The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, August 16, 1882, Image 1
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VOL. XII. LEXIX(iTOX, SOUTH CAROLIK^^mESDAY^^^AI'Ci'^'r ^ TU'?, ^1882. 41.
THE LEXINGTON DISPATCH,
iTBLiSnED EVKUY WEDNESDAY
IS if itioiH'rcif ??#. 51 a r ma a*
LEXINGTON, C. H., S. C.
ri:ir>r.< of <rn>n;>pri>tx.
One copy on** ye ir 5*1.*>0
six months 75
" " three mouths SO
.47/1 'Eli T1SI V'r HA TEA.
Advertisements will be inserted at tlie
rate of 7"** per square ot one inch space lor
lirst insertion, and 50c per square lor each
snl>N' pient insertion.
Liberal contracts made with those wishing
to advertise for three, six or twelvemonths.
Marriage notices inserted free.
Obituaries o/vr /'(*;?.% charged for at
regular advertising rates.
Address, G. M. II VKMaN,
Editor and I'roprietor.
TOG DAYS. i
The dog days are upou us,
The hottest of the year;
And candidates are looming up,
All o'er the district here.
Some are run by "bosses"-Some
are stannch and true;
And will not yield their manhood, j
Nor their politics eschew.
Take warning all ye bosses,
And list to what we say;
Or at our next election,
The deuce may be to pay.
Ths Newspaper in a Farm House, j
i
People who live in the great thoroughfare,
where they have access to!
u. two or three dailies and a half-dozen 1
weeklies, do not fully nj predate the
value of a newspaper. They come
indeed, to look upon them us uec??sii
ties, ami they as cheerfully do without
their morning meals as their
morning mail. But one must b? far
off in the country remote froul the
"maddening crowd," to realize the
full luxury of a newspaper, I The
- but one newspaper
a week, does 'uux giauco ove^ tits
co'umns hurriedly, with au air of
impatience, as does the merchant or
lawyer. He begins with the beginning
and reads to the close, not permitting
a news item or an advertisement
to escape his eye. Then it bus
to be thumbed by each member of ,
the family looking for things in which !
he or she is most interested. The
daughters look for the marriage!
notices, and are delighted if thej<
editor his treated them to a love
story. The son who is just about to ;
engage i:: fanning, with the enthusiasm
that will carry him far iu advance
of his father, reads all the
crop reports, and has a keen eye
for improved modes of culture. The
younger members of the family come
iu for the amusing anecdotes and
scraps of fuu. All look forward to |
*lO..* ulio'l twinnr fhp miner
CLJ*." UU > UJUt t;tiuu ?/4
O I i'* " '
with the liveliest anticipations, and if
by some unlucky chance it fails to
conic, it is a bitter disappointment.
One can hardly estimate the amouut
of information which a paper that is
not onlv read but studied, can carrv
:
into a family. T* ey have, week by
week. real
its vastlipncerns.
' It is 1h poor man's library, and furnishes
a> n.Uvii mental food as he has
time to consume and digest. No one
who has observed how much those
who ar?; far away from the places;
where men most congregate value.
their weekly paper can fail to join iu j
invoking a blessing on this means of
intellectual enjoyment.
: ?T::i:
Nr.w Gold- Certificates.? j
Acting Secretary of the Treasury, I
French, on the 10th iust., received a
telegram from Secretary Folger, who
is in New York, instructing him to
hasten the issue of gold certificates in
accordance with the provisions of the
national hank Act, which directs the
Secretary of the Treasury to receive
deposits of g'ld coin in sums not less
than t wenty doliars, and to issue certificates
therefor. There has already
been a large deinaud for these certificates.
They will be ready for issue
in a few days. The Assistant Treasurer
at New York states that all the
banks will probably make lar^e and
rapid ofo-rings of their gold for the
new certificates.
How Sho Got Even.
They toil a story of a would bo
fituny broker, who Just season adopted
a most fiendish method of getting
even with one of the chronic tiirts
who arc said to make tlie piazzas
here lively later in the season. He
I obtained half a doz.-u energetic crabs
from the fishing beach, and watching
for an opportunity when no one was
iu n particular tank except the inconsistent
fair object of his vengeance,
i be dropped iu the crustaceans (way
: up term for crabs). The young lady
? 5 i i
COUlluatru Lfi nuiai r-.iuixo
! (jam up term for paddling a few
minutes longer, when sho suddenly
(.uttered a bloodcurdling shriek, ami
was helped up the ladder with a crab
hanging on to her pink little too.
She had several consecutive epileptic
fits while the marine corn doctor was
being removed. The Mephistophelean
glee of the broker, however, gave
him away, and for fear of some counter-trick
he decided to bathe early in
the morning thereafter. A few d iys
after that the bath house keeper was
startled by some terrific yells, and
hastily entering the tank-house he 1 oheld
the broker llcuuidering out with
a big, jugged-toothed spring rut-trap
clenched on his heel.
"Who the deuce put this horrible
thing in the water?" roared the
broker.
"I did, sir." sweetly replied the
crabbed young lady aforementioned,
stepping out of a bath-room. "I
put it there to catch those horrid
ctabs, you know."
The broker went home on a crutch.
Must Drir.k or Die.
i
W ben tbe use of alcoholic liquors
reaches a point whore a man must
b:e power which tbe appetite for intoxicuuts
has over its slaves is vividly
illustrated in the following incident:
One wintry afternoon a trembling
man entered a tavern in new Hanipspiro
carrying a small package of
clothing. Going to the bar he said:
"Laudlord, I am burning. Give
me a good glass of gin."
The landlord pointed to :t lino of i
chalk marks and said:
"Johil, you see the old score?not
another drop until that is paid."
The poor wretch glared fiercely at
the man behind the bar.
"Landlord, von don't mean that.
You have got my farm, you have go!
tnv tools. All that I have got in this
world is in this little bundle of clothes.
Please, landlord, give me just one
glass of gin for them."
"I don't want your old clothes,"
calmly answered the man. "Pay tinold
score first."
The drunkard staggered back, and
a gentleman near said:
"What will vou give me for enough
to buy two glasses o/ gin ? I .see you
have a good pair of h.?i> cu your
feet. Will yon gi ? ajc- yo;i> boots.,
for ten cents ^
The miserable w :-.t. it
a moment, then ??:r .
"Stranger, if I give you the boots
I must go out in the snow barefooted.
If I give yon the bo;its I shall I'm ? ato
death; if ! don't give them to yon
I shall burn to death. Stranger, it is
harder to burn to death than to freeze
to death: give me the gin ami you
may have the boots."
He sat down and began to draw
them off. The gentleman did not,
however, intend to take them, but he
was testing the strength of the terrible
appetite. Others were looking on
and they said the man should have
his gin. They supplied him liberally,
and he drank all he could and took
ail the rest away. When night came
he drank the last drop, and lie went
- 1 * Tim fnO lb../
t<> Sleep ii: w.iiLi. ?
cnme ami took the poor man in his
arms, ami next morning he was found
in the barn frozen to death. '"Oh!
thou invincible spirit of wine, if tliou
hast no name to be known by, U-t ticall
thee Devil I"
(Jen. It. I'. Vance has be. n renominated
for Congress from N. C.
^t,t wrarfin
For the Dispatch.
.1//*. A'///< / ;?As the primary election
th" people's safeguard ; is drawing
uc.ir, it behooves every voter to
scrutinize the actions of the candidates
before making out his ticket.
\V?* have county officers who have
discharged their duties faithfully, and,
so fur as i know, lmvo given universal
satisfaction. We have others who
have bc? n partial and oppressive, and
instead of being public servants, assume
the mien of masters. Those
who have impartially and faithfully
/I fltuit* /lnfiiuc en mil/? !\n
* I J t >v? 111< J v? t ii via *nui\.o i;ijvuuv? w iv
elected, provided they are still the
people's choice, while those who have
boon partial, bigoted and illiberal,
.should be left oat. I have a few qne;ios
for the County Commissioners,
li-iw many Commissioners were present
when the building ol the bridge
at or near Mr. Daniel Draft's was let
out ? What amount was paid for it,
and how was it advertised? Is there
any particular mode of advertising
mijoined by law concerning the lettin-,'
out of bridges when the amount
exceeds $1<'U, and is it necessary for
more than one Commissioner to he.
present when letting out such a
bridge? 'JYli the voters if, wheu you
lot out the bridge at Haves', across
Dig Hollow ('reek, you did not require [
the timber to be ail heart, and when i
you received and paid for it were the :
of rnofove i\f 1 11 l t 0 T..11
me if von were iutiuenced bv anv one'
" i
in making the change iu the Cherokee
Head east of Rocky Creek. Did you
not know.,that I was absent, or were :
you not informed that I would be absent.
the day the change was finally !
made? Did you give the Ro:ul Overseer
authority to cut as much of my !
timber or as many of the trees that;
ujy little boys trimmed as he, iu his'
malice, chose to pile in the road, re- j
gardless of my protestations, and was i
autat leatL-ttae oi *>? ?? j
**** ... fc'jsvr iTr*i ur> proicssional man
to make the change in the road?
pave you a petition in your possession
to justify you iu making the
change? It" so, I am anxious to know
who diose petitioners are. 1 thought
my title was genuine, but }"OU cut off
a part of my land, to the great delight
of my enemies, and perhaps you
think you have done a great deed,.
but I indulge the hope that the coming
primary will convince at least one
of your number (the cussy one) that
he is not yet the great hub around
which the w hole of Lexington re-.
volvcs. I have one consolation?re
Il.otli /? ttill #\f *-v4 ? Lro vnn *
I I J UU l* * * j'l.H'V v "Hi \MVI KM1V
' \UetribiUi?.u, though sometimes slow,,
is sine."
I expioss 1:1 v sincere thanks to:
those citizens who, rather thau obey",
t uc man-lutes of the Commissioners,
highwaymen, overseers, <yc., in trespassing
>n my premises, paid their
lines. Gentlemen, 1 can now only ,
thank for respecting my l ights, j.
hoping tnat yon have cast your bread
noon th: waters to return :na;iv days ;
i , . i'
hence, aid Unit your money may re-j
turn tet iold. You certainly did a''
jh- 'ter#ifced than you thought you
for while you respected | (
yon ga\?.- t;)0 otTicers of the
lat^^Msni rem.L-o, which may yet
* ^ (
te-uni t sill tnat 'hey ar<? nnblio Servan
Is 11 toad of masters. :.
r ' i
1'. I. Kiwi.. f
1 o k A\*i.i.i., August 7th, 1882. I
; *
TlIK 8rW:it|M|; i'ul.lsllINO JSoap. j
This sti> is harmless. It contains
i;.> uciir it, ami is pronounced by} ^
those vo have used it to be the best i
I a
cleaneiml jin existence. It I
is espi-'thy adapted for cleaning and
polishi' silver, jewelry, plated ware, I _
minor windows, show cases, nickel
plate, ass, britania, white paint, and !
for t inure it has no o<jnul, making
it looketter than new. Price, 10c. i
For saat the JJa/aar. It7?tf. ;
; C(
"F i r, you are an awful brave! f;i
man,"'id a Detroit voiith to his pa- i<
timail it'.ve. "}fow do you know, | it:
Willie "1 heard some men at the | ai
store s hat you killed thousands of
S' loi* 1 ivlii'' tiif war.' 1 "Me? Wlivi
i
i v.-ii; . cf contractor for the army." fr
"Vrs, t's what. they suit]!" replied p<
the y;> innocent, as he slid otl" for nt
the hi n I ]J
A Druggist's listaks.
1 j
Two frh-nds nan* Parker anil
Ferris, of Denver, fj-ng somewhat j
I oppressed, went inb a drug store
! and asked the irutuai ate clerk for
' two small doses of Mchu. Having
1 swallowed tho same iy started for
home. They had uojrcceeded far
.when Frtris began twit Parker
upon the exfraordi"*?- and unbecoming
hue which Li. face had assumed,
under the uiTreuce of the
:. ... .. r . . .
bent. ion [invent ilea to boast
; of," 1 dot ted Parker; is about
as red as a fellow's ^^conld get
without breaking o^^ The two
friends hen halted, off exchanged
more elaborate enlivens upon the
appearance of each < t^r's faces, as a
result of which the-concluded to
uiako the quickest tri* co the drug
store on record. Titer* the obliging
clerk forthwith dicoveid that ho had
given them belladony^bnstead of buchu.
A physician happened to be in
the shop at the time,?ud by his assistance
a couple c- valuable lives
were saved. The c <rk was good
enough to say that h'vas very much
pleased at their reoovly.
Tm: Robin and ?The robin
has a rod breast. Tel.* have a plaintiff
song and sing 17. though they
were sorry for sumthng. They get
their name from the? great ability
for robbiu' a cherry toe. They knn
also rob a currant btvh fust rate. If
it was not for these robbers we should
all be eaten up by cax-rpiliars; bat I
think the robins might let us have
now and then just oue of our own
eherriz, tew see how they did taste.
The bat. They fly vr?y much uncertain,
nud ackt as tlough they bad
taken a loetle__too mToh gin. What
they are tell, and I
den Mitell either.?
What "Dead Ducn'k" Means.?
"Dead iruuk" is described by savants
of the Paris Biological society
to be a condition in which there is a
proportion of one part of alcohol to
195 parts of blood in the circulation, j
Should the proportion ever come to
ho oue part of alcohol to 10U of hlooil,
?loath would ensue. This might happen,
and, in fact, has happened repeatedly
where a very large quantity
of ucoholie liquor is swallowed at one
time and quickly. In ordinary drinking
consciosness is lost, and with it
the power to drink more before the
proportion of alcohol i^i the circulation
becotnes fatal.
Kendall's Treatise us the House.?
This valuable book tells you what to
do for your horse when sick, and
treats of every disease to which a
horse is liable. No person owning a
horse should ho without this book.
For sale only at the Dispatch office.
Price, 'do cents for a single copy, or
live copies for $1. Send or call and
^et a copy lirst opportunity, li7?tf.
A negro from Campbell County, '
fia., who was accused of outraging a :'
1.1-year old white girl, was taken out 1
>1 j;t11 last liiyht, iUtn, at .\ewnan, (?a , '
.vherc he was carried for safe kecnn^,
ami lmng by a party of seventyive
men. lie was tried by the crowd
md confessed that he and another 1
nan had committed the deed. 1
1
An old man with a head as desti- c
ute of hair as a watermelon, entered *
, drug store and told the Jerk ho ^
ranted a bottle of hair restorer. *
What kind of hair restorer do you I
refer?" "I recken I'll have to take
bottle of red hair restorer. That
as the color of my hair when I was s
boy." n
e
Hi..hi.v Kstkkmkd.?The youthful ?
olor and a rich lustre are restored to (
uled or gray hair by the use of Par- ii
er's Hair Balsam, a harmless dress- p
ig highly esteemed for its perfume p
nl purity. 4.'} <;
}
A pure strengthening tonic, free a]
om whiskey and alcohol, cures dvs-, C
* j
,'psia and similar diseases. It has ru
ver been e?]u:dled. Brown's Iron ;ai
itters. 1 tl
A Lunatic's Letter.
A day or two a?jo our County
Treasurer received through the | o>t
office a letter postmarked Dicatur,
111., directed as follows:
"Post master attention
To The Treasure (of the State or
Court bouse in Greenfield South Carolina
(this matter) It is the Propi-rti??
of ibe Governor of the State of South
Carolina."
Enclosed was the following letter,
evidently from its incoherent sty!,and
the peculiar wild scatt.-rin<; Ism..1 writing,
the v-'ork lunatic:
Divvrn; I:.:. July LiSih 1 -SS'J
To the Tresnre in tbo State house
in Greonfield South Carolina
Your honor arid dignity 1 Got a
million of Dollars in the State h>>u-e
in your Hand T am the Grand S ?n of
Jacob Williamson Jacob Williamson
was a million air. be is dead 1 am
the only legitimate and 1 -win! nir on
toj) of this plunate.
Your Honor Send to my address
to the- Postofiice one million oi dollars.
Jacob Williamson's name is in the
Coort house in Loranoo District, in
South Carolina
The name to which you will send
one million of Dollars is iJ.-v. W. A.
D. Williamson I will write tin' name
out in full: "Notice, 1 lev. William
Anderson District Williamson" Puisiuess
President of Colleges Worthy
Treasure I will Semi a postal card to
The governor of the State of South
Carolina, and he will give you or?Icrs
to do so Jacob Williamson my Grand
Father, held the deed to thr District
of Dormice South Carolina on account
of which I'v got J.OOO acres of land
rite here.
Worthy Treasure yon wiil please
consult The Governor of the Stale of
South Carolina one million of dollars
Cash is due the Rev. William Andcrsiiii
? ......
Colleges, I want the money now I reply
to lightning It is Lightning that
I am speaking to It is to the Tr. asur
in the State house in Greenfield South
Carolina English Decent. ? <irr.-u< ,;!,
Xt'i rs.
A Surprised Minister.
A certain minister had promised a
little hoy of his that he should accom
j'Hny biin to the church 011 the fidlowing
Sabbath. The little fellow,
although not quite four veins old,
was still old enough to remember the
promise. But when chinch time
came it happened that he was sound
asleep, and his parents went away
leaving him in bed. Some time after
he awoke, and calling to mind tinpromise
given him. he hurried down
stairs only to find his father and
mother gone. Determined not to bo
frustrated in this manner. lm mad.
his way into the street, and or >s>i:ig
to where the church stood, en.cred
the open door. The minister at that
moment was beginning his sermon.
Fixing his eyes upon Lis faflc-r tielittle
fellow waddled up the aisle in
his night clothes until directly opposite
the pulpit, when he Limited, and
looking up at him called out:
'T des you fordot me!
J.in-: Mi:mht <-k I* oi.i.v Id wan
mtil yon are in bod with disease you
n:iv not get over fur months, is the
might of folly, when you might ho '
tasily cured during the early sympoiiis
by Parker's (iinger Tonic. V.'e 1
uive known sickly families male the
lealtbicst, by a timely use of this
lure medicine.? :
Governor-elect Thompson i: a very '
trong Episcopalian, as is ev.-ty other I
lemher of the coming rulmiiji.-traiion t
xcept the Hon. John C. Shepherd, y
ho is a Baptist . The llev. Elii-m :
'apers, the nominee for Stare Super- t
l 1 ??. ?r is i : . ... i : ....
ueiiuL'ui ui j- iii'j n i'hi, i> ;uj j
;il clergyman, and for many years !
nst the rector of a largo pari; h in <
ireeuvilie. (itu. M.inigault, Me:-. > n
files, Stouey and Richards.>11 at. i
II commnnicants of the Episcopal j
hnrcb. Col. Lipscomb is not a s
leinber of any church, hut his wife ii
:id children are devout m? rubers of t
iii Episcopal Church.
Miscellaneous.
i .it* ii"t for any consideration.
Tit-re were ill deaths from yellow
fever i:i Havana last week tip to
Thursday ni-ht.
The Democratic Convention for the
f*!: District of (.Jeorgirt took l.'ti billlot
s he fore making ;i nomination.
Statisticians <>f Texas say her corn
crop this year will amount to 14,000,("Ht,
i nshel;:. This is six times -renter
that: ever b< tore.
p. elective medicine f-r kidnr\
dise:i |cs, low fevers ami nervous prostratiou,
am.I well worthy of a trial, is
1 >r< iwt:'.- Iron Hitters.
At < )r:i: gohnig on Thursday lust
t!:? > Congressional Convention of the
l'iist district unanimously nominated
Hon. S timiel Dibble for Congress.
The French Director of tho Dois
aiding Arubi Pacha's gov? !ri:t
in his rebeliotis war against
the iluvj>ti:t:i nn?l Jiritish governments,
by famishing him with supi
i; ..
\ h :?4N.
If Sivannah river nm>l is a good
fertilizer, then the people of Augusta
should grow immensely. There has
been enough taken in through the
water in 111 list three weeks to make
ii mm ;n fail as :i telegraph pole.?.
,\H /'/ '/ A' /' .'.
An < man kissed his neighbor's
wife while assisting her to
move some furniture. Afterwards hewas
tilled v.illi remorse, and, like
Judas, went and hanged himself.
Kissing does not atiVet South Carolina
men that way, however.
A const met ion train on the South
Carolina Paiiwav was ditched near
Ibanchville on the 10th. Tho accident
was caused by running over a
cow. Hnginc-f r .Armstrong was the
.?.le oer?()n killed, and several rail
road employees were slightly hurt.
lynched near Lancaster C. H. on the
Nth instant for an attempted rape on
the person of a white girl, which he
confessed. Another colored man was
lodged in jail at the same place on
the same day, for raping a mulatto
girl.
Win u rr Thisi.y??Saluda Factory
telephoned us yesteaday that
they could supply the new mills at
(i!t.-eiiville with their yarn, but that
freights to (ireenviiio were 45 ceuts a
hundred and to Boston 44 cents,
making it referable to ship North.?
shy 1 ! '/,.
S'p;ire W. F. Sawyer of Aiken, the
"old war hor?e" of McTier, said at a
barbecue: Although he was an autistoi-k
law man, that lie would kill
every cow he had, and throw in a
couple of mules to hoot to linisll the
job, before he would poll a Radical,
Independent or (irttubucl: vote.
A young-Vi-r was sunt by his parent
t'< talm a [ iter to the postoiiicd and
pay 'in- r on it. Tile boy returned
!i:_;'n!v ; intuit and said, "Father.
1 s <I n jut of men putting letters
In a hoi*-: ami, when no one was
iool.ing, 1 slipped yours in for
i.v-i uv k two dusky sons of
Africa (I'-uge liuelo-r and Ivl. Hurt
had a iittle inHnnderstanding about
of Africa's lair ? damsels, which
resulted in (h-urge cutting KJ. almost
to ii;s;v meat. Ti:e place of the
bio.scene wa- on the plantatiou of
Captain Jack Hates. The wounds
were many, and were promptly sewed
up by one of our townsmen ?l.)r. K.
F. Sir-other. M'luifur.
(> ;? of the most heart rending
lr-ei hoccurred in our city lust
Saturday afternoon that it has ever
u.i-ii our duty t<> roeord. Two little
x.vs. Berry and John Wilson, aged
>'ctivoly about seven and live
ems. and s >ns of Messrs. J. F. and
>. 1'. WilftJi.', were sent hv the latter
> his father's I>rifk yard to get a
air ft'.-he.es, and ujron reaching the
rich yard t!?e little hoys climbed
:: a !;*. :w slab that was lying
rn two i;og.>!:?.;id.s, and in disaonnting
it is supposed that Berry
uii:j-t-.I down lin t, which caused the
lab to hill to tho ground, one end of
t striking little John on the hack of
he lo ad ami crushing his skull.?
1 mb \"li /e.'"7e/?7(,v,-.
1A Sad Story of a Wrecked Life.
The most thrilling and sadly suggestive
temperance lecture i.s the
sight of a once noble, talented mau,
. left in ruius by intoxicating drink.
A Washington paper tells of a ragged
beggar, well kuown in the streets of
that city, who once held an important
command in the army, having been
promoted for personal bravery, from
a cavalry Lieutenant to nearly the
highest rank in military service. Ono
night, rot long ago, when he had
Iwc" -sful i:i beggii.L' ic-iu-.v
- - i . i i-.:.. -
to snte tns craving, auu wuno iviog
helplessly drunk in the rear part of a
Third Street saloon, some men
thought to play a joke on him by
stealing his shirt, and proceeded to
strip him.
Underneath his chirt, and suspended
by a string from his neck, was a
small canvas bag, which the men
opened and found it contained his
commission as Ike vet Major General,
two congratulatory letters- -one from
(len. (irant and one from President
Lincoln? a photograph of a little girl,
and a curl of hair?a "chestnut
shadow" that doubtless one day crept
over the brow of some loved one.
When these tilings were discovered,
; even the li.-rif-driinken men who
found*them felt *a ^ respect, for tho
mau's former greatness, and pity f<>r
his fallen condition, and quietly
returned the bag and its contents to
, where they found them, and replaced
the sleeper's clothes upon him.
When a reporter tried to interview
tbo man, and endeavored to learn
something of his life iu the past few
years, be declined to eommuuicate
anything.
Ho cried like a child when told
how his right named and former
, position were ascertained, and, with
tears trickling down his cheeks, said:
' For God's sake, sir, don't publish
(. dei/nidation, ?r my name, at least,
if you are determined to say something
about it, It is enough that I
know myself how low I have become.
Will you promise that much? It
will do no good, but will do my
friends a great deal of harm, as, unfortunately,
they think I died iu South
America, where I went at the close of
the war."
Intemperance and the gamingtable,
he said, had wrought his ruin.
Ex-Treasurer Whites Returned.
July H 1st a warraut was sworn out
before Trial Justice Carlisle by David
w.-.w, i m
iii pp? c.\Treasurer
L. 13. Whites, with embezzliug
?-S.7U0 of public money. Upon
this warrant the Governor issued a
requisition upnu the Governor of
Alabama and placed it iu the hands
of Messrs. David Hipp aud Adam
Aull, who started at once for Alabama.
They returned Tuesday with Captain
Whites, lit; has not been iiupris >md,
but is in el large of his bondsmen,
aud is free to go where he chooses.
The only purpose in bringing him
back is to get u settlement of the
atl'aiis of his office, so as to ascertain
exactly how matters stand and what
and where the liabilities are. Captain
Whites would have come back in
a few days of his own accord had ho
not been seut for. He had made his
arrangements to come and had written
to several persons that he would
lie hack the 15th or lGth instant, Xrirln'm/
H' fftUl, I<).
A L.ut Gkavk.?.Should two Lapps
be on a journey aud one die, the stir
vivor must try to tind a witness, unless
the deceased bo his father or his
relative, in such case he is beyond
suspicion. If no witness be within
reach the Lapp straightway digs a
hole in which to place the body, and
utters the words, "Siimorom o' Boghorn,"
"At peace with God," adding
the simple, reverent prayer, "Pomeni
i ! oe? ?.rwl ftiMffwvaio nAltu*<rw\Vi? *
"' "I""'
member rue, Lord?Thy Empire is i:i
Heaven," or this, "(iospod nie sabout
mc-uya da smictti," "Lord, forget nie
not, until I die"?a brief and touching
ritual of the dead. Then lie tills
i:i the earth, leaving nature to cover
his frieud with moss and flowers.