hanged. Look here, if you come to Saratoga, stand on - the Grand Lookout at 10 a. i. If you don't know where the Grand Lookout is, ask Charley Lelan:l of the Claren don. I don't ask you to stand there long, but just long enough to see a - young woman, in the simplest riding , habit in the wo .ld, get upon a magnifi cent bay. She is a brunette, and not , over twenty.flve, but she came up from - j the orange groves, and she brought 3 with her that indescribable something --that- mixture of fire and force which - contrasts so delightfully with the - sweetness and light of the innumerable Lady Hamiltons of the North, who are languishing here in landaus and phae tons. I believe we affected to turn up our Democratic noses at one time at the hauteur and inbred imperialness of some of these hot-blooded women who were said to have stripped themselves of their jewels for Jeff Davis' treasury, and were ready at a moment's notice to become Godivas for the same cause. But we take back all we said when we see one of themn on horseback. We turn down our noses on the Grand Lookout, and are ready to pay then all kinds of. homage. "Your Long Island fox hunters," remarked Col. Pike Graham, "ought to Invite a few of those Southern wo men up to show you how to manage your horses." There are more good-looking women at the Clarendon this year than I ever saw before at the same place. I hope they will not consider nc impertinent if I say they. are fresher, freer and fuller. I think the Saratoga girl of fifteen vears ao has" become an im posisibility. She was.t.hin-necked-she couldn't wear a low-niecksd dress wiith out catching cold. She inigled pru dery anId f.lirtation ini the most abomni iithe ilismner.' 11cr swveettness wa shtr'p, like her elbows, atnd she always Inherited a twang roin her g randmoth e hosang psalms. Her father matdenmoney suddenly, and she had a mission to spend it foolishly. That girl lb gone. 'The present one' is dep er-chested. She doesn't pinch her ribs I together so remorsel y. Shle can speak ahlttle French with mnilord, sing an Italianl aria with a 'count, and knows 3 from observation that you do 1not.go iup I' the Rhline in a gon&d,la. She is not - only ready bat fit to marry an English r aristocrat. 3 Leland says this hlas all come about f by fifteen 'years of persistent water -(drinkinlg at Saratoga. Leland be r lieves that the springs have a sociologi - cal virtue. Give him water enoughl - atnd he'll elevate puiblie taste and - morals to any given stanldard. Sars i toga is, in hlis pilosophy, a magniifl 1 cent examplle of hydrostatic science. This rettitnds me of what a well - known English traveler has1 said. a "An Ameriean goes about tasting all tihe water in lis coutntry," remarks this .Briton, "and when he finds seome that ,isn't pure lhe erects an enlormious pi r azza near-by anid:gets LIp horse races. s Then the people agree to go there and - get well." . -Willai J. Marshall wrote as fol lows, before committ.ing suicide at Grand Itapids: "I made utp mty mind . several weeks a o to enjoy life tile best SI could orav' hi 0; and I have done so, you bet! I camne hlere, having made up) my mntd to have one old rouser, and then*shufile off t his mlortallcol. Mv pasosare simpllyunotoab, anid It is tnonsonse for me to jog onl l onger. If' thlere is a f\uture state, I will do my best, If it is In my p)ower, to let you know It; but my impressionl is, whlen a man leaves tis world his t goose is cooked." -The people ive been so muchl Im posed up on by worthless blood purl flers, that we are glad to be ab oe to recommend a rprep)aration whlich can be depended on as containing inIvaltna -Ible medicinal virtues, anld Is worthy of tile p)ublic confidence. Ayer's Sarsa p)arilla cures, when anything cani cure, thle diseases that require an alterative fmedicine. -. --Dr. George )M. Bear'd says: "No 1religion on1 tile glob)e is stronig enough to bear tihe shock of its owh demnonstra I tion. A religion proved dies as a re .t ligion, anld becomes a scientific fact, a1 and would take its p lace side b)y side LI with astronomiy and emistry, wvith J hysics and geolog. , in the organized ~'-A farmer in~ Holden, Me., being rmuch annoyed withl erQws pulling up his corrn, placed a larg 'umbrella in his a' field in order to 'liten them away 0 but instead of beig frightened, thIe Ybirds in wet weather sought beneatli It I,shelter from the rain. ,The umbrella is now folded, and an old coat and hat haveobeen rigged up in its~ place. SI-Mrs. Gould Mitehell, of Masacahu sett,a old Indian woman who says thlat she 10a lineal d.eleendant of Mdassa s0i has pitched her tent on the borders of spawomp set Pond in Massachun set. on the land of her fdrefathers, Which she claitni, hd'Utovnds to pass the sumer thee. ' ITUTT: j 0 JTODUCED, $80. A TORPID LIVER ts the fruitful source of many diseases, promi nent among which are DYSPEPSIA, SICK-HEADACHE, COSTIVENE8i DYSENTERY, BILIOUS FEVER, AGUE AND FEVER, JAUNDICE, PILES, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEY COM PLAINT COLIC, ETC. SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Los of APPetite and Nausoat the bowels are costive, but sometimes alternate with looconese,Pain~in the Head, accompanied with aiJull sensation in the back part,Pain i-ntho right side and under the shoulder. blade, fullnses after eating, withi~d.iiG olnationto exertion of body ormind, Lrz1 eiability of temper, Low spirite, Loss of memory, with a feeling of having nogleoted some duty, Gonerea r iness; DissIneee 'luttering at the Heart, Dtebiore the eyos, Yollow Skin, Hadaohe generang over the right eye, Itestleosness at night with fitful dreams, highly colored Urine. IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHEEDED, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED. TUT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, a single doso effects such a change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer. TUTT'S PILLS tre compounded from onbatances that are fre(rous any propertisthut can Injure the mneat delicate erganiation. They Search, Cleanse, Parit'y, and Invigorate the entire 1yateta. By relieving the one gorged l.iver, they cleanse the bleed from pelsoneas htttere, and thus Impart health and vitality to the body, causing the bowels to act naturally, without which ne one can feel well. A Noted Divine says: Dr. TU'IT:-Dear Sir" For ten yearsI havre besn amartyrto D spspia, onstpatin andPle Leas them (but w.th litte ith). I an now a well man, ie gone.and (havegained frtypoundsolillu. ghey are worth their weih in o Rrv. B. I,. 31MPSOS Louisville, iiy. Tu T's PILLS. Thefirst effect is to Increase the Appetite, and cause the body to Take en Flesh, t us the s stem is neurished, and by their Tomt Ac. lion on hie Ilgsstive rgam, Regualar 6tools are produccd. . DR. J. Ft HAYWOOD, OF NEW YORK, SAYS: "ew drae3s exist that cannot be telieved byre. Storing the Liver to its nurmal functions and tot thspurpose no remedy has ever been inventad that has as happy an effect. as T'T PILLS." SOLD EVERYWHERE, PRICE 25 CENTS. Office 35 Murray Street, New York. W Dr. TUTT'S MANUAL of Valuable Infor. mation and Useful Receipts" will be malledfr e on application. TUT'S HAIR DYE. OnAY IAIn on WnIaKRAS changed to a oL,OIS rLACX by a sitgle application of this Dye. Itlha. pa h. a Nats Color, acts Instantaneously, and is sent by oxproas on reueipto $o 1. Office, 85 Murray St., New Yorke TOWN ORDINANCE. B E IT ENACTED nnd ordained by the B Town Council of Winnsboro. S. C., in Coned met, aind by the authority of the samec, that it shall not bo lawful for any dog, not acomonpanied by its o'ener, or some one in charge, to be upon the streets of the town wvithout being muz zled so as to offectuaiy, prevent it from biting any person or animal, betwoen the first day of July and the first day of Oc tober of each year; and any dog viola9 ing this provision shall be taken up and im aounded by the police for twenty-four 2. And be it further enacted and or dained, that the owner, if known, shall be informed of said impounding; aind any dog may be reclaimed by its owner upon the payment of one dollar. 3. If any dog be not reclaimed within the twenty-four hours it shall be killed by the police. Done ini Council this 31st day of July, A. D. 1878, under the corporate seal of the said Trown Council. (Seal.) JAB. A. JBRIC, Attest: .Intendant. WV.N. CuNDLrs., Clerk, july 10 TOWN ORDINANCE. BE it enacted and ordained by the 1.)Intendant and WVardens of the town of Winnsboro, 8. C., in Council met: That, foi the p)urpose of raising sup plites for the year commencing April 1, 1879, and ending Ap,ril 1, 1880, a tax for the sunms and in the inanner hereinafter mentioned shall be raised and paid into the treasury of the said town, for the use and service thereof, that is to say: two and oma-half mills ad taloremi upon every dollar of the vatlue of all the real and per sonal property within the eorp)orate limits of the town of Winnsboro; two dollars to be paid by every male Inhtabitant between the ages of sixteen and fifty-five y ars, in lieu of working upon the streets of said town; and three per cent. upon the amount of sales at auction. 2. All taxes assessed and payable un der this shall be paid in the following kinda of funds anal no other: Gold anN silver coin, United States currency and national bank notes. 3. All taxes assessed herein shall be due and payable between the 1st day of Otober and the 30th day of November, 1879, inclusIve, and all taxes remaining d11o and unp>aid oi. the 1st day of Deconm bor, 1870, shall be collectedl by dlistress or otherwtise, as now prescribed by law, together with all legal costs. 4, All persons owning property In the corporate limits of the said town of Winnaboro are required, between the 15th daty of June and the 1st (lay of August, 18r9, inclusive, to make sworn reti.rn of said p)roperty for taxation to the town clerk, and the said town clerk Is hereby reguired, when p)roPert.y-holdeors fall to reluso to make saUd sworn return, to add fifty per~ centumn to the return of the p)revious municipal year. Done in CouncIl. this thirty-first day of May, A. D. 1879, under the corporate seal of the said Town Couttoil. (SSA.) JAB. A. .BRICE, Attest:;nedrt E. 8. " AN4DLnn, Itnat -Clerk. OR Medical use, try the eebra Fted Saratoga Rye Whiskey, at F. W. HADE~NIGHT's. 0 TAD &Co.' FrnchBrandy, ger Brandy Blackbery Brand1?ea6k Swee Oi r,Pure Juidie Port WVine: CatAwba ivVne, Oh herry Brandy. Domnestio Gins. The. very best brandls of Cigars, Che4ing and Blackwell's celebrated 8m'iking. Tobacco, and a very isuserior PFii Pale Table Sherry, at .VW. HAns rNo , Rear of Ton Ia Ofor thq 31r4g Ayer'S ,Cherry Pectoral For IJiseases of the 8s - Throat and Luags, ld J- t n suoh as Coughs, Colds, s ,h6Nptt i0ough, fronohlt4, Asthma, S and Consumption, -- The reputation it has attained, in cousequence of o the marvellous cures it has produced during the AV last half century, Is a stilflent nssurance to the public that it will continto to realize the happiest results that can be desirecl. In almost every section of country there aro persons, publiely known,who have been restored &-om alarming ant It even desperate diseases of the lIntgs, by its use. All who have tried it,aknowledgo its'snperlority; and where Its virtuesnteknown noorfe hesitates sh as to what medicine to enlloy to rellove the dis. i trees and suffering peculiar to pulmotnary afrec. - tions. CHERRY PECTORAL always affords in. d stant relinf, and performs rapid cures of the It milder varieties of bronchial disorder, as well as to the more fornidable diseases of the lungs. re As a safeguard to children, amid the distress. ;o ing diseases which beset the Thnroat and Chest of Childhood, it is invaluable; for, by its timely use, f multitudes are rescued and restored to health. ' This medicine gains aiends at every trial, as the cures it is constantly producing are too re markable to be forgotten. No ftnily should be ty without it, and those who have once used'it or never will. Eminent Physicians throughout the country prescribe it, and Clergy}teon often recommend it from their kipowIedge Qf Its effects. PREPARED Ur s Dr. J. C, AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass., it I Praotical and Analytleat Chemists. BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVEtYWIHERE. d FOR a cool Lemonade or Ice Sod, t.I Water, call at F. W. HADENICET'S d Rear of Market. I FRESH GOODS! d le JUST RECEIVED. ie Io -CONSISTING IN . ART OF 3. I. -i 0 24 bbls. Molasses-all rades, 400 lbs. Choice Buckwheat Flour, 10 boxes Cream Cheese, e. 2 boxes best Italian Macenroni, a 12 bbls. Sugar, all grades, 14 sacks of Coffee-10 Rio, 4 best , Java, i- 50 bbls. Choice Family Flour. ' BAGGING AND TIES. LARD in bble., cans and buckets, t Bacon, Best Sugar Cured Hanas. - Choico Red Rust Proof Oats, Seed I Rye and Barley. Nails, Trace Chains, HIor&e and Mule Shoes, Axle Grease, WI?ite WVine and Cider Vineggr, Smoking Tobacco-r .Durham's best. A Ch&wing To' 2 Sbacco. e Raisins, Currants and Ci)fron. ALSO, e Fresh Canned Salmon, Peaoflos and Le Tomatoes, Mixed Pickles, Chow Chow and Popper Sauce. t A fine lot of BOOTS AND SHOES. d All of which will be sold cheaip for a Cash. S nov.9 D. R FLENNIKEN THE ELLIOTT COTTON GIN, WITH IMPROVKD 1R0LL, a MrANUPACTUnIED BY JM, ELLIOTT, WINNSBORO, S. C, d The subscriber has had fifty years ,experience in the gin~ business. 1J . M. ELLIOTT. * uno 14-Smnos ;SMITH'S WORM 0OIL g Anhww,GAl becomtat e i81. N the Wori (Y1. * I1t10 (ayhose d 1 g large w s v n dose to mylittl.e gi, furyoar ld, and she passd 8 wep om 4 t9 aI. Ioar01, IPae. ' . PrjPrd Dr. E. 8*.n r.PUJiRE WhfITE OILe Whomne yyl , a do, YELLOW, FEVER--BLAOE VOMI It is too son t forgot thr ti terrible disease, which will n@'lou a more malt nait and virkoel ;forrm ii u t luonths of 1879Vk MElitELL'H . ,' , Nreme y 4ea cred In South ' n ed -1 su wonderful resul t 4 eriva y j' t most agg ravat'd av Of Vc tqre i causes from one tl twQ u bite t, filtered or strained fronQ . e Od Ol$ passes through the liver,s ito g as an ose of bile exists. By Its wodrtul action on t1 Liver and Stomach the IIKATNs not Only pa vents to a certainty any kind of Fever al Black Vomit, but also cures Headache, Cons pation of the Bowels, Dyspepsia and I M alarial diseases. No one need fear Yellow Fever wao de expel the Ialarlal Poison and exQe from the blood by using Msitursr.' 1 - a which Is sold by all Druggists in 20 cent ai 1.0e bot tles, or will be sent by expres by t 'roprictors, A: F. MEIRELL CO., Phila., Pa Dr. Peinberton's Stillhigia or Qucecn Delight. IW'The reports of fondrfulcures of Rheun tisrn, Scrofula, Balt Ithetimn, Syphilis, Cane Ulcers and Sores, that come from al. parts the oountry, are not only remarkable but miraculous as to be doubted was It not for t abundance of proof. Romarkable Ouro of Sorofula, & CASE OF COL. J. 0. BRANSON, KRINUsroN, GA., September 15, 1871, GSNTs :-For sixteen years I have been a gre sufferer from Scrofula in its most distressil farms. I have been confined to my room na bed for fifteen years with scrofulous ulcer tions. The most approved remedies for s: cases had been used, and the most emine physlcians consulted, without any decid benelit. 'Ts prostrated, distressed, despotI ing, I was advised by Dr. Ayer, of Floyd Cou ty. Ga., to commence tihe use of your CompIoui Extract Stlllingln. Language Is as Insufllcle to describe the relief I obtained from the use the stillingla as it is to convey an adequa idea of the intensity of my suffering befo using your medicine ; auflifent to say. I aba (loned all other remedies and continued the u of your Extract of Stillinga until I can a truly "I am cured of till lain," of all disea; with nothing to obstruct the active pursuit my profession. More than eight months ha elapsed since this remarkable cpre, witho any return of the disease. For the truth ui the above staternont, I rot to any gentleman in Bartow County, Ga., i to the membe a of the bar of Cherokee Clrcu who are acquainted with me. I shall ev remain, with the deepest gratitude, Your obedient, servant, J. C. BRANSON, Att'y. at Law, A MIRACLE. WasT POrNT, GA., Sept. 1a 1870. GNT:--My caughter was taken on tihe 25 day of .1 un, 1863, witi what was supposed to Acute Rheumatism, and was treated for tI same with no success. In March, followil pieces of bone >egan to work out of the rig arm, and continued to appear till all the bo fron, the elbow to the shoulder joint came o! Many pieces of bone come out of right footnl 'I he case was then prono inced one White Swelling. After having been conaini about six years to her bed. and the case co sidered hopeless, I was induced to try Dr. I'ei bertons's Compound Extract of Stillingia, a was so well satistlud wit,h Its effects that I n continued the use of it until the present. My daughter was confined to hr:r bed abo six years before she sat up or even turned ov without help. She now site up all day. nra sews most. of her time-has walked across tl room. 11er general health Is now good, and believe she will, as he limbs gain st-rengt walk well. I attribute her recovery, with t1 blessing of God. to the use of your invaluab medicine. With gratitude, I am, yours truly, W. B. BILANTON. WsrT POIrNT, Ga., Sept. 16, 1870. OEss :-The above certificate of Mr. W. Blanton we know and certify 'o as being tru The thing is so ; hundreds of th3 most respec ed citizens wlll certify to it,. As much roteren can be given as may be required. Yours truly, CRAWFORD & WAI,KER, Druggists. IION. U. D. WILLIAM8. -W DR. PEMBERTON'S STILLTNGIA is pr pared by A. F. MICRRELi, & CO.. Phila., Pa. Sold by alt Druggssts in Si.O0 bottles, or soe by express. Agents wanted to canvass ever Send for Iiiook-"Curlors Story"-free to a Medicines sent to poor people payable in instt meats. may81 1OR the celebrf.ted Matthep 1868 Old Cabinet Rye, call at 1 W. HABENIOJIT'S, Roar of Mark( Hall. THEE FRIEND OF ALL HOLLOWAIY'S PILLS! "I had no appetite, Holloway's Pil ye me a hearty one." "Your Pills are marvelous." "I sen d for another box, and knop the in tihe house." "Dr. Holloway has cured my headel that was chronio. "~I gave one of y our Pills to my bal for cholera muorbus. The dear litt thing got well in a day." "MIy nausea of a morning is no cured." "Your box of Holloway's Ointmer cured me of noises in the head. rubbed some of your Ointment behin the ears and the noise lhas left." "Send me ,two boxes; I want one for poor family." "I encelose a dollar; yourr price is cents, but the medicine to nme is worth dollar." "Send me flye boxes of your Pills," "Let me have three :boxes of yor Pills ,by. return mail, for chills an fever." I have over 200 sucoh testimonials these, but want of sparce compels mc conclude. Fon CUTANEOUS DI8ORtDERB, And all erutptions of the skin, this Oini ment is most inavaluable. It does ni heal externally alone, but! penetrati wi'h the mrost searching effects to t13 very rcrrt of evil. RIOLLO WA Y'S OINTMENT Possessed of this remedy, every man may be own doctor. It maybe rubbe into the system, so trs to reach. any Ii ternal comnplaint; by these means, cur< sores or ulcers in the throat stomnac] liver, spine or othrer pairts. It is an il fallible remedy for bad legs, bad breast contracted or stiffjoints, gout, rheumi tism and all skin diseases. IMPORT4NT CAUToN.-Neone are genuine u: less tihe signature of.J. HIA YDoCI as agenat -f< the United States surrounds each box of P11 and Cintment. Boxes at 2% centf, 62 cents, ar SW* There is considerable sayin by taii the larger sizes. 1114.owy & CO., feb 15-4yew York, AND PL EASURE -00 TO PATTERlSON'# OsirLD1nAhED SPA INGi These springs are sitnated four mik southr of Shelby and six miles north< WVhitakor's, on the Air-Line M. 1R. Tl mineral waters are. sulphrur and ohala beato. Thre propption of tirer ulphur an ron, sulphur and magnesia. Propertit combined are benefiolal to all disease: and never fail to cure the most obfrtinal cases, as many will testify. ;The chall beate waters cannot be surpassed, hravirm wrought inanry almost rtriracuons ctrie These celebrated springs are now ope and thre prices a+e in reach of all-havin been greatly reduced this season. Bathing houses, croquet :grounds, te pin alloy, and ,other amusements an attractions free for visitors.. Haoks run ning from this place will -meet visitors Shelby, or at WVhitaker's. on the Air LIs A~ i4 upon short nogtocejo the Propr etc BATES 0OF BOARD, Per day . .i, Per week. Per month . a Per nionth for'2 or more mo$s 1. Qhildren and servarns haJ p4@e oforu at4at of Tnwn ia1.