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'J*?LE HORRY NEWS, I rrm.iMiKU livery S?liir<J:iy lloriiin^ ! for T W. BEATY, Editor.! " TUK.MS: IOXK Ykau, $2.00 J Six Months, $1.00 .All rominm^'Hi ion* toiitllne lottom ! pi'lvut** ill bi< cltitrKCil I or us ! ndvcrlUmiriiiit, I Professional & Business Cards I>. JullN.so.N. J. M. JOIINKJN C. P. QrATTI.KllAI'M. JOHNSONS^ QUATTLEBAUfVI ATTORNEYS and ClOSlSLOUS AT LAW IConwayboro, S, C. Tos- '!' WALSH, Attorney at Law and . SOLICITOR IH. l-;gU1T V, Will practice in V, court* of Mai loo, Horry 3 till I om.-e <u CON WAYlfOJiO, S. O. / Not IS, ISTO-tf. Irj^ F. GILLESPIE, Attorney and Connsoller at Law Will give prompt attention to all butanes entrusted to bis care. CON WAYROKO, S. C. June, 2 1871. rJ "aOLAIt A IIAItT, IConrmicsion Merchants, 163 fKUNT STKKKl, NEW Y< UK. AW Liberal advances made on consignments Naval Stores, Cotton. ?Yt\ Orders receive Promnt Attention. Unexceptionable references given North and South. J. R. TOI.AU J. II. IJaut. of N. C. of S. C J J.\ WILLIAMS, nKAt.icnn t* GENLH AL MERCI1AN DIZE, MANUFACTURER OF NAVAL STORES ?COMMISSK)x MEIICI1 ANT. A N I) FOB WARDING AGENT. tL> Special at ten I Ion given lo the buying and tilling of Ton Timber. Ul'LL CHEEK., S. C. J. c. HOOZKlt U WITH EDMONST. BROWN, j H WllOl.KS A I.K. DKAl.KIt IN MKN A\n BOYS' Hats, Cap* ^ Straw Goods, j M.JO Ladies Mfc?s and Children's Ilats, No. 40 liAVNE ST. CHARLESTON S. C. Opposite Chariest on Hotel. not 13. tf. $30,511,638.60. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Co, Total Assets $30,011X38,GO J. M. JOHNSON, Apont, Marion, b. C. r. QCATTLEUAHM, Ast. Afteut, Uonwayboro, R. C. fjpb 12-tf. tiie Columb^vIIegister, rrnunuKD Dally, Trl-Weekly ami Weekly. THE ONLY DEMOCRATIC PAPER AT TIIE CAPITOL. O TERMS, IN ADVANCE; Djltt/y, six months $J BO Tici-YVekkj.y, six months, 2 00 > Wkkkm', six mouthy* * 1 00 CHEAPKST 22ook and Job Printing Office IX THE STA TE. E7~ Address all communications, of whatever character, to Manage Kcgistcr rublisliing Company, (JOJfUMJilA, S. C. may 13-tf. ROC?If FOR STEEP OK FEAT ' ROOFS. QpAIJTY IXPROVKP. PRICK JlRDt'C'RD IV ltOIXfl UMA1)Y rOR API.PICATION. Can tic applied by ordinary vrorkmrn. Twen tv years' experlenreenables us to manufacture tl>e most (lural>Ie Heady Hooting known. Samples and Circulars Mailed Free. READT ROOFING CO. X. Y., 04 Couitlnndt St., oct 14-1 yr. New Yoik. C VOL.8. CON W/ Pharisee and Saddueeo. To church the two together went, Ihith doubtless on devotion bent: The parson preached with fluent easo On Pharisees and Saddueoos; And as they homeward slowly walked The lovers on the sermon talked; And he?he deeply loved the inaid? In soft ami tender accent said: "Darling do yon not think that wo Ate Pharisee and Sadduceo?" bhe flashed on him her bright I lack eyes, In one swift look of vexed surprise, And then he hastened to aver lie was her constant worshipper; "Hut, Mary, I insist," said he, "That you are very fair, I see; I know you don't care, much for me, And that makes me sad, you see." ?[Boston Post. Lost at Sea. BY C. C. "Captain Yaunhan wont down with tilc HK?ip " That was tlie report, that reached home when the news came of the loss of iho good ship "Ileatnce," oil the Sandwich Islands, in a great storm. "The life-boats were lowered and tilled, and while the captain stood upon the quarter-deck, commanding th? loading cf the boats, the ship sank." There was much more description tn the papers that I had obtained fioni a file of three years' hack. Three years, past in illness, exile, and sore poverty, before I obtained passage upon a homeward-hound vessel. For I am Captain Kichard Yaughan. who wont down with the good ship " licufiice." The rush of the storm comes to me in my sleep, as it came to mo when I sank, with Clara's name upon my lips, never hoping to rise again. Hut rise I did in the blackness of nigbt, and catching a floating spar, kept above the angry waves till the storm lulled, and daylight crept over the waters. It was many hours later when 1 was picked up by a disabled French vessel with tho ship fevw raging aboard, and short of hands from its fatal ravages. I gave willing work there, till the fever fastened its cruel giip upon me, and I tossed in delirium while we took in a cargo of gum* and spices, had the vessel repaired, and I was still unconscious ol all around mo, when she sailed away, leaving rue. All my savings were invested in tho "Beatrice." It would he too long a story, to detail all the puseries and hardships ol those three years until I lauded in England, and sat in a newspaper office, reading an account of the wreck of tho "Beatrice," and my own obituary. I had worked my passage from my last port, and had my wages in the pocket of my coarse sailor's suit, and I was waiting for a train to take inc to tho little English villy.go that was my home. Home ! Clara ! Those were the word/ that braced my heart for all the rough encounters ot the past three yearn, and yet, within a lew hours' ride ol them, my courage was fail'.ng tnu. What might not have happened in three years ? Death mi^jht have come?illness, poverty. I wa'a not a young man, having reached my fiftieth year; my beard si'.d whiskers were dappled with grey, and my lace was bronzed by exposure. In my youth they called me handsome, and my form was still straight, my teeth firm and wbite, my eyvs large and bright in spite of the snow on my hair and the lilty years scored in my life. Clara was much younger. Five years belore I married her lor true love's sake?my first love and my last. She was the daughter of a fel low townsman, who was my true friend lor yea if, and from the time she was a toddling baby, Clara had been called my "little wile." Every time I returned Irom a voyage tny cabin wun stored .with presents for Clara till her lather's cottage was a perfect muaeuni of foreign curiosities, and her wardrobe was the envy ol all the village girls. When she was nineteen I asked her to be my w ifo in truth, as she had been so loug in name. She looked 1 .An Tuclepci lY HO HO, S. C., 8 AT LI 1 frightened at Hint, but a lew days j alter she put her hand in mine, and | I>t'4>mto bo my true, failhlul wile. ! Wo took a year's cruise on the | "Beatrice" tor a wedding trip, and a lew month's alter wo canto home a blue-eyed babo lay upon Clara's breast. I loitered at homo for nearly six months, and then, kissed wile and child lor farewell, wringing my latherin.law's hand hard, I lott once more to start upon that ill-fated voyage when the "Heatrice" was wrecked, and "Captain Yaughau went down with the ship." Alter reading tho whole report of the wreck, I came to tho conclusion that I Inn) no husincea to he alive. No one, with tho tales ol eye-witnesses, the letters from the few wito were saved, the evidence on all sides, could ever believe that I, Pick Vaughan, 1 captain ol the "Beatiice," could ho still in existence, lint there 1 wag, ' | and a lew hours later I would be at home. I bit it seemed as il the chanter of | my misfortunes was never to bo finished, lor the train nu t with an accident, and wo woro kepi all night upon lho road. So it happened that tin? church bells were ringing h>r Sunday morning service, when at last, altera two-mile walk, I entered the village wherein lay my homo. It occurred to me at once that il I lollowed the little stream ol people entering the church, I could see il my wile and her lather were alive. They would he in church, probably But I did not wish to startle Clara by rising suddenly lrom my grave in the sea, so I stole into a.quiok corner and watched the people as they came jn. My heart beat so fast that it seemed to suffocate mo as I saw her come at Inst, her close widow's cap shading her nut brown hair and her pale cheeks. Never had I seen that dear lace so sad and so white. She grieved lor me ! Her black dress had no si<in of re turning brightness about it, being sombre and heavy, with a lung crape veil from the black bonnet. My wile! my little love! How I longe I to spring out, fold her in my arms, and see the brightness come back to her bonny brown eyes and ilio delicu'e Hush to her cheeks, lint I would not! This first meeting was too sacred lor alt these curious eyes to w ituess. tSo I nestled against the pillar that screemed ine, and listened to the service. 1'resent ly the clergyman read distinctly the banns between William Hudson and Clara, widow o( the late Captain liicbard Vaughan. The whole place reeled and grew black bcloro ir.e. H I did not actually faint, I lost all note of time and nlace. I ' Ii 11 the sexton shook mo gently, and I looked up lo find ho and 1 were alone in the church. 1 reeled out, upon the porch, hearing but not heeding the Hex ton's comment: "A drunken sailor." Cut in the air, a mad desire to face .my wife, to know il I was in truth so utterly forgottou seized me. 1 remembered well having heard of William Hudson, although I had never seen him. His father was an iron manufacturer ol immense wealth, and the owner of u superb residence, newly built, when I was last at home. * ? The son was then abroad, but report represented him as a very hand* some, accomplished man of twentythree, courtly, as was to he expected from a well-bred koii of a wealthy man. He was nearer Clara's age than I was; was he also nearer her heart than her old husband had ever been? I hurried over the (auiiliar road, lor* taring myself with these questions, and i must havu rushed over the ground at headlong speed, for beloro 1 reached the cottage 1 saw a little black-robed figure ahead o! me, that i recognized at once. Again the instinct that warned me to spare her the shock ol my sudden appearance made me pause and allow her to enter the gate in lront ot the cottage, while 1 stole round the fence and went in the rear gate. From a clump ol shrubbery, covered thickly with summer loiluge, I, well hidden, could see aud hear a11 thai 1 NET udent J ournal. ? 111) VY, Dt'iCEM HFiK. : passed in the cottage pallor. My faiher-iii.lu w was llicro when I liiht looked in, reading a paper with his eyes restlessly watching lor some one lo come. I < 1 i?1 not mean to ho an eavesdropper. 1 scarcely know t\hy I waited, hidden and watchful, lor Clara to come. When she did come it was with flashing eyes and crimson cheeks, such as L had never seen before. Her voice too was raised lo an angry pitch of ex citement ?itit?? new to me. 'Father!'she cried, 4 who has dared to tell Mr. Hates lo read the banns between William IhoUon and my sell?' "1 did!' was the shori reply. "You! you!' "Yes, 1 diil. You have trifled with Mr. Hudson long enough.' "I never trifled with bi n ' "Ho has asked you twice to he his wile.' "And I huvo twice refused that honor.' "But you shall marry him! lie is immensely rich, and will lake you to lus grand home. You cannot refuse him now that the banns are published.' "Father! father! how could you?' "Fray what arc your objections to Mr. Hudson? 1* he not young?' "Yes.' "1 handsome?' "Yes.' "()i good moral character?' "Yes.' ??\V\.1I 11 ...? ?I ----- " * uivii, niini i ; ??i you li11?1 (o object to? Not want ol money, surelyV All the excitement was ?,'one from from Clara's lace. She seumed to feel stifled by the net gathered around her, for she pressed her hand to her heart as it in pain. In u dull tone she said, wearily: "I will never marry Mr. Hudson. I do not love him.' "Come, that is an obi excuse. You made the same when you refused to be Captain Vaughan'a wile.' llctused to be my wile! Was that, too, her father's doing? Had she been tricked, then? My heait was sick as I I 1 * i ii-iiuuu aguinsi, a irt'b near me, ami listened to what farther was to com?\ The sweet voice 1 loved rang out ' linn and clear. "You arc right, father; I did not Uve Captain Vaugan when you threatened to turn mo lroni your house it I refused him. I was hut a child, and had my own romantic dreams of a hero young and brave, was to come and make a rosy heaven of love lor me, I respected Captain Yanghan, and gave him an nfl,ac.linn such as a child might give an indulgent uncle, lint I did not love as I dreamed I could love.' I groaned aloud as my wife spoke, hut not hearing me, she continued: "Hut it I did not love my husband wli< n you lorced mo to marry him, at least I did him no wrong. It my ' heart was not his it was tree. I loved j no one else. lie took me away. You know from what tyranny and cruel exactions he took me." "Upon my^word, you are cornpli- i mentary.' "I speak the truth. Captain Yanghan took me into Ins noble heart, as something to cherish, to love, lie t gave me eveiy wish ol my heart, and i gave it tenderly, lovingly. lie w rap* ped my whole lile in the sunshine o' i I hat love, till out ol my grat itude, my , happiness, iny Jeep, deep content, was bora an answering lovj. Before we I bad boon six mom lis on the sea togell.- j er, our world the ship, I loved my litis j baiubwilh faithful,Jenduriug love, such as even in my girlish dreams I bad ; never given my ideal hero.' | "Very romantic!' sneered my obi friend, and I wondered what I had ever found to like in him "Then my baby came,' said Clara, "and my child's father became to mo dearer, it possible, than my husband bad been. You know what I suffered ! tyhnn 1 ^iol/ !?? ? ^^ * 1 n.<v.> ' vn IVI? inc. X UU KIIOW I DC long agony of illness, the weary, hopeless struggles back lo life, lhat followed the cruel news of my husband's death. Hut for my babe I mum have died.* (ireit choking nob* were interrupting Clara as alio spoke, but she hurried O 15^7*1 V< \ i'l ^ k \ > i V'? JL V ' " I ' ' Oil. "I 1ivo?l for my child, and Providence look llmt too Irom me. 1 only ask now that I may he taken soon, i very snot;, to the heaven whtro my J ! dear ones are! There was a long silence. Then | my falher in law, in a harsh voio?, | said; 41 Von will he the laughing stock of ihn village if you relusy to marry \Ydiam Hudson now.* 4,1 shall refuse him! This very triek ; has turned the iudillorence I felt helore to a loathing and contempt I will never oveicome.' Then sith a sudden piteous wail she ci ied out: 44Oli, my husband! my own dear lunhand! why arc you not here to love and proiect tin-?' 1 could not hear the pleading in her voice. Unmindful now of the danger of startling her, anxious only to lake her from the tyranny that oppressed her young lite, I stepped from my hiding-place, :unl went to tin; porcli. Ax my footstep rung out there Clara grew deadly pale, lo r breath suspend ed, her eyes diluted with a ienrlul hope. lireathleKMly she listened till I stood in the door-way, when with a great cry ot rupture, she sprung into my open ui iwh, and lain ted there. Her tut loi-, sitting tmlt upright, stared hh it I had been ji ghout?as indeed I had h right to be. 1 curried I Clara oil" beloro his eyes, across the hall to our own room, and there I won life back ta her while lace and stilled pulse. She could only cry, nestled close in my arms, for a long, long time, hut her weeping was so quiet, and she clung to me so happily, that I, like an old idiot, let leaia fall Irom my own wyes upon her sofljiair. When she had *ept herself quiet she told me of our baby, and how the whole world seemed dark and desolate to her when it died. Then she kissed both my eyes, and bidding mo not to stir, she vanished behind the great artu-chair in which 1 was sealed. She moved soiuly to and fro there and suddenly name in front of me all dressed in soil white muslin, with knots ot Mint ribbon at Iter throat and in her hair, and the gold ear-rings and broach 1 gave her shining in llojir places. 'I will wear black no more, now you are conn*," she said. "I cannot mourn, even for my baby, when llcav cn has sent- my husband back to me,' The dinner -bell rang as she spoke, and there wis quite a little scene with Meg, our one?' ervant, when I walked into the dining-room, arrayed in my Sunday suit, carefully preserved by Clara for my hollnlay ashore, with my wile on my arm. That old hypocrite, my father-in. law, had recovered hy that tunc, and j pretended to he delighted to see inc. I lint we have had scperate establishments since that time, lor 1 went to sea no more. The very mention ol it ' .made Clara turn taint. We invested the insurance money i in a good farm, and live our happy, peaceful lile there, with t\to little one* who came to replace the bluo-ryed babe who died daring my long exile. How \ 111 ia 111 Hudson bore hi* dis. :i | ?p< M nl i n fit I I iwver knew. My miraculous arrival was a nine-day wonder in the village, but William Hudson ! 0 ' was seen there no more alter the read- | i nig cI the false banns. is aTmVan/a. i Flftocn Iliniilrcil Feet Under (jroiiud, And Wlnit May be Seen Thuro [From tho Boulder (Col.) Courier.] i It only takes live minutes. You step into the cage, and the band that guides i the Titan at the surface touches 111 v lein ol the black monster and you urc 1 plunging into the gloom. In a 1110- | incut the lights of earth go out; by I 1 the glare ol lanterns yon know you j are passing dripping timbers; I lie sounds iroui above grow laiuier and cease; the vapors rise around you as from a cauldron; you hear now ami then a rumble in the depths, as though the dark spirits below were coiuplaiuiug that their tlueasuiea were being thus taken away; you listen, expecting to hear the muttering ol gnomes NY 11 lei 1 guard the sacred treasures; there A.DV EUTISEMJBNTS Iat $1.00 per s<piarn tor first, aji4 |?f?v -i liU /mi pafli subseipienl iiis/'rtioii. (.'no inch spaou will constitute a .vjusr wliellier in brevier or ilisplay ty|w; lew than an inoli will in* cliuryeil lur ** a sipuuo. Marriage notices IVre. Dcatlm ami Funeral notices freo. liell^loiis notices of one square free.l A liberal discount will be made to thers whose aUvertisenienta are to u-> >v?pt in for three months ot longer. ttimt'H a dance ol the cage under ,our I cot; yon know the hand above hat touched thy bit of burden-bearer, and then the cage stops, and yon are more than n quarter ol a mile below the busy city which you just a few minutes be I ore lull; from the dusty highway ton have stepped into mo world s grandest treasure-bouse; you have passed Ironi the temperate to the tropical zone in a moment?you are in at Bonanza. It lakes but a little s ?ace to complete the transition; it takes but a moment to describe it; but tbo change is wonderful, and to one of a thoughtful mind, the womb r increases with each returning visit, It is no little thing to work a mine l,."?iH) leet below the stir I ace. True, there arc broad avenues tin re; broad limbers which like Atlas seem competent to support a world upo i their broad backs; there ate eognieors at work, and cars running; but every glimpse <il il Minn linn'.* i necessary to keep this conflict witli i Iip spirits whioll guard the bunod treasure below, The men are strppvd to the waist, those brawny del vers, with perspiration bursting from every pore and their bodus 'Shining an it is said tlie Spanish victims shone in Lli?s sunlight when stretched upon the toe ol Teooola, ere the Ar.teo priests torp out their hearts tor a sacrifice. Those white breasts have urejr her significance. On the surface snivile races may take from the laborer his breftd; down in that gloom there is no (ear of competition. The pale faces there hold H\?.\y. There the Caucasian race is iudesponsable, for what is needed among gnomes is a steady brain, a quick, strong hand, a ruling intelligence. Those strongholds are not stormed nf.til grappled with by the world's ruling races It looks pleasant dow there in the mimio streets and under the bullion's glare, but before those streets were opened there was in the stifling air a work performed which can not be calculated. Ticks were swung, drills were struck, powder was burned, men fainted snd tell in their places; but ths work went on. So it will proceed tn the future, until, probably, alter another sixteen years, they will b* worked 3,000 feet below the surface, as unconcerned as they now d?l\c xt the present levels. We pass through a long drift, and suddenly wo find where ttie attacking column is* driving into the oro. The sight is magnilieent, hut for those in this Ka*t who la - cv that silver mining is a light thing to accomplish, on ^ visit hn o wouhl i i * pel the illusion. \ glimpse at the work, a ghtr.ee at the machinery, h. lew thouglils ol the study ifijuircu to make a successful hattle again-1 the rock, the danger and gnome-, would suddenly reveal to I hem how it is that a lirnl-clnsg miner has to he a lir.-1-class man, and how, alter lie completes hit education helow ground, he can ? izo upon i he ordinary avoeations of 11t'o as a student alter compassing algebra is never more troubled by a problem in arithmetic. But we are on the cage once more, tlio bell up above signals that there is precious freight on board, and in Hvc uiinuit-* more wo are out ot the depths, the blessed sunlight comes to us again, the summer strikes us with a uhill, wo are out of the depths and ha\u done the Bonanza. T no laiilluut \ uiiiik 314*11 Slip was very pretty, wore a pip , ant hiiiIo, and when she entered an avenue car Inst evening there were seven young men who immediately vacated their Heats and delighted themselves by casting alternate glances at the fair one and the vacant spaces. She took the nearest sent with a nod to all and a bewitching smile; six young men bowed and stood up, ami each imagined himscit a martyr. She carried a beautiful child mi her arms, and it was very playlul. One young man thought she was i s .unit, and two others were quite positive she was its mother. Meanwhile the child amused itself. It climb-d and crowed and laughed and played, and the lady laughed and po led u. One ol the young men, a sacrel gnnn wretch, commenced li miming, I wi* i I were a baby," when the child, kick: : i .....i i i i-: ? iii^ 111 <\ |?i i y in i mi mi * 11 kii'H'kiii^ x n;i i ikerchief from 1110 lady's Up oil tlio floor. Tnuru were four of the yo ing iiit'i) who made a simueltaiieous dive tor the muslin, and two of them got it; they came up smiling neither willm j to relax his gtasp, and two hand* eo tended it toward the fair one. An old lady on tlio opposite side tilt rod, and the young lady held the child iu front <d her lace and blushed. The young moil looked at each other and then at tlio . Their mouths and eyes opened; each handed it to the other; something tell upon the floor, and two young men silently departed from the car. The other rnon looked out of the window and somebody whispered: "It wasn't a handkoiehiel. Columbia lieges'tr. A Georgia editor la having serious trouble with his subscribers .lor tk? heretical sentiments found intht patent job to iurn^n||^H|^?^SMHHnMn