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If ^Pf^S ®l)e P e inocrrt t. PUBLISH K) BVERT WEDNESDAY MOBMNG, TEIIMS :—$2.50 per annum in advance. $1.50 Advertisementi. Ona Square, first insertion t . One Square, second insertion . . . 1.00 Every subsequent insertion ...... 50 Contract AdvertismenU inserted tpon the most Reasonable Terms. Marriage Notices aud Obituaries not exceeding 6 lines, inserted free. &&"’ All communicstions intended for publica tion in the Darlington Democrat, must be ad dressed to the Proprietor. HEALTH! BEAUTY!! SiroMK, rare and Rich Dlood—In crease af Flesh and Weight—Clear Skla and Beautiful Complexion, SECURED to ALL. RADWAY’S Sarsaparillian Resolvent BY A. P. LUCAS, “Man'i noblest mission to ndrsnee, ITis woes ssnail, his weal enhance. Ilia rights enforOs, his wrongs redress—" $2-50 FEU, A.3Sr3STXJ^E. DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, GENERAL INETLLIGENCE AND INDUSTRIAL IMPROVEMENTS. VOLUME 2. DARLINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 13, 1870. NO. 37- [From the Charleston Daily News.] A BOLD DEMAGOGUE. WH1TTEM0RE IN A PASSION WITU CONGRESS. UK THREATENS VEXGKANCB LOGAN. ▲GAINST GENERAL B. E. Whittcmore, the disgraced and ex pelled member of Congress, from the First Congressional District of South Carolina. TIt * ASTI'NISHINO CURES. . n , „ „ , _ , , , , 2!L&2R*X i!2 * A, lD AKB Tl'i CIIANIIES, , prints in the New York Standard (the organ TS5„ ,,01, ' PJ,f>EK 0''E3 UNtlER THE INFLtd K ^ n i of hia patron, B. F. Butler,) a column or more in defence of his course. lie says:— ‘•It has been said "that I have made a for tune out of the freedmeu;” that I have es tablished schools—a large number—and charged the children twenty fire cents each, “VruV* trijly' woSuauriit^siijr' wi —s n. x xi a r tvary Day an Increase In Flesh end Weight Is Seen end Felt. neromi*, Con.wmp. Ion, Srphlf ls.nnenr«d and traal.d Ven.r«nl. In It. manr waw.raan n £Z 1,. _»» ..... wt. ... . . Gln»«lui«r dUcutae, Ulccra lu tlt'e Moutli, Tumora. Kodcr Im the J* 1 **®*# »iid o«l»er perla of the system, ■ere Kvcn, Ntrumous dlselierscs fruui Use luruptlwe tllseeses of the Kyes, JVosee Nlouth, ami the wur«t forms of Nhln <li«- «eses. Krnpilons, Kcrer Uores, &c«!d Ilrad. XCImx %V,*ru», hslt ftheuua # Kryslf>rt»s, diiCMe, Klleelc dpnts. Worms Im the Flesh, Tum.trs, Cancers In the tVoeob, autft all weakening and painful discharge*, Wight lo** of Sperm anti all wastes of the life principle, are within the curative *■***■• of Katlvvey** Sarsaparillian ltesol« 'vent, aud a few days use will prove to any person uatug it for eKher of these form* of disease. Its potent power to cure them. < * 00 * Sarsaparillian ttesolvcnt vveei sli known rerruyiisi urenu, in the core of Chronic, ■erefulau* Constitutional, Skin am! Sr phi l* >td disease but It is the only posit re remety for Kidney, Bladder Vrinary, and Womb dUea*e« v ravel, lita- Ineles Dropsy Stoppage of Water, Incon tinence af l rftue, Bright’s disease, Albam- tnxarta, ond tn all cases where there are Brick dust deposits, or the water Is thick, aloudy, mixed wltn sulxtnuees like the White of an egg. or threw!* Itks white silk, •r there is a morbid dark, bilious appear- •n««, and white bone dost deposits, end thers Isa pricking, burning sensa tion when passing water, and pain lu the ■•nail of the Hack, and al«»ng the Loins, In all these conditions Had way’s farsapartl- lian Resolvent aided by the application of Atadway’s Heady Relief to the *ptne and •wall of the Hack, and the Bowels regula ted %% tth one or twa of Rad way’s Itegnlat. Bills per day. '-vtll soon make a e<*u,- I lcte cure. In a few days, the patient vtlli e enabled «o hold and discharge his water naturally without pain.and the Trine u ltl be restorod to Its natural clear, and amber or sherry color. THU WABTEK OF THE B^PY a*# ntaMidd with a*-v, healthy, and vuoroua bhtod, that tarauhM soui.S struaure. Hi-ioe all sutfcHns from ATssautute Dirchasoss, «th..» AIALK or FKMALK, ■of th? Wemh, Pierua, or other ory ns, vL- ther I^ucor- fhsna, Rueim, or Krupi vs dim-h'irxus, of every kin«l, or fism vivlon.tf of “ SeH-sVase, 1 ’ Irum the Geniu’il Oinuds, er ▼ea-real di-hmyos, or ul«n:r*, or «or*«, tluourh the V*p«rsurs process of KaDWaY’S «▲ KSAiAIUL- 1*1 X N, ore siTcs’e*!, sa-i the ruptured organ* hc.\)cd. THE TRUK THE* ’BY «»F CURE. BA f> WAY'S NVURAI’A KILLIAN RESOLVENT -sapp tes the synssm, throu K h the blo<>a, urine, event, and e:ruc<urs-ia:itftif( oonsiitu, nU mtii Tus>ue tuukii. r. EUsh mtkiux. Heat or Caloric sni E«t miking el«rn..nt*. jxl, sf its lymstitMents sre n'>urithiitg. Verifying, and -S rtuglh-nirut. H [Zipairt lira $. and <trir*t t ' u » m J t** ihe products of I*cc »y ani Corruption. tCvftUdruiO, WiliTK HWLLUNti, LKoTrtY, hYl'IHLLt, C VNCEI14, K AIOKS Ac., sre all of « ociufu.ous si.> '(iid ax xu. h, art viihin the ciuativs r»a/« o» the .SAUNAI AltJLLlAN UliSOLVi^Ni i i Thai H-t fulu, by whatever nsme desi^ivito.1, is ths result «f dep-orita from the blood, induced or tuusod h> Cb • omc iutiniik tuon. That de^^its take place ■sr*i«*4 ih« b;oo-l tr pofjr % weak, axifery. and incnpnbie uf Lsidiax tu solnti<»n its projv-r constituents, or from the f-rsicnw nt some vuu» or p ison in the blood, as Mcr- a-uy. Calomel, t\»rri.>siv»> .>ut).imate., viiich L the C«*rro- str- Chiwn-le of Mcr-ury *»r other aconts jdvon in mrdi- «tnie^ Aa*i vliich ont.T far^oly in ths couuuou advertised f arsapanraA, N 11* AbS iRmiO Ult CilA.\ULI> > ROM Til CilC NATcRAL CoNDITioX. 3. That unless the repairs or nutriments are (treater than the vaxirs, ih«t doromimsitiwii and decay Will sQ- yc.’T«n*-, and the pavers of li£r booome ethsnaied. II. rhr’ the dvin~ body cannot tic suxtruned on any »•* ® f me It. arn.n ihat caUatMt* llio svhtem, or LsiJs ■%* •»un«h the b‘o*v-l, the only medium tfirnu\rh which Shs e»'t*; fon.. s are projerved, an i on woioh the trrowih •Si the t.«iy «I<*;>en 1*. ^ 4. That RadwAy’s Sarsaparillian Res- wlrsnt supplies a wunt ' ■'*- hcfoi c oo.vH-s-e.l or known 4e cxid in msdiciue, ' ' this new found principle m Chsaucal ■^ w **oo, suuh h*^.oeei hrmijrht to sutli a per- fret systesh of cute is exhibited as follows: I. Its jtreat power in nssunilatinf ths food in it*t flrsi t of dixtiUatioD m the process of digestion, as chyms chyle with the nourishing elements of hi, a*per*tine from Ikes* iiqui-is rsfuae and inert q - ■ * — — -* —'i ana couterriug the rccommen.lattuus for the »p" COiniBtUlS Of the Press On the Pre- pointmcut of the jroung men to the military or naval academies. No evidence exist to to show it; no witness has testified to such venality. Nor did I for personal gain, benefit, or reward, directly or indirectly, re ceive a farthing “for the procurement of any office or place under the government.’’ Af ter the favor bestowed upon the friends of the cadets, I suffered them to give material aid to the people of my district for educa tional and other purposes which poverty and suffering would suggest. I did not cover up my transaction. I believed the intention, which always precedes and qualifies an act. would be weighed as well as the act itself I had no desire to conceal my connection with sentment. [From Hie Marion Star.) The special attention of our colored read ers is called to the Presentment of the grand Jury for the June Term of the -Court of Darlington county which we publish in an other column. This jury was composed of ticefae colored men and four white men, and their presentment is unanimous, and unspar ing in its denunciations cf the peculations, theftj and villany of the County Commision- ers of Darlington County. The colored men “Very Good-looking bat Can’t Come So Congress says to Cadet-ship Broker WniTTSMORK : The Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Nun, gives the full particulars of the refusal of admittance to the notorious Whittemore as a member of the House. The correspondeut of the Sun says : ‘ The case of Whittemore, of South Caro lina (formerly of Massachusetts,) was dispos ed of very promptly by the House. There was quite a large attendance in the galleries there standing as the Grand Inquest of the ! but as the debate was not protracted, there county, they had the manliuess, boldness and iadipendence, in the honesty of their hearts the unfortunate affair: Had I thought it ' 10 in !*»gaage unmistakable, the - t L „ lV . .. j would have led to such a result, I W ou)d I "id corrupt men, white per month, for their tuition; ‘ that I have h han j befol . e eDgag i ng and colored, who as county officials of the o«Ll £•.- rrratniFsxiiu H icf n imt.mn VO V O V xxru:ea__ .1 I. 1. . 1 . _ .1. t. sold books sent for gratuitous distribution among them ‘‘that I have made merchan dise of Bibles and Testaments; that I have exacted money for clothing sent by benevo. lent societies to my charge, for the benefit of the needy;’’ that I have misused the means put in my hands for the erection of school" hoe.«es aud churches, and appropriated the same to my own benefit;” “that I have made extravagaant promises to attain popularity among my deluded constituents ; that I have sought entertainment for the teachers at the houses of the first families, and the cabins of the freedmen, collected fare from the teachers aud put the same in my own pocket,’’ &c.,— in fact, all that an idle, mischievous brain could invent, has been published, circulated and scattered to the four winds lor strangers to hear, who think there mus. be some truth in so much assertion. But I defy any one, curious in the art of criimuatiou, anxious to make a capture, to m it. Meaning them no wrong, my conscience is is still void of offence, and I am sure any judicial tribunal, where justice holds its even scales, would acquit me of any criminal inten- t i<m and discharge me from the odium, which s ome men, who arc not troubled with “light offences,” seek to fasten upon me. Whittemore schools, have been openly rob- btd the impoverished citizens of Darlington, o' thousands of dollars. This bold paper dearly shows to us that the colored people, rom under the influence of dishonest, men white men, are not countenancers of rascality nor the friend of rascals. The County Com missioners of Darlington are the apt scholars What 1 complain of is, that I have notj ot ' Wicked Ben. trained under his political 1 lash, and,"we venture to aao, that if the deep est depth of bottomless damnation was sound ed with a plummet, and the slimy floor of the gloomiest abyss, and the foulest cavern in perdition, were raked over with a planta- tation louse trap, and Gehenna's molten lake dragged over with a minnow seine, and hell itself puked empty with an emetic of Puri tanic preachers like Whittemore, you would find in all the realms of endless sin no crime so revolting, no horror so gigantic, that has not its counterpart in the imported thieves and their followers who have ruled over South yet been heard in my own defence, except before my constituents, who have reversec the decision of those who declared me “un worthy” a seat among them on the repot and resolution of a committee whose sittin's were secret, whose rulings were hasty, aid whose charity waa aa harsh as its chairmai’s persecution. I complain of the duplicity and decepton of General Logan, who, after lie had peee" cured me beyond the limit of civilised or j Parliamentary prccedeat, told me that “he was sorry that his committee did not report! prove a single statement here reiterated, or j a re80 j ut ’ ion 0 f cenf , lire instead of expulsion; j Carolina for the last four years.—The Couo that they may have escaped my eye simi ar J ^ ^ ajd na Ul y i Q | eDt i on wr00 g. | ty Commissioners of Darlington from a com- in its character. It will “‘'tte* hard thing or ^ ^ j won j d be returne( j to (;on .! ponent part of this corrupt m/bne, aud to day those who have already filled the columns o ^ aQ( ] l!e wou ] ( j be the first man to wel- our oM State stands paralyzed in the | a traducing journal, to gather evidence, | com returll/ . their charges are well founded, for no man | ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ is more widely known in h.s district than . ^ ^ >nd Slmuei w of myself. If J have been guilty ol any illegal | M „ hote worJ h , s „ evcr } . et ; act, I demand of the... that they shall bring U qu „ stion hasan jffi a avi t a I rea dy wide- j me to the proper courts ior punuhment. If ! blishtd) shoW) huW tho3C who are w . I have committed an immorral, unjust or un.-^^j coajpanJ cgn f>uify their faithful act, let me be brought before the i utterances. presence of their infamy and atrocity. Color ed men, we say, read the presentmunt refer- ed to, consider the exposures therein made by menjuf your own color, and resolve on Re form, and to vote for no man in the future but these of Known Honkstt. We believe you will do it. Follow the worthy example of vour brethren of Darlington. Be inde people who have known and tried me. , j complain of the unust, indecent, and pendent, and manifest a determination too Allow me, in th.a connection, to P™ 01 " ; ur<congfitnti(>nal Ji SI)0S i t i. u of my creden- ! »***"■ ^ suffer youfselvcs to he whipped into the statement of some of the most prominent | ^ ^ statesman,” who j <be political traces by dishonest men who gentlemen in the place of iny residence, w ^ : f M | ai fi 0 ^ j aWi history, preedents, everything,; only want your votes to put them in high will show how much of truth there is hi .e ^ ^ Meo|ltion (o a barbarous end P'-fes, that they may plunder aud rob you her. led accusations so industrious y circu- , r of the utler lirscgarc | 0 f my rights j <** the sole purpose of swelling their own 1 purses, while you labor aud toil in the face of hunger and rags. | latea to my detriment: Darlington, S. C-, June 9, 1870. j the rights of my contituenU—the great j principles which underic our representative I “ To idiom it mou concern: | » c j “We the undersigned, take pleasure in ! for “ 1 of g'"'ernment. 8ay in K that we have been intimately acquam-i I complain of the abttrary return of my mT cLju*w£h*the JtETn** Zt k&S! 1 ted w"th the ilcm. B. F. Whittemore for the j credential?, the insult thrown in the face of srsa iirjrv, P«^ five years. No man has done so much formed into blood. Here we see that by its wunderfij I jn hlS private and public imillStrutlOQ tO ftla “ ! the poor, to clothe the naked, teed the hun- [From the Charleston Republican 5th instant.] •*We trust that no Republican will for a p^wsr priActple that _ MbeaMcni urtinn ou the blood in its pritmtiTe end com- |4ets condition, arrsratee every atom of refuse mAtsiial or s.eau-ni, out of wfiinh the Tiius of dtsease is formed 1. That, ths blood thus prepurtwl, and supplied with these Asumhtuf proper!hm b**;(>me. strong, rich sad boAlUiy, and holds in solution its proper constituents, through the B«rsapArflti*n Resolvent, and repairs the w*«**e of the Mdr with sound und heulthy •truet tres. Surb is the wonderful power the Sarsa- jsax-llllea Resolvent exerts on the hlooat and jsiees of uu uyAem, that no virulent humors or poi- aeaa will exist by wbicb depiaits are made. g. The rapidity which toe Rar»apartlllan enters . r y, educate the ignorant, instruct the peo ple in general as h*-; and he has been jna- ligned at honie and abroad bccaute of his unflinching devotion to the cause ,f human- itj- ... . , “He has be;n untiring in erectng school- houses in the First Congressional District, . and it has been due to his personal energy. StJnLS*ZZZTZZhis constant appeals for help, as well as the ,.. i moment aeek to screen or defend the County 157.000 utnst.tu«nts,:beir distranch.se.nent, i . . „ .. , . , I Commissioners ol Darlington. If the bait exclusion rom reiyesentation, total and com- pltte abrogation of teir delegated, legislated immunities. I complain of th< complete disregard of liberal gifts from his own puce, that the wants of many have been reliev d. His private character and public virtues with ns arc unquestioned. “He has been the advocate of equal and exact rit'li“* to all men and tie former ene mies o''the government wiil iatural!y slan der such a friend of the masses to accom plish their own foul ends. “Rev. S. 1*. Brockenton, Jonathan Wright. Chairtr.aa of Board of County Cmiimissio' e y». Jackson A. Smith, (Hi ^Vcast Jack) County Commission., John Lunncy, l-taTe Senator. J. G. Gatlin, Trial Justice. Jourdan Lang, Mea.ber Assembly. George Lunncy, Postmaster. James M. Browne, Probate Judge.’’ This should be regarded with as much credit as the special” scandals of the flying Bohemians who, with g^ggnsnectacles, gath er their materia! from ti ■ -cased—discom- fitted—unreconciled—u.Vpeiitant enemy of •cures the oonstituent *«• rations of s»irh wspoctive orv«n, «stAhiis'iini;fuiicti5n*il hunnsny throughout the sydlem ; throuKk its aciiou and power over tn« Secretion*, the Livsr aerates its Batumi or proper allotment of bt e; tbs 8La sweat; tba Kidorrs urea; and tLe Lunn : 1,0 f °xderfui medici; e not only eetab- in haslt^th ^ til10 pfetocrves the svakem As we hare shown the principle on is formco. at well os the only sensible theoty of cure, vre claim that the nifijp* of cure of tne t!*arsaparll- llau Resolvent Lx unliiu ted, nud that every dixeaxs that is of s Chro:iio,8oruiulouj or Oiganic HialhosiA is, properly within its special rouge. THE GREAT SECRET OF CURE in this Midiciae couxista in the sel-ction oi ingredient* eontaininT cumUvr xud nourish’.ajr y^l^^ies that sui>- ply the Mood and general system with such constitue'*’* whitb, in a condition of d'.sesae and depravity, it is uefl- ; cient ol, together with the oomhiastion of tli© xi veral | inxredienU that form the SAltSAPAKILLl AN ItEiOL- j VENT. If the constituent of Oxygen was exhausted from ths j atmospheric air, life would become sxtinct. So, when : ths blood booTmex exhausted of its vital constituents, it * deposits its tubercles and diseased liumtrd in the body, J smd the elem-nts of d-^cay and decomposition supervene. Rad way’s Sarsaparillian Resolvcnl u to the blood and gcn«r»l system what Oxtoxn is to ths atmospheric air; it supplies the hfo principle, and •nabies the blood to hold in solution all its natural con* atitnents. DAILY CHANGES take place, fttr os' K- -uiparilii.nr. inercaxfii the streuglli aud pia ty 61 thr (>iooa, all dopootx arc diminished, and wher there an; tu>ivie* formed in the lungs, the nrmnirv • tho r.rpci nt order of thin*'* ‘ furtbiw 'iFixyiili are arrc-tc4 .ta-i rhiw. lk»l are Mt.b- | Country , tUC present, cruer til luiu E , B.h.,1 or iorrain, ..niodv.i, *x;.-.iiod, roh ui-wa. or me | f , e rtainlv. thf-sc who have been my neigh- S ortion of the diM-ised Sum; pkcamscd, and the con-sumo- ; ° r^Ihh C ^“' u ' r °”'‘ ,c * R '’ 04, if n< ’* • om ‘ a " | bor» arc better qualified to 'peak of me than gu(id ilinb lady ctTRF.o. ! those who arc afar off, cither by distance, Ornrrl, Dr.^i'.^a, bore U-5., M-t-.iinir from tU« [ Lams, can j. sympathy or political antni-y. Mr. U. ro. Mabtimss, a oammemal traretler, ia } * . , . ,, , _ doubt reason, Uw and justi e ; the denial of time, argument, research, which has resulted in establishing a prccedmt fatal to the liberties, the rights of the people—the choice of elec tors ! A precedent that will prove a thorn in legislation, an inducement not only to irreg- j that is 'aid it. the rut urn of the grand jury j be true, they should be in tbe county jail instead of in charge of it. Let a legal in vestigation be made, aud, if the facts are proven, a legal prosecution promptly under taken.” [From the Kingstree Star.] “Wo publish below some extract* from tbe prasentment of the Grani Jury for Darling- ular procedures, hut an usurpation of all that, ton District, made at the June term of the makes ourliepulicau ideas the boast of the I Court at that place. The Darlington Demo- world. | crat, frem which we take these extracts, says: The House of Commons, one hundred j ‘the panel was composed of twelve colored years ago, hy its arbitrary encroachments ; and four white persons.” It shows what a upon tiie rights of the Britons, furnished a j deplorable condition the public affairs of the warning against like usurpations; but Con- . country *re*io, under the management of tbe gress ha* disregarded it. General Logan j present officials of the State. The Grand and his adherents have given us a record I Jury of Darlington bus exposed the villany which uust yet be expugned, for the people and rascality of the County Commissioners will not submit to be trodden under foot by | of that diatiict, showing their utter disregard their servants. The servants are not greater ’ for the public interest, and that they are than thdr musters, and will soon be beard, 1 only actuated by mercenary motives in eve- | “Be ye no lunger servants of ours.” I shall carry my “case,” credentials, rein- dorsement hy 8,41)9 majority back to those who will not tamely submit to tho indignity whit-h 124 members of Congress, led on by the equivocal, false, vindictive Logan, have cait upon them. I have Wen faithful to my country, to the : 1 be 0,1 !> w ' j y to i elect honest, lion was no scene of unusual interest outside of the vote refusing him admission and return ing him his credentials, which rasulted 29 in his favor to 124 agaiost him. Among the former number wore Butler, of Massa chusetts, Coburn, of Indiana, Maynard, Po land, of Vermont, Kelly, of Pennsylvania, Whittemore, of Texas, Hoar, Cessna, of Pennsylvania, Brooks, of Massachusetts, Farnsworth aod Morrill of Maine—all Re publicans. During the proceedings Whitte- more sat in a seat near the main door of the hall, quietly taking notes, and after the vote was announced, went to the cloak-room, took a glass of water and retired, no one speaking a word to him. He complains very much of General Logan's course, as he charges that it was mainly owiug to the latter's represen tation that he ran again for Congress and was re-elected. General Logan made a fierce speech against Whittemorc’s admission, say ing. among other things, that it was a ques tion for members to decide for themselves whether they would admit a man who had resigned to avoid expulsion for a penitentia ry offence. Even the Radical papers rejoice over the exclusion of Whittemore- The New York Tribune says : “ The good name of Congress has been preserved from this last defilement, and that a line has been drawn somewhere.” The New York World makes the point, that the vote excluding Whittemore extends beyond the man himself to bis negro con stituency. andbayond the constituency to the Congress and the political party that created it. It used to be said of slavery that it de graded labor by the contempt it caused for those who performed labor. With equal truth (says the World.') it may be said that negro voting degrades the elective franccise by the contempt it causes for those who ex ercise the franchise. The practical working of negro reconstruction is seen that its very authors pronounce its results disgraceful. It has foisted into Congress a set of scalawags and carpet baggers of whom this renal Whit- tcmorc is a sample ; and Congress finds no way to protect itself against the disgrace but by denying the right of the people to select their representatives, and to exercise their prerogative of condoning their offences and giving them a new trial. The judgment in Whittemore's case is substantially right; but the principle on which it rests ought to have been applied at an earlier stage of the ex periment, and have prevented this revolting degradation of Congressional constituencies. The N. Y. Tlen-ld: “'Whittemore's Icad- them. But in this we were sadly disappoint ed, for in less then one month from our an nouncement of this happy marriage, it was our painful duty to announce the death of Mr. Bolton. And to-day, ere the once hap py wife had laid aside the babilaraents of mourning for the one whom she had chosen as the partner ol her life, we hare to an nounce her demise in the unfortuunto man ner referred to. Truly in the midst of life we are in death. The Rev. Mr. Coustir, of h is county, preached the funeral of these lamented sisters at Conwayboro 1 , last Sunday. To the family we tender our heartfelt aym- pathy and that of their many friends in Marion, in this their day of distress and mourning.—Marion Star. A Romantic Story of How Fulton Won His Bride. 'A correspondent of the Geneva Courier relates the following story ofthe Kate Morgan the little steamer which for more than a gen eration has plied on Caynga Lake, her own ers obeying the behest of the first proprietor, to “run her till she busts:” Before the chancellor Livingstone stemmed the current ofthe Hudson, yet after the little Clermont had stirred the quieter waters of the Collect pond, the whistle of tho Kate Morgan awoke tho echoes in Taughanic Glen, and tier paddle wheel dashed the spray upon Cayuga bridge. There is a bit of romance attaching to her name and building. Old General Morgan, of Revolutionary fame, had a noble estate on the eastern bank of the lake, not far from where the present Wells College now stands. Between his only daughter, a lovely girl of eighteen, and young Fulton had long existed a tender at tachment, which, however, the poverty and obscurity of Robert led the General to severe ly frown upon. Fulton went to New York. He labored hard long years in perfecting his invention; his day of triumph came, and then wrote to the stern father relating his success and asking for the daughter’s hand. “Nay,” wrote back the incredulous old soldier, “I’ll bcleivo what I see with my own eyes. Come you back, scapegrace, to thelake, build and sail a steamboat past my own door, and then, aud not till then, shall you have my daughter Kate.” Need I say that Fulton came joyfully back, that.a steamer was built as circumstances would permit that she was launched and in due time did sail triumphantly past the Generals door! But let me add that, according to the express stipulation made by the sly Robert Ths above Department will fee priaptiy at tended to. and all work in this line ix-cuted^ on iho most sntisfastory teims. Wo will furnish at short notica LA IF BLAXKS UASD anus, POSTERA, CI&CVLAb*. BUSISE33 CARDS. WEDDISO CARDS, BILL /ISADS, DAMD ULETS, * LABELS, All Job Work c,i!i be Casu on delivery. Josh Billing ou Marriage. Marriage iz a fair transaction on the face ov it. It it an old institushuu, older than tbe pyramids, aud at phull of hyragiipbicks that nobody kan parse. But there ain’t but darn few phi-.lks, who put their mouey in matrimony who tfoitld set down and gire a pood written opiuyuu whi on arth they cum to did it. This iz a grate proof that it it one ov then! natural kind ov acksidents that must happen just az birds fly out ov the nest, when they have feathers enuffj without being able tew teil why. Sum marry fuf buty, and never diskover their mistake , thia is lucky. Sum marry for inetiey, and—don’t see it. Sum marry ibr pedigree, and feel big for six mouths, and then very sensibly cum tew the conclusion that pedigree ain’t no better than skim-milk. Sum marry tu please their relashuns, and are surprized sum learn that their relashuns don’t care a cues for them afterwards. Sum marry because they have been histed sum where else ; this iz a cross match, a bay and a sorrsl; pride may make it endurable. Sum marry for lore without a cent in their pocket, nor a friend in the world, nor a drop ov pedigree. This looks desperate, but it iz tbe strength ov tbe game. If marrying for love is not a success, then matrimony iz a dead beat. Sum marry because they think witnmiu will be scarce next year, and live tew wouder how the crop holds out. Sum marry tew get rid of themselves, and discover that the game was one that two could play at, and neither win. Sum marry the second time to get even, and find it u gambling game, the more they put down the less they take up. Sum marry tew be happy, and not finding it, wonder where all the happiness goes to when il dies. Sum marry, they can’t tell why, and live, they can’t tell how. Almost every body gets married, and it is a good joke. Sum marry ia haste, and then sit down and think it carefully over. Sum think it it over carfully fust, and then set down and marry. Both ways arc right, if they bit the mark. Sum marry rakes to envert them. This iz a little risky, and takes a smart missionary to do. Sum marry coquets. This iz like bying a poor farm, heavily mortgaged, and working in case he succeeded—when# the Kate Mor-. - gan sheered in towards the General’s dock, j tbe b * Unc * ov 7 0ur days to clear oph the a small boat was seen pushing out containing , tbo mortgages. the original Kate, her grim father, and a gen- ! Marricd Hfo 1,12 its chances, and this is tleman in clerical vestments. They were jm* what gives it fiavor. Everybody luves soon on board, and there amid the waving of flags, the ringing of bells, and the blowing of whistles, the proud inventor and his proud er bride were made one. A glorious sweep np and down the lake completed the first bridal trip by steam ever known in this country. Before we leave this historical boat let us go below a moment. Here are the old fasb- . , ioned engines, inscribed “Tretaan.Cartwrieht mg charactist.c is impudence, but when he . e K ”, , „ , „ * A Go.” f hey were the first engines built In tried to bully the House as he bullied his D 1 r 1,1 ry thing that they do. The Grand Jury of Darlington have taken the proper steps in exposing the ineonipeteucy and corruption of their local officials, but what good will it do ? The people's money has been squan dered by them, and there is no redress, no j responsibility, no way to make them refund, icniedy these evils is to ignorant constituency into being as shame less as himself, he reached an extreme that even his assurance was unequal to, and put au insult upon the representatives of honest constituencies which they should resent by having the full penalty of his crime meted out to him by a criminal court. The Philadelphia Record, says : “Congress lias done its duty, and preserved itself from disgrace in sending the notorious Whittc- more back to his constituents. The impu dence of the man in presenting himself a second time at the door of the House is only equalled by that of his constitucuts iu return ing him. The Philadelphia Inquirer says: “We rejoice ever this.defeat of a corrupt politi cian. not only because he waa, but because he falsely claimed to represent in the Nft- tioual Councils a State whose best and most built in theUnited States, and furnished both rui ton’s and Fitche’s boats. Cartwright was the father olth« well known Peter Cartwright the western backwoods preacher. Glanee now at the cabin. Its upholstering tew phool with the chances, bekause every body expects tew win. But I am authorized tew state that everybody don't win- But, after all, married life is full as certain as the dry goods bizziness. No man kan swear exackly where he will fetch up when he touches calico. For man kan tell jist what calico has made Up its mind tew do next. Calico don't kno even herself. Dry goods ov all kinds iz the child ov T circumstances. -'V-' Sum never n.-, ry , 0 ut this is just as ' the disease iz the same, with no other ^ *o it. MM The man who stands on the ban was furnished by A. T. Stewart, at that time in S> aml da **'" nt : '* n ‘ r ’ re »P l J an enterprising young tradesman, keeping a ! t h an h>“* who pitches biz h - little seven by nine shop in Chambers street. Though the lustre of the goods has long since passed away, its durability remains to i Mir; river, Tbarc iz but few, that we everh never marry because they won t ■ • • *> O’*- is- - V - -AR- Canada West,writes u.-, under date of Apn! 17, l^oil, from Woodsto* ** Lne SAWiaPAKILLIAN RESOLVENT »« in *r«t demand au4w J# ki, u wo,,! *. Hr. no ao, ol StMffoids. Ti’:ie mcrchott, t >ld wo ofaease wUcre * trumitu WAS ! BUND, baf hy the lss oftheSARSAPA RILL1 AN KK- j bOLVE.NT.can now *cc to re-*d &lie wosld gixe a J certim-ste, lat d >e« not to be bothered j^th people * writing. HandrcU call to see her. The cure is regarded os wondsrfid. **ICe«rs. White u Scott, principal here, inform nt? ofa T.<rv<n of note -hirxn stva*! <img—who ior year was a:.!; t.dwith D Yd 1'»:«** I ^ *n | <1 It A V EL, who hub-’er. e:iti-e!v cured by lAAD* Ax o SAilSA* PARI LV.AN RESOLVES IV* Mr. I.oag reports an .thur cass of Tronic Sore Leg, tiut redsted all other adrerti*M>d , a-.niHnes cured hv s fswLott us of 8A ltdAPA KILL1A > RESOLVENT. •Mr. Jos at ham Fbsei.avd, o’ Viddcr Staff, n, cured* br ®e bottle, ot Bleeding from tbe Lung*, Night Sweats, Threat -ned Con«umpttnii. “In every town I visit f be irof wonderful curoe bv toa«AltN.\i'\'tILLT \N r.K>< LVENT. Fur every L ir.d Humor, Sor'?, Skin Erunfion, sad nil weakening disth:vpt *, th«» r> .pi** n««> if, raid cured ; *o with Pits, Scrofula, White St oilrig Sere H“"ds yO 1 ' Now and Mouth, nil kinds of S »re«, this wmdrr ul r*-Tr.^ v ac £* nr, powerfully oi' f he blood that all who LAs •t betUM* »trong, souud, healthy. .. ti,'»• CL MORTIMER, • * Commercial Tm verier.” RADWAY’B SARS.VP RILLIA.N RESOLVENT is •»M »i S! per Bottle, or R.iot;le« f*»r •», bv all Druggists sndMedi.-tne I»<-a;er»,an^tt Dll. RADWA Y 6 ilecbcius Warehouse, 87 Maiden lane, New York City. HARLLEE &. DARGAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. DARLINGTON, C. H ., S. C. W. W. HANLLIE T r - TV» RCiA V. x»vcb 23, 1871 It will be a matter of wonder, why I have n t before i lived “the scaadal and falsehood" so widely circulated. In ans wer to which I will say, that I have been engaged in a campaign which has becii un paralleled iu abuse and severity. I could not spare the time refute all the falsehoods so maliciously:trumpeted against me. 1 had to meet loom in the canvass; the press of the country priflted and reprinted them; my enemies used them as far as they could; and yet I was re elected by a majority 8,490 ma jority, to represent a constituency as honest, as capable of judging of the merits of any question before them where their own in terests are at stake, asany in the land, [’gol ly, what a i—c.J [Dbm’s. Devi! ] I now come to tbe matter which first brought mo prominently before the country, viz. . my connection with the so-called ‘sale ' . fj. of the cadetships.” I do. not attempt to ja#- j tify wh t is regarded criminal in the disposi- i t.ion of public favors. I do, however, em- , | phuticullx assort that do criminal iutent or j t, rrupt Irrirr moved er zrtuated me in my amse of humanity, to the reconstruction of a i „ , , . . • ; will uot betray the oontnlence reposed in ered Lomu, and 1 shall battle yet for j \\ T e have no doubt that the same universal, impartial liberty, until the colored j vatc of t b in ^ cx Lst in oilier districts ofthe voters, citizens j.f the^whole country,^haU j state, aud the Grand Juries should every- i J ‘ ' j where make a searching investigation into •ruble men to office, who ! iutciligent citizens were powerless to prevent rteerie a* much consideration asihe whitest electors of the nation. I am yours truly, It. F. WtUTTEMOItE. .Was; Flow To “asaoe Mjstaxks.—As a minis- I To Remove a Tiout Ring.—Rings are often left on the affairs of the public offices, and report eheir condition to the people, who aiouo can remedy it at the ballot hex, for to ask re- , , ., ., , . dress before the law now in such matters ia ter and lawyer were riding together, said the | a wa5U; of tiu)C and W0IK . y .» minister to the lawyer : ‘Sir, do you ever make mistakes in pdead- ing V ‘Ido,’ raid the lawyer. ‘A.id what do you do with the mistakes ?’ inquired the minister. Why sir, if large ones I mend them ; if small ones, I let them go,’ said the lawyer. “And pray,” continued he, “do you ever make mistakes in preaching?” "i-; - * ~ \ . . - ■ : ' . rt± ■■ V . ' " ■ . 4> , s •:' ■- -••SWtok’A.St* : his election. lie was alien to all interests, and ignorant of thcr necessities, through biith, instinct and custom attest to the honesty *nd good'judgment of j 1 ' anlttr ’ >-' and ^ « r ih * m ftarv “ . f . . v " “ ^ .=* the young dealer, and by which ho has long ; ce8 or broad before t’leai (spre - •“ foremost uicrclu.nt 0 j’j aides.) jist for th« ..ckovgiit. j Marry young' iz my motto. • . "’j ^ ^ ■i I have tried it, i nd kim what *• j since risen to be tbe our country, Sometime. The following is one of Mr. waifs, many of which appeared in the Louis ville Journal in its palmiest days: “Sometime—it is a sweet, sweet song, war bled to and fro among the topmost boughs of the heart, and filling the whole air with The wants of I sucb j r 0' an< l gH'iuess as the songs of birds tried it, and kti } ing ibuut. j If enny body asks you ! ri< d. (if it needs be) tell him yu don’t rteoj- Prentice's | ] fct Marriage iz a way to gamble—if you win I yu win a r ile, and if you loze. yu don't l.,xu cuny tiling, only the privilege ov living dis- .. ... _ _ iVr ' •?• TfMVr viii >•-'. get mar. tiie South chasctts. Carolina are not those of Massn- A Sad Affair. It becomes our painful duty to announce to day. one of the reddest cases of death by , » ,^ ! drowning, that has probably ever happened tbe ungers until they are half j b “ J , ... , i •• • . . . 1 in this section. Last Saturday, '2nd iust.,") buried in a deep crease and it is next to im- i „ n , , , , ' * , Mrs. C. P. Bolton, the daughter of our tTiend 'iteJ'&t b ' V-~K% possible to remove them. The arm should be elevated, and the finger soaked in ice water .for ten minutes, then immediately anoint with glycerine, and the ring slipped off. If this fails, the finger should bo very tightly wrapped in fine, strong, well waxed serving silk; the end of the silk should bt slipped beneath it with a blunt bodkin, and • hen. as the string is unwound, the ring will .e forced down. Sometimes, even this does ut succeed, and the ring has to be filed off, , what is far better, thoroughly cleauaed ! poin, delay or **erti~o T. W. Beaty, Esq., of Conwayboro’, and well known to many of odrcitizens as Miss Cora Beaty, while bathing with her little sister in a lake near her fatherjg house, ventured too far. and both were drowned. A Colored man seeing their danger, hastened to their rescue and waa rise drowned. About eighteen months ago, the deceased, then Mies Beaty, a lovely girl of sixteen summers, was married to Charles Pelham Bolton, one of the most talented and promia- ing young lawyers in this part of tho Stat«, and when we saw them on their return from their bridal tour, we thought that a long aud when the summer morning corns out of dark, ness, and day is born on the mountains. AVe have all cur possession in the future, which we call ‘sometime.’ Beautiful flowers and singing birds are there, only our hands sel dom grasp the one, or our ears hear the other. But oh, reader, be of good cheer, fir all the good there is a golden ‘sometime;’ when the hills and valleys of time are all pas*'J when the wear and fever, the disap pointed and the sorrow of life are over, then there is the place and the rest appointed cf God.—Oh. homestead, over, whose roof fall no shadori, or over whose threshold the voice of Borrow is never heard; built upon the eternal hills, and standing with ^aspires and pinnacles of celestial beauty a^ipog tbe palm trees of the city on high, thore who love God ahall rest under thy shadowy if here there is no more sorrow nor pain, nor the sound of weeping.” happy life strewn with flowvrr, wj» before jt. To care a Bachelor! aches—CaSiy the patient ^v«d yorde cf ailk, with * wemao mally alone, soaking your own feet. 1 repeat it, in ituiieks, marry young! There iz but one good excuse f ra mar riage late in liliefand that iz—a second mar- f'-tge. How to Rise Refreshe;j—Every per. sou who toils daihf at any kind of labor re quiring great physical exertion should be extremely careful to practice a ‘ogular system of ablution at the close of earn day’s work. Sometimes a person may bcccmc so complete* ly exhausted as to render tHis anything but an inviting performance; yrt by its omission a great deal of refreshment whi<-h tho hou:s of repose are designed to impart i»Jost. To be cleanly is a strictly religious deny, aod is essential to sound and refreshing slumber, heuee the labor of kcep ngone’s person clean is amply repaid by the elasticity which fol lows nightly ablutionshefi.ro retiring. Heed this advince, and the reader will sleep sound ly; disregard it—go to bed unwashed, and you wiil rise in the morning unrttVcshed; with feelings of lassitude which the exertions of th« day will hardly be able to remove. Cadetship Whettemoro will cnos de bis "ritirament” by a vim to Lie freod in New Kugland. --'•A.-