THE HORRY NEWS, ?UBLI?nKI) UvePV Saturday {Homing T W. BEATY, Editor. TliK3lM : One Year, $2.00 Six Months, $1.00 All fominanlcntloiia tend Inge to serve private Interest, will be charged lor as FT THE FAVORITE HOME REMEDY. This unrivalled Medicine is warranted not to contain a single particle of Mercury or any injurious mineral substauco but is PIIKELY VEGETABLE, containing those Southern Hoots and Ilerbs, which an allwise Providence has placed in rcountii? s where Liver Disiy^s most prevail. It will cure all Diseases cav by Derangeinient of the Liver aud llowels. Simmons'Liver Regulator, or Medicine eminently a Family Medicine,?and by being kept ready for immediate resort will save many an hour of sullering and many a dollar in time and doctors' bills. Alter over Forty Years' trial it is still receiving the most unqualified testimonials to its virtues from persons of the highest charac. ter and responsibility. Eminent physieans commend it as the most EFFECTUAL SFECIFC For Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Armed with this ANTIDOTE, all climates ami changes of water and food may be faced wiih^ nt fear. Asa Remedy in m^vlauiouh FicvKits, ItowKi, Complaints, Hkstlkssnilss, Jaundick, n au sic a, IT HAS NO EQUAL. It is the Cheapest and Rest Family Medicine iu the World ! MANUFACTURED ONLY BY J. H. Zi;iJL\ & CO., MAt'oN, OA., and PHILADELPHIA Price, $1.00. Sold by ail Druggist. VICK'S FLOllAL GUIDE . For 1874. VOO PAGES; r,00 ENGHAVINOS, and COLORED PLATE. Published Quarterly, at 25 Cents a Year. First No. for lh74 just ssued. A Gorman edition at same price. Address, JAMES VICE, Rochester, N. l. Dee. 2d,?ti. Cottage Color Paints *$1.00 to$1.50pcr Gallon. ^ENGLISH ROOF PAINT,* Ground in oil 50e. per gal. LIQUID SLATE HOOF PAINT, Fire Proof $1.25 per gal. PATENT PKTUOLUM LINSEEI) OIL, Works in#all paints as Boiled Linseed, only 60 cents jn^r gallon. MACN1NEUY OILS, E. G. Kelley's patent Sperm oil $1.00 Engine Oil 76 Filtered Hock Lubricating Oil (SO Send lor cards ot colors and circulars. NEW YORK CITY OIL CO., SOLE AGENTS, 111! Maiden Lane, New York. May 19 20-8 m The True Southron. Tho Paper of tho 9 o Independent and Fearless?Derated to the Interest of the Good and Trv.c People of the Country, and esthf> Supremacy of the White Kace. Published without the aid of any Oflflcl.il l'atlonage whatever, and appeals alone to tlio FitlKN 1)8 OK 1IDNK8TY AND OOOD o< vuknmcnt for its support in its fight against villainy. We call upon the WII1TE MEN OF SOUTH CAROLINA. ? those who desire to redeem our Stit'e from the abomination of thetviiig intruders, domestic tcouudrelfc and mongrel ?ceih?re, who hare acquired place and power through the Instrumentality of negro supremacy, combined with corruption and bribery?to come forward and suatain us a cordial and liberal support, and show a Radical corruptlontsts and Scalawag traitors, that they are determined, henceforth, to sustain a fearless exponent of their views and principles. We say, candidly, we need yonr support. The party in power have done their utmost to crueh us by endeavoring to.'deprive ue of legitimate business, and all we as|t is the subscription of etery true Carolinan?which will place us beyond the reach of coiingenclts. We are no adventurers, bnt Carolinians, to the manor born?have been engaged in thejpnbltcatlon of this paper over eight years?and ask your patrrmage, b elievtng that It will be glveijteUhout J&sitation. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $S A TEAR IN ADVANOF, with rtdnotlons to clubs. To Business Men and others, desiring to advertise, we beg to say that, onr circulation is touch larger than that of any other ptpor in this County, with largo and increasing lists In the Middle counties of the State. Send one cent stamp for specimen copy. DARI1 k OSTKEn', Proprisstors, W. a. KETNNADY, Editor. S. O. s * , ' IIP I VOL. 6. Til IE PIETY. I To be the thing we seem; To do the thing we doom Enjoined In duty; To walk in faith, nor dream Of questioning God's scheme Of truth and beauty. Casting seif-love aside, Discarding human pride, Our hearts to measure; In humble hope to bide Each change in fortune's tide At God's good pleasure. To .trust, although deceived; Tell truth, though not believed, Falsehooh disdaining; Patient of ills received, To pardon when aggrieved, Passion restraining. With love no wrongs am chill, To save, unwearied still, The weak from falling; This is to do God's will On earth, and to fulfil Our lievcnly calling. The Headless Horseman. 'God speed you, and a safe .journey to you Charley,? ejaeutaied the master of the little shebeen horse at Ballyhooloy, alter his old friend and good customer, Charley Culnane, who at length had turned his face homeward with the prospect ot as dreary a ride, and as dark a night at* ever fell upon the Blackwater, along whose banks he was about to journey. Charley Culname knew the country well, and, moreover, was us bold ami as daring a rider as any Mallow boy that ever rattled a four-year-old upon v i? i i urumrue race course, lie mm gone to Fermoy in the morning as well lor the purpose of purchasing some ingredients required for the Christinas dinner by his wile, as to gratify his own vanity by having new reins lit led in his snathe, in which he intended showing off ilie old mare at the approaching St. Steven's day hunt. Charley did not g"t out of Fermoy until late; for although lie was noi one of your very particular sort in anything relating to the common occurrences of lite, yet in all the ipp'?intments relating to hunting, riding, leaping, in short, in whatever was connected with the old mare, Charley, the saddler said, 'was the devil to plaze.' An illustration of this fastidiousness was afforded by his going such a distance for a snaffle bridle. Mallow was lull twelve miles nearer Charley's farm (which lay just three-quarters of a mile below Carrick) than Fermoy, hut Charley had quarreled with all Mallow saddlers, and no one would ' content hi in in all particulars but honest Mick Twomey, of Fermoy, who used to assert?and who will doubt it??-that he could sticli a saddle better than the lord lieutenant, although they made him all as one as king over Ireland. The delay in the arrnngcrm tit of the snaffle bridle did not allow Charley Culnane so long a visit as he had at first intended to his old friend and gossip, (Jon. lSuckley, of the Haip ol Erin. Con., however, knew the value of time, and insisted upon (/hurley making a good use of what, lie had to spare. 41 won't bother you waiting for water, because I think you'll have enough of the same before you get home; so drink otF your liquor, man, it's as good parliament as ever a gentleman tasted.' Charley, it must be confessed, nothing loth, drank success to Con., and success to the jolly "Ilarp ol Erin,' with its head of beauty and its string* of the hair ofkgoid, and to their better acquaintance, and so on, from the bottom ol the bottle reminded him that Carrick was at the bottom of the hill on the other side of Castletown Uoclie, and tiial ho bad got no iurther on hi* gossip's at Rallyhooley, ctoec to the big gato at Conuamoro. Catching hold of his oilskin hat, therefore, w hile Con. Buckley went to the cupboard for another bottle of the 'real stuff,' ho regularly, as h? termed it, bolted from his friend's hospiliality darted to the stable, tightened his girths, and put the old inare into a canter toward home. Charlev cantered uravlv. regardless r n J J 9 O of the rain, which, as hit* friend Con. had anticipated, tell in torrents; the good old woman's currants and raisins were carefully paokod between the >'KY An Xndepei iV AY BOKO, S. C., SAT | folds ot his yeomanry cloak, which Charh y, who wax proud of showing that ho belonged to the Mloyal Mallow light horse voluleers,' always strapped belorts him, and u>ok care to never destroy the unlit.uy ellect by putting it on. Notwithstanding that the visit to the jolly Mlarp ot Erin' had a little increased the natural eoinplaeeney ol his mind, the drenching of his snaffle reins began to uisturb him, and then followed a train of more anxious thoughts than even were occasioned by the dreaded del eat ol the pride of his long anticipated turn-out on St. I Olepheu's day- In an hour ot goodfellowship, when his heart was warm, i and his head not over cool, Charleyhad backed his old mare against Mr. Jepaon's bay filly Desdcuioiia, for a j neat hundred, and he felt sore inisgiv- I ings as to the prudence ol the match. ' lie now arrived at the bottom of Kilcununer Hill, and his eye fell on the old walls that belonged, in loruter tunes, to the Knights Templars; but the silent gloom ol tin.' ruin was broken only by the heavy rain which spashod and paltered on the grave stones, lie then looked up to the sky to see if there was among the clouds, any hope lor the mercy on his new snaffle reins; ami no sooner wtn; his eyes lowered ihan his aiicuiion was nrresled by an object so extraoidiimry as almost led bin: to doubt his senses. The head i apparently ot a while horse, wiih short, cropped oafs, laige, open nostrils, ai?d immense eyrs, seined rapidly to follow l.yin. No eonneciiou with body, legs or rider could possibly be iraced. 1 he head advanced. Charley's old mare, loo, was moved by this unnntur al sight, and, snorting violently, increased her lrot up tne hill. The head moved forward and passed on, Charley pursuing it with asLouishing gaze, and wondering hv what means and lor what purpose llns detached head thus proceeded through I le air; lie did not perceive the coresponding body until ne was suddenly Mauled by tiuding it close by his side. Charley turned to examine what was thus so socially jogging on wilh him, when a most unexampled apparition presented itsell to Ins view. A figure whose height lie computed to be nt least eight teet, was seated 011 the t?ody ;*11?J legs oi a winte horse lully eighteen hands and a halt high. In this ineasnrenienl (./hurley could not be mistaken, tor his own mare was exactly Hltcen hands high, and the body that thus jogged alongside, he couid at once determine, was at least three hands ami a hall higher. Alter the first feeling of astonishment was over, he exclaimed, Tin sold now forever!' But still lie directed his attention to this extraordinary body, and having examined it with the eye ol a connoisseur, he proceeded to reconnoiter the figure so unusually mounted, who had li therto ivniained perlectly mute* Wishing to see whether his companion's silence arose irom bad temper, want of conversational powers, or fiom a distate to water, and the tear that the opening ot his mouth might subject him to having it tilled with rain, he endeavored to catch a sight ot his eompanon's lace, in order io form an opinion on that point . But his vison tailed in carrying him luriher than the top ot the collar ot the figure's coat, which was a scarlet single-breasted hunting trock, having a waist ol a very oldfashioned cut, reaching to the saddle, with two huge shining buttons al about a yard distance behind. I "bVoht. t o see tun her than this. too,' thought Charley, 'although he is mounted ofthis horse, like my cousin Darby, who was made baronr constable last week, unless it is Con's whiskey that has blinded me entirely. Huwover, ^0 farther he could not, and alter straining his eyes lor a considerable time to no purpose, he exclaimed, with pure vexation, 4By the big bridge ol Mallow, it is no bead at all he has!' 'Look, again, Charley Culnane,' said a hoarse voice that seemed to proceed Ironi under the right arm ol the ligu re. Charley did look again, and now in the proper place?lor he clea.ly saw, under the aforesaid right arm, the Mi'Std from which the voice had It)'') cctded, and such .1 head no mortal ever saw before. It looked like a large cream cheese hung around with black pudding. No speck or color enlivened the ashy paleness of the depressed features; the skin lay stretched over the uucarLhly surface almost like the parchment head of a drum. Two fiery eyes ol prodigious circumfieuce, with a strange and irregular motion, flashed like meteors upou Charley, and a mouth that reached from cither extremity of two ears, which peeped forth from under a profusion of matted locks of lustreless blackness. This head, which the figure had evidently hitherto concealed from (/barley's eyes, now burst upon his view in all it* Indeousness. Charley, although a lad of proverbial courage in tho county of Cork, could not but feel his nerves a little shak?u by this unexpected visit from the headless horseman, whom he considered - 1 - 1 1 v ' ndent J ournnl. UllDAY NOVEMBER this figure must doubtless be. The crop-eared heud of the gigantic horse moved steadily forward, always keeping from six to eight yards in advance* The horseman, unaided by the whip or spur, and disdaining the use of stirrups, which dangled useless from the saddle, followed at a trot b> j Charley's side, his hideous head now lost behind the lapel ot his eoat, now starling lorth in all its horror as the motion ot the horse caused his arm to move to and fro. The ground shook under the weight of its supernatural harden, and tile water in the pools was agitated into waves as he trotted by them. On tbey went?boa.Is without bodies and bodies without heads. The deadly silence ol night was broken only by the teartul clatter of hoots and the distant sound ot thunder, which rumbled above thu mystic hill ol Ceeanno a Mono Kiuuea. Charley, w ho was naturally a merry-hearted and rather talkative fellow, had hitherto fell tongued-ticd by apprehension; but finding his companion showed no evil t / kUMI !??' ? " " 1 IV>1 aoi mill, illlU liavill!.; become some wu:ii reconciled t?? I he I'atagoniun dimensions of the horseman :int lor ihe present cut.' 'Humph !' growled again the. This second humph was a terrible I thump in I ho lace to poor Charley, who was fairly both?Tod to know | what subject tie could start that would prove more agreeable. ' l is a sensible 1 head,' thought ho, 'although an ugly one; lor 'us plain enough the man I doesn't like Hat lory.' A t bird attempt. ( however, Charley was determined to j make, and having tailed in his observations as to the riding and the coat ut his lellow traveler, he thought he would just drop a trilling allusion to ! the wonderful headless horse that was j jogging on so sociable by the side ol t lie old mare; and as Charley was considered about Curriek to be very knowing in horses, besides being a : private in the Hoyal Mallow light : house volunteers, who were every one i ol them mounted like real Hessians, i he felt rather sanguine as to the result , of his third attempt. . ] 'To be sure that's a brave horse your honor rides,' recommenced the pi rsevenng Charley. I 'You may say that, with your ugly, < mouth,' growled the head. , Charley, though not much llaitered by the compliment, never1.belt ss chuckled at his success in obtaining nil an- 1 swer, and thus continued! : 'May-be your honor wouldn't he a I- , ter riding him across the country?' ' 'Will you tiy me, Charley?' said the head, with an inexpressible look ol ' ghastly delight. i 'Faith, and that's what I'd do,' re- < sponded Charley; 'only I'm alruid, the , night being so dark, ol laming the old , in.ire, and I've ever halfpenny ol a hundred pounds on her heels.' This was true "enough. Charley's | cuuiiigu wits noimng dashed at the . headless horseman's proposition; and there never was a steeple-chase, riding or leaping, in the country that Charley (Julnane was not at it, ami foremost in it. 'Will you take my word?' Raid the , man who carried his he id ho snugly under his right arm, 'lor the safety oi your mare?' 'Done,' said Charley, and away they started, heller skelter, over everything, ditch and wall, pop; the old mare never went in such style, even in broad daylight, and Charley had just the start of his companion, when the hoarse voice called out; 'Charley Culuune, Charley, mail, stop for your life; stop?* , Charley pulled up hard. 'Ay,' said he, 'you may beat me hy the head, because it always goes so much heloie you; but if the bet was neck and neck, and that's the go between the old marc and Desdemona, I'd win it hollow]' it appeared as it the stranger was well aware of what was passing in Charley's mind, for lie suddenly broke out quite loquacious. 'Charley Culnone/ sajs he, 'you have a stout soul in you, and aro every inch ot you a good rider. I've tried you and 1 ought to know, and that's the sort of man for niy money. a a ? /i iiuiiuicu )can il :h hi nee my Iiorflc I and 1 broke our necks at the bottom of lvileummcr hill, and ever fiince I've been trying to get a inan that dared to ride with me, aud never lound one beloro. Keep, aa you have always done, at tho tail of the hound*, never 0 ws. 7, 1874. NO. 44. ' . ' - baulk an inch, nor mm uway from ; stone wall, and the Headless Horse man will never desert you nor tin old mare. I Charley in nmuzemont looked to ward ids right arm lor the purpose o seeing in his face whrther or not h? was in earnest; hut, behold, the head was snugly lodge I in the huge pocke of the h -rsrman's scarlet hunting-cloak 1 hu horse's head had ascended perpoi dieularly above tliem, ami his extra ordinary companion rising quit k!y at ter his avaiil-courier, vanished from the astonished gaze ot Charley Ctutiane, Charley, as may he supposed, w;u lost io wonder, delight ami perplexity; the pelting rain, the wile'--* pudding, the new snallle?even the match against 'Squire Jcphson?all wtie lorgotten: nothing cotihl he think ot, nothing could he talk ot hut the headless horseman. He told it directi\ he got lu>:ne to,Judy; he told it tin following morning to ail t he neighhoi . and he told it to the hunt on >t. Stephen's day; hut what proxoked him, alter all the pains he took in describing the head, the horse, and the man, \xa> that one and all attributed the creation of the hiadiess horseman to his friend, Con. Buckley's 4X wuler parlia- ' inent.' This however, should be told ? ? that Charley's old mare heat Mr Jopl.son's big lilly I )i'sf which I speak, but something high- c r and more nselul. As a result ol , .his study, wo shall have better art- t sis, engineers, media tits, arc I i ects, \nd designers. Many articles, such as I glast-pottery, cabinet furniture, prints, ind other manufactures, may be renlered worthless, or have their values t increased many-lold according to their ' designs. Good designs increase the j value ot prints from 'JO to 30 per cent. | So important is this art of designing I considered now, that a firm in New 1 York pays a designer in shoes $">,000 a year. By I he beauty ol bis designs i iuamiluct?rcr of silverware in Taun ion, Mass, drove every other tri iinilacturer otit of 1 he maikel. A single rnanuluetiuii'g company in Massachu sttls 8tat"?J that their designs cost J< them 0,000 annually, every dollar ol ! | which went Io England, France and I Germany. This sum should We saved ' to our own country. Workmen do not sufficiently nmler -tand the importance oi drawing, li I is Haiti that if thin art were understood by every journeyman wi a machine ' shop, the productive efficiency would 'J be increased 33 per cent. I?y enabling workmen to work Irom a design in- ; stead of expensive models, this art would save a vast amount of time and money. A manager of ail .important branch of industry at Wopcheritor, Massachusetts, says that, when a lad, be was oue oi a class ot thirteen, who spent all their iei?iiro time ui studying drawing- At the prevent time, every one then in the class haa attained an important position either aa manufacturer or manager, and each haa owed hia power to *eizo iho opportunity of advancement * to hla knowledge ol drawing. Massachusetts*, ever alivo to her educational and manufacturing interests, finding thai she was tar behind a i> v jk ui i \i n Imm'ivO at |M?r V|tiiire t*>>' in>? .\.i ! till > mill* lor uhi-Ii llHO.tioil, inch ,?4.?4r?? will conjifttut" a vji.ir', u luMlior in l>r?M l%r or iluj>l?y tyf? tl:.i i an inch will !?? clurye'l lor 1s t r, fi*an?. Mail ia^o I'reo. iJcall* aud Funeral notices fr OMtuaiMi o< one square free; ??vt ine suare charged $t ailvarliJiug rafrt.-, # notice-t of otic Mjinrc in* ? A 111 ?<'i; I discount will ik: in.in m, I'm wlioa' advcitiseiniuifs . >>> t? * ? t< |> in i.. j ci 111 <'i ?>r r. Kuropo in 1110 education of li?*r lilmrera, and that, as a consequence, in r iiduslnes were mil* ring, a i j t*l Drawing as one of the Mn lua l?? l??? aught, in all the puhliv. school- >; i h * Statu, making it obligate! y ??? e\?iy city containing over lo,otw> mViV.tam o furnish free instruction in ilns ?n, o all over fifteen years ol age. * Art Director whs procure*! in* n |v? iope at a salary ol $5,000, ;*n,000, and low oiImc manulactures in wh+cli design is ot inn first importance, * ere probably n?wi\ Massachusetts never made u lnuier in vestment lor her sou* and daughtei *, and her manufacturing interests. It is believed that this study *cr.n b?? introduced into our schools without* interfering at all with the present iines of stud v. * * To Woman, rapidly nsmg to 11. r irun position, to wlioin the avcnurs ?vt" rade, the professions, and nil kinds of mployment are opening, this subject ippeuU with peculiar loree. Sim hotild have a ileep interest in ativ measure which will render her less lepcndeut on himbuud, brother or ather, ami which will enable her to d)tain a generous support when jther resources tail. She should seek o be in a condition to leol indcpend* lit, and to bo abb; with ease to earn a ivelihood. A know ledge of some art, ?vill tend to give her a higher position nid to secure tor her higher resp?el. Krom her knowledge ol colons ami heir relations, and her skill in drawng, woman is fitted to sueeed in whatever requires taste. The sueeesnot die lady pupils ivt South Kensington is greater than that of the male students, and that in the la-ce ol greater Jiflicultics. Tire many branches ol ait workmanship requireing delicate tin. gers and native readiness of teste, ?aa bo better performed by woman mi i L?y man. In 1850.it),000 women \vervill increase ber usetulness and inHujiioo. ? l'cnn. S. Jour mil. Jrecn Manuring and One-Horse Ploughs. Some o( our good, progressive farmers, become deeply impressed witb die advantages of turning under green wops for the improvement ol the soil, iuvc planted peas lor this purpose, and lave been gladdened by a heavy crop; HI I. VL'Iikji I iin.v ......... i.. !>" ? ,, ..VI vrr> J ? V V V/\r?# IV ou 'bill; llllll* ng-under pari, ot the process, their tnhusiastn and their laith in green Manuring have .received a decided ihock.?lie peas decline to he turned inder. The Heavy entangled masses )l vines and puds are dragged into leaps, hut remain obstinately above ground. What is the difficulty? Well, I reckon,' the tanners may srty, that the editor who advises us *t?? [daot peas lor gieen manuring didn't know what lie was talking about, ami Had never tried the thing hinnell. Well Air. Farmer, it that means us, you labor under a mistake. We havo Joue the tbmg otlcn, ami knew exact ly what we were talking about; i.iu, we did not try to turn under n heavy urop ol cow-peas with a one h'?r*o plough. First, run & roller or diva ; over Lt?t* ticUl, then pul'tu ;i good twohorse turning plough, ?ml you will regain your iaitli in cow-peas, as grco.i manure. It your land i* good miuugh to produce a heavy crop ot .peas, ur. grass and weeds, you need not b : afraid to use a large.plough to bre.t!v it up, and nothing less will do.it pro. erly.?On lighter-land, you will hivo a lighter crop, and can use a otte-horm plough.?Rural Carolinian. The C/iicuyo Taut* describes Oil Fred Grant us" a stolid-loking, sullen Jaodd yonug man with a.taint attempt at a moustache, and cold lifeless eye, an ungainly figure, and .no redeeming features In the ease at a Kansas .man 'being fctrmk by lightning the coroner'* jury rendiued a verdict;' He whs killed hy tbi J.cid I t.i tin It id is ?11 light' %