The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1877-1900, March 13, 1877, Image 2

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WINNSBOiO, S. C.! Tuesday, March 13, 1877. R. MEA1TS DAVIS, Editor, JNO. S. REYNOLDS, Associate Editor. The Senate has confirmed all the Cabinet nominations made by Presi dent Hayes. This is a victory for the President and for the policy embodied in his first appointments. Politicians like Blaine must now take a back seat, and surrender the leadership in the Scuste to better n .n. True to his pledges of equal jus tice to all, Governor Hampton has issued his proclamation, offering a rew.ard for the arrest of Putiaun, a young white man who killed a col ored man in Laurens county. Cham borlain has shown his utter inability to check crime on the part of any one. Another reason why the blacks should adhere to Hampton. He is the safest friend they can find in the State. The Radicals are preparing for the inevitable by endeavoring to ob tain Federal appointments in lieu of the State offices they must surren der. The leaders aspire to missions, or judgeships, while the small fry are ravenous for colloctorships of the Internal flevenue, postoffices, and detectives' places. It is worthy of note that they bestow no thought upon the colored voters whom they have deluded, and who are now left in an unenviable predicament. The colored citizens should lose no time in professing allegiance to Governor Hampton. No decided steps taken yet. All appearances indicate that no out side intervention is required to de eide the political situation here. Chamberlain's government is already as complete a sham as was McEnery's shadow in Louisiana after the Wheeler Compromise, and is becoin. ing daily more attenuated. Govern or Hampton grows stronger each hour. Every one is becoming ac customed to his government ; and it. may be tfldieult t o mark exactly the period when ti e so-called dual gov 1Anet coc to, exi8. It is practi y at an1 <nd nOW, without tihe interv(.1 : n rf yr.... Th~e ChIief Justiecship. Thie death of( Chief Justice Moses creates a vacancy in the highest judicial oflice in the State. A num ber of tgentlemicn have been sug;;est. ed as well- fitted for the position. Associate Justice Willard has been prominently mentioned, and the Chief Justiceship would be an ap propriate recognition of his conduct in the gubernatorial case. Should it however be the determination of the Democracy to retain Judge Williard in his present position and elect a chief justice from among the nmems boe of the bar, a large field would be spened to choose from. In ad dition to the nominations airady made, we would suggest the name of Col. James H. Rion, of Winnsboro, whose elevation to the Supreme Court we would be pleased to see, not because ho is citizen of Fairfield, but because we deem him the lead ing lawyer of the up-country, and the peer of any member of the bar in this State. We do not know whether Colonel Rion would consent to abandon the active pursuit of his profession, but * feel assured that he would adorn the bench. We submit his nomination to the public. Panic in a Church. The New York Iferal contains long account of a panic in a Roman Catholic church on last Thursday night, whichi shows how easily a large crowd may become alarmedl beyond self-control, and likewise the terrible effects of such alarm. There were twehtysfive hundred womea''in attendance upon one of a series of lectures intended specially for their sex. During the exercises, the-intgense heat and ovorarowded stt o; the building caused a woman to faint, moaning aloud as she fell to the tloor of the gallery, a,'Il the siome (one raised the cry of "ire. II IIIediately the entiro as semblage made a rush for the doors, and a perfect crush followed. Though the means of egress were abundant and well-arranged, yet such was the pressure in the vesti bulo that the crowd could riot get out. "At first the panic was almost wholly confined to the galleries, but the shrieks of the struggling crowd soon filled with terror the crowd which flled the aisles, and the move ment to escape became general. Out from the body of the church began to pour the immense congre gation, which, meeting in the vesti bule the fleeing occupants of the gallery, made a new obstruction and effectively blocked all egress. Then ensued a terrible struggle to escape from an imaginary danger.". After a time, the fire alarm having been sounded, a company with an engine arrived, and the firemen, pushing aside the crowd that were pressing from the streets, made their way into the mass within, and opened a passage. Through this the crowd emerged-four thousand in all, and all alive save seven. The killed were six females from sixteen to fifty years of ago, and one boy of seven. It is only marvellous that so few wore injured. This occurrence teaches the importance of selfspos session in time of danger, and the necessity for providing more means of exit from very large buildings. In this case the doors opened out ward, and the crush was the result of the pressure from all sides upon the vestibule. [CoMMUNICATED.] The "Southern Policy." "But the 'Southern policy' of the new administration does not seem to differ from the old. Yet none will more gladly accept it, if it can be made to work, than those .who supported the former one. If, however, the withdrawal of Federal interference in Southern 'affairs means a resort to the 'shot gun' policy in future elections-if the freedmen are to have no rights which white men are bound to re spect, Is the Returiinr Rovrcls which mazde Mr. Hayes President alleged was the case in important parts of the Sou~h last fall,ithen the 'local self-government' policy will not be found acceptable to the nation. A react ion will come wvhich will demaind and secure something like justice for these poor men who have been made citizens in name if not in fact." The above extract is from the New York .Aercantile Journal, a b~usiness paper which claims to be conservative. Such opinions 'igno.. rantly entertained of the whites at the South by the masses at the North have caused the untold calamities which we have endured. None are so blind as those who are willfully blind. The punishment which I would inflict upon such people is the compelling them to live for eight years under ihe rule of negroes and their carpet-bag leaders, namong whom to talk of honesty, truth and justice is as vain as to discourse of chastity in a brothel. X. Y. Z. SENITIMENTAL SucDES.-Sentimnen.. tal suicides are becoming very comn mon ini the United states. About a fortnight ago a young lady who was engaged to be married and appar ent ly happy, committed suicide in Marion, Iowva. A few mornings after the funeral, her lover called a young lady cousin to his room, and remarking that he was going to biai sweetheart, shot himself in the heart. A brother of the dead girl went to see her lover's remains, and catching sight of the pistol, seized it and did his best to shoot himself, buit did not succeed. Spartanburg has the latest 'curi osity. It is a wine bottle inside of a grape vine of the Tokay variety. Mr. Thompson, the grower, states that he cut off the vine at a point where the vine was a little larger than the bottle, and hollowed out the vine sn as to set the bottle in it, and bound it up gratting wax, and the vine grew -around -the bottle completely imbodding it, and taking the exact shiapa of the lgottle, having tbe appearance of a wooden~ bottle linea with .glass. It *asive- years in growing The South n the Cabinot. The Washington dispatchIeP p)1 lished in 7he News, and Courier contained the announcOlOnt that ox-Senator David M. Key, Tennes see, had had an interview with President Hayes, and accepted a Cabinet portfolio. Mr. Key was born in Greene county, Tennersee, is 54 years old, and ranks among the ablest lawyers in his State. At the the time of his appointment to the Senate, to fl the vacancy caused by the death of Andrew Johnson, he was Chancellor of the Chattanooga Circuit. At the recent election for Senator he re ceived forty-five of the whole num ber of one hundred votes, his sup porters being twenty-four Pemc. crats and twenty-one Republicans, including every member from Ten., nessee. During the war .he com manded a Confederate regimen', and made a splendid soldier. He is not a politician in a partisan sense, but a broad and liberal statesman. In a speech in the Senate on the Oregon question, last December, he said : "It is time that we become infus ed with more of that charity which thinketh no evil and is kind. It is time we should have that confidence which would allow us to repose trust in each other. It is time for us to make our government one of law instead of force. It is time that offenders be tried and punished, and not those who are innocent. They should be condemned, and not com munities or States because wicked men are in them." Why was he selected to represent the South in the Cabinet ? His loyalty to the South cannot be im peaiched, but he is a National man, :t Conservativo Democrat, whose liberality of sentiien t commends him to the Republicans. This, we presume, is why he is taken and others are left. The information we have concerning him, at this mo ment, comes mainly from Republi c.n sources, and it will no doubt be thought by many that if he were not half a Republican already, he would not be so highly spoken of. This is not a just view to take o' the a)pointmeit. An ultra Democrat could not have been chosen ; and it is moderate Demo crats like Senator Key who, by sticking to a bad bargain, enabled the Electoral votes to be counted before the 4th of March.--News and Courier. PLATING IT oN TRAMP.-A Hart ford paper tells how a lady in that city "plays it" on tramps, through the agency of the bogus money known as "advertising greenbacks," and which to the casual observer al pear genuine. The lady with stud ied cilesernces puts a bill of this kind under the mat at the back door, and waits the approach of the innocents. Up to the door comes Tramnpy, and hiis greedy eyes at once alight on the money. In a flash it ii transferred to his pocket, and without stop)ping to knock and beg, as he intcnded1 to do, he hurries out of sight, radiant with the joy of one who unexpectedly str-ikes good luck. When at a safe distance he looks at the bill, and as the extent of the terrible deception dawns upon him, he clutches his hair, and with a wild, despairmng cry of "sold, by Jerusa lem !" crawls into a convenient rat hole and dies. A PAIR oF SHOEs GONE--A car, penter who wvas always prognosti cating evil for himself, was one day uplon~ the roof of a five-story build ing upon which rain had fallen. The roof being slipper-y, he lost his foot, and exclaimed, 'Just as I told you !' Catching, howvever, an iron spout, lhe kicked off his shoes and regained a p~lace of safety, when he thus delivered himself: 'I knowed it ; ther'apiro shoes ;;one.'par o Charles A. Darling, mor-e familiar ly known in the up country as "Gunboat Darling," H. Springs and 'William L. Springs, three r-evenue officers, made things lively in Green. ville a few days ago. They wvent on a regular drunk, resisted the officers werne put in the guard-house, and were fined $25 or twenty days work on the str-enta. This is the kind of officers who rep~resent the Feder al Government in South Carolina. Will President Hayes look into the matter'? DAdininstratr's Sale. BY 4uthority of 0.Rt. 'Thompson, Esq , IPJudge of Probate for Fairlield County I will oftkr for sale ait pumblie outcry on the 3rd day of April, 1877, at the resi dence of Miss E ilawkins, in Fairtilid county, all the persona1 property belong ing to the estate of WVm. Daw kins, de ceased, lateoof said county. Terms cash. 8. M. DAWKINS, mar 13 Administrator. FINAL DIHVIIAlIGE. NXT ICE~ is hereby given that the un. iNdorsigned will make. a pplication to the Judg4 of Probate for Falrfleld county, on Tuesdays -Af ril 10, -1877, for a flual (1i80 argo as Guardean of.dNG'va ~ NicuomsoN. mie-b 2..'. a.W.rW=. JUST RECEIVED -BY J. F. icinater& Co. ---0 SPRING PRINTS S.PRING PRINTS I 4-4 Pereales at 121 6. New York Mills, Wamsutta. Fruit of the L on, Farwel and other brands of Longoloth. Table Damask--Brown, Bleached and Red. A full stock rf Bed Ticks. A large lot of high-baok Tuck Comba just received. All of which we are selling very low -FOR THE CASH. J. F. McMASTER & CO. mr 10 SPRING HAS COME AND WITH IT A BEAUTIFUL LINE OF LADIES' AND GENTS' SPRING GOODS -AT D ANNENBER Gs, CALL AND SEE THEM And bing your change with you. ('ur beautiful Centenxial Etripes, at 124y, one yard wide. CALICOS AT OLD PRICES. CLOTHING IN GREAT VARIETY. JUST RECEIVED A beautiful assortment of Gents' Pants for a 'ring wear. 'Whito Vest;i of all kinds, at all prices. Boots and Shoos The largest stock in the Boro. We keep coast antly on hand Mfanko & Stearns' Baltimore mc do Sh~oes, each and every pair warranted. -CALL ON R.. L, DANNENBERG THE LEADER OF I.a o~ w P -W ? 0 e s mar 10 New F amily Grocery.~ JIHE undersigned desires to inform his friends and the public that he can be found on the east side of Congress street with a fresh Stock of FAMILY GROCERIES, Viz : eal, Orist, Flour, Bacon, Sugars, Con'ees, Teas, Crackers, Ginger Bread,S sda, Spices, eto., etc. Oranges, Applee,'Candies, &e., all fresh and cheap, 10OR CASH ONLY. -Je E.. CATH0 T, Op~oI(alt.1f- dgtfgiat 6 lend. f.h 17 .if JUST RECEIVED, One oar load seed Potatoes, One " " " Oats. -ALSO, A full line of Plantation Hard ware consisting of Lay lrou, Plow Steel, Steel Plows, Plow Moulds, Spades, Shovels, Traces, Ha men, Clevices, Heel Screws, &c., &c. which will be sold low for -CASH. I keep constantly on hand a full supply of PLANTATION and FAMILY G- R O C .R I BS. I have on hand several brands of first class FERTILIZERS which I am prepared to sell for Cash or on time with well approved secuities on a money basis, or with a cotton option if parties desire. All parties in want of Fertilizers will do well to call on me before purchasing. feb 20 JUST RECEIVED, ALfull stock of Plain anad Faioy (Ito cories, which will be soil at lowst priae for the Cash. ALSO, A fiue stock of liquors, sineh as WHISKEY, BRANDY, WVINES in great variety, ALE, BEER, etc., etc. The patronage of the publio is solici B. ROSEPIHEIM. feb a.oAA Seed~ Stoi'o. GARIDEN Seeds of all kinds just re. --ALSO, Clover Seed, Kentucky Blue Grass, H ungarian Grass, and the genuine Germian hillett. For eal. at the Drug Store of mar 8 W. K AIXmt Established 1858. OHC1ARLE~S NL Haes remuovedt to the store next to Franois Gerig's. tIATOHES, Ol9eks aind Jew eb~y re-. topererrd, and satisfaction guaranteedj Those indebted to me for work ona jewolry will please pay at once, for Hfanjtq~ 4 I l'ected,I