The Darlington news. (Darlington, S.C.) 1875-1909, July 04, 1889, Image 1
THt DARLINGTON NEWS,
.■'tf * 3.., • - .'• ,£$£* J‘jk”SiX3mFp
I^ublishkl kvutthuasdat morning
HENRY F. THOMPSON,
PROPRIETOR.
TER1IS«$2 Per Annuni in Adrnnce.
One Square, firat insertion $1.00
One Square, second insertion 50
gverjr subseqent insertion 50
Contrtot adrertisements inserted upon the
most reasonable terms.
Marriage Notices and Obituaries, not
exceeding six lines, inserted free.
••FOR US PRINCIPLE IS PR1NCIPLR—RIGHT IS RlWlIT—YliMTEKUAY, TO-DAT. TO MORROW, FOREVER.
VOL. XV. NG 27.
DARLINGTON, S. 0., THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1889.
WHOLE NO 755.
Ballad of the bloody brook.
OSm* listen to the story of brave Lothrop and his
How thay fought, how they died.
When they marched against the redskins In the
autumn days, and then
How they fell. In their pride.
By Pocoir.uck aide
“Who will go to Deerfield meadows and bring the
ripened grain f"
Bald old Mostly to tils men in array.
“Take the wagons and the horaea and bring It
back sgain.
But be sure that no man stray
All the day. on tbo way *'
Then the dower of Essex started, with Lothrop at
their head.
Wise anil brave, hold and true
B« bad fought the Pequpte long ago, and now tc
Mosely said.
“Be there many, be there few,
I will bring the grain to you.”
They gathered all the harvest, and they marched
on the way
Through the woods which blazed like Are.
Vo soldier left the line of march to wander or to
stray.
Till the wagons were stalled In the mire,
And the men began to tire.
The wagons have all forded the brook aa it flows.
And then the rear guard stays
To pick the purple grape# that are hanging from
the boughs
When crack I to their amaze,
A hundred firelocks blaze!
Brave Lothrop be lay dying, but as he fell he
cried,
“Each man to his tree,” said he,
“Lot no one yield an Inch I” and so the soldier
died;
And not a man of all can see
Where the foe can be
And Philip and his devils pour in their shot so
as
From behind and before.
That man after man la shot down and breath re
his last;
Every man Ilea dead In his gore,
To light no mote, no morel
fib. weep ye maids of Essex, for the lads who
have died.
The flower of Essex they I
fbe Bloody Brook still ripples by the black moun
tain side,
Rut never shall they come to see the ocean tide,
‘ id never shall the bridegroom return to his bride
From that dark and cruel day, cruel day I
-Edward Everett Hale.
MY DAY IN CAMP.
Alaska—aud 1 mesa by that the
whole great mountainous region
porth of Ilritish Columbia—is thought
to contain (fold, and narties of adven
turous spirits have already begun to
explore it thoroughly.
Home of these hardy fellows tell odd
stories of adventure in the hitherto
S nvisited recesses of savage nature.
. young gentleman—lately an ensign
in the navy—who has been with one
of these venturesome gold seeking ex
peditions into the great wilderness
to the north of Simpson’s river relates
Bn incident which will go to show that
S e earth lias not yet ceased to harbor
rge game iu formidable abundance.
“I felt about used up that morning,”
said he, in telling the story, “and told
the other fellows that I would take a
4ay off to get rested.
‘‘All right,’ they said; ‘if you’re
sick and want to stay in camp, you
can scrub up the plates and dippers,
and scour out the mush kettle. And
while you’re about it, cut a good pile
of fire wood, and don’t forget to have
a brisk fire going, and supper ready
When we get back.’
“This was paying a trifle dear for
the privilege of being an invalid. Off
they all went, with their pans, buck
ets and shovels. I knew I should not
see anything of them till dark, for
they were going to a creek in a ravine
ten or twelve miles distant to try the
washings, and would have to climb
over a rocky ridge two or three thou
sand feet high, and then pick their
Way through a thick fir scrub on the
other side.
“With an aching head I set to work
to tidy things up a little, and then lay
down in one corner of our pole
ahanty, and piled the overcoats of the
party over me, hoping to get warm
.and sleep off my indisposition.
“I went to sleep after a while, but
■oon waked up very hot The sun had
come out wann, aud the camp felt like
.an oven, for it was built on tlio south
«de of a high crag. Feeling still very
drowsy, I took two coats and went out
beneath a fir tree which stood not far
from the camp, beside a bowlder that
had recently rolled down the crag.
“Here! laydown again in thesnade
of the fir, and slept for an hour or
two. I had an alarming dream—a
jumble of fearful struggles—from
which I at length started broad awoke,
.and heard a snuffing noise close by me.
“Casting my eyes around, there
■tood a grizzly bear that had just risen
on his haunches to take a good look
At me. He was only about thirty feet
from me, and not more than half that
distance from the camp door. At the
same moment I saw just behind him
Iwo more bears, ambling along, a nice
little party .coming round for a call
on me I
“I was obliged to say ‘not at home.’
For to ‘scoot’ to the camp door past
this big chap was too risky, and my
rifle—every gun we had, in fact, ex
cept one which the boys had taken,
was set away inside the camp.
“For one second I lay perfectly
breathless there, then bounded to my
feet with a yell, leaped upon the bowl-
fler, and catching hold of the lower
most boughs of the Hr, climbed iL 1
didn’t even dare stop for so much as
one look at my visitors, till I was
well up from the bowlder, when 1 saw
the foremost bear still standing there
m the same spot, and the other two
Also reared up on their hind legs to see
what was going on.
“The£ all stood and looked at me.
(And then rolled their heads around
•ha looked at each other for some mo-
•neats. The first comer then dropped
hn all fours, and coming cautiously
forward sniffed the coats which I had
|n»t vacated. Apparently he did not
«ke the odor, for he gave them a sud-
4en flip with his paw which sent them
JPjnning aside, and growled uneasily.
•Yobably these bears had never be-
seen or ecented a human beib
The three put their heads together,
and conferred about it, with a dubious
jplnnee in my^diroctionnowand thexji
I ,! la y scented other more afr
J i.iiuj-), in tne camp, and am
bled ur> to the door. After rolling
iiicir Iku-.u and peeking in for a while,
largest one ventured iu, audlben I
gro\
Sgal
heard them overhauling our stores for
some minutes. One of them stayed
outside and kept an eye on me, else I
might have gat down, and either es
caped or possibly entrapped them by
closing the door, though it is doubtful
whether so slight a structure as out
le shanty would have held them
long. They were great strong brutes,
eavy as an ox.
“1 kept as quiet as I could, hoping
that they would soon satisfy their cur?
osity, and proceed on their travels, *
but they appeared to be in no baste,
and after they had smelled around for
an hour or more, I heard the under
brush snap a little way off, and soon
saw two more bears, a small one and a
big chap, coming up.
“As soon as the three at the camp
discovered these two later arrivals,
they ran out to meet them aud arched
up their backs as if intending to fight,
but made peace after a few minutes,
and told them about me.
“The big old gray fellow came close
up beneath the nr, and smelled me for
some time. He did not approve of me
at all, but wrinkled his nose and
wled. Then he returned to inves-
gate the camp, and the whole party
had a fine time pawing things over.
“By and by, still another bear—the
smallest one yet—came in sight and
stood listening. Then he sneaked up
to see what was going on. Pretty
soon one of the large bears saw him,
and made a dash at him. The little
fellow cowered and tried to conciliate
the other, but the big one knocked
him down and rolleu him about for
coming univited, I suppose. Two or
three of the others also came out and
took a hand in toe fun.
“Finally they let him up, and told
him to cast his eye into the fir where
I was roosting. At that toe little chap
tried to ‘show off 1 before the rest.
He strutted out toward toe fir, and
arched his back at me. The others all
stood looking on, and I imagined that
they were winking at one another.
‘‘They then all sat down and ex
tended their muzzles toward me, and
snuffed in concert. I wpuld have given
A hundred dollars for one of our re
peating carbines for just five minutes!
“Suddenly they all turned and ran
for the fir woods below the camp,
where, for some moments, I heard a
frightful growling.
“Now’s my time,” I thought, and be
gan to clamber down, being so cramped
by this time that I could scarcely
stir. But before my toes touched
toe bowlder, I saw them coming back
as hard as they could race. There
was nothing for it but to climb again,
they were sure to get to toe camp be
fore I could. Resuming my old perch
I looked down, and instead of six saw
nine bears! three new onesl
“The latest arrivals hud to bo intro
duced to mo, aud one of them made a
great show of growling and tearing
up the turf. A man was evidently a
novel creature to these remotely bred
bears, and they failed to see anything
in me save a small, timorous looking
biped up iu a tree. Having acquitted
themselves duly iu the matter of mak
ing an impression on me, they turned
to other ways of entertaining them
selves — perhaps they intended the
show for my benefit as well.
“'Hiey were out for a lark that day.
Their behavior reminded me of a par
cel of boys on a picnic. They ran
hero and there examining everything
that attiuctcd their attention. Two or
three of toem would gather round one
of the larger bears as if to talk over
some choice piece of gossip; some
times, it seemed, to exchange some
slighting remarks about me. Into
this group a waggish bear would in
trude, nosing the others aside and
starting an imnromptu scuffle. After
giving and taking a few good natur-
ed but hearty cuffs with some feints
at biting, ho would turn and lumber
clumsily away, pursued by the othcre.
“Had my situation been less haz
ardous nnu painful, I might have
been amused at the uncouth antics of
these creatures. At one time they
came together, and four of them exe
cuted a “walk around” in the presence
of the rest. The biggest bear acted os
leader, and in spite of my precarious
and unpleasant position, I could not
refrain from laughing outright, as the
great brutes shambled past each other
and turned to re pass, as if to the
Strains of some ursine ‘breakdown.’
“I now lost all hope of toe bears
leaving before my companions return
ed, and settled myself on the sticky
fir boughs, to pass the time as easily
as possible.
“The sun was getting low, and fog
was setting in. Tney wo
on
way
The bears had begun rummaging
about the camp again. I suppose they
were getting hungry.
“On a sudden I hoard a noise in the
woods up to the north of my tree-
crash on crash of the brush ana sticks 1
It drew nearer momentarily.
“ ‘Good gracious 1’ I thought, ‘can
there be more bears?’
“An instant later toero burst out of
the firs into the little open a large elk.
He was running at full spring, and
had scarcely emerged into view when
seven or eight gray creatures, which I
at firat took to be wolves, came obund-
ing out at his heels.
“In an instant the elk was close
upon the camp, when three or four of
the bears rusned to meet him with
loud roars. The poor animal, thus sav
agely headed off, wheeled about, and
iu a moment was in the clutches of
his gray coated pumers.
“They sprang upoa him with eager
S ow Is, ana clung to him like leeches.
0 bounded once or twice, tripped
and fell with the whole bloodthirsty
mob clinging to him and rending him.
The elk hod hardly fallen when the
entire gang of nine grizzlies bore
down upon him, making forest aud
crag re-echo to their roars, and
brushed away the gray coated huu-
tera as if they had been so many
squirrels.
“A rapid scurry, and tbo latter
dashing away in all directions,
Our job il(-|>nrtni«iit is sapplitd wiih ei«(
faciiii.v ueecssttry lo enabli- us loconipris
botb as Inprice siiilqtislHy n( work, with evsr
tliosc eft be cities, ihhI we gtiarxutte sath
fiction in every psrtic\pitror «harg>- uoihiny
fur our work. Hesicfllwnys prepared la
fill onlrri 1 at abort notice tor lllsnks, liil
Heads, Letter Heads, Cards, hand LiP.r
Uniters. Circulars, Uaniphlets, &c.
All job s„rk must be paid fo^
Gash on Delivery
bear, bounded upon too roof of our
shanty, while another, to my surprise
and terror, made for my fir, hissing,
spitting aud snarling, and at two
bounds was up into it, so near to me
that I could nave brushed his gray
coat with my hand, as he dashed up
past where I sat!
“They were not wolves, but creat
ures 01 the cat family—lynxes, prob
ably. The one over my head scented
the air strongly with his musky
“breath. I swung my hat at the brute,
-shouted and did my best to scare him
off, but he clung there, snarling, with
eyes like fire, the picture of fury and
venom.
“I hope I shall never be in a more
disagreeable position than I was then,
for I was momentarily expecting that
the creature would drop on me.
“The cat on toe shanly, too, was
snarling like a demon, and glaring
first at me, then at the bears, which
by this time were making short work
of toe elk, enlivening their feast by
an occasional fight over a bone. At
length the three big ones drove off
the other six altogether, and these lat
ter walked around and roared and
growled in so awful a manner that I
sincerely wished myself back in San
Francisco.
“This performance continued for
half an hour, I should say. It began
to grow dark, for the fog was shutting
down dense and wet. On a sudden,
toe cat in the boughs over tpy head
gave a leap out over me, and landing
in some brush ran for toe wood, and
a few minutes after, to my still great-
relief, I heard the voices of my mends
down to toe south of our shanty.
“I immediately hailed them, and
bade them approach cautiously.
“ ‘What’s the matter?’ they called
out.
“ ‘Nine bears!’ I shouted back.
‘Work up quietly, and get the guns
in the camp.’
“ ‘Where are you?’ they inquired,
evidently puzzled by the directiop
from which they heard my voice.
“ ‘Never mina me,’ said I, ‘get your
guns.’
“It was not yet so dark but that I
could see the camp, and I soon made
out the forms of my companions
creeping around the corner of the
shanty. But though toey picked up
some Of toe carbines in the genera!
wreck which the grizzlies had made in
side, they failed to find the cartridges,
aud at length fired on the bears with
the one double barreled gun which
they had with them. It was too dark
in the shadow of toe evergreens,
whei-e the brutes were growling over
the elk bones, for me to note their be
havior, but I heai*d them making off
into the woods, and then ventured to
get down aud hobble to the shanty.
“I had been up in the fir fully seven
hours, and was glad to have toe
seance come to an end, though the
was setting in. iney wooia get n
to camp by nightfall, I supposed,
account of the difficulties of the w
cry i me and muscle in my body
was aching, and 1 felt sick enough of
gold huuting in Alaska. However,
we got up a fair meal after an hour or
two, and the next day I felt better.”—
Youth’s Companion.
Queer Kentucky Lingo.
The Kentucky mountain vernacu
lar has i>eculiarities which Charles
Egbert Craddock did not find or no
tice in her Tennessee mountaineers.
Here a man who wants to sav he fired
two shots says he shot two shots. The
western expression of getting the drop
js never used, a mountaineer saying
instead that no “throwed his gun
furet’’ The prefixes in aud im are
not known, un being used instead, as
“unpossible ; ” for instance. To “mis-
list” a man is to deceive and ill treat
him, and when a man says “his word
is his jiut’’ he wants to convey the im
pression that he is speaking os truth
fully as if under oath. The queer ex-
^ lions are so numerous that it is
to understand all that is said.
A dialogue that was a gem in its way
was indulged in by two young moun
tain gallants, one asking: “Be it moke
fur you to see Nance, this arternoon?”
The answer was; “No; I don’t
have bound to, but I aim to.”
Tbo man who has knocked on a
door, when asked what he wants,
says, “I want in,” and in the same
style he would ask a stranger, “How
might you call you?” They have no
diincuity in understanding each
other, however, for English is treated
in the same manner by all, and even
those who can read and write talk a
it deal as do the less learned.—
uisville Courier-Journal.
were
growling, snapping and marling in
toeir impotent rage at being thus pro-
yokingly dispossessed of their prey.
Three or four bt them ran back into
the woods from which they had
emerged. One of them, chased by a
Dangerous Carelessness.
The amount of carelessness I
ed by business men in drawing cliec
and other financial papers is almost
beyond comprehension. It is a well
known fact that an enormous sum of
money is lost annually throughout
the country by the frauds perpetrated
by check “raisers.” Business men can
not be too careful in drawing their
checks, and every possible safeguard
should be taken to prevent alteration,
and especial care should be observed
to prevent financial paper from fall
ing into improper hands. The “sharp
era” who are laying for opportunities
to swindle the public are numerous,
and it is needless to say that they are
thoroughly versed in all the arts of
their trade. —SL Louis Globe-Demo
crat
Railway Hysterics.
Railroad Stockholder (looking out
of window)—That is a superb new car.
Must have cost a small fortune.
Railroad Director (loftily)—Tliat is
car 125, built for the president Finest
thing on wheels. Cost every cent of
$30,000.
Railroad Stockholder (timidly)—By
the way, what is the prospect of a
dividend?
Railroad Director—No prospect at
all Meeting this morning decided to
jiass toe usual dividend. Money earn
ed absolutely needed for betterments
of the roed and interest on debt—
Pittsburg Bulletin.
Florida maintains its pre-eminence
as the land of flowers. A gardener in
Marion county in that state has raised
ight 1
INVENTOR OF THE COWCATCHER.
A Fsi iium Slid His Plow Suggrat;. Hie 1.0C0-
niotlve’s ValuMlilt- Adjunct.
If you should ever go to Columbus.
O., said a railroad man, and should
happen to drop into the model littered
little olllco of the Novelty Iron works
there, you will see a sharp eyed old
gentleman, who will more than likely
Be poring over some works on me
chanics, or sketching the design for a
pattern for some piece of ornamental
iron work. The old gentleman is L.
B. Davies, a native of Kennebec
county, Me., who was the first loco
motive engineer in actual service on
the first railway built in Ohio, and the
inventor of the attachment to the lo
comotive familiarly known as the cow
catcher, which is in use on every pas
senger and freight engine in the world
today, but for which, invaluable ns it
is to railroad companies, be never re
ceived one penny.
When Davies was 19 years old lie
was the engineer on Commodore \^in-
derbilt’s famous old steamlioat the
Cleopatra. He ran there one season
and then drifted out west The little
Miami railroad was then building be
tween Xenia and Springfield, in Ohio.
He went to work on the road as engi
neer of a construction train, and when
the road was completed, three years
afterward, he ran the first passenger
train. Some yeara later he entered the
service of the Columbus and Xenia
railroad. It was while he was run
ning a locomotive on that ioud
that he conceived the idea of the cow
catcher. The locomotives of that day
had no cabs, and a row of iron spikes,
four feet long and driven into the
bumper of the engine a foot apart and
a foot above the track, was die loco
motive builder’s idea of the proper
thing for a pilot or cowcatcher. And
it was a cowcatcher, and no mistake.
There was no headlights on the loco
motives in those days, and as the rail
roads were not fenced in, and as cattle
and live stock had free run of the
country, scarcely a night passed but
some cow or horse pr hog was impal
ed on these spikes, much to toe peril
of the train and its passengers.
The dangerous character of this
rude and cruel pilot was a source of
constant thought to Davies, and he
studied daily how he might improve
that attachment, and not only remove
it as a menace to life and property,
but make it a safety feature of tue lo
comotive. One day, while he was run
ning his engine, and thinking on toe
subject of improving the pilot, he no
ticed a fanner plowing in a field near
the railroad, and the manner in which
the mold board of toe plow threw the
earth to a furrow on one side at once
gave him the idea that developed the
plan of the modern locomotive cow
catcher. The action of the mold
board on the soil was just the
as jiu
action that was necessary lo make
a pilot a useful attachment in
stead of a dangerous oiie, but it was
one sided. It did not take Davies long,
however, to see that by putting to
gether a device that was virtually a
plow with two mold boards he would
accomplish the desired result. He con
structed such a device and attached it
to the locomotive “Paterson,” of the
Columbus ami Xenia railroad, and oq
the very first trip lie made with it its
success was manifested. On the trip
ho ran into a drove of cattle that were
crossing the track. The new pilot cut
its way through them as if it were a
plow turning the soil, and threw then)
right and left, clearing the track with
out any nerccntiblo effect on toe en
gine. All the locomotives on the road
were at once fitted with the cowcatch
er, aud it was not long before the idea
spread to other roads, and from that
time no locomotive has ever been
built for passenger or freight service
without Davies’ cowcatcher. Davies
did not patent his device, and although
it has saved the railroads of this aud
other countries millions of dollars and
hundreds of lives, ho never received a
B y’s benefit from it—New York
and Express.
Indians Who Were Cannibals.
During the siege of Detroit several
murders and massacres were perpe
trated, and one English woman, wno
lived with her two sons on the com
mons, was massacred and eaten—made
into a soup. Shells were fired at the
Indians from toe fork but the cunning
savages soon learned to run toward
them when they were coining and
blow out the fuse, and so prevent their
exploding. But few of us nowadays
would suppose that the Indians ever
had been cannibals, but wo are posi
tively informed iu letters written from
toe Detroit post that in several in
stances Pontiac’s braves ate their pris
oners, dished up in various forms. In
a letter dated July 9, 17G3, the writer
says:
‘‘Was it not very agreeable to hear
every day of tiieir cutting, carving,
boiling and eatingour companions? *
* * They boiled and ate Sir Robert
Devere, and an Indian had the skin of
CapL Robertson’s arm for a tobacco
pouch.”—St Louis Magaziuo.
Orauco Wins.
There is a man iu Southern Florida
who makes a delicate wine out of
oranges. His process is a secret which
he guards jealously. In tlavor these
wines, for there arc two or three va-
tieties, are likoa (incsaulerue, and one
has the suggestion of the while Rhine
wine flavor in it He has hud made
for the Paris exposition, to which he
sends some of his manufactures, bot
tles shaped like oranges, with the
leaves covering part of the fruit toe
cork being made to imitate the stem. -
Chicago Times.
a cabbage eigl
in diameter.
1 feet aud three inches
Swallows • Uv« Fish.
Mr. B. CL Mitchell says that while
he was a boy he had a friend named
Bill Chandler; tliat one day several
boys were in a crowd, and in going by
u branch they ail stopped and drank
from it Bill Chandler sucked a fish
In his mouth aud swallowed it before
ho could spit it out Ho says'that the
boy could feel it flop around in his
stomach several minutes after it wcul
down, and the way it kicked and
K uirmed made Billy feel skittish and
ok squeam.sh.—Ainericus (Ga.) Re
publican.
GLENN SPRINGS,
Spartanburg County,
S. C.
Thi« Fmiiouti ICrwort will be
open to YIkIIofm from .71 ny
lat, lo October i5tb.
It i8 accessible from SiMitauhni^
by a pally Hack Liiu . niuki g good
countctiou with ;;il trains.
GLENN SPRINGS
MINERAL WATER,
A SAFE, PLEASANT AND
EFFECTIVE REMEDY
For All Diseases of the
KTIDHSTEYS,
LIVER,
STOMACH AND SKIN.
It /\ots ©n the Bewels,
( leanitCM the System,
AND'REGULATES THE Lit Kit,
An) i- a Spec fie for tuoit
J'kW.lf. E JUSOI, ! >/; l!S.
slims k mmi'
Propriitora,
GLENN SPRINGS, S. C.
lor Sale In Dr. ,1. A, L5o\d.
June <5, 18SJ).-tf.
SWEEPING REDUCTIONS
In all Spring and
GtO.E TOALC, HENRY OLIVER
Geo. E. Tome & Co,
MANUFACiUgfCUS
—AND—
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Doors, Sash, Blitids,
Builders' Hardware,
AND
iiuisf a
OFFICE AND SAH'.sn*t()M8
10 ami 1 ‘J H.iyne Street,
CHARLESTON, - - S. 0
U'rite fer Estimates.
May 31,1888a
Tfye Darlington Land Im-
nient Company
liuvu iSetitsble liuiLljag Lots su i jauds
for mis, Aepl? 10
J. J. W.Utl),
President mid Ties surer.
J»r. 84. *89— !y
Although our Spring tnule hnn been far better than we
expected; We have decided to make our Summer business
c<|un)ly us good. To accomplish this we must give induce-
I Hieuts that will reach beyond all manner of competition.
We ofler no such petty baits us. “.Needles and Pin? tf a
penny a paper,” '' ”
SUCH AS THOSE WE GIVE AWAY.
Our bargains are in Ntandar^goods. The latest styles and
newest novel lies, ” ”
No Ofld Shoddy floods.
We defy all legitimate comp -tiiiou to match our price?. Thfi
loUuwing are a few wc mention : Simpson, Windsor and Arn-
» pfints at G* cts per yard ; Figured Lawns from 3* to IQ
cents j Beautiful Challies at 7 cents per yard : A full line
Cottonades, all styles, from 10c. up.
Our fou th Stock of
STIRJLW ZHZA.'X’S
just received, cheaper than ever. Don’t buy until von so-
them, ' youseyi
On Shoes we ucq well fixed. Will discou. * any „ r ice von
eun get. Our Ladioe’ 10 button Straight ily ivi'p l /•.... fLy
ton Shoes bring, joy to every Indy. Kvory „air wnrrnntod
nnd sold al *1.00 per pair. All other grnde., equally a> cheap
Another lot of r
W, L. DOUGLAS’ CKLE*
BRATED SHOES.
Fry them if you want till I satisfaction.
7r, N c C J nlttm Alpaea ftnd Seersu ^ or Cuats ! ^d Vests frqnj
Our line of bargains in every department are too numerous
to more than give mention to a few, but if you !,. e | that this ia
Die time to make your dollar do double duty, then call on qs
n n i t st s
J* J WARD.
WARD & WOODS.
•Attorneys & Counselors ut Law,
DAnLfNOION, S. a.
\Y|I pnciicc ill ull full- iHiij I'eilvrul
Courts.i
Sj Ct i .1 iittviui. n to ail a at
tors |xitaiti ng lo tin- 111\111g. fell
ing. it uting os ie ising of !c-<l o-tan .
Any party having b i>iih- s m tins
lill** would do well to rail on the
firm, who have eoiitu lot s.oiio- ol
th* 1 moat desirab e property inti'*
Tow a and C-ant v.
J. K. SKTTLZS.
f. ». M1TI Xf
Nettles & Nettles,
Attorneys & Counselors at Law,
Darlington 4’. II., S. C.
Will practice ii, nil t!t« State aud
Federal <'ogtts.
Prompt persona! at;* ntion given lo
colli cl ton ol claims.
Sep. 2, 1 v.
GKO. W L'ARUAN.
JiJCNr.Y T. TIIOWI’hON
DARGAN & THOMPSON.
Attorneys at Law,
{fjY"Nor , .liea*t sj ie ot tin- Public Square
Darlington, S. (■.
t. h. Wm.
Attorney at I . w,
DARLINGTON, C. 11., S C.
Will practice iu Circuit Courts and
Supreme Court of South Carolina.
Prompt attention given to alt lui-
► iuess, and special attention given
to collections.
H W. BOYD.
CKO. U. BROWN
BOYD & BROWN-
Attorneys and Counselors at Law
Office in real of Dar iugton Nation
al It.ii k.
DA KLINC TOS (’ /) , .S (\
N'.OMPT PEKSoNaL ATTENTION TO
ALL IllSlM SS.
Fob 3, ’s? -ly.
W- F. DARGAN,
•Attorney at La^y,
Darlington, - • • g, C-
Office up stalls, ov *r th Post ofljm*
Match 28. ’8!) J..
C. P, DHRGAX,
Attorney at Law
and Trial Justice,
I’raciWs in ilir Unite.! 8:ai*s Courl and
in Ibe m* and 5ib eiro”iis Prompt al'ca-
lion load businrgs enttusied to him.
Office iu Etc'muge Sirorl, nrxt the Dae-
lmotoji Njcws Otfio*.
And we will ta^e pleasure iu allowing yog our p.any valut-a
Will prove what we say, • ”•
Very Respectfully,
A. j. BROOM.
V
May 30 1881).
BOOTS AND SHOES,
HATVi
a. d
h FULL LINE OF EACH
^ ew ftoocls,
IaOWJSST
PRICES
-A. IR, 3D ‘W -A. I?, IEJ
aJT C^ST!
Groceries A SjRcivi y
A.T
Enterprise Grocery*
September 13, ’Sty
A- S WHITE, Manager,
Misses McCullop h Garvlt
JL-g t > :u)nonuue that they i i)v- rented the
IDE IP A IR.TIMIEIN-'^
ol JjdaaidH & XoriueutV stnr.'and hare opened an entirely new hue of
Nentsi Styles Hals, Bonnets, Ribhojis, JPIqw*
ers and Feathers.
HATS TRIMMED TO OUDEJf am} SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
O.UUGOODS ARE NEW AND STYLISH—jjJJIf PffipE^
We Nobejt m early call anil will ale. ay a be pleased to show pur goods.
Res peer fully, MISSES McCUI.LOUGH & GARVEY,
of Haiti moie ;
Appl IS, 1$8y.