University of South Carolina Libraries
... I.^'i ( I ' LJlLL|i|? I i 1 , l ULlliiu.LI A... r 'l ! ! nf Mini ' J-.' ' ' - 1 1 ' I " I THE GREENVtLLE ENTERPRISE. ' ' \ ' ' 1* f J ' *- ' ^ t ' ' * /t? v .. ? - J Drwolcir te Hons, lilies, 3t\irlli0cncr, ntiir i\^mprowmtnt of ll)c Slate Aitlr (Counlnj. JOHN C. BAILEY, PRO'R. GREENVILLE. SOUTH CAROLINA, NOVEMBER 8. 1871. VOLUME. XVIII-NO. 27. ?? . ii, i i i i n i ?? ? ,. FINANCIAL. THE UXDEKSIUXEI) WILL BUY A.\?> SIEM. GOLD AND SILVER. ALSO, , , BUY AND SEI.L E XC IIJ1JYGE ON New York, Baltimore, T31i l 1 n il /".I t?Vi i r* x iixiuuuj.|;aia) Charleston, AND OTIlEli C I T I G S. T. W. DAVIS. OrccnviUc, S. C., Juno f>, 1871. June 7 6 t( COTTON TIFST V E ARE AOF.NTS FOR THE MANUKAiVrURFRS I\,R ~ - Eureka, Swett, Arrow, Anchor and Butter TIES A I.SO OF Trip PATKNT LOCK T1K. Im <:inu. 4.WIO litttullee of the EU RF.KA no ! I.OiK ?I MS. * N<? lie ' ?? compare with llu1 IJnreki fur fitrplieli? ami 'iuiubiniy, ami wo offer lias n I i-that fs'ttiiexcelh il 'I'I it- Afow i* ?l??? w.-ll ki o?n We ink v'iftir imiIkip g'iurniit**iii|( is 'o? it >li?y can If pillchased ill In an} fv ii.lit"II port. We shall be p|en?eil to 'Inn die cnusivcolllt-lil ol your coiI"II, ntn) ni l give till ship in in is our fl<?s?wt aH< ntlftn. GEO. W. WILLIAMS & CO,. OOlTitN FAt.TOKS, Church St.. CITAIiLESTOY. S. C. S. j.i 27 2<n FOlt yAfiE. o TUB HOUSE AND -LOT IN llio City of Greenville. prr*<"nt rcsidoneo I tin, ml scrihor. The LOT contain* three neros, most conveniently nn?I pleasantly siliiafcil, west of tins River, corner illicit mnl River Streets, ,villi a trout of tnore than' JOO Icet on each. Tlio I) XV K Is Is S N G 1IOUS K anil situation is considered one of the 1.?fI in Greenville, with the usual nntl necessary Out Luililings. There is a tino \ KGBTABLK UARDImN and WJ'I.L of the parent eoid wafer, which never fa ill. There are nl-nndiineo nf SHADE TKKKS, of nativo growth, ami KVKIlUttlvMNrt on the Lot. For tonus and further particulars, apply'to tl. F. TOWNLS:, Proprietor. July 20 12 tf (.i;i:AT ? AT E. EL Winstock's. err HE iititlersii/tifil Iiup just re | A** tinned from New York with n lull ft ml WEIL SELECTED | ' ^ OF S FALL AND WINTER CONSISTING -IN PART OF rifLLt ItlJYES I AW iiir'iWinv 1 ^ Ladies' Drees woods. U lAUMCKTICM. Lad ics' and Gents' Shawl*. 44 ? 4% Hosiery nnd Gloves. " 44 Shoe*. a Gents' and Hoy*' i>onts. 44 Clothing and Furnishing . Good*. H Ladies' Gents' and Hoys' Llatg. * I ><Mi)cstic Groceries. ffCrockerv ami Glassware. SsTrunka, Valifcs nftd Carpetbags. And a great many articles too ?vuitner<?iis to mention, all of which 1 sell at Lowest Prices for Cash. I^T* Gall and examine for Hyoni* self, and yon will nil ac,y knowledge that you can get great bai gains at B. M. WINSTOCK'8. jgi At well known Store as Carr's f Old Stand. *' ?? * rjy. Od 4 ?2 If GREENVILLE UNIMPROVED LOTS FOR SALE. AFFERED AT PRIVATE '/ SALE, a number of Lots of i Land on tlio New Extension of WASHINGTON STREET Lending from Main Street to the AIR-LINE RAILROAD jarm ss m- ? , a 1 _>,? rnTc v.r?? c> ? i <%?-? w j^v/ iu "ii ?? vov ui i i:i;t <11111 Johns Street, (the latter swim to be opened) which ran parallel to WASHINGTON STREET. These LOTS variously ian-;o from a distance of about BOO YARDS OP MAIN STnEEST TO HALF MILE AND UPWA UBS. ALSO F UMBER OF LOTS WEST OF THE RIVER, ADJ.U i vr TO TIIIC LOTS OF B. Howard, Col. Ware a xi) JUDGE DOUTHIT. tiif. lots < ffkkf.d fmdraok SOME OF 'HIE FINEST am) M OST U EAUTIFL'L SITUATIONS ft'it i\ tub CITY OP GREENVILLE, and wilt. i1k dispose!) of OXVT TESTLMI? TMMr WOLL JJULSYOIFY PURCHASERS 1SVESTIBG. Tor further particulars apply JOHN WESTFIELD, or GEN. W. K. EASLEY. S. |.t 27 21 II T'.io only Roliahlo Gift Dirtrlbution in the Country. 360,000.00 I.Y VALU A RLE GIFTS To ho disirihuUsd in &. ?. e a 33 ? > s 132ud Regular .Monthly GIFT ENTERPRISE, To ho drawn Monday, Nov. 27lh, 1S7I. TWO GRAND CAPITALS OF $5?0O Each in Greenbacks! Two Prizes of $1,000 ; Five Prises of $S00 ; Ten Prize* of $100: enrli in Greenhaoks! Whole number of cash gift*, 1,000. One Mono anil Rnggy, with silver-monntftd Ilnrnoss, worth $000; one finetoned Rose* wood Pinno, worth $.'>00 ; ten family Sewing Machines, worth $100 each ; Ave heavy eased Gold Hunting Watches nnd heavy Gold Chains, worth $300 eaoli; flvo Gold American lt,?ntU,? TV-if, worth *I2A unrh tj-n I.*. dies' Gold Hunting Watches, worth $100each j 800 Oold and Silver Lover Hunting Walshes, (In nil) worth from $20 to $3<>0 each ; Ladles' Gold Leontino Chains, Gent's Gold Vest Chains, Silver- plated Castors, Solid Silver and Dnnhle-plnted TnMo aud Teaspoons, Ivoryhandled Dinner Knives, Silver plitod Dinner Porks, Silver Vest Chains, Photograph Alhuinn. Ladies' Oold Breastpins and Ear-rings, Gouts' Gold Breastpins, Shirt Studs and Sleeve Buttons, Finger-rings, Gold Pens, (silver extension,) etc. Whole T)snn>er Gifts, 0,000. Tickets' limited to 00,000. /igfsfr ann'tti In ?tU Ticket*. to trkom liberal Premium* trill be paid. Single tirbets, $1 j aix tickets, $0; tWaive tickets, $10; Twenty-Ova tickets, $20. Circalars containing a lull list of prises, a description of the manner of drawing, n d other information in reference to the distribution, it ill ho sent to any ono ordering tbeui. Alt letters must he addressed to L. D. SINE, Bog 00, Office, 101 W. 5th St. ' Cincinnati, O. Oct A 12 T 73 Land for Sale. AS applications ha ve been made for smaller parcels of Land, the auhreriber baa eon oiadcd to sell a part of bis GKKKN PLACE accordingly. lie now offers to sell a lot of ten acres on the southwest corner, running across the bottom, about 6x2 acres, at $40 per Serf. Three Lots of 10 acres each, bordering on theeaat en the Paris Mountain Road, and on the west on leads of II. P. Hammet, Esq., at $4Q per gcra. Also ono Lot el ten aerea of Wopdland, on the aortbweA corner, at $60 per lirt'.'1 Dividing fences to be built by the purchaser- . . _ . ^ Persons desiring farther Information may ...I. C.nl n II ur-ll. .. I. IL. L i " v.,-H v.. >i?ncn>, ..i ... .nr. wmnbcr. JAMB8 C. FURMAN. Aug 2 13 tf | tsCBRcr.tPTiox Two Dollars per innnm. Adtbrtibbmkrts inserted at tha rates of one dollar per square of twolee Minion lines (this rise I type) or less for the Orst insertion, liftj cents carb for the second nuA third insertions,, and twenty-five cents for subsequent ir rertions. Yearly contracts will he made. A J! hdwrlist'invnts must bars the number of insertions marked on them, or they will be inserted till ordered out, and ebarged for. Unless ordered otherwise, Advertisements will invariably t>o "displayed." Obituary notices, and all mattera Inuring to in ,i .. ..r .... ... ......uj __ Advertisements. r<>n tub CIHIUlil tAttHMU The Beautiful Beyond. ?r f.i.8ik lAltSUT. There must be, aye, thcro '? a life, Jleyond the toils, (he ilia of thia, Beyond the hcnrt-nche and tho strife, A place of pure, Attending bliaa. 0, that beautiful, bright beyond ! I know that when tbia lifo ahull end, My poor, lone heart, an and, ao fond, Shall never feel it nccda n friond. Life ia not long?I will be brare? Willi strength fiom that bright world above, My aoul ah all triumph o'er the grnvc. My heart he fired with holy love. Aye, 'lia not long ! I'll work and wait, My rccompcnco will aurely coma j tlod rules my fortunca, Uia not fate, And lie will give mo frienda and home. REMINISCENCES or Til K CQUMTY QFQREEMVtLLEt B\ EX GOVERNOR B. F. TERRY. [CONTINUED FROM LAST WEEK J WADDY Til''MPSON. Ciciicial Waddy Thompson, was for many yea 6 a Representative in the United States Congress from . i .. 1 f\? . ^ imo uongrcssionni uismci, composed of Greenville, Anderson and Pickens Counties. Afterwards ho became Minister to Mexico, under the administration of President Tyler. Ho was the son of Chan c Jlor Thompson, of South Carolina, a great man by nature, and one of the finest looking* men I ever saw. Had his great mind been cultivated and improved as it should have been, Chancellor Thompson might have been one of the great men of America. The Guieml was residing in Edgefield when I commenced leading law at Greenville. lie attended onr courts, however, and soon after wards returned to Greenville to reside permanently. His kindness and cordiality, his talents, wit and humor, a d great conversational powers, completely won my admiral ion and affectionate regard. In after years politics estranged us for Sometime. He became a warm partisan of Nullification, and a bitter opponent to the Union party to which I belonged. We were opposing candidates for Co gress in 1835, and ho was elected. lie had not been in Congress but a short time w hen a schism occurred on tho sub-Treasury between him and Mr. Calhoun, who was then United States Senator, and resided in litis Cong: c-sjonal District. 1 coincided in opinion with General l'liVtn| son on thrssuhjcct, and openly os | > mi sod his cause. I thought, too, ilicro was an ungenerous ef fort to put ltirn down for daring to differ with Mr Calhoun. Judge Whit iter was brought out against hi.-, wishes, as the opposing candidate < f General Thompson. Air. Calhoun took the stump, and can vassed the Congressional District lor Judge Whitner. Dot with all >t his great talents, overshadowing reputation and nnrocrntic power in South Carolina, he proved unequal to General Thompson on the stump. The masses were more pleased with the wit, humor, and anecdotes of flie General, than with tho dry logic of Air. Calhoun,? The election resulted in the defeat of Judge Whitner by n very large majority. Tho Judge, too, was personally one of the most popular men in tho Congressional District. 11 o was an intimate personal friend, and 1 was nufriendly with General Thompson at that lime. 1 did not, however, hesitate Id tlirow naiilrt ni>i-ahnitl o#iiwii lions. ilii-* renewed the friendly relations between General Thump* son and myself, and wo continued ever afterwards fast friends entertaining the same political vjewo. Gcneinl Thompson was a man of rare talents, tact and energy of character. As apolitical electioneer lie can scarcely be said to have hud a superior, llo know human uaturo well, and understood how to approach evory one. In Congress ho was greatly distinguished as a ready debater and partisan leader. On tho8tnmp he had an inexhaustible inud of anecdotes wh ch he applied most elfcetually. Ho said in one of his speeches, that Mr. Calhoun could not tolerate any independence of thought or aotion with his political associates and friends. That he was like an ok! eccentric friend of his, (the General's,) who, in drawing up the agree ineut between him and hie over- t seer, inserted this emphatic expree < sioy : " When I lay go, you arc to < go; when I say trot, you arc to c trot; and when I s?y run, yon are to i run. It General Thompson had i devoted himself to his profession, i he would have been eminently sue- I i cessful as a lawyer. Lie wn-, how- i I nvor wnnlinr# its fltof 1 A %.? , ki>n? imn/i . Hi 'i I patient research which are abso* i lutely necessary (o success at tho i har. As an wlvi cate before the I jury, he was very able and success- i fill. IIis style of speaking was 1 rather conversational, and he displayed very little impassioned eloquence. On his-retircment from public life, he wrote a book on Mexico, which was well received by the i pn'dic, and had an extensive sale. < The intimacy and close friendship 1 between General Thompson and < Col. William C. Preston, Irom the ( time they were in college together i to too death of Col. Preston, almost a half century, was something rare and beautiful. Through I all the vicissitudes of life, and all the ups and downs in ]M?litic*. tliev < were never tor a moment severed ' in feelings. General Thompson was employ ed for a year or two after bis roturn from Mexico, in prosecuting , claims at Washington, utid receive J , scvoral very large foes, amounting , in all to over one linudred thou- j sand dollars, t lie of these claims , was that of Dr. Gardner, for lostc3 ( in mining in Mexico, which turn- * ed out afterward* to he fraudulent ( and unfounded. But General . Thompson knew nothing of the ? fraud at the time. Tho counsel { employed, and the court who heard ] and allowed tho claim, were equal- t )y unconscious of the fraud. I \ heard Senator Evans, of Maine, | who was one of the Judges, say r that the Gardner claim was more < thoroughly and satisfactorily . proven than any claim before the j court. Co!. Payne, of North Car -| olina, told me tho same. I know, , beyond all dispute, that General j Thompson had not the slightest . suspicion of the fraud till the trial < nnu conviction of Dr. Gardner. I ( was assoc iated with Messrs. Brad- | ley Jk Carlisle in the defence of ] Gardner, and I saw tho whole cor- , respoudcnco between General ( Thompson and Gardner before the ' claim was allowed and after it was | established and Gardner had gone < to Euro) o. t Whilst in Washington, attend- ) ing the trial of Dr. Gardner, Gen- t oral Thompson, Governor llamil- , ton and myself frequently visited . tho Misses Fox, who were spirit ( rappers, and witnessed a great many very marvellous revelations. < General Thompson liecaine a firm ; believer in tho spirits, and died in | tl.at belief, Ouo evening, at tho i instance of Governor Hamilton, | the spirit of Mr. Calhoun was call- ( ed up, and tho Governor asked < him if he still believed in the doc- j trine of Nullification. Tiie spirit ' replied 44 yes," at which Governor * II ami Iron expressed great satisfuc- , lion, and said he was glad Calhoun | still adhered to his States Rights " doctrines. < Chancellor Dargan, who was J himself a medium and firm bclicv- , er in the spirits, came to Green- f viUc some years after this, to hold f court. General Thompson carried g him out to his Mountain home, and < for twenty four hours they talked < over spirit rapping* and nothing < else, as the Chancellor afterwards i told me. In tho latter part of his i life, General Thompson would en < tertain his friends and visitors for i hours and dAys, in telling them | the wonderful intelligence communicated to liiin by the spirits. Whilst in Mexico, General i fri?Al?? liO/ktt Si>|S^.aIa I i & iiv/iiii'o' m? ui vniiic i ol t llll iiiiu<u i with President Sun'A A nun. And i had a high opinion of hi* talents. On oiio occasion, he applied to the i President for the release of the ] Texan prisoners. Santa Anna < asked which of the prisoners he i desired to have leleased. The i General replied, u all of them," , and further added, "Iknow that you < will not refuse my request." They c were all released,and among them 1 Samuel Augustus Maverick, a per- c sonal friond of the General's, and c since a Senator in Texas. i General Thompson know per- i Bonally and intimately, most of tho r great men of America, and if ho I had a Bos well to tako down his conversations in reteronee to thctu, they would have made a most in- ( teresting book. I frequently sug- j gcated to him, that lie should oc- i ciidv his leisure time in wri?i?f? Reminilicences ot hi* great cotetu- y porarics. ( A few years before his death, \ General Thompson rnovi d to iiis i plantation in Florida. Whilst on i a professional visit to Tallahas*ee, t he was suddenly taken ill and d>ed. i But r\Pt nntil Ids wife had time to t reach his dying bed and receive < his farewell. Several years before i I us death, General Thompson bo:arae a member of the Episcopal Jbnrch, and spent a govd portion { ?t his time in reading and study- \ ng the Scriptures. His legal mind i 1VK8 constantly suggesting tlifficol i lies in liis reading of tho old Tes i O ITlAtlt RaUIA t tliADA * IVCVy ?? VI C ? VI J j I nmttsing. He pr pounded to sev- | eral of the clergy a query whether < the capacity of Noah's nrk was < sufficient to hold all* the animal* I that were stated to have gmio into j it. And then ho was bothered to I know how all this multitude of an- < itr.als were fed during the time I they were in the nrk. i General Thompson wa9 twice i married. Ilia first wife was n daughter of General Uutler, and lister of Judge Dutlor and Gov- t prnor Puller. 11 is second wife j was Mies Jones, a daughter of i Did. J-?nos, of Wilmington, North j Carolina, who still survives, with ' in only child, William Preston ] riirunpson. He has another son, I William 13. Thompson st II li?ing, j by his first wife. * t [CON-TIXCI l> SEXT WEEK.] I I III 1 Wholesale Thieving by New York City Official*. New York, October 27. The citizen*1 committee appoint3el by the Boned of Supervisor* j reported this afternoon, through a 1 >ub committee, Hiat al! the works 1 for the city had been thoroughly examined by them, and the char 1 jes therefor rigidly scrutinized.? rile amount charged to the cost :?f tho new court .house building ind furniture is $8,130,000, and J5.2SO.OOO i3 charged to the County court* and ofliccs in the same t>?iilcliiicr, making a total of $13.110,000. The whole cost of the 1 jnilding, when completed, cotdd ' lot honestly exceed $3,000,000.? I The committee further report that ' J3.221.000 were paid for armories and drill room#, the real value Vie- ' ing $202,000 ; for lumber, $1G3, [)00 paid, real value $48,000 ; for advertising, stationery and print ing. $7,1 OS,OS ) paid, real value J 1.5000,000. 1/>83 to the city, < $19,519,5SG. The report of the Committee shows that in getting the money on the various warrants, forgery v.ns resorted to very extensively, a large number ol the 1 signatures not being genuine.? ' The Port stated that a *uit will '< lie brought against Nathaniel sands to recover $7o,000 cumins iion paid liim for selling tho city 1 bonds while he was ati officer of ( lie city government. in receipt of i salary of $10,000. The law exrnessly prohibits such action by | >fficials. Tho anticipated arrest of Super- ' rigor Tweed, the Tamtnnrv ring- ' eader, in New York, in connection with the stupendous frauds , upon tho treasury of that city, ( took jdace on Friday, ami, as , stated hv the telegraph, ho iimnc ( diately obtained release by giving ( hail in the sain of $2.000,000.? ( n.is is the first net in the drama, . ivhich will doubtless dischwo more | 'illninly than litis ever boon ex ; libi'ed before the courts of New ] Fork or ar.y other tribunal on f jartb. The developments which . invc been made by tho committee rho hnvo examine I into the rauds for which Tweed and his r iseociates are held responsible, { iliow that during" tho last two rears and eight months half the ( entire revenuo of the city and ( County of New Y'ork for that j :iino, and much inoro than tho en , tire tax levy, has been diverted, >r, as is charged, stolen by the ( ring. The amount thus diverted foots up over $10,500,000. , __ ? , A HB.vsinLE writer says a sharp thing, and a true one, too, about ( ttrtvn win?flp tsili-o iibtna of mnnidli. it ess lead thorn to use tobacco: " It has itttorly spoiled and lit j lttcrly ruined thousands of boys, j [t tends to tho softening and weak jning of the bones, and it greatly injures the brain, tlio spinal mar- ] row, and the whole nervous fluid i A boy who smokes early and Ire juentiy, or in any way uses large ? pianthics of tubacco, is never I mown to make a tnan of much j mergy, and generally lacks mug- t n.lar and physical, as well as | nontal, power. Wo would partic i llarlv warn hoys who want to be < mything in the world, to shun to- i jacco as a most baneful poison." j Latb Hours.?Lato honrs are < carrying more pooplo to untimely graves than the deadly missies of I warfare. Tho builot and shell ? nanglo limbs and inflict flesh ; rounds, but midnight dissipation, i to universally indulged in, iin- j tairs the whole system, and hur t ica all agoa and sexes under the J tod. Tlus growing tendency to t urn night mto day ie one of the t uost serious ot our social evils. < Hid should receive the earned! I sonsideration of those interest*, d i 11 the welfare of tho human race. < A Shocking TragedyTli? Detroit Free Press, of the * 10th ultimo, says: On the 26th ) iltiino a shocking tragedy occur \ red on tho f.irtn of John Maney, welve miles out on tho Pontiac ood. Mr. Mauey was the owner ' ?f a very fierce bull, the animal i>cing so violent at times that no >no dared to go into tho field a hero he was kept. Tho farmor tad often threatened to shoot the 1 mitnal, as no ono would purchase tin;. It seems that the bull broke ', :mt of his field and got into the | barnyard, where ho was annoying a pair ol steers to snch an extent that Maiicy decided to rit-k the j ' chances iind diivc hint out. He ' entered the 3aid, armed with a itmit eliih, nnd had succeeded in getting the nniinal nearly out ot 1 the yard, when he turned short ilxmt and charged hack at Mancy. I'lic unfortunate man ran tor his ' life, and had nearly reached the fence when the bull overtook him tnd tossed him several tect into 1 lie air. As ho catno down the i utinial ran one ot his horns clear < through the man's head, pinning him last to tho earth, and causing his death in a moment. Iiis wile and daughter witnessed the affair, and the}' did not hear even n groan from the poor man ntter striking the ground. They were of course, terribly excited, and both ran into the yard and tried lo drive the animal away. Still more maddened, tho bull pursued ibcin so closely that both came near being impaled mi his horns, lie then had tlie yard to himself for a time. Whilo the neighbors were being summoned, lie charged back and forth across tho yard, tossing tho corpse on hi* horns several times, and tearing up the fenco in his rage. After help arrive I, it was some time before the (ltMlfl li.'xtv rwtulil 1.0 ineoiw.rt ntwl it presented a sight so shocking that it made the stoutest heart faint. Tiic hull was allowed to live two days after committing the deed, his fit of fury lasting him all that time. Mr. Manov was a well to do fai mcr. and much reelected by ull his neighbots. When a man retiree from business and lives on the interest of his in ?nov, ho m xy bo considered n resting 0:1 his " owers." ?? Jldge Okk has granted permission tor tho institution of proceed ii ?8 agaih6t the Air Line Railroad Company in South Carolina to forfeit their charter for various rea ions, but- principally for their persistant refusal on their road to lonio point on the Savannah Riv;r by Anderson Court lloueo. Gkttv8buro, I'a., has a patriot named David Blocker. Some of the Confederate dead wero huried on his place, and when tho Georgia committee was about to remove those from that Stuto the other lay, this fellow's loyalty would not oerinit it to bo doiio until he had oeen paid for tho use of the ground n which tho dead had rested.? Let David blocker's name go the 'ottmls as a synonym for meanness 4 uid indecency. Aik IJkds in tub Mornino.? Hie wise housekeeper should sec o it that all the beds should be ' tired immediately after being oc- 1 Ml pied. The impurities which jinnuato from the human body frotq insensible perspiration, arc , made up of minute atoms, which, it allowed to remain long, are absorbed by the bed, nnd will then, to a grcntcr or less extent, vitiate, the air for a considerable time af forward. Let tho occupant throw tho l>ed open oti rising, nnd as soon as is convenient open the windows nnd ventilate the sleeping-room. One hour*? carlv ventilation is worth two hour's late air iug. Human Proorkss.?Can on i (vingsley. in presiding over the inAugural meeting of tho Devonshire < Association tor the Advancement >f Science, toojv occasion to advise lis hearers, as ecientitic men, not :o be in a hurry to assent to cerain modern hy phot hoses as to the liuman race. " Civilization." he mid, may tali as well aa rise. Those who talk of a continual progress , upward in inaif ^without divine ' Kid) forget how many facts are Against them. Has Greece risen :>r fallen inlhe last 2.000 vears? [las the whole East rison or' fallen in the last 1,000 prearst Has Spain rison of fallen in the last 300 yearsf in America alone, have not two great civilizations, that of Mexico and that < f Peru, sank lit _ to savagery again dnring the last 300 years ?" It will pnnle the advocates of44 human progross" to ( inswer theso questions in acoor- : lance with the known stubborn [bets of the case, or harmonise ' those facts with their unscriptural joginus. Sellna, Ala., hits a cat 33 years D'-mkstic magazine?wives who jlovv up their husbands. Only twenty-five thousand OunminUts still remain to he tried. T?? keep water out?use pitch. To keep water in?use a pitcher. Tiik four seasons?mustard, salt, pepper an 1 vinegar. Tiinnie 5* a tnnn nnf \Y/wt < < ? jo lazy ilmt ho has applied for a position as a railroad sleeper. Many a child sings "I want to lie nn angel,'* who would prefer to linve ft chunk of gingerbread. The young lady whose feelings wcro " ail worked up *' will get a fresh supply. Advice to lovers?When yoft cannot catch tho last car at night, take u 44 buss" instead. One who wisho) tho world to know what lie knows about farming, nays the best way to raise strawberries is with a spoon. What is the difference between an entrance to a barn and a loafer in a printing office ? One is a barn Jour and tbe other is a darn bore. A man up in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, named his two children Ebcnezer and Flora, and always spoke of them as Eb and V\'o. According to returns furnished by two hundred master1 carpenters, of the 2,500 men formerly employed in Berlin ninetcnths are out of work. 44 Leave you, my friend,r said a tipsy fellow, clinging to a lamp post on a dark night, 44 leave you in a condition not to take care ot Ir o >T yuureen t i^cver." It is said that in London " a child is born every five minutes.*' It must be a little unpleasant to the children to have the process repented so often. A cobeesi'oxdent descnlrcs Vinnie Kentn in her stndio 41 with her arms bare to the shnnlnera and her nokles likewise." Which, if she wears Iter ankles bare to her shoulders, must make it $mbarnssing, fnr modest visitors.: No career, however noble or exalted it may sefm in itself, will trulp bless liiin who follows it, unless he carry into it the spirit of truth, justice and love. Then, all business is sacred, and all life is religion. Eiuiitf.kh copies of the first edition of the Bible ever printed are still in existence They wcio printed in Metz between the years 1440 and 1445. James Lennox of New York owns one of the c ?pies, having purchased it at a cost of $3,200. * Look on This Picture, Then on That." The Charleston News is permitted to publish the following dispatch, which wASfent fr >m Augusta, Ga., seve?a lays agn; . Ai gu-ta. Ga, Oct. 15, 1871. To Ihr Hon. Mayor of the City of Chicago ; rieate draw on us fjr one thousand dollars and distribute it among your afflicted people. Branch, Sons <fc Co. Major T. P. Branch, the subscribing member and leading spiiil of the Arm, was a gallant officer, in a promimui Virginia regiment, and a* a prisoner o war was drawn as a hostage, and finally, wi?h many others, was planted in rang* of the guns of Fort Sumter. The Rome Commercial states that in 18CC a gentleman wrote from Georgia to a miuis'er in Chicago, requesting his assistance in soliciting funds in that city to rebuild one of the Georgia,, churches, burnt by Sherman's vandalsand received the following in response r * I am at this time a minister in tlie Old School Presbyterian Church, and D sent me jour petition that I might try to get something for your aid in rebuilding your church. But I had no heart to do arything with it.?" I fear the people would rather re-burn you than to aid you. Small, sadly mall, is the Christian charity in this % part of the world. Fanaticism seems to reign and riot, while hatred and murderous malice would bold still their ls^j. Diootiv c?rni?i?i. [SavattnaA 27/A ult. The tVinmboro* Neu>* eetimete* the rrop of 1871, it from Iwentyfive to thirty-lhree per oent. Ie?i.tben tliet of 1870, Tlio report of the School lioeer of SperlnebtMf <5?wn?y, f.?r th* veer elorlngf 90<b June fe?t. whow- ',w,f (eveniy-flve public ecbnol* in Wte Conniv, ind it leeit 8,000 childfe* 'n *' lendmce.