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t. wr .w hi ? ?n<- WHIMI-OM""" ?i?I THE HOltltY NEWS, I PUHI.lSIIKP fcverv .Saturday MorninK* T W. BCATV, Editor. T1?)IS: <>NK YKAI!x,_^.-. $42.00 rr.^JN- $1.00 All ct?miiiuMicntioiiH ti> titling: to serve |ni?n?r titteii Hl. Mill bi> clung t'tl lor tw n?lvcrrl's<*iii?>iitM. Professional & Business Cards 1>. JOHNSON. J. M. JOHNSON C. r. qUATTl.KUAL'M. JOHNSONS* QUATTLEBAUM, ATTORNEYS aiul COUNSELORS AT LAW Conwayboro, S. C. J OS. T. W!;]<SII, Attornoy at Law and SOLICITOR IV I.V\IT!'I'V - ? ? I A ) ill practice In the court* of Marion, ilorry and Georgetown. Office at UONWA.YHOKO, S. (J. Nov 13, 1870-tf. rp l'\ GILLESPIE, Attorney and Counsellor at Law Will pive prompt attention to all husines entrusted to his care. CON \VAYBOKO, 8. C. Juno, 2, 1871. EO. It, CONG DON. It GonorfiC Commission Merchant, JIOYCE'S H IIAllF, C II A U L EST O N , 8. C. Naval Stores, Rico, Cotton, and General Produce. C~7~ My friends in Horry can dejiend upon f/cttint/ the best prices for Naval Stores and all Produce shipped to toe for sale in this market apr 1">, *7t>. ti rpOLAU ?fc HART, Commission Merchants, ll? IMHINT STIIVVr NEW Y< UK. Liberal advance* made on consignment* Naval Stores, Cotton. &c. Orders receivo Proumt Attention. Unexceptionable references given North and South* J. R. Tji.AU J. II. HART. of X. C. ofS.C J J.\ WILLIAMS, IMCAI.KUU 1.1 OKNERAL MEUCIIAN DIZE, MANUFACTUIIEll OF NAVAL STORES COMMISSION MERCHANT. FORWARDING AGENT. I\y Speeial attention given to the buying and selling of Ton " imbcr. BULL CllEEK., *<?. C. ,J. C. ROO/JCK EDMONS T" BROWN. WliOl.KSAI.K DKAI.KIt IN MF.N AND BOYS' Hats, ( ;ips tV Straw tiiooilv, A I/O Ladies Misses and Children's Hats, No. 4:1 II.VYNK Sr. rilABLKSTON,. S. C. Opposite Charleston Hotel. 110v 13. tf. I $30,511,638.60" ! Liverpool & London & Globe 1 Insurance Co. , Total Assets $30,511,638.60 < N J. M. JOHNSON, | Agent, Marlon. S. C. 1 C. 1*. QUATTLEBAUM, 1 Ast. Agent, Conwayboro, S. C. feb 12-tf. Encourasce Home People and \ r Home Enterprise. a 0 ? ,,i r Geo. S. Hacker, I t b CHARLESTON, A C. a t< n - ' ? tc --V 4- ^ P M^tW nvi.v anr.D ctuu iUn I>f IVIn _ m* < oaoii i' ui'inw jry owned and managed by a Carolinian " in ihlsCity. All work guaranteed. Terms tl Cash. ai Always on bund u large Stock of Poors, n, Sash, Blinds. Mouldings, Brackets, Scroll and , Turned Work of every description. Glass, ' White Leads, and Builders' Hardware. Dres- Ol sod Lumber and Flooring delivered in any u portion of this State. y march 11-ly. * OLD HUNDRED! ? ic ;;Tho Horry News P And Ixuiisvllls " WEEKLY COURIER-JOURNAL ? One year for $2.75. 1 wo papers for little a. more tlian the price of one. Send us $2.75 and receive your home paper with the COURIER-JOURNAL, the best, hi wittiest, brightest and ablest City Weekly iu fi< the country. (} vol. 8. ~ coir Democratic I'latform Adopted at St. Louis* We, the delegates of the Democratic party of the United States, in National Convention assembled, do hero declare the administration ot the Federal government to be in urgent neod of immediate reform, do hereby enjoin upon thi nominees ot this Covention, and of the Democratic party in each Stato a zealous effort and co operation to this end, and do hereby appeal lo our fellow citizens of every termer political connection to undertake with us the first and most pressing patriotic lllltv iVnr ! lin 1 ? lw. ?, V I I ? VI kdv i/v;iiiv^v>i > Ui II1U whole country, wo do hero reaffirm our faith in the permanency ot the Federal Union, our devotion to the Constitution of the United States with its amendments universally accepted aa a final settlement of the controversies that engendered civil war, and do hero record our steadfast confidence in the perpetunity ot republican sell-government. In absolute acquisition in the will of the majority, the vital principle ot tho Republic; in the supremacy of the civil over tho military authority; in the total separation ol Church and State, for the sake alike of civil and religious freedom; in tho equality ol all citi/.ens before just laws of their own enactment; in the liberty ot individual conduct unvoted by compulsory laws; in the failh'ul education of the rising generation, that they may preserve, enjoy and transmit these best conditions of human happipincss ami hope, wo behold the noblest products of a hundred years ol changeful history; but while upholding thu bond of our union and the great charter of those our rights, it behooves a free people to practice also that eternal vigilence which is the price of liberty. Reform is necessary to rebuild and establish in the heatlsof the whole people the Union eleven years ago, happily rescued, to save it from the danger of a corrupt centralism which, after infecting upon ten States the rapacity of carpet-bag tyrannies, |?as honeycombed the offices ol the Fed uiai government iiroii with incapacity, waste ami fraud, infected Slates ami municipalities with the contagaion of misrule, and locked fust the prosperity ol an indusliious people m the paralysis ol Hard Times. Keforin is necessary to establish a sound currency, restoro the public credit ami maintain the national honor. VVe denounce the failure for all these eleven years to niako good the promise of the legal tender notes which are a changing standard of value in the hands ol the people, and the nonpayment of which is a disregard of the plighted faith of the nation. Wo denounoo the improvidence which in eleven years of peace has taken from the people in Federal taxes thirteen times the whole amount of the legal notes, and squandered lour Limes this sum in useless expenies, without aocumlating any reserve or their redemption. We denounce the financial imbccili,y and immorality of that party which luring eleven yeais of peace has made to advance toward resumption, that < unload has obstructed resumption by vastiug our surplus income, and while mnuallv protessimr to intend a snee.lv < mm # w ( J elurn lo specie payments, lias annual- i y enacted fresh hindrances thereto, f Vs such a hindrance we denounce the t CHumpUon clause of the act of 1875, I lid we here demand its repeal. We i lemand a judicious system of prepara- | ion, by public economies, by olticial I etrenehinents and by wise finance, | rhich shall enable the nation to assure t he whole world of its perfect readiness I o meet any of its promises at the call of a he creditor entitled to payment. We elievc such a system, well devised, p nd, above all, entrusted to conipe- t cut hands for execution, creating at o lime an artificial scarcity of curren- t y, and at 110 time alarming the public 1 nnd into a withdrawal of that vaster ^ lachinery of credit by which ninety- 0 ve per cent, of all busincs transactions ii re performed, a system ouen to the n ublio and inspiring general conti- t ence, would, from the day ol its adop- a on, bring healing on its wings to all y ur harassed industry, and sat in :no- a on tho wheels of commerce, inanufac- s ires and mechanical arts; restore em- p loymeut to labor, and renew in all its ii ational sources the prosperity ot the k eople. c Reform is necessary in the sum and Ii lode of Federal taxation, to the end b lat capital bo set free lrom distrust, ti nd labor lightly burdeued. We de- a ounce tho larilt' levied upon nearly a >ur thousand articles as a masterpiece r; 1 injustice, inequality and ta'se pre- ti nee. It yields a dwindling, not a p early rising, revenue. It has iin- n overished many industries to subsi- si izc a few. It prohibits imports that tl light purchase tho products of Amer? Ij an labor. It has degraded Amori- g in commerce trom the first to an ei lienor rank upon the high seas, h > has cut down the sales of American n< lauufaoturers at home and abroad, tl id depleted the returns of American tl grioultare or industry followed by ai lit our people. It costs the people pi re times more than it produces to p to treMury. It obstructs tho process l ol Uflt - - - J .' ? ? **?'???? -An Indopo iVAYBOItO, 8. C., 87 of production and wastes the (mils of labor. It promotes fraud and fosters smuggling, enriches <lishonest ofliciaU and bankrupts honest merchants. We demand that all cusiomhou.se fixation shall be only lot revenue. Reform is necessary in the scale of public expense, Federal, State and municipal. Our Federal taxation has swollen from $60,000,000, gold, in 1SOO, to $ 150,000,000 currency, m 1870; our aggregate taxation, from $184,000,000 gold, in i860, to $700,000,000 in i 1870; or in one decade from less than five dollars per head to more than eighteen dollars pel head. Since the ! peace the people have paid to their l&x-gaterers more than thrice the sum of the national debt and more than twice that sum for Federal goverment alone. We demand a rigorous I'urgality in every department from every ! officer of the government, t Reform is necessary to put a slop to the profligate waste of public lands and their diversion lrom actual settlors by iho party in power, which has squandered millions of acres upon railroads alone, and out of more than luriee mat aggregate lias disposed of less than a sixth directly to tillers ol the soil. Reform is necessary to correct tlm omissions of Republican Congresses, the errors of our treaties and our diplomacy, which have stripped our fellowcitizens of foreign birth and kindred race rccrossing the Atlantic of the shield of American citizenship, and have exposed our brethren of the I'aci fie coast to the incursions of a race not sprung from the same great parent stock, and, in fact, now, by law, denied citizenship through naturalization, as being neither accustomed to the traditions of u progressive civilization nor lilted for the exercise of liberty under equal laws. Wo denounce the policy which thus discards the liberty-loving German and tolerates the revival of the Coolie trade in Mongolian women, imported tor immoral purposes, anl Mongolian men hired to perform servile labor contracts; and we demand such a modification of the treaty with the Chinese Empire or such legislation by Congress, within a constitutional limitation, as shall prevent the further importation or immigration of the Mongolian race. lti'torm is necessary, and can never We effected Wut Wy making it the controlling issue ol the elections, lilting it above tho false issues with which the office-holding class and the party in power seek to smother it?the lalse issue with which they would enkindle the sectarian wtrile in respect to the public schools, the support ol which belongs exclusively to the several Stales, and which the Democratic party has cherished from their foundation and resolved to maintain without partiality or preference for any class, sect or creed, and without contributing from the treasury to any; the false issues by which they seek to light anew the dying embers ol sectional hate between kindred peoples, once unnaturally estranged, hut now reunited in one indivisible republic and a common destiny. Reform is necessary in the civil Beiviee. Experience proves that efficient, economical conduct ol the government is not possible if its civil service he I object to change at every election, be i prize fought lor at the hulloL jox, bo a brief reward of party zeal ti8tead oi posts of honor assigned lor rroved competency and held loi fidelty in the public employ; that the distensing of patronage should neither te a tax upon the lime of all our pubic men nor thu instrument oi their mbiliori. Here again promises, falsi, ied in the performance, attest that the lurty in power can work out no pracieal or salutary reform. Reform is necessary even more in he higher grades of public service, 'resident, Vice-President, Judges, icnators, Kepresentu lives, Cabinet (licers, these and all others in authorly, are the people's servants. Their dices are not a private perquisite; hey arc a public trust. When the unals of this Kopuhlic show the dis;racc and censure oi a Vice President late Speaker of the House oi Repreentalives marketing his ruling as a residing officer; three Senators prolit?g secretly by their votes as law-ma- : ers; five chairmen of the leading j ruiimSf fnoo i\i flirt -.4 UIU?UI%VVV0 V? ??IV lilVU 1 luurc U1 J lepresenlatives exposed in job- j cry; a late secretary of the j ie usury forcing balances in the public t ecounts, a laic attorney general mis- j ppropriutmg public funds; a see ret a- | y of the navy en ricked or enriching i 'iends by percentages levied oil' the l rofits of contractors with his depart- | tent; an ambassador to Kngland cen- i j red in a dishonorable speculation; r ie President's private secretary bare- t r escaping conviction ou a trial for c uilty complicity in frauds on the revnue; a secretary of war impeached tor c igh crimes and confessed misdemea- i org?-the demonstration is complete |j lat the first step in relorm must he u io people's choice ol honest men irom j, a other party, lest the disgrace of one i olitical organization infect the body u olilic, and thereby, taking no change f men or party, we can get no change 0 \J I ^ ilj ndont Journal. ITURDAY, JULY 8, ot measures ami no reform. All these ! abuses, wrongs and m imes are the pro. ' duet ol sixteen years ascendency <>l J thn Republicans themselves; but their reformers are voted down in conven- 1 lion and displaced from the cabinet; i the party's masses <>l honest voters is powerless to resist the eighty thousand , j otiiec-holders, its leaders and guides. I i Reform cun only die had by a pi-ucelul ei vil revolution. We demand a change of system?a change of administration? a change ol parties, thai we may hare a change of measures and of men. Platform of Hie Republican Party, Adopted by the National C'ouveiilioa'at I'iuciunati. When in the economy of providence j | this land was to be imrired of hnm;?o I o slavery, am) wlmn the strength ol the people, lor the people, was to he demonstrated, the republican parly oiino into power; its deeds have passed into history, and we look hack to themwith pride. Incited by their memories and high aims lor the good of our country and mankind, and looking to the future with unfaltering courage, Itopo and purpose, we. the representatives ot the party in the national con* veiition assembled, make the following declaration ol principles: Fiust?The United States of America is n nation, not a league, by the combined workings of the national and state governments under their respective constitutions. The rights of every citizen are secured at home and protected abroad and the common welfare promoted. ?3kconi>?The republican party lias preserved these governments to the hundreth anniversary ol the nation's birth, and they are now embodiments ol the great, truths spoken at its cradle, that all men ari created equal; that they are endowed by their creator with certain i'lalienable rights, among which are life, liberty and the pursuit ot happiness; that for the attainment ot these ends governments have been instituted among men deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed until those truths are clioeriuily obeyed, if needed vigorously enforced, the work of the republican party is unfinished. Till P II 'I'll., iiniii.nn.i..! : . ..V, |/\. t III.IIIV IH |/il< I lliTill IWI1 of the souther n section of the union, ami the COMl'I.KTK l'KOTUCTION OV ALL ITS <11 l/.KNS In the free enjoyment o( all their rights, are the duties to which the republican party are sacredly pledged. The power to provide lor the enforce- I meul of the principles embodied in the 1 recent constitutional amendments is vested by those amendments in the : congress ol thu United States, and wo declare it to be the solemn obligation 1 ol the legislative and executive de- 5 partmcnts ol the government to put ' into immediate and vigorous exercise 1 all their constitutional powers for ' removing any just causes ot discontent 1 on the part ot any class and securing 1 every American citizen complete 1 liberty and exact equality in the ex- fl cruise ol all civil, political and public a rights. To this end wo imperatively 1 demand a congress and ehiel executive whose courage and fidelity to these ' duties shall not falter until the results * are placed beyond dispute or recall. [ ruuurn- -in the iirsL act ol congress 1 signed by President Crant the national 1 guverniuent assumed to remove any c doubts ol purpose to discharge all just " obligations to public creditors, and 1 solemnly pledged its (aiili to make 1 provision, at trie earliest practicable * period lor redemption ot the United I .States notes in coin. Commercial * prosperity, public merits and 0 <! national crkdits . Demand that these promises he ful- i filled by a continuous anil steady pro- t gress to specie payments' ii Fifth?Under the constitution the <1 president and heads ot departiucntM u are to make noniiuatians IV.r ollice, the i senate is to advise and consent to ap- o poiulments, and the house ol rcpre* u lentatives is to ante??? _ v? | ' UillUll If faithless officers. The best interests u >1 public service demand that this it listinotncss he respected; that senators o ind representatives, who may be I1 udgcs and accusers, should not dictate hi ippointmentH to olfice. The invariable pi ule lor appointments should have m elerence to the honesty, fidelity and sapaciiy ol appointees, giving to tlio nirty in power these places where larinouy and vigor ol administration equire its policy to be represented, ^ >ut permitting all others to he tilled 'u >y persons selected with sole reference oc o ellicienoy ol public service and the ight ol citizens to share in the honor 111 d rendering tailhiul service to the ountry. ht fiJixxu? We rejoice in the quickened on science ot the people concerning w toliiical affairs and will hold all pub. I'' ic officers to a rigid responsibility, 1X1 nd engage that the prosecution and t'1 lunishuient of all who betray official *,iJ rusts shall be speedy, thorough and itispanng. .Skvknih?The public school system ro if the several states is the bulwark of I 187(5. NO. 26. tho American republic, and with a view to its security and pcrmancnco U'o recommend an amendment. to tho constitution of tlx? I'uitcd States forbidding tlic application oi ANY ihlHt.tr .K.UNOS Or -properly lor tho benefit ol any school or institution under ructniian control. rile;11111 ? -The it venue necessary for current expenditures and Alio obligations of J he public debt must bo largely derived front duties on importation, which, so far as possible, should bo adjusted to promote the interest of American labor, aud advance the prosperity o! the whole country. X I V i ii \\'?? n<.'? 115 rm mil' iiiinnii'lrti' - to further urn:ia of t lw jmtdic lands to corporalmans and mtiin>| <>1 ics, and demand -tint the national domain be devoted to Ircc homes for Ihe .neoplc. Tenth?It i* the imperative duly of the government to modily existing treaties with Kuropeun gov. rnniehls that ill*? same protection shakl he, afforded to adopted American citizens that is given to native born, and all necessary laws be passed to protect emigrants, in the absence ot jipwcr in the state lor the purpose. Klkvkni??Jt is the immediate duty of congriKjj to fully investigate the ellect of the emigration of Mongolians on the moral and material interests of the countryTwki.itii?The ie|>uhlienn partj' recognizes whith approval the substantial advances recently made towards the establishment oT equal rights for women by the many important amendments effected by republican legists- ' lures in the law .which concerns the personal and property relations of wives, mothers and widows, and hy llic appointment and election ot wonum to the HtiperinUuid. nce ol education, charities and other public trusts. The honest demands ol this class of citizens for additional rights and privileges and immunities should be treated with respectful consideration. Tiiihtkuntii?The const it utiom-conic r 8 upon congress sovereign powor over the territories ol the United States lor their government and the exercise ol their power. U is the right and duly ot congress to prohibit and extirpate in the territories tlt.it relic ol barbarism, polygamy, and we demand such legislation as shall secure this end and the supremacy ol American institutions in all the territories. Folktkkntii?The pledges which the nation has given to our soldiers and sailors must he lullilled, and the giatelul people will always hold tboso who periled their lives lor the country's preservation in the kindest rememberii nee. Fiktkkntii?We sincerely deprecate ill sectional feeling and tendencies. We, ihwrolorc, note with deep soliciudc that the democratic party counts is its chief hope of success upon the doctoral vote ol a united south, secur;d llnough the eflbrts of those who iV<rc recently arrayed against the national government, and we invoke lie earnest attention of the country to he grave truth that a success tlras ichieved would reopen sectional strife, ind imperil national honor and hw. nan rights. Sixticicntii ? We ehargo the demo* ralic party as Wring the same in shuraolcr and spirit as when it sympalily I?I] it* 1111 f ...III. ..... I.: * .hi i.vnnUH, ?llll Is control ol the house ol representaivos the 11itim|>li siml opportunity >f the nation's recent Joes, with ?e* isserting ami applauding in the national capilol the scnliuieiil ol unrou-nted icbellion; with sending union oldicrs to the rear; w ith deliberately imposing to repudiate the ?digh'.ed nilli ol the government; with being qtially false and iinhecile upon the vurshadowing tinancial ijuestioir; with 1 hwaiting tin? ends of justice h?y .i.ts ' artisan mismanagement and oh^inrc- , ion ol investigation; with proving IsolJ through thepeiiod oJ its asoen - ' loncy in the lower house of congress ' Itereily incompete.nt to administer i lie government. We wttnn the coun- , iy against trusting a party thus alike nworthy, recreant, atnl incapable. Si;\ KN'i'KKN'iU?The national ad- ' linistralion merits commendation tor ' s honorable work in the? m.niaoi.im.i.f I douie.-tic and foreign iiK'nics, anil { 'resident (Irnnt deserves the e.on inned ml hearty gratitude oi the American eople tor his patriotism and his .im ' tense service in war ami in peace. African Ituynlty. | ' Tin* Journal do Paris contains a let- t r front an eye-witness giving the lot- iy wing particulars ot the atrocities > j ununited on the occasion of the luiral oi Kamraski, King ol Oiuiyoro, c Central Atrica: ^ An immense grave pit, capable of di >lding keveral hundred people, had en <1ug, at the bottom of which the ivea ot the defunct King had been uced in the form ol a ring, to ho in ^ adincus to recivo upon their knees n e corpse of their lato tyramcal and 'I n harous master. Several regiments ^ the royal guard had been sent on ~ e proceeding night to silently surand eomo ol the neighboring ^jWtrn gos. The first human boina ' Jnl/1 V T m I A I) V L^ I ISEMEN I .Inserted at 1.'H> por sputra for tirst, And tifty cents tor each ?uhscquont insertion. One Inch .space will constitute -a, sqtiar* * bother in brevier or display tyjmj; low tUaa an inch will bo charged fur u.s a sqiuio. Marriage ionics froo. Death* ami Funeral notices firec. Religious notices of one square, free. A liberal discount will be made to those whoso advertisements, Jare to be kept in lor three months 01 longer. man, woman or child that made its ent from tho Hum on tiding huts was forcibly seized and carried off, and 'the captives entrapped in this manner conducted towards tho pit prepared ior tho funeral., llcro there began the rnont horrible scone. Tho limbs of those poor creature*), arms atid logs, woro broken by 'the soldiers. Tho lamentations and crios of deqpair of tho victims intermingled with tlic shouting of tho hui ututti orowd, and 0110 by ouo ithoy wwtvi thiown into tho gaping gull b 1 vv. Then began tho heating of drums, tlaj flourish of tho trumpets, the piercing sound of the whistle ami pipe, w'hn'ti, together with the violent \ mciIimwUums of tho crowd, drowned the cries ??l Urn victims. The soil dug out oJ the,-pit tho previous day was then >tltiow*i hack into the monster grave. 'I Uo fanatical spectators of tho dismal drn| ma, as hood as it was filled up, e??iu? | monccd to dance on the summit <>1 llio grave, stamping the soil down ?vith I all their might, so as to form a hard, j compact layer above those in?i i?iil j alive. All tho lamentations 'having censed, nothing was left to indicate the ceremony of the abominable sepulture; tho noise of the iuHtrmnontn had ceased also, and the assembled crowd ru| tired, satisfied with themselves, and admired the greatness ot the king whose lnancs demanded Bitch Baorrtices. llo Didn't .Want the 'Script iou. (Worcester iPreeaJ] lie wae an old man, and he had a bit of conductor's pasteboard Htnek in hi? hat. lie walked into the drug atore aud inquired: "Have you got nay good wlriskey?" "Yes, sir," replied the gentlemuuly druggiwt. "Gimnio half a pint?' "Have you got a doctor's prescript tiort?' "No." "Can't scll it, then, sir. Jury in session; must be strict." "Where can 1 gut a doctor?' sadly inquired the aged inebriate. "I'm a physician, sir,' win ninety responded the druggist. "Can't you give mo that?what you call it, 'eci iptiuii?' "Well, 1 might.' And the l^oetor wrote out a prescription blank, calling for so many ounces of'$]>irUus furtnenti. lie fillod a snug looking bottle with the article, pasted a luble *011 it, numbered to correspond with the paper, and presenting the bottle to the vonerable roysterer, remarked in the most business like way imaginable: "A dollar and a half, sir" "A dollar and a hall!' gasped his astonshed customer. "Ain't that prutiv hi^h, niUtor?" "It's our price?a dollar for tho proscription and fifty cents for the medicine.' "Yes, well,'slowly replied the wicked old duller, as he slowly buttonet^ up the half pint fin his overcoat pocket* "I guess, boss, that 1 don't want.the 'scription. Here's your halt a dollar," and he stuok his tongue in one side of his month Sw.~lI i.J ? ...v?.v| n ?ni?vm in 11 v/ ft j i v>?? 11 y ai l II III of mortar and pestle, and walked out. Carrying Elections by the lhiyonci. Wo learn on responsible authority that an arrangement has boon coin plated by which, a.couple.of months hence, when the political campaign get* 'hot in the Southwest, Liout.-Uen. Sheridan will take the active command of 'the troops there, with his headquearts iti New Chileans. This arrangement, as wo are assured, is made with the approbation of Bheridan, Wi.o 'enter* lieartily into the idea. Me must naturally relish tho work of decisively crushing the class of citizens whom he nneo denounced as banditti because ihey would not look tamely on while ho Louisiana carpet-baggers stniMl he ballot boxes wrtb fraudulent votes, ind threw out legal votes, and tried ,o cover the rascality with .forged attiIfVVTtfl. Tho intervention by tho bayonet in >oulhern election? baa been ao emphat c-ally repudiated by tho Bobor Ronse of he country, that we can hardly boievo that Grant's Administration will laro to rovivo it; and we ehould .not red it the report did it not come to u* rora a very credible eource. Hut owever Uiie may be, it hi alwaye * roper to declare that an attempt to arry the reconstructed State* for the tepublicaoe at the point of tho bayoet will reooil upon the oon?^: hey might succeed 1 rand in eoci}{iff?ffOY?jfj* tales* u OF kvert i>*ajlkw _ . -* lnvH?d. Ptie* l.itt ?ad Out Mt?n to FtJ.Lk*, Waiiiik a Co. SM B t. N?w York.