The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, January 31, 1878, Image 1
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f
'V
1. In writing to (Lis office on buiijiAff.'ffr
'.our immf aiid Poet Office eJJrga*.
Lt«r#afl coi
cntetl by nrcesmiry note when require*!
O. Article* for ptiblioition nhouirt !>• t^rlt*
tM) i» a clear* legible Ivund* ae<! on only «&•
tide of the [>:tge.
4. All changes ia advertiseiuents must
heecbnis oh ftldayi ' * '*■ 1
ite ff
,H- U»as/\
Travelers’ Guide. *
^nrth ('ardina Rsttroad.
U1KKWELL C. It. S. Cm THURSBAY/JANUARY 31. 1878.
DiVREED.
hfjni .n*r—'• > ij ./I
“Into all Hsus somuriutt must fill!,' .
-=
ae«.
mSi.
but sh a guaranty.ef good I
Addreas,
Barnwell
-r- ! ■■■ z=:rX2t.*-
miy
m , y * Into akfapyes soim teardrops eta^,
mmm 0>fSlkSw3S
Sunday, next,
187Lj
the South
Ch
On and after
(Sunday morning excepted),
Leave Charleston . . 9 00 a. m. 7 20p
Arrive AugusU . . 6 CO p. m. 6 14 attm
fob coin M.ftaa
(Sundiy morning excejfled),
Leave Charleston .J.tii mJa. m.. © 60
Arrive at Colmabia. II *0# m. * 1 45?
WMiyWfflBilt
Tearing theruisn to oleeulng wounds,
m.
|T»eart.
Into all hevt s some sorrow must tree]',
Into af!'ewil* some doubt!agacome,
ves of LifeAgweat deep 1
$i44i^P nK V i ^*HH' hin6 foam '
^ jowir,
riijg,
Or enter lag the hgart with tymr bittertfidg.
Upon all brow^-ou^ wiuJh must blow,
Oftr MMo«1<M i (fcffe must be lain^
BowVM]xneTOt%fb%s Wty blight
Do^ n to the dust in bitter pain.
FOR CUaBI-BSTOn,
(Sunday morning cxoqf
Leave Augusta . . . S It) a. Va. 9 »0 p m.
Arrive nt Charlestm 4 20 p.ra H 00 a, f«-
Leave Columbia . . 5 80 p m. 7 15p. m-
Arrive Charleston . 12 night and 6 15 a. m.
Summerrme TValn,
c (Sundays |tfcepted)
Jro^nmmerville * ”7 40 aeu
nv#ai Charlct-T'm ' ^ 8 40 am
Leave Charleston ^ Q 16 p m
Arrive itSununerviUe *' v 4 25 p m
Breakfast, Dinner and Supper at BroncKville
4 V) Camden />jft . ,
Connects at Kingsville daily (Sundays excep
ted^ with day passenger train to and front
Charlestbn. Passengers from Camden td Co
lumbia can go through without <i«tcation on
Mondays, Wednesdays aud Fridays, tyid
from Celufhbia’ to Camden on Tuesdays,
7’hursdftys and Rsturdays by eon tree t ion
with day passenger train
Day and night trains connect at Augutta
with Georgia Railroad and Central Railroad.
This route is ths quietest and most direct
Northwest.
Night trains for Augusta connect closely
gomery. Mobile, New Orleans and points in
the •Spiithn'eet. -.(TlHriy-ehx iiqnrs New
Orleans.
Day fains Jfdr fhv/innlije connfflf -tlosely
with Charlotte Kailrosd for all points North,
makbig\]uick time and no delays. (Forty
hours to NpwYork.)
Tbeyatos Aadthe CrvonviGp nrd (Mnnibia
silll Fparniflbarg and*Un1<m ItAlffo^ds con«
nect closely with the train which leaves
Charleston at 5tXl a ni. and return rug they
counect in same roauner with the traiu which
leaves Columbia for Charleston at bBO p m
Laurens KailrdSd train connectaat Ji«wberry
on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Blue Ridge Railroad train runs d»i y, can-
necting with up sa l down trains on Green,
villeand Columbia Railt oad.
b. 9 SOLOMONS,
Superintendent.
S. B. Pickf.ns, Genera! Ticket Agent. ^
Dowi
' •• wtx;
s some duty thrust,
some burden given,
the heart with its dreary weight,
ing the soul from earth to heaven. ,■
luto all hearts and homes and lives v
' -own tfftfUbnflffde WWhlTfeilulh^do ♦ n
Gilding the ruins of Life's great plain— ?
Weaving for alVa^ol^en crown.
Cn
n
senator be tier on silver.
HE COMES 0 UTSQffA EEL T AO A IXfT
- , . THE ELAND S WIND LB.
A Southern Senator wlio Knows the Re*I
Interests of his Comstilueuts, aud
Means to Protect Them
Sav^ntjah i|dP( lm^lfsa^n7ftiima! , To.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
Ciurlkrtok, S. C-, -Tan. .5. 1878.
On and after .Monday. January 7, 1878, 'he
Depot
(mini on this Road v ill leave
Northeastern Railroad as follows,:
of
Fa*t Mail Daily.
Leave Charleston
Arrive at Savannah
Leave Savannah
Arrive Charleston -
3 15 a. m.
9 00 a. m.
6 00 p. at.
11 00 p. m.
AtconmoAetion Tnmj Sundvyt Etm/^rd.
LwwveCbaiicston - *• -■ (?(4I a. m.
Arrive at Augusta .... 6 16 p.m.
Arrive Port Roy«t - - « 1 60 p. m.
Arrive Savannah - - - - - 3 50 p. m.
Leave Savannah - . . . f) 00 a. m.
Leave Augusta - » - 7 30 a. m.
Leave Pori Reyal - - 10 20 a.m.
Arrive Charleston - - - 6 BO p. m.
Atykl J'nttf/iger, Sundtyt Excepted.
Leave Charleston
Arrive Port itoy^l -
Arrive Satannah - . -
fSpcctn! to the N Y. Herald.)
Wasbifotow, January 21.—The bII-
ver men have couu f «d Senator Bailor,,
of South CafoMta, wrnong the number,
but the following statemeuts, made in
an Interview whioh he granted (0 tke
Herald eorreepondent, show that th^f
are mistaken, anefthat Gen.* Butler 1*
sound on this question. His views are
practical and sensible, and based upon
a comprehension of the needs of his
own people. Senator Butler was asked:
Q. It is understood that you are pf
of the opinion that the passage of the
Bland silver bill would be disastrous
to the real interest^ of the South, and
as Illustrative of this would have tb®
immediate effect of raising the price pr
the prime n*cessities of life with you.
A. Yes, that’s my apprehension. -Jit
is a fact that the price of baoou and
other articles necessary for subslht-
egee were cheaper when I left h''me a
few webks ago than I have ever known
They have been ao engroaaed .Vy the
ills which have been put upon them by
bad aud corrupt loc^govoramcptsun-
tli the loamruxatioa of the present ad
ministration, that they hate had neith
er Che time nor the IhcHohtlon to' cop-
slder nation hi ROdfetlonh.' l^am qylto
welt satisfied, however, from th® ea--
prqsaion of opinion by. leading bnsl-
uess and financial men from different
parts of the Bute, that they are op
-poeed to reviving the dffflouhfee of our
post financial p^perfexlee, as I am sure
tAe hill, will 4 do.
In this connection allow
that th® people of the $ou'th;h<
dlsposltloh to sustain any movethent
which even appears to impair the na
tional credit. They regard this as one
common government iu whose good
faith and Justice to themselves and to
the common credit they repose confi
dence, and I cannot see the force of
.1 ■ • * « • j
the argument, eitberin law or morals,
of the advocates of the silver bill when
they say that the holders of the gov-
ernmert securities should, because
they purchased them at a discount at
a time when the exigencies of the gov-
eromeht required them to be put upon
the market, be called upon to receive
less than their face value any more
than I could see the force of a claim*
that a private Individual Whose exi
gencies required him to pur- oat his
“promise to pay 1 ’ for a given suns
which he ThAHves ehotild ihen ask an
fangpett holder for valuable conside ;
ration to surrender that premise to pay
4t a less sum than its face value be
cause that innocent bolder may have
procured it at a discount. x j
Q. What do you regard as ths best
way of solving the financial difficulties
and relieving the country from Repres
ent stringency ? ,
A. I think that one tbfngto be dons
is td repeal that provision of the na
tional bank act which imposes a tax of
ten per cent, on State banks an d’
(hereby practically drives them out bf
bufineag. The eoun|ry tsbotfuffeflog
mtch frond a scarcity of nioney as
from ao improper distribution pf the
money. The naHohal banks were es
tablished as a vv^r ooeSHute in order ta
enable the government to
bonds arid contrhT the thoney of the
country. TfiafbetWeeity no longer ei-
of the ffovernment Is the bes't ihlog ®P onotn ** # ®od Will jteap
•-iWP- ' L ji . Am. *d2i*£*A-M ».v tc '
for the whole country, an<^ ee
tor the South, and I am tboroq^
convinced now that It woulcftiave been
better for us in thoSoutli Ifwoh«|dnpt
had ®o much credit and there
been eueli an Influx of
cheah goods, e>^ Into the ^untfy
mediately after the war, we had
trpvagant ideaii before/Du}lbtqj:oi
abuadantiy t\ie fruits of his economy
y kftef dhB year of sobe privation.
4.- Thi chbntry merchant will get bl«
legitimate trade and the factor WiA hot
nof gef the entire proceed* of the crop to
pay a guano r Hen or hill for bacon and
coVn.thieto a western merchant.
6. Theootton that Is made will he
ogdW eoM at horn*, the money kept at home
to olroulato amorg us, and thereby go
tlcRi 6r r thlngs*crsited a spe<mtafl»e _ _ . _
pfopensfiy which madA eve^hody- Into the'hands of the liar'd-werklog
wild, and the
times apd impairment pf credit .have*
forced us to economical habits, the
production of lees cofton and more ar
ticles of food. ^djf we can cbhtlnaw
ttyst condition of^ thlpg* noting cant
prevent'our becoming in a few years
the richest people on the Oorittnedtt
for yre have the mateiial et. great
wealth and prosperity If we oolg utlU
ize it properly.. We h^ve, learned a
terrible leeson, but we have protated
by it, and now If this legislation Is.
adopted ftnd the pnbltc mind bSeomts
with the Id^a that thfcrtfts to
be tmllnrited’issue of money sod' h re
turn Of flush times-—a fatal delusion—
we shall all go wilJywgain. j^Cou. are
learning the lesson at the North, but
yqu may as well learn it and get bull-
nc^s down to a h'gi^imatu solid gpk!
basis, the onlr tufe and stable oup, and
then w'e*shall b?gfh to bnild up anew.
IfYre can keep the government dbWn
to a gold basis we shall avoid fn fu
ture terrible disasters. Why, the fail
ures, frauds, forgeries, crimes, suicide®
and tramps that are now .cursing the
North and West are the natural off
springs of the py^igacy, extravagance
and corruption of.the past decade, and
turning loose thpfloodgates AfTiRpney
is not going to cure them. We must
some down to gold—to hard pan—ter
.cure these evils, - and we are nearly
there.
J
and shoeftMter and me
chariicWKtf every dvscrtptlo* and ooca-
afekMiiya doctor’s bill wliUbe paid.
All this, Mr. editor, wW’lbyfflfy and
hopsfufiy potioipate at no. distant day.
3vti.alas 1 and it U with grief 1 speak
IhtiTiNotbiog oan be seen through these
gifted clouds now brightening” that
perteods good to the lawyer and the
faotor. They are not to profit by these
yhangse. The bankruptcy.of a conn-
Sry ls» harvest to lawyers. HetosSridt-
ly an ornanaeotal member of aooisty—
apeceseary ev.H in oar taidst whioh
cannof be thoroughly eradtsated as
them, und I could buy bacon for th»l Wfv
WiHt arfmffttfA reifMm/bytl
tenants ori my plantation in the city of
Augusta, Ga., at six and three-quarter State government
tyy the
would .furnish ! a
currency to the people which would
ccute, and so of other prltm articles.
Now, tltis may be considered tv smalt
clrcutWam**, but ft i» suggefetive .of'
the timt-s. The low price of these Ar
ticles must have been the result !to
some extent pf thb present flnahclal
circumstMics of the country, and my which they do not own
fear is that if the silver bill should be m 0 '’^ in certain cuiyep
Leave Savannah
Leave Augusta
Arrive Charleston
■> - 8 60 p. ra.
- - 6 45 S. m.
* - - f 2?>a. ra.
- - 10 00 p. ra.
* ► 9 00 p, m.
^ • 8 46 a. m.
Fast mail train will only atop at Adams
Bun, Vemasste, Urtthunville and Montei'h.
Accommodation irain will stop at all sta«
tions on this road and makes close eonnoction
for Augusta and Port Royal and ail statieus
on thy Port Royal Railroad,
FaRt mall makes connection for points in
Florida and Georgia.
C. 8. GADSDEN, Engr. and 8npt.
8. C. Boilstow, G. F. and T. Agent.
WILMINGTON, COLUMBIA AND
AUGUSTA RAILROAD.
&
CfcNF.KAL PASSE.VOPK DirAFTMF.ST,
Oolvmbu, 8. C., Adigust 6, 1877. *
The following Schedule will be operated on
and after this date:
Night Exp rent Train— Ilatly.
coixa NOKTQ.
Leave Columbia
Leave Florence
Arrive at Wilmington
BOIKO SOOTU.
11 16 p, m.
2 40 a. bu
.'6 32 a, m.
’l
v-* V-
-L
.‘-L.
l4bve Wilmington . . 6 00 p. na.
Lea«e Florence - ^ 10 02 p. na.
Arrive at Columbia . 1 26 a. a.
This Train is Fast Express, making through
connections, all rail. North and South, and
water line connection via Portsmouth. Stop
only at hast over, Sumter, Timatpnaville,
Florence, Marion. Fair Bluff, Whitevilie aad
Flemington. ' •,
Through Tickets sold and baggage oheck-
od to «!! principal points Pufijpan Sleapera
aa night tsaina. tt _ a, , F*
rhrvyk
Arttv
t»
Ereifht Than—Daily.
day*.) '-'xi’'
••• vufc
-^•UUiO K0RTH.
a CetaiRMn 'S> ”^ ^,8'
**“ *3
. m.
t B8D T*.
Wfifl
loec.nee .
so p. xn.
urenoa at i
A. FUPEJ
IT. A.
paseed, aud legtalation gerroaoe to it,
aod a epfculntive. condition of buel-
neee be created thereby, that every
croeeroada store In the country will
make a corner in baoon, and the con
sumer and producer will be the losers
and the speculators the gainers. Now,
this appear* to be,a small matter, but
It Is Illustrative of the whole question.
The advocates of the silver bill Insist
that the silver dollar Is the dollar of
the people, but unfortunately they do
not say how the people are to get It.
The people do not own silver mlnee, all
of them, and if they get silver they
must work for it, just as they do for
other money. The trouble in the coun
try is not so much a scarcity of money
as a scarcity of confidence ; nor does
the present string* scy of the times re
sult front over production or over
consumption, hot an over want of Con
fidence. I will mention one other cir
cumstance to prove that t(m present
financial management of the govern
ment and tbs proapestive resumption
of specie payments, with the demone-
is that the money of the country is
confined to commercial centres and
cannot be procured by the great body
of the people except upon collaterals*
The money
ip cwnmer-
cial centres, and au Increase of the
volume of the currency under the pres
ent system would only swell those cur
rents without disttibuiing it over the
country.
Q. A great many of the fallacies
concerning the silver bill come from
the West, and it is sought to make the
South believe that it Is for their inter
est to accept them and be of the same
opinion in order to show a strong front
In unison with the West. How does
this strike you ?
A. Of course I am not so familiar
with the wants of the West or Its diffi
culties, and It might look like pre
sumption in me to express an opinion
in reference to it. But iu my Judg
ment the West does not so much need
more money as she does cheap trans
portation to the seer coast. She 1«
horning corn for fuel, while thousands
of people are suffering for food on the
same Oontlnent. Cheap lines of trans
portation will solve the greatest of her
difficulties. ^ f
Q. As a Southern man what Is your
and bis
troybles. He grows out o| trouble and
trouble grqwa out of him, and so on,
ad infinitum, \vithoat factor’s jlens
‘a&d tndrtfckes to foreclose he will eke
otil a w^Ary oi'Stence here.
Jinid his bowers their cheerful in-
$ODLUN MARK f.{ 0 ES.
Am Ixftraet fmn the Mnry ef h Newly
*--•*- Harried Men. • ,**> ^ j
’ r foairajjii , * i ~
January 1,1877..—Can it bo ffcat I
am really married f It ecoum a
dream. \ 4
r #s
they wooliThave
oa.
A (M&iu Hnrftm jQUlban sued the
dilatory iqveg of tklWdnngfcter for ffiWO
for room rent, fuel and lights during
fbur years bf eoertsfifp. Tr * -•» w
r r7 : w., 7
It, ! Aod XU. h. .11 th»t . «. moraUIo 7„ P
s«r, ,,
conld wish. It does mp good to hu
mor her prettv little exacting ways.
I must interview bid Grtndem, ^nd,
hare mj^ salary raised.—A married
man^B expenses. _
March i.—Kate is a goo'Ji njrl.' ftut
these women won’t ubdeVsiami t£at
a man Can’t break off from his ebunpr
as short as—ad Icfbfo, She pouts aod
cries even IfY want to run Cut an hour
or two in the evening' once a month.
It does SOem a Trftldfi^Rg.Ht timet.
foit Knte—dear Kate—she makes "vjp
tor eveythlng.
April 1.—We’ve hffd oer first b|g'
qnarrrf.' A "tpan can’t t*xpeCt 1 »<r
drtfl men are,at work op it, end ft irlU
not be completed for Jour ys^/^
TValfilng near York, Pa^ 1imi terper
wlmban kept a record of rba AWher
of tradtps visiting bis preiqk«n., Pvm
April 1, lfl77, to Navembun lit^Ubfre
were ^or anaverngo of Ifi j^rweek.
The Last ill-natured Btory teldahnut
Chicago is that twontj-gna tiaf ijumr-
acted for the prtaMsge of viewing what
is reckoned-^ ths Chatoest curiosity
which the great Lake City can .show,
via, the only unmortgaged filfee of
ground. «
The*eorier*ton*of thewrsctffft Mfop
of the eogtnsefhiff depart—
because a feftow^etk sprung occasloo
Bekdtl-
M»,l.-Spring! Spring! Boatful- The flMUtaiLb'io'South.WS
ful spring! Xato’e m.-thcr has bfeep* ^ a t ooMlnlttltt M
fftayftigArtthttH. T mfss tlirploasaat. furnfcd; Ofthethree Vdtt'lWf
ove<hii)g« we used to spend alone'to- nssr^Ietthvt. ba«-ods':iafa hfM
Tdf
dctec
ifiAit:
^ttie AesUtut
The Lien Law.
Mxseas. EoiTuas:. Ths pot passed
at the recuut legislative session, abol
ishing what was known as the Use
place wasppleoe.of isgl*
latlpn for which the people of South
Carolina, as a body, ttonstdering the
the greatest good to the greatest nua>
her, should be truly grateful to Its
author^. It must result iu incalcula
ble improvement of the condition
supply th ir wants. The trouble now- our people, aud more especially of
fixation of silver, *e the best for the le- .idflli of ^here|bon£tizHtfon <jf ssllker—
gitUnate business lotarestsof the coun
try. Last fail, when the merchants
from my little toWn of Edgefield went
to New York to purchase goods, they
all came back iti good Spirits, at the
improved prospects of business by the.
restoration of confidence, brought
about* D" doubt, by lb eatable aud per
mauent ffuaudal policy and the con
servative eourse adopted by the Na
tional Administration, together wt*h
the Improvement in our State govern
ment, They all felt hopeful and buoy
ant about the future and appeared to
be endeavoring to rebuild their busi-
nesa upon the faith of the then condi
tion of oar finances. Now, I think it
wotlId be wrong to disturb that condi
tion df things by this leglslAUoo, which
I Am sure would be the result of It,
gto^lpteifesn, nqulre-fpr their protection
» j agAlDet speculators and sharpers a
mit
ackttsly
dWon.aC«urflni
/%.^*rpm tfinsjisst i
rd as
Jon^
fogof:
The feelthg i
Vslyons
that is Ur^ew, the mnttor has
very »Mlterk.’ly among
gfs we dfeef to spVtql i
gether when first fhatTled. Kate’a
mother Is as good a woman as aqy
mother-in-law can be. Uht aomehow
they are together so iuuch ; and UJo
•M lady And Kate are’ Ao eonfideotil
that it seems to me at tftnee as If I'd
half lost her. f* 1’^* ^ *<
Jane 1.—Kate’s oldest unmarried
sister has been Buying with ht during
the last mooch. It does out Aerttf' 4o
pleasant as it ased'fo whew tsA Vhrit«*d
places of smnsemeot together, ffi 'a
Job anyway, to look out for thVeh«
men. It’s expensive too. YeiF
Kale’s sake, I love my mother
sister-in-law. 1
wt- pohu raibrabiy to what was neid tore
Ylf » sktlaffuctory’ ^^ras 6t the Afta-
nnd fotfoe:' The mhnes
not makfYqt h T'aykble fbr debt, Inter
est or c us locus due ?
A. I shhuid not object to the re
monetization of sliver to a limited ex
tent to be used as a subsidiary coin,
but I am opposed to the Bland Mil and
shall vote against it, as I shall against
the bill to repeal the Redumption act.
If I had been in Congress when silver
was demonetised and ths bill was
passed to resume specie payments in
1879, I might possibly have voted
against both measures for reasons
which it is not necessary now to give,
except to say that thne enough was
not given within which to resume and horn*. Hs is gone the lees ooovlaeed,
that demoaetisatlon skowid have been however, that oqyld he have
fixed for A future day, soi that people satisfaotoy arrangements it would
could have put their bouses ln%rdfr. haw been a fortune made for him aad
But now that we have realised what- bis factor, and he Aon id bate Been
those engaged in agricultural pursuits.
We vi ntu'-e to predict that oo« ysar’s
experience wiil prove that its object
has been fully realized by the impe
tus it will have given to every branch
of our industries ; by Its reviving in
fluence upon the agricultural Interests
of the State and by the increased pros
perity or the very class who now com-.
plain most of it, viz; the country mer
chant and tnerchante of our interior
towns. There is no system that can
be called a perfect one, and no law caa
be enacted that wUl meet the ap
proval of all and add to the interest
of every individual memtMr of society,
but considering the interests of the
people at large and disregarding the
interest and views of that class of t>ur
people known as factors, who com
plain that they have cast their .bread
upon the waters and have not reaped
a j ust reward, 1 say diersgauUag ths
interests of these, and I venture to
assert that under the new order of
things the.country will rise like a
Phoenix from its present state of pov
erty and financial embafragment, and
the originators of this bill will hold a
place sacred to the memory in the
hearts of these same county people,
who have regarded factor* since the
war as their best friends. By every
mail comes the Ibtelligene* that in
view of the late act, abolishing tbf)
lien law, our factors will make nq,
promises to advance baoon and corn
for us to use in making cotton. By
every train oomee home some dls-
•(pointed brother who has been to see reducing said salary, and to take such
his Motor, having bis heart set upon step* as ia their'judgment may be nec-
oreating no other as w iiuiief from It4
consequences. We undgrstaad that
the enemies of the late act am bring
ing heavy influence to defeat it "Hold
the Font.” _ D. O. -T.
Meeting of School Trustees-
PPI <<V
Bxmwfxi. O. H., 8. 0., January 7.—
The School Trustees for Barnwell
county met this day,* J. 8. Havener,
Sohcoi Commissioner, acting as Chair
man and W. H. Duncan as Secretary.
The chairman read for the Informa
tion of the meeting a circular from the
State Superintendent of EdUdatlon*
contaiateg suggestions for forwarding
the work.
On motion of Capt. Dudenhoff, the
fqUojrlng resolutions were passed :
Resolved, That hereafter the pay of
teachers In the public schools of tbia
county be left Ao the trustees employ
ing them to fix the rate and amount.
Resolved 2nd, That hereafter thi
public schools be opened la the re
spective townships at such times and
places as the trustees for each town-
ship may elect.
The School Commissioner was re
quested to vacate the chair for a mo
ment, when the following resolutions
were unanimously adopted:
Resolved, That la the sense of this
meeting a great injustice has been
done the 8 oi Commlasionfer of this
county by reducing his salary after his
election to offija.
, Resolved 2uJ, That we hereby re
quest our Senator and our members of
the Rouse of Representatives to use
their beet endeavors to repeal the law
du% at th A park last night. 1 We have
——■Pi Wtt&nWtftka
nearJdetthyr, bul oee -la An ©pArAf^n,
aad st the soote ef
iisrtss themIsmaskJAqM^TP' ot Ikkee
daysa we' k. Tbs worst of ths mi4*er
is (.hat there Is not evra* remote ^pps-
pect of hnprovtmeid, *od the njsytfcw
formerly i ff* red of emigration to {jiis
country are at an And.
*»*;•' -— >1. »M><SS » ..I. a>S i*»Si (J
. TR* .(^^a^ OcTuxnL--4LN4W-.Yofk
letttff 4>f Mwtday, my*;
'‘'Aese rpi
*' ffuesce shad,
TTlfese charms he loved, but airiliesiTcliYrs)*
1 arifled.” ** ‘ ’ ’ V
And’then the factor. He laA luxury
We cannot afford*and must be placed
ih the satae Aitegory, for he has eat
out and destroyed our substance ever
sinks tbs vsat. Will any' mAh deny
that bad it not been fortbe factor and
the- lisa Imw oit-nonstry would Tjot
have been to-day in Its unprosperoua
and kbpoverithed condition ? ’ Even
wbstr thA tbdnders of war Yeeonffded
from the Potomac to the Rio Grande,
Stroth Oafoilna enjoyed a degree pf J
prosperity (except among those who [kiater-in-hrW. ^ V tkie bHief) Why sbosld botton faKit,
had refugeed from their hom*) thas i N. B.-The XfiMnSn aU tMk as if fMy* snrt ewsn appear 1 .t<y 4m laUr—li t
shsifcawnwret known since, and wit)* weragolng let© the country toifftliW. Aa a result tbsanaHttA J "
«*4rtr ^ w h°l« pwRdoingf #Bl»tm|v3 ►Wnanclallr MlMP sAeWis Hiftbarramink. points, and ths4ware started a story
is Service taoM»f«P%t Mtssb 4f<»ln»fft.i«fii.flrtA71lA»yWdiuiAs 1 Ar»jy that afal pm* KnUliKirtSl tbs sts-
Wby was this? We all kooW? KotA Kh^as t waft But^wf coums, fewbfUsvs
ietour Legislature, which-, lattflcome ‘likry\pe6pfewers woaitffyopca. ghrfs' tblx. ThAVtdaHbs jK** 1
boldly to the rescaie, bold tbs grdond aXwoet-temperod, 'pteasaflt girl, pfobaWfWiiirti ssleis'
they have gained and carry Into sffect Wepfnff Bottan bo^s. ———-
the best act of that wbw# wssion by Augmrt ffr-Mary *n^ myself vfer© *ock> mbm tkvjMt M waai
many sympathies in er dmibti. Bhh U , white tl>s Vs^W t
lonely—poof thingt ttilito she cmdd . not hAd Ijjft P
find a friend. 1 wish- [daccrsare fir
September 1.—Bfertfs ^been a Jt>b.
Kute and the rest bavii come R^e
suddenly. Somebody has been wfi- badness Wold be thd’*It ta
ting tb Kate about trft and Mary
Holmes.
October T.-I think Fra a patient
man. I can stand a good deal. But
If taother ln-latr and ! 1»iktpr-ln-law and
aunt-lo-law want a row they can have
It Darn the day they ever came into
the honae. ”
November 1.—They’ve gone aad
Cate wfth them.
December 1.—Before Judge BrAak
cotton ttwj s#XM90i
not bad for maufact
duccra are firm ln,Uirir
It is stated 1 if they IfbtiSd
the smallest fraction a
tkteil vary firoMtesi which
tensive operations.”
A rival to the Moffett Bed
attrocUng attention In Yirghda. -
plan Is that the Btate auditor i
have prepared a book of couponAf to
be s4id to AH barrooms and fiffbor
dealers generally. When tb# dvilsr
sails a ddnk the esnsunssr rbosistl s
coupon, which fiOtUJss him to rimive
bond. Suit for divorce, J. W. Smith from tbs 8ta4^ te pajmen* of his,jsx
vs. Oatherlne
temp.
Smith. Incompat. of
A huge crop of cotton, and had bsento
“mako arrangements,” which means
in tbs majority of cases, to give a lien
fcr the year Iff?8. He is now resolved
to go home and feed hie hogs, and fix
his land tb plant corn and provision
crops In general—ia other words te
make a virtue of necessity and live
essary to secure to our efficient com
missioner the rate of pay of ail of f bis
predecessors, from the first of January
X motion af W. L. Cave, Esq., the
meeting adjourned sine die.
J. S. HAVKFEn, Chairman.
W. H. Dcncaw, Secretary. ,d **
The excavations at Olympia have
been actively conducted during the
past year by Dr. George True, the
chief of th© Genua© expedition. Ths
ground in front of each end of ths
Temple Of ZeWI has been dee red and
important discoveries have been made.
One of the most tobsreetlng works pf
aneeint art yst nnsartbsd was recov
ered late In October. It was a very
large brenae plats, wrought with fbor
rows of flgurae is relief, to antxtreAie-
!y archaic style, coffeepondiBg to
that df ths earliest so-called Corinth
ian vases, and as may be inferred
from the descrtpOob'of Pausanlas, id
that of the chest of CypAelos. In the
Idwest compartment appears a fdtir-
wlnged female figure, who, In cither
hand, holds up a lion by the foot; In the
second, Herakles, aa a kneeling Arch
er, shooting a flylng centaur, and with
out fill latter Attrfbdftfe of tho lion’s
hide aad olub.; In ths third compart
ment upwards two grlffios.-fftoiog one
another-and In the uppermost pots
partment two eagles. The head'
conddent that ftils, the first dlacov _
of the kind made dt Olympia, Is des-
es, one oeaL If two driaks are to- bs
paid for hs rsceiv^i a coupoq- jpri4ed
on orange paper, good for two eenta.
If five drinks a blue jpspof, ^bodlfor
flvecenu. This seems to bs an ad
mirable arrangement for tte pv#iso-
tlon of Artnking, It wostd sndodbt-
edly be the patriot’s dsty to dstotatali
hs can. and like a good, litllo Sunday -
School boy, get a blqa ticket at-Ispst
at every sitting, . Not only does the
State enjoy an inconjp^ipm
drinks, put a maa wjtp-df isM •
reasonable ebanes of paying off bis
fates the orabgb cou
pons. Of ooersa tbs Mggest taxpsy-
era will have to dwfb^ftfajrilrikkia*
to bate nee their ademnits vfitk the
State, and the sslooSS will bapeA^tu-
sBy crowded with toen tootarfaff^kut
their tsXss. ^ '
' ;..•* ■ 'I. •Adkici I
ELilucd Bis SwamsaaKr^r Ori- Fri
day, the lith instant-, on ths. pissts-
tion of Mr. W. £. MoFaddon,iaL#ser
Salem, darendoa eouaty.ayonng esi-
orSd girl
stanly kiMdd hy s gun is tile!
a young colored man
tddin. No*
the sosne, vkstl ths
tostiftod that he tsoksp ths i
A d-dsloo of 8.o.»t Lanr to de-1 . ,Ded “ ,ur " l » s “ ta»»lu*bW lloV In
more than willing to pay high prices'
andosurious’ Interest for tb# needed
ever of hardship and damage and loos
aoersed from such legislation nod are
about lo resp th© benefits of ths poli. supplies. Nttw let us earn Up ^l^i^^’^resoUon.ln
jj wr speech against the sliver,
wod the action taken by theraerohanls
of Charleeton are attracting much at-
Vf toctloa from the Sostber* men and
frost ail the frisads of the Bland bill
sa among ths laUsr there it a faar of
lAltudy of th* origins of Gfroei
-*» 1—amM*' ■■- 1 '" 1 o-'-—> *
tattksto.
oy, R sseras tb me to be on wise, inju- ffBuR:
maob
►'Sj- ...a-
diclous and Affoog’ to disturb or throw
away the advantages and <r recose the [the
Status quo" anterior to 1878. With
and management of the government^
nothing U*4t
d am in nowise responsible.
^as t find them, and^’^^ture as
haea I-think they ought fo 4m' lhav' no
doubt hut tbs present financial
a- - „ - V :: ^
ssi -
&M.*
1. There wHl b* more provisions In
ufltry next year than
war. If the Legislature
act Aha« will stand la Usu of
• a j•JIH
horses. 1'
now findisat
00# laboring 1c
e.aodlwimqiie
/stk'--
3. The credit ayslnm ifone, .Urn tfe,.
f|M*er date? before the final vote is
t*ke*.—Springfield Republkn.
VCbb ifoc^xh'DABnrET CHAXone.—ft As
Tws Morror SsonSteAD^MF. iWQ-
ttete P. Teylor, ossond auditot xif the
State of Vlrfinis, in a oommuientjon
to the Speaker of tbs House of Dele-;
gates, says the repocgi reesited teom\
tka operations of th# Mo Cat t. whiskey
m'
registers iudloats the
them wtilampsot-to ower
BPPWPMIBWWjPBj -. year, which is 8240.pp9,!Q
ow given out that ff anybody is to reyenue nndfr the H'"'
the Cabinet itto tiot-Mr. Schmar,
whom euch tmnendoffs J
1 Been brought fo Wsf by
fopreesknd tb© T
' Jth#r Mh fcvdtta ti<*
, hatredk of t»#
'toy & the m of •ptofofodAt ds