University of South Carolina Libraries
r* TILK IIOUUY XMWS. :*r itt.isu t:i? livery Tm**?S;ay .^oruin^. T, V/. BEATY, Editor. ( )NT. Yuan $2.00 Six Months, $1.00 ^ %" < n|n ??> i j? i ? ? 1 i .? i v, tl'ltllillU'lo Ht'l'Vr l?rl\ ate liilcrosl. will in' ? !* ? ii; ? <! lor us U>1 ? t'l'i is >1111*111 v. THE FAV02ITE IIOME EEMEDY. This unrivalled Medici ne is warranted not to contain a single particle, oi Mercury or any njurious mineral substance but is i?rasia,v vKtaiT.ii ssi.k, i ^L^containin 1 Uiose ulhcni Hoots and Herbs, \\ bieb an ;X. Pro\ idenee lias placed m eounti !?-s whore 1 ivor Diseases tin t prevail, it will cure all Diseases caused by Derangement of the I.ivcr ami liowels. Simmons' Liver KV^ulalor, or Mf&iciiio Is eminently a Family Medicine,?and by being kept ready for immediate resort will save many an hour of sulli'ring and many a dollar in time and doctors' bills. Alter over forty Years' trial i' is still receiving the most umpialihed testimonials |(( 11s virtues from pei.sons of the highe t cliarae l?r and responsibility. Fminent pbysieans commend it as I be most EFFECTUAL GFECIFC For Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Armed w.Mb this A Vl'i D<VL'K, all climates and ^changes of iter and food in i\ be faced withhold, fear. a Hemcdy in Si \i.Alstons FkYKISS, 1'owr.l. CoMI'LAlM S, 111 S M.USSNKSS, J AI NDICK, X At'SKA, 11" HAS NO EQUAL. 11 is the ( hcaposl and llesl Family Medicine in Ibe World! M AN i: IT At ."IT OKI) ONI. V 15 Y .3. BH. X (; A ., and I'lll I. UIHHFHIa Price,??1.00. Sold hj all Druggist. BSE 2 BOSS'S w t n t nAFl^^KB rin Avr r\ v 5JL.S! I.UKUUM UUlm i\Ui. Kspco.ialh designcnorthenseol the. Mi USi'ii! .7Vo/V's".it,a an.) the luttnif'/. possessing those intrinsic medicinal propei t ies which belong to an ()l<l and I'nn din. 1 ii'Hspc livable to females. (looil lor /?*'* 'licif ('iiiiiphtinls. A delirious Tonic. I Yd up i:i oases ennt aiding one do/.cn bottles each, and sold hy all druggisls grocers, ike. A. .M. liintnjger A: Co., established 177^. -No. J > Heaver street, New York. \ ^ J ( ' j \ 1 ^ FLORA*. (a;j 1)10 For 1874. 200 PACKS; .700 KNOKAYINOS, and COLOKKI) PHATK. Published (JuaP.eilv, ;il 25 (,'cnls a Year. First No. lor 1.^7-1 just, ssuod. A Cmnau edition at same price. Address, .1 AMES YICK, Rochester, N. Y. Dee. 2d,? 11. Ithir Seventy l\t<jc J llnst rated Catalogue of O OOi '.V j Sashes, ?5 l 5 n el s ;|Sta'r Rails, | hi ewe is, Fancy Class, &c, Mailed (o any 0110 interest ed in buildm Ion receipt of stamp. fli * : o u u & T u dp as * * :, : ^ I J|25 l ami i"><> Canal Street J j New York*. ]\I IT.! .1-:ICS A I "A I 1 AT A f1 ALMAIM At For (lie Year 1874 ; IT I'.MSIIKD FOK ITOiMlY C( HJNT'Y'. TT^or siilo iit 10 cents eaeli hv Jj M. IMJKATV: Dec !> 1870 -~ "T&DAY," THE PEOPLE'S ILLT'STHATED I'.H'EK %. ^ ^Llis ;i American enterprise, i'1ms ti"iio*l liy tWe leailinyj artist am' teeming with thelites! c Hurls ot the most able writoi s of our ; country. It is a paper tlint, once introduced ' in tlie i'ainily circle, is sure to bo eagerly watched for and carefully preserved. The i oico of tiiuhb of Tin: most jir.vuTiFirr, i' V* 11 O.TI O S ever Issued is given to eaeli subscriber, viz "Jrsr So IIioii" and "Li'itu: SrNsnixH,': I two beautiful fluid Pictures, by Mrs Akdkii ' son, and ?amono tiii: l)i:wi>noi,M,'' a beauti fill landscape in water-color by the celebrated l'.i itf<i:r Fostkh. All our agents have op pies of each, and are prepared l<? delicti tlteiu together with a 5 .Subscription < <ou$ca>c .signed by the publishers, at the tinnAno money is paid. Agents wanted everywhere, and liberal inducements ?fibred. Sample copies wi.li full particulars ami descriptions of tho Cbronios, scut on re ceipt of six ccn'.s. Only two tlolfni'M iiixl n Iiaff a joar. audhkss, To-Eay*Printing & Publishing Co., San torn St., rhl\(?le\phia. 1 Broadway. \. V. 3 School St., Boston 11G, 110 & 117 E. Madison St. Chicago. , T-Tif Y Tj JLivJ1 JL \ i) I ^ (1 0 O "N" Tilt' Art of Transplanting. One of the nv>st important opera* tions ot the garden at this season of the year, is the \ransplant nig of grow- , ing herbaceous plants, ami much ol our success depends upon its piopor performance. Thousands of good, j healthy plants are lost every year for want of a little eare ami -kill in trans- j (erring tiiein Irotn the seed-hed to their permanent place in the garden. The best way to transplant both vog- j etalde and tlower plants, when prae- j tieable, is to take them up earelully with a garden trowel!, with a ball of earth attached, so as not to disturb the roots, ami transfer them to a bole of suitable size, where t hey are wanted. It this be skillfully done, and a little wilier nmncdiuiy applied, lliey 111 j scarcely be cheeked in their growth. . . . This is best done immediately alter 11 rain, but a thorough watering of the seed-bed will answer the same purpose. Where the plants ciinnot be taken up in ibis way, the roots should be "grouted" with a batter composed of rich, black earth, or better still, a mixture of equal parts of fresh cowdung, vegetable mould, and wood ashes. Late in the afternoon is the proper time lor the operation. It is well to shade the plants for a lew days after transplanting. /tnj'dl Oar'i/hiion-y M nj Xo. The bands ofllte how Country. For indeed if the white race is to maintain itself in the low country, it must do so by keeping possession ol the pine lands ami utilizing tlioni. W e have everv year renewed assur j liners thai the mgrocs will not aid t he whiles in the culture of cotton. 1\very year a larger and larger breadth ot j lan<l is either totally abandoned or turned over to the negroes. It. is impossible for the low lands to benefit by the immigration ^(Movement wbieb is now holding out a promise ot relief ; to the State. We cani.ot invite l'or| rigneis to eome ami work lor iu* on our cotton lands. It we ouf'Stdvos I cannot work them and live, it is simply criminal to invite others to do it, for lis. lint they can .vd us in developing the pine lands. Accustomed to the laborious details of farm life, they will inlusc new life into our people, and give a new aspect, to the country. Our country must become a fruit country; our pine lands must furnish the market with figs and raisins; out pine lands must become flourising vineyards. It lias indeed been objected that success has not followed the atlomps to cultivate the vine, and that our climate is adverse to the production of wine. To this I answer, that the grape grows spontaneous!v on the soil, and that this alone indicates! what should he the pursuit ol intelligent husbandry. In spite of the sporadic and spasmodic eflorst* at raising grapes, we have had experience enough to encourage us to go on. Nature has given us the vine, hut il intelligent energy does not eome to her aid, she will never pro duco anything belter than the acid grape which our woods now yield. Hut tor intelligent industry, the apple would never have been any oilier than a crab; the Scuppeiliong nothing but the acrid bulluce. It is indeed supposed that the grapes ol America are deficient in the requisite amount of sugar for making wine. Ii this is so, we may supply I tie deficiency by artificial means; but il is more likely that the want of smrar mnv i?rru?<w><l O J I" """ from tho graphs being gathered before they are fully ripe. In Europe, the Southern grape is condemned because it yields too much sugar. We are | very little south of Madeira, and our latitude is that of the Canary Islands. Our people must be redeemed from their horrid habit of di inking distilled spirits. Nothing can effect this rovo' lulion but the substitution of a cheap, i ! wholesome wine; and this can bo fur- ' nishod by our pine lands. llural Carolinian, ^fny ICo. Among several other items of general inielligenc, a Missouri paper mentions the following: "The State Sen- ! ator from this district is a liar, a : coward, and a horse thief, and ho can lind us in our olllco any time during j business hours." i m z> _ VI V J.. _A n I n<l< m u : \VA V HOIK), S. IT The Waleroe Swamp. The Camden Journ<tl is favorably impressed with the proposed utiii/.a. (ion of the Watercu Swamp by a Uiitisli Company. The corporation referred to propose, through their agon', Dr. K. M. lioykin, to purchase and control the swamps of the Wateree River for the purpose of cutting timber, which they will rait down the liver to the oeenn and ship (<> Kurope. The plan is to straighten th<^ river, and thus avoid the freshet.s which ren<ler the low lands almost worthless, they being liable at any time to be Hooded by the water, which when it comes down 111 large qualities, cannot run oil, o wing to the crookedness of t he channel, and is trhowu back on the adjacent banks. This can be aceom I?11sne<I i>y cult 11><-C inrougn a lew comparative! v small "nocks" suit I allowing a free passage for the water. The river being thus curtailed of its present liberty, large bodies of land, as productive as any in the world, would be redeemed from water. To effect this object the Company propose to turn l'inetree Crook into ISeaverdam, lJeaverdam into Town Creek, Town Creek into Swift ('reek, Swift Creek into Halting Creek, and Url't.mg ('reek into l>euch Creek. This, the *Tourntil thinks, can be done withouth any very great expense, and would aid materially in confining the l iver, as a eontinuous levee might be built, instead of one pierced in several places by the entrance of streams. In order to carry out their purpose, the Company, through their agent Dr. Hoy kit:, other l.o purchase all the lands Iyini; mi 111<i liver throughout t!ie w hole territory over which their opera! ions w ill extend. Arr irs and ( 'OKritir. Wm 11 i i; j r (It; ir 11 amis <>f it. | N ew'.s and ( ,'oin ier. j It is impossible to compliment the J udiciary Commit ten ol tin; 11 ?t;s<' of 1 {.cpresentatives upon theii report on the subject ol the lneinoiial <>l the South Carolina Taxpayer.'-. The rcm;o/ts which they give lor recommending that the prayer ol the taxpayers he denied have cither no Korcc what? ever, or point to aoonclmJfcm directly lho*rcvorsc ol that which the committee have reached. The commillc ad iniL that it is the duty ol' statesmen, who are invoked to .apply a remedy to existing wrongs to ascertain "the 11 a n o t ture, extent and origin1' ol lliese wrongs, and they do this, in their own opinion, by declaring that the real grievances ol the .Memorialists relate to the Constitutional amendments which have been adopted since the war, and for which the people of the United States are responsible. They further say that Congress has no more right to interfere to disturb the State Government ol South Carolina than to interfere with the States of \c\v York, Pennsylvania or Illinois. This is their whole argument, and it. is wretchedly illogical and in conclusive. The Memorialists know as well as the Judiciary Committee know, what 's the general cause and origin of the political revolution which allows South Carolina to he governed hy an ignorant, hlack majority, acting through a few crafty and venal leaders. They showed that the State Constitution, under which the evils ?omplained of arise and increase, was the creature of Congress, framed by a Congress, conformed to the general plan laid down by Congress, at.d finally approved of, and given lorce to by Congress. Ami as Congress, to ae complish this, deliberately overthrew the lawful State Government already existing in South Carolina, it at once, in the opinion ot the Memorialists, established a precedent for the interfereencc of Congress in the domestic at fairs of a State, and bound itself morally to redress any injury which might bo produced by the inlerlerenco which had already taken place. The Congress was not asked to undo the Constituiional amendments. It was asked to investigate for itself the condition of affairs in South Carolina, and to grant relict as practicable, if it were satisfied that relief was necessary and could he obtained in no other way. Instead of doing this, the committee iay i the whole blame on the Constitutional " jNTjJ r i(!( m l t flounistl. I<:s I?A V. M V V IL>. 1ST nmcmlim'nt s, ami compare South t u | ohna to the States which were never | "in rebellion," which never seceded, 1 which were never changed Ironi I roe Stales into military districts, ami ; wInch wore never reconstructed l>v Co j eress. The rij^ht exists to in'.erlVre in South Carolina, because the op ; pressioti ami inisoovornnient here is i . " . the consequence ot previous inlertorc! enee. Am! w hat a mockery it is tor j the Judiciary committee to evade i t hese Questions, and devnt e t Itcmsel ves to a praise ot the "intelligence and I capacity" ol the ( ounter-iucmorialists as otvine; 'he assurance that the African raee can, it they will, "establish 1 their rie-ht to the eonf'ehnieo of the country!" The colored men who made the ai'oiiments lor the Conntei! memorialists are not hoediitcti. A hat education they have they obtained j before the emancipation ol the slaves, and thai education they have used to hoodwink the poorer blacks whose votes lifted them into thenHiecs by which they live. In South Carolina, with lew exceptions, the most intclli I gent incii im pntilio lite are, also, (lie i most unscrupulous and didionest. 1 The most marked leal nro ol'iiie re i port of the .1 ltdieiary Committee reJ inains to lie noticed. 1' does not eon- j lain a single kindly word of sympathy with the taxpayers, nor docs it, even i by implication, condemn the rascality j which the Mvunorialisls exposed and | which was admitted by the iiinapologists and the. South Carolina * onI oressuien. It. can he nnderstood thai both I democrats and Kepubliears in Congress may, lor diHurent reasons, object to any l'Yderal action which i i lie Constitution does not act ually require them to take; but there was nothing to prevent tiie Judiciary Committee Iroiu com.l"inuing the Iran Is and usurpation ol the Coluin bia llings. Words enough for tlio A hi cm i nicer. Not ji word for the ; persecuted and oppressed white man! i Tim commit t cm Jo r.ol veiilme l?. deny ilic trails of the. charges prelerred I>y lie! taxpayera, ami 111? y sustain ami uphold, by their silence. I lie most, ;nidacious gang of theives that civilizu1 tion knows. f rom the Judiciary committee we j a;>peal t o ('ongress ! Thai body may I ' vs/ielined to compel t he Soul h Uar 1 unheals to change their habits j and their laws, but surely there are, in list! Senate and the House, brave., honest men who date speak the truth, and wi'l urge Congress at least to place, on record its condemnation of ill 1 1 # - * ' 1 rouuery :i 11 < i rasea my, and give llic I South Carolina plunderers :i rebuke I which Ihey cannot forget or misunderstand. Such :i course, although nut all vo need, would strengthen and encourage the honest, ailv/.ons who may join together this Fall in the work of reforming the government oi the State. The recent vote in the Senate l?y which the inflation hid was taken uj> shown conclusively that the ranks ol I the inflationists are still unbroken and I undi'aished. The hill was taken up ! on a vote of twenty-seven to twenty | five. It was the policy of the green i hack men to have the hill up, in order to show that their ranks ware not shattered. When, theicforo, the hill , came up, the inflationists stood square hy each other, and the bill, requiring a two-thirds vole, failed hy a vote of thirty-four to thirty. Ties vole clearly indicates how square an issue this currency question has become. It is a wedge of gold entering into the campaign, and will split the i various political organizations in isTd. ri?o South and West in Congress arc vet shoulder to shoul<l?'i*, undisturbed by the tremendous energy of this veto, endorsed by the whole power ol the | fourth estate?the American press. There is something significant in all this. ? Union- ITerald. '1 ho old saying that revolutions never go backwards, has met with a decided contradiction in the West. At one time,it looked as if the temperance crusaders would sweep everything before them; yet we find that the new City Council of Cincinnati has repealed all the Sunday and temperance ordiuj ances by the hea\ y vote of ??>S yeas to ! 5 nays. Which is another conclusive I proof that revolutions, to ho successful, : must be conducted with intelligence, | not intolerance. # j* i s V V 3. t. No. ID. > .?l !!!'-; I' m* I'tv- i?!< !it. A i'!i.tii"v in iiihiI.' o| oloelinij flic I Vn-Tlent Mini \ inn I 'rosnlnnt lias Itccii t?>r s?>11h i fi:n uii.i.r nous'ulnral ion i l?v tin' S? natn I oininii t ? ?. of i'riviloons an I Klnolion-n Il is ninlei'stootl lliat I hat iMiininitii'C li ivo ;i^i\ \ upon tlioir report, ulii-li is sulisianli ?! I \* Uiu plan snoot-xt<>,{ |i\- Smalm* Morton. The i v i i . , prrposit u?:i is Jo i i: \ uIn anil Mate into 101 notoral ?list riot s, n<u i'i spomlino wit!i j \ lm t "?? ?;M css'u .:i;i I 1 is I l in? s. Tim p nop In I w ill voir ilireei lor 1 'i nTnleiit, ami tin* I oanili'latn in a T>t i n t lia \ iiijl; llio liit^lij nst miinlior ol popular \ op s will be | given oiu* vote lor tint <lis|riet. Maoli j j St a to is to It a vn ' Wo vol. s *S\ h loll a In 1 | to lm oivnn to lie on in . n la to having ; I.In* highest pop111 i?' \otc in tlm State. All ol tliv'sn vol? s a i . 11 > 1 in counlo<l at \\ ashing! on, a a 1 '.!< < a lilata? liav ing j :i majority w ill lm <1 . <1 !'resident. A similar nuu m i - pr j olioino ol thn Vino ! 'i io'mit, ami a j trilniual is ornate 1 i'or li * <h e'.sion ol Till ipinsl ions ari-air_j oni of a n el no t ion . j for t iin ollinn < 1 111i v-i< 1 . i;t ami \ inn- I i i i . i ; : 11 .. I I t > I > I ' 11 I . Ill'1 ' i ' i < I I I I I i I . ' 11 \ M' j cured by t 111' propose.1 ohaiipe is the | IIIml it i< lit < I the 'k I'll t el??1*:11 ( ad I op OS ' ill tilscj>;i rat v' St A ir.< <tn'l ( '?>> ri< }\ 1 iJ.?v, l<> !'ul or. :> t '.iim'I, [I'miu I he.Sail liaiuisiit ' limine].*. | A I. thisjuiiet.uro tlio ('<m'ou< r d esi red I In tliow i<i 111(* jury I lie comso taken j ' by the ball, ami lor ihis purpose j>i*<?- > I dure 1 I lie o ms?-, u I'mop by Mrs. 1 Ihtrhaa'M at 11?o time of i lio i raped v. ik \ oil see," saiiI he aid In iv ho drew llioont'ii aiimin] I is waist, with tla.' laces in IV mi!. ho hall inns! have ni<? in hero truiii behind. Xn, that can't. hi1, oi in r. lor the i|ho|<?i says lac ball wool in front. ( oiiiouml it, i I've pot il <>n wimiio*. I*.11' (ins way." (I loro the ( oli'iioi put llic oorsot mi upside down ) "Now, you see," j pointiup o tho ludo in I ho parmont , , w> ioli losto I directly nvci I is hip, "the hall must have puim in her. No, ill:.I enn'l l.o, ei'Jici , lor lit ro Mr. Mai lie r. the 11: i odsoniost man on the jury broke m. "Dr. Stilliiian,'' sa'.d 10, "vou've pot thai, oorsot ou wronp " lloro ! ir. Stillnian blush od like a pomi y. " \ \ t i I ' said ho 141 vo boon married twieo, and I onpht, to know how to rip a oorsot." os," said Mr. Mather, "but you don't. Vou had il, rii?iit in ibo lii'sl idaoo. i I The strings po in front, and the ladies clasp them lorn titer in tho back. Don't 1 know? i think I onpht to; I've boon married. Il yon doubt it, look horo (poinlinp; to tho fullness in I ho top). Now do you suppose that's poinp to bo filled up unless you put it on as I supposi?'' "That," said Dr. Slillman, "why, that <; it'8 over the hips." "No, it | don't,'' said Mi". Mather; "that, fullness [ goes somewhere el.-e? t his way;" and , hare .Mi'. Mather indicated where lie thought the fullness ought (<> go. At, this a pale-faced young man with a voice 11La robin, and a note hook under his arm, said la; thought i ladies always rhwp t heir <;orsetH on the side. The pale-faced young man Haul this very bunas m iy, as if In; wished to convey the impression that he knew nothing whatever *! t!m matter. The jury laughed tic pale-laecd young man to scorn, am 1 one ol t In in intimating that he thought the young man was not hall'so green about, wemens' dress as ht; t ried t o appt nr. The vonn:' man was a re|a>rt< r, and it is therefore j exceedingly probable tiial his knowledge was fully as limited as was aj parent from his uiy^crl ion, the jury-! men to the contrary not.withstanding- ' Mere another juryman discovered I that Dr. Slillman ha<l the cotaet on \ hot 1 om side tip. "Doctor," said he, "put. it on the J other w.iy." Then the l)oetorpni ;t on in reverse [order, with the hu.es in front. This 1 bronchi the l hi lift iioU s directly over j j the tails o| liis e<>:d. "1 don't think,"' said Mr. Mather, "that the bullet Went in there, Doe- | I tor." ' No, I don't think it did," was the j reply. "Confound :t, it's mighty tunny, siv married men in this room and not one that knows how to put on a i woman's cor.-et. ' Here the f hroiticff reporter, who | had several sisters am! ;l\vays keeps his eyes open, a<l vaneeiI and eon vinced IJr. Siiilman and Mr. Mather, alter j inueh argument, that the lares of a corset go behind, and that the garj inent is clasped in Iront. Alter this explanation the cor.rse of the bullet was readily triced, and iound to bear [ out the explanation a honied by two physicia ns. At the Memphis Cotton lisriiange on Saturday, seventy-t hree estimates i ot the cotton crop were opened. The. highest was 4,287j087 bales, and the ' lowest 3,891,000, average 4,132,000. ? - m*A Mormon bridegroom was simultaneously married to ihno blushiyg brides in Salt I/iko City recently. Some confusion was ere tied alter the i ceremony, by ea? h bride persisting on ; jjcr individual right l > the first kiss. . mi? s *?IHI<hi'inrwn)w? ?-. w* *.!,?] \ jctcrissvtai^vi * ^ fii>? ? ? ' t' $l,( > i' ' square Ph* ftnl unit * v 1 whether in In >'\ i<?r or It vim-,* 1. ss 11 a i . M.irii.??<< notices free. I )e,if In .imiI Kmi'm';il notices fr IP'r I i?v" r 'ii * ? suJtre ehariieil at .olverli *iult r i* ltctigous uolimi of o'ui m>ii 'i " f *.?. A liberal <lisromif will no fi uli* t ? r 11 ., whoso advertisements are to he kept in U>r term of thioe nomths or lunger 1 ?????? ' ' s China.? The most womlei fnl e?niri try in me won -1 is < inn i. it conta ins nearly one-half of the population of the earth. The provinces, win It at j oovorncd by the lieiltointnt s <1 rh? Kmperor, are larger ami more I icklv peopled than any Kiiropcnn kbi The ei vili/at ion ol China is o! lerthan that n| I4!nrope, ami thvre is sc; rrelv any so-ealled modern invention, wit t tl e execution ol* the steam enoin an I telegraph, that has not been in u-c to- f| many centuries in China. l'? pni.i education is more general there than in any 01 lu-r eonntry in thexvoihl, an I the social structure is so lit inly an I securely established, that it seems impossible to shake tt in Lite lea-t. lode' d, the more one learns eotieeriU'i ^ this rem ark able eon lit ry and its inieCet tants, th" more interesting does 1I05 stud v ol t hem become. -? m I lie ?.i^uhoml Saur, And old man of very active phys'iwttornv, atmwerino to tin4 name o( Jacob Wiluiot, was brought to the 1 'olice Court. Ilis clothes looked as IhoU'.dt the\ 111ioItt have la en bought, second hand in his yonlhlul prime, lor they hud slithered more Irom the rubs ol the world than the proprietor himself. \\ lk \\ hat b11siness ?" UN one ; I'm at ra veler." \ v-:i <r' l?i in 11 iiO'li'iiiu .-? * i j"- i " "Vu i are not |;ir wronij. Traveleis ami v:i :iIhni?ls arc about. the same 11 IH ' i i i? 11 IP rein c is tha I the hi I I cr travel wit limit money ami the loimoi* \\ it h"ii I hrai its V \\ ie re im \ e vmi 1 rn\ ehsl V" 4 "A 11 o v i i t he l out i lien I y "Kiir \\ 11;11 |Mi I |>o->e * <k( )hser\ It ichi." u\Vlnit have yon observed?" "A lin'eto eommnml, inueh to censure, au-l a oreal ileal to lauoli at. k> I ! a m 1111 ! u ! fa t do yon e<unin<*11< 1 ?" ' A handsome wotnau wliat will >iay at hollte, an el'Mjlieill nieaelier turn will lu'eaeh short .sermons, a y.md writer tlial will not write too mm h, ami a tool that has sense enough *o hohl his t onoaie/1 l,\\ hat elo you censure ?" "A man that marries a oirl tor 1 er line ehuhino, a youth \s lio sin.In s medicine while he iris tie- use <?! Ins hands, :t11<I tin? |>t ??j?1 what w ill i U.e.u udrunkard to otlico." t4\\ li.it >lo you luu fli iitV" 4'1 l:il|o| | Ul :i /HUH will) CXpOON ll!S position to eummand tliul respeet which Ins personal ?|u:iliticutiuiirt and ipiulilic.s do not merit I le was dismissed. A Itultie in Arkuiisas. Li t i u: Rock, May I. A regular battle is reported m .1 offer son county between tin? two opposing poIit7e.il p.trlies. The Urooksites hud nine killed and twenty wounded, and the remainder were disarmed and sent home. Seven J?axteritc\s wore wounded and six horses killed. Fedral auction is hoped lor by ail. The eorner-s'.oiie o! \ underbill University at Nashville, Tennessee, was laid on Tuesday by ITnliop Payne. Addiesses were delivered by lhsliop MrTyeire, (lov. lb own and Jnd^e iMoioan, ol Memphis. The attend :iiiu<3 was very large. The husines? houses of the city were closed during the afternoon. Oil Kit AW A > O I'll KSTICIC UaII.KOA I). The <|H"Ni ion at present agitating the easiero counties ol the State is the building ol" the Cheraw and Chester, and the Cheraw and Little liivcr ILdlroad. The act of the Legislature authorizing an election to 1 ?<.? held in the Count i< s of C'hesier, I.anc.aster and ? host erlield, upon the <jnest ion ol issuing hoods to the first named road, will he ral lied into effect at an early day. The election will lie held in tii'i month ol done. The Laneaster Ledger is ol the opinion that should tin; people of the several counties vote in I a vor ol ism tiny; the bonds, the i oad will he placed under concraet hy the first ot August, and grading will immediately coinmenee. ? A't-w.i an I 4* oonYr. t ' iru l\ KM. \ 11 people who arc fond of tried chicken ?and who is not?-ought to know that a Iablc^p ?on1111 Of I >i) \A i le ? , , 1 \ru i' I .... i ... v I "t I - xv< *' " ' "? " ' s' in a pint ot corn meal (d; y) th r?n1i v and fed to the chick**, is deiiili, cci'iu u to hawks, Tlio first, 11?i? *x ihc l?i\v v d? os i** to pull out the craw ami oat it, mid ho is certain to gee the dose. ll a hawk kills a chicken and parti/ devours it, il you can find it, and d is, a little strychnine up ?n it, you w i have him safe. I have caught, ise\n r.vl in that way. l?o caretul to mix i i'* JVux I'ontica powder well throng i the meal and not give too much a i i time to very young -chicks.? I! ir i\ (\troliiti*tn, M<ty Ao. I "I'vo helped Imry every man that sold me a drop ot liquor, except on , and I am alter him night and day, ' was the cheery good nature I Tern irk. ot a temper alien o. iter at Springd 1 J.^ Mass., tuo other day. * "