The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, October 07, 1874, Image 1
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YOL~ 4. LEXINGTON, SOUTH CAROLINA, 'WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1874. NO. 51.
THE ~ j
J
. LEXINGTON DiSPATQH.
f' * FOR ?
1874. }
I
Official Paper of Lexington
County.
PUBLISHED EVEBY WEDNESDAY,
I
Hy Godfrey JI, Harmon,
* AT LEXINGTON C. H., S. C.
CA.PT. "W. D. M. HAIftlAN
EDITOR. i
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JiVSIXESS DIRECTORY,
JFOR
LEXIXGTOX COUXTY. !
Clerk of Court.?Win. J. Asraiann, Jr.
J'ulyt of Probate.?P. P. Wingard.
Sheriff. ?Henry H. Geiger.
Coroner.?C. J. Hendrix,
Qehool Commis' r,?A. D. Haltav/.uiger.
/ Commissioners.
If. T>. P. Mitchell,
Jeremiah Wyse,
S. L. Smith.
Clerk.?John Pox.
Cmnty Treasurer.?Dr. E. S. J. Hayes.
A I'litor. ?Emanuel Walker.
Jury Commissioner.?Green Daniel.
Trial Justices
Lexington C. H.--Godfrey M. Harinau. j
? "_W, M. Drafts.
n u <4?xhos. S. Waring.
Countsville.?F. W. Derrick.
L?csville.?H. A. Smith.
Stc:wlman's.?W. J. Barr.
Beav??r Pond.?Charles Hut to.
Phmaria. ? J. J. Derrick.
r tv,,.;..
?f/. uiuoivi
Sfivrfor.?Joltu C. Hope.
Jbpresentithxs.?Maj. H. A. Htctzc, Dr. |
Jacob W. Lo\vm.iu.
iltl^^tl<itiiint ^i"b rmi t - - i 11 mmmmmtm
Ra R. R.
RAOWAY'S READY RELIEF
CURES THE WORST PAINS
hi from One to Twenty Minutes.
NOT ONE HOUR
after rea'.inc'this advertisement need any ine
i jbr fep. with pain*. .
r.vdxtats ifceiny p.eltf.f is a ccke spit
tjpkvnrt pain*. y
v^Tt was the first andis J
The Only rain 1?**rnerly
that instantly stops the most excruciating pHiti?. aiiari
Inflammation', and cures Ciinei'Mtoiis, whether or tfic
ionics. Stomach. Itoweis, cr other gL.tr.ds or organ*, by
one application.
IN* FROM ONE TO TM"ENTV MINUTES,
no mn'u*r how violent or excruciating the iiain the
HlfKUMATl-'. rh!r>n. infirm. Crippled. Nervous,
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF
N7ILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE.
INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS
INFLAMMATION:OK THE BLADDER
INFLAMMATION OK THE BOWELS.
CONGESTION OK THE LUNGS. ;
SOr.E THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING.
PALPITATION oF THE HEART.
HYSTERICS, CR0U1\ JDIPTHERI A.
catarrh, influenza. ,
headache,toothache
NEURALGIA. RUKlTTATISi!.
COLD CHILLS. AGUE CIIJL1.S- .
The a no IT*rr We >? d y Eelicf Si the part or
vixzu AnrrtTthe j.aiu or difilcuity exi*w will afford ease
ImiCnmfort.
Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will in a few
moments enre CRAMPS. SPASMS. SOUR STOMACH.' ;
HEARTBURN, SICK HEADACHE. DIARRHOEA. ,
DYSENTERY. COLIC. WIND IN THE BOWELS,
and all INTERNAL PAINS.
Traveler* should always cfirrv a Bottle of ISndavuy'?
Ready Relief with them. A few drops In 1
water will prevent sicklies* or pains from chance of
water. It is better than French Brandy or Bitters as a
stimulant.
FEVER AKD AGUE. -j
FEVER AND AGUE ctired for fifty cents. There is
not a remedial njtent in this world that will rtsre Fever
and Aette. and all other Malarious, Bilons. Scarlet, 1
Tvphoid, Yellow, ami other Fevers [aided bv RAD- i
"WAY'S PILLS| so quick as RADWAY'S READY RELIEF.
Filty cents per bottle.
HEALTH! BEAUTYE!
STRONG AND PURE RICH BLOOD-INCREASE I
OF FLESH AND WEIGHT?CLEAR SKIN AN'I> ;
BEAUTIFUL COMPLETION SECURED TO ALL.
# -x? 1
DR. RADWAY'S
Swisila BtsJtat
THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
HAS MADF. TOF. MOST ASTONISHING CURES: SO !
QUICK. SO RAPID ARE THE CHANGES. THE
BODY UNDERGOES, UNDER THE INFLUENCE
THAT*"" "v"
Sferr Day an Increase ii Flask |
ail f aifkt is Sees ail Felt.
Every drop of the SARSAPARliliTAX RF.SOT,. i
TEXT communicates through the Blood, Sweat. i
and, oilier Fluids nnd juices of the system the vigirof j
fouti?*Tilate'ria'l. ' scroti!r Mt'/i IlfoSi%
Glandular disease, Dicers in the throat, Stoutn^Tu- '
mors. Nodes in thcGIandsaml other pacts oftin; system. !
Sore Eves, Strumorous discharges ironi the Ear< and
the Worst forms of Skin dl-eoscs, Eruption*. Fever
Sores,Scald Head, Ring Worm.Sail Rheum.Erysipelas. ,
Actie. Black Spot*. Worms in the Flesh. Tumors. Can- :
cers in tlic Womb, and all weakening and painful discharges,
Night.Sweats, lasts of sperm and aii wastes of
the life principle. arc witl:jalhccura[:v*rajwc of this
mender of Modern Cbcnrfsiry, and a fewtbiy.s'use ivill ;
prove to nny person using itfor either of these forma of
disease its potent power to cure. them.
If the patient, daily becoming reduced by the wastes
and decomposition t ant is continually progressing, succeeds
in arreting these wastes, and repairs the same
with new nisterinl made from healthy blood?and this
the SAitSAi'AkI ILIAN will ar.d does secure?a cure
is ccrtalu; for when once this remedy commences its
work of purification, and suceccds.in diminishing the
loss of wastes, its repairs will be rapid, and every day
the patient will feel himself growing better and stronger,
the food digesting better, appetite improving, and tlesh.
and weight increasing.
Not onlv does the S-insAPARauiS nasot.vit.vr excel
ail known remedial agents in thccure of Chronic. Kerntuiotis.
Constitutional, and Skm diseases; bat it :? the
only positive euro for
Kidney & Bladdov Complaints,
I'rinnry and Womb diseases. Crave!. Diabetes. Dropsy,
stoppage of Water, Incontmenccof Urine, Bright'* Disease,
Albuminuria, and in ail cases where thero aro
brick-dust deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy, mixed
with substances like the white of an egg, or threads like
white silk, or there ip a morbid, dark, bilious appearance,
and white bone-dust deposits, and when there is
u pricking, burning senySiou when pa-sing water, and
pain in the Small of the Back and along the Loins. >
Tumor of 1'$ Tears' Growth
Cared by Ibidivay's Resolvent.
DR. RADWAY'S
PeiciPBrptife&EeplaiiDiFills
perfectly taslclcss, elegantly coated with sweet gam,
purge, regulate, purify, cleanse and strengthen. Itadwav's
Pills, for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach.
Liver. Bowels, Kidneys. Bladder. Nervous Diseases,
ii.~oi.iche Rons'iriR!ion. Cosfiveness. Iudiccstlon. Dys
pepaia, BlllouintSf. Elliotts Fever, Inflammation of the
Bowel*, Files, and all Derangements of the Internal.
Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive cure. Purely
Vegetable, containing no mercury, mtncraUordeieterious
drugs. ,
A few doses of RADWAT-S PILLS will free the svstemfrom
all the .stove named disorders. Price, 25 oeuta
per Box. SOLD lit DICUKJISTS.
READ "FALSE AND TRUE." Rend one letter
stamp to RADWaY A <10.. No. 32 Warren St., New
York.* Information worth thousands will U: sent you.
The CJiorteslen X( >r.s and
Courier.
daily, tei-weeei.-, and ve-eely,
ITRLISIILn L"Y
P.IOEDAX, DAWS OX ft CO.,
Office No. li'J East Pay Street.
. CHARLESTON) 3.. C.
The Daily X-ws. fur one yensi.. .
Tri-weekiv News for cue year 4.00.
Weekly News for one year 2.00.
The Charleston News is the leading
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The Orphans' Friend,
A PAPER FOR THE FAMILY CIRCLE,
PUBLISHED EYED Y SA TEED A Y
BY TIIC
CAROLINA ORPHAN HOME. !
One year, in advance ?2 CM
Six months, iu advance 1 CM
To all Ministers, one dollar per annum.
rates of advertising reasonable.
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We want every one who reads this to
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it. 0. OLIVER,
Sup't. Carolina Orphan Ilomc, ;
Kpartanbtug, S. C.
Revue Re La Mode,
The Cheapest and Jiest
Fashion >Ioui'n:il.Gt.
IVES over usi fis! illustrations,
T 200 Patterns. ami 12 lar^'O highly
Colored Steel ENGltAYIXGS yearly.
Published Monthly si $3.50 a year.
A'.Wre-s,
-V. T. TA YTjQH,
t>l<3 Proadvay. X>\v Yml:.
i
F L UID E X T R A C T
BUOHUI I
The
onlremark" for
* I
BRiSKTS DISEASE,
Ami a positive remedy for
GOUT. GRAVEL. STRICTURES. 1)1- !
ARETES, DYSPEPSIA, NERVOUS
DEBILITY. DROPSY.
Non-rctenlion or Incontinence of Urine, j
Irritation. Iiifl.irnation or Ulceration
of the
BLADDER & KIDNEYS, |
SPERMATORRHOEA,
Leneorrhcea or Vv bites, Diseases of the ;
Prostate Gland, Stone in the Bladder, j
Colenlus Gravel or Briekdnst Deposit j
and Mncns or Milky Discharges. j
KFAKXirrS
ESTEACT BTJCHU
Permanently Cores all Diseases ol the :
BLADDER. KIDNEYS, AND DROPSI-;
CAL S'vELLiNGS,
Existing in Men, Women and Children.
J3T NO MATTER, WHAT THE AGE ! j
Prof. Steele, says: "One bottle of j'
Kearney's Fluid Extract Bnel.n is worth
more than all other Buchas combined..
Price, One Dollar per Bottle, or Six
Bottles for Five Dollars. ? 1
Depot, 104 Dr.anc- St., Ixew York, j;
A Physician in attendance to answer ;
correspondence and give advice gratis, i
j?3~~ Send stamp for Pamphlets, lrce. i'
TO THE
Nervous & Dsbsiitated j
CP BOTiySEXES.
Xo Chary*fur<<u<l CunsvUallon. J'
De. J. B. Dvctt, graduate of Jefferson (
Medical College. Philadelphia, author of!
wvmo! v>ln itilh ivnrK can be consulted '
on ail diseases of the Srsual or Urinary j ]
(wififili lie ir.us made an especial j *
.study1) e-ilbvifin male or female, 1:0 mat- ]
WX c>r'^na^jtl" "5 oi;'
year- enables" L&:! to treat diseases with | I
success. C-iurs osarautced. Charges;,
fz-.ilo. Those at n distance can lor- j
ward letter describing syinptoiur, and en-; '
closing sbur.p t o prepay postag-. ,
Send for ti?e G>o'ie frajJw/fli, Price 10c. 1
j. r>. dvott, :i. i).. j i
Physician and Srrrgeom i (
10i Dunne Si., X. Y.
Jan. 7?1 v J'
THE GREAT REMEDY FOR :
CONSUMPTION
1> <n ontiA/1 7\TT o
YVI1HJH Uttll tuitu uj <i?
timely resort to this stand- |
ard preparation, as lias been
proved by the hundreds of
testimonials received by the
proprietors. It is acknowledged
by many prominent
physicians to be the most
reliable preparation ever introduced.
for the relief and
cure of all Lung complaints,
and is offered to the public,
sanctioned by the experience
of over forty years. When
resorted to in season it sel- J
dom fails to effect a speedy
cure in the most severe
cases of Coughs, Bronchitis,
Croup, Whooping Cough,
Intlucnza, Asthma, Colds, ;
Sore Throat, Pains or Soreness
in the Chest and Side, !
Liver Complaint, Bleeding
at the Lungs, &c. Wistars
Balsam does not dry up a
Cough, and leave the cause
behind, as is the case with
most pre])arations, but it
loosens and cleanses the j
lungs, and allays irritation,!
thus removing the cause ot
the complaint.
PREPARED BY
SETH W. FOWLE & SONS, Boston, Mass.,
And sold by Druggists and Dealers generally.
Oct 1?Iv * |
VICK'S !
FLORAL GUIDE
ITor l?r J.
VJOO r\r.i:s; 500 ewkavint.s, rind
colored plate. 1'uViisLt-d Quarterly, j
:tt 2~> roms ;i y'f.r. First inmiDer fori
l^Tl inst A (U-nortn rdition 'fit j
. ': .n-'j Address
/A.Ylb's \ K i\. llo:hi.;U-i. .1 7.
For the Lexin^tm DiBprttfh.
To the Norttern Pcje.
Jfr. Editor:?so clearly as
in the present insSsfce. bore I observed
that safeguard of justice
which providencf has placed in
the nature of inna. Such is the
imperious doniinon with which
truth and re.aso^ifc^heir sceptre
over the l^B^nptollect, that
no solicitatioh-^Sgeyer artfulno
talent, howevc^p?mm:mdih??
can seduce it'Swm its allegiance.
In propdi^i^n to the llu
uiilitv of our submission to its
rule do we risilftSAflR^Xaint emulation
of that in^^35 and presiding
divinity, characteristic
attribute it ^^N?e coerced
and bound by ttie^in.ecorablc laws
of its own nature,! so as to be allwise
and all-just" 'fr?m necessity
rather than electio^ You have
seen it in that v&uu-be Iru'hfui
rom mimical ion in th^ issue of
the DispaUsh, over the signature of
"Northern Pole" most peculiarly
and strikingly jKnsteated. Yon
have seen his talent n*d integrity,
perhaps the first in y conn fry,
languishing under an Msertion too
weal: to earn* him,, add'too heavy
to be carried by him. .'He will be
forced to admit its natural candor
and its want of truth, having
uo merit in bis cause, ^Ltake refuge
in the dignity manners,
Lhe resources of his owinngeuuity,
frnn flirt /-\vrt?>ci.-1>rti!r>inor
"V" ?"' v*~ o
ivitli which'he is* surrounded.
Northern Pole, unhapjj^ Northern
Pole; what a pictu^you have
presented. But sitch is tlac condition
of guilt?its comniission
nean and cleecplrf^?itj defence,
[ fear with all its sincerity trivial,
ts condition diguil^^-^?* aaSW?|^
10a, kiud re?ders^i-^le
"^TreT^ad rTroafflflf nidation. He
jays, "whei^s lie, the Little Political
Adventnrciy it* company
ivith a Ivirk, xcpa?wl tin? -Capilal
to receive an appointment under
Hie Mosaic administration,
ke." I care not to repeat his false
tssertion. I desire .^not to task
tiiy memory-with its (falsity. Suffice
it to say. has ij(e stated the
thith, and has he trcfated the Political
Adventurer fajtrly and justly
by his application? J say not. His
feelings and passions of prejudice
will not allow hint to be fair.?
Why is the rule adopted in this
single instance'? I answer, because
this being particularly an injury to
th i most susceptible of all human
feelings, it would leave the injury
of the Little Political Adventum
to be ascertained by the sensibility
ol the people, and does not
??" ' > flu. instico oi
l^itOUiUg l'/ V ? w J., _ _
their determination by the cold
and chilly exercise of its own discretion.
If I cut off a man's arm,
you can measure the loss he has
sustained,j^ot the wound of feeling
and the agony of the heart can
not be judged by any standard
with which I am acquainted.
And now, felhiw-citizens of Lexington,
I am the more disposed tc
feel the strojigest indignation and
abhorrence at the odious conduei
of that "Northern Pole"' when ]
consider the deplorable condition
to which ho intended to redact
you, and, perhaps, the still more
deplorable one lie has in prospect
before liiin, \iz: "for us all to rol
tin to damnation." Oh, how, unchristian-like
and uncharitable.?
What a progress lie has to trave
through before he can attain tin
peace and tranquility which he has
lost. How like the wounds of th<
body are those of the mind. Hou
burning the fever. How paiufu
the suppuration. How slow, lion
hesitating, how relaxing the pro
cess to convalescence. Through
what a variety of suffering, througl
what new scenes and changes mus
that unhappy "Northern Pole'
pass ere he can reattam, suouiu n<
ever reattain, that health of sou
of which he has been despoiled In
the cold and deliberate asscrlioi
of that practiced and gilded, com
munication. Let me remind tha
"Northern Pole" that in his cor
respondencc justice not only em
powers him, but that its polio;
commands him to consider th<
public example as well as the in
dividual injury when lie makes hi
{erroneous assertions. I confess.
! Mr. ''Northern Pule,'' that I am
most anxious that you should acquit
yourself worthily uyon all occasions.
I am addressing you as
the "Northern Pole," and as a
gentleman.
I am auxiyjus that a feeling of
i those high relations should enter
into, and give dignity to your cx ubration.
But I confess it I feel
'a ten-fold solicitude when I remember
that I am addressing one,
i - i i ii._j. 11 ?i 1,1 _?n
. WHO UUSUL'S Ulili* iVfc* iiil MUHliU 1UU
on to. damnation?one whose chai^
i actor, as a gentleman, must find
either honor or condemnation in
| the result of your quixotism, smai.
as must be the distributive share j
of that national estimation that
can belong to so unimportant an
individual as myself. Yet do I
own I am tremblingly solicitous;
; for its fate. Perhaps it appears of
; more value to me, because it is embarked
on the same bottom with
yours, with one exception, "erroj
neous assertions." ,
Perhaps the community of peril,
j of common safety, or common;
| wealth gives a consequence to my j
' share of the risk, which I could
.....
j not be vain enough to give it if it i
! were not raised to it by that mn- j
; tuality. But why stop to think of j
: myself at ail, when I know that
' van, Mr. "Pole," when I know that j
our County are my clients in this
day and time, and must abide the 1
alternative of honor or infamy, nsj
you, my dear "Northern Pole" i
shall decide. Put I, as an ir.di- i
vidual, will not despond. I will'
; not dare to despond. I have notj
Tlost all in you yet. I have every j
' trust, and hope, and confidrVy jp :
"over the left should*-1" ''
J Anil jAAhat" hope I add ?
! m7 "frst yV.TWe^f *r^..rf to the ; J
(*od $ aljwh andjj^ioe so toj j
raise ai^**^ enlighten, #nd fortify;
u?iad against a^ing
j accusations and fnlsoc assertions, b;
and that you may so act as tc pre-]
'servo to yourself while you live,f
the most delightful of all recol-j
lections, that of speaking and
j writing the truth, and to transmit
| to your children the most precious
of all inheritances, the memory of
your manly virtue. /
Little Political Adventurer.
4^4
For the Lexingtou Dispatch.
Mr. Editor:?Please allow me i
I space in the Dispatch to give a de-'
i nial to the statement made in your j
:columns, some time since, to the!
effect that I had made allusions to ;
the family of Dr. Hayes, in one of j
; my recent speeches in this County, j
. j I am too much of a gentleman i
! to make disrespectful allusions to j
| any one, and the man who has i
' mlcrftwocnntdil mp knew that;
Ill I lO \ ,7i\.i3vwkvv> ? ^
( his statement was false when be i
'; made ir.
While I am not afraid of having I
1 1 I
i my brains shot out, yet self-re- j
; spect causes me to thus publicly j
. I deny the statement.
.! * ISAAC D. IiEGAXS. |
j . <.5?
For the Lexington Dispatch.
! Ifarmaa?:?Some one in
L j
( giving my remarks in relation to;
the social association of whites and j
.* i i
kI blacks reported me as saying that!
|.!I saw no impropriety of a black!
i man courting a white lad v. wbeth1
. . |
er the parents were willing or not.
_ 11 deny saving this in the manner
i: as stated. The writer misunder- j
, | stood me. Tljis is what I intended I
>1 -i. T
, to Say: iu:il x ueueiuu iu in.
, I |
, i whites keeping to themselves and !
. i the black to themselves in this i
1 matter, but that I did not believe!
: J ;kat this would always be the case.;
.: I feel myself misrepresented and
! ; injured. I hope that you will adi!
mit my correction and oblige
t i Your Humble Servant,
i JOHN JACKSON. !
J
,j The award of the Augusta cot;
ton pool was in favor of Mr. Lee
>' Howard, of Charleston?his guess
i i being the nearest?3,l(!h,S7o.
~ j "When the Governor of Kansas
G informed Grant, the other day,
-! that the Indians were murdering
n.? i,;c. m-ofc nnd an
- I tliU UH/.VUO yjL Itt>7 . L
| pealed for troops to protect them, i
[ not a man \?as sent, yet thousands
c of soldiers were hastened to Loui"
sir:nia for the purp'iwc <;l ro-estabs;
iisbing the carpet hag despotism.
Homestead to be Held in
Perpetuity.
. The decision of the Supreme
Court in reference to Homestead
remainders is important, involving
the right of creditors of deceased
debtors to sell the Homestead when
the youngest child comes of ago.
The question came up on a decision
of Judge ??Iackey in the
Court below in which he held that
the citizen takes the Homestead
exemption, not as an individual,
but in his representative character
as the "head of a family."' in other
words, that the "head of a family"
is, within the intent and meaning
of the Constitution. simply the
trustee and the family the &&nr
quo, trust?that as the individual is
the unit of the family, so the family
is the unit of the State, and the
prime purpose of the Homestead
clauses in the Constitution is to
seertre a ' local habitation"- for the
family. Hence to deprive the family
of the Homestead on the decease
of its natural protector violates
the reason of the constitutional
provision, and that, too,
when tl-.e family most needs its
sheltering protection. Judge Mackey
farther held thnt the.term "exempt''
in the Constitution, as applied
to the Homestead reservation,
means in law, us in its ety- J
mology, a cutting off or perpetual
reservation of the"Homestead from
execution and sale for debt. The
Homestead, moreover, being in the
nature of a grant. Judge Mackcy
hold that the construction, which
gives the largest privilege to the
grantee, must be regarded as the
true construction whenever a doubt
arises in the case from the terms
of the statue.
This decision of Judge Mackcy
has been sustained by the unanimous
voice of the Supreme Court,
which is equitable and just. It!
would indeed have been a cruel
and heartless law if a mail's family
were protected by the Homestead
exemptions while the heatF of the
",!I-"'V lived and his ajje and child- i
"eU COntw ^ i**1
ronngest
between
nation of deie^I^^Him^^H
carpet-bag Convention haveleafflF
out, and afford an instractivo
glimpse at the character of both
these worthies. Elliott told Lee
that he, as Speaker, had issued
fraudulent pay certificates to legislative
attaches, to the amount of
$240,000, and that he (Elliott;
could prove it, as Jones, the Clerk
of the House, had the stub book
showing the amounts of the certificates
issued and the names of tlio
persons to.whom they were issued,
many of them being fictitious, and
others who had not been in Columbia
at all. Lee hung his head,
and could not deuy the charge.
1.111 J ?.~,1 4- ^ T r.n if li A
?,111011 111611 prop'j&eu JU?> ?v>
wbuld withdraw in his favor and
surrender his chances for the Legislature,
he would set expose him.
If not, he would. Lee agreed to
the bargain.
Lee has built a house and drives
a Brett and pair, for which he has
paid. He wears an eight hundred
dollar diamond pin, which, he says,
Honest John Patterson presented
to him. But one who knows, a
prominent ltadical leader, says that
this is a falsehood, for he went to
the jeweller from whom the pin
was bought, and it was paid for in
fraudulent pay certificates. Lee
has no means but what he received
from the Legislature. Truly, Elliott
and Lee are a nice pair.
Amendments to the State ConsrrrcTioN.?There
are three amendments
to the State Codstitutiou,
which will be submitted to the people
at the next election.
> t-. /-.1isin<r:nn* the
J. XtJ 1'^I.IU ?-^
boundary line between Pickens and
Oconee Counties from "White Witter
to Toxaway Kiver. The present
boundary is said t > occasion
?reat inconvenience to the people
interested.
2. It is proposed to change the
term of office of the ComptrollerGeneral,
Secretary of State, Treasurer,
Attorney-General, Adjutant
and Inspector-General, and Superintendent
of Education from four
to two years, by which all the State
officers will be elected every two
years.
:>. This amendment prohibits the
General Assembly from authorizing
any County, City, Town or
Village to become a stock-holder
in, or to loan its credit to any cornpar.}*,
association or corporation
for any amount exceeding five per
* f i 1. .
cent, of the assessed vaine 01 me
taxable property of such County.
City. Town or Village, without the
approval of a majority of the legal
voters thereof, expressed at an election
duly held according to law.
Pitislield, Mass., September 17.
Mr. Richard Lathers, of South
Carolina, delivered an address in
the Academy of Music this evening
on the subject of "The South
and the Two Races." The kaU
was well filled and Jthe audience
! listened with 'plose attention to the
address. Mr. Lathers traced, from
the -the effects of the
; cnftitholTfs^cnfr of the Sonthe;n
blaclvs^ufl jdVelt at -great length
or. the-evil inlht nice over the uev
?A no \?r\of.lao rf
^ruw ui nit? juoi.ii.ii? ?.i*i
gers. He pointed ont the t?tal
helplessness of the Sout hern whites
defrauded, oppressed and burdeu- ,
ed with taxation at. homeT and re*
fused oven 'itrig vrfiefr" they
applied to the executive for- tcdress.
Mr. La there, quoted^ from
official records t a, prove the bare;
faced thefts perpetrate 1 by the
! carpet-baggers and negroes of the
| reconstructed States, and made a
pathetic recital of the wrongs niir
! drr which the people of his State
| are groaning, and by which they
have been brought to the very
i verge of ruin. Mr. Lathers ati
tributed great blame to the unprincipled
carpet-baggers for the
present shameful condition of
i Southern politics.
Surra visons of Election*.?The
laws of the United States provide
for the appointment of two supervisors
of election at each polling
precinct, at every Congressional
| election. These officers are to beselected
from different political
parties, so that each of the great
parties into which our people are
divided may have, at each precinct,
! a man of their own selection in
whom they may have confidence,
whose dnty it is to see that the
election is'properly conducted. It
is required that the supervisors
shall be voters, and shall be able
to read and write the English lan|
. . ; . ..
Ten citizens shall make appliestion
in writing to the chie^sui^flBMn^tf
the State,
A|. aopointment^^^BHB^^B^BB^BW
'thousand
Kansas Affairs.?The
! legislature met in extra session^B^^B|^M
| the call of the governor, to provide
i means to relieve destitute citizens B
on the frontiers, made so by the ^
! ravages of grasshoppers. The govpernor's
message stated that the
State of Kansas has an abundance
of bread stuff, much more than is
needed to feed all her people but
that portion of which has been almost
entirely depopulated during
J the last eighteen months, will suffer
! for want of the necessaries of life
j unless provisions is made for its
relief. This section is confined to
' counties west of the 6th principal
' meridian, ar.d the governor esti!
mates the number of destitute, at
j 15,000, and the amount of seed
wheat needed, at 12.000 bushels.
I He leaves it to the legislature to
; devise means of relief, and in forcible
language enjoins the legislature
: to confine itself to the special ob
ject.s of the session, and adjourn as
soon as measures of relief are en!
acted.
Postal Facilities.?The recent
change in the postal laws promises
nt;v nfT?r>r> rlenartraent
I 1U,WVS,
| a most important agency for the
j convenience and advantage of on?
people outside of its ordinary province
of transmitting letters and
papers. Under the operation of
L the new and reduced rates for
j matter other than sealed letters,
! the post office department will
j soon become the most perfect and
the most expeditious as well as the
i cheapest and safest, -express for
; the delivery of small and expensive
parcels that there is in the world,and
if availed of by our people to
the extent that is possible, the new
: system will create an era in some
branches of business little short of
a revolution, by which the residents
of cities, villages or country
: places thousands of miles distant,
may do their "shopping'' in the
metropolis, without visitiug it, and
be enabled to deal directly and at
first hand with onr dealers in every
branch of merchandise.
: ' X "
It has been discovered that the
' 1 -- 1 ."?/? f
moon s diameter is iw jccv, lui^d -""s^
at one point than at others.
It is affirmed that iron cau now
he bought in New York mucfe s . *
cheaj)er than it can be mannfa<>^^^^*^r
It is said by of the
fanners that the recent rains
the
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