Horry news. (Conwayboro, S.C.) 1869-1877, July 24, 1875, Image 2

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hg/gmm' 1 m m * ^ ^ 4 f uju* i?i;Tu>n? coasrKTrrxow. i IklUi'I'eUGtrjga&^Cottci Tij. fl Tfctt Tit ???>? l of t""T 1M-Ml*'?t^vvl|^ Ml f?r ?. t! It .ifK?nlttlii<l. A ?lv xlo (: i ll ut t' ' t, HI rrw? ? inrma it* t'atir'h, lur-i1* ? . I *j HQ *dv?nt? . ffci'f l? tti*i)iark<-t \lo?rer*'!<" V K9 lo ?i-"p'jr ir?. ? rt i?m ; i -!^o* t r:. ? < 'i m. M !cn r ijwifti 7 Molt. J. J|? ( 11 A. J. NE-lLiS & CO., Piitsl?jfg\ Ta. 1 fin t^4N?. Ar'l. " * ?? ?? f ? a| g_t J and *lt?? t* w".; l.i .? h r>*. K'r ??.-?, V. HI 'luiint', . ? * it, *<?? \ a* Clll'.>n, 4>v /.-I. t N ^Fl Ten t?er?l bf Aallle'I'r.xn^i t(> suit i I ! ?< y Kinsman Of Howell, Factors and Con/mission Merchants. Liberal'^Advances made oh /^rk + t/\+f /?1> a at, VC7 yyl ! V v>(//i vrt HfHA> i v ia ut kji ur ChS. C. POUTS'S MORSE AND CATTLE POVVDCRO, V ii\ oure <>r prevent Pina>80. ?'^C-er^iLci?-<e-*C*it K. 4> r.y^srrl, err <f}4 t'lS-ts ^aLlXn.^J <frf.F Ag. wy&'xs ~ ^yu? Ji~<V? f? <cVy %4tt~ Ak ?>ur iwlvi-riibor tins nut miulo hi* tnlvertlpeTnont nHuiri-t.hor distinct, we will interpret und olul/otntc it ns follows ; !<;. 15. I 'OOTI *.. 3T.T > Author <>f l'Inlu 1 Ionic Talk, M sMonl Common Rouse, Fetmiee in Siory, etc., lift) Lexington Avenue (eor. V.Hxt dstli Street), Now York, III) ISliKl I NDKNT J'iitmoi*n, tre.?ts nil forms or f.ttiyerlnff or Chvovio Diseases. nn 1 receives litters from nil porta of the oi v i i,i/.ki> Wont,d. 1 By hi* orifilini uwry of ootirtnclinjr it Mediuil I'rac tie?, he is siu*'v**ioily treating niiii.mous path tits in ICtirope, i''1' V. fit liiiltoR, IkotitliiJon of itn<l in every pint of the Uniteo .Slab*. NtO TM.witctn'tiA.r. Or deleterious ilt'upf* used. llo has. (luring the past twenty three years, treated successfully nearly or quite 40,()U<I unn'i All facts connect oil with each ta-e lira carefully reionteit, ulictlici they he eoiiiiiiiiiileitlt'il hy letter or in per-oii, or observed hy the Doctor or Ida associate physicians. Tito latter aro all hClentiUo medical men. HOW INVALIDS AT A DISTANCE .Are treated. AH invalids at a distance are required to answer it list of plain questions, wlileh elicits evory nvinptoni under which tlio invalid utfTera. All coininunit'irth'ii* h'Kittil HtrU'du riniri,tentt'il. A complete system of registering prevent* mistakes or confusion, Ijist of questions sent free, on application, to any part of the world. Sixty page pamphlet of Evidences o? Bucokss, also scut tree. All these testimonials at a frotn those who have been treated hy mail and express. Advice ix orriou, on nv utih fiike ok cuaiiuu Call on or address DR. E. B. FOOTE, No. 120 Lexington Ave., N. Y. "Wuntrd loscTl DrJFovtes Plain. Jlo'me Tallc <uid Mc/Hl'oI CotiiDictl Sa/isa.'^AIsct J)r,lboies Sciences in Story, IcrTarticuhws aiictirss- ' Ifurr^'JtiiiRililisliin^ Company [WTasIZS0^ NEW YORK. Dr. Berger'a Tonio Bowol and Pilo Pills. These pills aro an infallible remedy for constipation ami piles, caused hy weakness or suppression of the peristaltic motion of the bowels. They very gently increase the activity of the intestinal canal, produce soft stools and relieve piles at one. Thousands have tieen cure I by the n, l'rioe f?U cents, sunt by mail on receipt of price. Prepared only by 1'. AT,FRED JtRIOH AUDT, PlI.UUUOlBT, 4tW i'ounTIX Avenue, JSKW YOUK CITY. Dr. Burger's Compound Fluid Extract of Itdubarb and Dandelion. TheboU combination of purely vegetable medicines to entirely replace Calomel or Blue 1411. It stimulates e.ho liver, increases the flow of bile, and thus removes at once torpidity of the liver, biliousness and habitual ocvstiiKUioii. and the diseases arising from such as dy<pap*i.v ?ick hemltohe, flatulence, etr. rhocITecti vet ion of thin Extract will be proved, visibly, at. onco V? the p itient, as one or two bottles lire auftlclciit to clear tho complexion bonntlfiilly, tuul remove phitplct rvad stains o utsoil by liver troubles i'rieo fcl per bottle, ti b ittlo*, $ >; will be relit on receipt of the priro t/o hhv address. froe of ehmve. l'repnrctl only by 1'. A LI''It 111> It El (J IIA It Of, I'UAUMAf I8T,-lOiFoUKXtf Avt-Nt'K, Nkw Vontt Cits Itxnk the liljHieft for I)urahnitvt lVifect "Work. ami K?<e t?f (?pim?i?n. They ate tie* most silent. I yhiruimlmt ami -ereicc.h'is, the earnest to sell, ami tuo>t xvililn^ly p.'.l I i.tt, ill .1 titievef ? \< rv requirement In the family ami manufactory. I.ilural tcntim to A wonts. A.Mac., Damestlr*' 5teuir.tr Machine Co., Ken-York. ' "i , (.| l-e a m ool i : i! . ?. I'll.el.t . t I'. < I: i; s f r L.niKV, MS . V, - li t Children's (iainivhts el foiiifu ? ?l (loinc.Mii ?le<5at .-v. by l|. j in "t mvoin pllshed iifi'tt- ? Tin*, :?. ? 11 t* it,t -1 i .# i f. . tlrt .r ii . ? tl.i'i'.iU , rn.d yillliet t- i?i i 1 o | ultciim wct |>rtt 'cliuiiM' (Mi '?< , ii" ! I il;i* llieliiul li< ivvif intm? rfVll. A'fnt* UuHUl. < I 4ol llhltlKitiU 1 ;MiC. A (III I k *' ThmioKtir " Spurim* MuclihiP Co., Jfou-Yorlc. Mkvoti i> TO Twirox. Y.iTKKMrr* AMI AMT. A tlH'rnincl#y Til'mutu, n lii.'>1 ;>iu\ I'cu'llc I liil'oniiiu.t ? ?>rirt rl I'dt * I I 1" i i I? id III iu ill liallllullt*,; * , >.p wllf rv* ?.f to 1 c: t( rtnlnliir* llU*r twv. hmnl.? >i? illiinliulloun, ?ri ti i ifli'ii'H,?ti..?. h ? iiihI u .liiiinnil i / i'll n.if | <o the \>uii11 nf iho Imrm-ilrtlu. Tcruw, H'l.W) t? r ycniv S;;>?clnifii c>>|>Us lite. <>>r Hmi.mi ?ir\ i" ? \tVAt to cvry Mflncrllici In t!ii> Ci irl'mlril /t'liiextii " I'mov OH* rn in ti. i * tiHmteU 111 / vtc/ici'c. Adiirciti " Domestic " Monthly, " DftiiiMlif " llull.llng, N<w-Ynrfc? 0t, ffejMKY -COWARD JL'JjtlNCIJ'Alj. A riTKI, 0<wirs^)r A I5LK PKOFKSSOR!Compl^te* outfit df Arum, Apparatus, Ki for thorough mental and Iphvsivul t t rill nil 'location not?dUor healthful hen*, and ,pn.se ^htu KailroidfTand Telepmphio facilities. K< ill apply to L'rlncjpul. TE IIOUUY" XK\VS. T. \V. DKA1 V. Kwott. HATUUDAY JULY 'Jul., 1^75.. The Verdict in the Parker Ti'iiL Tli<; hearing be to re the Jury i ;i the Parker ease closed on Monday, and at a o'clock the jury retired with instructions that ii they agreed in one hour iheir verdict# would be rceioved by the Court. ll not, they would bekept together until they did agree. At the end ot the time stated the jury 1 . 1 1 i I 11 nan not agrccu, sum me juii^c instructed them it tliey agreed betore !l u'clcuk ho would receive their vor ilioi; it not, they would he locked up ior ilit- night. At 10 o'clock the jury sent out wort Unit they ',ad agreed upon a verdict I mil the.Judge, who had gone out to Ins place, was accordingly sent for. I'lie distance was ahotil three miles, and n was altar 11 o'clock before tl?c .Judge arrived. In the meantime the la wyfi'rt oil both sides Searing the no As, Hoiked into the t'ourt house. Some further delay was occasioned in waiting lur the deli ndanl to he brought into court, and it was half past tl o'clock belore everything was in readiness to receive thu verdict, which ?\ as as hdlows: "We find ha the plainlit! in the sum <>t seventy live thousand dollars." Mr. Youmans excepted to the verdict, and gave notice of a motion lor a now trial. A Stamo Suit.?N icw Yokk 17.? A curiorifc ease, involving the constitutionality of Hie amended postage laws, has been brought in the United J States Circuit Court for tins district. , A gentleman utters a book lor mail transmission to Philadelphia Irom liiis city. Postage at old rates being II'".- i i i i l i i: <iiUAi'u aim urin^ HUIM'Hj nr lor it mandamus to t -?? i?j>t 1 ihn postmaster lu icceive tlm package. The ineiit ol tin* applicant is that the sundry civil appropriation hill, into \\ldeh the amendment increasing the rale on third-class mail matter was inserted, was not. a hill lor raising revenue; that the amendment did proside ways an I means tor raising revenue; that the. Senate has no constitutional nulhoiity to provide measures lor that purpose, that lining the sole prerogative ol the House, and the postal amendment having originated with the Senate and hoen glutted on J the hill, which was not one for revenue purposes, is uneonst'tuiional. The Local School Tax riicoiistitnlional. The Kingstrco /Star, which is friendly lo the irco schools, and would have every person in the Slate lo he educated, takes the hroad ground that the local or district reload tax is w holly unconstitutional and cannot he eitlorced if properly resisted. The points made are: 1. That the tax is a delegation ol a power ot taxation whteh can only he exercised by the Legislature; there being no power to to conlcr the right lo tax (or school purposes, although there is, under the Constitution, the power to cooler on cities, towns and counties, the right to levy taxes lor local purpo-is. Moreover, the Constitution declares: u 7 7t a (ienet'ul Assembly * * * I...11 I...... .... fwii.\nn1 l..v. .... '..11 ....1.1... Il?lil \ > till aillMli.l ltl.\ IMI <? I I til AaUlt n properly throughouglit the Stale, for the support ol puhlie schools." 2. That the district taxes are unconslilu tiona1, because they are not "uniform ami equal." While some districts levy a tax of five mills, others lex y no tax whatever. Jh That no lax can be levied "except in pursuance of a law which shall distinctly slate the object of the same," tfce. The Legislature can make laws; a public meeting cannot, ami a tax levied by a public meeting is without law. 4 The general school tax is distributed among the school districts in propotion to the respective number ol pupils attending the public schools," irrespective of the amount of the district school tax, which is unjust. These are strong grounds ot objec lion, and a judicial decision u|?on lhe ?juesUou oiThe constitutionality ot'taa is mi]>oitaiU, not only because it is loi the public good that the ComUtuiior shall be held inviolate, but becautu t lie people at largo are thoroughly dissatisfied with the present system Tins gives a handful ol negroes tin power to tax the whole ol the proper iy in any school district, where thej have a natural cr an accidental -major ity; and lire people at large have n< Hisurauce whatever that the tax, whe* collected, will he ixroptt'ly spent. Tin - school teachers, in many cases, are a ignorant as their pupils, and there b waste and contusion vvlvere liven fhoultl be strict ecouoiny and order There is no opposition ot consequent to the education of the people by th State; but there i? an objection to pay iog money ior the henotit of inconpe tent teachers and to support !az; oiliciaU. Thn, and thin alone, nmk the live schools 'unpopular with th tux,pay org?News and Courier. .Columbia water works .lor sale. An advertisement imvy -brvve bee i^fledn in our ad-vert isenieuc colunis ie i the-past week,-in whioh the old -wait e. . works are announced to be sohl by th ; sheiillf on the-tirst Monday in August ,r to satiety a judgment obtained again* the ulty by the Carolina national banl ti: iiOHRY WE I K] of this city. This properly contains several acres, ami is situated on tha corner ol and Laurel streets, ?nd cootaius iho basin machinery, and other valuable lots that have j Ihk-u mvu< il by the ciiy for a threat number ill \eais. The water works j j?i.?jM-n v advertised to be *old is in daily use, supplying the city with water. It is absurd to suppose that this property can be levied upon and sold like an old market or some other valueles city property. "1 his being a matter ol public necessity, ol course ii cannot he sold any move than the court house, and, il it is attempted we expect to see the sheriff enjoined Irotn ? 11!. ? I ' - ... I .... 1 v I M till \vl III . * j\l k ktl %* SCIllII^ llliS VillllitiMi; |MU?IH. n , The city council should move at once in the matter, and call a special meeting to act promptly in either net tling the account or post polling the execut ion ol the judgment. The loss or curtailment of our water supply at this time would work incalculable mischief. Through the ineflicieney and stupidity of the com- j moil couucd we have heeu deprived of light in our stieevs. To tins degradation and shame is the loss ot a lull supply oi fresh water to ho added? We thinu we have only to call the attention of the eitiy.eiis to the notice of this sale to have a remedy provided. The council is not likely to do anything in the case, it they are to he judged by t he past.? Union Herald. \ Constitutional Amendment !:: North Carolina. The people of North Carolina, following i lie example ol Arkansas, Virginia, and other Southern Slates, have set about the Work ot icmodcliiig the Constitution given to them during the Ucconstruction period, and the adoption o| which was made a condition precedent to the roll atniil.ition or tin ir Slate in the Union. It Ui'm work is done in the proper spirit, its ii has keen m tlio other Stall's wi) have named, it cannot We opened to any reasonable objection. The lmpcrteeti in of many ol these Reconstruction Constit minus were pointed out i?v Tun TitntUNK&l the lime ol their adoption, and lriv<since been generally aeknow lodged. 1 bey could hardly have been otherwise than imported. The authors were too oil en ileiieieiii alike in theoretical knowledge, observation, and practice ol the sciuee ol go\ernnieiit; loyall) to t!?e Union and acceptance ot the result I of the civil wj r wore there only qualifications tor olWce, Man) of them were newly emancipated, illiterate, and mastered by a prejudice against a large portion ot their tellow-eitizens. which was natural indeed, but tunc the less deplorable on that account. Others were intelligent and to some extent educated, but new ci* izens ot the States w hose organic law they were to frame; and others again were mere adventurers who having acquiivd their seats by pandering to the pnjiidices ol the lowest idass ol voters and mauipula ling primary meetings in tlieir own interest, directed Jill tlieir energies tc the perpetuation of theii own powei and Hie opening of Slate treasuries lot their o\vis dishonest purposes. Nordhl ilie belter class ol citizens have an op portunity ol staying whether the) would accept the instruments this? fashioned. As a measure ol prut.oetioi to the Irccdineu it. had been though best to exclude lor a time a I a rye pro portion ol the people ol the South Iron the cxeicise ol the right ol snfiVage Not one-tenth of those who voted a the Constitutional elections could s< much sis read the ballots placed in ihci hands, and the number who could tin 1 dersiand, the plainest proposition o law was quite as small. Thousand voted i'or tne adoption ol a new (am stilution merely because it sccuivd l? them tilth* :iv? dom,aod others be cans i its adoption seemed t<? oiler iheeasics way ol escape Iroin inilitaiy govern me ii l. No wonder that laws thu I Irained should be crude in conceptioi ' alul execution, abound in absurditie ' ol legislation, and prorc utterly unsui - ted to the people to whose benefit the should have inured. One ol the uioat laitlty of these lie construction Constitutions is that ijnde ' which the people ol North Caiolhi - have Hied lor eight years, and whici i* it is now proposed to amend. A reeen > address ol the Democratic Centra Cemmitiee ol the State thus describe ! some ol the characteristics ed tJusii stiuiiiont and its practical working; - Its provisions are so loosely wor<jc * and so badly arranged aw to couslatut r but u medley ot inconsistencies tiia * deities Jtiwi successful construction ot ill > courts; in fact, to reconcile the dillicu i ticH arising froai its practical working P. the court Jius in some instances hee h dri\ en to supply omissions, and i R ot her**-to introduce a new |>jri,ncipl f- hitherto unknown in the juridical hi tory oi our Mate, distinguished i e '^judicial legislation," an innovatie u anti-re,publican iu .character and inva * i.vo oi the rigbu and duties .ol a sepe - .ate department. Its provisions ?re i y obscure that within the Uriel spacev e .its existence many more decisions <. uoiistiiulionrl questions have .been d uiandcd than in the entire previoi history oi the Slate?-and ol.latea1 have witnessed the extruorduiai Upeelacle ol two-sots ol-Judges.in ho n the lid and YJLllh-Judicial Distiicl ?r contending lor the same position, 01 ir oi which,-claiming .to.hold by an a ie pointiuenl lYom the Governor tor t, .period oi.tin years, an office thai ll >t Constitution seems to say is lo <# tilled by the people at dlic polls, .u A N EAYS: JtlA 2i whose term in expressed to be only I eight years. In many counties there is a practical denial ol justice, the courts ure inad* quale to the public I demands, and thus they arc driven to resort to special terms, which are expensive ami unsatisfactory, ami poisons accused o| eriuiinul offenses are ollcl) eonliiied ??jr nioiphs u itlio it uial. The udtlivss which we have quoted also urges the necessity of a less expensive judiciary system, ilie abolition ol useless o 111 cos, a return to the old practice ol a rotation ol judges, and the disfranchisement of persons convicted of in(amon< crimes; and we are glad to add the people are called i upon to elect to the Constitutional ConI - ! 1 - t I 1^.1 ^ A 1 vcimon "men 01 enmrgeu mimj prac ileal stntesinanship, spotless integrity, representatives of sill classes of society, ami whoso poMtions will entitle tlioir labors to confidence am) support/' The subjects her? suggested for consideration by the Convention surely may be discussed am) acted upon without giving rise to any wellgrounded lear that the rivhls of the colored man t re in danger, but. this cry has already hoen raised by st partisan press in North Carolina, and we may expect soon to hear it eoine hem Washington. The Legislature, however, in calling the Convention, was w ise enough to impose chum a in restrictions upon its action which fine-tail such, partisan clamor. These restrictions amply secure personal liberty; each delegate helore 4*hc shall he pennilted to sir in said Convention shall swear to observe these hestrioi ions;' " and J ndge Jamison and o' her high auihonties on the pmveva of Constitutional Conventions have clearly held that Conventions are bound to observe the restrictions imposed by a Legislature in the act calling such Con vein ions. We repeat, therefore, that in view ol the necessity tor changes in the ttmdameiit.il law ol the Slate, the declaration ol the peo ? " , expressed by a two thirds majority ul their chosen representatives in favor ot amendments by Com chtion, ami the restrictions, imposed l>y the Legi?lat are as t <? the topics to lm considered, it would seem that the attempt, t>1' North Carolina to improve her Constitir. ion slmuld be allowed to pass without further imputations ot evil intuits. It is to he hoped, ami there is reason to believe, that the members ot the Convention to be elected next month shall be such as arc tailed tor by the Democratic Com millet*; if so, there will be little canst to fear thai the changes which may be made will give any class ot citizens cause ior coin plaint--A. J . Tribune A marvellous piece ol mechanism in the way ol clocks, is described n the French jottina's It is an eight day instrument, with dcadbeut escape men t maintained power. It chime: the quarters, plays sixteen tunes plays three tunes every twelve hours nr will play at any time required The hands go round as follow.-: one once a minute; one, once an hour; one once a week; one, once a month; out . once .1 yeai. It shows the moon's age . the rising ami setting ot the sun; th I time ol high and low water, hall cbh and hall llood, and, hy a bcuulitul con uivance, there is a part which re pre sen Is the water, which rises ami tails > ' . , tilling some ships at High water lid as if they were in mot ion, and, as it i t cedes, leaves these little Hiitotiiatoi ships dry on the sands. Tne el< c shows the hour of the day, day ol th | week, day ol the mouth, mouth of th , ye.tr, and in the day of the mom " there is provision made lor the Ion and short months. It shows th uiirnv >( t Ik, '/iwliiii'1 II ul rilrrw rvt- ini< V,. ?,.V ........v.- ... ..v., . chimes or not, a> may bo desired; an it has I no equation tabic, showing tit difference oj dock and buii every da i> . , J in llio year. Horn sides in Ohio express grea confidence ol victory in the comin campaign. The Cincinnati Guzeti \ says: "the prospects ol a sweepiu * republican victory this lull are grow 1 ing blighter every clay. They at ^ brighter now than they were at tli lirst ol tlie month, and were hrighti then than on the 1st of dune. Th 1 remark is not made in the way' < jl campaign boasting, but as the delibe ate conclusion lormed fro in a larii * number ol letters, eon vernations wit ^ men in different parts ol the state, an a careful examination ol the counti ' weekly papers. '1 bo republicans ai . everywhere hopolul. The democru ' artA de^jvonded/' The JjJnyuirei'y < L the other hand, speaking tor the d <uocra??# says; "lV,u can assure ?i .c oojLccwicd that Ohio u&u give 100,0c majority lor a sulliciej,it currency at * good times, if tlio rig hit WW* a " resorted to enlighten the people." v4 ??I?dwaid lyi. Fry and Agues L 8* .ning ol Syn Frajtcisco were engaged i IK i- :. i 11 ..... . i? . " we (iiarruMi. i*e hsw u *f yxfuam, ill 1,1 ?he a UaiWlii*. A tewday* bo/ore th }i* Hxod lor the wedding, Archbislu r* Alemany aunt. icr the couple, and iju 40 went lo Ida .house. The Archbish1 told Fry that if God hles^ed him wi ,n vohildren, he supposed he would ha i:' them educated in the jLhii holic C'.burs 118 Wry said he "didn't -understand ,thi Vii Jqgicnl terms, hut he didn't proper ' 'y ,pui A tfw?ru?ngu .on his unburn -el 1,1 dren." MTbon Jl .earmot granl .you -*>> diKpimsatioai," said the Arch his In l,<J "and without .it -you van not ?ho -in P" rid;" "UVdmrilJ can't," swd F a U'm uboiit tired of the OutbolioChur 'lu anyhow," said Mrs. .Fry that ,was j be, and they hunted.a Protestant m J.i?ter, .aud were mm t ied. 1S75. The Ship "Henrietta." In a letter from Captain J. C. Nieh" | * !h, ih*J commander of thia noble ahipi i dated St. JchuV N. U., July 4lli, 1H75 hv w.)?: t4\Vo croaeed ll?e Georgetown bar at 7, A. M., of 3d June, ami came to anehor at Si. John** at 1, 1*. Al., on I the 11th. We had a line run ot live l l i - t ^ i ?%***. I u ?ys iron ?uM?i^i'i?wn to ?u luinoms water oi? George's Hanks, and from tln-re six days of head winds and thick fog to this place. I hope to finish loa ling on Tuesday, and go to sen on Wednesday next. I cannot yet tell what amount ol deals the ship will cany, hut I think something more than $500,000 standard.'' The "standard" is either 1800 or 2000 feet, we don't know which, which would make her carrying ca' paeily equal to about I ,0tX),000 t>i feet according It* our measurement. She tak?s her cargo to Liverpool, and iiom thence will sail to any port offering the most profitable freight. ireorgetoi&n Times X Know lug Druggist* "Will yon please tix this up for me?" asked x woman of an Kant-end druggist, to whom she handed A prescription. "Ycs'ui, in a minute," answered the vender of restoratives, as he examined the prescription with a troubled eye* Failing to decipher what was written, he learned toward, with elbows ou tin* counter, heels up, and eyet> intently fixed upon the prescription. lh.comi kilt? vcvi'il l\i> lvk i . I "AY I i IV u' full' u?is?" whererupou lite woman intelligently answered, "the doctor." lie again tasti i H1 < I his eyes on I he j wiper i ami slo.vly deciphered, "Oleum jjecovis ; asseti*," having (.Lone which, lie was still at a loss to know what was man I. In the midst ol ihis perplexity ho obscrvvl a friendly physician passing. lie lost no time in telling the woman to wait another minute, ami liven called the doctor, of whom he asked: u\VLal the devil is oil of jackrvsttlf " .Jackass oil, I presume, sir," said the doctor; "but it you mean what is railed tor on this prescription you had heller call u rod liver oil, as iluit'a what \>leum joaovis asseli' signifies." (Jen. Tre-urn's wild speech has ae~ e.omplished an excellent work. It has given live South an opportunity to say iluil it has outgrown old laniastics and lanters, and has cca&ed moaning oyer the past. Not a single Southernjournal has defended Preston's harangue, hut, on the contrary, all of ? I hem have uttered sentiments similar to1 ihe following from 1 he Memphis AutflnHche: "The destinies of the South have heen transfered to the keeping ' s ot the younger men, most of whom ? were not voters when Sumter fell. ' They have more important tasks then brooding over the past and presaging '' evil in Hie hituiv, 1 hey have a vast, almost ruined empire to rebuild and ? heatiiily ami enrich ? a country to rem der greater and more glorious tlnuw l? ever before. .Men charged with thi-a '? oii jit mission have no time to listen I o # ? - - ' j to the maunderiiigs and jibberings o-fc j unshected and wneoltiued ghosts." iV. Y Tribune. In sp'te of the snug satisfaction '' with our school system shown by the majority, there appears once in a ( while a vigorous protest against de* (eels. The tSci7i J^raticiaco Chronicle, for instance, s?ysr "The State is ^ bound in sclkproteclion to educate its '' youth. Hut it is not bound to tench rj|ih'un a poor smattering of all the \digies, 'osophics* and 'isms.* It is (> not bound to teach them the classics, N the sciences, or the accomplishments. The parents of pupils who are de^ signed lor professional or literal y pursnits should at their own expense tur" nish t heir children with tuition in the 't j special branches require^. Tlie exist* T j sy.-tem is irl together too ambitious. Ii aims at accomplishing too much? t i at accomplishing more than is possit. bio in an ordinary public school course. Memorizing, cramming, and ^ superficiality are inevitable under it. ' There is no good reason why the State should utterly ignore the patent fact ^ that the great majority of its youth (j arc destined to indusli ial occupation? in wliich the 'ologics' 'osophics' will be of no practical use. The education supplied by the Staidfehould be de< Mi signed to give a taij^^ftrt to all, an<] ^ tins start being leave cacti j, to work out ilia destiny. The I *. -v ? l?/\ ii/inwiL id t li/i mi ui \i jq ? III) l/Uiu<D^^^>ui |iuwin |(| .schools able to rea^^^Bmilv. lo writ* well, and with knowledge o arithmetic, is lulj^^^Biairly e<|ui lor tlie scrub nu BHEle. Alter thai (j> he can study Mpver his tastei Lo prompt him to s^By and his nieani l(j .or 1 c,t>uW afford htm opportunity for This sytiU'UA avoids waste of time anc ju energy, sense is beginning to be rewgnij^cd'aa the^oyereign i? tbi op a^' &entimeutul and <f?uoilt?l tl?n , j, qriea must give way to the practical. v.e ? : A\. tlow to G,k,t I^id qp ^'liks.?TIv ?o- smoke .of the dried .leavea of.a jpttnipki to burnt.qo a bright,five mill cause ,flic til- to ?<juU an ttyuii'inient .instantly or i a will.kill them. .Uirita must bo will >p, drawn*befcre tho.oporation, and ipoi ar- sous should abstain Iroin going int r.v. apartments immediately alter, as tli eh, 4>inok(\cuuseH hwndacbes. TfJpvtiDplo; to mem of lam el. oil is also a ,prevehti\ in* against flics, as they carrot .bear ,tj> .AlQcil pf U' tijic American announces that an in* sect, hostile to housewives and slum* ^ her. lus been purged ot his pestilential I qualities by a simple scientific method* 1 and rendered a delightful and indispen* sable article of the dresMiig table* I5y snaking nice lutJied bugs in a saturated solution offl^feratc ot potash and water, a pcrfuim^delicate, delicious, penetrating and like nothing else in the wide world, is obtained. Impressed by this ion elation, the uiucago /rtotme says: What an impetus this will gb? to the slaughter of insects of this persuasion 1 Nilruic of potash is cheap, and Ikj'1 bugs are plentiful. The underpaid clerk on five dollars a week, living at a dingy, third class hoarding house, has in this announcement the wherewithal to accumulate u competency. Such as the value of the daily newspaper as the handmaid of science, ami benefactor ot the helpless and ueedy. ^ /\H Now for the iliq^Kcry t t fi roaches can he nsec^vs tin voriti^j tracts for puddings, pies, c*o The San Antonio (Texas gives the following notice ers: "Hereafter we shall ^t the lllOSe fll fishing on the Lord's day atrdH^il to V send us a string of trout, lVrcb and ' suckers have t?n> many bones in them to allow tis to forget that tin; moral element of our ]s?pulation looj^ to *he press to eradicate this growing des- J ecration of the Sabbath. B 'Jlieitt is nothing llMgkk.e proposition to inflate the curve ne-m There is already a great deuL rnore- ewrre-ney tli.au van he used in the present amount ol business, and immense sums of money lie idle and unproductive in the- banks* The pt'oposithut of the Ohio Democrats is, therefore, empty thunder?there is nothing in it. The real question before the country is whether the (10 vernrawoi sih.a.11 be ad- B ministered economivally a?<l honest I v by 11 v?il who will not Meal, or wh*th?ir v pl um level s nh<l' vobfeuir* ch:vH. hw Kept- fl wu power. Un-iit tihnl is swfctleil',. tho ML tnurciuiy epvesl ion <r:in into etare wfc itself.? Xeio York Siuk Kt'^uliir l omiuuniiatioiiM. S\ 'LTw# MftXt regular cnniTmurjcatinn of ^yv^^Florry Lodge,. No. ?r>. A.-. IP..-. M.\ u HI be heM on. Tuesday night July ^ 2Ddr L67.0- , L. D.. LOXO. SftCty. L ITy onlV?i of febff W? &?.. J METROPOLITAN TEA CO. I OlV UCCotSlt oft ho- h&ltfi tinwt* tH'& tic'- I I beouiineil. to .sell Teas oil any kjimL cheaper i iLmu any house in the- VVorUtL l&LACJv 'J'LA,..-from 50 cents to peril)VOU.NO LLYSOX " LM.rF.lUAL 0c Ll'Xt'OW I) 1?U - <10 . 'JM AVe will send, a pound or a half |fl atps to yo-tt t>y mail ^ >/3 FOH A SAMPLE "J omrcwiipt oS th?- prices. Please stoH 1 * \Z% l; off T ea you wauA, an <li be very give lis y.011.1: eooect address. All' letters iiMisI 1X3 ;uLh vssedl MK.TTlOrol.riTAN TEA. 6lL A. oT Yosey j.une 10- "W SB TO THE Y OU CAN have your choice elolh bound look.' of beij^^S?E^BEB^^?B^8 vueal or Instrumental?vasy nothing, by subscribing io* ????*??? m ?v 'M ? a m. A huge Magazine, containing sketches* poetry, IUIW^ wokvii or ttoo*) m'sic;. It Only ??t $l-;M^MBMfflKgBiHBi S*mm1 stamp &>r sanip!?^HB^HB^RHm?pM|^KH content* of psctatHim subscribe- u?>wv and revive mail and the Yisuron regularly ^PHBHBMBIWBI l'or a whole year. Agents w at Address, joiix cuuu^BKPjyfflBHMjHH llttsmr** Notie ?^|BHK|?| rpHE COBARTNERSIUr in th? ftnlBHMS I W. H. BUCK A CO. having esphcSHRHBH its own limitation, as per previous ik>i i'V^MgHggS Notice is hereby given that William L, BuoK^^MB will settle up all business matters connected with the late film, to whom all persons holding claims against said firm will juesont them for payment, and all indebted will make pay* meut; he, alone, is authoruodto receipt for, . or in settlement against saijttMito. WIL ?p: BUCK. C. F. wFk. 1 It. L. BKATV, i J E. DUSKNBUBV, 1 Gkkknwooi> Mills, ! Buck.vii.le, B.C., July 7, 1375. NOTICE is hereby given, that I will oonAKflM tlnuo to caijy ou at Greenwood Mills,Hn9[ ( Bucksville, 8. C., in my own name and on my^BEB own account, the business of the late firm of^^nS 5 YV. L. Bm'k & Co. In all ot its fcranem'.s. " i 1 have constituted atid appointed Mr. B. L, ? Bcaty my agent and attorney, to whom lull [' authority is given to act for me in all matters of settling up the business of the late tirm, as well as to the continuation of the business ou k my own account. a To tlic patrons of tlw late firm, I return my g hearty thanks for their liberal patronage, and assure theru than tlx busineatjlo be continued will becaiiiedou with the (kAuc assiduity * that has hitherto' noted the bWiwood Mills { foi the past tlaity years. s WILLIAM L. BUCK. M ( 1 ncrvir/\/in Vf f I I _o I) liLCKsviLi.K, S. C.. July 7, 1375.. July 10-4t, lfij9 I The Binger Sewing Ma* fl chine. 1 it Dl$}j$I(iN l^D.^aa been appointed V JL local ggent at Uonwuyboro, S. by tfie J finger lUiiuutjvctiiiipg Hud r* ^iudantljkocp op .lj^nd i<t*r 8alc,,Mi? .Hhp\dMH| o liiajnya jui?u^$3C<l bkWbNG MACIIIN ,e together with noco^ary nB^kpiflpU. appur-HH , Lonapco*, Needles, and Pnivad. Macljines^H| ) w ill IwjaoUI on Uieaiu??t lilTjrtil t^rpa. e ApjU" Lo ? W WJLWl^vi. TALbU, ^ July %tf. t? I J ^ J