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PcwDcrnt. PU BUSHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, T Kit MS per annum in advance. Advertisements. One Sqnnre, first insertion $1.50 On« Square, second insertion .... 1.00 Every subsequent insertion 50 Contract AdvertismcnU inserted upon the most Reasonable Terras. Marriage Notices and Obituaries not exceeding 6 lines, inserted free. All communications intended for publica tion in the Datlington Democrat, must be ad dressee! to the Proprietor. BY A. P. LUCAS, “Man’s noblest mission to advance, His wooa assail, his weal anhaice, llis rights enforce, his wrongs redress— M $2-60 DPEIEt -A-3>TlSrXJ^- DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, GENERAL INETLLIGENCE AND INDUSTRIAL IMPROVEMENTS. HEALTH! BEAUTY!! Sir«RK, Pure and Rich Blood—In crease of Flesh and Weight—Clear Mein and Beautiful Complexion, 8ECCRED to ALL. VOLUME 2. DARLINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 6, 1870. NO. 36, [From the Saturday Reriew.] PKF.TTY WOMEN. After all, i. the world b> very abs.rd in its love of pretty women ? Is woman so very ridiculous in her chase after beauty ? A pretty woman is doing woman's work in the world, not malting speeches nor making puddings, but making life sunnier tnd more beautiful. Man has foresworn bciuty alto- ■ nee- ami abundance flings a glow of comfort I and ease over the most ungenial career.— Life becomes more harmonious, it beats with a teener pulse of enjoyment, in the presence of pretty women. After all, a charming title figure, a piquant little face, is the best ruicdy for half the ills of existence, its wor- res, its vexations, its dullness, its disap- «)intmentn. And even in the larger and nore placid types of beauty, in the beauty a tinge of [From the Si Louis Republican.] MEN EATEN ALIVE BY LIONS. R. AD WAV’S Sarsaparillian Resolvent; ™ h " 0 "" It ig ‘h^cs. to recaii thciwieau fa Dumbdio, there is RAI?D AM kThTciiasoks: I idea of manhood, to insist on th. develop- there «*»»»>• »» • t “? 8 P h * re thb non\r undkkooeis under Tms infi.u. ) r . , . m«nlr re l' 08C » a g cnia I influence mouldmjr our KNi.E OH Tim TRULY W0SDJ-.k*i;L Mfe.1/1- incut of personal beauty as not less manly » ’ . t , cink that , _ ‘ social converse and habits into firentlcr shapes. Every D.y an Inerea.e in Flesh and Weight i th «" of personal virtue, to dema.l the gr.<^ ^ , g K F- of Canning from our .tatesmen, or the digni ty of Robertson from our dirines. Th world of action is a world of iglincss, an. the good looking fellow who starts for tfe prizes soon discovers what Madame do f?r- adin calls le malheue (Tetfe beuu. Heis guessed to be frivolous, he is assumed to>c poetic, there are whispers that his morals re no better than they should be. In a socity resolute to be ugly, there is no post form Adonis, but that of a model, or a guals- mau. Rut woman does for mankind vsat man lias ceased to do. She clings tube w“t^' Vuce.*I ! Pcriclean ideal. Her aim from very cild- e of I r|.»e, Brticlit’B dlMcaae. Albam- i - i • . , « i f» Seen and Felt. S*trofftl*,Con«nm|ttl<m, Sypfilll«,nticnr«tl an«l bailly trented Vroer^nl. in It* mauy J*> rB ***» OI»i»cIul*r «IlBraMe, Ulccr« in ilic RI<*«itlt y I'litnors, Nodes In ♦!»« e systoui. fr»*in I lie >ft, I’Vo'-e. J*itV ill*- ICrnpiions. Kever Sores, Se.nld Ilrml, Itlnfl' %%'orui, SaIc Rfieutn, Kry«i|>t-l.»s, lilottk Spots. Worms in like l^lrsli. Tumors. Canters la the Womb, and nil weukenlkii; mid pikiiifol discharge*, ^wrnt*, lo»s of sperm «ml all wastes nt the Ilf** prinrfpie. are within «hs curative range ot Itiadwny** Snrsn parilllan (trsol* ▼cut. and a few days t«.e wilt pr.ive to any person uslu^ It fsr either of these forms of disease, Its potent power to cm e them. Not only docs the Sa» SHpariillnn Kesolvcnt ezcei all Whomn vciEtHiul in the mrc »*f Chmtiia Ncrofulou** Constitutional, Skinsii-l S, phil"i'l dis ii.>. s l ut It u the only positive remedy for KLid'iey. Itlnddcr iiood is to bu beautiful. Even as a suool- girl she notes the progress of her cbrins, Vinenee of I rloe, Bri|{hth limria, «>»*.! in all cases where there are Itriri. dost deposits, or the water Is thick, cloudy, mixed with «uh%tanees like the rr‘*.U:; , /,“.'V”a , i.S , *LT k U I the deepening color of her hair, the grwiug I symmetry of her arm, the ripening colour of her cheek. We watch with silent inerest all tbese coiidiitons llntlw ny's >nrsMpurll- ’ v- rnvarioc ni llin ruoirlot* sbp lian HoMBCreut aided by the application of I mystCriOUS fCVCrieR 01 UlC Blame , She £<>dwa]r'. i< r «4>-itcii.r in ti.« s^>ine^K.Mi j f j, e ; s ,| raam ng of a coming beauty and tin»all of the Uark. and the How _ fed with one art wo of Had «voy*» ftteijtila*. • 1*111. per dny, vIXl soon mnk*- n c i amusing to see how the prcttincss of women tells on her dress, how the order and propriety of the dress tell on the home. The pursuit of beauty, the habit of prettioess. gives an idea! dignity to the very dignity to the very arrangement of her bonnet strings. In every inovemrut, in every sweep of her ample folds, in the pose of her languor, ia the gay start of her excitement, one feels the softening harmonizing influence of her laS look in the glass. She may be gay or sor rowful, or quiet cr energetic, but she mist he pretty. Beauty exercises an impercepti blc compulsion over her, which moulds her whole life into graceful and harmosious forms, Her dress rises out of the nieie clo thing of man into regions of science, »f poe try. of art. It is a triumph purchased, like nost tri umphs, not without loss to the coinjaeror.— Life, if it gains in delicacy, loses something in breadth and vigor from its very concen tration. There is something terribly mo notonous in the life of the pretty woman, in | wliaf dreans, what discoveries, whit dUup- 1 pointmen* what careful gleaning ft expe- ' rien.-e, whit sudden flashes of invention ! ! The joy o her toilet is the the joy facile ovc his canvas, of Michael Angelo before his marble. She is creating beauty in the silneesnd the loneliiuss of her cham ber ; she grows like auv great art creation, the resut of patience of hope, of a thousand delicate touching, an. re-touchings. But even tie Giocouda the moment of perfect ness, o'completion, cmies at last; the mas ter Utes his work frun the easel and gives it to the faces. Woman is never perfect, i".'- [minting for the glories of eighteen, usen- 1 siblv she becomes an artist, her rom a e CMMblcd to lk«»lf| mud UiMclinr^e Ills water i J ’ i her glass an academy. Th, hours . . , , or .u.rr, co,«r. work w ;,h aer, but she works with tie hours. t!,e d!,1, J r bi * ule Wlth enDU, anJ boredom, THE WASTKS OF THE B'»T>Y . , - , . a-e •aptiiasi vuii nw, u-wthf. nna vi.-oiyai bioM, thai ‘What biout uiubhi^s Diiloro lieruiirror; farnt'hftk Mitin-1 xtrurtuiv. Jicncc all from I VVkaklwiko rftlitT MALE <»r FEMALE, • «f the V. omh, L'tertu, or othci or^ms, wlu-ther Leueoo> vh'KA, or Erupt ve disch vrfre-s. of ovory kind, or fro.n YOrlaace of ** SHl-aiiuv''.” fiuio the Genital liluuda, •f VenentBl 4i»c!iiTgcn, or u'-'et*, or sores th»oi*pb tin; r^ji.rativc pitKcas ot KADWAVS FAHNAi AKlL- X.1AN, arc urrua.bJ, the' ruptured tuptns honied HIE TRUI£ THE* *R Y •‘F CUKE. RADWAY b bAUfSAFAKlLLT VN RL.iOLVKJfT the >v«aeiu, thn'iitth i.h*- b:<*od, unif. saent, and airiicturi-m-tlTYig <Mniitiiii.-nt4 with Tis-ue makiu^, Fiiwh m tkin;, Hrat or Calorto and H.»t m •ki' , a cii*inei*Ui. Alt ai i:a c •ntutnent. nre n'<ut iti-ruij. P’lrtf and ■* . -1.-,7. Ji }Z'p,\ut Hr.,is, lk\Muirra t and drivet ■on* j/ </ie. uod ; the tnofiu. ta ot Itf-v-ir nnd Corruption CO .su JrikKj*. Wiu/ E SsVELi.INt*, liRCi'SY. 9 k r V NCKil S 1 •:MOttS A c . »rc ull of a n ;-.luioua >U Gh-.dis *i:«i •*-■* mi h, «rt « rhill the rucativa Toacc of the riAiUAl'AtlJLLlAN KESOLV EM! i Th u SeT ffuln, by whattver r.nm.i devipnat jd, is the rexult .if itorn the blood, induc’ d or (Au*o4 Ch.-cutc inUuiuation. i'h.v. tho.,-.icpcaitR take p’aoe *wh-n tk.* bo.fd is p<*>r t w.a*, wafery, and incapable of Ikoiu.tiit in Miititoiu its proper coiL»li;uente, or j.uin tks yrooriKC ..I some virus oi |artS4>.i in th.- blood, its M.-r- «’iry. «'ai.>niol, Corrosive .*>110 tniMto. aruic'.i istbe C< 1 r>* aivBCiihai*i«ol Merrury or othcra^-uts ;nv«n iauntli- j , . • La j eim^ an t wliu-.h color ix.L'ch in the ootnmon tdvcrtis-d i IHiVCf Complete. A re«tl0SS UlmOCS Nur AHS UtREIl Ult CHANGED ’ , , ^ * v l • 1 J >14011 ruEiu .vatu r a l con uiTiuy. the (uo beauty of the day; sunshine blurs 2. That unl‘*ft< (h« rep«i» or nutriment.* arr pmitar th-*u *.h« •aau*s t th »t d.*noin>isiti»n «n l dor-ty will ,.u- Jir.VcUf-, and the [.OM'eiB of lliti \*muuic esu*us.ci. J. Th/* t?i«* d^- n; body caunot be au*t anM on any %r««im ni nio-tr -rtinti tb it exhauite tiie or fads the evazescent coloring of her check ; freet oi]s the tender outlines of her face into sud- den harshness. Her pencil has ever to »> n.un.s tli* V-OJi. U*. only m-umni :. t'■ u-f' -.liicb t , . , i th. —*«' i»r..re pro.'-rvod, .si or. wn<u ih. ^ovkb i to be at work, even while the Loors worn -w u»o lo If -1 -,-f.J , . _ , —, j , work ngamst her at last. Care ploughs its lines across her brow ; motherhood de stroys the elastic lightness of her form; the 4. That H.a<fway*a karra par’Ilian Rea* «! vcot RiippnuB a want new- r br-foiv j <*aM*«-«*d or known 1 to exist iu meUicmo, that thix now found prinriple m A'htmiu'ai scknioB, wUi^h bn* bo«nj brought to xu . Li u por- ! fvei syat-ra of euro i«* exinbitt-d w> follows : _ _ l. Itsjp-rat puacr in aa»irailAtiua tho f«*o*i »* ID fire! i , , r* * . .» : * /*.. v rSYtn* ats^e of duttll.ition m the pro-'.<*x nf tju-'ivdion. ** >• v&ie j hloOIIl Oi her CrKCit, the C|U.Ca ildStl 0* Her and chyle with tho noui*2»*uj? etcimnu of bU<o <f , , . . ^ r*.. a*per«tw>g from ti ]i.|iiius refute and inert uuai- CJC, I MU 6 and Va.ll6u H8 tllC years *0 . iii.-s before they are taken up by lh»* luctecals snu a a formed into biood. Heft we that by it* WundcrW power it char^i’* th»t systmit ’-i»h tho very eK&niic^ui prinaj 1c that forma the vital powvrs of the txaly, anditx cdemirai arti«a on thv blood in its (irnndive and con- piete <ondiuo.i, R.-j-aratcs»-v^ry atom of rufiisc matcriutor e eiut.nt, uUt of which the virus of dirworio >* formed 3. That, the nioo<i ihu* prciutred, and supplied,vith ik^an- aouri'hitiK propartic i bcconieB atrong, rich xnd baalthy, and hold* m solution it* proper cons ( i*u.nti, tkroufii the fca.r*n|mrif!lau flcaolvcitt, a; i r«p«!r« tb« waxtes of the body wdb sound and herltky atructura*-. Such is tho wonuerful power the 8a*aa- parilliafs Reaalveat exert* on the blood and juicee of U«c system, thut no virulent humor* oi pin- eon* will exist by which deposits arc made. ». The rapidity whicH ?hc Sarkaparllllan ators ti e circulation, aud communicate* ita curative pwers through the Blood, Sweat, Urine, and other dum, s*>- oures th.* oonstiTni nt ee<uotions of o«oto respective egan, oatabluiiinv functi >aal Liu \aouy thruugbo-. t tho xy tom ; ( through in act ion a; mi j><»wer over tho Secretion, the 1 Liv«r so reto* it* .Aural or proper allotment ofbi e ; : tbu. A £ . ua Kidn- -; * urea; "Uha thic iiu.ii;. I earuon, a> ,w, 't wonueuxui medicine not only <sta’*- labea uealih in the sick body, but preiiervce the pyiitan in health. As sre h-avo shown the principle on which duomsc is form--1, ms well tho only sensible theory of cure, cuLim that the ranc , * > of cure of the >nra«.|>n-^*l* But woman is still true to her ideal. She won't know when she is beaten, aid she manages to steal fresh victories even in her defeat. She invents new conccptionsof wo manly grace; she rallies at thirty, ant fronts us with the beauty of womanhood ; slu makes a last stain* at silty with the beauty of age It is the fame g oat artist, who exhilits year after year, but ibiose styles rangestrom the the girlish innocence of a Fra Angelico to the severe matronage of a Zorhiran. She fails, like Caesar, wrapping her mantle 'round I he—‘buried iu woolen! 'twould a sai, t } pwoke!” Deatk listens pitifully to tie : hnginos of a lifetime, aud wrinkled lace Ha. ItMoiv.ut w unlim t.-a, ana that wrcryV|i'\ , smiles back its last Cold Smile r ith th.ti, at aOhiwai-.Scroftilsttior Oiryauic Di-wha. - ‘ _ ,ra,eriy wiihin u. *].>■.i.i rni: ? «. a ■ si me’.hiD'sjf thi pnj*Jiness of eighteen. THK OIUSAI SECRET OR CORE tj > ° ,t, r n we M.dicin, consists m th, am-<.'on .a miprrfiOTt [. Perhiip wf enjoy beauty less tnt n e In thi.- M-diom, ouu-:»ts mth« »l' < non ot mo^dient OontainniK cuiu'-ve uud nouri-.liinjf prO|>e:t!0* Liat *up- v ply the blood ftiul systrin wiili su b. coi.stituentx , which, ia a cojutd*<m of tlisease nud depr wriy, it x* led- j WnU..,.u 5 cai.i ye aud .io..n.!.in a f .ro,«:C«Jaat .u^ . J . |0n| u [, sur d connection which wtti. the cn.-an.t.-. n of .t., -..»t ! men have etablished between the enjoy- i’tpjir lion13 cluit form the SAltdATAlflJaLiAN KE-SOD j ment >f it an< love. One ounce of real love would outweigh papa's petting in childhood or mamma's fuss about her ehild'scoming out. There are jealousies of the schtolroom and jealousies of the ball- ,f jj a f_ room, littb envies, little spites that line with thorns a pth which seems strewn with roses Then thee is the plague of fops, the eternal circle of upid admirers, the eternal drivel men abo.t town. The prettiest lips have pouted scuetiuies with a longing for the ug liness whch secures their sisters a chat with a man of sense. The prettiest bosom has heaved alittlc rebellious at the destiny that consigns it to the stupidest of eldest sons. Perhaps it might have been better to have been a Ittle charming and to have married that anusing younger brother with an in come ofa few hundreds a year. Sometimes, too, a pretty woman will sigh a little over the iutnito littleness of her lif'q, will long for the wider word of politics and effort from which ler very piettincss and its train of re sults sluts her oat. Marriage is a mere ca tastrophe, poisoning her existence, restric ting ler to a siigle adorer in the place of a thousand. Then, too, the single adorer is so to keep, and the thousand are so easy togaim and so begins tho strife between pleasure and duty, the little warfare fought out under the wu.-Pful eyes of tattling dowagers and aud impertineu. fribbles. Aud tbeo comes the inevitable decay, [ s e!la y to turn from the glass, but it is impi-'aible to turn from the eyes that surround on. eod every eye becomes a mirror in which the fvetty woman reads the wreck of her charms. Younger rivals pass her by, the circle of ajorers-hinfcs to a few bores and old baux, men treat i^. r ,.1 ...c-md rate stories, or talk with their eyes fixed on another corner of the room. There is a shade of iuipertiuce in the address of the young guardsman; wall flowers claim her own. She has lived for a year or so, and her whole existence is a mere looking bacV. to that year of life. Or it may be that her prettiness simply passes on from phase to phase, lut even the prettiness of thirty-five fascinating as it often is, seldom fascinates its possessor. She conquers new realms, but she fails to reconquer the old. She brings VEV1 . I ineiu. « .. a... .0,0. We fancy it iropossi- 11 th- -or.-taucT-.t of Oxygen was uhaoMai frum th» ! [,l a t 0 care ouch about a pretty face unless •tmo.pl,crie ai-, life would Wcomo extinct. Bo, when ’ ^ ^ j, j t our PWI1 gallery. “What the blood become, oxiciuetc l of it. vital constituent*, it j * . . . - ■ . W I*, taiw-rcio- and d*«.-d hnm .m H the b„iy. rare I how i.r she be, she is not so fair to um iergraduates to her feet, her desk ^«m.ton^o«d.a»y«-. e ; .^.a ~^re ;i we.!** It . perhaps truer to say that nine- * - ^ with tlw , vrio8 of unw hUkcred Xladway’a SaraaparllllaM Raaolraat i* to 0 OJT enjoyment of beauty ai8a|V th" blood "ltd general system whut Oxtokn i* to the 1 , w , •tmo.p'.t-ric Z it nipple, the Me p.indhta, and OCrt Wit. pOSSCS«.on. 1 he lover dwells 00 ena'oe. the blood to hoW in .elution ail iu nutuni con- ■ fii. mistess' face t ill he loses all sense of the rutuento. • world c* beauty without it. He is like the The nsdally quiet little village of Middle- town, Missouri, was lately thrown into a painful fever of excitement by an awful ca tastrophe which occurred to the band lately attached to James Robinson & Co.'s circus and animal show, aud led by Professor M. C. Sexton. Upon starting out. from Cincinnati for the season, the manager determined to pro duce something novel in the way of a band chariot, and conceived the idea of mounting the band upon the colossal den of performing Xumidiun lions, and whiuh would form one of tie principal and most imposing features of tho show. Although repeatedly warned by Professor Sexton that he deemed the cage insecure and dangerous in the extreme, the managers still persisted in compelling the band to ride upon it. On the fatal morning of the 12th, the band took their places and the precession commenced to move amid the shouts of the multitude of rustics who :ad assembled to witness the grand pageant, and hear the enlivening strains of music. Not a thought of danger was entertained by any one, but the awful catastrophe was about to occur. As the driver endeavored to make a turn in the streets the leaders became entangled and threw the entire team into confusion, and he lost control of them, aud becoming freightened they broke into a violent run. Upon the opposite side of the st-eet the fore wheel of the cage came in contact with a large rock with such force as to cause the traces and stanchions which supported the roof gave away, thereby precipitating the entire band into the awful pit below. For an instant the vast crowd was paralyz ed with fear, but for a moment only, and then arose such a shriek of agony as was never heard before. The awful groans of terror and agony which arose from the poor victims who were being torn, lacerated bv tho friolit- tui monsters below, were heart-rending and sickening to a terrible degree. Kevery mo ment some one of the band would extricate themselves from the debris and leap overtbc sides of the cage to the ground with a wild spring, and faint away upon striking the earth so great was their terror. But human nature could not stand and sec men literally devour ed before their very eyes, for there were willing hearts and strong arms ready to ren der every nsistancc necessary to rescue the the unfortunate victims of tills sbockiug ca lamity. A hardware store which happened to stand opposite was invaded, by the request of the noble hearted proprietor, and pitchforks crow bars and long bars of iron, and, in fact, every available weapon, wasbronght iuto reqisition. The side doors of the cage were quickly torn from their fastnings, and then a horrible sight was presented view. Mingled among the brilliant uniforms of the poor unfortunates lay legs, arms torn from their sockets aud halfdevoured, while the savage brutes glared ferociously, with sickly, green colored eyes, upon the petrified crowd. Professor Charles White arrived at this moment and gave orders in regard to extricating the dead and wounded, he well knowing it would be a difficult and dangerous undertaking to remove them from the infuriated monsters. Stationing men with forks and bars at every available point, he sprang, fearlessly, into the den, amid the savage monsters, and commenced raising the wounded and pass ing them upon the outside to their friends He had succeeded in removing the wound- j fed, and was procecdeding to gather up the j ^ ^ ^ uof . nrlunatc awW wardness of lifeless, when the tuaimuoth lion, known to take riiu*. for »the sI^-pMii1»n 0 iScs»w the etmaiA I connoiscur who so dotes on the little Corrcg- «re b tuwh3!V finned in iho luiiifl. th* Igio b< has picked up for a song that he ^®Sl» < i*rmlu**S,‘!lISw4fexsmistetn ot o* • cease to care for the larger range oi art. j portion ft.,. iuu£ ricaU'Ud'i, .iml tho con.sni!?>« live, McrotuUiij ttuini;. „ receive* rood, il not hexith. rA teal way of enjoying pretty women with the S'.rephous, but there is a terrible irony about ii all, and she turns with a sense'of the ridic ulous from their siglis and protestations. She is beaten and she knows it. Strephou has duie enough if he has served to cover her rcreat. Perhaps the one later prettiness tint a woman feels to have real power, more Ei.i.vn lady ct:r.CD. lor- CreT.', Sore Lrg«, likeiing from th* ( an^Gloeoe MoSTism, o —oMreial tmvellw, | t I AruuU Wr*c, aw titer* u* t u.,aer dale of April 17, !%{< | ” ~ ■dem* rillf uu: BO ceruficate. wrting. Hundred* call r a« won. erful. •* \Ip*«r*. u’nrrB A Scott, principal dr: . tx lere. infiarm me of ayM;r»«'U of note Hi gh ** l> -eu «ntr. '*', cured liy 14AlJ W A Y' .S.VU ^A- .1. AN R E^OLV F.V i • " t iA‘ ri pi-rfs an. tlot ion.* .? Chroni*Sore Lex, Ail ot to fall in love with a pretty : P cl !lI1 l )S thau ‘ hc 01 > on ‘ h > 18 rhn .r„c InvR—the okssure i ^ I’tottmeSo ot old age. I here is the charm ( " dd'ie ffcver wom;u -t. all. The true, joys—the pleasure derive from the Is neb ter of children There seems to be some trouble in the “Republican" camp in Charleston. The Republican organ cracks its party lash over the heads of Messrs. PeBarge and Pelany. It tells them the cry of ‘black man's Oovcrn- ment” is as had as that or the white man’s Qovcrninent. The organ, we presume, would rather have it, “This is the Government of Messrs. Scott & Co.” The “ring worms’s are in danger. DeLarge, “a brown man,” as the Rcjiublican call's him, said: “Wejoinedthispartybeeau.sc it professed eqnal right and privileges to all, and as long as they do as they profess, l stay with them. We joined this party, and we arc thankful because they gave us our freedom. IVe thought, on the ground of expediency, we must do nothing to offend them, but some impudent scoundrels in the party now say, ‘You want too much; you want everything!' We place them in position; we elected them, and by our voters we made them our masters. We now propose to change this thing a little, and let them vote for us. It is no more than reasonable they should do so. When a colored man is capable of fiilin an office. I say give it to him; and I shall fight this over the entire State. This movement has not been made without consultation You will find no intelligent colored man who is not with me. Some parties thought they ! had worked their own schemes, but we work ed too. There is not a prominent colored man inthis State who is not pledged to stand by the doc. trine which I pronounce, and we shall suc ceed not only in the city, but also in the County and State.” Colonel Delaney, a colored man, said: “Wc lay the basis for the oew campaign, and this basis must be clearly defined. We are not equal to our white friends in many qualities, and we require therefore, a proci- pnl to depend upon. We must h" valued for something. We are not el*** 1 to tbe white race in general inteFfgence. and wo .Lcrefore have an ollhet to he equal, and let that offset be ‘honesty, and ‘justice.’ I don't believe in social equality; there is no such thing. If we want to associate with a man, we’ll do it, and without laws. But let us demand, as a black race, (when I say ‘black’ I take in the lightest as well as the blackest hue,) let us demand justice. 1 take the ground that no people have become a great people who had not their own leaders. Take the world over and all nations arc represented by their own people, and blark men must have black leaders. We must be directors of our own people, and let it be known that neither Major Willoughby, Mr. Fox, Gov. Scott, or any one else, can lead black men.” TIIE NEGRO AND COOLIE RACE COMPARED. The Rev. Charles Ktngsly thus compares the negro with the eooiie race, as experienced by him during a recent visit to Trinidad: We saw almost daily proofs of the coolie men's fondness for their children; of their fondness, also—an excellent sign that me morale is not destroyed at the root tor dumb animals. A coolie cow or donkey i B petted, led about tenderly, tempted with tit bits; pet animals where they can be got, arc the coolie’s delight, as they arc the de light of the w:ld Indian. I wish 1 could say the same of the negro. His treatment to his children and ol the beast of burden is, but too often, ns exactly opposed to that of the coolie a* are his manners. No wonder ! that the two races do not, and it is to be feared never will, amalgamate; that the coolie showmen as Old Nero, sprang with » Fright ful roar, upon his keeper, fastening his teeth and claws in him, in his neck and shoulders! lacerating him, in a horrible manner. Pro fessor White made three herculean efforts to shake the monster off, hut without avail, and gave orders to fire upon him. The contents of four Colt's navies were immediately proured into the carcass of the ferocious animal, and he full dead, and the brave little man, notwithstanding the fearful manner in which he was wounded, never gesture and vulgarity of manners of the average negro, and still mors of the negress^ looks on them as savages; while the negro, his turn, hates the coolie as a hard-working interloper, and despises him as a heathen, or that heavy fights between the two races arise now and then, in which the coolie, in spite of his slender limbs, has generally the no van tage over the burly negro, by dint of ms .-teat courage and terrible quiskncss. DEMOCRATIC ADDRESS. The following is the sensible uddrcss made by the Democratic Senators and members of Congress. Wc deem it good advice, and the case is strongly put: To our fellow-citizens of t\r Unitcil States —Friends of Constitutional, Economical and Honest Government. The undersigned beg leave to call your attention to the peculiar importance of the elections which take place this year, and re spectfully submit some suggestions for your consideration By State Legislature to be elected, nearly one-third of the United States Senate will be chosen—nearly all the mem bers of the next House of Representatives are to be elected next full. Upon the com ing elections, then, depends the question whether the Demouatic and conservative element iu the Senate shall ho increased, and whether that element shall have a majority in the House of Representatives, and as a consequence, whether we shall have consti tutional, economical an honest government, or a continuance of revolutionary, extrava gant and wasteful partisan rules ; whether we shall have general, uniform, just and con stitutional legislation, with reasonable taxa tion and frugal expenditure, or unconstitu tional, partial unjust class legislation, with oppressive and unequal taxation and waste ful expenditure. That we have strong rea sons to hope for a favorable 'result is plainly apparent. Elections already held clearly show that the tide of reform has set in with a power that euni.jl be resisted, if no blun ders be committed by the friends of refonn. If they do their duty and act wisely—if they throw off all apathy and aci with vigor and stead fastness—there is every reason to hope that their efforts will be rewarded by success. Let there be no dissensions about minor matters, no time lost in the discussion of head issues, no manifestation of narrow or proscriptive feeling, no sacri&se of the cause to gratify personal ambition or resentment, and let the best men be chuecn for candid ates, and we may hope to see our country redeemed from misrule. Aud iu this con nect ion, we beg leave to say a word to our fellow-citizens of the Southern States : Do not risk the loss of Senators and Representa tives by electing men who caunot take the test oath, or who aro under the disability im posed by the fifteenth amendment. What ever may be said of the validity of that amendment, or of the test oath Act, you may rest assured "that Senators elected by the votes of members of Legislatures who arc held by the radicals to be thus’disqualified, will not be permitted to take their scats, aud that members of the House of Representa tives thus disqualified, will also be excluded. It is the plainest dictate of practical wisdom not to incur any such risks. We hope soon to sec the day when all disabilities will be removed, hut iu the meantime, do not, we intreat you, lose the opportunity to strength en the Democratic and conservative force in fongress and the possibility, nay, probabili ty, of obtaining a majority in the nest House, ufKor by putting it in the pow cr of our adversar..- verthrow or disre- gard your elections The National Democracy has thus put it self on the ground of Constitutional Kco nomicul aud Honest Government. The New York Trib""* of Friday last, iu an article upon settling in the South, points out some of the causes of the sluggish influx of settlers. In contrasting the West with the South it says that the potent charm cf the former is that everybody believe, that an'. thing can be done. On the other hand half the time and force of the South oozes away in visions ot the by-gone, in day dreame o/ . „ j. » „,; 4 ,Ki 1,9.0 Seen. Planters sit on galleries in the long noontide, with money in their pockets, aud say the South can nev er do anything without Northern capital. “Men of the South,” says the Tribune, “no country ever became strong and great on the money of absent ^capitalists. Our kings ol the railroad and spindle are powerless to give ubstantial aid. What do you want Job Pcpftvtmcnt* The above Department alt* bv promptly at tended to, and all work in this lino executed oa lbs most satisfactory terms. We will furnish at short notice LA IF 2JLAXKS, JTJXD HILLS, FOSTERS, CIRCULARS, a us rxess cards, WEDDING CARDS, BILL HEADS, FAN PH LETS, LABELS, All Job Work will be Ca»H on delivery. be because her sons are unskilled in the toblc arte that “make nations great and keep them so.” «+ ■ >■ ' ■ ■ — AN EMANCIPATED HEAVE'S GRATITUDE, Governor Alcorn, of Mississippi, recently appointed W. G- Henderson to a Judgeship, and in sending his nomination to the Senate said, he selected him from several gentlemeu equally well qualified, solely on account of the letter which we print below. The Gov ernor added that he could not. refrain front saying, “on an occasion so touching to every man of the South, that there is an elevating of the good old word, when labor toiled for duty, not for meat/ in this spectacle of an emancipated slave consenting to sacrifice all other favorites for office in order to conse crate the influence of his position as a worthy member of the Legislature to bestow honor on his late master.” This is the letter : HorsE OF Rkpiiiskntativis, l Jackson, Miss., March 20, 1870. ) To His Excellency Gov. J. L. "Alcorn. Governor : I was a slave of Colonel W. G. Henderson. Boys together aa wc were he is the centre of tho tendcrest associations of my life. Arrived at manhood's estate, I was still intimately connected with him in tho relation of his body servant. WhenTio was wounded at Uppcrvillc, Va., en route for Gettysburg, he languished in the valley of Virginia, in the hands of the Federal authori ties, until it was my privilege to take him away, through the lines, to his own people. The affectionate relation of our childhood, having ripened iuto a fixed friendahip iu our manhood, has been invigorated further by a mutuality of service and devotion which make* Mm dear to my soul. My friend aud loving master is a candid ate for thcoffiee of Circuit Judge of the First District. He is a man of unblemished hou- or—is a lawyer of high standing at the Bar, and having stood out for you boldly daring tho late canvass 1 is a good Republican. Now, Governor, I, by Ac mysterious pro vidence of God, am a member of the Legis lature. I want no office, no honor, save that of standing here in my place as a duty to my race- But I believe my position gives me some claim ujion the patronage you are about to dispose ; and I now place, without reservation, all the credit of that claim to the account of my earnest prayer that you ap point to the Judgeship of the First District the playmate of my boyhood, the companion of my manhood, the generous friend of my whole life—uiy f irmer master, Colonel Hen derson. Hoping you will grant this first and hst prayer which I, as a member of this House of Representatives, make to yon us Governor of Mississippi, I have the honor to he your Excellency's very humble servant. Ambrose Henderson. Fearful Tragetlv In Mlaaonrl. From th 1 ' f?, ‘ f^tis RepHldicnn, we con dense the ‘blpwin* *«~*"nt oF , 0 e of the . trible d«edb of man age r • » most hi v f a,,a desperation we ' : ' Some months since, V. Quincy, Ashley, and Watson Seminary ot ’ .y that before she left hom \ ' ' z. ■ The Bathino season.—Tho bathing season is at hand; and many there arc who i ^ without l rci j. ht » What good daily enjoying the luxury of a good bHt | ^ ; , iale8 d( , yoU miles.* you can supply There arc rules for bathing as well as every ^ ^ ^ thcir ! of Ifu's afterglow over the gray, qiuat head, ! sis of this fan or that, but iu the »orsc of v_ h T weseini t-4 wiiii DYSfEfM veaviRAVKt* j pretty forms an) pretty faces about one, ' A V > K *. It -l A _ " win-! * Ur *''l •ej — 1'^ tt .* n .'.\u ; yi* \ v iu>OL*:vr. Jo*irt!A.\ Fhuk-.anp, ■>?' WiJdor 'St.:, p, cured, fcy me bmtl*, of Blc. iiugfrym the Lung*, N;lit Sweats, Tin• !t*it urn; non. “ In everv town I -i.:t I i.ear of ur ndottl «nr«\s bv tbaSAUSAl \KILLIAN KKSriLVLNT. F iverykind «f iiu:n-v\ ‘ ore, .-'Km KrujGi .ind a w A-cning (trwchn ges, tii j..*‘j.|e ise it, :ui<t beiwmfi <.iM ; .■**• with Fite. 8cro f . While f*w*• r.iig, Soic Ji.-. m.l Kv**.«, Now. Mild M* nth, : h ui of Sn i. '• w .'i.l. 'ul r- np lv ac t |n»o. rt.illy on the h’oo l thill, who t-Ae it Ikxumic t>uo i£, fc»uu I. m l lu iltl '. ‘•UK'•. «i aioiumru “ Cotamct cml rav« li<T.’* RAHWAY’ •phi at ii d«t .A* McM.i WAr*ii. SARSArAKILLIAN »:| )LVKN !’ ia l flic, or Bottle f-r ?'*. Lali not ai , .n.i.t l>!:. KAiriVY’S Mediant M.tuicu Line. JS«w YoiU fly. I The joy of variety, the pleasure of tie inex haustible rangt of the beautiful ooims to the admirer of prety w.iiuen, never to the lover of pretty- womm. We arc not quarreling with tho instinct which leads us through pfetty faces into paths of domestic peace, ft is often necessary to restrict one’s sphere j ot enjoyment; and if one is aW'itely obliged men ' to marry one had better marry a pretty wife than an ugly one. The refinomeot which the student of art gains from constant oon- anvnte, that we read a subtler and divuer 1 beaut ; thau iu the rosy cheek of girlhood, a beautv spiritualized, mobile with every tho't and emotion, yet restful with the restofyenrs. An infinite tenderness and largeness of heart, a dignity whose grace aud naturalness rolls it of all sotiso of restraint, a touch that has in it something of cunpassionatencss of Heaven, this is the apotheosis of pretty wo- A Texas man/who has heard that he is the rightful heir to any number of million in Germany, HARLi.EE & DARiAN, ATTCRMEYS AT L.W. • Darlington, g. f., s r w. w. hari.le.-., t i f>.‘. March 23, P‘70. :} ■ AN j '.let w.iii beauty of color and form every one ; pouffdty and the title of Duk ! gains in some degree from daily contact with ! annouiices that lis caves notniog about the 1 the be.iuiiful in flesh and blood. Woman ; title, a» lie would not give up tho pride of Ls tho art of home, tho Giorgione whose ; being bi ing an American citizen and a Tex- ' brilliancy dashes through the parsonage, the j »□ for all the dukedoms in Germany ; hut he Prrugioo whose grace tempers the rough- »« ;?>«>? » f ' M 1,16 mo ney, as be finds that , tiers of every d .v. the Ruben? whose large- : * s respected even in a free country left the cage until every vestige of the dead spinner was carefully gathered together and placed thing clsc.and as in all others respects, they I T ^ ^ thcir c | leor f n | i upon a sheet, preparatory for burial. It was ! are generally disgraced, lor instance- j i)crut ^ a|lJ t ' lCat v First of all, you must make found that three of the ten who mounted the i baths should not be taken wit .i>. .jul ioui .it , ^ c i tMa p for the mechanic, and not force cage a short time before were killed outright j least before eating^r withtn two hour,^ after ^ ^ ^ ^ Minnesota wheat, Ohio cheese, and four others tenihly lacerated. The names l of the. killed arc August Schoer, Conrad j The head and face si ou Frceiz and Chavis Greiner Coffins were ; bathed at the "onicncemont of every hath, procured, andan immcdiatehurialdctcrmined j to prevent the rushing oi blood to the head upon, as the bodies were so frightful torn and j and ward off unpleasant a msations A bath aud lacerated as to be unrecognizable to their or u>0 ,, ruatly f, ti ,, uc d by exercise, most intimate friend. It was a melancholy j yfodi-rare extrei.-e bcfiire ai d after bathing day for Middletown, and a sadder | is beneficial All general baths | influx of the best people, of families who will for the friends and companions of the de taken hr-skly, the body well rnl-cd olid - - .... , ouicklv dried, and warmth and reaction ceased. I J / . Of all that vast multitude who started out j Dr0U o “ • - iu the morning with anticipations of a glad I Pave YOUR Pr.ANT holiday, few left for their homes with dry j Bright, furnishes the Farmers Home Jour- eyes after the triple funeral, for the entire , , tn j with the following useful and simple di- community followed the remains to the quiet ’ veetions for protecting flowers, plants, kts., little cemetery. At midnight the carcass of | *y om the ravages of insects : the slain beast was quietly buried on the lot j “Pour a small tumblerful of Phenic acid where was intended to be given the exhibition ' ; n to „ p;,il of water, and with a fine sprink- bnt which was never accomplished. The | ] eri sprinkle your plants and the ground a v - •Si.v-c vv » I ‘ t • •• r* -X ’VAf ■ V'- .. -• a'-vc’ftS followed Mias longer period before and after is better | 1 ' . . , k 1 , t . - i . and potatoes from Maine ; to till lua garden aid be thoroughly 1 , . . with a spade Tammcred in MassacliUseUs and feeds his chickens wit* scrap cake fron Cineinnati.” The Tribune conclude!' its good advice ly the following suggestions: 1 The !$.!Oth needs above all thingian from Insects.— Dr iiotlseUlb-4n a swamp or in a wilderness, who wants ichools, churches, bridges and mrn- pik 's^who are not content with day wages or ignorant of the value of things offer'd for sale. 2. People having these tastes like to be neighbors, and will not go in groups unless « large tract can be obtained. 3. ^'he South abounds in soils, climates and scenery exactly adapted to be the. home lions are the same cues which nearly cost : aronn d them two or three evenings in sue-,—home of the best British blood that ever "-'a 1 .-Av :. ' . , , pipeless and del_ Soimcrs from Quincy to Ashley, and hired bin ■•’If as a farm laborer near the town for tlnpurposc of acting the spy on her action*, ft ppears that last Sunday he went to town arl attended church, where she saw the yting lady in company with a gentleman of hr acquaintance. Ooe traced them home, j*d followed them into the house where Miss uturners boarded. Going into the room •vhcre the lady was, he asked permission of ner to talk with her privately, which she granted, the gentleman who accompanied her from the church retiring. Coc immediately hoiked the door and commenced the work of butchering her with an old knife which ho had procured for the murderous purpose.— The screams of the lady immediately alarm ed the whole house, and a utiraber cf persons rushing to the door and finding it looked. brokTitopcn They found Miss Summers lying on the floor in a pool of blood, with her spiuo completely severed, other fatal »«»<*» in her breast, and the knife still stickilig in the last wound. She died iu a few momenta. The maddened lover stood by, begging tho** that came iu to kill him at one*. ^ Coe was arrested and placed in Bowling Green jail, to await his trial, and has not been lynched an was at first reported- Mis# Summers was 22 vears of age, and is said to have been beautiful and highly accomplished. The'-enclopy of Whittemoreis thus Stated: .•ii c ~ ^co* fXr linn-