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Lassoed the Negroes. A City of Mexico special to the New York Herald, says : By request of the American Legation of tin's capital Juan Lainedo, president of the Tlahuilio Agricultural and Colo nization Company, has made the first complete statement of an official nature regarding the troubles of his company with the large shipments of negroes made in Mexico from the United States. The declaration has beeu d i spate h ; ed to the Department of State. Washington, and it is as follows: "The initial shipment of negro labor arrived in Tlahuilio about one year ago and was composed of about sixty colonists with their families They proved themselves to be thor %%' ough and expert cotton planters and all around agricultural hands. Iu justice to them it must be said that they have proved themselves thor oughly competent in their avocations, ? and are the only ones that remain on the plantation since the exodus be ga:: a few weeks since. ' The first batch of colonists was brought in through the instrumen tality of Mr. Ellis, a colored man holding a concession from the Mexi can government for the introduction of two thousand negroes from the United States, and it was under the provisions of this grant that the blacks were taken to Tlahuilio. The result was \hat instead of acquiring skilled cotton planters, as was the case with respect to the first con signment, bootblacks and others un O ' 'mm desirable were shipped by the whole sale to the plantation, which, as was natural, was not a very prosperous occupation for them "Coupled with this fact the source of real trouble made its appearance in the form of a disease that caused an enlagement of the knee among the negroes, the maladv invariably ! resulting fatally. Instigated as by . one mind, fifty settlers signified , their ; intention to return to their Southern j homes in the United States, and ! nothing would deter them. The! district where they were colonized 1 was at a considerable distance from j the railrod, there being no interme- j diate villages Instead of striking out to the j north, they headed for the west, j which is entirely void of vegetation and every semblance of civilization ?a desert, as it were The result was that before Mr. Fargu3, the ad ministrator, could proceed to their rescue, amply supplied with provis ions and water, four had perished from starvation "This band of fleeing negroes was j overhauled by Mr. Fargus and five mounted Mozos, who were heavily armed, after days of travelling. The negroes, thinking that Mr. Fargue had overtaken them for the purpose of compelling them to return to the plantation, assailed the parry of res coers with Knives "The attack was finally brought to j a finish through the Mozos lossoing a ! number of the colonists, a proceeding that seemingly had the effect of fill- j ins: them with awe The negroes ? were thereupon brought back to the i plantation, instructed as to the points j of the compass and allowed to de- ; part, well provided with rations and water "Then followed a series of incon- i veniences and drawbacks that ere- ; ated discord among the remainder of j the colonists, m?ny of whom fol lowed the footsteps of the first baud, ; "The experiment has cost the com pany ?500,000, and unless the cot- ! ton they planted, covering an area of ] 65,000 acres, can be successfully pick- j ed, the concern will lose a large sum The negroes will be shipped back to ? their homes in the United States a* the expense of the company.''' Sam Lewis Lynched. The Jailer Killed by the Mob First White Man Lynched. Jacksonville. Fla., Aug. IS ?A special to the Times Union from Jupi ter, F?3 , says : "Sam Lewis was taken from jail at Juuo by a: m jb at o o: clock this tnorniog, hanged to a telegraph pole in front of the court house and then rid dled w?tb bailers. The mob approached the jail with sitare hammers and be gan to batter the do?r. Seeing they would -?-ti in anyhow. Jailer iyeyser threw the Iva chers the keys As the lynch ers entered, Colored Deputy Sheriff Perkins, who was in the iati, fired at them. The ivuehers fired ? vol le; ir? retar-i. killing Jai?er Kevser. They then dragged L-wis i'r<>::i bis cell, ciuci 'j'?'j tu a'i aodershirt, a . lynched hin. as slated above. Tue nude body of the variai hung until late this ruoro 12?, when it w?s cut 'i'.vfu. The lytieh ois, eanie to Juno, which is on L?:ike Worth, in boars from Biscay oc J?av, the scene of L~wi-' crimes. Severe! "-a*:;:4? ago. Lewis, in cola* blood, shot down ex Tas Collector John Highsmith and his nephew, John Davi-, because they refused to kneel an,d apoi igizi for a fancied insult. The t:?ur derer Sed to Nassau. X. P., bat the Eugtish authorities got after him, and ten davs ago he fl *d back to Florida. About a week ago he was captured after a fi^hr in which he killed Ret Me Gregor, one of the posse, and was him self badly wounded. Lewis was a na tive o? Vermont, but came to Florida from the West. He boasted that he bad killed two men ia Montana and : three in Texas. So, including Jailer ; Keyser, Lewis was responsible for the j death of nine roen. It is said that Lewis is the first white man ever lynch ed io Florida. The lynching is gene rally approved. A Force Expected to Descend on Spring Valley Italians. I Chicago, Aug. 18 ?It is believed I the colored meD of this city ^e making ? secret preparations to send . an armed ' body of meo to Spriog Valley, Ills., to j force a fight with the Italians there io ; retaliati?? for their outburst against the oegro mioers two weeks ago. It was learned yesterday by the po : lice that a colored inan. whose name is : supposed to be Robinson, has beeo I canvassing the pawnshops in this city ! and has bought over 100 revolvers. ; Ooe firm of money lenders reported to j the police that they had sold seveo re i vol vers to a colored man. The descrip j tion of the mao they gave tallies with ! that io the hands of the officers. De I teetives have been detailed cn the , ? case, it is said the colored people ; I have become disgusted with the public ; i meetings, because their plaus have al ? ways miscarried, therefore they have j j decided fo meet in secret. A number j ? of meo are to be armed and smuggled ! : ioto Spriog Valley to be io readiness for duty at a moment's notice. Tee discovery of the plot has caused con- i siderable agitation in police circles. At a meeting of the advisory board of ! I the American Protective Association of | : Count county, resolutions were adopt- I j ed denouncing the mayor of Spring j j Valley as cowardly, disloyal and uo-j j American for not using his authority ; : to quell the recent, uprising there, and I demand that the loss sustained by the negroes be repaired. Sheriff Clerk, of; ' Spring Valley was assured that the I American Protective Association stood I ready with 5,000 men to go to the min ing town to assist him in preserving ; peace. Exposition Notes. \ Mr. Alexander W. Smith, chief of the Department of Public Comfort, has arranged with the Pullmao Sleeping, Oar Company for three hundred sleep- j ing care, to be parked on the railroad : sidings in and about Atlanta, and has i arranged with the city for the necessary sanitary service. These sleeping cars j will accommodate between 7.000 and 8,000 people, and the berths will be rented for ?1 per night. Mr Smith bas secured from the Southern Railway, sidings enough to accommodate ooe- ? third of these care, and expects to place the rest with the other roads. The listing of rooms by the Public Comfort Department is very satisfactory, ; and iuctudes apartments in many of the handsome residences in the City. Pub lic spirit bae been appealed to, as it I was in Philadelphia, duriog the Cen- j tennial, aod the disposition of the people j of Atlanta is such as to make this feature ! more thorough than it has ever been at any great Exposition. Clemson College. The statements contained in the let- ' ter of the correspondent of The Srate, about Clemson College, are not to he brushed aside by the resolutions of the junior class. The complaint.- of the . management of the institution are such as to affect, not only its standing among colleges of its own kind, but its repu tation amonng the people of South Caro lina. The complaints made against the : maoagemeot are specific. They relate to matters intimately affecting the interests of the institution. They can be met by evidence within easy reach of the board of trustees. There should, therefore, be an early and exhaustive investiga tion The iuquiry, having for its sin gle object :he ascertainment of facts, ; should be conducted in the manner best, calculated to bring out the whole truth, j Aod the sooner the board of trus- ; tees shall act, the beoer for the reputa tion and success of the institution. Charges made by a perfectly trust worthy party cannot, with sr.fety to the interests of the college, be flippantly brushed aside The students?or some of them?may say what they please. Their action indeed settles nothing The trustees must act It is the wish of ail the people of South Carolina to accord to Clemson College the amnlest opportunity to show thac the scheme of education there employed a good out1 T'iere wrre. groat proales male for the :;;?! lege. The Legislature, relying upon the<e assurances, has responded with the- greatest liberality to every re quest lor an appropriation. Men y ba been spent freely?almost lavishly. There has been no complaint, of the, action of the Legislature in re spect. ihere is none now. 'fhetiesire of the people evidently is to grve the institution every facility for the accom plishment of the result;- that its friends anJ promoters have promised. This being the feeling ?? ih:' 'axpaycr-i who sustain the college, they certainly hive the right to expect good management of its affairs Especially have they the right to expect the highes' attainable efficiency in the president and the pro fessors. The Clemson trustees should act at once. -Tir S'utt -?-?aMK ?* ? ? Think o: This. Hood's Snrsapari?a :a the only true biuod purifier prominently in the public oye -d'iy. i: cores disea^ when all others fail, because it makes ;j:::e blood. Blown Up and Burned. A Hotel in Denver Blown up and Twenty-Five Per sons Perish. Denver, Coi , Aug. 19?Probab?y 25 men, womeo and children perished by an explosion of the boiler in the Gumry Hotel od Lawrence street, shortly after midoight this morning. Half a dozen others are injured and at the hospital. Eight burned and crush ed bodies are at the morgue Ten more were known to be burned in the ruins, ? but 15 persons are missing altogether. With deafening sound and terrific force, the entire rear portion of the building was demolished. The rear and side walls crumbled lik? a toy house. oon afterwards, the mass of timbers, ; brick and furniture caught fire, ore- | mating many of the victims who lay ' pinioned and helpless amid the burn ing pile. Their piteous appeals for . h lep could no: be "responded to be-' cause of the flame. The latest informa tion regarding the catastrophe is that a seventeen-year-old boy. Elmar Piere?, 1 who was temporarily pincei in charge of the boiler, was respooisble for the explosion. With the boiler at almost white heat, he let water iu, causing an immediate explosion. Fie escaped un injured and to-night was being hunted by angry people. Few people other than firemen, che j hastily summoned rescue corps and po- ; lieernen remained near the scene to witness the recovery of t!ie horribly , burned and distorted bodies. E Lstson, who was the first live man : taken from the ruius, slept on the third ; floor, was encased in a conical mass of: mortar and bricks that barely allowed ! freedom of modernen*. Chief Riberts ! of the fire department, first discovered : bim and rapidly began the removal of ? the fns of material that seemed to i rest directly upon his body. In heart rending anneals he begged for some- ? thing io end his life The rescuers worked with a will and in two hours had succeeded in removing enough plas- . t?r and bricks froci the apppareotly lifeless body to allow his removal. His lower limbs are crushed, but he will j survive his terrible ordeal. Excitement in the city to-night is at a high pitch. Throogs of people crowd poiice headquarters and the morgue to search for missing friends. Ropes were stretched around the scene of the disaster, but they and extra police failed to keep back the excited friends of missing people, and thousands of curious bystanders. There is much conjecture to-night, concern ing the caase of the accident, but j Coroner Martin is firmly convinced ! that it was caused as stated. The | hasti'y organized surgeon's corps un- j der Police Surgeon Jarecki did : noble work. With fifty feet of brick | wall tottering over their heads, they ? wended their way early along corri- | dors, down stairways, by shaky par : titions, to aid the injured. Medicine | was passed from one to another along a line, and while Mr L?tson was be- i ing rescued, his head was swathed in ! damp bandages and stimulants ad- ! ministered. About C o'clock this even* ing a severe wind storm came upon . the city, and work was extremely . hazardous with the weakened walls. To add to the confusion and dismal scene, rain began falling! in torrents, and what few workers who were nor drenched by the streams of rhe fire engines were wet by the cold rain. : At S o'clock the rain had ceased fall ing, but. the clouds of stifling smoke continued to arise from the mass of. wreckage, and more engines were ? called. Their services were not need ed, however, as. the wind died away The boy who was in charge of the . boiler at the time of the accident had attended a picnic during the day and was nnder influence of liquor when ho went on duty, as several reliable per sons have testified. How be ever managed to turn the injector cock and escape without injury is a mys tery. The boilers are said to have been in excellent condition. The terrible destruction wrought by the explosion is evidenced everywhere within three blocks of the scene. Stores in the neighborhood hare their fronts demolished or windows damaged. On Marion street, in the rear of the build ing, there is not a whole plato glass for a block, and Lawrence street, in front of the hotel *hows the same effect of the explosion. An estimate of the financial *-.? is difficult, as the insur ance papers were lost in the fir*.;, bu? the loss wiil hardly exceed S75.0?O. The hotel was worth about ?25.000 and furnishings ?10,000. Everything is de stro cd. The building w;:* a ?vc-sforv one. erected iti IS SS by Mr. Gumry. The McMann block, which *cjo; ss the he re?, was aiso heavily damaged, if was occupied as a furniture store th - A Lilybiade Furniture Company and was damaged $*J5 ti?O. '! ? Clay ton block directly across Lawrence street, was also damaged about SI, 500. 1 The boiler hea l, which wrough, so much destruction to life and property, after crashing through the rear wall crosse '?. ten foot alloy and struck a 1 brick bam with sufficient force to do st?-oy it. Es-Goverr.or Rout! said t o da : lln i.-iv opinion the explosion was caused by ' dynamite, instead o? by the boiler. 1 think :t was doue to kill Mr Gumry. Vou know he is superintend ent of construction at rh< capi-ol build- > tog and lately discharged a number ot men These meo have ber:, heard to threaten hie lift;. I do out think a boiler explosion could bave wrecked the building in the maouer it did." Ex-Governor Routt is correct in his statement regarding the discharge, but his suspicions are oot given credenoe by the authorities. Dispensers Suspected. Pinkertons and Special Con stables in Charleston. Special to The State. Charleston, Aug 19 ?There is something about to drop iti dispen sary circles. It was learned to-day ?rom most trustworthy sources that several special constables and lout detectives have arrived liete and will immediately set about to make their presence felt. The object of their mission is, of course, kept secret and nothing definito can be learned. . Rumor has it that the constables are here for the purpose of watching the ; dispensers and probably the regular1 constable force. It has been ru- | mored here for several months that : the dispensers were violating the law by selling to minors and habitual < drinkers. They have b??n keeping open alter hours and even dispensing liquors on Sundays. They have al ways been particular, however, to | whom they sold liquor when violating : the law It is surmised that the Pinkertons are here to watch alleged blind tigers : and, if possible, to get evidence upon which to send them to the | penitentiary upon contempt proceed ings, as Governor Evans has threat ened. The result of the arrival of these officers is anxiously awaited. COURSE OF COTTON. New York, Aug. 19.?Liverpool declined to day and at the opening our market was lower, October sell- ; Ing on the call at 7.29. Though further scattering rains were reported I from Texas, the crop advices gene rally were not satisfactory and prices soon improved. October rai- j lied to 7 36 Some realizing sales j and a spell of dullness in the after- j noon caused a reaction of a few I points. The close was quiet at 7.33 | to 7 34. The lightness of the re-1 ceipts begins to attract a good deal of attention and many believe that the September receipts will make a worse showing relatively than those of August. If this anticipation should be realized, there may be lively times in cotton next month. A GENERAL REDUCTION. What the Commission May Grant on Cotton and Fertilizer Rates. On September -i the State rail- ! road commission is to meet in this : city for the purpose of readjusting the freight rates on fertilizers, cotton : seed meal and cotton, and the indi- ; cations are that there is to be a gen eral reduction of rates all along the : line The matter of securing a re- . duction on these articles was agit?t- j ed to a great extent last spring, but | after hearing full argument on both ! sides the commission decided to de lay action. .Sime? time ago notice was sent to the several roads that action would be taken at the Septem ber meeting. It seems certain that the reductions will be grated, so par ties who should know say?Tint Sfate. ?-- TtvcV ?? - -^B????-? The news from Europe relative to the voting Tsar is curious?that he will give up the throne of Russia and his mother will rule in his stead. The story is that he is too effeminate, : too weak to govern. The London Chronicle publishes all this and more The Tsars wife, the Tsarina, is dis appointing, lacking strength of char acter, such as to influence the Em peror. So in this view the marriage of Nicholas i I. and Princess Alix of 1 liesse is a failure. It was thought ? that she had the qualities of a ruler, and through her weak husband would 1 control, would rule Russia But, lo ! ( it is now said that both are lacking in the governing qualities and the mother will take the reins It may turn out, however; t?) be a false re- ' poi t Blown up by Nihilists. ? Loxpox, Aug 19 ?The Dj/?/j 1 ?? ? > will to-morrow publish a dis* - patch from Trieste, saying that news papers there report t!::ti an explosion occurred to day at the artillery bar racks Tools, espilai of the govern ment o? that name in Russia. Three hundred persons are said v have been kil?e?, including many oi (icers The barracks are a heap oi ruin-. An examination into tue cause (;} the explosion led to the discovery that the barracks iiad been undermined everywhere Many :?r rests have been made o? persons sus pected of being implicated in the j mirage, which is supposed to have been the woik of nihilists Out o? the .'?.-i.?i! ships which passed 1 through tin- Suez canal the past year, \3?* * were British, .imi only ?ve American. What a showing tur this 1 ?rea! Republic, which was once ? 1 [ lose rivii of England >n the seas, imi has more sea coast and m ?rc ports than an* nation on earth. THE TERRIBLE EMPTY PISTOL. Tunkhaxxock, Pa., Aug. 19.?The wild west craze has cost the life of another boy. A number of boys were playing at killing Indians this morning in Mehoopany township, and nine-year-old Lenford Love was a red-skin, and twelve-year-old Fred Doty was a cow boy. According to all established rule of boyhood fight ? ing the young "red skin" was to die by the hand of the cowboy and Doty placed a supposedly empty revolver to the mouth of little Love and pull ed the trigger. Unknown to the boys the revolver was loaded and the bullet passed through the child's neck, severing the spinal cord and instantly killing hirn. it is pleasant to know that the borse : is trotting back into popularity. Peo- : pie who were weaned away from the noble animal by the love of the bicycle or the fear of the electric cars are find ing that the horse is better than the one and superior to the dangers of the other. And so we find the prices of horses increasing, and this increase is sure to continue. There is nothing that can take the horse's nlace. If this government is to be hold responsible for the safrcy of missionaries j in China, it might possibly be a good idea for the war department to make arrangements for the planting of a gatiiug gun squad at every mission sta tion, with the purpose of back i tig up free salvation with soliti shot.?Sav?n- j Wik News. The hair, when not property cared for, loses ?t3 lustre, becomes crisp, harsh, and dry, and | 1 Is oat freely with every combing. To pre- ; rent this, the best dressing in the market is ; Ayer'? Hair Vigor. It imparts that silky gloss so essential to perfect beautv. 5 r feL the Only Sarsaparflia AT THE WORLD'S FAIR. IT LEADS ALL OTHER * BLOOD Purifiers, Harper's Weekly IN 1S95 Harpkr's Wbks.lt v? a pictorial history of the time*. It presents every important event j promptly, accurately, and exhaustively in illustration and descriptive text o? the highest ] order The manner in which, luring 1894. i* hns treated the Chicago Railway Strikes and the ? Chino-Japanese War, :? ? the amount of light : it was able to throw op. Korea the instant at* ! tention was directed to that little-known coun rry. are example* of its almost boundless re- ? sources. Julian Ralph, the distinguished '' writer and correspondent, bas been sent to the . seat ?i war, a tul there joined by C D. Weldon, : the well-known American artist, now for many : years resident in .Le an, who h;is been en gaged to ccopentre with Mr. Ralph in sending 1 to Harper's Weekly exclusivo information | :!:::l illustration. D-iri::^ !S95 every vital question will be-' discussed wi:h vigor and without prejudice in ! tne editorial coiuirns. and also in specia! : articles bv the highest authorities i:i each de. | parftiienL Portraits of the men and women who are making history, and powerful arsi ? caustic political cartoons, will continue to be i characteristic features. This Susy V.*. ri?, with irs keen and kindly comment ori :he lessei doings ot* rhs day. will remain a regular de partment Fiction. There will be two powerful se- j ria!.--, both handsomely illustrated?The Red ' Cockade, a .?tirrin<r romance of older day? by Stanley J. Weyman, and a novel o? Nea Yuri;, entitled The son of His rather, by i Brander Matthews?sevsral novelette*, and many .-??ort stories by popular wri'ers. SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED PROSPECTUS The Volumes of the Weekly begin with tht ' 1 Sret Number for January nf each year. Whefl qo time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the Number curre:;; a: rime o? receipt oi y Order Ch>th Cases f"r each ridurne, suitable for ?iading. will be sent by uiaii. postpaid, on re ?eiptof ?!.(ii! each. Title page and Iro'ex >cn ??:; apatica iron. 1 ; Remittances should be made by Post OSce ) Money Ori^r ?..- Draft, to avoid chance of to.-s j - ^/.-?/;.? :? ?>: an not to < <?,?)! th?* ?tdsertiHSVieni o?d ort,* di. i > '??.? /?.?;<? - 9/*Har?er ?? Brotheus Harper's Periodicals, i??IvPIvK'S MAGAZINE, one vear, ?4 >:': ?Ali: Kh'S WEEK LT, ?: 4 00 ! i [?arpek^ \ .\' . ?? : i"1 ; T?KPK-K'S TO UNO PEOPLE: ?? 2 OC p.^tagf Freo to ail subscribers in 'he : United : *:.:o-. C ?'..i '.;. -I i i .*!- ;:??? Aiin o: llARPER ? BROTHERS. " ' p. O. > : :?.*. X. v. Ciry. I E . SVK ? .'i NEW CROP 189?. j White Comb Honev in See- j ions:. -\ Choice Extracted Honey, by \ he srallon or less Quantity. Fur sale at my residence, or c >rders may be left office <>i the ?Vatchman and Southron. >\ G. ?steeii LODGE DIRECTORY. Cl?renlo ut Lodge, No. rj?, -4. F. M. Meets Thursday nights of each month, on or before the Full Moon. A. C. Phelps, W. M. H. C. Moses, Secretary. Beulah Chapter, No. 25, ti. A. M. Meets on First Tuesday of each month. H. C, Moses, High Priest. F. M Spann, Secretary. Gamecock Lodge, No. 17, h. of Jt * . Meets every Monday night 3t o'clock, except fifth Monday night. M. Stucket, C. C B. Walsh, K. of R. ? S. Sumter Lodge, No. 1077, K. of Meets every First and Third Mao day nights at 7 o'clock. W. F. Rhame, Die K. C. Moses, Rep'r. Fidelity Lodge, No. 251, K. & L. ofB. Meets every Second and Fourth Monday nights at 7 o'clock. J. S. Hughsox, Protector B. J. Rhame, Secretary. Sumter Council, No. 649, A. L. of ? Meets every Second and Fourth Tuesday nights at 7 o'clock, W. F. Rhame, Com. J. X. CCRBETT, See. Sumter Lodge, No. 8, /. O G. T. Meets every Wednesday night at 8 o'clock. j. W. Dani?i . CT George Maxotte, Sec. Sumter Lodge, No. 1, A. 0. U. W. Meets every First and Third Th?rs day nights at 7 o'clock. H. C. Moses, M . W, B. Walsh, Ree. Focahontas Tribe, No. 16, /. 0. R. M Meets every Friday's Sleep at the 8tb Run. Wm Yeadox, Sachem. B. C. Wallace, C. of R. Sumter Council, No. 7. Jr. 0. U. A. M. Meets on Second and Fourth Tues day nights of each month at S o'clock Siieppard Nash, Councillor. C. Wallace, Sec'ty. Holly- mod Camp, IV. of W. Meets every Third Wednesday night at S o'clock. Thos. B. Jenkins, Cod. Com E. I. Reap.don, Clerk. Carolina Council, No 515, C. L. Meets every Second and Fourth Wednesday in Monaghan Block. Neil O'Donnki.l. Pres. A. . . a . , Sec. All of the above r.eoieties hold theii meetings at the Masonic Tempie, ex cept when otherwise specitied. ? To Ion I F~? I Who Wriir \ in Jut It ] . \ } j-. Has your ?a?pAUeat pea ever caught !?! yoar pnper ri^h* :??, ihe midit g? fr V s?itM?iA-i s?urt to ?3T ?breast with Our V Ii o n .* 1 ) :?.-??:;: ? How n??ir:v m :?r!^:;? iOc? has y yeea lost ricever iva Splash ??. ?ieS (he ;? ?: jj cone !?seiltev;e?i ?:;. ?:. .. treach- * .. i'rsii:? w ive of irri**vt?; :> S> ::' -. [tvc$ j? I :!: ? ;>r-:i :? to :> Ih me : l?.r piper " ! ^' ' lifynfiniv > II [ win en an? mace o? t?ie liest stock 4. |? oa?y, smooth surface, even in ri ri- M ish, with no breken-j?bre traps tor :'r:e i" aoAvarv . ;r* h levile by L M Ili, ?STlffi &{]()? ? LIBERTY STSEBT, : SUMTER, s. C Oae Pouad o? superior "BTrit?ag 5a?>:r. vrith Savclopes to match, sold >7 H. G. Csteea & Co., for 23 coats.