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Special and Local WEDNESDAY, APR. 17, 1878. INhX TO Nzw ADvEETISEMENTS. Dr. Butts-Married Life. James k. Rikard-Notice. D. .B. Wheeler-Sberiff's Sale. J. H. Estill-The Image of Her Mother. Dr. W. Jaques & Co.-Prescription Free. So. Supply Co.-Watcbes and Revolvers. 4 Mrs. Miriam Johnson-Information Want ed. Johnston Rufflier Co.-The Johnston Raf fier. P. N. Livingston and others-Trespass Notice. C. B. Buist-Quarterly Report of Town -N Cou2cil. W. B. Squire-Opium and Morphine Hab it Cured. Barbam Pile Cure Co.-Barham's Infalli ble Pile Care. Dr. S. F. Fant and S. W. Teague-The Wonder of the Age. SPECIAL NOTICE.-Business no tices in this local column are inserted at the rate of 15 cents per line each inser tion. Obituaries, notices of neetings, com munications relating to personal inter ests, tributes of respect, &c. are charged as regular advertisements at $1 per square. Notices of administration, and other legal notices, obituaries, tributes of re spect and notices of meetings, as well as communications of a personal character must be paid for in advani. The subscription price of the Herald is $2.00 for twelve months, $1.25 for six months, 75 cents for three months and 25 cents for one month, in advance. Names in future will not be placed on the subscription books until the cash or its equivalent is paid. Mr. L. S. Bowers, post master at Prosperity is our authorized agent at that place. Seed Pindars at H. A. Burns'. tf. Our delegates to the Presbytery speak in very high terms of the Clintonians. The Jewish feast of Passover begins Wednesday, the 17th, and lasts eight days. ACCENT.-We regret to learn that Mrs. Bela Mangum sustained a painful injury in the breaking of a leg, just above the ankle, a few days ago. THoxrsos, Dentist, over Mower's Store. The Phrenakosmian Society of New berry College will dedicate their Hall the evening of the 26th, instead of the 19th. LOST OR STOLEN.-A communication from Strother's last week. The writer will bblige us by sending a duplicate. We regret its loss. Ogburn's best Tobacco, at H. A. Burns'. 17-tf. The Italian with the panorama says he was robbed near Norcross, Georgia, the other day of fifty-two dollars and sixty-five cents, by two white men in masks. He thought they were tramps. At the meeting of the State Medical Association last week in Greenville, Drs. John M. Thompson, of Silver Street, and 0. B. Mayer, Jr., .of New berry, were elected among the delegates to the American Medical Association. THE~ IMAGE OF HERi MOTHER.-This is the title of a novel to be published in the Savannah Weekly News. one of the largest and best weekly papers publish ed in the South. Subscribe for the News and secure a first rate novel. Send $2, to J. H. Estill, Savannah, Ga. One trial of Foutz' mixture or lini ment will convince you of its wonder flu merit. Sold everywhere in the United States. 12-5t. SEA.SU)E Nov.is.-A complete set of the popular Seaside Novels will be re ceived at this office by Friday or Satur day. Read list on another page, make your selections and call and get them. First come, first served. Such cheap reading was never offered before. Have you consumption or any dis ease of the throat and lungs ? If so, call at your DruR store, and get a trial bottle. of Thrash's cure ; trial size 50c., large $1.50. For sale by Dr. S. F. Fant. EA&STR.-Next Friday, the 19th, is Good Friday. Services will be held in the Episcopal Church that day and also on Sunday-Easter. The church has been beautifully decorated. The Lutheran Church has also been -decorated for the occasion. WET, OR DRYr?-At the municipal election in Prosperity, the 9th instant, the "wet ticket" was elected by about two to one, composed of the following gentlemen: Intendant-A. H. Wheeler. Wardens-A. L. Wyse, P. P. Beacham, L. S. Bowers and M. L. Long. KNIGHTS OF THE SHINING BLADE. A fight took place in the colored band -room Thursday night between Charley Gary and Calvin Jackson, in which Gary received a fearful gash from a knife in the abdomen and another in the back. His wounds are serious. LADY OF LYON.-This splendid play will be presented to the Newberry pub lic the evening of the 24th. A large audience will no doubt greet the ama teur actors. Many persons in Laurens have expressed a desire to see it, and there will probably be an extra train to accommodate them. BUT THE RIGHT to make and use Davenport's Preserving Fluid, and you will be satisfied that it is the best thing which has ever been brought to light. With a knowledge of the cost and mode of prepar ation we can assure the reader that it is the simplest and cheapest pro ces frreerving meats, fruits and "Remember This." That we are determined to have our prices below everybody on Dress and Fancy Goods and everything else, as we sell for the money only. 16 tf JONES & SATTERWHITE. "Get Money Out of the Bank," And save on an average 25 per cent. in buying your Dry Goods through the Sum mer. Those who sell on a credit always charge it, besides trying to sell you the poores goods in stock. 16-1m JONES & SATTERWHITE. The King of Shirts. You have never seen their equal. $1.00 each. Lien Collars, 121c. 16-1m JONES & SATTERWHITE. Large assortment of New Style Silk and Gingham Parasols and Unibrell_s, just re ceived at 16-1a JONES & SATTERWHITE'S. BEST PRINTS, at 6tc. COATS' COTTON, at 60c. a doz. Ant will promise to meet any cutting prics, if they go two hundred per cent. lower. 16-1m - JONES & SATTERWHITE. WARD'S SHIRTS and GENTS' FUR NISHING GOODS, the best in the world, at JONES & SATTERWHITE'S. 16-1m. "The True Value of Your Money." The ladies all say that Jones & Satter white have the Licest and cheapest stock of Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Fancy Goods, Ladies Lace and Siik Ties, Silk Handker chiefs, Ladies Kid, Silk and Lisle Thread Gioves, Ladies Hosiery, i: Newberry. This decision they have made after looking all around. AS WE SELL NO GOODS ON TIME, we will guarantee sour dollar to buy you on an aveiage of TEN TO TWENTY FIVE PER CENT MORE than you can buy any where in the market. - JONES & SATTERWHITE. april 17 16 Im. REMOVAL REMOVAL! We have moved to W. T. TAR RANT'S old stand,. NO, 5 MOLLOHON ROW,T WHERE WE ARE RECEIVING A FULL LINE OF FRESH AND DESIRABLE MFIli GOOBX. An inspection from our friends will prove greatly to their advantage. JONES & SATTERWHITE, LEADERS OF LOW PRICES, Newberry, S. C. March 5, 1878. - -2m. ABOUT HAnMProN.-Anything relat ing to.our Chief Magistrate is in order now, and especially since the turkey egg story got out. Well, our Governor went fishing last week, and his success was most wonderful. The biggest trout in the Waccamaw considered it their duty to bite at his hook. Another in cident worth relating is that while on the way to the big meeting at Ander son, he stopped at Alston for dinner, and having heard so much about Mrs. Elkin's famous milk farm and Ku Klux corn he refused to partake of any thing else but buttermilk and corn bread. Mrs. Elkin will vote for him now to the very last. EXCURSION TO CHARLESTON -The city of Charleston will wear a festive garb next week. Among the attractive features will be the meeting of the State Press Association, the Grand Divi sion of the Sons of Temperance, the Grand Lodge of Good Templars, the loral Fair, and, best of all, the grand Easter Festival, which will be given in honor and aid of the Washington Light Infantry. Round-trip tickets will be sold at stations on the G. & C. R. R., at the following rates from the 19th to 23d: Chappell's Depot, $7.25; Newberry, $6.50; Prosperity, $6.25; Pomaria, $6.00; from Clinton, $7.75; Martin's Depot, $7.50.. PERSONAL. - Judge Kershaw arrived on the up train Monday, and is now holding Court. Drs. James McIntosh and 0. B. May er Jr., attended the State Medical As sociation in Greenville last week. Prof. Kelly was in town on Monday. His engagements in Laurens will close in a week or two, when he will go to Clinton. Maj. W. R. Cathcart, the popular Cotton Buyer and Broker of Columbia, visited Newberry last week on business. He was accompanied by a very fair specimen of a "chip of the old block" in the shape of a seven year old boy. A REMARKABKE RESULT.-It makes no difference how many Physicians, or how much medicine you have tried, it is now an established fact that German Syrup is the only remedy which has given complete satisfaction in severe cases of Lung Diseases. It is true there are yet thousands of persons who are predisposed to Throat and Lung Affections, Consumption, Hemorrhages, Asthma, Severe Colds settled on the Breast, Pneumonia, Whooping Cough, &c,who hwa no personal knowledge If anybody contemplates sending b this office any Spring poetry let hiu take warning from the following : Oh, he was a sweet, young, lithesome man And he moved with a tender grace; And a smile like the sweep of an angel's winj Played over his fair young face. "I bring," he said, and the editor bowed, For he loved the sweet young thing; "I bring," he murmured, "a poet's song, A lay of the balmy spring." Then the editor gathered his cross-cut saw And the nail grab, all thq, same; The big sledge hammer, the long crow bar And the club with the terrible name. He sawed him in two, and he flattened him out, He tore out each quivering lung; He pinned Lim up to the sanctum wall So scattered, and yet so young. -Burlington Hawkeye. DISTINGUISHED VISITORS.-The com mittee of wine culturists, consisting of Dr. Wm. Tinsdall, Col. C. H. Bliss and Gen. Jjseph Smolinski, of Washington City. accompanied by Col. D. Wyatt Aiken, arrived here Mond.y. These gentlemen were not ex-qcted until Tuesday, and consequently many plan ters from the country who were invited to meet them were disappointed. They ware entertained by Maj. L. J. Jones. We regret that the stay of these visi tors was so short, but feel cheered by the hope held out in the brief yet pleas ant interview had with them just before their departure, that they may return at no distant day and plant a colony of industrious and thrifty laborers in our midst. We are glad to know also that the visit was a pleasant one, and that climate, soil and people gave them sat isfaction. Under the guidance of our energetic and intelligent friend, Col. Aiken, we are confildent that the com mittee will receive the best informa tion. THE CRAVAT PARTY in aid of the Ladies' Monumental Association on Wednesday evening, was as pleasant as it was successful. The hall was not as full as we expected to see it, owing no doubt to the postponement from the pre vious night, of which no regular an nouncement had been made. The la dies who managed it are entitled to praise for the admirable manner in which the affair throughout was con ducted. Not only were the tables ele gantly and bounteously provided with everything in season and many things out of season, but they were handsome ly, gracefully and modestly presided over. To use a homely phrase there was no ''goin;, for a man" and holding bim until his pocket book was exhaust ed, and the consequence was that the "lords of creation," so-called, felt an ease not usual .on such occasions, and were so happy at the conclusion of the party that they were ready to attend another. In tender consideration of the universally tight condition of the gentlemen-pecuniarily-the p r i c e s charged were remarkably low, for in stance elegant coffee and chocolate 5 cents, delicious cream 10 ets., supper 20, and so a through the delightful whole. Ladies, you did well and the gentlemen thank you. Never, too, did we see such an array of beauty, from the little miss not yet in her teens up through all the stages of budding wo manhood to the stately and matured matron. Newberry certainly has rea son to be proud of her beautiful and modest women. There was only one regret, the cravats were rather short, and can only be used to tie up fingers in case of cut or bruise. The amount realized was $75. Let us have a straw berry festival next, ladies. THE NEEDS OF THE SOUTH.-That our people are an age behind the great Northwest in all matters pertaining to the introduction of machines to facilitate and utilize to the greatest advantage the productions of the farm, is too well known to need repeating. Modern in ventions have produced wonderful rev olutions and practical good to the far mer as well as to the non-producer. That we cannot at the South raise as fine crops of grass and hay as our friends of the Northwest, is confirmed by the fact of our enormous yearly purchases of baled hay.from that quarter. Our planters are driven to the rieces sity of miaking as much fodder as possi ble from corn tops, and to utilize this to the best advantage in feeding, it is found to be more profitable to cut the fodder in a feed-cutter tflan to feed to stock whole. We have noticed in our town for the past two weeks a new patent feed-cut ter, called the "COCKADE .CUTTER, that -for simplicity and good practical resuis we think stands first in the rank of machines of this kind. Our enterprising fellow-citizen Uncle Dick Chapman, has purchased the right of this County, and it speaks wvell for the intelligence of our planters that he has already taken orders for thirty ma chines, which he is now constructing. We learn also that a company oi three of our leading men have secured the rights of thirteen Counties, and will immediately commence the manufac ture and sale of the Cockade Feed Cut We were pleased to meet Mr. P. T. Young, the .owner and vendor of the above patent, and from our short ac quaintance with him can recommend him to our friends as a clever gentle man who will "nothing extenuate.' We commend him to all those who may wish to transact business in his line Every farmer ought to have a "Cock ade Feed Cutter." Dr. C. W. Benson's Celery and CHAMO ~CTT ~' DYT T ~ o~ ~,or,~ii ATnr~~~alv tA~i Cnn ) VARIOUS- ~ 1 Good rains. t Now for corn. Some sickness. Weather propitious. Set out cabbage plants. u Everybody take the Herald. b Standing advice-plant corn. st Capital beef in Market last week. Advertise and break the monotony. The Lenten season will soon be over. Wheat and oats are giowing off fine-!at Iy since the rain. to Narrow escape from frost Thursday T night. it The inmates of the Penitentiary have been reduced to bread and water fare. 'I Has Smokey Town mixed with the w, circumambient heavens ? A few tomato plants still to spare at in this office. Chickens will be needed next month -meeting of Synod. I The root of the sassafras placed in co hen's nests will destroy lice. Some writers have a river of words, p, but only a spoonful of thoughts. The best way to keep an umbrella- ed dig a hole fifteen feet deep and bury it. as It does the heart good to look at the a c fruit trees-they are loaded. ne Gardens too never looked better at 0 this season. Beans are talked of. as Little folks are advised to examine it the rabbit nests next Sunday. The visit of the Atlanta Surgeons to this ulaLe was entirely too brief, many co failed to see them. I The color "ashes of roses," is again revived.- Some one has been stirring up the ashes of the past. The lock boxes in the Post ofice look wh brighter since they have been polished t than when first put up. sh One of the ways to build up the town co is to send your Job Printing abroad. The money is lost. fe The campaign has commenced and in there will be lively work, Subscribe er for the Herald and keep posted. sLt A few radishesgrown with cucumbers of or melons will save the latter from the pl, ravages of bugs; they dote on radishes. er: Getting into debt is like a mouse in a TI trap; it is very easy to get in but hard to str get out. th Enough of some things is enough, 4 so but it is our opinion that we can never in have too -much corn. Plant more. John S. Fair, Esq., b'ad English peas for dinner the 10th inst., early for this m place. No cards. Pr Mr. J. D. Cash has a fine new safe, very large, from the Hall's Safe Manu facturing Co., Cincinnati. Treasurer Whites has a Liberia .cp in per coin. On one side is a woman's head, and on the other a palmetto tree. in It is a two-cent piece. t Mr. W. T. Wright has kindly given Mr. Emanuel Livingston and family the use of a house till they can get one of c their own. t Our carrier was weather bound Tues- t day last, hence his patrons received the Herald through the Ppat officp. He is on time once more. cn A hundred and sixty pound poetess Fr yearns 'to twitter as a bird on some lone e spray.' If she gets on one, there willfr be a good local item. a Charity covereth a multitude of sins, fe, but giving the water in which eggs de have been boiled to a hungry beggar w woman, wont cover worth a cent-.s Liberty Hall is a trump section, and the Herald circulates freely. A few old a crusts borrow their reading, and we S want that stopped. lic We desire information about every foi man in the county who borrows the ta: Herald, so that we may be able to write or biographical sketches of them. fr< A game of baseball was played Thurs. mI day, afternoon on the College Campus sy between the town nine and the college nine. The town nine beat. at When that buggy upset on the cor. N ner of Pratt Street the other evening, wV persons in the neighborhood thought they felt an earthquake.m There was a large gathering of col- It ored people from town and various parts as of the County on Sunday at the Helena ac Church. The exercises were impres sive. i It is said that there was some bad be- re havicr in one of the churches Sunday night. Those who do not~ know how to behave in decent society should keep ~ out of it. S There are some persons whom youR cannot approach with anything like a A request for accommodation. As soon G ask a rhinoceros for the privilege of sit- of ting an hour on his horns. Measles has been in town for several Ii, weeks. It seems to be a light form of F3 the -disease. Though a great number -. of children have had it there have been t no deaths. f Cut worms and white grubs can be u. driven away or destroyed by a light sprinkling of salt. A table spoon full of saltpetre to a bucket of water; pour A a little around the roots of plants. This a~ is another remedy.L Burns' friends will be glad to know PM that he did not have it long. He traded l it off to his neighbor Pope. If any 0, man can take care of an elephant and fa preserve his 'equanimity Dr. Pope is d< tht an That mnotn fMi tre a e Teed onoStndy fbyi te warnce lieved on Saturday by the appearance P h I of Diorama on wheels. Everybody ver seen in this market, has a fnz rotter, the possession of which wil 3ake some man happy soon. Oh that n editor could buy it. A little damsel, being aggravated he ond endurance by her big brother, fell pon her knees and cried, '0, Lord, less my brother Tom. He lies, lie eals, he swears. All boys do ; us irls don't. Amen.' It was a picture to see little chaps om four years old and up locked armls ith little misses promenading the hali ,the "Cravat party." They treated cream and lemonade like men. bere was one boy more than girl, and was sad to see him looking for a girl. 'John, my dear,' said a loving wife, thought you said that the dodo bird as extinct.' 'So it is pet,' he replied. Vell, but, Charlie, some one has sent a bill to-day, and it says : To one lep, do do. To three smashes, do do. twenty braces, do do. Charley, ease don't buy any more dodos ; they ust be horrid things.' The dolo is mmon at present. The best feeling man at the "Cravat rty," Wednesday night, was the ndsome drover Landrum, he displav a bouquet over the region of his heart, big as two sun flowers. He was not quainted with the divinity who pin d it on, but his recollection after re vering from the swoon into which lie is thrown, is that she was as pretty new pink shoes. Poor fellow lie las now. QUERY: "Why will men snolke mon tobaco, when they can b u.y arburg Bros. 'Seal of North Caro ia,' at the same price?'! 5-ly. WHO DID IT?-The most disconsolate :n the night of the "cravat party" is our friend Pat, who sleeps under 9 Hall. Having no need of a cravat voted to remain in his room; the uffiing overhead, however, was not nducive to sleep, so he concluded to ,al out into the night air to cool his ered brow, and calm the agitation his breast; but, alas, just as he em ged, and without any warning to d from under, down came a bucket slop, washings of coffee cups, greasy ,tes, &c. How much of the conglom ,tion struck our friend is not known. ie question to solve now Is not who uek Billy Patterson, but who took s starch out of Pat Duckett's shirt lar. It is said that his feelings were overcome that he expressed himself some very appropriate language. Go to H. A. Burns for Canned To toes, Green Corn,'Peaches. At Low ices. tf ~LAPA SNAPS. Fine rain seasons the past week, eat and oats are consequently much mproved, and the prospect is cheering. Farmers are busy, some are putting cotton while others are getting ready do so. Corn is not forgotten. Mr. J. B. Campbell lost a fine grey *rse last week. While running about struck against a tree. 4. post mor n examination proved that the ani al had burst its gall bladder. A base assault with intent to kill was de on the person of Tilda Swindler, lred, living on Dr. Clark's place, iday night. The miscreant, conceal in a fence corner close to the house, ed four shots from a pistol as she was out to enter the door. Two took ef t, one in the hip and one in the shoul r. Two others struck the house. ounds not dangerous. Who fired the ots is not known. An old blind man named Hudson as arrested here last week by the U. Marshal, for selling liquor without a tense. Hudson is much to be pitied ; emerly he had been employed as a nk tender by the L. R. R. Co., the dy thing he could do; discharged >m that he tried to support his family the way above stated. He has the mpathy of all Jalapa. Business is very dull, and the clerks nuse themselves with the study of atural History. The lesson last week as "rats." Our Democratic Club meets on Sat -day afternoon, the 20th, at 2 o'clock. is hoped there will be a full turnout business of importance will be trans ted. A mackerel was fished out of a trap Beaver Dam last week-it was al adv salted. DEM. YES re can change a fifty dollar bill if you nt a bottle of GLOBE FLOWER COUGil (nUP, the greatest Cough and Lung emedy in the world ; or if you want i try it first and see if what the Hion. lex. H. Stephens, Ex-Gov. Smith, Ex ov. Brown and Hon. Robert Toombs Georgia, say about it is true, you can at a Sample Bottle for ten cents at r. S. F. Fant's Drug Store, that re Bves an ordinary cold. The GLonE LOWER COUGH SYRUP never had an lual for Coughs, Colds and Lung Af etions. It positively cures Consump >n when all other boasted remedies il. Sample Bottles, ten cents. Re'g ar size, fifty doses, $1.00. NEXT TOWN head where they loan you a dollar id chalk it down till to-morrow, for a >ttle of MERRELL'S HEPATINE for the iver. The enormous expense of imi >rting the ingredients of this grL'tt rer medicine into this country, is why 1r Druggist Dr. S. F. Fant sells hut 1e sample bottle to the same p)er~son >r ten cents ; but as there are fifty >ses in the large size bottles, it is 1eap enough after all at two cents Br dose, for a medicine that has never en known to fail in the cure of dys epsia and all diseases of the liver. It as never failed in the cure of liver ~mnl~~dnt ~vh~n taken as directed, ni Sad Things. "Of all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest aze these, 'It might have been.' Whittier. 'Tore sad are these we daily see, 'It is, but hadn't ought to be." Bret Harte. it of all sad words to "beats," and tramps, The saddest are these "I'm out of stamps." New York Weekly. A-.d of all sad words to the tailor sleek, The saddest are these,"call round next week." New York Commercial Advertiser. 1111 saIder than these have ever been, Is tUe servaut's answer, "she isn't in." Burlington Hawkeye. Dut saddest of words to printers said, Are. "his subscription is still unpaid." Southern Watchman. But sadder than all, when news-boys call, Are the words, "we never subscribed at all." Bulletin. S idder by far, and worse than all When a promise is made to pay in the fall NEWBERRY.-We bad the pleasure of a trip to that most thriving and at tractive town, Newberry, last week, and our appreciation of the place prompts us to give expression to the :umihration we have for the business (puaiifications of its business men and the hospitality and kindness of all its citizens. Newberry h4s for a number of years held the honor of being the best cotton market in the up-country. Its business facilities enable it to offer advantages which have not been un appreciated by the buyer, as is evi denced by the rapid growth of the place ant' the air of prosperity which per vades everything. The professions are ably represented by men whose n.1mes are familiar to the people of this State, and known even beyond its borders. Two of the best county newspapers in the State are well supported there. Banking facilities are within the town. The morals of the people are well cared for by the pastors of churches of nearly every denomination-. The educational wants are amply provided for, there being, besides its numerous schools, the Newberry College. En passani, the building up of this College is a matter of grave interest to the entire 'State. It should receive, as it deserves, the hearty support of our citizens, as it offers the advantages of the highest ed ucation AT HOME. The new college building promises when completed, to be an ornament to the town. Whilst not so handsome, perhaps, as the old one, it is far more durable and con venient. Newberry needs either a "vigilance committee" or a fire company to check the numerous fires which have been prevailing there lately. So much for the material beauties and advantages of the town. "Place aux ~iames"-who shall speak of the beauties of those ladies ! Whose tongue so eloquent or pen so facile as to do justice to their charms ! Certainly not ours. But in honest admiration of their beauty their grace, their cultured, elegant manners, we lend our feeble voice to their praise.-Ninety-Six Guar Abandoned at Sea. At all times ships of one kind or another are floating about the sea, abandoned by officers and crew, in what seems a hopeless condition. ~Some are dismantled and mere hulks, somie are swimming keel upwards, some are water-logged, but being laden withl timber will not sink, but are driven hither as the wind and waves may direct. So people afflicted with catarrh, bronchitis, and consumption, are abandoned by physicians and friends as incurable, yet thousands of such are annually restored to perfect health by the use of Dr. Sage's Ca tarrh Remedy and IDr, Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The Catarrh Rem edy is unequaled as a soothing and healing local application, while the D)iscovery purifies and enriches the blood and imparts tone and vigor to the whole system. VmDOLA, La., A pril 17th, 1877. Dai. PIERCE : Dear Sir-I suffered for twelve yecars with that most offensive and foat hsomne of all diseases-catarrh. My taste and smell were completely de stroyed. I procured a supply of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy and your Golden Medical Discovery, which I used according to directions, and a complete and permanant cure was sneedily effected. I take pleasure in rleommwending themi to all affBicted. Ever thankfully yours, .CL AR A E. HUNT. WADING RIVER, Burlington Co.,N.J., Feb. 28th, 1877. Da. PIERCE : Dear Sir--Your Golden .Medical Discovery is the best medicine for cuh,colds, and consumption, I cver knew. It has saved my life. Respectfully yours, HELEN B. MCANNEY. NIJNE NOVOROD FArR.-The great market of the eastern world has been held at this junction of the Volga and Olira Rivers, in Russia, every summer for~ hundreds of years. Here the natious of Europe and Asia meet with their products for trade. Cossack, Chinesc, Turk and Persian meet the German and the Greek with every variety of merchandise that mankind emipk,vs, from sapphires to grind stones, tea, opium, fur, food, tools. and hst but not least, medicines. Ji. C. Ayer & Co.'s celebrated remedies from A merica were displayed in an elegant bazaar where the Doctor himself m:ight sometimes be seen. They are known and taken on steppes of Asia .s well a the nrairies of the West, WHAT IT BRIN.-Now tha. Spring is at hand. a general activity is witnes sed in well-regulated households, the good house-wife over-hauls everything, flower and vegetable gardens are seen to, rooms from basement to attic are examined, bed-rooms, dining room and kitchen undergo scrutiny not thought of through the cold, dark days of winter. Strange, if in all these places there be not something lackng: may be a water pot, trowel, flower-pot, some article of crockery, china, glass, wood, tin, iron, willow, etc. She takes the situation in at a glance, and determines that things must be 'set to rights:' a list is prop:ircd and sent to Kingsland & Heath of Co lumbia, who she knows will fill her bill in the most satisfactory manner. A word to the wise is sufficient. tf Tortures that Need not be En. dured. People suffer a great deal of pain unneces sarily. Among tortures that need not be en dured are those inflicted by the rheumatism and gout, since the acrid element in the blood which produces them by contact with the sensitive covering of the muscles and joints may be eliminated by the u-e of that match less depurent, iostetter's Stomaph Bitters, before the inflammatory symptoms are devel oped to any great extent. When it is con sidered what excrdciating tortures rheuma tism inflicts, and what a tendency it has, when fully developed, to attack the heart, the advisability of an early use of such a re liable antidote becomes at once apparent. The rheumatic virus is expel!cd from the blood by the inceased action of the kidneys -which act as strainers-produced by the Bittera, and the sufferer will find, if he uses this supreme defensive agent, that lie will be protected against a return of the agoniz ing oomplaint. Dyspepsia, fever and ague, liver and bowel complaints and other mala dies, are also cured by this admirable reme dy. Cheaper than Physician's Bills. "A THING OF BEAUTY Is A Joy Fon EVER."-What is it? Something prepared for woman or.!y, and t, be used by woman exclusively. It is ndapted especially to cases where the womb is disordered, and will cure all irregularities of the "menses,' or "monthly courses," by restoring the dis charge in Lvery instance, whether acute or chronic. Where is it ? Dr. J. Bradfield's Female Regulator-Woman's Best Friend is prepared and sold by J. BratIfield, At lanta, Ga., and may be bought for $1.50 per bottle at any respectable Drug House in the Union. We, the undersigned druggists take pleas ure in reccommending to the trade Dr. J. BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR, believ ing it to bi a good and reliable remedy for the disea5es for which he recommends it. W. A. LANDSDEL.1, Atlanta. Ga. PEMBERSON, TAYLOR, & CO., Atlanta. REDWINE & FOX, Atlanta, Ga. W. C. LAWSHE. Atlanta, Ga. W. ROOT & SONS, Marietta. Ga. For sale by Drs. S. F. Fant, Pope & Ward law, W. E. Pelham and W. F. Pratt. 15-2r. Go to Hi. A. Burns' for your Cigars, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, all of which are sold at Bottom Prices. 13-tf. ECONOMY IS WEALTH, Poor Richard says. If this b.e true, then it is wise in every family to use Daryeas's Satin Gloss Starch in preference to any other, be cause it is the most ec)>uomical ever mann factrred in the world. It is the most econom ic .1 because it is the best; it is the cheapest because it is the best. It is purer, whiter, and sttnnger than any other starch. It has recsived the highest award over all competi tors in the four quarters of the globe. Don't be deceived by your grocer. Ask for Daryeas' Imoroved Corn Starch for food, and Duryeas', Satin Glo'ss Statrch for laundry purposes, and take no other. POST OFFICE, NEWBE RRY, S. C., Apr. 13, 1878 List of advertised letters for week ending April 13, 1878: Biggs, J. W. 1Feltman, G. W. Boland, Miss Anna Graham, J. B. Cromer, Mary Ann (2) Graham, Jerry Cromer, Andrew Maffett, Miss Ida DeWalt, Fanny jOxner, Luther Suber, Miss Mary Philuips, W. L. Parties calling for letters will please say if advertised. R. W. BOONE, P. M. POST OFFICE CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. Down Train arrives ......... 2 P M Up Train arrives.............. 2 07 P M1 Larens Train arrives.........12 40 P M1 " " leaves..........215 P M Mails close for all traiUs.......1 30 P M1 Up and Down Trains pass at this place. R. W. BOONE, P M1 Newberry, S. C,, March 19. Commertci. NEwBEERY, April 18-Cotton-Middling 9 1-4. Number of bales shipped 187. Newberry Prices Current. CORRECTED WEEELY By J. N. MARTIN & CO. BACON Shoulders, Prime New.... 5 Shoulders, Sugar Cured.. Sides, C. R., New......... 6 DRY SALTED ME ATS Shoulders, New............. a - Sides, C. R., New....... a 4 Sides, Long Clear........ 6 AMS Uncanvassed Hams.......10 Canvassed Hams, (Magnolia) 121 LARD Leaf, in Tierces...........12j Leaf, in Buckets........... 13 SUGAR Powdered.............. 16 Crushed.................. 14 Granulated Standard...... 12a Ex^ra C.................. 12fr Coffee C.................... 11 Yellow................--1 New Orleans............... 12i Demarara................ MOLASSES New Orleans Syrup. 75 New Orleans Molasses. 40 Cuba Molasses.......60 Sugar House Molasses. 40 TEA Gunipowder..............1.50 Young Hyson...........--1.50 ALLSPICE............... . -25 PEPPER..................3--- 0 COFERoasted or Parched.0 Best Rio.............. 26a Good Rio.............. 2a 25 1 VINEGAR Cider Vinegar........ 50 White Wine Vinegar.. 65 COR Tennessee............. . 5 MEAL Bolted.................. 1.00 Unbolted................. 93 SOAP........................... 6a 10 STARCH................-.......l10a 16 STAR CANDLES................ 16 I FLOUR, per bbl.................8.00a 9.00 PEARL HOMINY.................. 5 ANDY ......................... 15 CONCENTRATED LYE....... ...15 ENGLISH SODA................. 10 HORSFORD'S BAKING POWDER 25 SEA FOAM BAKING POWDER... 35 AXLE GREASE.................. 15 TOBACCO...................... 60a 1.25 NAILS (10) ke,.... . ........3.50 BAGGIN-Heavy...................l ARROW TIES, per bunch...... 3 00 RED CLOVER SEED-per lb...20 RED OATS-per tu.............75 The Largest and Best LOT OF STATIONERY! SUCH AS. PA PER, all kinds. },NVELOPES, all sizes. PENS, different makes. INKS, approved qualities. PENCILS, Slate and Lead. SLATES, different sizes. DIARIES, large, small-. (EOADMBOK,dto umma ammt nnno rein Iron It'ok.. TRY HOME FIRST. CO0L UMB'i _'A, S. *1.0 JOIIN AL LR PROPRIETOR. REDUCED PRICES: VERTICAL CANE MILLS, LIST OF PRICES, 2 Rollers, 10 inelws diameter, *35 00 2 " 12 " 45 0) 2 " 14 " " 55 00 3 4C 10 " 6) (0 3 " 12 " 4 'At 00 3 " 14 " 800 Lbove prices complete with Frame. With out Fra: , 0f less oL eaex Mill. E[ORIZONTAL, 3 Roll er Mill, for Steam or Water Power, $150. SENM YOUR ORDEH FOR ANE MILLS and SYRUP KETTLES, TO YOHN ALEXANDER, COLUMBIA, S. C. April 3, 1878-14-1Y. a/ Iiscellaneous. Medical Notice. I respectfully offer my professional ser ices to the citizens of Newberrv and sur. ounding county. I can be found during he day either at the residencc of Mr. L. . Folk, or at the Drug Store of Dr S. F. Fant. At night at the residence of Mr. L. . Folk. JAS. K. GILDER, M. D. March 20, 12 3m * NOTICE U. S, INTERNAL-RE VENUE SPECIAL TAXES. Uuder the Revised Statutes of the United tates, Sections 322,. 3287 328, an d3239, very person engaged in any business, evo+ :ation, or employment, which r'enders bin libet- special tax, is required to pro :re and place a'id keep conspicuously in bis establishment or place of business a STAMP denoting the payment of said speCial tax for the special-tax year beginninig May I, 1878. Section 3244, Revised Statutes, lesignates who are liable to special tax. A return, as prescribed on Form 11, is also required by law of every person liable to pecal tax as above. Seve e penalties are prescribed for non-compliance with the ~oregoing requiremente, or for cont.inuing in business after April ~30, 1878, withioms payment of tax. Application should be made to E. M' Brayton, Collector of Internal Revenue, at Dolumbia, S. C. H FOR HATHING. From my P.-emi;n BUFF COCHINS 3.00 for 1$, $5.00 for $26. PA RTRIDGE 70HINS, $2.00 per doz. WHITE LEG. ORNS and BROWN LEGHIORNS, $2.00 er doz. LIGHT BRAHMfAS, $2.00 per loz. Golden Spangled Seabrigh. BAN. L'UMS and White BANTUMfS, $1.50 per lozen. C. B. SIGH ALD, mar 20 8 tf Charleston, S. 0. Final Discharge. I will apply to the Court of Probate for ewberry Courty, on the. 23d day of April 1et, for a final discharge as Guardiaa >f Mary E. Vaughne, now Tri>bie. D. V. SCURRY. Guardian. March 12, 1878-12--St. TRESPASS NOTICE. We, the under;igned, watrn nl persons Lgaist trespassing o-2 one premises either >y hunting, fi4ing, seining or in any other ianer, arnd any person so found trespass og will be dealt with to the full extent of he law. J. R. SPEARMAN, SR. F. G. SPEARM AN. J. R1. SPEFAARMAN, JR. J. S. SPE A R AN, JR. A pr. 3, 14-4t*' NOTICJE. The follon g POPUL AR GUANOS are or sale by I. N. MARTIN & CO, The Atlantic Phosphate. The Acid Phosphiate. he Bradley's DissGhred Bone. Call and examine before buying. Jan. 30, 5 -tf. 8EiIO0NBLE 900D8 at BOT TOM PRICES. . JUST RECEIVED A FRESII LOT OF RACKERS, CANNED GOODS, PTA;\ ~ ~RPvi'T fl~Jnv