University of South Carolina Libraries
commnsm:s;ix Thursday Morning. August 13,1874. Fraudulent Boada of Che Southern States. We learn from the St. Louis Republi? can that the Arkansas State Conven? tion is debating the question of repu? diating the bonds, about $9.000,000 in amount, authorized by the Legislature while- onder control of the Republi? cans, to bo iesped; \? Certain rajlrpad compajojie^jTJie^ that had' liat complied with the condi? tions. . What amount has been ieaned and pat on.the market wo do .not know; but it is almost certain that all will be disowned oh the ground of fraud. This ths people demand, and the Convention will comply with the popular wish. The issue of these bonds by the Republican offioiala was marked by frauds similar to those practiced by the Bullock government in Georgia. Iu one oaso, it is stated, the railroad company built a section of ten miles, drew the bonds thereon, took up the rails and relaid them on the next section, and drew another in? stallment of bonds, and so oa, till its whole quota of bonds had boon drawn, and no road built?the venal State authorities conniving at aud probably participating in the fraud. In some instances, the bonds were sold for twenty cents on the dollar, the State receiving no consideration for them whatever. The Republican makes the following, comments on the proposed repudiation by Arkansas of the fraud? ulent bonds issued while the State was in the bands of the Radical plomderers: "Tho repudiation of these bonds by the State of Arkansas is very unfortu? nate; we do not know that it is wise and just, fiat it is another example of the inexorable disaster in which the1 Radical governments in the South end. Repudiation in Georgia, repudi? ation in South Carolina, repudiation in North Carolina, repudiation in Ar? kansas, and a threatened insolvency in Tennessee, are the dismal residuum of the reconstruction rale in those States; and we have no reason to hope that the process is ended yet" People who parohase stolen pro? perty, knowing it to be stolen, have no right to complain when the law re? turns ' it to the rightful owner, and punishes the receiver and the thief. When the governments of the South were wrested from the intelligent and lawful custodians appointed by the people to administer them, they fell into the hands of . adventurers and | plunderers, who, under the specious 1 pretexts'of progress and internal im? provement, involved the Southern States in tho wildest and most extrava? gant undertakings. Their purpose was to onrioh themselves and iuvolvo the people id' irretrievable flnauoial ruin. No sane man ban ever expeot. tbo tax? payers of South Carolina, for instance, to pay the fraudulent bonds ?Jan?d without tbosun?tiod of the people of1 the State. Call it repudiation or what yon please,, we.askit in ail candor, what have the h oh t'/p top q t; ty-h ql der a j of South Carolina?who are helpless aud powerless to protect t^onisolves, to re? press a wrong or .'assert a right? to do with the bonds 'issued by the mongrel government? There is no moral, obli? gation on,,their part to redeem one single dollar of the'millions of pro? mises issued in the name ot South Ca? rolina. These bonds and the bonds of other Southern, Statesij were sold-ot prices ranging from fifteen cents on tbo dollar and .upwards, bearing; in most oases, eight per cent;.1 interest. The purchasers, the Augusta Chronicle' and Sentinel justly asserts,'did not expect the property-holders to redeem them when the government reverted to their keeping. Our Governments have been iu the bands of robbers, who, not content with stealing everything they oould lay their hands on in the respective State Treasuries, have issued millions of promises to pay. The press .Warned the people of the North and of Europe that these bonds are fraudulent. Tho Government of the United States, which sustained the adventurers and plunderers in offioe in these Southern States, is responsible for the debts contracted. It is a settled principle in law, that Una -principal^ is 'always' responsible fo'r iha'olUoiftl 'aeja/oj hi? duly and ?wMfcMWjMjf agent,, The Governments la tV South after the war wer^tthS^eafdsakW)^ Federal QojMrMraf]i tiwyjwer?inau. gurated by the Opugrose of the United States and sustained by the adminis? tration, and:the PederaLGovernment is alone responsible for the unlawful acts committed by its proteges, as well as for all the bonds illegally ieeaed in defiance of the wishes of the property holders and oitizena of the Southern States. Olviu'RiaHTS -?The Cincinnati Com? mercial has a long leading editorial, in which it essays to show that Mr. Jub tioo ^rilfey hY reride?d a- ?Jedjjpioi* agalns?#be oo| stitufijifoflitj toE thf Civil l^jglite Bifl (of pourjBo, orjW ttabV BUutiflJly bo.) 89 d toy'prove that, the TOprrelioafa parl^'lH not pledged to the passage of tbat bill. It affirms that bardly a majority of the Republican lawywra of ? the country-bold that bill j to ho ooDStitutioual. The whole ten dency of the article is to relieve the Republican parly from" the odium of that bill of abominations, and to put the party upon a new took or traok. Last Week's Victories.?Not only I in North Carolina did victory pereh on the Conservative banner. In Ken j tacky, a Olerk of the Suprome Court was ohoBon by a mujorily of over 50,000. Tennessee also made a glori? ous exhibit in the local elections. And the city of Yioksbnrg gave a large De mooratio gain, sufficient to put the municipal government under the con? trol of white men. It would seem that when Conservative majorities com? mence raining, they pour. Let ns re? alize the flood. Horrible Negro Plot Discovered. A special despatoh to tho New Orleans Bulletin, dated New Iberia, August 7, I says: "A dreadful plot ot the negroes has {jest been discovered here to kill the j inhabitants and to sot fire to the resi? dences and plantations in the Parish of St. Martin. The fuots were dis I closed by a letter which was banded to a prominent white gentleman by a Republican, who vouches for the truth I of the statement it contains. The plan was to oommsnao killing and bnruing! I at the Lestrapes place, and oontinne their work of rapine and murder as far I as St. Martinsville. A recommenda? tion in made in the letter to set the I plantations on fire, in order to find where money could be found. The negroes were to keep for themselves the most beautiful women, and tbe parties who were to be killed were mentioned by name. As soon as the ] criminals ascertained tbat their horrid plans were discovered, they fled the Parish in hot baste. The greatest ex? citement prevails, and the people are thoroughly arou?ed and determined to discover and bring to punishment the villains who have meditated this dread? ful mossaore and pillage." A New System,?Four large aotton warehouses are being built near New York for the coming cotton crop. They j are ranged along the river front, aud will be connected with tbe docks by i the railroad tracks. The buildings are (of brick, and the space between tbe ; warehouses can be so arranged that the cotton can be repacked and rebaled under glass roofs in all weathers. The I storage capacity of eacb of tbe four warehouses now in oonree of oonstruo | tiou is about 15.000 bales, aud it is ex jpected that the buildings can all be ready in time for tbe new crop?about October. There is also room for tbe , erection of additional structures, with acapaoity of over 250,000 bales. The transportation' to and from the city I can be accomplished by lighters, and I vessels oan load tbeir cargoes at the ducks, thereby, eavjug.tho expense of cartage from the presses to the ship. Many of the pr .aont store-houses are sarroanded by inflammable buildings, but those warehouse* will be almost fire-proof and amply protected in ease of a conflagration. The Herald says: "If this place is selected," said a cot? ton broker, last evening, to: the re? porter, and it' is certainly suitable for tbe purpose, the ellocrwill db to revo? lutionize the cotton, trade. It will be a grand reform,' and, although some old fogies may etiok to their little (store-bouses in the middle of tbe city, most of the cotton morahants will cer? tainly send their cotton to these water fr?nt warehouses. You can say that the saving in thij city will be 0500,01)0, at tho very lowest." A Talk.?Lieut. Col. Davidaou, of the 10th Cavalry, bas furnished to the | General of the army a report of a talk with Asbobe and Asatny, of the Po nuotetbka bund of Comanohes, which is interesting as showing tho cause of the present hostilitity of tho Cornau cheB and other tribes. After some I talk, in which they inquired as to bow they were to be treated, Davidson asked the Indians what the Comanohes bad to complain of; what wore tbe .causes of this general hostility on the part of tbe Comanches, Kiowas I and Oheyennes. They replied, that the Comanches had nothing to complain of on the part of tbe Go? vernment agent or troops or whites, but tbat some two months ago a prophet arose amoDg tbem, who told them that be had bad ,an interview! with the Great Spirit, who said that the Oaddos, Wiohitas and other In-1 diarjs, who .were, adopting the white mode of life, were going down hill .fast in means and population, and the1 Comanohes would do the same, if they followed tho samp road;' and for them to be again the powerful nation they onoe were, was to go to war and kill off | all the white people thoy could. This, these two chiefs said, chimed in with the feelings and wishes ot the evil disposed of the nation, and the present war is the result. - There baa been a terrible gale off the coast of Aberdeenabire, Scotland. Hundroda of fishing boats are over? due, and it is feared many of tbem have been lost. Iceland's millennial celebration took place August let, when Kiqg- Christian IX, of Denmark, opened tU? ?eromo nlear wijb a for drat gran tin gNtof^?. new GoHstittjtion to tue islaud, which'?'rao ticailly (ffees<it fr^m Daniah stoprotntft audi git^a its inhabitants absolute co. trot over their ojwu affairs. Then will fullhw-ttuy number of foatlvitioa[ in oommemoratiou of the founding and consolidation of tho republic by Harold, the Fair-Haired, in 874, before many of us were born. Iceland lies) between latitude. G3 degrees 125 mi? nutes and 6G degrees aud '30 min u tos North, uud longitudo 13 degrees 38 minutes and '2i degrees 40 minutea West. It is quite a remarkable islund, seeming uotbiug but a nest of volo.i uoea. It has no Btratitied rock of uuy kind, and is u simple muss of mnltnu mutter that had bubbled up out of the ocean and, after cooling off, bad taken on an Arctic suow-cap to "make it more binding." Tbo rugged grandeur of its soenery is very striking. Tbc clefts in the enormous beds of oucn fluid lava are of tbe most picturesque nud startling description. Its rivers are formed from the melting euows of tho mountains and are very numerous uud beautiful. The whole interior is u vast deBert, for tbu most part so ele? vated above tho level of tbo sea that the snows never melt. Surrouuding this desert and overlooking tbe sen, there is a belt of land on which there is plenty of vegetation for flocks of sheep aud herds of cattle, aud a popu? lation of 00,000 or 70,000 find a com? fortable subsistence, partly from their pustoral lifo and partly from limbing. They are a quiet, iudustrious uud cju tented people, und seem well capable of self-government. Who aue the DuKzuits??Homo of tbe leading papers of tho couutry mado singular blunders recently, in giving notice of a convention of 1)link? ers, held in Illinois. The Cincinnati' Tunes gives a brief sketch of their his? tory: The origin of tbe society, or, more properly, the church, dates buck to tbe Christian era, but the first congrega? tion organized in America was at Gor mantawn, Peun., in the yeur 1721. Tbey are a denomination of Baptists, and emigruted to this couutry from Germany, hence tho name, German Baptists, whioh is the proper name. The nick-name, Dunker, or Tuoder, is from the German word, Taufen, to dip. The Seventb-day Baptists origi? nated from this deuominatiou, about the year 1721), by Courud Beissel, at Epbrata, Penn. They wear a very plain but neat dress, beiug temperate iu that as well as in nil other things; as regards shaving, it is left optional with the members; but they are not! allowed to change tbe out of tho beard to follow the evor-chauging fashions. Tbo men and women do not live in sep irate bnbitutious, us tbey are not J confined to monasteries and nunneries, but, ou the cuntrary, are soattered over the land, from the Atlantic to tbe Paoiflo, and are more numerous than is generally supposed by thorn who have but little knowledge of tho sect, having over 1,500 ministers, with quite a large laity, (150,000, according to report of National Conference, held in Illinois;) and instead of marriage being disapproved of, as has been re? ported, it is held more sacred than it is by most other religious denomina? tions. The only case in which it is disallowed is when one or both of tho parties baa a husband or wife living, whether divorced or not. John Hay ban sung of the noble exploit of Jim Bludsoe, pilot of tbe Prairie Belle: "I'll hold her nozzle agin tho hank Till the last galoot's ashore." The bruve self-sacrifice of Charlie Ditt inau, who died at his post on tbe Pat. Rodgera last week, deserves to live iu story as a nobler act than tbnt other. When the fire was discovered, he promptly turned tho wheel so as to bead tho bout toward tbo Indiana sboro, but, to bis horror, he found tbat tbe rudder did not answer to the wheel. It was evident that the tiller rope had been cut or had burued through. So the boat was unmanage? able, and she slowly drifted npou a sand bar, somo distance from the shore, und the passengers and crew bud the water before tbcm ns their only refuge from tbo flimcs. Although bis efforts to govern tho boat were I fruitless, Dittmau seems still to have clung to the hope that tho rudder would again auswer to his will, und so stood at tbo wheel, steadfast and grand in his self-martyrdom, until the] hot flames licked up the frail pilot bouse, aud be perished with his bands tipou the wheel. A Singular Circumstance.?Several weeks ago, a family residing near Liberty .Mills, Orange County, Va., arose early in the morning, and pro pared breakfast, using the tea kettle in whioh to heat water for coffee. Tbe family drank of the coffee as usual, and without any injurious effects. To? ward noon some one in attempting to use the kettle for another purpose, fonnd in it a considerable sized black | snake boiled to death in the water which was used for the coffee in the1 morning. On this announcement there was oonsternation in the family for a short time, some vomiting and others trying to do so, bat failed. Strange to say, no one was otherwise injured.?Shenaniioah Valley Register. The total number of accidents on English railways for 1873, a report of whioh has been published for the year, was 247? being one more than the pre? vious year. Tbe total number of per? sons killed was 1,372, and of injured 3,110, whioh embraoe all killed and in? jured at crossings as well as servants and employees. The correspondence of tbo New York Tribune, from Williamsburg, Maas,, .save that very little e?uuge, eo fa? n&s been .mode in tbo fade of/the conntry over which the flood' swept. Sand nod bowldera etill mukc a ^idider bes* of onoe pleasant laues, ?tr?ste and fields, and bat few bouses are t lids far) building. Where houses onoe^Htoud," yon .flud wooden arosses erected, on whiob are rudely painted suggestive legends liko these: "Dr. Johoson'H, all drowned (seven-;)11 "Birmingham's, all lost (five;)" "Seyentweeu swept away and drowned betweou here und the mill," &o. Them is an todispositiou yet to build, uutil property-owuets kuuw whether they uro building on gaud or rock. , Masked (Juthaoeis Kentucky ? D. B Naiu, ? jeweler, of Med way, Wood ford Gmiuty, Ky., while on his wuy (mine, Monday evening, was seized by four masked uiou, and no truce of bim h,is since boeu found in the neighbor bood where he wui captured. It is probable tbut ho was murdered und his body hid. A uiau who hoard his cries and went to his rescue was driveu buck with threats of deuth. Several negroes a. littlo later saw the mou cur? rying Nuiu away. IIo was then .strug? gling und grouuing. Finns ?Tbo gin-housn and fixtures of Mr. w. w. lingers, of Itidiatitowu, I S. C, was totally destroyed by Uro on Tuesday morning hud. The house was struck by lightning, from which it caught, mid hud nearly burnt down before the fire w is discovered. L >ss 8SD0; no insurance. The store und entire stock of good i beluuging !<j Mr. ,Jas. Elarper was also destroyed by lire ou the night of the same duy; cunse of the lire accidental. Loss 8J.UU0; uu iusurunce. MuRDtsn in Ciiuuou ?During a ser vioa iu u Methodist church three indes from Carlisle, Ky., a rough named Hamilton jumped up, cursed tbo scr vicu uud flourished his pistol. Trustee Thomas Shaw, iu taking Hamilton out, was shot by him through the hoad. Tbo murderer wrs taken to I jail uud then removed to Lexington to avoid lyuchiug. Rev. Webster, of tho Oraugoburg Free Citizen, received a mauling from an irate official, F. McKiuluy, of Orungeburg, a few days ago. Ho took it meekly. The cause o( the assault wus cerluiu strictures of the newly fledged editor. A mau named John rotormau was run over by u train near the Catholic jCharcb at Hist Bridgeport, Conn., nn the 11th, und lustuutly killed. His body wus horribly mangled. He leaves a family. Nearly ull tho stone-workers on tho new Stute House at Hartford, Conn., have struck to maintain the rule of nine hours us a day's work, tho cou truotor requiring ten. AWFCL.?Failing to kill Til ton by calling him koprophugous, the World newspaper now attacks him us a "Corybantiuu cuckold." The kitchen of Johu A. Culhoun, Esq., Of Abbeville, WUS consumed by tire during the pust week. Mrs. Gabriel Hodges, Mrs. Annie Duncan and Mr. Eli Thornton died in Abbeville last week. An agod colored man, named Harvey i Davis, died suddenly in Newberry, a few days ego. There were 27 doaths in Charleston for the week ending the 8th?whites 6; colored 21. Ex-Laud Commissioner Leslie is working hard iu Baruwell to be ueut to the Legislature again. Mr. J. U. B-ilke. a Charleston grocer, died suddenly ou tho 11th, of heurt disease. K A Great Convenience. EROSENE OIL delivered at your resi? dence, at 35 cents per gallnu. C. DUOOKBANKS & CO., Agents. Aug 13 3 Ward 1 Tax Union. AMEETING will bo held THIS AFTER? NOON, at Irwin's Hull, at Ok o'clock. A punctual atteudanco is requested. By order of the 1'iesideut. Aug 13 1 J. T. WELL*. Ronrfdarv. $10 Reward. IWILL pay tho abovo Howard for tho do livery to mo of my indentured Appren? tice, MILES KOON, and I hereby turbid all persons harboring him. JOEL MEDLIN. ConiJMiiiA, August 12, 1S7L Aug ?3 'J* Chicora Tribs, No. 2, Improved Order of Red Men. ACOUNCIL FIKE of tho abovo Tribo will bo kindled at tho Wigwam, (Odd Fellows1 Halt,) 8th Run. 12th Sloop, Stur? geon Moon, G. S. D. 383. Degrees will bo conferred. By order of tho Sachem . W. J. CATUCART, Aug 13 1 Chief of Records, pro t-ui. Steam Engine For Sale. AN 8-horao STEAM ENOINE, in first rate order, for sale; suitable for a cot? ton gin or grist mill, i'rieo, lullt). Apply to RICHARD TOZER. _Aug 12 HENRY WARD BEECHES AS tho principal actor in tho greatest sonsation of tho day, and tho "Indian Girl,.' as the leader of tho Cigar Trado of the Stato, have boeu thoroughly crltioisod as to their merits, and the result, seema to be a warning to marrlod man to huaband more oloaely tho afflictions of their wtvee, and to Smokors in supplying thoir WANT3 TO HUSBAND MORE Cloaoly their funds, by investing iu tho "Celebrated 53. Cigars," instead of inforior gooda at higher ratos, and to remember that as no orio oan boast of rooro W1TE3 THAN BRIGHA? YOUNG, So no cigar store oan honst of as good Cigars and Tobacco for the price aa the INDIAN GIRL CIGAR STORE, Aug 11_Columbia. 8. C. House to Rent. TnE HOUSE and FOUR ACRE LOT of Mrs. E. J. Arthur. Good gar *den and excellent well of water. Tos mission givon immediate!v. Apply to WM. MARTIN or E. R. ARTHUR. , July 4 City Matters.?Subscribe for the Phojnix. * iTbe calico ball in aid of the Ladies.' M^nuafgnt Association is tbe attraction at piertfli Springs to.night r \ ?rookhankB A: Co.'*deliver kcr'cscqc oil ut your tesideuce- at a low price. Bee their advertisement. Transient advertisements and no? tices must be paid for in advance. This rule will be adhered to hereafter. The season is in its prime, and Africa rejoices. The difference in number between muss melons and melon musses is! riot appreciable. Job priuting of every kind, from a miniature visiting card to a four-sheet poster, turned out, at short notice, from Pikenix ollice. Try us. Tim. Hurley's poor children's pio nic comes oif at Mount Pleasant, to? day. Tim., evidently, wants to be made Governor. The Charleston News and Courier publishes Governor Moses' Sumter speech iu full us a supplement?twelve columns and u half of small type. The Savannah Republican, one of tbe oldest papers in tbe State of Georgia, has been forced t.T suspeud publica? tion. Yesterday uud the day before wero warm enough to mtisfy even a crema tiouist. Fans were iu such demand that tbo prices went up ICO per cent. A bor.se attached to tbo buggy of Mr. G. 1). Huudris ran away, yester? day, throwing the occupant out aud badly smashing one wheel. Seegers' ice machine is all light again, uud "freezing out" as usual. Cooler weather may, therefore, be looked for. Wm. Henry Truscott, Esq., has de? termined to ruu for Congress from the Third Congressional District. We shall publish his authorized announce? ment to-morrow. See what Messrs. W. D. Love & Co. have to Bay. Their stock of goods is tbo most extensive in the city, and what tbey claim for them can be de? pended upon. A line of steamers is about to be pot on between Port Royal and New York. Charleston and Savannah mnst keep a sharp look-out, or the new city will get ahead of them. What a world of gossip would be proven tod, if it was only romembered that a person who tells you of the faults of others, intends to tell others of your faults. Old type metal?superior to Babbitt for some purposes?can be obtained at Phoenix office at low figures?25 cents a pound for fifty pounds or less; 20 cents for larger quantities. All in want of musical instruments of any kind, from a Jew's harp up to a piano, would consult their interest by visiting Mr. Bawls' store, next to Phcb nix office, as he is selling off cheap, in order to close out his stock. A run-off and smash-up of two freight cars on the Charlotte, Colum? bia and Augusta Railroad, near Gilbert Hollow, on Tuesday, detained the Au? gusta passenger train five or six hours. Counterfeits of the new fifty and ten-cent stamps are now in circulation. The counterfeit of either note is hardly calculated to I deceive persons ,who handle much money. The paper is poor, and the green color is paler than tbe genuine, and the engraving very clumsily exeouted. A number of prominent Radicals of Wilmington, N. C, chartered a train from the W., C. & A. R. R., for an ex? cursion to Columbia, on tho IStb; bat owing to the turn of the tide?the de? feat of tho party in the old North State?the contributors backed down, and tho train will riot be run. Tho Cbicora Rifle Club numbers about eighty membors. Tbe following are tho oflicors: President, C. F. Janney; First Vice President, F. B. Orchard; Second, James E. Morris; Third, George W. Wright; First Director, R. A. Koenan; Seoond, H. C. Beard; Third, H. Milne; Fourth, J. D. Roberts; Fifth, J. J. Orchard; Surgeon, D. B. Miller, Jr., M. D.; Chaplain, Rev. W. D. Kirk laod; Secretary, W. W. Williams; Treasuror, A. C. Moore, The Civil and Political Convention adjonrned, yesterday evening, after passing a series of resolutions?tho grand wind-up being a knock down argument. Samuel Leo, of Sumter, who claim? to bo a reformer, made a severe attack on Treasurer Cardozo? denouncing him as a dishonest offioial? when the keeper of the State money? bags strack from the shoulder and stretohed the Sumter reformer on the floor; and when the latter arose and made belligerent demonstrations, the portly Treasurer gave him another Bookdollager, and down he went again. Parties interfered, and tho combat ended. O?b Book Table.?Mr. W. J. Daffio has furnished ue with a copy of a pro fufily Bathed novel, by Dr. F. W. Robinsdn,' oh tilled "Second-Cousin Safeh",';'! uutbVor of "Carry's Coufcs ci;is," h\c. 1% is an admirable story, and* the-character of tho heroine is originally and skillfully worked out, and an interest is cast aroond which never fligd?tho numerous wood cuts materia)ly adding to the interest of the work'. It is published by Harper & Brothers; price 75 cents. We are also indebted to the same gentleman for a bound copy of Harper I Sc Brothers' descriptive list of their publications, with trade-list prices. Rape and Atiemited Mubdeb.? The statement published, yesterday, relative to the attempted robbery of Mrs. Sbull, of Lexington, waa incor? rect. She was on her way home from Gilbert Hollow alone, on Saturday, when tho stirrup-leather broke and she slipped to the ground. Perceiving a stump u short distance off, she was proceedings towards it, to remount her horse, when a negro man sprang out of the bushes, and, alter a struggle, succeeded in outraging her. He then asked her if she intended to tell on bim, and when she replied that she did, he attacked her with lightwood kuots and beat her terribly. A white mau came up while he was engaged in his murderous work, wbeu the fiend ran oil, but as he is known, and u number of men ure in pursuit of him, he will likely be overhauled. Crimes of this nature are becoming so frequent in different parts of the country, that short work should be made of the scoundrels when canght. Lynched.?Henry Glover, the co? lored brute who outraged Mrs. Shall, near Gilbert Hollow, on Saturday last, was caught, yesterday, in the swamp adjacent to that village, and shot. "Served him right," is the univeral sentiment. Sdprem.8 Coubt Decision, Wednes? day, August 12.?Alexander Wise, ad? ministrator, respondent, vs. Jesse H. Hardiu, executor, el al. Judgment of Circnit Court modified and case re? manded. Opinion by Moses, C. J. Wright and Willard, A. J.'a, concur; Willurd, A. J., filing separate opinion. List of New Advertisements. C. Brookbanks & Co.?Kerosene. Meeting of Gbicora Tribe, No. 2. Joel Medlin?$10 Reward. W. D. Love Sc Co.?Great Bargains. D. C. Peixotto & Sons?Auction. Hotel abbivals, August 12, 1874.? Wheeler House?Q D Bateman, C C Puffer, D A J Sullivan, H Faber, W Laughlin, Charleston; G McAlpio, Philadelphia; L S Beiden, Wilming? ton; W O Boylston, Baltimore; J G Thompson, city; B Mvers, S C; D M Elkins and lady, Gilbert Hollow; O B Stoat, Ky; W M Graham, Sumter. ? Hendrix House?Xi W Du vail, J B Lenard, Winnsboro; D McNair, Che raw; 8 Rosenberg, John Wood, city; E E Snelgrove, Newberry; A F Ruff, Ridge way; W Daniel, N O. National Hotel?J N Henry, Ga; T C Magan, Aiknn; B S Boazman, Chap pell's; B E Fripp, T B Bissell, Richard Green, Charleston; J D MurioD, Miss Maggie Marion, Chester; W L Disher, Alken; H Wolff, Orangeburg. The Baltimore Sun ,eays: "A citizen of South Carolina, an old man, who is wholly disconnected with political life, writes to the New York Daily Bulletin a sad account of the 'overwhelming load of irresponsible depravity and ignorance which has crushed them to tbe earth.' The appeal he makes to the North to consider their case is most mournful and touching. He says 'it is simply awful to be com? pelled to live and roar children amid scenes of such political corruption, and profligacy,' and makes an affecting invocation to Northern magnanimity to ask what can be done to 'save what? ever is fair, lovely and of good report from extinction or a worse fate.' "All tbis social anarchy is the result of the political deviltry which North? ern politicians, seeking their selfish ends and the continued domination of their party, inflicted upon the South by what tbey called the polioy of re? construction, which, instead, was simply destruction." -? The Atlantic, Tennessee and Ohio Railroad.?Tbe Charlotte (N. C.) Ob? server, of the 6th, says: "The order for tho sale of the Atlantic, Tennessee and Ohio Railroad, ander the Childs suit, on the firat mortgage bonds, hav? ing been granted, and tbe parties, to the suit, Messrs. Childs, Manson and others, of Colombia, 8. O, having re? fused to take the amount of their claim and transfer the judgment for the be? nefit of the gold bond-holders, Mr. R. Y. Mo Aden, of this oily, one of the trustees under tbe gold mortgage, ot the request of the Board of Directors, through his attorney, Col. H. O. Jones, of this city, obtained a restraining or? der preventing the sale of the road. The in junction was issued upon the complaint of Mr. MoAden, in the in? terest of the gold bond-holders and tbe stockholders of the road." Three giraffes just from Abyssinia have reaohed the Garden of Plants iu Paris. This animal threatens to be? come extinot. He is taken now only in a very small district.