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Humorous ?epartmcut. A MILD MANNERED MAN. A certain mining superintendent on the Comstock range, in White Pine, Nevada, who shall be nameless here, has the smoothest way of doing all manner of unpleasant news of any man above the sod. He may be said to oil the very hinges of the world as he moves along through it. The superintendent never makes things "rough" for any one where he can just as well make them smooth. As an instance, he had some men working in a drift in his mine who were inclined to take things easy. Visiting them, he examined the rock in the face of the drift, saying : "My dear boys, this rock seems very hard." "Very hard," said they. "It's too bad, too bad, that it should be so hard," said he, slyly making a mark ou the rock near the face of the drift, "terrible work to get it out," added he. "Terrible," said they. "Too bad," said he, "but do the best you can, ray children." - The next day he again made his appearance in the drift. Examining the rock in its face, he saw that no perceptible advance had been made beyond his mark. "I see," said he, "that rock is still as hard as ever." "No change," said the men. "Well, well; it's too bad that we can get no change. The rock is so hard that I hardly know what we shall do. It is hard on you, my children, but I hope it will not worry you much longer. Take care of yourselves !" and up to the surface he goes, finds his foreman, and thus addresses him : "See here, those infernal loafing devils in that southeast drift hain't made two inches in the last two days. Curse such men. When they come up give them their time." Strolliug along C street during the afternoon the superintendent meets the "children" of the southeast drift who have received their walking papers and are starting out in search j of "new worlds to conquer." The superintendent is greatly surprised. "Why, hallo! my children, what are you doing up here at this time of day ? Has any- j thing happened at the mine ?" "No," say they, "nothing the matter, but the foreman has discharged us." "Discharged you, my children! I do not know what I shall do with that foremau. I never get a set of good, industrious men, but lie goes and discharges them. Too bad, too had, the way he uses me. Discharged my hast. men and the rnck in the drift so hard. too ! What ain I to do now I don't know. Well, well, good bye, my children ; we all have little trials in this world." ? At Work by the Day.?Snooks had occasion to call ou the Reverend Domiuie Thomas Campbell while ho was in Glasgow. "Is the dominie in?" he enquired of a portly dame who opened the door. "He's at hame, but he's nae in," replied the lady. "He's in the yaird, sooperintenden' Sauners, the carpenter. Ye can see him the noo if your business is vera precise." Snooks assented, and walked through the door pointed out to him, into the yard, where he beheld a carpenter briskly planing away to the tune of "Maggie Lauder," and the worthy dominie standing by. Unwilling to intrude on tneir couversauou, Snooks stepped, unseen, behind a water cask and heard, "Sauners !" No answer from the carpenter. "Sauners, I say! Can ye no hear me?" "Yes, minister, I hear ye. What's your wull ?" "Can ye no whistle some mair solemn and godly tune while ye're at your work ?" "Aweel, minister, if it be your wull, I'll e'en do it." Upon which he changed the air to the "Dead March" in Saul, greatly to the hindrance of what was now painful plaining. The dominie looked on for some minutes in silence, and then said, "Sauners, I hae anither word to say till ye. Did the gude wife hire ye by the day's darg or by the job?" "The day's darg was our agreeing, minister." "Then, on the whole, Sauners, I think ye may just as weel gae back to whistling bonnie 'Maggie Lauder.'" "He."?Highlanders have the habit, when tnlk-inor their English, such as it is. of inter ; --o n ' jecting the personal pronoun "he" where not required?such as "The King he has come," iustead of "The King has come." Often, in consequence, a sentence or an expression is reudered sufficiettly ludicrous, as the sequel will show. A gentleman says he has had the pleasure of listening to a clever man, the Rev. Mr. , (let his locality be a secret,) and he began his discourse thus: "My friends you will find the subject of discourse, this afternoon, in the first Epistle general of the Apostle Peter, chapter 5th and verse 8th, in the words : 'The Devil he goeth about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.' Now, my friends, with your leave, we will divide the subject to-day into four heads. Firstly, we shall endeavor to ascertain 'Who the Devil he was.' Secondly, we shall inquire into his geographical position namely, 'Where the Devil he was,' and 'Where the Devil he was going.' Thirdly, and this is of a personal character. 'Who the Devil he was seeking.' And fourthly and lastly, we shall endeavor to solve the questiou which has never been solved yet?.'What the Devil he was roaring about.'" A Good Answer.?Iu giving reminiscen? ..c i 1 t ?: un.i?ii.nii o ,?o,, U1 VyUIUUt'I UCYI JUUUincilj a liu^u IIUUI Hi his day, the Montpelier Argus tells the following etory: "The colonel was uncommonly bald, and without his heavy dark wig looked not a bit like himself. Once he was in the wash room of the Pavilion, and for the convenience of his ablutions had laid his wig aside. Presently a young, spruce chap, with extremely red hair, came in. Noticing the colonel's nude head, he inquired, 'Well, uncle, why don't you have some hair 011 your head?' Looking savagely 011 the red head of the saucy young stranger, he replied, 'When they made me, and had me all finished except my hair, they told me that they had nothing left except red hair. I told them, then, 'Egad,' I wouldn't have any. I would rather go without. They might save that for impudent young popinjays and fools.' The young inquisitive and joker was perfectly willing to drop the subject." Thinking of tiie Neighbors.?Last week, at a little social gathering, a duet was being performed by two young ladies, to the apparent delight of all the assembled guests. The two executants were doing their utmost, ir\ n onrvtlinr nnil with cnr?li rrvnrl f?f feet that one could scarcely have heard the report of a cannon fifty yards off'. Every body was radiant, with the exception of one individual, to whom, at length, a friend addressed himself: "My dear fellow, what makes you so pensive ?" "Ah," was the reply, "I'm thinking of the neighbors." A Doctor's Memorandum.?A doctor called on a cholera patient and prescribed. Next day found the patient well. "Well," said the doctor, "the mediciue brought you out." "No, sir, I didn't take it." "What did you take ?" "I ate saur kraut and turnip sauce." So the doctor wrote in his memorandum, "Saur kraut and turnip sauce good for cholera." Next week another call. Irishman this time. Prescribed saur kraut and turnips. Next day called ; found Irishman dead. So he wrote opposite the memorandum "Saur kraut and turnips good for a Dutchman, but death to an Irishman." A Detroit policeman heard that a resi-i ? i TV-nlftV, of roof Via/I hoon hnrllv ininred. Ut'Il L Ui inciiiu ai?vv?u?? ? -J J J and he called at the house to obtain particulars. He found the man lying on the lounge, his head bound up and his face badly scratched, and he asked: "What is the matter; did you get run over or fall down stairs ?" "No, not exactly," replied his wife, "but he wanted to run the house his way, and I wanted to run it my way, and there he is." ^griotlfovxl ?epttmcnt. MANURING FOR CORN. j I have seen many inquiries and answers in J regard to manure and its use. I will now i tell the readers of your paper how we applied it, and cultivated the corn crop to which it was applied. In April of last year, about a month before we plowed the grouud, we ma: nured a part of our corn ground, drawing 110 j loads of coarse manure on four acres of ground. : In the manure, which was mostly from horses and cows, was mixed a great deal of straw and ; refuse cornstalks, and it was therefore quite | coarse. The field was in sod four years old, having | been mowed two years and pastured two. It j was about the 10th of May when we eommenI ced to plow, and by this time the grass had j growu up through the straw until it was about i four inches high. In plowing, we found a i great difference. "Where it had been manured, the ground was loose; and when it turned j over, it broke and fell into pieces and was j very mellow, and the work was much easier I for both team aud man. Where there was no i manure, it was hard ; and when turned up, it i remained unbroken and never worked down | as well as the other. Another part of the I field was mauured while we were plowing, j There was always a difference in the corn, and when we harvested the crop, the first manured j was much the best; and either portion was a I great deal better than where it had none. I j cannot give the exact yield, as it was not measured ; but we had 30 bushels shelled per acre of good corn, besides soft corn, which ve did not measure. The miller to whom we sold a | part of our crop, said it was the driest corn he | had bought. We began to plant our corn the 27th of I May, and it was planted three and a half feet i each way. We planted in fresh furrows, strij king our cross furrows as fast as we wanted to plant. The corn came up well, and when it was about two inches high, we put on it a i mixture of ashes and plaster. On account of ! very dry weather in June, we did not plow till ! it was nearly a foot high. The field was i clean ; the corn grew fast, and we thought it best to let it alone, rather than to work in it when it was so very dry. It was only plowed twice; the first time we threw the furrow away from the corn, and the next we threw up to the hills. On part of it the ridges were leveled with the hoe. It was cut and stocked in September; husked in November and December. Over half of it was caught in the snow, but we were not as badly off as some of our neighbors who laughed at our avtfa irnfL- in the anrincr nnrl hnd hilt, little ?v,.~ ? wj b , to busk. The field was very free from weeds, or I suppose we would have been obliged to give it more work. The corn grew so fast that it soon shaded the ground, and the weeds could not grow. At the time of cutting the corn, there was one spot in the field of about two square rods, which was full of weeds; and with that exception, and a few weeds around the fence, the field was remarkably clean. I will add that what culture we gave was thorough. We are so well satisfied with this way of manuring that we are doing the same this year, only drawing our manure earlier. Country Gentleman. Using Nails.?Every farmer, who has occasion to drive a nail into seasoned oak posts, knows its liabilities to bend and break. If the point be moistened iu the mouth it will usually drive more kindly. Oil is much better, but then it is inconvenient to dip each nail separately into it. Another point is, I that boards become loose eventually from the rusting of the nails, which, communicating to the wood, causes not only an enlargement of the nail hole, but the wearing away of the nail itself, rendering the fence or building shaky and insecure. This may be prevented by heating any rough grease until it smokes, and then pouring it over the nails to be used. The grease will penetrate the pores of the ' iron, and cause the nails to last without rusting, for an indefinite period. Besides this, 110 difficulty will then be experienced in driving them into the hardest wood. The reason I is, that the coating of the grease prevents contact by air, and consequently oxidation. Oxj ygen is the inducing cause. Anything which | kept from coutact with the air is preserved j indefinitely, and if it is kept dry, the effect is j measurably the same. Paint upon buildings prevents the contact of air and moisture. If the whole fence cannot be painted, the heads at least of the nails should be touched therein. Tiie Tomato.?Dr. Bennett, a professor of some celebrity, considers it as an invaluable article of diet, and ascribes to it very important medical properties: 1 Thnf flip fnmnto is one of the most now j erful aperients of the Materia Medica, and that in all those affections of the liver and or{gaus where calomel is indispensable, it is I probably the most effective and least harmful remedial agent kuown to the profession. I 2. That a chemical extract pill can be ob| taiued from it which will altogether supercede j the use of calomel in the cure of disease. 3. That he has successfully treated diarrluca j with this article alone. 4. That when used as an article of diet it is j almost a sovereign remedy for dyspepsia or ini digestion. 5. That the citizens in ordinary, should i make use of it either raw, cooked, or in the j form of catsup with their daily food, as it is a most healthy article. : Permanent Whitewash.?With the re1 a | turn 01 spring come me usum imjumco mi i a good whitewash. We have only to repeat I the following directions given before, as foli lows: Take half a bushel of unslaked lime, I slake it with boiling water, covering it during j the process to keep in the steam ; strain the j liquid through a fine seive or strainer, and ; add to it a peck of salt previously well disI solved in water; three pounds ground rice I boiled to a thin paste and stirred in boiling ; hot; half a pound of Spanish whiting, and I a pound of clean glue which has been pre; viously dissolved by soaking it first, and then hanging over a slow fire in a small kettle inside a large one filled with water; add fve ! gallons of hot water to the mixture, stir it I well and let it stand a few days covered from 1 the dirt. It should be put on quite hot; for this purpose it can be kept in a kettle on a i furnace. A pint of this mixture will cover ! a yard square of the outside of a house, if ' applied with a large paiut-brush. Remedy for Horse Pawing in the Staid. e.?Take a piece of small chain, a foot long, put a smjill strap with a buckle through the end link, liud out which foot the horse paws with, and buckle the strap with the chain attached around the aukle. When he paws, it whips the other leg, and he dont't like to punish himseir, so gives up me practice I altogether. Put it on every night for a week ; after that take it off and he will not do it any more. Do not use this remedy on a horse that kicks the side of his stall. | To remove warts on horses, procure an ounce of concentrated muriatic acid, spirit of I salt, and apply to the top of the wart with a , thin pine stick, morning and night. The i acid forms a crust which is easily taken off each day until the wart is gone. It causes no pain, and in due time the hair will appear on the spot. Keep the acid well corked and out of reach of the children. Sore-Shouldered Mule.?Take a quaufiV nfwliit.fi nak bark, boil it down, in water, until strong. To two quarts of the liquid add one pound of alum, and use it freely on the mule's shoulders. I will guarantee a speedy cure. It is an excellent application for all horses' shoulders prior to beginning spring ' work. Treat Cows Gently.?Card freely, water regularly, and feed liberally. Nothing is better for a cow at calving than good hay and warm bran-mashes. Give all the water 1 the cow will drink, but for a week, after cali ving take the chill off it. Heading fat the JaMath.! ; CONDUCTED BY HEV. ROItEltT LATHAN. i FULLNESS OF CHRIST. j There are three special names or designa- j i tions of Him who in the eternal purpose is ,; presented to us as the Christ. The first of* J these is the Wisdom ; and the description of'; 1 this we have in the eighth chapter of Pro- : verbs. The second is the Word ; and it is of j this the Evangelist John speaks in his first | ' chapter. The third is the Son ; and of him j' i the Apostle Paul writes in the first chapter of the epistle to the Hebrews. , I Each of these three takes us back into the j past eternity. The Wisdom is eternal; the j' i Word is eternal; the Son is eternal. ! As the eternal Wisdom, he possessed all j : that we call knowledge or truth, in every j ' ! .iurt ounrw L-inil fII ] 1 i111 WPTf! "hid all I the troasures of wisdom and knowledge." ' (Col. 2: 3.) He was "the Wisdom of God;" 1 j and because he was so, he is made unto us ! Wisdom." (1. Cor. 4; 10.) As "the Wis! dom," he is "the Truth ;" not simply the dej pository or dispenser of the truth, but himself ' "the Truth as lie said, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life." (John 14: 6.) As the eternal Word, he is the revealer of the mind of Godhead, l'or as it is by words ( i that we come into contact with the invisible ( ; mind, and know the thoughts and feelings . within, so it is by him, as the Word, that we j' ! are made acquainted with the mind of God. j Is it through him that God speaks to us, and j. it is in him that God shows us what he is. | \ "He that hath seen me hath seen the Father." j Without him, the character of God would have been to us a blank, or utter darkness. ( "In the beginning was the Word, and the 5 | Word was with God, and the Word was God ; j and the same was in the beginning with God." As the Wisdom and the Word he is the light {C of the world; "for in him was life, and the * : life was the light of men." (John 1 : 4.) As j the revealer of Godhead, the uttcrer of the * divine mind, he is both the light and the life of men ; that life and light which speaks to 1 us oT the holy love of God, and invites us to ' become partakers of that love. As the eternal Son, he is "the brightness of 1 Jehovah's glory, and the express image of his person;" (Ileb. 1 : 2) distinct from the Fatli- j er, yet one with the Father; holding filial ( fellowship with the Father, and iuviting us to cuter into that same fellowship and rela tionship as sous; as the Son, giving to us "the . spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father," (Rom. 8 : 15); and making us not 1 only children, but heirs of the inheritance, "heirs of God, aud joint-heirs with Christ." Rom. 8: 17.? Treasury. 4. + KNOWLEDGE, ITS USE AND ABUSE. 7 ( "What an excellent thing is knowledge!" said a sharp-looking, bustling little man to one ] who was much older than himself. "Ivnowl- ( edge is an excellent thing," repeated he ; "my boys know more at six and seven years of age than I did at twelve. They can read all sorts ( of books, and talk on all sorts of subjects. ( The world is a great ileal wiser man it usen ( to be. Everybody knows something of every- | thing now. Do you not thiuk, sir, that knowl- ( edge is an excellent thing?" "Why, sir," replied the old man, looking j gravely, "that depends entirely upon the use to which it is applied. It may be a blessing j or a curse. Knowledge is only an increase j of power, and power may be a bad as well as a good thing." ( . "That is what I cannot understand," said : the bustling little man; "how can power be a . bad thing ?" "I will tell you," meekly replied the old , man, and thus he went on : "When the power of a horse is under restraint, the animal is i useful, bearing burdens, drawing loads, and , carrying his master; but when that power is ( unrestrained, the horse breaks his bridle, ( dashes the carriage that he is drawing, to . pieces, or throws his rider." ! n/va f T aaa ool/l litflo mnn i X OCC t 0<IIV4 nit/ ii ui iv iuiviii ^ "When the water of a large river is prop- * crly conducted by trenches, it renders the e fields around fertile; but when it bursts , through its banks it sweeps everything before it, and destroys the produce of the field." "I see! I sec!" said the little man, "I see !" 1 "When a ship is steered aright, the sail she hoists up enables her the sooner to get into port; but if steered wrong, the more sail she carries the farther she will go out of her 5 course." "I see! I see!" said the little man, "I see clearly!" 1 "Well, then," continued the old man, "if j you see these things so clearly I hope you can see, too, that knowledge, to be a good thing, ^ must be rightly applied. God's grace in the ' heart will render the knowledge of the head * a blessing; but without this it may prove to us no better than a curse." The Safe Channel.?The pilot of a Uni- j ted States revenue cutter was asked if he | knew all the rocks along the coast where he sailed. He replied : "No; it is only necessa ry to know where there are no rocka." These ' words suggest a deep moral and spiritual * truth. Sermons, lectures, and books abound 5 on the temptations which lie along the lifecourse of the young to eternity. Over the most dangerous ones arc lifted the solemn notes of repeated warning. This is well. ( And yet how much more frequently does the j word of God present and enforce, with all the urgency of motive love can suggest, the very truth contained in the nilot's answer?the "King's highway of holiness." Looking unto Jesus with simple faith the soul is secure; whatever the perils that lurk on every hand, there are no rocks ahead. To a loyal spirit it is sufficient to know this. ? Is it not foolish to be living in this world without a thought of what youjvill do at last ? A man goes into an inn, and as soon as he sits down he begins to order his wine, his dinner; there is 110 delicacy in season which he forgets to bespeak. He stops at the inn for some time. By-and-by the bill is forthcoming, and it takes hiin by surprise. "I never thought of that?I never thought of that!" "Why," says the landlord, "here is a man who is either a born fool or else a knave. What! never thought of the reckoning?never thought of settling with me!" After this fashion too many live. They eat and drink and sin, but they forget the inevitable hereafter, when for all the deeds done in the body the Lord will bring us into judgment.?Spurgeon. When men live to themselves, and arc 1 satisfied that they do 110 hurt, though they j do no good, are secure, selfish, wrathful, an- t gry, peevish, or have their kindness confined s to their relations, or otherwise are but little ! s useful but in what they are pressed unto, and 4 therein come off with difficulty in their own s minds; who esteem all lost that is done for t others, and the greatest part of wisdom to be cautious, and disbelieve the necessities of t men; that make self and its concernments f i the end of their lives; whatever otherwise!! their profession may be, or their dilligence in | t I religious duties, they do very little either to j \ | represent or glorify God in the world.? Owen. \ s - j A Small Thing, but Valuable.?It was; a charity for humble Susan to spend her hoi- jc. ! iday afternoon at the house of a still poorer j J neighbor, amusing her children, and caring I for the baby, while the mother finished and j | took home a piece of work, which bought them 'k I a week's supply of food. Without that timely 1 I help, she said, she did not know when she ! should have been able to complete it. Susy ' ! had helped to provide them with food for a ;( week, yet she had not a penny of her own in i' ; the world. ^ i-z?F Sin is never overcome by looking at it, j i but by looking away from it to Him who bore ] our sins?yours and mine?on the cross. The i heart is never won back to God by thinking s we ought to love him, but by learning what i ho is?all worthy of our love. f Jfauth Carolina pmrs. AMENDMENTS TO THE CODE. An Act to Alter and Amend the Code of Procedure, being title 5, part a, of the General Statutes. Section 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of South Carolina, now met and sitting in General Assembly and by authority of the same : That the Code of Procedure, being title five [5,) part 3, of the General Statutes, be and the same is hereby, amended in the several sections thereof as is hereinafter provided : In section eleven,strike out sub-division one ;1) and insert the following in place thereof: '(1.) Any intermediate judgment, order or lecree involving the merits in actions commenced in the Courts of Common Pleas and General Sessions, brought there by original process or removed there from any inferior jourt or jurisdiction, and final judgments in the plaintiff shall make oath that he is apprehensive of losing his debt by such delay, and the trial justice considers that there is good reason therefor, (the grounds of such apprehension being set forth in an affidavit, and served with a copy of the complaint), he may make such process returnable in such time as the justice of the case may require. Sec. 7. In section ninety-eight (98,) strike )utthe words "forty years" where they occur ti the fourth and eight lines, and insert in place thereof, the words "twenty years and n sections one hundred (100,) one hundred uid one (101,) one hundred and two (102,) one hundred and three (103,) one hundred ind four (104,) one hundred and five (105,) ind one hundred and nine (109,) strike out the words "twenty years," wherever they ocjur, and insert the words "ten years" in the dace thereof. In section one hundred and deven (111,) strike out the words "twenty ,-ears," on the twelfth line, and insert the vords "ten years in place thereof, aud on the same line strike out the word "ten," and in;ert "five" in place thereof. such actions: rrovidea tnat, it 110 appeal until final judgment is entered, the court may, upon appeal from such final judgments, review any intermediate order or decree necessarily affecting the judgment not before appealed from." In sub division two (2) of the same section, ifter the word "trial," in the fourth line, iu?ert the following words : "Or when such orier strikes out an answer, or any part thereof, )r any pleading in an action." Sec. 2. Add to sectiou forty-one the following words: "And whenever it shall appear to die satisfaction of any judge of probate that he personal estate of any person deceased is insufficient for the payment of his debt3, and ill persons interested in such estate being irst summoned before him, and showing no . ause to the contrary, such judge of probate shall have power to order the sale of the real jstate of such person deceased, or of so much .hereof as may be necessary for the payment )f the debts of such deceased person, upon inch terms aud in such manner as he may hink best; may grant orders of injunction to dno notmnc nr nrnnoarlinnra orvuinaf tko dViu/'iti. a^tiuiio wi a^aiuob ui\j V/AVV/U ;ors or administrators of such deceased person, uid such other orders as may be necessary to secure the marshaling and administering the issets of sucli deceased person. All proceedngs under this section to be by summons and complaint, wherein the time for answering, manner of service, etc., shall couform as nearly as may be to the form and practice in the Uourts of Common Pleas of this State." Sec. 3. In section fifty-two strike out the words "first section," in line one, and insert in place thereof the words "thirty-fifth section and in section fifty-seven strike out the words "clerk's office," in the fifth line, and insert in place thereof the words "office of the Probate Court." Sec. 4. Sirike out section fifty-eight (58). Sec. 5. Strike out sub-division four (4) of section eighty-one. Sec. 6. In section ninety-one add the following words as sub-division sixteen: "Where more than twenty-five dollars is demanded in i complaint, the same shall be served on the lefendant twenty days, and where less than that sum is demanded, five days before the Inv tiiorpin fivofl fnv 1 rinl PrnvwJprl Ttinf. if Sec. 8. In section one hundred and thirteen, idd to sub-division two (2) the following vords: "Other than sealed notes and personil bonds, for the payment of money only, vhereof the period of limitation shall be the lame as prescribed in the following section : Sec. 9. In section one hundred and fiftyleven, add to the sub-division four (4,) the folowing words: "If said defendant is a resilent of the State, but is temporarily absent herefrom, to any person over twenty-one rears of age, residing at the residence, or employed at the place of business of said absent person." Sec. 10. In section one hundred and fifty:ight (158,) after the word "postoffice," on ine thirty-two, add the following words: "In :ases of minors, who cannot be found within he State, the like order for publication shall pe made, and the summons published in a pewspaper, to be designated in the order. In iddition to the publication, so to be made, the iummons and complaint shall be personally lerved by delivery of a copy'thereof to such ninor; and if under the age of fourteen years, ilso to his or her father, mother or guardian, >r, if there be none such, at the place of his >r her residence, to any person having the jareand control of such minor, or with whom ie or she shall reside, or in whose service he >r she shall be employed, unless it is made to ippear to the court or judge, that the place >f residence is not known to the party making he application, and cannot, with reasonable liligence be ascertained by hira. Proof of tuch personal service shall be made by affilavit of the party delivering the copy, suranonsand complaint, properly authenticated." [n case of persons imprisoned in the peniten,iary, or in any jail of any county in this state, and in case of lunatics confined in the isylum, or other place of confinement, perlonal service of the summons and complaint, >r other process affecting the rights of such icrsons, shall be made by the sheriff of the :ounty in which such persons may be impris>ned or confined, with the like proof of service as required in case of minors; and thereipou, the judge of the court or trial justice, icfore whom the action i3 to be tried, shall ippoint some attorney, or other competent )erson, to act as guardian ad litem for the lersons so imprisoned or confined, who shall eceive out of the property of such persons a easonable compensation for services rendered n their behalf; and the case shall proceed, as n other cases of persons not under any disa)ility : Provided, That in case of persons imirisoned or confined, as herein stated, beyond he limits of this State, service by publication hall be deemed sufficient. That the same ection be amended by striking out the words 'two newspapers" in line twenty-two, and inertiug the words "one newspaper," in place hereof. Sec. 11. That section two hundred and hirty-two be amended by adding thereto the ollowing words: "In case the plaintiff does iot execute the required undertaking, the larty having possession of the property shall etain the same until the determination of the iuit." Sec. 12. Strike out the last sixteen words if section two hundred and seventy-four, and nsert iu place thereof the following words: 'In such cases the cause shall be placed on lie calendar of issues of fact, and the issues shall be tried together, unless the court othervise direct." Sec. 13. That section two hundred and ieventy-eight (278) be amended by striking iut the first nine lines thereof, beginning with ,he word "act," and ending with the word 'notice," and inserting in place thereof, the following words: "At any time after issue, ind at least fourteen days before court, the plaintiff shall file in the clerk's office, the summons and complaiut in the cause, endorsing thereon the nature of the issue, and the lumber of the docket upon which the same shall be placed, and if the plaintiff fail so to do, the defendant, seven day9 before the court, | si ; inay file copies of said papers, with a like eu- i vi doreement, and the clerk shall thereupon place , b ; said cause upon its appropriate docket, and it j d ! shall stand for trial without any further no- j ii: j tice of trial or note of issue." j di Sec. 14. Strike out section three hundred ei and thirteen (313) and insert "final judgments j tl hereafter entered in any court of record in I tl ! this State, shall constitute a lien upon the real m , estate of the judgment debtor in the county j d where the same are entered, for a period of j S? ten years from the date of entry of such sf judgments ; and iu cases where judgments [ 01 | have been obtained since the first day of pi March, A. D. 1870, a like lien may be ob- ir tained by the service of a summons upon the e: judgment debtor, or if he be dead, upon his ; tl I heir, executor or administrator, to show cause, i st if any he or they may have, why the said [ oi judgment should not be and become a lien in ! ir I , I I . ' accordance with the provisions of this act; ; hi and if 110 sufficient cause he shewn to the con* > in ! trary, said judgment shall be and become a | Ii ' lien on all the real property of the judgment 1 st ; debtor in the county where entered, for ten pi years from the date of the filing of such sum- se ' mons, with proof of service thereof, in the se ! office of the clerk of the court of common a ! pleas, of the county where such judgments I have been entered; but no judgment shall se ! constitute a lien on any property of the judg- al | rnent debtor outside of the county where the tl I same is entered, unless a transcript thereof is tl: I lodged in the office of the clerk of the court ct I of common pleas of the county where the se I property of the judgment debtor may be situ- t> ate ; and, from the date of the filing of such fo transcript, it shall have the same force and fi' effect as if the judgment had been originally hi ; entered in the county in which said transcript st is filed. Provided, however, where any judg- p< ment lias been obtained, and execution issued tl: since the 1st day of March, A. D. 1870, and cl the said judgment or execution has now a oi : lien by reason of a levy, in accordance with li the provisions of the Code of Procedure, then tl: the lien of such judgment or execution shall date from the day upon which it became a hi lien under said Code of Procedure. Provi- tl: ded, further, That the plaintiff in such judg- o< ment may, at any time in three years after its m active energy has expired, revive the judg- ni ment, with like liens as in the original, for a te like period by service of a summons on the T debtor, as provided by law, requiring hira to (?: shew cause, if any he can, at the next terra of the court for his county, why such judgment si should not be revived ; and if no good cause ol be shown to the contrary, then it shall be de- se creed that such judgment is revived accord- tl ing to the force, form and effect of the former p: recovery. Provided, further, That this sec- tr tion shall not be so construed as to make final m judgments, in auy case, a lien on the real Is property of the judgment debtor, exempt tl from attachment, levy and sale, under the "< constitution. tl Sec. 15. Strike out sections thr?e hundred and fourteen (314,) three hundred and fifteen n< (315) and three hundred and sixteen (316,) oi and insert: "Execution may issue upon any ti judgment or decree, within three years from d the entry thereof, without any revival of the h same; when levied on personal property, they a shall be a lien on such property, for the period p of four months from the date of such levy, tl and such levy money may be renewed, from te time to time, with like effect, shall be made ei returnable, in the words 'according to law,' and p shall have active energy from the time they si shall first be lodged until the regular term of ai the court from which they were sued, which shall follow next after the full completion of five years from its lodgment; and may be renewed at any time during the continuance of its active energy, without costs ; but, after the expiration of its active energy, as aforesaid, the same may be renewed by the service of a summons on the judgment debtor, his heirs, executors or administrators, to show cause, if any they may have, why the same shall not be renewed; and, if no sufficient cause be shown, the same may be renewed ; and so, from period to period, as often as the same I may be found necessary, and, whenever renewed, shall be subject to the rules herein provided. Sec. 16. The sheriff, coroner or other officer, with whom final process, as aforesaid, slTall be lodged, shall, at each regular term n of the court from which the said execution or J process was sued out, during the continuance 111 of its active energy, until full execution thereof be returned, make a return to the office of the clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of tr his actings and doings thereunder. If he Cl shall have fully executed, he shall return the ai process, with the manner of its execution ; if is he shall have partially executed, he shall re- k< turn, on oath, to the clerk, a statement, in ar writing, under his nand, of such partial execution, with the reason of his failure as to the tb remainder. If he shall have wholly failed to f? make execution, he shall return, on oath, a n] statement, in writing, under his hand, of his failure, with the reasons. And, in any event, on the first day of the term at which the ac- a tive energy of the process shall cease, as here- es in provided, he shall return the process, if the same has not been before returned as fully executed. And the return of the officer, made as aforesaid, shall, for all purposes, have the ?{" same legal effect as if the said process had been made returnable to the term succeeding its first lodgment, and renewed after each sub- p sequent regular term. For failure or neglect _ to make any of the returns above mentioned, or for any false return, the sheriff, or other officer as aforesaid, shall be subject to rule, attachment, action, penalty and all other consequences provided by law for neglect of duty by executive or judicial officers. Sec. 17. Strike out section three hundred and thirty-three, and insert in place thereof the following: "When allowed, except in courts of trial justices, costs shall be as follows : 1. To the plaintiff, for all proceedings where judgment is obtained by default, fifteen dollars ; for trial of issue of fact, twenty dollars; for trial of issue of law, fifteen dollars. 2. To the defendant, where judgment or verdict is found for the defendant, the same | costs as are allowed plaintiff in like cases. 3. To either party, in all contested cases, j fifteen dollars; for a commission to take tesJ timony, ten dollars; for the examination of a ! party or witness before trial, five dollars; ! for the appointment of a guardian of an inI fant, ten dollars; for making and serving a j case, or case containing exceptions, ten dollars ; for procuring an order of injunction, five dollars. 4. To either party, on appeal to the Su! preme Court, twenty dollars; for argument, 1 ,i.. Ptv-tirirlor? Tliiit nnt.hinnr horo ; lllll LJr UUJIUIO , 4. ? vs I B ..... > in contained, shall apply to suits commenced ! I and existing at the time of the passage of this i ; act, wherein the costs shall be the same as al1 lowed previous to the passage thereof. ! Sec. 18. In section three hundred and fifj ty-seven, strike out the words "two years," in : the fifth line, and insert in place thereof the ? words "three months," and add to said section ! the following words: "No rule or order of any court or judge shall require the printing ; of any brief, report or other paper connected with appeals, by any party to an action or i proceeding who makes an affidavit, to be filed j ; with the Clerk of the Supreme Court, that he i or she is unable to pay for such printing." ! j; j Sec. 19. That section three hundred and ; ? : fifty-nine (359) be stricken out, and that the j J first eight lines of section three hundred and 1 i" , sixty (360,) beginning with the word "if" and j : ending with the word "appeal," be stricken 1 i out, and the following be substituted in place j ~ : thereof: "A notice of appeal from a judgment, i directing the payment of money, shall noti ?J I stay the execution of the judgment unless the j ! presiding judge, before whom the judgment I was obtained, shall grant a stay of execution ; i : but, after no ice of appeal, the plaintiff shall , not enforcer, sale of property without giving an undertaking on bond to the defendant, j with two good sureties, in double the apprafs-; th ed value of the property, or double the amount'Ift, | of the judgment, conditioned to pay all dama-1 bc I ges which the defendant may sustain by rea-1 I >11 of such sale, in case the judgment is reersed. Nor shall the plaintiff in such case e allowed to proceed with a sale of defenant's property, if the defendant do enter ito an undertaking, with good sureties, in > ouble the uppraised value of the said prop ty, or the amount of the judgment, to pay le judgment, with legal interest and all of j le costs, and damages which the plaintiff lay sustain by reason of the appeal, or prouce the property levied 011 and submit to the lie, in case the judgment be confirmed." In i :ction three hundred and sixty-four, strike nt the following words: "Whenever an ap- ' eal is perfected, as provided bv," and insert | i place thereof: "Whenever the defendant tecutes the bond hereinbefore prescribed, or ie appeal is perfected, as provided by." In J iction three hundred and sixty-five, strike I Jtthe words "three hundred and titty-nine," i the first and second lines. In section three undred and sixty-six, after the word "judge," i the fifth line, insert the words "or clerk." i i section three hundred and sixty-seven, i ... ?. f? TIK'J OUC 111(3 wurus LUU Jjuncuuug vi au sal by giving the undertaking mentioned iu j iction three hundred aud fifty-nine," and in- | irt,in place thereof, the words "the notice of ppeal." Sec. 10. That section three hundred and ; !veuty-one (371) be amended by striking out; ,1 of said section, after the words "clerk of i le Appellate Court," in the tenth (10) line lereof, and substituting a period for the semidon, and that sections three hundred and iventy-two, (372), three hundred and seven- j --three, (373,) three hundred and seventy- j iur, (374,) and three, hundred and seventy- [ ire, (375,) be stricken out; that section three j uudred and seventy-seven be amended by riking out the words "but uo justice of tl.e }ace shall be bound to make a return, unless le fees prescribed by the last section of this lapter be paid on the service of the notice t appeal," on the fifth, sixth and seventh nes. That section three hundred and eightyiree be amended by striking out the words, And if the party making such offer shall ive given an undertaking upon the appeal, le parties executing such undertaking shall 3 liable thereon for the payment of the judgent entered by virtue of said offer, "begining on line thirteen and ending on line six:en of sub-division five (5) of said section, hat section three hundred and eighty-eight 188) be amended by striking out the words And no undertaking given to stay execution mil be enforced for more than the amounts f the corrected judgment," on lines, sixteen, iventeen and eighteen ; also, by striking out le words "He shall be allowed to take, as a art thereof, the costs and fees paid to the ial justice on making the appeJ, as disburselents, in addition to the costs in the Appelite Court," in the thirtieth, thirty-first and lirty-second lines. Strike out the words sourt below," in fifty-sixth line, and insert le words "trial justice." Sec. 21. That after the passage of this act, o judgment shall be obtained in the Court f Common Pleas except during the terra me, and in open court; and it shall be the uty of the clerk to place all cases filed in is office, in which there is no defence, upon docket to be prepared by him for the purose, to be known as docket No. (6) six ; and ley shall be called on the first day of the irra, and the order for judgment shall be idorsed on the complaint, and signed by the residing judge, and no execution shall be gned on judgment obtained by default in ny other manner than is herein provided. Approved November 25, A. D. 1873. MVyvnrETi-v ST ai THE FAVORITE HOME REMEDY. rHIS unrivaled Medicine is warranted not to contain a single particle of Mkiicury, or any ijurious mineral substance, but is PURELY VEGETABLE, intaining those Southern Roots and Herbs, hioh an all-wise Providence has placed in eounies where Liver Diseases most prevail. It will ire all Diseases and Derangements of the Liver id Dowels. SIMMON'S LIVER REGULATOR, OR MEDICINE, * i eminently a Family Medicine; and by being apt ready for immediate resort will save many 1 hour of suffering and many a dollar In time id doctors' bills. After over Forty Years' trial it is still receiving ie most unqualified testimonials to its virtues om persons of the highest character and responbility. Eminent physicians commend it as the ost EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC For Dyspepsia or Indigestion. rmed with this antidote, all climates and changi of water and food may be faced without fear, s a remedy in Malarious Fevers, Bowel Comaints, Restlessness, Jaundice, Nausea, IT HAS NO EQUAL. is the Cheapest, Purest and Best Family Mediae in the World! Manufactured only by J. H. ZEILI\ & CO. Macon, Ga., and Philadelphia, rice, Si. Sold by all Druggists. March 2(5 13 ly* ^ I fiailMI?trdvv*^Sappl^Woa?lmgfr \ U XJl i Brithtbtfewtls MLBahutn-jMre GwirdiM W ^ I Slate tnd Mhrble MiniLu;F7oorindDriui\ fn Qj \ TilinpjWhibFine,Wibwtlux<yLw6eiy% ? M i CxbindlLhrsEnjeWoodi.Sc. \ w Qr. ft AU. WorhWkrrentei. \\ L ? j LOWEST PRICES. ^ r W ! SendfofPrlceLUt . J ^ 8lh.hall&co.! $ lUnuf&etuTtntcfltiler*. ^ % 2j4,Q, 1,10.Mirhet Street. ?jj . V 223,225, H&stB&y,' b* ;{ CHARLESTON, S. C. jg$ ilxCut entered accordlngto Act of Congress, In the year 1873, by 1. II. Hi.Lt, it Co., in the office of the Librarian of CongicKs,at Washington. July 3 27 ly HE LEADING INSTITUTION IN THE U. S. rHERE are no Vacations. Send for Catalogue and College Documents. For Splendid Speclensof Penmanship, enclose two P. O. Stamps, ddress W. H. SADLER, President, Nos. (5<fc 8 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. January 1 1 tf "MISSOURI TRIPOLI [UST received a lot of Missouri Tripoli, espeI cially adapted to housekeeps for polishing lated-waro, Brass, Steel, Glass, or any materia, here a brilliant lustre is required. Full direcuis accompany each package. For sale by W. L. GRIST, Agent. ANNUAL, RETURNS. l DMINISTRATORS, Executors, Guardians and Trustees, are hereby notified to make eir ANNUAL RETURNS, without further dey. Unless returns are mado promptly, I will > under the necessity of issuing rules for default. JOSEPH A. McLEAN, Judge of Probate. July 24 80 tf SPECIFIC MEDICINES. PREPARED expressly for and adapted to the Southern Climate, "COMPOUND EXTRACT COKYDALIS" Is the most powerful and cflicicnl alterative and blood-purilier known. Prepared expressly for Scrofula, Eruptions of the Shin and all diseases which are produced by bad or unhealthy blood. "DR. GREENE'S FIT CURE" Cures all kinds of Fits, Spasms mid Convulsions which arise from irritation of the nerve centres. In Epilepsy, it often slops the lits from the first day's use even when they have existed for years. "MEDICATED HONEY," The great remedy for Asthma, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, Croup, Sore-Throat and all diseases of the air passages and lungs. It does not sicken the > patient, is pleasant to take, prompt in its action and does not injure the appetite or impair digestion, its most Expectorants do. OUR "NEURALGIA SPECIFIC" u Is a perfect specific for Neuralgia, Sciatica, ^ Rheumatism and all muscular or nervous pains, wherever situated. These medicines are prepared with great care from perfectly reliable drugs, and forthe especial classes of diseases named on each bottle. No one of them is claimed as a "cure all." They are identically the same that we have used in our private practice for years, and in thus presenting tlieni to the public we know whereof we affirm. They are safe, reliable and efficient, acting quickly and thoroughly. Try them, and you will want tio others. Ask vour Druggist for them. For sale by J.* C. KUYKENDAL, Yorkville, S C. Prepared onlv bv Dns. GREENE, LINDLEY BENTLEY, Charlotte, N. C'. N. B.?Cancers, Tumors and Ulcers treated as heretofore by "Kline's Great Cancer Antidotes," at Charlotte,'Goldsboro and Asheyille, N. C. December 18 ly TIIE COOKING STOVES manufactured at our works in Greensboro, N. C., Rive universal / satisfaction wherever introduced. They are made of the BEST SCOTCH PIG METAL, with heavier and thicker plate than any other Stove in tlio market, and consequently will the longer withstand heat and hard usage. They are of hand some pattern and neat finish, and warranted equal in every other respect to any Cooking Stove sold in the United States, while it is confidently claimed that they are the CHEAPEST. All the usual pieces of ware and cooking utensils are furnished with each Stove. An important consideration witli purchasers is the fact that our patterns and sizes are never changed. Should a piece got accidentally broken at any time, we can replace it at the mere cost of casting. Not simply because it is a home production, but on account of its intrinsic merits as an article of household economy, do we ask the patronage of home purchasers. More than ONE THOUSAND of these Stoves are now in use, and among many others having them we respectfully refer to the following: R. E.Guthrie, D. M. Campbell, M. H. Currence, York county; Mrs. Elizabeth J. Wylie, Chester; D. A. Gordon, Guthriesville; John A. Brown, Rock Hill; B. P. Boyd, Joseph Ilerndon, L. M. Grist, Yorkville. You can save the freight from the northern cities r and the dealer's profit, which is no small item, bv buying of us, and at the same time get a STOVE THAT IS MORE DURABLE than those ? of northern make. The following are our prices, delivered at depot in Greensboro : No. 8, with 10 pieces ware and 8 l'cet pipe, $30 00 44 ~ (I 44 44 44 44 44 44 26 00 Address, SERGEANT iV McCAULEY, j Greensboro, N. C. T. C. DUN LAP, Agent, Yorkville, S. C. JOHN R. LONDON, Agent, Rock Hill, S. C. MUSIC HATH CHARMS, &C. WITH pleasnrol inform all who desire to give their children a chance for a musical education, but whose means are very limited, that I v have made arrangements with the celebrated "Mason & Hamlin Organ Co.," to supply persons with their unrivaled instrument, either at lowest factory prices, for cash, or on monthly or quar- % terly payments, upon whatis called the lease principle. Thus any one by paying only a moderate sum for the use of the instrument, can, at any time,give it up or become purchaser; the amount already paid being applied to the purchase. Or a person having paid the rent for four years, becomes the owner of the Organ without further payment. Call and enquire for particulars and see the new styles, at my Photo gallery, in the Adickes' building, where I may be found during all business hours, either to show you a sample or to wait upon you if you want anything in the Photographic line as heretofore. T T> OnTTAD D ?j. xv. OLXiv/nu, P. S.?Notwithstanding all the misrepresentations and "gab" of smart agents of the "Ring" y companies, I still insist that I have the best and cheapest SewingMachine (the American) to offer, and I am ready to prove my words to all who seek for the truth in the matter. J. R. S. STATE OF~ SOUTH CAROLINA. ; Columbia, April 24th, 1873. THE YORKVILLE ENQUIRER is hereby designated as the newspaper for the publication of all Legal Notices and Official Advertisements for the county of York, under the Act approved February 22nd, 1870, entitled "An Act to ?> ] regulate the publication of all Legal and public ^ Notices, and the order heretofore issued designating the "Carolina New Era" as the official paper for the county of York is hereby rescinded. By orderof the Board. II. E. HAYNE, Secretary of State, and Secretary of the Board. I. HENRY E. HAYNE, Secretary of State, and Secretary of the Board, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the Original on file in my office. H. E. HAYNE, Secretary of State. CHERAW Am) DARLINGTON R. ROAD. PRESIDENT'S OFFICE,) i Pirvniw ,t- riAn.r.ivfjTO'v PAir.TtoAn Co.. \ Society Hill,S. C., October 10, 1873. J CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. ON and after MONDAY, 13th of October, the passengor train will run as follows: Down Train. Up Train. LeaveCheraw 8.00, A. M. | Leave Florence,...3.00, P. M. Leave Cash's 8.20, A. M. Leave Palmetto,..,.3.20, P. M. Leave Society Hill.8.43, A. M. | Leave Darlington...3.40,P. M. Leave Dove's 9.15, A. M. I Leave Dove's 4.15, P.M. V . Leave Darlington. .9.50, A. M. | Leave Society Hill.4.45, P. M. Leave Palmetto...10.10,A. M. | Leave Cash's 5.10, P.M. Arrive at Florence. 10.30, A. M. | Arrive at Cheraw. .5.30, P. MThe Freight Train will continue for the present ^ to;run as heretofore, except to adapt its running and stoppages to the "Ranged schedule of the passenger trains. Ironinthe Blood #TTTE PEP.rTIAN STUT'P Yltollzea and Enriches tlio Blood. Tones np tho Sy stein, lilt lids u p tlio Broken-down, t uns Femalo Complaints, Dropsv, Debility, llnrnors, Dyspepsu, Ac. Thou'sanck havo been chang<5 by the use of this remedy f.J frpm weak, sickly, aJ| suffering creatures, to strong, healthy, and happy men and women; and Invalids cannot reasonably hesitate to givo ft a trial, Caution.?Bo suro you get the right article. See that "Peruvian Svrun" is blown in tlio Pamphlet*free. Sendforonc. SETS SV.FOWJ.K <fe SONS, Proprietors, Batten, Mass. For sal* by druggists generally. October 2 40 ly ?lte f offeviUc inquirer. TEUM8 liv AUVAKCE: One Copy, one y oar, 3 00 One Copy, Six months, 1 50 OneCopy, Three mouths, 1 00 Single Copy, 10 Two Copies, one yoar, 5 00 Ten Copies, " " 25 00 ^?*To persons who make up clubs often or more names, an extra copy of the paper will be furnished one year, free of charge. ADVEBTI8EMENT8 Will bo inserted at One Dollar and Fifty Cents per square for the lirst, and Seventy-five Cents persquare for each subsequent insertion-less than three months. A square eoi sists of the space occupied by ton lines of this size typo, or one inch. No advertisement considered less than a square. Semi-Monthly, Monthly, or Quarterly Advertisements, will lie charged Two Dollars persquare for each insertion. Quarterly, Semi-Annual or Yearly contracts will be made on liberal terms?the contract, how- j ever, must in all cases be confined to the immediate business of the ti rm or individual contracting. Obituary Notices and Tributes of Respect, rated as advertisements. Announcements of Marriages and Deaths,and notices ofa religiouscharacter,inserted gratis, and solicited. I Personal Communications, when admissa- ?- * ble; Communications of limited or individual interest, or recommendations of Candidates for offices of honor, profit or trust, will be charged for as advertisements.