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THE HEALD IADVERTISING RATES. THE HERALD -~ I Advertisements inserted at the rate of $1.00 per sqnare (one inch) for Alrst insertion, UIDouble colim advertisements ten per cent. EVERY WEDNESDAY MOR-NING, Notes of meetings,obituariesandtributes IS UBLSDi anof espetsameora pea squen isrin. At Newberry, S. C. Spei Notices in Localcolum 1cents BY THOD. . GRENEKER, efertn et itlrh :Editor and Proprietor. . Specialcontracts made with large adver Terms,tisers, with liberal deductions on above rates. Terins, $!a.00 per 'JIUD1.., Invariably in Advance. A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &J Vi' Te paper is stopped at the expiration Of ______ ___ __________ time fur which it is paid. DONE WITH NEATESS AND DISPATCIL. '7tim whchmark denotes expiration of sub Vo. XIV. W EDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 13, 1878. NO. 11. TERMS CASH. acription. Clothing. WRIGHT& J, w, 0OPPOM HEADQUARTERS FOR MEN'S AND Boys C LOTHING, Furnishing Goods, Boots and Shoes, . Unprecedented Bargains Can be had from this date to the 1st of March next, In such as Heavy Fur Beaver, and Black and Colored Castor Beaver Over-Sacks, Heavy Worsted Coats and Vests, Colored Cass. Suits, and Colored Cass. Pants. We would call especial attention to our stock of Boys' and Children's Suits and Overcoats, which we prDpose to Sell at and Below Cost. R FURNISHING GOODS DEPART MENT eep always full and complete,having just eived a fresh lot of Linen Bosom Shirts, 81.00 to $2.25 each, also a new lot of en Collars. Black Silk Dress Hats will be sold from ree to five-dollars each (good style.) Heavy Boots and Shoes are also offered t cost. We beg leave to call the attention of our customers to the fact, that we feel assured it will be to the interest of every one in need of anything in our line to call and ex amipe our stock. 'Respectfully, WRIGHT & J. W. COPPOCK. Jan. 16, 3-2m. DrJ Goods and .otions. GEORGE W. CLOTWOETHY WIT DANIEL MILLER & (O. IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF DRY GOODS, INOTI0Ns, WRITE GOODS,&c. 327 and 329 Baltimore 42 and 41 German Sts., BALTIMORE, MD. Feb.1.3, 7-6m. THERE IS A TIDE IN THE AFFAIRS OF MEN, Which, if taken at the Flood LEADS TO FORTUNE. NOWIS THAT TIME AND THE TIDE c. F. IS AT COLUMBIA, S. C., Who is selling his entire stock of DRY GOODS AND NO 0 WIONS, AT PRICES The ladies are included in this invitation and are assured that they will find the flood a pleasant and profitable one. Jan. 16, 3-tf. IMPORTANT TO FABMERS, Th e following popular Fertilizers: Eutaw Fertilizer, Palmefti Acid Phosphate, Are offered to Farmers; At Low Cash Prices, or at Cotton Option. W. W. HODGES, Feb'6 6 3m Agent. PAVILION HOTEL, Charleston, S C (. T ALFR &a CO o puer. .iiscellaneous. VEGE TINE Purifies the Blood, Renovates and Invigorates the Whole System. ITS MEDICAL PROPERTIES ARE aliterative, Tonic, Solvent and Diuretic, VegetiDe Reliable Evidence. Vegetine UR. H. R. STEVENS. Dear Sir-I will most cheer V -getine fully add my testimony to the great number you have already rec ved in favor ot your great Vegetine ai4ood medicine, VEGETIE, for Ido not think enough can be said in its praise; for I was Vegetine troubled over thirty years with that dreadful disease, Catarrh, Veaetineland had such bad coughing gtDl spells that it would seem as though I never could breathe Vegetine any more, and VEGETINE has cured me; and I do feel to thank God all the time that there is so Vegetine good a medicine as VEGETINE, and I also think it one of the Vegetine best medicines for coughs, and ,weak, sinking feelings at the stomach, and advise everybody Vegeti ne 'to take the VEGETINE, for I can assure them it is one of the best egeI medicines that ever was. Vegetine MRS. L. GORE, Cor. Magazine and Walnut Sts., VegetiDe . Cambridge, Mass. Vegetine GIVES .i Health, Strength, VegetiDe And Appetite. Vegetinel My daughter has received great benefit from the use ol Vegetine VEGETINE. Her declining health ge1 was a source of great anxiety to all her friends. A few bot Vegetine tles of VEGETINE restored her health, strength, and apetite. N. H. TILDEN, Vegetine Insuranoe and Real Estate Agt., No. 49 Sears Building, Vegetine Boston, Mass. Vegetine CANOT E Vegetine EXCELLED. CHARLESTOWN, MASS. Vegetine H. R. STEVENS. Dear Sir-This is to certify that I have used your "Blood Vegetine Preparation" in my family for several years, and think that, Vegetinelfor Scrofula or Cankerous Hu Imors or Rheumatic Affections, it cannot be excelled; and, as a Vegetine blood purifier or spring medi cine, it is the best tig I have - ever used, and I have used al. egetiae most everything. I can cheer fully recommend it to any one Vegetine in need of such a medicine. SYours respectfully, Vegetin e No.19 Russell Street. Vegetine, IT IS A Vegetine Valuable Remedy, Vegetine SoUTH BosTo-, Feb. 7. 1870. MR. STEVENS. -Dear Sir--I have taken several egetine bottles of your VEGETINE, and am convinced it Is a valuable Vege tiDe rem' f*tr adsp-a. Kidny egetiDe Itcan heartily recommend it to all suffering from the above egetine coSE re ctfully ege tiD e 86 Athens Street. VECETINE Prepared by H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. VEGETINE iS SOLD BY ALL. DRUGGISTS, Mar. , 10-4t. The Largest and Best LOT OF STATIONERY ! sucH As PAPER, all kinds. ENVELOPES, all sizes. PENS, different makes. INKS, approved qualities. PENCILS, Slate and Lead. SLATES, different sizes. DIARIES, lar:ge, small. MEMORANDUM BOOKS, ditto. Together with many other articles in Stationery of prime necessity. All of which WILL EE SOLD AT REDUCED PRICES At the HERALD STATIONERY STORE. Jan. 2, 1-tf. SILVER AND GOLD PERFORATED BOARD FOR THE LADIES. At HERALD BOOK STORE. Jan. 30, 5--tf. Any Book or Article In the Stationery Line NOT IN STOCK, Will be ordered and furnished at publishers' or manufacturers' regular retail price. Leave your orders at the HERALD STATIONERY STORE. Jan. 2, 1-tf. Watches, (focks, Jewelry. WIATIHES AND JEWELRY At the New Store on Hotel Lot. I have now on hand a large and elegant assortment of WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, Silver and Plated Ware, VIOLIN AND GUITAR STRINGS, SPECTACLES AN~D SPECTACLE CASES, WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY PRESENTS, IN ENDLESS vARIETY. A'l orders by mail promptly attended to. Wathmaking and Repairing Dot e Cheaply and with Dispatch. Call an ! examine my stock and prices. En'lJARD SCHOLTZ. t A HAPPY FAMILY. The. British Lion wags his tail, But somhow fears the shock; The German Eagle flutters when He hears the Gallic Cock; The Austrian Buzzard droops his wings i And Italy cries for peace. Roumania whines, "Let me alone," a And Servia feels like Greece. A happy family are they, Though acting rather shirkey, But each a raid to stop the Bear From gobbling up the Turkey. t [Peppercorn. FOR THE HERALD. a IRROADBRIM'S NEW YORK a LETTER. t No. 59. p High Church and Low Church-Peter Dwy- a er's Mission-Dives and Lazarus--Another t Defalcation-The Wonderful Psycho meters-The Brocho Ponies and Per- t forming Dogs--Odds and Ends. r b Not a stone's throw from the t spot where Stewart's great marble a dry goods palace frowns down on t the pedestrians of Broadway, is a - rich and costly Gothic pile known as the church of Grace. None but o the saints who go clothed in purple o and fine linen ever dare to cross its t, sacred threshold, for in it there fi is no place for the poor. The He- t, brew, who of old wandered house- o less through the streets of Jerusalem p calling sinners to repentance, and h telling the glories of the new dis- e pensation, would have turned away a from its gates, for if he did not, the t burly sexton whose ponderous form t usually blockades the door, would o have given him in charge of the n police. The inside is glorious, 8 mellowed with golden light, re- t] flected through windows of rare o beauty, gorgeous with miracles of t1 art. The saints who suffered for f< the cause of Christ are here rejoicing a in their new canonization, stirring v to emulation the sluggish hearts of C the worshippers. The evidences of a wealth are everywhere, from the t: organ, whose grand diapason swells a its thunder of Heavenly harmony, t] to the rich velvet ]inings of the e pews, where the wife and daughters i of Dives sit, bedecked from the t looms of India and the mines of t Golconda, outshining in their costly b trappings even Solomon in all his s: glory. Everything is in keeping. v The very air you breathe is laden 2 with the odor of spices and rare e perfumes, calling up visions of Sam arcand and the distant islands of t the sea. The priests who minister a at the alter are not of common clay. e The odor of sanctity encircles them b like a cloud ; religion to them is an b abstract sacred classic, only to be b expounded by the chartered apostles t1 of the schools. The singers were i] trained in far- off lands, and the y homaely strains il "That once did sweet in Zion glide." s never shock the ears of the saints, t. whose musical culture is enriched g by gems from "La Fille de Madame Argot," or the beauties of the Op- e era Bouffe. This is the temple I where Croesus asks forgiveness for 3 his sins, if he have any-where the r rich and the good (for all the rich 'I are always good) come to see and a to be seen. Grand equipages line e the highway adjacent to the church, r and John and William and Thomas b sit and freeze in the wintry air, t while their masters and mistresses, ii with becoming humility, listen to y the teachings of him who said, I "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for t they shall see God." I said in a e former letter that a city is full of I sharp contrasts. At a little engine- f house on Barrow street another v Apostle is at labor. The guide of I his faith is the same that they use c in the church of Grace. The mas c ter in whose cause he labors is that t same outcast man of Galilee, and ( the final reward he looks for is the r same as that whose expectancy I crowns these gilded saints. The I church in which he toils is old and I crumbling to ruin. Years ago roys- t tering sinners made its old rafters t ring with songs of wine and wassail. I No words of benediction ever conse- c crated it to heavenly uses, for it was 3 the abode of sinners then, and it is t the abode of sinners still. Yes sinners,c al sained and foul and loathsome, s :ome here night after night to hear xpounded, by rude, untutored lips, he story of suffering and salvation d Him who died for just such vicked ones as they. This is Peter )vyer's mission-a mission for the efuse of the slums. The repentant hief can here find one who like imself, has worn the convict's garb nd chain; and the harlot, spotted vith moral leprosy and sin, and al aost loathsome to the touch, can ere find one like herself, clinging o the foot of the cross, expecting o receive, like the Magdalene of ld, the mercy which the world .enies. I suppose we may call these high nd low churches-the one so high nd the other so low that it seems ey can never come together. I ave often asked myself if there are .ot two heavens. It cannot be ossible that these Faints in velvets nd gold can ever In this world or e next find an abiding place with bese sinners in homespun and ags. Poor Peter Dwyer finds it ard to pay the rent of his little ample, the plastering of which is 11 cracked and seamed, and ready ) tumble about the heads of the rorshipping congregation. Are the souls of these repentant utcasts of less value in the sight f God than those whose names are : be found swelling church bene. tctions, and foremost in the gifts > charitable associations. Will any ne help Peter Dwyer ? Will some erson who reads this extend the and of fellowship to this rude but %rnest. apostle? He may not be ble to expound the mysteries of ie Gnostics, to unravel the lore of e Sanscrit, or detect the crudities f the Koran, but to untutored sin ers like himself, floundering in the lough of Despond, or battling arough the Valley of the Shadow f Death, he can speak in tones as irilling as those which thundered >rth from the Acropolis when Paul mazed the hearts of the Athenians 1th the wonders of the unknown rod. Will some of the saints who nually gather in Exeter Hall or be Tremont Temple, or perchance t the Cooper Institute, to consider de wants of the heathen, cast an ye on these famishing sinners, per hing for gospel bread. No need : cross the ocean to seek for souls a save, for they are around us ere by thousands, struggling, inking, dying, and dying the death hich some of the sentinels on ion's hill tell us shall never, never nd. Notwithstanding the mild winter, bere has been much of suffering nd sorrow. The comfortable mer hant and mechanic, wrapped in is double Ulster and hastening to is home, warmed with Baltimore eaters and comfortable with all be applicances of our modern civ ization, is apt to forget that a poor roman or a wretched child,shivering 2 calico and rags, may possibly uffer from cold even when the bermometer fails to mark ten de rees below zero. "Beware of the vidders," said the der Samnivel Weller ; and if James orimer Graham had profited by fr. Weller's experience he would ot now have been brought to grief. o those of your readers who are t all acquainted with the creme de la reme of our Knickerbockers, I need .ot say that James Lorimer Gra am represents the highest seat in he Sanihedrin. As an old-time pol bician he wvas a success ; his house as the center of social grace and tospitality, and the dinners he gave o wandering dukes and vagabond ounts were the envy of old Philip lone, who imported a French cook or the purpose of getting even rith the Grahams. Daniel Webster, enry Clay, Kossuth, and even the Lefunct Emperor of the French, at ifferent times have toasted their oes underneath his mahogany. The rrand Sachems of Tammany were t less welcome than the Whigs, >ut that was before Sampson had >een shorn of his locks, or Delilah Lad corrupted his heart. Well, his ancient respectability under ook the management of a widow's ortune, and as long as the divi Lends came in regularly, everything vas lovely ; biut in the mutations of hese evil times, when the dollar of >ur daddies requires an act of Con n.ess to maei a legal-tnder, the dividends fail to come, and a re cent investigation showed nearly seventy thousand dollars had van ished into thin air. Mr. Gzaham says he- invested for the widow to the best of his ability, and the widow says that he had mighty lit tle ability to invest; all she knows is that her money is gone, and it now &ppears that Graham knew that ,. ong time before the widow. Mrs. EcCall tried to get Mr. Gra ham put in jail, on an order of ar rest for swindling, but merciful friends came at once to the rescue, and for the time at least saved him from a felon's cell. So many proud heads have gone into the basket during the past year- that it. is scarcely safe to prognosticate what may be Mr. Graham's future fate, but it may not be amiss to tell all the old codgers out your way to "bevare of the vidders." We are now rejoicing in the latest, of scientific discoveries-the won derful Psychometer. With this marvelous instrument you can look right into a person's brain (if he have any), and you can tell what he is going to think about. Mind reading is no longer the secret of showmen and traveling mounte banks. The shop-girl who sells you a yard of tape or a paper of pins, can look in your eye and with a Psychometer in her inside pocket can tell exactly how much you are going to beat her down. We had a private exhibition at a fashionable boarding-house on Wednesday last, but everybody knew so much about everybody else that it produced such disturbance in the company that two suits for divorce are now pending; there were five free fights coming down-stairs, and a couple of actions for personal damage, are the results of the evenings enter tainment. My wife has a lively curiosity to see how the old thing works, but I mildly suggested that perhaps it might explode, and there the matter rests for the present. Our savans are in grief, for we lose the Castellani collection, which, for the last year, has been an un qualified source of delight to all of our intelligent citizens. It will be long before we shall again have an opportunity of studying such gems of art, bringing back the most hallowed memories of the~ world's immortal dead. I was in hopes that perhaps Judge Hilton, Mr. Stewart's lucky heir, would have cast some bread upon the water, but I leaned upon a broken reed. I had a faint, suspicion that, may be, Mr. Astor would respond. Per haps his judgment is more pro found on Schweitzer Kase than Archeolgy, and this accounts for his silence at the present interest ing juncture. Those of us who visit London may perhaps have the pleasure of looking at them in the British Museum, unless Kaiser Wilhelm or the Khedive of Egypt should secure them for ther na tional collections. The first man that I hear talking about public spirit in New York, I will send the fool-killer in search of, and if he does not brain him on the spot, I'll have him deposed from his office. You know it used to be consid ered as rather uncomplimentary to call a raian after that gentle animal which assisted Joseph in his fligh t into Egypt. I don't know that the objection is entirely done away with yet, but if any man wants to call me a horse, I should rather esteem it a compliment. I saw some horses up at the Aquarium that could do everything but talk,-such feats as never were -performed by any equine before. And as for dogs, why the next man who calls me a puppy, I shall think is trying to compliment me ; for these dogs are able to do, in these hard times, that which many a two-legged pup py is not, and that is, to earn their own living. The second murder within a month at Owney Geoghegan's rum hole, 103 Bowery. It is true that the murdered men are just of the kind that save us the expense of a gallows, but I can't say that I ad mire this means of putting them out of the way. If we could only get up a sort of general prize-fight, and induce them to keep at it till, like the Kilkenny cats, there should be nothing left of them, it would be n nt+oid blesing to society. But' now they endanger honest citizens with their miscellaneous shooting, I and, as there are very few of us left, so it behooves society to be careful. Three murders, four suicides, and a I a couple of disastrous fires, have -i failed to make us comfortable; in I fact i begin to doubt if there is I such a thing as truly unqualified I happiness. Hoping that you, Mr. I Editor, and your readers, including i myself, may each get a share of I what little is stirring, I am, Yours truly, BROADBRIM. 1 THE FENCE LAW. t f The following is the text af the t new Fence Law. It has passed i both houses of the Legislature: J A Bill to Amend an Act entitled "An Act to Authorize the Coun ty Commissioners to Submit to E the Qualified Electors of their e Several Counties a Proposition . to Alter the Fence Laws and to Provide for Effectuating the f Same," Approved June 7, 1877. ] Be it enacted by the Senate and I House of Representatives of the k State of South Carolina, now met I and sitting in General Assembly, t and by the authority of the same: r SEcTION 1. That in the several i Counties and townships of this t State where the electors have al- F ready or shall hereafter vote to 1 adopt the provisions of the above ( entitled Act, commonly known as i the fence law, the boundary lines i of the lands of the inhabitants within the . territory so adopting the same shall be deemed and taken to be a lawful enclosure 1 thereof; and the owner or mana ger of any horse, mule, ass, genet swine, sheep, goat or neat cattle of any description who shall will fully, knowingly and unlawfully or negligently permit the said animals, or any of them, to go up on the lands of any owner or oc cupier situate in any such county or township shall be deemed guil ty of a misdemeanor, and, on con viction in any Court having com petent jurisdiction, shall be fined in a sum not exceeding thirty dol lars, or imprisoned for not more than thirty days, or both in the discretion of the Court. SEC. 2. Thbat the o,w ner or man ager' of any of the live stock aforesaid, in addition to the pen alties provided in the first Section1 of this Act, shall be liable to theI owner or occupier of any of the lands situated as aforesaid for all damages he or she may have sus tained by the depredations of any such stock,to be recovered by action 1 of debt in any Court having compe- 1 tent jurisdiction, and the stock I that caused the damage shall be I held liable to pay the same in preference to all other liens, en cumbrances or claims against the same: Provided, That if the own er or manager of the stock shall show to the satisfaction of the Court that the damages were com mitted without fault or negligence on his or her part such showing shall be held a sufficient defense. SEC. 3. That in the Counties of Anderson and Chester, where a 1 majority of the townships have adopted or shall hefeafter adopt the provisions of the fence law, it shall be lawful for the county i Commissioners to erect fences on i the county lines, instead of on the lines of townships, and for that purpose they are invested with all 1 the powers conferred on them in a cases where the entire county shall have adopted the said fence law. SEC. 4. That it shall be the df the county Commissioners to erect substantial and con venient gates in said fence at the crossing of all public high ways and neighborhood roads, and when the inhabitants, or any of them, shall desire a crossing on their own lands they shall be per mitted to erect and keep up such gates at their own expense ; and any person who shall willfully and unlawfully leave open any of the said gates or do any willful damage to the gates or fences erected for the purposes aforesaid j shall he deemed guilty of a misde meanor, and: on conviction in any Court having competent jurisdic tin, sal be fined in a sum not i .xceeding twenty dollars or im )risoned not more than. twenty lays. SEc. 5. That it shall be a misde. ti neanor for any person to willfully t< -ide drive or allow his team to t< ravel outside of the road on cul- i ivated lands of private parties, 6nd, upon conviction thereof, shall L e fined not less than five nor 01 nore thantwenty dollars or be im b; >risoned not less than five nor w nore than twenty days: Provided, w "hat in case any person charged M vith this misdemeanor be brought m efore or reported to a Trial Jus ti ice, he may discharge himself L rom any further proceedings ri hereon by paying such fine with- C n the above limits as the Trial fi ustice may impose. 11 MARRY THE WoMAN.-Some men W iarry dimples; some eyes, a few ti ars; the mouth too, is occasionally ci aarried; the chin not so often. A ai oung man once fell head over eels and ears in.love with a braid. m Ie was so far gone that he ni ecame engaged to his braid, h: ut a new mode of hair dressing m iaving been adopted by his fiance, b he charm was dissolved and tc ever renqwed. What do young cl nen marry ? Why they marry m hese and many other bits and 01 craps of - *fe, instead of a true e, voman. Ana then, after the wed- C ling, they are surprised to find F hat although married, they have Ii io wives. He that would have a 9 vife must marry a woman. h C A recent advertisement contains . he following: "If the gentleman vho keeps the shoe shop with the t] 'ed head will return the umbrella if a young lady with whalebone s -ibs and an ivory handle to the 54 ilate-roofed grocer's shop, he will 0 iear of something to his advan- i ;age, as the same is the gift of a h leceased mother now no more Tith the name engraved upon Vanity is so constantly solici 1ous of self that, even where its >wn claims are interested, it di -ectly seeks the aliment which it h oves by showing how little is leserved by others.s A year! A life! What are ti ,bey ? The telling of a tale, the >assing of a meteor, a dim speck r< 'or a moment on time's horizon, is iropping into eternity-.c If thou hide thy treasure upon b he earth how canst thou expect tI o find it in heaven? Canst thou y iope to be a sharer where thou tI iast reposed no stock. j It is not always safe to guage a 8] nan's financial ability by the hi oudness of his wife's outer gar nents. ____,______ h In matters of conscience first P houghts are best ; in matters of a >rudence last thoughts are best. Ii It is better to fall among crows han flatterers, for those devour y he dead only-these the living. sI An able man shows his spirit by n ~entle words and resolute actions ; o: s neither hot nor timid. y ----e .- -e A thousand evils do afflict that g nan who hath to himself an idle y 1nd unprofitable carcase.o No man preaches his sermon se yell to others if he does not first se ireach it to his own heart. .p ci Truth is -the foundation of all :nowledge and the cement of all ocieties-.t w A little boy's first pair of trou ers always fit, if the pockets are eep enough. t An able man exhibits his man ~ood by few words and many res 'lute actions-.t God pardons like a mother who isses the offense into everlasting k orgetiulness. They who cannot sleep are not a veil. Either the mind is dis nred or thn body is ill HAMPTON'S POLICY. On Friday night, at an enter iinment given by the Washing )n Light Infantry, Gov. Hamp )n, in response to a toast, made ie following remarks: My friends of the Washington ight Infantry: This is the see. id occasion to-day that I have id the pleasure of meeting men ho were my comrades during the ai. I have seen the men of the ashington Artillery and now I eet those of the first company iat volunteered for the Hampton egion, the men who were on the ght of that legi->n; who under Dnner went always nearest the tshing of the guns, and out of )6 came out of the war with but vo men who were not killed or ounded. I remember all these tings: I remember all the in denta connected with the legion, id I tell you that -you and all ho served with me are bound to e by ties which death may, but >thing else can ever sever. I ve had the good fortune to lead any of you in battle. It has len, perhaps, my better fortune lead you during this-last politi 6 canvass. I take no credit to yself, for I was. but the exponent the feelings, the voice and the itire heart of the people of South arolina. But I can say this to :u, young men of South Caro ca, that I declared every feeling, ish and thought to the safety, Dnor and prosperity of South arolina. You cannot know, you in never know, the sacrifices I ade in that canvass; but, had iey been tenfold greater-bad iey involved even my life-the ttisfaction I have felt since in ,eing a free people once more up a the soil of my old mother, and irecognizlng that in the hearts fthe people of South Carolina.l ave a warm place, would afford te ample compensation for all that. have had to endure. [Applase.] My time is almost out. Let me my to you that the fight is not ver yet. That this next election pill be the crisis in the history of Ais State. You havte it in'your ands to say whether that will erpetuate the prosperity of the tate: whether the power will smain in your hands, or'whe 1er it will be lost. You have sen that by doing justice to all, scognizing the rights of all cit ens of South Carolina, you can irry the State. If you go on in sat line you will carry it again, at I warn you if you depart from iat straight and narrow road, if ou allow the extreme men ot his State to take possession of it, Lst as sure as tbe sun will rise it ill rise upon your failure. I )eak as a Carolinian to Caro oians. I ask you to think of iese things. You, the young men South Carolina, into whose ands her destinies will soon be laced, who -are to take our places, 'e the ones to work upon this ne. You have a glorious destiny afore you. By your conduct in se last election you have stamped :>urselves heroes. You have iown a courage higher than the ighest courage in facing the can an's mouth-that you are worthy Sthe freedom you can govern ourselves ; that you have achiev i. Now, let. me adjure you, to yon in the same line and devote yarselves to your State. Think nothing but the interest of that ~ate. Work for it, dedicate your lves to it, and though I1 may not e vt-it may be I will have ~ssed off the scene-but your iildren and my children willirise to call you blessed. I did not intend to say aword -night, but there are themes hich, when they are touched, -ouse the emotions of my heart, d one of those themes is that iast just given-South Caro na. A pious ruler is a great blessing any. people. Having turned over a new leaf; sep it clean. Christianity carries blessings herever it goes. Fait.h is necessary to victory.