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THE NE AND HERAID. WINNs3doIt. S. C. 1UEiSDAY, January 13. t 1890. It. 1.1 .vs na rIs, uos. v.. 8. Nk NOLLbX. Assose,JATi onITR. (Ot'ERNt(on SIMP9ON tYS l E Doz:s not ti:el authorized to call the Legisla laiture together to consider Jhe supply bil. In his opinian no such emorgen Cy has arison as would justify a proela lation. It is not for ilitm to interpret the law. A nuinber of papers. hold. that uhe Act is valid, and they say there will be no trouble about collect. ing the taxes. Others are by no means so sanguine. People have have a natu rul a'ersion to tax-paying, and it is unsa'e to assume that. there will he no evasions. It is to be hoped a case will be made and decided at once. it' not, the Governor might as well call the Legislature together. A few days' work will sutilce to pass a bill about which there can be no doubt. General Bratton for Comptroller-Gen eral. Col. Wm. Wallace, of Coluntbia, in declining a nomination for the Comp ! ttroller-Oeneralship, very gracefully nominates General Bratton, of this county, for that responsible position. Goneral Bratton has put forth every etl'rt in the fight for redemption, and no eflbrt whate% er in the strife for of flce. It would be wise in the State to secure the services of such a person. Linked Sweetness long Drown Out. The trial of the clergyman, Hayden, for the nurder of the girl Mary Stan uard, has been its progress for more than fifty (lays, and has excited uni versal interest. Experts were sent to l;urope to study the subject of arsenic po'soining, and at on1e tine eflr'rts were made to bring into court the head of the deceased girl which htd been preserved in alcohol, to show that her cheek bone had tie mark of a boot heel corresponding in shape and in the number of nails to that. worn by Hayden on the (lay of the mturder; but public opinion could not stand that. It is charged that Ilayden had been criminally intimate with the girl. One of his strongest witnesses is his wife, who swears to an alibi. As to the trial an exchange says: It Is now believed Ilit it will be imi practicable to thitshi the evidence this week. ''he (lefenice has (lone such strong work in stir-rebuttal that the State regards it ats necessary to meet mte of the evidence whiclh has been putt in by counter-evidenice which, it is claimed, catn be resurrected from those appatently inexhaustible umies of itfot11natioi-Itocklan(d and South 1aldison. The people of the former place have reapIed a harvest from this trial, and for three months have aban (loned the )rotits of chaurcoal burning andl getting oust hoo0p p)oles for the ettnolumeonts of the witness roomn, $2.70 per day tot travel aud attenidance. At'ter ilnishisng thmeir testinmony for the State; and beisn struck from thte State switness roll, not a few sue ceddits getting their natimes enttered upon the rolls of the defencee, anid these ii alternated between the two sides, on lawyers say that the peole of Rock ad htave dleveloped an ability in re memberingthings which, to usea mIld expressiont, is very retmarkable. Nearl - two hundred witnesses have testified durIng the thtree months of thme trial. A careful rccotrd shows that thte prosecution called or recalled eighty-nlste persons anid thtat the die tence followved witht forty-sevent. Tme State put ont tbrtty-six onm rebuttal, and up to thtis evetnitng on sut-tebuttal thlr,ty-four have testi fled. The figures aggregate 216. Com.eecticut has had a nutmber of suich long tials, atnd sevetal counties have been neatly bankrupted by tlte expenses, whicht have reached as high as thirty thousand dollars. The swearisngin thtis case has been so con * ~ tradictory that about the best platn is to close thte trial and1( toss up a petnny for the verdict. Many Stanntard was a servant girl of very little itntelli gence, atnd Hayden's salary as minis ter was two hundred dollars a year. The parties intterested as prIncipals or witntesses setm to be a hard sot gener ally. ".4 AtThe Latest from Maine. Atlast accounts,lolitics in Maine were itn a worse muddle thtan ever, - healtmost stirred with a spoon. The LegIslature met on the 7th Instant. Thse F~usionists had ant unquestioned majority in the Senate amid that body was organized without trouble. That is to say, the Republicans originally had a majority, but theo Council couint ed In a fhsion majority, and as all these mnembers so counted In appeared and took the oath they easily con r4 4 trolled it, and elected all their officers, including the President of the Senate, Lamusotr whto was to act as governior pro femn. until the new governor be elected. The House was the theatre of conttest. Several Fusionmists who hadl been couinted in~ declared a (de termintion )tot to servo, anid thte Re publicans i opeCd to capture that body. At thte apipointed hour all the memn bers, antd all thte contestanmts asnd mnany outsiders, includinmg Republican and Fusion leaders and the mob generally, crowded in pntil even stantding room was exhausted. -Ex-Con ressmnan Hetlo, who wvas elected a ' embQr of the Ifouse, managed the Reiublicani C' ~ sIde. He protested against the calling of the roil eas fraudulent, but the aeci'etary.ref\tsed to hear 'thd point, andi called k over. Then, amid hiss ng~ and jecripg and cheers amnd the utmost disor4er, Governor Garcelon appeaNd and administered, the oath ieon%t g et ~ 1dIat,~h hogt titr wiIbeno egotnti, ~o iI~J4ta~s clij~~iodiscovored seventy-six. This caused a great up roar. Hole tried sone more illIibus terinr, but in vain. lie demanded the roll call to show that a quorum was lacking, but be was unheeded, and the ofticers were elected v1 et armis. There was really no qu'run, bit the Fusionists did not -hesitate at this. The most disgraceful disorder pre vailed all through this time till the I louse adjourned. That uight Garce Ion's term expired and Lamson be comie governor Pro ler. Blaine was ubiquitous and worked until be fell In a fit anid was in the hanls of the doc tors for flive hiaits. The Iepublicans saw that they had failed the first day and on the next they tried to have their members qualified, hoping to win the light by parliamentary tactics in the House. But again they were foiled. The terms of Garcelon anid his Council had expired, and as the law requires (ho governor to swear in members in the presence of the Council, Lamson held that lie had no authority of himself to adllminister the oath. 'TLhio Republicans bethought them e& es of the Supreme Court, but the ce,stitution provides that the gov ernor sinall put the questions to the Court. and sineo there is no governor, the Court cannot supervene except in the ordinary course of law by means of quo warranto. Again, a new com plivation arises ink this ease. The Su premo Courts of Wi.consin and South Carolina were called upon to say which of two men Were elected. Eith er one or the other was. But in Maine if the Fusionists choose a gov ernor, the Court nlay say he is not governor, but they cannot say who is governor, ihr no one else can claim the ofllce'except by a vote of the Leg islature. A dead lock has existed for several days with 110 speedy chance of a break. The monotony is varied by the testimony of two Fusionist mem bera that they suffered themselves ap parently to bo'bribed by Republicans not to participate In the proceedings. One member held a roll of greenbacks containing a thousand dollars, which he alleged to be the identical , mom y paid to him. Blaine vehemently - de nies the bribery; but as it is no secret that be bought thousadls of voters at the election, his vehemence must be taken with a grain of salt. Two ficts are apparent. First, that despite the blood and thunder talk of the Rtadicnls, no blood has been spilt, and secondly, that t.he Fusionists have d1splayedl mtucht more backbone than the Northern Democrats ever showed before. Right or wrong, their pluck must be admitted, and it is this, doubtless, that made Blaine fall In his lit. 1OR Co TOr,to,z GENERAL. Colonel William Wallaco Declines to be a Untiddate, and Nominates General John Braition. Co1.IsmirA, January 10, 1880. )sditor' R?egister: I see-by the CJam (den Journat that d kind fAichd . f'omn Faiuirfleid( hais 1nom11inatad mel for the hiighl and1 resp)onalble oilice of Comnp rioller General. But wi' lst I appre.. (efte thie compllienit, I milltt for' the tfol lowing reasons, decline the nlomfina tioni: I don't knlow wh y it Is. unls some$801 re mote anceestor, of wihom I niever heard, (for I can trace thle family genealog.y no0 fui ther back than my grandthh er, who was ani lio1test farmer of Kir cudbrightshlro, Scotland,) miust have eairned ani hones~t livinig for hhlnself anid his b)lue(-eyed progeniy by dlepriv inig the K(ing of 1118 revenue, 'after tile mfamier of D)irk Hlalteraik, of happy memory, for 1 never see a tax-gather er or revenlue officer that Burns' 1po01n. "The . dell came fladlin8 through the town, And danced awa we the excisemnan, (d0es not comec to lmy mluind ; and( my experience of tax-gatherers since th'ie wvar, though some)w hat mtodified by D)emocratic rule, has tenlded1 rather to inerease thlan dhninish this hereditary in)stin1ct. I know, however, that these offices are nlecessary, and should be filled by ourP best men. I therefore take the liberty of nioiniatling for tile office of Comlptrollecr General a gentle man who is well knowno throughout the State-one wiho, by those qual1iflea tions whlich will always conmmnd tile resp)ect and admiration of mlankild courage, fortitulde, devotion to princi ple and exalted p)atriotismn-arose from (lie ranks to the conmmanld of a brigade in that army of p)atriots whose caulse has not been lost unitil Grant dons thle purp~le, and whose gfenial na1 tulre and kid ness of heart will always place him where duty will permlit--on thle ide of the imploverishled tax-pay.ers --General Johni Bratton, of Fali~leld. Another reason whiy I must decline the nomniationl Is because I conlsenlted last summlTer, at tile request of' frinds in the ThIrd Congressional D)istrict, to become a candidate for Congress at the enisuinig election, anld have mnade some1 pr,ogress ill that direction. I am satisfied with the Democratic party, especIally tile rank and file, anid cannot see the necessity, after the victory at the polls in 1876, of forming a new party. Nor ennl I seeO that the party is to biam siefd~outhlern Congress men who are ini a majority legislate for the Northern Democracy whlo are in the minority, it seems to me that the faunit Is rather with the Conigress men than with the party. But enough for thle p resent. I will ive my views more fully as occasion otliers. WILLI WALLACE. OPENING Tflu CAMPAIGN.--The lRe p~ublicanms are beginninlg to dot the Southlwithl bloody shirt organs to serve their pur'poses in the ensuing genleral election. They have already eRtablishled the Ledger' in New Orleans, wlehi the t 'lograph announced a few days ego had made its debut with a liberal adveritising p)attonlago from "Demnoerats"-save the mark I Last night?s dispatches proclaim the advent at itte ockofthe .Arkana Reopub Jican, and It is rutuored thmat an organ of the party is to.be established In Co lumbia at ant early day. We trust If it does the citizeins will fore it to .rely enltirely on~ the conRtibutons of theO party i6 meatnsto fQist upon us if' poe. slble to our frtetrIevable ruin..-RegDs. --An AthAtmta grl asked A young mian how he lIked Shake.peare. l1e ~l,wthout a strQgle, 'tAs 'You BOUTHI CAROLINA N.W& - Abbevteu -Medh mn: Serious complaints have been made about the contraband whi. key wagons that are constantly run. ning Into the eountrv noe Donalds. vile and "dealing damnation round the land." -Mr. J. W. Norris' saw till was burnt down qu Just Thursday night. The fire was the work of an incendia. ry, though no clue has yet been found ats to the perpet.rator of the deced. Mr. Norris' loss will amount to about five hundred dollars with no insurance. -The. farmes complain that the lessianl fly is doing gueat damage to the wheat crop, and in some sections it. is said to be turning yellow and is hopelessly injured. 'I here has been a larger area plaited in wheat than last year, and the crop with the exception of "the fly" is doing wall. A good stiff freeze and protracted cold weath er will, perhaps, kill the insects and prevent a failure of the crop. With another harvesting season like that of the must year the country will stand on solid ground. -Before the war consumption was comparativelv unknown among the colored population, but. of late years there has boon a rapid and marked in crease of pulmonary diseases among these people. The Chiles family of negroes, living near this place, has during the last two years beoome al. mest extinct from lung complaints. -Chiles, and Allen and James died the latter part of 1878; Fielding (lied in the spring of 1879, and all of them from pulmonary derangement. There are other instances of similar fatality among the negroes fronu the same dread-cause. Chester. ---State Bulletin, Januarv 6: Mr, Jasper G. Sledge, who was recoently injured at the railroad ferry, has sinc died of his injuries. -Dr. Wm. J. Ilicklin, a well-knowr physician and a gtool citizen of thi county, died suddenly of heart diseasf last Thursday at Lancaster . depot, whither he had gone that day to visil his son, Mr. F. M. Ilicklin. Dr Hicklin was one of the very best met in the county. lie ranked high in hI profession, and always sustained ar unassuming, irreproachable Christiar ohlarnoter. -Iepcrter, January 8: As an evi. dence of the remarkable mildness o1 the present winter, a stalk of greeti corn, about six inches in height, cai be seen on the side of the pavelent in front of the post office. It looks al. most as fresh and vigorous as growing corn usually does in May. -Mr. J. H. Barnes killed, a few days before Christmas, in Caldwell's mill pond, a wild goose, some say s swan, which measured seven feet anl five inches between the wings, ai live feet and two inches from the poini of the beak to the end of the tail. Thil is the biggest game yet brought dowr by any of the hunters in these parts. -Last Friday afternoon as the ulT train on the Chester and Lenoir Rail. road was bowling along at the rate o1 sixteen miles an hour, a short distance above Yorkville, the pilot of the en gine struck the head of a negro namei Iairrison Blalock lying on the track asleep from the stunor of intoxication Stopping his tralin, Captain Marshal walked back to where the negro wva lying, and expected to find a ease o smashed skull. Upon~ examination howev'er, he found that skull sound but the skini covering It was righ smartly ripp)ed up. (Uaptai n Marshal then suggested to the negro that il wvouldl be proper for imu to emiigrat< fromt that p)lace. The dlarkey at on)c4 roused up and struck out for home. Lancaster. -Ledger, January 7: Eggs 122 cents. Biutter 15i. -Mr. 8. B. Stewman sent us white p)atridge last Saturday, which he killed In the fIelds near hisa promis es. It is certainly a curiosity, auc might he classed as a monstrosity. -A tenant house on thme farm o1 Mr. J. B. A dams, near Cra4gville containing abont 6000) pounds of hay 1000 of fodder, 300 bushels of cottor seedl, and some houisehold furniture was destroyed by fire on Suna nIght, 28th ultimo. It was the worF of an incendliar~y, and on1e arrest wvau made, but the evidence being insuffi cient the party was discharged. -On Friday night, 26th uIt., a difii culty sprang up between a negro man. Morris McPherson, anmd Mr. Minoa Blackmon, which resulted in Mr. B. getting a severe blow from a rocla (supposed to have been throwsm by Mcl herson) and McPherson a dan-. gerous wound In the stomach from s pistol shot. Mr. Blackmon was Im. mediately arrested and placed in jail, D)eputy Shierifr WV. C. Hunter in die. charging his (duty received a severc wound in the face from a rock throws by some unknown person. At this writ.ing McPherson is considered out of danger and Mr. Bllackmoni has bees released on bail. Pickens. -Sentinel, January 8: Tom Thur. by, colored, was acidentally shot neat this place by another colore'd boy dur ing Christmas. Thme ball entere'd the abdomen, but fortunately ranged sc as not to entcr the intestines, antd lhC is rapidly recovering. --C.-B. Clardy, a middle-aged man, who lives in the Lathem neighbor. hood, in this.county, was found dead during Christmas week. It Is sup-) posed lie died from the eff'ects of hecari disease sup)erinduced by drinking in toxicating liquors. Coroner Parkinm held an inquest, but we have not seemi the verdict of the jury. -Mr. Ewell Reeves, Jr., had a little daughter burned to death on Saturday last, it appears that the child was left in charge of some smaller childreni while the mother had gone to a branchi to wash some 'clothing.. The child gathered some fuel for the fire in hor apron, which caught on fire in empty Ing it.. Her cries attracted her moth. er and others,.but before she could be reached. she was so badly burned that site lived only a few hours. -We regret to learn that Mr. R. C, Cook, who resided in the lower sec. tion of this county, met with a fatal accidenit at his mill en .the 23rd uit, lie was on the race making suome.e pairs, wvhen lisa footing gave way, pre. cipitating him to the ground, some t6i1 feet, the backof his hecad strikitig ..s rock, crushing his skull. . He lingered unconscious until the morning of th'e 27th when he breathed his last. 'Mr. Coo~ was an Englishman, and had boon in this country. only a tfoW ypara lie married.the dlAughter of Mr. L.G Hamilton,'of this county, and. i intelligence and .6og was: acumulang ptroper '. - Bt i n .friends., . .udsban }-M N..ZWB OF TH E DAY. -Miss Roxanna Brigham, a maiden lady, of M^rlboro, Mass,, refus,d to eat because she got it into her head that eating was smftil, and so, after nine days ofstarvation, died on 8aturday of last week. -The glycerine building of the Latlin Rand Powder Company, at Oak Ridge, New Jersey, was demlolished by an explosion on Thursday. Two men were blown through the roof forty fet in the air, and are so seri ously hurt that they will die. -The Supreme Court of Virginia has aflirmNI the jttdgment of the ltieh nond Ilustin Court in the ease of .Tno. E. Poindexter. eonvicted some months since of kiiling Charles C. Curtis on the 3rd of March last. 'oin dexter was sentenced to the peniten. tiatry for two years for vollntatry muan slaughter. -A Paris dispatch says the news of Edison's discovery in electric lighting has produced sometu sonsation there. Count Du Moncel, who is recognized there as the highest authority on elec tric science, writes to the Temps sav ing that the new lamp is not new and warns the public against the pompous announcement from the New World. -Tihe Senate committee on the Southern exodus organized for busi ness on Saturday, and will begin tak ing testimony this week, when wit nesses will be sumnoned from Indi ana and North Carolina, and later frol-n other States. The comnittee do not at present contemplate going out o' Washington for the purpose of the int quiry. - -'rhe Irish Tines states that tCh. government Is- determined to use ?220,000 of the church surplus as a fund to be lohnod lt an exceptionally low rate of ilntorost to landlords and local bodies for expenditures in the Construction of permanent works in order to provide labor for unskilled workmen, the loan to be repaid in thirty-five years. -The National Greenback Labor partv collference met at Washington on 'lhursday with otle hundred ttnl twenty-five delegates from twent ' eight States in attendance. lion. T. 11. Murch, Greenback Congressman from Maine, was elected permlanent chairman, and a committee was ap pointed to report upon the time and place for the National Convemtion to nominate a candidate for President. --A special frou Cambridge, Texas, says that on Saturday M. A. Seay, who was supposed to be Insane, went to tt.o residence ofJ, N. Ladd, ten miles cast of there, and shot him dead without the least provocat ion. Thence le he ut to Samuel Tubba' houso and shot him, five times. Tubbs is not, expected to live. Seay then went to Logan's farm, informed Logan of what lie had done, and before he could be prevented p1lacedi a pistol to his Own head and blew out his brains. -J. 13. Mannex, assignee of Arch bishop Purcell,-has filed in the Probate Court a schedule of the real estate whi h is claimed to be liable to sale for the benefit of the creditors of the Archbishop. The schedule covers all the >roperty of the Catholic Church in Cincinati-the Cathedral, churches, parochial school buildings and lots. le propertyis to:be ap.praised, but is noiv estimtuted to be wvorth over a million and a half of dollars. Tihe attemplt to make tis p)ropertv assets for the creditors illl be bitterfy' con.. -A Greenville, Miss., dispatch says that last week;Gity Marshall McGuire, of Lake Providence, wile attempting to arrest a nliuber of fiatboatmien, wvas shot and killed. Five men were atr rested 01n susp1icion atnd p)laced uinder guard. A number of McGunire's rela ui Ves broke itto the room anld opened( fire, mortally wounding two, and crippling tile other three. The jury of mnquest discovered that the man who killed the marshal was JTanes Brown, who escap)ed In a skiff, anld the five men who were shot were in nocent. --Frauds on the Newv York Produce Exchange, said to amount to *31,000, have been dlscov'ered. 'rho defauhter' is Benjamin C. Bogert, whlo has betn treasulrer of the exchange for mlanv yeais, anid was a highly respe)ctel merchant in whomi genleral coniden (ceI was felt. Bogert did not app)ear at tile Exchange or at Is office after the dis covery was made, andc died suddenly 0on Thursday afternoon at tIhe house8 df a friend, It Is thought that being tun able to bear his disgrace, he may have committed suicide. JAn1UARIY.--The name of this montht Is taken firom the Latin ,Ja'nuarius. anid consists of 31 days. It is said to have beetn added withI February, by Numa, to the Rtomlan year, wichd previously had but ton mnonths.flR was named from thle double-faced god, .Jannus to whom Its first day, wvhich looks iack upon) tile past year, and forwaajd uipon thlat to come, was sacred. It htad origi.. nally but 29 (lays, but two additional days wiere given to it by Julius Cmesar when he reformed the calendar. It wvas symbolized in Romoby a consul in conIsular robes, because those magis trates wer~e Installed Into office 01n its first day. It corresponded in tihe Athle tian calendar with, thle latter half of Poseldeon anld the first half of Game 11011. Among the Scandinavians It was called the month of Thor', anid later, Ice mnonth. The French Revo hltion)ary calendar merged it in parts of Novose and Pluvoise. It was nlot uniformly the beglining- of tile year among Latin Christians until the 18th century.-Ex. --Eight dollars is a big price for a poem in these times, but we paid it cheerflily to Mr. Tennyson for tIle sub joined effort, entitled "Rural Scenes:" Gently the kine are lowing, Soft waves tile golden grain, (uickly a man is making ' racks for the comning traln., Silently fall the dow-drops In the solemn evetntide; Ready a girl is getting To take a buggy ride. Soon wUij the maiden's lover Illis arm arounld her slide; Wilie to his manly bosom Her head will gently glide. Sava ey bitos th'e mosqito, .Merr ~bumbbes the beo; . ut all that theiaiden sayeth Is~-once In awhvbl.-sTo.he I" AnnXYO 700K?--If so, go to your nearest drhggit or store, and buy a box of Dr.. (*der'sLiter Pills.. They will cure you.- You can find' thern in an~ store. For sale' byh,D)'y W.' E. -Ohinese literatuare lqso 414 thqt the Olirnaanilaam.J$- l'-. Dr.TUTT'S Expectorant I IN 2 OTS. AND Si BOTTLES. Its proportiea are Demuloent, Nutri tivo Bialaanle,.oothing and oa nir. Co~nibiiing all these uaitie9 it iithe most effootivo LUNG BALSAM ever ofored to auferora from pulmonary diseases. DR. J. F. HAYWOOD, of Now York, voluntarlly indoreos it. * -READ WHAT HE SAYS:-' Dr. TUT: Now Yo k, Sept.. 19, 187. Dear 6r-,During this ar I v.aod ' no buntlred 01180s of l uing d seaees. in the 1"twor w.rds of the cifty tho cessowore of a very severe t ye. It woo tyrte my aatton.ton wa otllt'Tutt's octorant, and I confess ay sur riso at its wonderful power. D)uring a practice of twenty years. 1 have never knowu a iediWine to act as prompm~tly and with anob happWoets. It instantly subduud thbe most violen Ateeof coughing amnd invariablyc red the: dleaas hn a few days. 1 uhnerfulidurs 1tasth b lung meioue I ever used. J. NRANOIS H AYWOOD, IL A A NEWSPAPER PUB. WRITES. (Jffice ':vonin News, Augusta, (Oa. Dr TUTT: Dei -Ms little son w at ked witb pneumonta laot wimu.'r vM oh loft him with a voleut cough, that la t il thin a mouth sinoe, for tae ouro of which laim Indebted toyour valuable 1fxpoorant. I had tried tnoot every thing reoin tnonided, but nono did any good until l usod your its" poct.'raut. one bottlo of whiok removed the cough entirely. 'With uan.y thauka ouo t,ull . Had torrible NIOHT SWEATS. M.enmphis, Feb., ll. I82i. Dr. TUTT: Sir--I have ben outring for nearly two years with a severe cough. When I coimmencod tar king your Enpectorant as redued to one hundred and sixateen Ipouuds in weight. I had tried almost everything- had terrible nthtaewoats.. havo taken half dozen l ottles. Trho night sweats have loft tne, the cough has disappeared. and 1 hvo gained fifteen With great reespct OIVCR RIUInd. IMPORTANT QUESTIONS. Tteader, have you caught a cold? Ar6 you un able to raise the phleg:a? Have you an irrita on in the throat? A sense of oppressiou on the lungs, with short breath? Do you have a fit of coughing on lying down ? A sharp pain iow and tiho In the region of he heart, shoul dore and back? It so, our Advice In take at once a dose o Tutt' Expuctorant; you will soon be able to raise the phlegm. In an hour rpeat the Expectorant, place a hot iron to the feet,take two of Tutt'e Pille. You will soon fall into a aoant sleep and wake up in the morning. oough gone, lunga working frnely; easy breath lig, and the bowels moving Iianaturaluanner. To prevent a return of these symptome use the Expectorant several days. Offloe, 35Murray Street, N. Y. TUTT'S PILLS CURE ToltltPID l SR. TUTT'S PILLS CURE DYSPEPSIA. TUTT'S PILLS TUTT'S PILLS -ULTE HEIRDE. 9TUTT'S UPILLS TUTT'S aPILLS TUTTS PAILLSY APIAY l1AI1% on WHIBsae Changed to a OI.Oy BLACK by a sing o application of this Dra. It im. ports a Natural Uolor. acs Instantaneously, and is as llarmloas as spring water. 8old by Druggiats, or sent by express on receipt of 1. Office, 35 Murray St., New York. FROM FACTORY 'D IRET TO PURCHASERS! Every Man His Own Agent LUDDIEN & BATES' GRAND INTRODUCTION SALE. Five thousuad super Instruments from teni leading manufactur~ers to be placed in repre aenta.I ye Southern homes at factory rates for in trodlnetion and advertisement. Sale inaugu~i rated Nov. 1, 1Si8. and proving suhl anf im mense success, will beocontinued untIl Nov. 1, 1850. 'The only sale of t.he kind cver successfully carriod out In America. Don't miss this chfane to join a gigant,Ic club of live thousand pur chasers, cach of whom secures an Instrument at mlanufactu. or's wholesale rates. INFORMATION TO PUJRCHIASERS. Don't make the mistake of supposIng us to be merely "local agents, selling on cormisslon." Uniderstand and dona'ffor Get f that XN of the largest, manufactutrers it America including Chichmering & Sons. Mas~on & Hamlin. ilalet & Davis. Guild & Church. Mtathiushlek Piano Co. Peloubot & Pelton, Southern Gem Co. Sterling Organ Co. have appointed us theIr southern Wholesale Agents and given us exclusive control of their Instruments for fihe sout.h. These manufactur ers supply us, uunder apeclal contfract, with thor's ands oinstruments yearly at only a snall per cenaf. over prime cosf of muaufacture. All advan tages gamed by our direect Connection with manu fit.urers andI our immense purchases we give dliretly to puirehasers under our NEW PLAN OF SELLING. No Agents I No Commissions I Instruments shipped from factoryv direct to purchasers, and all middle men's profits aaved. Every man his own agent and entitled to agent's rastes. The ony house South sellIng on this new plan. Buyig from us is practieally buying from the manufacturers, and our prices are as low as man ufaoturers over give. See these special offers: Pianos ~Organs 6125 7 Oct. Rlosewood 9 Stops. T andsomle Carved legs. Cata- Walnut ease, wIimh Gold. logup price, $525. ornamentatioa, 657. .155 TX Oct. Rose- 1s Stos. 'Three sets wood, large siz.e, Carv- of reeds large size, ex.. d Le80 ie teded top Etgere case lint. t.p e$600 ofrich design, 671. 6227 TX Oct.'Square 15 8.tops. Three sets Grand, oxtra I a r g e reeds, superb Mfirror size and manilleent, To French Walviut lornamente ease, Bur inlaid and Gold Catalogue price, $1000 Ornamented Case, 880. All guaranteed Instruments from reliable makers. Sold uinder air yere meaantee. Shipped diet .fro factory or fro Savannah,I o dollars on an organ, we assume freit to any Ri. IM. eotor steamer landtng Soth ienton 15 da tet trial, We DA tht both ways if not stisfactory. Order and eat in your wn home, Severest tests of c pent muii ans invited, Purchasers choie romn ten lI makers and two hundred different style. .fdi) elal rate. to lleachere, Sehool,, Churches and44~ fore. BOnd for IntroductionSale Clreular glving foil information. Address ZLudden a Bates, SAVANNAH, GA,' Whtoleale Piano and' Organ Dealers. 40018s 0G E . month guranted $9a data ~ hoe de e h indut,rious. hoptaf0ttsiWed wll start yo.iten womeh, y SM grls make moneyfse as tht~fltie insnd usteradcifesses at 910 6iasee tor emselve. 001 ad1 em ,~1e~p la sua of money, Adae tine. I Bargains AT JOHN L. MIMNAUGH'S. O Make room for Spring Goods, I will offer my entire stook of DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS, SHOES, HATS and CLOTHING, GLASS and CROCKERY WARE at MATCI[LENS PRICES. Parties in Need of the above goods will do well to visit my store before purobasing elsewhere. JOHN L. MIMNAUGH, The Leader of LoW Prices. jan 10 CLOTH1NG Dry Goods. Sales greater than ever, which shows the INTRINSIC VALUE and GREAT CHEAPNESS of our goods. SUGENHEIMER & GROESCHEL, If you wn tosave money by buying yonr goods, come and see us beforo NEW GOODS! W E bays now open, and will sell as low as any reliable house in town our second supply of Fall and Winter Goods. 1 case Fruit of the Loom Long Cloth.. 25 pieces other brands of Long Cloth. 1 case Bessbrook Jeans. pieces assorted Jeans and Cassimeres. pie"es new style Prints. Dress Goods, Alpacas, Mohairs, Cashmeres. Blankets, white and colored, Flannels, Linsays, Ginghams, Browi. Homespuns, Plaid Homespuns, Drillings, Osnaburgs, Bed Ticking, Hick ory Shirting, Cotton Flannels. Comforts, Shawls, Cloaks, Boulevard Skirts. A full supply of white and colored Dress Shirts, Undershirts and Drawers, Bleached, Brown and Colored Half Hose. Clothing and Hats. Overcoats I Overcoats ! ! Overcoats I I ! For the ladies we have a nice stock of Undervests, Hosiery, Gloves, Ruffling, Collars and Cuffs, Edgings ank Insertions, Ribbons, &c, The "Pinafore," "Juna," "Pride" and "Beatrice" Corsets. White Goods, such as Nainsooks, Jaconets, Cambrics and Lawns. For house-keepers, we have a full line of Table Damask, Doylies, Towels, Bleached and Brown Sheetings. Notions in great yariety. Ladies' Misses' and Children's Shoes. Men's, Youths' t.nd Boys' Boots and Shoes. Trunks, Valises, Satachels, and Umbrellas. In our Grocery Department can be found everything needful at low prices. We cordially invite an inspection of our stock, feeling assured that we a n please. F. ELDER & CO. nov 4, THE ELEPHANT HAS COME, - WITH A FRESH STOCK OF FALL AND WINTER GOODS, -AT THE-. WINNSBORO DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, AND MILLIN! Y BAZAAR. We take pleasure in announcing to our friends and the public enerall that we are now opening the finest and most com lete assortien of Fa and Win~ter Goods, inoluding Fancy and Staple DrGosyl telts styles of Millinery, Ladles' Dress Goods, Fancy (Lorod 'a> r1bni tes DEALERS IN.. OR IM OOONEIRIEg,. Oto 'mnA OC RX,TrNUdWOOD.itNAmjj , fr fB ETC~, wpc ilbopc v ry fo~los s we are dete2!nlh?.d tn sellhe . rthan the ebeapest, and cordially nvite all to call and see tA ";'~s~ I atm also ent for the well-knwn nd , a?r selvd ? l Qot4? A; 04MW2U8