e '2 PER ANNUM, J Vol. 1, THE OIUTsGEBUHGTIME Is published every w e d n e S d a y, AT ORANGE?URG, C. II., SOUTH CAROLIN BY JAMES S. HEYWAK?. yynsciui'Tiox hates: ?2 a year, in advance?$1 for six montl JOB PRINTING in its all dcpailmcii neatly executed. Give us a call. I ZLAE & DIBBLH ATTORNEYS AT LAW, russell street, Orangeburg, S. c. .1 \s.F. Tzi.au. S. Dinnt, inch C-lyr Kirk Robinson, ?RA I.Kit IX II k?U?, Music und Stationery, and Fain Articles, at THE EXilISE HOUSE, OKANGEI3URG, C. IL, S. C. me 11 1JAV?IJ03) MOTEl ( II ARLESTON, S. C. K. Hamilton, (1. T, Alford & Co., S inter! itli'inlcn'. J Vwprto/orx. i)li. T. UFR WICK LEG A RE, 1? e Pf t A i. s ?<: k e o Ji Giaduate, Baltimore Coiieg." Dent: V?re, A'.o'/cf V/^vf, (Jtcr St,,re o/.I. .1. Jlxmiltt loii ? it W. DeTreville, A T T (.)RN !?: Y A T L A W. Ollice at Court House Square, < ?raaje'virjt, S. C. iiic!.l:i lyr FKibSNF.l! .v IL\ NTZLLK. m !?: n t i s x s (.!!!:?< over Store of Win. Willcock. V; I'llUtSXKi.-. i'. A. Dastzi.kii, I). I?. i tell l*J-.'Jnio.< AUCT'iH)-!? HAIDES. nr /??. /'. eeaJij). On MONDAY, OeloherUdi, at W?o'clock, . M.. I will sell at my aue 1? a !? inn, one lioi east of jVe.l/asli . JJOUSEIIOLD EUll \7777i7v, iil'.Y t.';f>!><, i 'ItOVXEllY, JlUSfEiiY, ? Ai_s.o; A l"i "t Kaney Goods find Notions, f1-;.' llartrntiis njriy ! >? expected. t?riY"f iood.? ravel ved till 9 o'clock on dav sale v. v. KHAKI), Auel, and C om. Mi reh't jisq. coixock & co., FACTORS am! COMMISSION ML CHANTS. CHARLESTON, S. C. lOlIN COI.COCK, TUOH.lt. COLCOCX, I.. IlAOol O. P, HAY, A (.st. July Hi, 187*2 '2:; 3m oiiil mwt Tlic undersigned have this dav formed a Pa ncrship for the purpose of uniting their so| rate Schools into one, under the. name of t < > It A X ii E 2* V It G A C A DE M ^ Having individually enjoyed liberal p roiiujre ai the hands of ihn I oinmimity, togetli they hey it continuance of it t<> them under i present arrangement, promising; iinahated em gy and industry together with the further i vantage of heilig enabled, under the changed e eiiiostaiioes, to devote themselves inorts e\el jdv.oly each to his own particular brunches. Terms payable as heretofore, at the end ?., ii month. WAX month: < 'l.-'T-sicH, - - - M l .0( > I'.mrlisli, -;- - - 'LOO N% xl (erin will ch in their aw; pride, Thu mingled strain of my thanks shall he That yon have lived and that Christ hasdii by the life-stream glassing the Kden-flowcrs I will walk with ; oil under shadowlcssski And on forever through amaranth bowers 1 >\ ill follow the light of your guiding eyes. A Sea Fight on The Stage. A French correspondent of the Orclu Ira gives sonic details of the working the wondoiful,ship scene in the Gak drama of "La Fils de la Nttit." We a told the stage is entirely cleared, at three long lines ol rails are laid down one coming straight down from the bin (j j towards the footlights, and another frp . j the b f't.wihg, while the. l:t.-! travovsoa.tl stage at the first grooves. The Irg vessi mounted comphte upon a platform ft nished with rollers, remains till wtuit at the extreme back of the singe, and pa bod dewn the rails and turned to tl left ready to enter. The painted clot representing the ocean, is then laid dow and the firs* row of "waves" take the place. Tii v arc little boys* who, sunn with semi-circular canes, creep under il canvas, and, pushing their coverin imitate the movement of the sea. The are fifty of these useful aids in all; l second row being composed of fullgrov men on their knees, and the last at j most stormy undulations of the main a ; formed by the movements of auxiliari j who stand erect. The electric light pla ! upon the top.- of the waves, and the br j appears. It soon reaches the middle i the scene, where a turn table is fixe ! supported by the robust shoulder.; ' twenty-five men, who, by moving up ai ??? down in measure, imitate the r?i:ng ai pitching of a ship in a gale of w ind. Tl attacking boats now come along the hoi r,f I y.ohtal line, of rails, und thu vessel boarded and taken after si hot hand-i band fight. When the piece was first produci j sonic years ago Mr. Fechter was phi H ! ing in Paris, and his presence of mi averted a contretemps. Tbc cloth rep scnting the sea gave way in one pnrt,ai the head und bust of one of the "wave who, for the sake of coolness, had div ted himKclf of bis upper garments, cat through, and remained fully exposed the gaze of the audience. Mr. Focht' who represented the pirate captain, ai j was supposed to command on ?leck, young soldier bad been tortured sull |1( oiently, Deschamps sluA him. Dentvell n was one of the | latoon who tortured an ic assassinated M. dc lteaufort, an oflicer < ?il the iNational Ottard during the siege,nu ,,. who w as guilty of no crime hut of bavin r an aristocratic name. Dcnivollc shot > ?5' rC de Beaufort and transfixed bim with b n> bayonet. n As usual in such cases, the time fixe id for their execution was not made know re to them till the very morning ofthcevoi (.,< had arrived, and, as a consequence, 1.1 es unfortunate men exhibited cousiderabl j.r surprise when awakened from their slet of and informed them their hour had com d They soon recovered self-possession, ho\ of ever, and spent their last few minutes i id prison in partaking of;codec and wri.ii id J letters to their friends. Deschamps sm kid a pipe till lie bad arrived at the po i- j at which he was to stand for oxeeutio i... I when it was taken from him by onh r an (fficial. Although deadly pale, tl men nil walked with a linn step, and.it d I olutely faced the three pickets of sol lie v- I detailed to do their duly as executionet id Some difliculty being experienced (.. binding Lolive to the post, he nbscrw i. nothing.?Very soon the tearing souj t" I caused by a discharge of musketry Wi ?is heard, and the three, bodies wero sei of- shrunk up side by side?D 'tiiville writ! at I mg spasmodically for a few scconds,ai ?{\ j receiving the coup de grace. It was i'v minutes past six when the troops hegt marching past with bands playing. A though the morning was exceptional lino, there were but few spectators of tl es Strange scene, the police rigorously refit lie ing civilians access lo the ground. ?i\ T) NEWS, of d. A scientific experiment was made I to medical students upon the boly.df Job e- Barclay, who was bung last Frida)*? net m Columbus, Ohio, which so nearly produ il- cd genuine vitality again as to act as warning to the authorities to intcrdl a such treatment of-corpses if it in dec |?D AND NATl*IiK MD T11U BAM*. A* WEDNESDAY, ? -i_i_-^-L-,-!-? )! i .1 fr r> I. is ^advisable that the extreme penalty of la should remain executed. The vieti gave his consent, before being taken t the scaffold, to have Ins remains used f' ilhe benefit of medical science, and the ijwero removed from the cofiin to the op Tating table. The pupils of the eyes we yffcund to be dilated, and the face discolo cd. The body was stripped of its clot Jing, npel thirty-seven minutes after deal the students began operations. The ele trical instrument used was one of tl jirnost powerful known, consisting of si jcups of Bunsen's battery attached t Glitch's induction coil of the largest siz ?It was operated hy Pre fcssoi Mendenhn. an eminent electrician, while Profcsst AVonnly and Professors lloldermau an ibenig conducted the experiment. Tw ||purrcnts of electricity were used?or placed at the lower extremity of the bod 3and the other drawn along the arm, nee jjface and breast. The effect was wonde $ul; the eyes opened, the face drew up ; if in pain, the mouth jerked to one sid Rhs arm raised as if to strike, and the fi clenched. The limbs also raised, at |lio toes und fingers worked, and once tl body almost turned to one side. Tl arms were next laid hare and a currci of electricity introduced. '1 he who system seemed to respond, and the mov Stents of the body were at times violer, The action cf the galvanic current co tinned to he applied to different parts < the body, which responded as before, at only when live hours and thirty-live mi: utes had elapsed after bis death elid tl truumcut fail to have visible e'fceU , Tho I> >nrd of Directors of the Sout Crro'Iina Mommiemt Association,Mrs; T. Darby, Miss LnBeirde, Mrs. AY. I Gibhes, and Miss I, I). Martin, encou aged by the success of the Bazaar la year, and yielding to the urgent reque of a'great number id' persons, take plea niv in announcing that they will ope the "Monumont Bestnurant" at the Fa gronds on the first day of the Fair an will not close until after the distributh of prizes. The Bcstunrant is entirely under tli control of the Hoard of Directors of tl Association, and the Executive Commi tec is nppoinfed from their number. De.aches will bescrveel from 11 o'cloe a. in., till I p. in. Contributions of meat and poultry, well us of money, are solicited, and mti be sent to cither of the ladies com posit the Executive Committee, A suit of great importance to buildc has been decided in the New York Cou '" J of common pleas. A brick mason tigrct j to build a house and charge ?f? per tho b j sand for laying the brick. When 1 I ("line tc measure the brick he measuri 10 i ;ill the openings, windows, doors, &c, i 3" solid work, making his bill $2000 larg n j than it would have been Intel he on ?V mensuued the solid wall. The man f " j whom the work was done refused to \n " i this 02000, and the mason brought su to force the payment, pleading the en font' of brickniasons in his favor. Tl court decided that he had no legal rig to (?b?rge for laying brick that were no er laid. This deeinion is important builders and contractors, as other Sta courts would he likely to follow the dc< j sion and precedent set by the New Yoi court. ? m * m* n I The acquittal of Laura Fair by a S.i i- j Francisco jury, points a moral terrib (I significant for the times and adorns wi ?c I hideous malevolence one of the darke n tales in all the annals of crime. Th 1- j a jury ed" men some of w hom arc sup; < y j eel to bo heads of families, should i ie 'solemnly give tln-ir sanctions to lawle 5-! itjroads upon the peace of the dornest circles hy a 'ease beauty and should pr nounce her slaying her victim in tl , presence of his wife, no murder, shows tl weakness of human nature and the elet] y c?crncy of our system of judicial tritt n It virtually oilers, says the Wilmiugte ir j Star, a premium for I looderowiiod pit > j litution. It saps the social .system, co a j founds and confuses justice with lieero :t j blunts the public con science and elegrad n ! our civilization. Against such monslro perversions of justice and morals, tlio ii$ dignatiou of the press all over the land ought tobe raisod.?Aikcu Jouknal. -? ? i ^ . - A Louisville Delegate Opt for (Jreoley, Mr. Samuel Clem, an old citizen of Indiana and a lifedong Democrat, and one of the two delegates from the Ninth Congressional District of that State to the Louisville Convention, has returned from that city and publishes this card. ' grade the. body in order, as they iiuagiuc to exalt the mind, should vonsidor mor deeply than they do the imp irtrfiice o our muscular expression of feeling. Th manifold shades and kinds of expre^oi which the lips present, their gibes, gam bolsaud flushes of merriment; the language of a quivering nostril | the . waves and ripples ot emotion which phr on the human countenance, with tlx spasms of passion .that disfigure it-^al which we tase such pains to enibody^h ?'??> uimnK< ..U\,.?u.I..-.-..?:.... e guicl ic variei estly believing that the convention wa called for the furtherance of sound Den * ocratic principles. Iuterooursc with th )T managers ofthat affair at Louisville ha satisfied me Lhnt it was instigated an 0 managed hymen wholly for selfish pui poses, and to secure the rc-clcotion c General Grant." r I Colonel K. Barnwoll Uhetf, Jr. is ci The New Orleans Times of Fridaj *t says the Picayune announces and aceci d sion to its editorial corps in the person c ,e Colonel ii. Burnwcll Rbctt, Jr., late c ie Vvnith Carolina. Mr. Pthctt was Ion ,l connected with the Charleston Morcttr\ 1? and has had an instructive journalisti c" experience, which will prove valuable i his new position. We welcome h:.m t ," New Orleans, and expect to find in hit jt an effective co laborer in the work of n ' form. 1). C. Jenkins, Esq., still retain l" his position ou the Pic as associate edito e [sPKOIAl. rEI.E9it.VM TO TilK NEWS.] Co EU MCI A, S. C, October li j* The Ji<>^atuia..JaViBUt^JSlu(lgctt, [ Georgia, who has been hiding from th hounds of justice for the last year in New t berry, was arrested here last night on . charge of forgery. The warrant was base upon an affidavit made by W.J. llintoi of Atlanta, Whose name appears as one t the surotics to Hold tret ts bond us treasi 1 r ? j rer ofthc Western and Atlantic or Geoi ;) gia Railroad. -Htuton's property in Geoi gin has been attached under proceeding .against Blodgctt, and It is to save hin e I n self that he has been Irving to jjet hoi f Uoldgett: 111 i?od Stales Jnrors. ,s I The following is a list of grand an y j petit jurors that have been drawn for tli next term of the United States Circui Court, which is opened in Columbia b Judge Bond on the fourth Monday i is 1 November : ii CtltANn Jl'ltORS. d I p, M. Smart, Ridgewny; Win. Meyer it- W. O'Larin, R. II. Wiles, Orangehurj ie James M Larin, John Bristow,Bennett 'd ville; Win. II. Marshall. Cheraw; Junu is Hun ill, Sumter; I'd ward T. Carter, Can t den, K. G. Holmes, Beaufort; Jackso Lv Smith, Darlington; J, C?. Cole, Beau for t R. H. Fletcher, J. II. AI hers, Jacob Mill y S. If. Hare, It. F. Dereef, Joseph San 't son* Charleston; Barney Burton, Unioi 8" petit .n itons. ^ Henry Wilson, Cheraw; James I Crossluud, Greenland I*. O.; Archy Greet Gudsdea P. O.; Win.M.Morris, Calhou Mills; S. M. Brow n and W. II. II Hani] to , ... . ton, Charleston; W. L.Dennis, hisho] , ville; J. F . Ilendricks, Lexington; Hem ' Mack, Sumter; Win. McKenna, Lanca ter; Isaac Hoffman, Bftavcr Dam; Janv ^ Just, Aiken; Virgil Johnson, Onnidei |y Edward Marshall, Cheraw; A. Iludsni j, Lancaster; Addison Walker, Choste ,t Louis Red fern, Oro; Thomas Johnsoi ll( Mayesvillc; Lawrence 12. Walker, Ando son; Thomas Brown, Darlington; Wasl ington Ashc, Bcnneltsvillc; Amos Asl Inooks, Lancaster; Dcniamin Welsl Graham's Crossroads; Nelson C. Da vi York ville; Cain Evcrhjge, Abbevill John Y. Marks, P. S. Riddle and Gcorf ,c Mittag, Lancaster; John C. Fitzsimmoi j and Sur.eho Davis, Columbia; George !? s Griffin, B? nncttsvillc. Muscular Expression. e, In an julmiruhle chapter on the rel L's I lions of the mind to the body, Professi 1* I Mnudslcy snvs : Tliofie who would d wwm *, m*m^ VI IllU^t II1UI 41VVIWIS. When the eye is turned upward in rapt devotion, in the eestaey uf supplication, itis for the same reason as it is rolled uj> w'ard in fainting, in slevp, in the agony of death ; it is an involuntary net of the- ob lique muscles when the straight muscles cease to act on tho eye-lull. We perceive, then,,in the stiuly of muscular action the reason why man looks up tu heaven in prayer, and why he lu\s placed there the power ''whence come lb, '\\\s help," A. simple property of the. W?ly, as Sir Charles Bell observes?the fact that the eye in f supplication takes \\lu\t h? its natural f position when not ac'cd on by the will? has influenced our eiuiccptions of heaven, our religious observances, and the habit mil c I expression ol our highest $eeJ\ngs. l . Xnts for the Mosaics to Crack. Is it true that ho-est John Patterson s was active in lobbying the so-called regu p lur Bepuhlicau Convention for the nomi nation of Moses ? Is it true that said honest John is large ly interested in the S 1.800.01)0 of Blue Ridge Bail Road scrip ? Is it true that the injunction, of Judge Willard alone prevents that ?erb> from i becoming the chief currency in circula I tion in South Carolina,, receivable for taxes and nil other dues? f I Is it true that a motion is ponding in the Supreme Court to set aside said in junction, upon the hearing of which no tion the Governor elect will have tl p ap pointment of a Judge in the place of Mr. Justice Willard ? j j Finally, is it further I Hie that the afore said honest John taft top the North the other day in fine spirits, saying that j Moses would be elected and his .Blue Ridge scrip would b : "all right ?*'[?Cam. den Journal. 0 j It is not anticipated in ofli -ial circles 1 that the award made by the Geneva tri ' bunal will not be paid before the cxp'r.i 1 of twelve months from tho tiui-j of iti announcement, this h^nig the treaty limit. The money will he pajd to the depart ment of State, and as there is puw no }n\V concerning the disposal of it, legislation by Congress becomes necessary for that purp >sc i- " n I Some Good News at bust t; Offic'is, P. C. Lux. t ctoUer 7. ) l. Captam V. \V. Dawsons My Duau Slit?It may bo well, in ? order to appease tlte anxiety of the friends of the Asylum, to let them know through j j the News that 1 !iave succeeded in npikinjj arrangements whereby the Institution will be amply supplied with provision." and till medical supplies fur the balauci " of the year. No one need now feel any ' fipxiety. Our trouble is over tor fl|b year at least. ' I i ours tinIv, b J. F. Knsoi{, Superintendent, $c. m ? tmm ' - ? -- Death of Secretary Se\y.?nJ. AntntN, N. V., October 10. ' j William II. Seward, the veteran poll I tieian, statesman and traveller, died a! ' 1 bis residence in this city this aiternoon. ;c ; ls A Jti(|gc, pointing with Ids cane at ti j prisoner before hilt), remarked, "There i> i a great rogue at the end of this stick,' j tho man replied, "at which end, nn l- Ninety-three plantations in Ainlwiu >r have boon daniaeel 3' v),009, by receu c- floods.