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ft* 1 ' DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. .. -— . For Govcrnoi. ^ADE HAMPTON^ For LleutenAot-Governot. W.D. SIMPSON. For Secretary of Sts'fK E. M. SIMS.. : MM For Superloteodent of Edocatioo, H. & THOMPSON. For Ootnptroller-Geniral, or Ooi itJHNSoN HAGOOD. Adjutfebt bpd Inapector-GeDtuoi' For era], Y F. YOU MANS. For Ooogrefig, E D. TILLMAN. seta — - This oourt w$M cieatod by authority of M act of the last Legfelature for the purpose of detennlnteg the validity of certain State booda and coupons “ f th« bond oomotlaaion to i>e . ve elapsed since the court fterc^coimnlesion- and were ready to proceed to bn Bl uets, and yet, so far as wo have been to ascertain, not a stogie bead has been adjudicated. Upon one plea or abother tbe court has adjourn ed from time to time. The State has adopted the motto of “nunquara para- tus” and the paraphernalia of justice are periodically spread out for the ad miring multitude, again eirefolly fold- ed and put away until the State gets ready to teat their capacity for useful- MealUtne 4^rles are drawn from p State treasury with a promptness y truly cotbmendable. We nts and junketings to and In k by lawyers and thefr retinue nates. Wb have Ante and prandial consultations. We hare bunting and wltncss^tuntlDg Ws have telegrams, microphones Abb, Lord tiftny other jJbojiCe. But do not advAbbe one step towards a -’ adjustment of the bond question* ■jails the counsel fot the that if tpey bad been anxious to mpton’s testimony, they could have got It at any time witbln the last three weeksIn New Yotk -that Klmp- tpn was actually sitting complaoentty In a broker’s door In New street within a short distance of tbs house wherein State counsel, attorneys and comjmis- Abner and all the machinery of £tate jostles necessary to taks testimony, Wsrp placidly Stretching their legs and picking their teeth. Yea, more. Jlr. K .1^mf9:,‘A^9PXpd theijc attention to f the street right un- 4u their legal notes and ooming to wards the door of the very house in which they Mt—that KJmpton on see ing their faces at tbs window turned his course and Went down Wall Street. ^^ have been something uninviting in the Countcuuncee of I at the time which CoOld away even ^jbe brazen |r, Brawley tacUcs one versary’s si The next Th»y must bare looked dag- Ba that gs it Any the looks tell ng to legal fdflew Ills ad-' now In New admission tW of the ubiquitous Canada and knocking fot door of Carolina jne- ls that he has been ebH'ared by a ib Matt&ohueetU. “Stop f Oatcu fogue r shouts out Mr. Inetory. *'111 be hanged if I go,” KUppton. :’If you wanted me aa a witness you could hare got me at Any time witbln the last six month, but 111 be switched if I go as a felon wit- nees.” On goes a requisition from Governor Ham " BApubflcan quteluon over water .and to iya, let ate fcdd-flehla^r on, p goes the ut- The Governor undergoing a Springs ry for all the rp- of Congress scratches '“Hold Wbat . »l South i X. J ^p6ot ■ ItirdSfthe par- with cis^Arsaad av^r barbing, the *■ v :• . ; ^ ’ r - • , J . - V •'•‘'ill...-', ^ ■ ' ?' A-& ■ . . • , . * *• -• : "■ <T. —-ST O f. ■M •I” -■x ’ '‘ c “- ' r a .Jzz£~ TWSI »r llorror-tn the Kind ever Accfe \ ■ r The Pee Deo Watchman of last week says» That on Friday last, Alexander DcWkt, (eelored) convicted of the mur der of Wm. Wnrtcn, (white) some sev- "th'br eight years ago, died in llio jail yard at this place in a most horrid man. ner. A petition asking Executive clemency hod been forwsrdcd to Governor ilamp<_ ton, who revised to interfere. Jv ■■■ ■£& : Ifc wa* baptised and received into the Church on tire day previous to his ex- ecution. ■* t • Our reporter entered his cell an hour previous to that fixed for the execution. DcWitt ■seemed calm, and was dressed in a suit of wliite. . His wife and daugh ter harFjust passed down the stair-w&y weeping, ami as the reporter entered, he was taking adieu of his ton, to whom he said, “be a good boy” several times, and appealed lo W. F. Earley, on whose jdace the boy and his mother lived. Be ing asked if he hatf timdoAhc last part ing with his wife, he replied .that “she was so in distress that he could ttot-bavc a regular parting with her.” Ho an nounced himself as fully prepared to die, aud would soon be at rest. lie was raised in Darlington as the slave of Mrs. N. F. Duett, hut lived some time time in Barnwell. The enclosed jail yard Was about forty feet square, eighteen fefct high. Into this pent up enclosure (he burning meridian sun sjronc with fid! force, producing intense heat; . , t _ i, At 12 o'clock the Sheriff descended r-c --?*+*■ --- -t t -- - - v from the jail with the prisoner, and jis- cended the gallows. The prisoner stated that he had prejudice against no c ne, but attributed his death to his race. 'When asked by the preacher how ho felt, he said ho was going to meet hfs God— loved the jailor judge ^~ri(T“jury, ani l would acknowledge nothing in regard to the murder. At 12.-10 the Sheriff adjusted Ilie roj e and rwuKthe tl«ith warrant. He then began to shew syrtiptoms of fright and giving way, his body trembled and his knees shook, especially when Calvin Josey tied his legs. Jlo asked if the coroner was- there. He then said he wanted to tell something about others implicated in the murder, and requested Mr. tV. Early to get up on the platform with him. After repeated requests Mr. Early went up and asked what he want* ed but fouud him too much frightened to utter a word at first, at length he asked for two days to bring up the guilty par ties ; otber incoherent words followed and Mr. Early came down. He now began to squat (-the Slier ff and deputies, Catling upSh him to stand up like a man) apd sat down on the platform. The C?t.^ !IT 4*. -..11 1 i. . !• a. a. Sheriff again called to him to stand up, instead of doing eo ho put his body in a horizontal portion on thu platform and rollbd off at 12.‘SO. The sethe is now said to have been fearful, the cap was partly pulled from bis face, which wore an awful expression, while his strangled utterances wer* rails to kill him. In U>U position he hung and Choked to ilealh in ab.mt 20 minutes, when he was declared dead by Ur. B. CJ. Nur- ment, after \Hikh big b*.dy was cut dowu and delivered into the hands of hia friends. p ft n pabular Is bcrlaln in thoftesont instai c thc-gnilt of drawn aside that hide* the features of Ratltarson and Pftftofflr. h- Before tlio Grehepivl # Asflfmbly In 1872 caine': 1 “A*biH to relieve the ‘^Bt&te df Sofltb Ctmlina of all liability “for its guaranty of the Bonds of tl>e- “Bluc Itidge Railroad by providing for' “the seobriag and. ^euLrucUon of the wwn«.” This Wii,. a schevte to get, hold affd divide $t ,800^ of Blue Ridge t*cTip, off the plea of getring ‘rid' of the liability of thrfttate as guarrmtor of $4,000,00() of boh As, '2 »‘A bill re flating to the bonds of South Carolipa,” better known as the validating act. This was intended to validate the illegal issue aud use of nearly $*> 00j0.,000 of con version bonds. 3. “A bill relating to! “the Finunvial Agent ofthe Stolle,” com- mouly called the Financial Settlement bill. This empowered thb Financial Beard (Scott, Barker and Chamberlain) to settle with Kimptou, so as to Cover up the fraudulent use of the proceeds, of State bonds sold foi account of the State. In the third bill Kimptou was chiefly iu- ttoested, and it was agreed that the bal ance duo him, as shown by the settle, 'ment, being $ 1311.000, shpuld be divb ded cqua]!j between himself, Chamber, lain aud Parker. This is Parker’s tes timony, and Cluiubcrlam's famous letter to Parker is an adniisslou tlmt Cham- ’ ... ' * r '#. * ■ ^ •'#; bcrlain was to divide profits with Kimp- ton. “How do the cotnmSssious foot up, ,ch?” In live Validating bill, also, Kimp- tdn Was heavily interested. Patterson's pet project was the Blue Ridge bill. The trio, and theiv Agents, pulled to gether for Uiuii' common benefit. Ex. Treasurer Parker swears that tlio throe bi’ls wo have described were pass ed by the Os* of money among the mem bers of the Legislature, that Kimptou was to secure the jtrussage of the bills in the Senate, and Patterson in the House. Establish tliesc facts, ami the charge of conpiracy and,bnbcry is made out. Woodruff, Clerk of the Senate, swears that Kimptou'deponited iu thu Central National Bank, in his name, a certificate of d A posit of 830,000, which money was to bb drawn os sooffas the Validating act was approved, and was to be divided be tween Senators Leslie* Owens, Nash, A Drawn oi'Frnud in Three Acta. Whittcmoro, II. E- IIayn.e and Swails; that Iks drew the money and handed it to Leslie iu,the railroad committee n>oiu ; that $20,000 additiouul \v?3 dej^tited, $10,000 of which wasm hia< Woodruff’s natbe, which $10,000, by direction of r' a Leslie, he paid to Ovens. How was the money procured? Parker swears that be obtained $72,000 on Kimpton’s drafts, secured by Blue Ridge scrip; that $.>0,000 of the money was used to pur ■ chase Scnatoi-s, tlfcbaluueq was to go to the House fflrough Patterson. W’o druif, we have seen, Icdh* where full 830,000 went to. Cbtrfirtning this testimony of IWker and Woodruff is thn’Hof ,T. H. Sawyer, Cashier of the Central Natibual Bank, who swears that lylmptori drew a check tor $3,000, which amount w.is placed,to rite erod-t of Woodruff* ngd whs drawn out by hhiT. G.yJ. ircdel, Cashier of tiic Central National Bunk, finds $10,000 deposited to Woodniff's credit, which vmbur.t rial d?awti out by Woodruff, and h like" umbnnt on thA Same day, dcppsitc’cl tb thb ‘eredft off QW0P®.ji MuxwcJI, colored Senafof from ^arlboro, swoars' that Patterson paid, kim,$3,000 lo $. ri ',O0O for supporting* tji^ t^r«Q bills.' Jorvey, cotpred Sena tor fppa^Ch^rleston, swears/ thlA-;i , -pt- tor#ou paid him $2,000,. W-ril. Nash, black Senator firtrtn . ilichleiid, swears that the $30,000 hikep by Woodruff ‘ to the railroad boiVimitteh room was dis- flfews aiw CoufleVd -h ■. i The means by which Pattcrtoo wa» elected to |heIVrted --£#atea, Softate, And hik exploits ds ptemoler of Uw Blue tidge Eu ill-gad a nd as iffaW(iulatot of the Iroeuville and Cufumbja Railroatf, hat’c been fully desciibcd itx t^ese eglaru ns, Ig. cve^y.instance, the Conuni^^e, <11^ tributed' tlmong the Senators', lie Frauds have given tire testimony p|^|. prtb?- to‘tbc^,-] their own oouelnsioiu, so aA to satisfy. *- - ^ the people that the end tlvoy have in view is the punishment 6f guilty officials, not the persecution of obnoxious politicians. A host of witnesses have been examined by the Committee /■ but only they who ’planned or carried”out the schemes off plunder have been tried', 0/ will be brdught into Court, a& defendants, The sniall fry, the weak aWwillici t!hron^, dubbed Ids gratification money,) go- free, upon tfio single cbn^ti^ttibat (hey retire fipm public.life and steal up more. In truth, the original responsibility fb the public swindling m South’ rests upon axmall uutnber of _ Whwcrerthe Coflttritweon Fmuda left, high or I6w, they find iraoog ' SO CO#» Fatferscn ter son oiid that he Juul arranged with Leslie to take eoro of bis iiiomls, that Ljesliaymid jthey should bp wpll 'iaiken pore c^ and that Kimptyo toM hlmthat H was sometimes naccsssry to pay, ftfr doing what was -right, and he wVuTd guarantee tliat whatever Leslie promis ed Would be carried out.’ Thp, 7 mqqoy who took Bribes and divided m “lSun-1 alhitted #0 the Senate ii fully ^eqouu day-School fuutf, (as the pious Y^oodruff tisd fbf. Leslie, OiVona,'Nash, Whitlie- .t' • i, " *v « ’ TT T 4 : ttV— i — 4 more, II. E. flayne and Swad» reotivod $o,000 each; Ow.ii.s;-u(TLeslie-'teedV- ed $10^0 CflehAdtnttonai; Making$30^ 000. Pottereon paid other euiifjr flrlta-? aHo»»enfc.-^AVe noir KepreSentAtivos, W" fgar ofof enufion, ffhal itead M-vernl shoia «l of Scott, Chninberlaia, PAiJter, No^lci- torjon. . of restless vigijanee tbr theii ‘ sake, iu 8td*’r>, when Mr.- Kimptou, Piittorsou, Moses, Cardozo, ienty ^1^0^ *4**^ ' thatimoneyiAms pcud to theta,^ of to Ahem, by Patter** t E.' Chin, tering of the Radicals after the dampujgp \h» habit : T <***'&>• Iwwt ' This $9,700 ffobil, byr^’atterson to only f the one hundred Radical mem, f ortbc House ’^)f Representatives, t is easy to see bow $22,500 could’ bo disposed of at this rat?, oven had not Kimpton lent a hand. The Financial Agent did not confine his exertions to the ppnfth-. In the House he promised G’aip $500, and offered J. S. Baker. $3,00(1, begged Jamas N. II ay no to support tbc three bills and it would be ail right,” asked C. D. ITayne the same thing, and told W. L. Leggett he could nmtehome money by the three bilU. ); 1 The chain ef proof is complete. We’ have shown beyond doubt that the three bills were passed by bribery, and that Kimpton, Parker and Patterson furnish ed the money, and made the arrange ments with, aud paid the members of the Legislature. , There‘was, during the negotiations, a quarrel over the spoils. Kimpton and Patterson fell out. The end of it was that Patterson gave Kimpi ton an order on Slate Treasurer Parker for $114,230 of Blue Itidge Scrip; $42,857 to be used in paying tbe ex penses, of passipg in the House the Fi nancial Settlement and A’aliJating bills, the remaining $74,414 to be applied, at the rate of seventy cents on the dollar, to reimbursing Kimpton $50,000, in money, to bo paid by him for passing thu Blue Ridge bill in the Senate. This is the $50,000 already aeeoumed for. The original order of Patterson to Par ker is la possession of the CommUftc on Frauds. rl> *- 'i. What more is wanting to convict Pat ter ton and Kimpton? WiU Massa chusetts stand between Kimpton and a fair trial in the South Carolina Courts, with such evidence as this, thrown open' to every' reader >f a newspaper ? Can it be claimed that politics is at the bot< tom of the requisith n for Kimpton when every particle of evidence against him is furnished by his Termer allies or friends, members of the Same political party ? W look with confidence for Kimpton’s sur render next week. And the people have Aright to insist that, now that requisi* tions ale in order again, they shall not be confined to the cx-Financial Agent, At least publish the testimony. Chamber- lain is Hot si fugitive. Wliy is lie Hot sent for ’? No injury .can flow from- the publication of every sbred of evidence against pub:! gonv lion concerning the TauJ Commivioi) pur chases, in ’uuing llell Hole tiwamp, will , tickle tbe jaded palaigs of even South Carolinians whose iistonl.mmcnt was fatigued long aiuce. One other Question. AVhy hr n r i Elib/ft trikm in hand? The p n opVare emiJhlent that aside bis UU glass and called fbp some wpler. , He saw' the other train coming, and cleared the track for it st' otice. ‘ it think the saddest of all experience is the consciousness that an opportunity For right doing has been lost. It brings a sad look into a man’s face to know that ho has set an example, bad in itself, -Hid hopelessly followed by others,-- .— Fathers and mothers, your opportu nity in behalf of your beys and girls is to day—now 1 Don't let it slip from you j r - arc to make and Keep that track suitable for the travel of the ^coming generation.. And here comes the work of tlie Sunday school teacher, to get the uneasy, ram bling feet of childhood" over info the roadway of the very, best lite.—Chris' tiAn Neighbor. <«ire llw <>ran<. yj-w AO \ i:/rnsi-:MKxrs: 1 -gfrjL-rs- r„y :v ^^-^Blackvllle, .S. ^H&rand Opening O ■r m A 1 No SuccessMOpposition to my Run! O: •n"- AVo are not only to have a dear track ; Lam just frorff tbe Notthern markato. where I have spent, a month' iSj! Q - [fully seiee:i:ig and pu.elmsing one of the fullest hud must complete stock, GeneraTMerehaiidiso over brought into this State. I guarantee eatisfactioi one and all and defy competition in prices, styles and quality anvwbemin State. Call for yourselves and examine ray splendid _stnck of Ready-n m Clothing. GehtB and Imys “ilgged out” in the latest Pailsian styles'In quality of suit from the .“every day go-aboul” to the handsomest “wetjt outfit” and at prices to suit all. 4 ■ ' My superb stpek r>f Boots aud Shoes for Gents, Yopthp, Ladles Child cant, be beat anywhere. In fact I have a full and complete assortmenttof and cvervthinc'you want to buy In the way of Dry Goods, Hats, Caps, Hosl Yankee Notions, Showcase Goods and everything else besides. A choieff tfno of Grncerliea, Caoh6ff Goods and Liquors. . ' " • ,* < • Can set you up housekeeping from the nicest bed room and parlor sgj furniture to the frylng-paln In the kitchen. .'.&?*• AVhen wo say wo hope Grant will be the Republican nominee In 188!). wo mean precisely what wo say. Grant came very near destroying the liberties of the people and making a wreck of a constitutional government. But he4. failed, although he gave it a faithful shaking’from which it has hot yet re covered. But Grant gave a blow to his own party, and it now lies bleeding and writhing in the death agony at his feet. When he went into office You will also find a choice lot of Mules and Horses In my Sale JHab bought in person in the Western markets at bottom figures for c*»hr bo sold to your advantage. When you have purchnhed a horse ox mule I then subply you wlth^as good a set of Harness or saddle as you desire and thee^ipst teuns. ... ^•Just-call in and look and we guarantee to give you satisfaction. ' SIMON BROWN. BLACKVILLE. S. I &oe33—tf Hiram W • l^riedenwald, eleven Southern States were under Republic an control, When Ira left it every State had been redeemed, and a Democratic Governor occupied every Executive Chair. It was Grantism that caused such a Uemeuduus revo lution In the representation of the U. S. House of Representatives; it was Giantism that gave the Senate.to the Democrats after the 4th of March. 1879 It was Gratnism that elected Samuel President of th D FritedhStetes. It was Gratlsm that filled the cmuitry with thieves and spedi^ators and tramps. It was Grantism that brought ab.»ut the commerciol paralysis and the fl- n ah dal prostration. It was Grantism- that caused the strikes aihong labor ers and ereated a colony of rogues on British soil. It was GraUsrc .that de graded the American name, destroyed public confil ionce, madb the military the great factor kijatate elections, en throned vice. and crime, ruined the na vy, and wasted aini alula tho pcofde’a money. By all means give m Giant then. If there is not enough of honor, virtue r.nd patriotism among,Amtiicdu -AYITH- ,of- WIESENFELO & t’« Wholesale -AND JOBBERS OF tloiii< r Cassimcrcfi, Coatings, Sul tine; Is, Tweeds, KerqT, Jeans,, No. 2i2 Went Ittiitimorc'Street, BALTIMORE an".2 Oin. rzsg%:HX-' lailsc «m Avalanche WOW 38 o-O gh 4 A. II13he sis tei 11, Wiilistoa, South Carolina * i. LerJer of Low Prices in Barnwell Lountyv: . bKFYfNG COMPETITION, IN\'i TES ALL HEsLltOCS OF vesting a iff tic money to the best advantage to ytrit him at an eatffy < "ila^uarai.tv.C''“r'irrtnnrjTth:* in' idry G-rodf tiroperjek, lUtsg Hr he fioqpislfod py } hkii»g and stealing. Hus the Cum.mittQ.3 on .Frauds nothing that smirohes him exetq t the Mgnifi- eant fact that iu w^e peid by Patterson 32,611 ia BJiuj RiJiro ru ii) on March 1S72. (the day after the payment ol Slfi.- OfX> to Owens,) ho having been an ac tive advocate of the Blue Ridge hill, and the witfie* to Patterson Voider ou Par ker for $J 11,250 to phy the expeusea of passiug the Bill. The ComimUicc on Frauds say: “Now let the curtain drop 1” But the bell is ready to ring for' the Second Act, Scene, a C # oixrt of justice; and the pub- ire are Impatient for the Third Act, scene, the ^outh-Carolina Peqjuefrtiary. In f 1 of a rniiitafy »yr.-»fit .v <! imuryer. Giv* ua’Grant ntid.vve. will beat him su badly it will bo Ib-o hist of Grant and GraetioJu in Ammivaa 'jFdliKa.—\\ il- miugion Btav. ffCT 7' -G2f> ♦ — Shoes, ClotMtig. <j iassware^CrocSerjf.>w a re, Tobin ••0 atijl.. niijrUtuij^ i.eedei! ; y pe-p c to make tlum happy and Ootnfol'table. Two stofi courteous .sajcsmeu—bariKnaii prices and n wide it^witke uinreftant. .tezG Ml TT—— T. S. NfPSU.H. T<- . J. r. 1‘AIIMTNG. Milfoil } ♦ ” mihUSAl.KAND RETAIL DEALERS IX Tiic Oibcxr Ti-aln I hat is Com- "l : ■ • i«er. .> As a tteiftraa paywuy nvor a - New England railroad it struck a broken rud. The conductor fell the shock. He knew a fW was off the track, 1 aad sprang tor a brake. It was his last Bravo servica.. Tb u crash came, and he waa picked up, a poor mangled WTCek ; Ids skull had been broken. He made gut, Itowever, to utter these wordsy-the last fiftFrances of a faithful, loyal soul—“Put oh the signals fob the oilier tram!’’ Some* whefe down the tfaek Ire knew another . 4^ ' ' ^ Iff**- J. , . . t^ vK , »■} 1 -W train was coming, thundering, blowing, crashing*along, faster'festet, and there wa« hiU train on the trAelc 1 Out with II r. Coil fi* r say the, ,Vy ;tt Aiktu. in theXi-wsuind We. t.avo bvarU men id Tuat [ t'o..f-whe.tt, but we' have novel- yot sc-oa the farmer who 4art r st ■ !,hi. J . grain eNoo-‘•mentolly,-to d» to'know positively thru It was ruut. proof. Because rust at lacks t he wheat crop gem rally, and does not attack h certain fi Id, it does not follow-that, therefore, tho grain in tint field ijs rust-proof. If any one haa ever ex perimented with whea*, as we reported not long since having donB'with oat8 ) to ti'ijf. iu, power to resist rust, we do not know it; nor wi!l yro believe there is such a thing as; rust-proof wheat until wo know such an experiment, or 'leTles of t-ipetlim nis, have beeii made 7 ExpHictce, Lbweyer, is not an infal- l«j, Hoes, Trunks, Bags, Ei 2EE Kuitf Sfrccl, Near Mtuki'i Streef, ClbirK slon. S. (', I Partleu’ar ait union given to fllliug of Orders, end all ( Kids gmn aiitcrfi h« reseated. aiqj 15-6 —- t tm UENTlSXUY ^1 ✓j W p=» V- PS H *V5 New Goods 1 ' M XO V KF/:f Tv I \ ft x FBESH ‘ of Gooi rtula, cmslaPTrur «r Dry Ti.x>d\. IMiehtnoOn, Hoots and oiioha, fK* r >!*em» t>H, P) Hirdware, Oroautoe, - .* Cr<K-kt*iy-War<». 1 Neatsfoot OH, 1'urnlo S+tah Bo«rginff and XI To which I in vita the attrition o llble guide ra the matter df. .growing wheat. For iastiinoe, the e^perieneo of iUind8tev< ry farmer is, thatit will not pay to grow wlmct on sandy land,and yet Dr. Rivenf-t has proven tirat wheat eau be teonomlcnlly grown upop the sand beds around Charleston. His suc cess ,or aoiuo other cause, has given a ethmtlns ter glowlng.fn bur lower counties, for there fd far greater in- J II E MILHOUS. BDrS- WILL be at his vflice in Hlsekville, 8 C., on Monday", iirml will m.-ct pKtiesU there any time ifdui notice is giren. Will attend calls Uiroftglibut lisrnwell an<l adjaccBt. nug22-Cin ^ —1_ reofile of Harnwell and Or* wtttjrmirarrtwrtir gelf Ui« gotM.’s cmu tm mdd-for o««h. ^counties. Your petromura.is rpspoctfully toltt - €h E- STEADMaN, Agent, BliACKVILLE, S. mur'.'Vtf Sr- Henry J. Monzon, ■ > Stirizeon Dentist) LotKHAHT & nmmm quiry from that section for seed wheat than wo have ever known before. Wo hope they may be all aucoeWtil hr growing their own fiiur, but If we lived therb vie still Incline to the opin ion we would make some other crop- pay for our blacuita. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. P rions Uftvinir land* for sale Jft well county wHldo well to corre WilllstoD. augl Haa located at TllackvlHo trad rexpbet- fully offers his profeaetonal services to the citlzanaof Hurnwail and adjoining coun tii ‘ “ “ ie«. Olficft »t roeider.ee of M. Keeler, Fstp JO | ti^e signals 1 another train is- coming That was bis last injuuctioq.' * That other train, that otber train,- I ant saying to .myself, the generation that is following u«; the boys and tho* girls tfiafr am presSlug hlrdiaftcr us, coming aiofj’g faster,Vaster, just ahead of vb. an Ahd'^Teffvcjr. Kimpton Wor^culy perhaps wc are in their wav. a hibdrance, ah obstacle:, ifnd the' oeearioii *f their nifri. What rtecd speech, want i iti gesture \ t B gto «>C|ipcnie that will he || 1 n rin Tf wd are on f > are in. the out of lire way • ' I taUr was’ a qnts- ‘ . itt O Ji' ? Southron: On Tueaday moaning lust several persons, amdng theni Messrs. J. B., A. E. and young John Woodhum, a son of the. former, went tq the resi dence of Mr. M.. Berry Woodkam, who was out in hia field at the tlnje, when an alt creation began between tboeo outslda and thoto inside the houHe- Hot wonls ensued, When Mr. M. B. Woodbam returned to the house and joined In, toore as a peace-maker than otherwise. Boon firing took place. One report has it that a son of Mr. Berry WoodhanaAred the first shot. l&rcd by the out - Berry Woodham fell mortally woundefi and died in a half hour; All the parties are closely re lated to each other, and the cause of tbe dfrSealty seeps to bare been a famlly .lrouble, which Will oil cope out when the next court sonyenea. The whole affair ie a shock tog one through out’Tv ] 4 jtV Referenaes—Uev. W. D. McMillan, Measr* ‘ Ko. ‘ - . -- - - - ibtaa Zon, Hat DibClo. &. tolar, blackville: M«jt Brabliam, Barnwell C. II.; Hev. IV. or ,ou- DDNTISTKY I. II. ALEXANDER, D. L OOLUM1UA, H. C, S Will visit Blackvine and Bar, lirofe«sionally about thelstof Ool BUR 15-Cf; DR. MOUZON wiir to *£ Barnwell on Um tlrst Monday in each mouth. ■ •• ■■ ■' s'" K' junol3-Ctn B. J. (iuattlcbauffl, mcNxis'r. '• mist##, s c. u.r. Ti'illiUtend cnlln throuj^houi Bannwell aiid adjacent eouDtiee. nmy9-Cm — 4 ——; ■' ^ H. M. Alexand JVferchandiso Droll 17J EAST BAY STREET, Charleston, South Catoli * *•- w 1 -", - p-*^- jM^^Comignments Solicited. prompt Returns 1 Noth# to Planters, i r~ ■-" 3 > v ' * The subscriber respectfully Informs tbe Cottofi Banters of North Carolina, South Carolina, . Georgia, ' Alabara Notce to Debtors Crcdito: rsons indebted to thi^e t ■■■MMIull will nt and settle. TUoah to Vfu) KET H’ Plates i> Vho Florida, Mlsslssippr , and Louisiana Only attested to estate is Indebted will present their 1 TT* .and reforriog lo (h^Ile.tTaji b« mighi JT.WW0.of lo ijfi:*'** Iucco and teatlp^lflUlliiia of dgara, were smoked, snuffed, and chewed in that he lately added to the Usj; of hU previous inventions anothefc Improved Rib, which he - justly claims superior over all Gin Ribs in use. The name of my Improvod Gin IMb is khotrn ns Qpen-Tltroat, Curved-Breast; Double X, Centre-Vent, SelDRib Cleanstog- Seed Gin, open to the whdd for trial. Prlc^iaskyeair ffi parnaw. \I will off- er thj* season at $3 50 per saw—paya ble Novemtour- lst,- <lty aedeptance. The common Iffh Gin, pt $a.2S-pf r saw, only made to oi JAME8 LUTZ, Idmiolslra 0. KOLUN. Oi a. rou,ni u 0. POLLIN' 4 1 ■U'’' • *•'‘1 fiA* ■- . Commission mi pi .'7 - (f * T-jf, - AND AGENTS FOtt Tl , .J- A J" this country, aalqcrtase of about 8, JZk i to % co «ud 50,000. ’S3^-'»fcS' ! -b'V?"..?