University of South Carolina Libraries
Requests* * HHBgHRnmBBpngi v'k '; v,V Jl, f - r:-' mg^mgmgmgmm , I, Irt writing to tUU office on fcmincM p^fwrsn fire your name and Post Office wldresa. % fsusiacss letters and eomniuniwit ions lo bo-'published should be written on separato ^4 Sheets, ami theolajoct of each clearly invU- cfced h^bocCssaty ^ota when r^ntred. -. W/'_ 3. Articles for pnhlicftticn should be writ* ^Icn in a Clear, legible band, and on only ono gidocf the page. * ; 4. All changes In ftdTcrtisemeuts must reach us on Friday. ^ ; .\~ — —r—; : ~ • -r-- EMU' Travelers Guide- South Carolina Railroad. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. , CHCBtitsToH, Mttrch 1,1878. i On and after Sunday, ncit, the South Carolina Railroad will be run as follows: yon AtiousTA, * . : (Sunday morning excepted), Leare Charleston . . 9 00 a. m. 7 80p. Arrire Augusta , . 5 00 p. m. 6 55 a. 10^ • FOB COLUMBIA, (Sunday morning, enbepted), Lcavo Charleston . . 5 00 a. m. 8 80 p an. Arrive atColumbia. 10 50 p. m. 7 45 a. m. ■ nOB CHABLBRTOS, (Sunday morning excepted), Jjeave Augusta ... 8 30 a. mr 7 40 p. m. Arrive nt Charleston 4 2Qp.m 7 45 a. ih. Leave Columbia . . 6 00 p m. 8 Od p. m. Ar. Charleston*, 12 15 night and 6 46 a. in. Summerville Train, (Sundays excepted) Leave Summerville 7 40 ft m Arrive at Charleston 8 40am Leave Charleston 3 15 p m Arrive at Summerville . 4.25pm Breakfast, Dinner and Supper at Bronchville Camden J^aln v • _ Connects nt Kingsville daily (Sundnys ex cep* ted) with day passenger train to «nd from Charleston. Passengers from Camdon to Co lumbia can go through without detention on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and from Columbia to Camden on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays by connection with day passenger train. Day and night trains connect at Augusta with Georgia Railroad and Central Railroad. This route is the quickest and moat direct to Atlanta, Nashville, LouiAille, Cincinnati, Chicago, St Louis and other points in the Nor Lit west. / Night trains Cor Augusta connect closely with the fast umit train via Macon and Au gusta Railroad for Maeon, Columbus, Mont gomery, Mobile, New Orleans and points in the Southwest. (Thirty»six hours to New Orleans. . Day trains for Columbia connect closely with Charlotte Railroad for all poiuis North, making quick tjine and no delays. (Forty hours to New York.) . Thctraina on the Greenville and Columbia and Spartanburg and Union Railroads con nect closely with the train which leaves Charleston at 500 a m, and returning they c«>unect in sane manner with the train which leaves Columbia for. Charleston at 5 30 p;n Laurens Railroad train eonnectsat Newberry cst Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Blue ttidge llaili>>a£Dat | > runs daily, con necting with up-ar t down trains cn Green ville aud Columbia RaUrntul. SOLOMONS, 'I ^^SuperinteodM, ‘icklixs, Genfintl*ckot Agent. r: 1 —g V- — "Siva’mah nnd Charlfstofi Rafiroiu) Co. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. CitAiibESTOX, 8. C., -Tar., 5, 1878, On and nfler Monday, January 7,1878, *hc ftains on this Roa t w ill lea ve Depot of Evriheasteru Railroad as follows : Fist ifcil Dcihj, I^ave Charleston Arrive at Savannah jJeavc Savannah Arrive Charleston - ) i . ■ • » ■ ' - ■ ' * , ... . ." • -> !" ' - ' a 1 + . :SI A i.rt ftZF L * • rr=r»fer-rr5 voi. n. BAKNffELL C. Ri S. C.. THUB8DAT, SEPTEMBER 5, 1878. TVZr TltE TRIPI.E Execution of the I.or.klearw nud EaMterllnis: for the Murder of Frank Bryce—Four Thouannd Pcroono Preoent. ~, > ’ T C5e {New* and Oourier J. Bicw!crrrBYiLLJ5, August is.—The last act ia the drama of the Uvea of three great criminals dosed in the vibration of their bodies upon the gallows here to-day. Our cowity heaves a pigh of relief from the rasg suspense of their confinement In our Jail. For many nights a strong guard has been kept around the Jail by thempunted militia belonging to the regiment of Col. B. A. Rogers, of this county, and to-day the whole regiment was present as a guard and for police duty. A. vast gathering of people from the counties of Cum berland, RlrkdMond, Moore and Robe son, in North Carolina, and of Marl- boro’, Marlon, Chesterfield and Dar* Ungton counties, in South Carolina, filled every nook and corner of the »treets and public equare. The crimi nal fame of John Locklear alias Re- vols, Neiil Locklear alias Revels and Pompey Easterling, their brother-in- law, is not..confined to a small limit, but has become almost natioqal. Thic accounts for the 4,000 individuals con gregated to-day at the place of. their execution. It was confidently expect- ed by some that the details of their many crimes would be given from their own lips to the public to-day, but in this they were greatly disappointed. The gallows was erected between the court-houso and jail within the jail enclosure. About 10 o’clock the pris oners were brought from their cells in the Jail and made to ascend to the platform of tho gallows by Sheriff Wm. P. Emanuel, and his assistants, promi nent among whom was his faithful deputy, Me. Jasper T. Easterling, who has made the safekeeping of these criminals bis special caro ever since they were placed in his charge. They were ail seated upon the platform and the opportunity given them to say anything they deoired. John Locklear began first and occu pied about ono hour in a disconnected harangue about bis reasons for telling nothing of the crimes within his know ledge and of his religious prospects— occasionally- breaking forth into ex hortation, quoting.or rather mis-quo- tlng, fragments of Scripture, and rant ing and raving lu nonsensical language most of the time. He said he had no doubt he would go safely home to Heaven, and begged his relatives (who were permitted within the jail enclo sure) to meet him there. Neill Lock lear seemed tho most affected of any and could hardly say anything. He said he felt that ho was prepared to die. Pompey Easterling spoke after the same manner, and warned all who crowd dispersed without any disturb ance whatever. • Our little community has been muob shocked and saddened by the death of Mr. C. H. Huckabee, a promising young lawyer, who was admitted to the bar last February. He died of peritonitis at G o’clock p. m. yesterday. He assisted in the defense of the Lock lears In July ultimo, and while they were swinging upon the gallows bis corpse was lying at the hotel. Ton days ago he was in fine vigor. His parents deserve and have the sympa thy of this entire community in their sore bereavement. ' Pfjc-Dee. : Aconnm'hiitivn Train, Sundays ExtrpUd. Lcavc Charleston - Arrive at Augusta - . . Amro Tort Royal - Arrive Savannah - - - . Leave Savannah Sea re Augusta - * ?.cave Port RoyiU Arrive Charleston - - 8 00 a. m. 5 15 p. m. 1 50 p. ra. 8 50 p. m. 9 00 a. ra. 7 30 a. iq. 10 20 a. ra. fi 80 p. in. Eight Passt'iger, Sundays Excepted, - 8 50 p. m. - 6 15 a. in. - 7 25 a. ra. * 10 00 p. ra. » 9 00 p. m. •• 8^45 iv. ra. Leave Charleston Arrive Port Royal - Arrive Savannah Lvftvc Savannah - Leave Augusta » n Arrive Charleston - Fast mail train will only stop at Adams' Run, Tcraassee, Graharaville and Monteiih. Accommodation train will stop at all sta- tleoaoB tnis road and makes close donnoetion for Augusta and Port Royal and all stations on the Port Royal Railroad. Fast mail makes connection for points ia Florida and Georgia. C. S. GADSDEN, Kngr. and 8 3. C. Botlstok, G. F. and T. A rad Par*. ig<r WILMINGTON, COLUMBIA AND - AUGUSTA RAILROAD. GeNMUI. PaSSXXOER DKrARTMXST, Columbia, 8. C., August 6, 1877. The following Schedule will be operated on End after this date ; AY/At Express Train—Jpatty. dOIRO NORTH. Leave Columbia . Leave Florence . Arrive at Wilmington oouta SOUTH. 1 25 a. m. Leave Wilmington * Leave FoMuo*. - Arrive at Columbia * ( This Train is FasFBxprass, making throngh , connections, all rail, North and South, and waterline connection via Portsmouth. Stop only at Eastover, Sumter, Timmonsville, Florence, Marion, Fair Bluff, Whitevillc and Flemington. ‘ *, ' Through Tickets sold and baggage check ed lu all principal points. Pullman Sleeper# on night trains. Through Freight Train,—Dally, except Tluri' days,) COINO NORTH. Leave Columbia . . . . . 5 Off p, m. Leave Florence. Arrive at Wilmington. .* •. COIKG 80UTH. 1 ' 2 80 p. of, 2 35 a. a. 10 10 a. in. Leave Wilmington, . • Leave Florence. . • . Arrive at Columbia . , Tjoeal freight. Train leav^Ctdarabia-Tuea- d»v, Thursday and Saturday only, at Ca. a. Arrives at Florence ai 3 30 p. in. , - - A. VOl’E, CL F. * T. A. J F.MVINB, Superintendent. 8 15 a. ra. 9 00 a. ra. 11 00 p. ra l beard him to take heed from hie fate. 1 Their spiritual advisers then came upon the platform and they sang sev eral plecoe, afker which one of their advteem, the Rev. William Scott, from Robesbu, N. C., offered up prayer, clo sing with the Lord’s Prayer, in which all Joined with great fervor. The ropes were 1 then tied to the baags, and the last effort was made to get them to give some information regarding the murder of Daniel and Nc!ll McLeod in Cumberland, N. C., in May, 1S70. But no word of revelation escaped their lips. Neill and Pompey would have told about It, it Is believed, had it not been for John. His influehco over them prevailed to the last. Ho would warn them against telling anything, and they seemed to fear him even upon the gallows, and obeyed. And, by the way, I would state that Mr. John McLeod, the son of Neill Mc Leod, was -hero and recognized John Locklear as the man who shot him when his father and uncle Daniel were killed at the time named in Cumber land, N.*C. Mr. John McLeod carries in his body thirty of the forty-one shot put In him by John Locklear on that occasion. Pompey Easterling ealled for Mr, Isaac E. Sheffield from Moore county, N. C., and when the latter came Pom pey confessed robbing him the week before they killed the peddler, and begged his forgiveness, which Mr. Sheffield freely granted. When the 6 Off m ^ nota wera adjusted John seve- 10 02 p! m. **1 t{BQe9 8 ave instructions about the 1 arrangement of his ; asked for plenty of rope ; said he wanted his neck to break, and not to he strangled.. He was very bold, and frequently Would exhort the others M to stand up and die like men?’ They shook hands'with their relatives, and kissed them, -ex horting them to meet them in Heaven. The death warrants were road, the caps drawn over their heads, the plat form cleared, and they were allowed to stand pinioned and hoodod for about four minutes, when Sheriff Emanuel jerked the cable that sent thorn twirl ing into eternity. They died very quickly- Dr. J. C. Jordan made the examination, and plbnounced them dead |n twenty minutes. Ths bodies Vere lowered into the coffins and taken away by their friends for buftul. ^ due reverence for the occasion seemed to fall upon ah, and the large 11 16 p, m. 2 10 a. ra. . 0 32 a, m. ... 4 30 a. m. 12 00 is. Kemedle* for Hard Times. [New York San.] Messrs. Hewitt and Rice, of tho Con gressional Committee investigatingtho cause of the present business depres sion, held a four hours’ session on Mon day, August 26th, and heard sugges tions from Charles H. Marshall, Robt. F. Austin and George Walker. The following was read from a postal card sent to the committee : “ Mb. Hewitt : Cannot you use your talents to a better purpose than to ridicule the laboring man ? You have made it a point to gather up all the crazy men of New York and show them up as a sample of American mechanics, but we see through your contemptible game. You are a Traud, a bad coun terfeit^ and every Intelligent man can see your game. , John Petebe.” In reply Mr. Hewitt said that all who desired to speak were heard dur ing the first week of the committee’s session, and any American mechanic who desired to beJieard could send In his application and he would receive attem Ion. The committee had no bias, and, although they might differ from some of tho speakero, they merely de sired to get at the facts. The commit tee had no power to reform society, and the next Congress could not do it if It wished. The committee proposed to sit in New York until Wednesday, and would then go to Pittsburg and Chicago, where they worrid be happy to hear both employer end employed. Mr. Charles H, Marshall, one of the owners of Black Ball line, gav¥>the committee his views on the subject of the decline of American ship building Tbo main cause assigned was the su perior advantages of the English iron ships which have replaced tho-Ameri can wooden vessels, and which our ship owners are debarred from using by our navigation laws. He acknow ledged himself to be a *' bloated bond holder and a small ship ownqr,” say ing that his profit on shipping now was about one-half of one per cent,, so that Ida ships are kept afloat mainly for the benefit of those who are employed ns laborers in running them. The ship owner, he thought, is very much in the position of the man who had bold of the tiger’s tall—he would be killed if ho let go, and It was death to hold on. .Mr. Hewitt led him to express at length his views on the tariff, the labor question, and tho currency. He ex pressed himself to be a Free Trader, and he gave as his panacea for the present trouble the following : Reform the oufsrency and give stability to com mercial transactions; simplify taxa tion and adjust the load to the shoulr dera of the people - r reduce the tariff, and establish a tat iff for revenue; abolish the navigation laws ; give us an economical administration of gov ernment in city, State, and cation. He opposed Government employment of the people, and expressed the opinion that the main cause of our trouble is that we are now engaged in the uncom fortable duty of paying our debts, or, as tho workingmen express it, “We are working for a dead horse.’’ As an illustration of the difference in cost of work on ships In this country and in England, ho said that he had paid $2,800 for coppering a ship in flew York, and he had been obliged to pay only about $1,800 in England. -, Air. Robert I?. Austin wa» the next speaker. He denounced the railroad companies because they monopolize so many industries. He said : “ A man can’t buy a piece of pie between here and Chicago without paying tribute te a railroad company.” He thought that the railroad companies had ho busi ness to be engaged" in car building, hotel keeping, and coal mining. He drew a distinction between Mr, Van derbilt and Mr. A. T. Stewart by say- lag that the latter acquired bis wealth without getting the aid of, legislation. Mr. Hewitt referred Mr.. Austin to the Attorney-General of the State for his remedy. In conclusion, Mr. Austin expressed the opinion that food and clothing ore about aa cheap now as they were In I860, and that the laborer can buy about as much with a given sum now as he could then. Air. George Walker, Vice-President and Manager of the Gold and Stock Telegraph, w^o, Jim been writing and studying economic questions tor twen ty-five years, attributed the business depression to the o not be made available for business. He condemned the theories of green back inflation as being highly detri mental to the Interest of all classes. He quoted the present condition of things in the Argentine Republic as a sample of tho effects of Irredeemable paper money, fluctuating Id value eve ry hour. Mr. Walkor'k conclusions were that there should be a careful supervision of all corporations by the Government, a prompt resumption of specie payments, and a gradual reduc tion of the tariff. > The low rate of in terest now prevailing would gradually compel capitalists to invest their money and set the unemployed at work. HEW*. Icals have been granted amnesty, and that the Investigating' Committee spent thousands of dollars In a useless session* That the mere revelation of crime was sufficient remuneration to An & her f(imIn0 tB IrelftD(1 theState is an absurd argument. The en(H j by tho fai j uro ot guilt of tho Radical leaders was HIGH TIMES. t * • * V Am Ex-Governor Refnseo to Pay His Fare and I. Put OIF the Train. Conductor Nat Terrell, of tho Bluffs Road, well known In St. Joaeph, had a racy adventure Wedneiday morning with ex-Governof Scott and family, of South Carolina, & shott distance out from Council Bluks. Jdst after the train left that city, Conductor Nat. Terrell started through the train to collect fares. Among the passengers was a well-dressed, substantial look ing gentleman, with his wife and a son about 17 years of age. Tho conductor approached the gentleman and de manded his fare, whereupon the gen tleman pulled out and presented a scalper’s ticket of the kind known as contract tickets. Tho pass was not transferable, and the conductor know that the man presenting It was not tho one to whom it was Issued, whose name was written on it. He told the gentleman that he could not take it, and that he must pay his fare. This the passenger refused to do, and the conductor said that ho would have to put him off, although he regretted the necessity. Some hot words were pass ed between the parties, and the wife of the gentleman lost her temper, inform ed the conductor that she was from South Carolina, and dived down into her gripsack after a revolver. The conductor succeeded in allaying her chivalrous South Carolina wrath be fore she eould shoot him qn the spot, and the train just then refching n sta tion, he telegraphed to the superin tendent of the road at St. Joseph, sta ting the case and asking what he must da The superintendent replied, di recting that the combative South Caro lina family be put off unless they paid theix fare. When the train started, tho conductor again etated to the South CagDl ioa gentleman that be would have to put him .and his family off, unless the fare was paid. This so enraged young South Carolina, son of the eld erly one, that ho Jerked the revolver out of his mother’s gripsack, and might have done serious work then and there, but he was caught by a number of passengers and disarmed. The train soon reached Bartlett, and Mr. Terrell told the South Carolinians that they mu»t get off there or pay their fare. They refused to do either, but the head of the family said that they would get off if the conductor would take them by the arm and put them off forcibly, so to speak. This was laying the predicate for a lawsuit, but lawsuits can't delay mail trains, so the conductor took the father, mother and son and bundled them off on to the platform at the depot, where he l»ft them shaking their fists at the de parting train, and threatening nullifi cation, secession, Fort Sumter, States rights and Wade Hampton. They are said to be ex-Governor Scott and fami ly, of South Carolina, taking a Sum mer tour through the Northwest—St, Joseph Herald. ~ Too Mach Anaesty. Some time since the News and Herald remarked that there bad been too much amnesty. It was constrained to observe this when it saw the prose cution of leading Radicals coming to nought The present seems to be an opportune moment for repeating that remark. The spectacle of Smalls, a condemned criminal, receiving a rb- nomination to Congress; Swalls, a noted thief, running rampant over Wil liamsburg, and Elliott, a revealed crim inal, organizing a party u State chair man, is well calculated to disgust the average Carolinian with amnesty. The recent correspondence In the News and Courier between Col Maurice, of Williamsburg, and Mr. Dibble, of the Investigating Committee; of the last Legislature, has revealed a startling fact Swalls has received a promise of full and complete amnesty lor past crimes and ta now as free to run for office as Governor Hampton himself. Conscious of this, he openly defies- the Democrats, and boasts that he will known all along. Tho committee was put on their track to send them Into the penitentiary, not to give them free pardon. ** ,. To outsiders tho following appears to have been the course of tho Investi gation: First, Mosoe and Woodruff and Jones were pardoned for telling on the minor thieves. Then tho minor thieves were "amneeted” for telling on Patterson. Then Patterson was left off for voting to seat Senator Butler. It nqy benefits have accrued from the Investigation they have been kept marvelously close. ~ The people of South Carolina are lung suffering and kind, but they can not fofgtvo everything, pnd we are much mistaken it they do not raise a howl yet over these Inyestlgatlons. Lively times are ahead.—News and Herald. . ‘‘JV -t « » ■ < A Horrible Crime. — in - •— Jt -J-J i A special dispatch states that Mary Dean, a widow, living near Hillsboro’, Mo., murdered her two children by cutting tbolr throats. Upon being ar rested and brought to Hillsboro’ she said she was too poor to support them. She murdered the bady first, and when she undertook to put' the little fivp year old boy on tho bed to kill him'.ho clung to her and begged piteously, say ing, “Ob, mamma, don’t kill me! don’t kill me l” Without heeding him she threw him on the bed, and after cutting bis throat struck him on tho side of the head with a piece of Iron to complete the work. 8ho presents a woebegone appearance, is possessed of little or no intelligence, and to sup posed to be insane. Candidates ought either to or made to pay a license. . !/.. . .... taxed ^ threat- potato A Pahable.—Once there was a mull. It.had a pair of limber legs with heels on the end of them. Mule thought his master did not give him enough to eat. So ono day as tho boss was pass ing bohind him be lifted up his heels and boosted him to the other side of the barn. This is what Mr. Mule calls a strike. He thought he could get all the corn ho wanted now. Presently he wanted water. He didn’t get It though. Ho wanted corn. He didn’t got that. He went to bed that night without his supper. Next day he didn’t have to work ; he didn’t have to oat, either* All he had to do was to stand and think. He couldn’t imagine why that master of hts didn’t come to feed him. Tho next day was tho some, and the next. Before that mule got anything to eat again he had grown so gaunt and gentle that he was willing' to keep his heels on the ground. The strike had ended. Natubs’s Remedy.—People who, with out knowing that they were applying nature’s remedy, have drawn In their breath hard when they had cut a fin ger or barked a shin on a coal scuttle, will be pleased to learn that they have Employed respiratory analgesia In Its simplest form. If any man will draw breath deeply and quickly for the space of three minutes or less he will thereby lose acute sensibility to pain, so that he can endure mthpr sur gical operation without inconvenience. Eminent surgeons have found the pro- cess of great advantage when used alone, not only, but when onmsthetios were also employed, in which totter case the quantity of the drug ta used is greatly diminished. crop. Between liars and lunatics the Pot ter Committee seem to have bad their hands full. “Money,” cays an exchange, “to tho missing link between our subsdbere and the editor.” The store of a man who does not ad vertise looks as lonely os a sprinkling cart on a wot day. . Stanley, the explorer, was a deserter from the Confederate army—so tho “ Eclectic ” for September says. A Connecticut woman was appointed constable the other day, and the first thing she said was; “Now I shall catch a man.” . Russia loses $600,000 worth of live stock every year by wolves, and even <%en tho ravenous beasts go hungry half tho time. The Chlrtitoe have a saying that an unlucky word dropped from the tongue oannot be brought bock again by a coach and six horses. 9 ♦No time to lost in courtships In New Zealand. When a man to ready to marry he hands the girl a dekd rabbit, and she must say yes or no in five minutes. No newspaper should speak slight ingly of the man who, seated on a dry goods box with nothing on earth to do, stops every pedestrian to ask the time of day. It to estimated that In tho famine- striken districts of China tlie popula tion has been reduced 5,000by ac tual starvation, and tbe prospect con tinues as at tbe beginning. Always give a child whatever you promise. Wo know a man who waded two nillos and a half to his home on Tuesday night, to give his son a whip ping, because he promised It to him. The brave man of Ill-fated Grenada Is Bill Redding, tho telegraph operator. He is at his post almost day and night working like a hero, with a rag 'filled with corbollo add tied around hto neck. r . A friend of Postmaster-General Hey says that Mr. Key’s contribution to the Republican campaign fund was $100, and that It was given with the injunc tion to “ put it where It would do the most good.” - x The scardty of fashionable young men at the watering places this Sum mer to accounted for by the fact that a great many treasurers, cashiers and bank clerks are now occupying prison cells as defaulters. Addrsas, ' r* .t’Cr- 5 ''':; be CxncEEN Cholkba.—For a few years my chickens died so badly that I abandoned all care of them, thinking It labor lost. In 1872 I commenced feeding with alr-siacked lime ; I lost a very few that Summer. In tho Sum mer of 18741 lost none at all by that disease. I put half'W^dnt In a vessel and fill it with water orwUlk and put for them to drink. As tbe^ dkhlk L I fill up again. Sometimes I mix It is announced that Hayes gave $500 to tho Ohio Republican campaign fund last year, and that he bos given more this year. He could very well afford to Increase his oontribotlon, In view of the fact that hto stolen offlosi j brings him $50,000 a year, besides per quisites: The Secretary of War, through Gen. Marcus J. Wright, formerly of the Confederate States army, but now keeper of the United States archives, has tendered to tho Southern Histor ical Society free access to the Confed erate archives now in possession of the Federal Government; and the execu tive committee of the Historical Soci ety, In accepting this courtesy, has ex tended to the Government Ilka access to the papers of that society. ‘ - ' r ' An es-rebel in South Carolina heard a good colored preacher say he w&s.a Republican, whereupon he took a shot gun aud chased the darkfey all the way from Charleston and Lower California and made him jump Into tho Poclfio Ocean and swim to the Sandwich Is lands. And yet there to a class of peo ple In this country who would have u* believe tLat South Carolina Isas peace ful as Massachusetts will be on the day after Ben Butler’s funeral—Washing ton Post, ken by of hto capture; cfal order* 1 Johnston from large collection < rote archives weret North Carolina, the Confederate point. Mnausolemn l in the grounds of University, in w monument ot President of the monument Isd work of art, jw»d sculptor Valentine Ing the re ble. likeness, ot uniform, the solum from hto grasp, and hto covers his limbs, The attitude to] rest than of The sweetest little 1 season Is told by Burlington, Iowa. ^ dwells a little giri who every day In« small two pickens* nessed, and, by i enabled to guide tion* The fish orw about t length,, weigh between i pounds each, and « Wlion the girl has t drives the pfekerei to whore they ore unban into a commodious made expressly for When she goes tot them for a rido, the pickerel j most into her arms, *01 ly, ore they to see her. Tho misc has been offered II team. ■When we consider ifow big Texas really to, we will cease 1 derat theactionof thel iitato Convention, egafos being called to < elding officer, and the 1 seven times In one dsy clerk. It to not. were turbulent end notoff days and days to do theW cause it to on the bodies move ale times greater than York, and copsidt thcrepubllo ot 0 population nearly the United States. .TWO States as Bhodelslabd out of Texas, and th«b there -craps enough left to New England—Chicago “Beautiful, beMtOful «jf Philip murmured, fondly lugly'wlth one « her nut-brown' es; “ soft an tbe plumage wing ; light as the dances on the Summer atf ftlH mer of sunset, tho glitter 0ld, the rich red brownef forests blend-in entrancing ts—” And just then It hi* hands, and bs forgot safnext. There was a moment found silence, and then Aurelia from him and went out of tfc* with it. When she came back fe*"i gone. They meet now, but os strangers, and 4he eyes wont to bflMfc atooife rairili ntfi awakened love-light, no# , thongh fife was an eternal Hawkey* »» .mtimuiSS, a pint with a peck of stirred up feed and give them: The lime helps to form the ehell for laying hen* I give the lime two or throe times per month, and always If I see any signs of the disease. I raised about twenty dozen lost Summer, and healthier, brighter looking chickens I never own ed.—Weetern Agriculturist. smash them to smithereens. <• It to, in deed, up hill work for tbe Democrat* to .carry the county of Williams- bufg, when Swalls to defying them be- foie hto black cunaUtueuts with im- rplkm of punity. This to not ail .* ..The ugtt&t part to tho goMibifity that aU the Bad-. Arrxn Pattemqx Again.—The Wash ington Post says a requisition from Governor Hampton, of South Caroli na, has been Issued for Senator Pat terson and placed in the bonds of tbe proper officers to serve at the first op portunity. Tbe requisition to directed to the Governor of Pennsylvania, and a detective to now shadowing Pattyr- The officer got on a train to captured trophies, ty, son. Baltimore tbe other night on which tbe Senator was sleeping, but was mis led by a friend of the totter, and thus tbjown off the: track for a day. tenon, it to sition. and The English navy proposes introdu cing the uso of hand torpedoes, which, like the band grenades of tbe last cen tury, will be thrown by hand into the enemy’s boats or over parapet* In stead of being shells, exploded by p fuse, as were the grenades, they are of gnn cotton compressed Into a coke weighing from three to four, pounds, A long cord to attached to each torpedo, the other end of which is connected with a little instrument held by the op erator, and resembling a pistol After tbe torpedo has been pitched into posi tion, the trigger of the pistol to touched, and an explosion follows. Ono oak* Shatters a five-ton block of > At an exhibition of wa# military fair held tor tho i Soldiers’ Belief Fu*d, * few sines, at V ijjr&S/M. ! Delaware on ikmJ&tk Senator Bayard, of at Newport, tho subject: “Our sion.” The Senator said following the tote elvtt WAT, duties on imported above ail the uaacri condition of ou&mo eausosof the present elon. Money has * market value, and vuluomay bo government can vgpe. In this cc ia really no there any actual need tor The sole baslsof business and that to the host shield of man. It demands that contracted shall be first thltt vtosr of tho matter the I sold tho payment of the bonds due was unwise, and It ono-fc tho money paid out of th* pot sury to purchases* a largo hod beep, exj hi4nt»fwW rtwww arui .meibSm to restoring specie j (country aij no* Smvw madiaato-' m ▼am, i tel *