- - -+ - -d -, " - .-- w--a - . .E " " - EDITION.] INNSBORO, S. C., TUENDAY MORNING, APRIL 10, 1877. NO. 30, N EWi AI)V1(afI IIMN1'si. 2 O Ladios' Favorito Cards, all styles, with nmUe, 10c. Post il. f. B .r uIrrE n, Nassau, itons. Co., N. Y. You will agreo to diatribute some of on circulars, nu will send you a (.IIinoMo IN i1./r FntAMIE, and a 16 sage 61 column illustrated paper, fry': for 3 months. InclOse I U (cntsq to pay postage. .A:.nts wanted. KEFNDALL & CO., Bs. ton, Mass. TRIFLING With a Cold is Always Dangerous. USE W ELS ( Car bt. lie 'Tab&ilets, a sae remedy for Conghs, and all )is eases of the Throat, Lungs, Chest and Mucouts .\t ibrane. PUT UP1 ONLY IN BLUE BOXEs. Sold by all Druggists. C. N. CnITTE:roN, 7 Sixth Avenue, N. Y. a mofth. A1ENTs WANTE) .20..0 on our Tn :E GIrtAT $2 I:ooxs. The .ery} of Chi rc'y itoxs, a full account of this great mys tory written by his Father, beats Robin o11 Crusoe in thrilling interest, ''ho Il1ustrated IIANI>-11o1 to all IEIo.IONR, a cOnlplete account of all denonlinations tnl sects.. 300 Illustrations. Also the ladies' inedical guide, by Dr. Paneoast. 1.0 Illustrations. Those books sell at sight. ;Hale and female akents coin inoney on thien. Particulars free. 3opies by mail $: each. JoHN E. PoTrn A Co. l'hlilalelphia. A HOME AND FARM OF YOUR OWN, On the line of a great railroa 1 with good markets both East West. Now is the ITime to 4 (uire it. Mild Climate, Fertile Soil, best Country for Stnok Raising in the United States. Books, Maps, full infornatin, also, "TE1 PIONEE"IL Sent free to all. parts of .th world. A d dresse. ?. 'e O g -g Land Coin. U. P. I. It. OMAHA, NEB. NOTiC.. We hare the0 I~rgolntI~td bony au d 1 1 u t h e World. It contains I l,.h~rticf )u tor, I Oonvu pe. roped. t:entodor, g~tdoi pe~n. and It tlo, o""C"t. J. Iury. CIIIIIlot0 esn111 4'l 1 011; 1owt ICKAOIIIhld tl~.c. oovobu to,,. pull1, 2 ', c. sit-. G tI.ckLO'Cel. with ne..r'cdl Joweity, D[D'0 & CO., 700 Droadway, N. V, T W E L VEitteg i one 'I'b02.t.'i I)ILINAT U\. Cantle teo as n r e b l no).n , o a m .cr 1' tif Illi C ut ro pa ir Iii f :.c a . endu tfor tocik, and Fyet. 1-ttoens. r cto a :. R( 'f nn coma~nn ond IoI he tvynroo i.ovpnd I c trA a urfoo,.,o. A:ro:t, are n, l' C , o r m vI 1:Il ty it) I the~l beat solatt'g n'i a' 0Allut. Blid~ 0 ra;I ~ t, tax. for , C l . $ar ,'ulintrvl "tIICCIIICI;. t"' Agren'a. Send fur sumII~oo 141111 "': and009 cIII OII . m vIII r t ,vu1. BRID . t~s. ( 7 . / 2 oaclway, II. Y. ATJOittY PAC(tzm:r1 and IXof Ile 1.1.0%,j) Ct),'tNA. Mfh rgrT1aO LA~ 7rv D Broadway, N. V. sept 3 EsablishePd 1 59. CIARLES MULLER Has renaoved to the storo next to Francis Gerig's W TATCTIES, Closh eni Jewelry re W paired, and satisfiction guaranteed to everybody. Those inldebted to me for work on jewelry will please pay at once, for lIImnipf on is I Aecte'd. CHARLES MULLER. feb -itf Sewing-Macdn o. rRADE aW * MARK meoo.**') ?uo. July to, 1811. wE CLA iIa l'olt 'A'L E JI h1PoVFU1 WSEINOW The following speciflo p)oints of supo. riority: 1-Gresit hlimpglictly 1us Comu.o '. - flu raI 1 lity. 3-Excedlatgy Lighst ii:a3i 5-CPs-os at Va5ItIes ofr IVork, 6-11eaufy of' F'Iinits simnd J'It 1c1:. Sin gle Machinies sent on, orders dlirect from theo factory, writton guarantee with each Machino. WILY PAY OLD PinTCESl jfar-Send for elroulaars and partloulars. Address, Time W b'1mtneoy lu'g.Co., feb 17 . Paterson, N,. J. Shirts!i Shirks i hirtIl W AMBUTTA hiAU1 '&p200O Lineri, 5.0 'pej l'a&Y n. Pe reale ag Qali~oe dd A ~ 'o half dozen, , - m ar 2 ma 'dautERAN* SPRING HAS JO1E AND WITH IT A BEAUTIFUL LINE LF LADIES' AND GENTS' SPMING G001 -AT-. B ANNENBER GX. CALL AND SEE THEM And brlig your change w th you. (Our beautiful Centnnni al Ftripes, at 1 one yard wide. CALICOS AT OLD PRICES. CLOTHING IN rGREAT VARIETY. JUST RECEIVED A beautiful assortment of Gonts' Pants for .9 'ring wear. Whito Vest oftall hinds, at all prices. coots and Shoes The largest stock in the J3oro. We koop Cons5tantly on hand Mianko & Stvarns' Baltimore mir de Sho s, each and every pair warranted. -CALL ON R. .. DANNENBERG THE LEADER OF LO'w '3!r.c o mi;. near 10 PRING' AND SUE R E invite the attention of the public to ousnfew and assorted stock of spring and Nunmmuer Spring Cialicos of the best brands and Pe(reales aind Cambrics at 12'. eenits. Whtitea Pique~s froma 11i e per'yard up. Linm n Lawns, and1 brown dlress Linens, ve'ry cheap. Nainsookcs, Trish ILnens, TLowvels, P'ique Laces Cation TIrimmiaine'. Shoo~t Ifigs. leac~cherl an I Hlrown IJ0ome4'pons. T1ie 5, Cottaades. 1 0.. &'C., &., * &c. at prices to suit the har 1 times. Our stoca of Geants' Goods is full up. -We ask special attent-ion to our Iinei of Cassimers, which cannjot be Hurpasse5d in price, stivle atid quality, anywherie. I(EEP1S eel ibratedl partly mladuo Shirts on handl at $.5 00 per dozen. SHOQES J SHOES ! SHOES ! A full an~d comnpletae sortmnent of ShoesR alwnys on hanti. W have a vplenid lot of' baadiaas' anl (Tents' Fino 5dhoes which we will soll low. nid wvhich we take pleasure ini showing. HARDWARE!I HARDWARE!1 A full lino always on hand. McMASTIE R & 1111 CE. mar 22. Etteniger & Edmond, RICRMoND. VA. MJANUACTUREllS of Porta~ble an1 .. Satioary ngines un'd hollers di all kinds, Cironlar t4aw Mlills, Grist Mlls, Mlill Goating, Shaftlnge Pnlleys &o. / Asun10AN TURNIE iWA'TER wHEEL. Campo *&1rgeal Steam up IMPORTANT -TO --AND AGRICULTURISTS! --0 Emperor Willam Cabbage, r *HE best,largest, hardiest. and most profitable variety of 'w'srain c(A1I.(ana: known in Europo, and imported to this country exclusively by the uldersigne,l, where, with little cultivation, it flour ishes astonIishingly, attaining an enor - ntu1)s hize, aid selling in the Mnarket at prices most gratifying to the producer. In transplanting, great care should ho used to give sufficient space for growth Solid heads the size ofthe mouth (t a flour barrel is the average run of this choice variet . One package of the seed sent post paid oin roceipt of 50 cents, land ono 3 cent postage stampy). Three packages to one address $1 00 and two 3 cent stamn ps. Twelvo packages sent on receipt of $3 110. _i1- Read what a well known Garrett Co. Marylander says of tho EAIPEnoa Wi. LIAm Cabbage: BOOMINOTON, Gani:T Co., Md., Jan. -2l, 1877. Mn. JAmci: CAMIPnE.M,, GG Fulton St. N. Y. Dear Sir: I bought some seed from you last spring, and it was goo 1. Your En peror William Cabbage suits this climate well. On a mountain side the seel you sent mo produced Cabbages weighing thirty pounds each. Very truly yours, JAMES .BLOWN. ----- .>.91 I atm Sole Agent in the U. S. fox the famous Maidstone Onion Seed Fron Maidstono, Kent Co., England, pro luimg the most producing the inio :t prolific aid finest flavored Onions kmnown Ind yieldling on suitable soils from 8(10 to ("0 hushels per acre, sown in drills. 1[r. Ilenry Colvin, a large m-irket garden. r at Syracuse, N. Y., writes, "Your. English Oniont 5 ed surprise me by its arge yield, and the delicious flavor of the fruit. I could I- v. sold any quantity ir his mar et at good prices. Iy wife says :he will have no other onions 'or the 'able n future. Send meW as much 'ts you can or the enclosed $5,.00." One packoge of seed sent on receipt )f .0 icen1s and one 3 cejnt postige stall. hree paet ages to one address $1 till. an.I ,wo 3 cent stamps. Twelvo packages sent n receipt of $3 00. fy supply is limited. Pa tios leasiring I 0 secure either of the above rare seeds, dhould not delay their orders All seed VAltnIANTED FnRsH AND TO 0:It.MNAT:. .'ash muunt accompany all orlers. For )ither of the above seeds, address JAMES CA1PIlELIL, mar 1- x thu GG Fulton St., N. Y. ilE BALL STILL ROLLS ON -AT THlE GRAND CENTRAL Dry Goods Establishment -OFe- - 11 reory Bother COLUMBIA, S. C. H TE suIccess attending the disposal oif 1. 0)ur M AostIc1:NT H'foex, which v 0 haui upon the miarket early' this seaseon at such low figures, convinces us that the public 1ppreciat a our 'ff'orts to suppzy themi with t-he newiest anud mnost stylishe goods. anyinig as we de~ from the firsit hanlds und for cian, enables usl to offer SUPERIIOR INDUCEMENTS. Wn aro now receiving a now and eleanit stock of SPRlING AND SUMMIERl BOOTS, SHOES, whiuch will be sold at the sn~no low )ruling popular piries. \Ve expect to do a rjva resumaG nUsINESS, anid bargamns will be; nfferedi daily. "A word to the wviso is smin, pW Samples sent on appienttion and oxpresage paid oni bis over $10. Grand Central Dry Goo ds Estalishmeont. TI. A. McCnuatny. 13. 1R. McCnE~.nY. B. A. IhAwLs, WI!, HIoi5xN, feb 20 iE. J. McCarley B EGS to call attentio'm' to his new 6%ok of Bhoots and Shoes, all siz0s anud styles, at unprecedentoedly low prices. .Ah80,. An entirely now Stock of Groceries.3 Blugar of' all grades, Coffee, Rico, H~ominy, Meal, .-oap, Sta oh, Soda, Pepoppe en4etf( Fine Seed Iriithi Potatoen. Choicent Blrands of Flour. Best Corn and. IBye Whiskey in town. Tobacco 'end Cigata,. Mfolas'es1 Lat,, Bacon, t|hons &os J..wevst hnarket price or cash. GENERAL, GOSSIP. The amount of legal tenders now outstanding is $302,642,204. Pennsylvania continues to deal tenderly with the Molly Maguires. A brother of Tons Hood is doing a flou ishing business as a florist, in Bergen, New Jersey. Three members of tho Packard Legislaturo were sworn into the Nicholls House on Wednesday. The Democrats carried th o recent mniciipal election in Colnhus, Ohio, while in Cincinnati the Repub licans were successful. A number of prominent Mexicans havo been arrested for conspiracy to overthrow Diaz and restore Lerdo tga; the presidency. An outbreak is imminent. A train of twenty cars of silks and ten from China and Jupan, which left San Franicisco on the 20th, reached New York on Friday, mak, ing the trip in ten days. Tweed's release is set down for Monday next, but may be delayed some datys by the reconveyance of property which ie had transferred before legal proceedings were con menced. Among the repent appointments by the President is that of Samuel 13. McLin, a member of the notori ous Florida Returning Board, to be associate justice of the supremo court of New Mexico. As a proof of hard times, the mar shal of the District of Columbia shows nearly thi ce hundred letters from persons begging to be put on ju ics that they may give their families bread. A mass meeting of ten or fifteen thousind citizens in New - Orleans, last Friday, passed resolutions de elaring their fidelity to the consti tution of the United States and their determination to uphold the Nicholls goveinmeint at all hazards. Gen. Sherman says it is not his purpose to parley further with the Indians or to delay the intended campai'gn. Supplies are now being rapidly forwarded and oterything is being put in readiness for the spring campaign. Isaac Friedlander, formerly of Charleston, the largest grain mer chant in California, has suspended payment. His lialilities are esti mated at $1,000,000. Mr. Fried lander claims that he will be able to pay all debts and have left a surplus of over &'3,003. Ex-President Grant, in an interview with a St. L:>uis reporter, favored Hampton and Nicholls and the with drawa'l of Federal support from the bogus govemnnments, and believed that Louisiana and South Carolina would soon enjoy local self-govern mont. President Hayes expresses a deter intnnation to mr-ko no additional ap pointments until his Southern policy has been tested. lHo ias ah-eady~ received large mnubers of letters from individuals and organizations through out the country app)roving of hits recent course. Oov'. Nicholls having issued a proclamation thanking the pl)oll for their support, Packard lias ma snedl a cou nt~er proclamation deny ing the right of Nicholls to style himnsel f Governor, and reminding the country at large that he (Packard) is elere;d, if H-ayes is. .He also in. timatos that lhe wvill call the negro militia to his aid and fight for his position. Hog has also wvritten a threatening lotter to Hayes. Ex- Governo:- Piinchback has been appointed by3 Governor Nicholls and confirmed by the Senate, a mnembler of the Louisiana State Board of Education. A. H-. Corbin, colored, has been appointed1 by Governor, Nicholls tax collector for the Sixth District of New Orleans. Sov oral other colored men have been appointed to lucrative offices by Governor Nicholls. Haydon says of the poet Keats: "Because the world did not bow at once to his talents, as his friends had done, he distrusted him. self and flew to dissipation. For six weeks he was hardly over sober, and he once covered his throat and tongue as far as he could reach with G yenne pepper in order to enjoy thle delicious coolness of claret ini all its glory." Of the candidatos mentioned for' governor of Noew Jersey on the ]Edmnocratic side ex-Govornor 1 arker proablyi c~a n tnost Muserative' Judge Green, on account of his de. feat by McPherson; the best politi cal rights. On the Republicau side Cortlandt Parker, though personal ly a brutally cold maan has the most brilliant oratory, and John Hill has the greatest claim on the honest, sincere convictions of the in'lustrious men of the State. The contest is likely to be bOtwoon Green and Parker, with Abbot and Hobart in reserve. . A Georgia paper, speaking of cer. tain additions to be made to the luna tic asyl hu, perpotrate s the following choice piece of rhetoric : "'hese buildings are to bo built under the direct su)pervisiol of Captain Wilcox, the Engineer of the Asylum, and a complete gentleman, and with a force to b employed." Have the hua. tics been turned loose into the newspaper sanctun . A Wiseonsin man, who had boon induced by Western p.apers to go to Florida and start an orange factory, passed through Atlanta on hiway home the other day. Hiss. rghes were harncssed to him by one sus pen dor, and be stood up to a free lunch counter with the air of a mnh who knew his rights and dared matintaifn them. Per eontra, a 1Florida man who started West sov oral years ago without a cent in his po,;ket is now able to keep a private shaving cup and razor in a high toned barber shop. Boll's Tolophone, Prof. Boll, of Boston, has pelfect ed an apparatus different from Gray's mlusical telephone, by which not only the sound of musical notes is repro. (huiced, but also that of the human voice in 'words spoken in ordinary conversation. 'His success in regard to the reproduction of the sound of the lumphtn voice his boon very inarked. lie thas constructed an ap p)at alus which, w1Pbn at'ached to the receiving end of the teleg.hmph wirk enal)lcs any person in the apartment to hear words distinctly which are pokcen at the other cud of the lino. A. trumpet-mouthed tube Is sot' o - poaite an electronagnet similar iaL form and arrangement to that al ready described. Across the mouth of the tube a dia pllragni or membrane is strained, to which is attached a light mag netized bar of steel, which almost touches the coro ends of the magnet. A batter y actuates the magnet and supplics the elect ic fluid to the line. One pele is to the ground while the other is to the line. At the receiv ing end is a single helix with an ex ternal soft iron case and a Jooso soft iron cover. When words are spoken into the tube at the sending . end. the magnet on tho membrane vibrates with it and induces mag neto-electric pulsationa in the mag net opposite. These are transmit. tod over the line and reproduce vi brations in the loose iron cover or disk of the magnet at the receiving end, which give out the sounds as they are caused at the sending end. The receiving instrument, when p'ope1'ly mounted on a resonator, gives out an inicreased sound, and then whole is justly regarded as one of the wondlers Of our~ ago. As these marvels of electrical science and1 skill are only in thecir nimn'my as yet it is not too much to expet that when perfected, as they are curtain to be within a little time, the whole art of telegraphy will be revolutionized through their inflin ence. Every -day that passes over us servos to pr1ove how true are Hamlet's wvords to his faithful Trer are more things in heaven and earth, Trhan ar'e dem'et or nyur philosophy. This is the way the Boston Tran scripe accounts for the use of the cresent b~y the Turks. When Phillip of Macedon approached by night with his troop~s to scale the walls of Byzantiun, the moon shone out and discovered his design to the besieged, who repulsed him. The crescent was afterward adopted as the favor'ito badge of the city. When the Turks took Byzantium, they found the crescent in every public place, and, believing it to possess some magical power, adopt od it themselves. The origiri of the crescent as a roligious emblem is anterior to the timo of Philip of Mace don, dating, in fact, from the very beginning of history. The easiest, wvay to get. rid of stumps of trees is to bore a hole in the top, say one -or two inahes, and eighteen inches deep. .Put' in the: 1h010 from one to two ounces 9 saltpetre,.fill the hole.,witpi and plug up tight. In the A1 ' tamke out the plug, piour in -af' g~ofkoosenoi, and sethfre-teit4 ig6h m 2MO r.P