University of South Carolina Libraries
BY W. A. LEE AND HUGH WILSON. ABBEVILLE, S. C., WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 14. 187*2. .T> '-^>7* * * i. v- t fi'.'S- ' i ' " " : - : r ? VOLUME XX?NO. ia? ; ; Our Sprir IS XOW in store, and we would invite al assured that we can please both as to q 'we desire to say that we have more and bett heretofore kept, embracing a large variety t SPRING AND SUMM! to which we would special In these "hand times to live" we have on great'y to the "creature comforts." We intend to keep always "FULL UP" i Grocery nrinminr c VJUUILAV A No. 3 Grani April 10, 1872, 52?tf SVE ARE NOW 01 STOOK OF SPRING Al Embracing a variety of Goods uev Dress Goods of all t WHITE i EMBROIDERIES, LACES, TRIM KTotion Also a full line of Ladies', Mi: CASSIMERES, HATS. TIES in Endless ' Together with Millinery Goods, Trimmed and Untrimmed, Also a Fresh Confectici Fine Old Hava: With a Choice Collection Hardware, Crockery, and many All are respectfully invited to call and ex McDonald April 17,1P72, 1-if MILLER & BECi leave to announce to the public tlia and ready for inspection ; it in LA lit They cull especial attention to their Dress C White Goods and THE VARIOUS DEPARI Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, M\ CROCKERY AND I fittnnvBTPO c iiurn pi UttUl/?lU/?jUUj UXlUUiJiU tiro all full and complete; all of which will MILLER April 10,1R72,1-tf KAPHAN~& AT THE WELL-KNOW] PROCLAIM in tones of Thunder to all I that now have on hand for the presei tionably low prices, in fact, most deinoraliz A CHOICE, RARE AND EL,! READY - MAD! Very cheap and of the very latest styles w rope are "all the go" iu America. They have also, HATS, CAPS, BOOTS ANI OSNABTOGS, ! iind everything else, which the most fastid Evjn the most economical person in all of actly ' suited to their mind." April 11, ztwz, i-ii j. B. & W. J WILL BE E NO. 2 GRAM And are fulJy prepared to show to the publ Groceries and Consisting of BACON, FLOUR, MOL, NEW ORLEANS LAR1 and everything in that line suitable for fan A.Sice Assortment Comprising ORANGES, LEMONS, BAM BRANDY PEACHES, SARDINES, * everything in that line. ALSi A Choice Lot of Mountai The above stock will be sold low and th< nd examine for themselves. ig Stock. t to call and examine the samo, feeling uality and price. liiSIlg :er goods in tlicir line than we have )f ER DRESS GOODS, lly call their attention. hand many articles that will contribute n the r Line! te auge. ?EXIXG OUR M SUMMER GOODS ?r kept by us before?sucli as ;he Latest Styles, GrOOBS, .s, ??so. sses and* Gents' Shoes, wi 5, COLLARS and CUFFS Variety. , Ladies' and Misses' Hats? Flowers and Ribbons, Supply of laries, ana Cigars, of Family Groceries, tilings we cannot mention. amine our Stock and Prices. & Haddon. ROBERTSON ,t their STOCK is now IX 8TOP.E iE, VARIED ANDCOMPLETE. jrOOdS, 'MENTS COMPRISES : fare, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Clotliii, GLASS WARE, IY AND NOTIONS,' i be sold .luw on a CASH BASIS. & ROBERTSON. SKLARZ, S DERBY CORNER, ;hc world and the "rest of mankind' it spilinti SEASON, at most unques ingly ruinous rates. :gaxt assortment of S CLOTHING ) SHOES, DOMESTICS, DRY OOODS, ious and cultivated taste could desire. Abbeville, cau lind bargains just ex I. ROGERS, OUND AT TE RANGE. ic their select stock of [ Provisions, ASSES, SYRUP, :mackerei? 0, SUGAR, COFFEE, RICE lilies. Also, of Oonfcctionaries, rANAS, COCOA NUTS, JELLIES, ASTERS, CRACKERS, and any and n Com and Nice Hams, 2 public arc respectfully invited to ca How tbe Gates Came Ajar. 'Twas whispered one morning in heav en, That the little child-angel May, In the shade of the great white portal Sat sorrowing night and day; How she said to the stately warden, lie of the key and bar', "O angel! dear angel! I pray you Let the beautiful gates ajar." "I can hear my mother weeping? She is lonely, and cannot see A glimpse of light in tho darkness Where the gates shut after me; 0 turn once the key, dear angel, The splendor will shine so far," But the angel answered,.'*1 dare not Set the beautiful gates ajar." Then up rose Mary the blessed, Sweet Mary, Mother of Christ, Her hand on the hand of the angel She laid, and the touch sufficed? Turned was the key in the portal, Unloosed was the golden bar And lo! in the angel child's fingers Stood the beautiful gates ajar. "And the key for no further using To my blessed Son shall be given," Said Mary the Mother of Jesus, Tenderest heart in Heaven. f 1>mm'e n on/1 .iitrnrl V?T lilCiV O U OU\l"VJ VU i i i U I i J But may catch the glory afar Since safe in the Saviour's bosom, Are tlie keys of the gates ajar. NOMENCLATURE. [From Appleton's Journal.] Our names are part of ourselves. They were settled on us long be fore recollections, aud have always, belonged to us. They come through our parents from long lines of ancestry, and seem, through the vista of descent, to belong to the eternal fitness of things. And yet, in many intsances, they have their origin in the occupation or other accident of him who first tiore the patronymic. Names are the keys of family history, unlocking for us r? nnofro 1 11 n ao nra LI J VJ OCUl^lO V/JL UUVLOUIU XI UVU^Vi Bestowed in the early dawn of so ciety, they were taken either from trade and occupation, or from lo calities; from characteristics of mind or body ; from hero-worship .; from the animal, mineral, or veget able kingdom ; from war or peace, or from some one of the .many thousand cause which attach them selves to the personality of the hu man race. Trades and occupations have given a name to more of the inhabitants of the earth than any other cause: ncrhnDs more than all other causes put together?as, for example, the innumerable Smith family. An honorable calling is that of the smith; he was the leading workman of his tribe, when earlv 7 ? genius first suggested the sharpen ing of Hint arrow-head, or tried to sonstruct a weapon out of metal. That Smith founded more families than anj* other man that ever lived It was trade, too, that first gave names to our Taylors, our Carpen ters, our Bakers and Masons, our Brewers, Sawyers, and Coopers; our "Wrights, Barbers, Chandlers, Butlers, Carriers, Boardmans, Sla ters, Chapmans, Poundstones, Bra ziers, Brewsters, Bankers, Cloth iers, Curriers, Binders, Cutlers, Arkwrights, Bootmans, Sawins, Cutlers, Carters, Cartwrights, Col liers, Carriers, etc. Kightly to understand the indi viduality of names, we should study their rec.ord in the Directory. The JSTew York Directory of last year contains the names of two f ItAncnul niw) ffr_ nmn Qmitlic? LllVUCCUlVl ttllli All \.j III II v UJiiUii3j five hundred and thirty Scrnidts, and over one hundred Smyths, Smythes, etc,'all connected hy re lationship somewhere this side of Adam?probably, indeed, this aide of Noah. One hundred and fifty nine of these residents of nur cos mopolitan City are John Smiths; and we hardly envy the letter-carri er who .has to distingniah John Smith the seventeenth from John Smith the one hundred and fifty eighth. What is he to do with a letter direetcd to "Mr. tTolm Smith, New York, N. Y. ?" Is he to run the gamut of the whole hundred and iifty-iiine till the right man be found? And what tales and se crets those miscarried letters must tell! To be sure, they are all about the Smith family, and therefore every Smith reader is interested in hushing them up. We all remem ber the case of the gentlemau who came too late to the Broadway Theatre to find a vacant seat. t jv- ? ajuuiwng, ruuuu iui <111 nisiaiii upon the crowded house before hi in, lie quietly exclaimed: "Mr. Smith's house is on fire!" There was a great rush for that pit, and the gentleman had a large number of vacant seats to choose from. But "Smitheries" abound else where than in America. It is but a few years since that a bet was laid in London that no Old-Bailey session had passed two years with out the trial and condemnation of John Smith. And, alas for the family name! the records of the court were searched, and the bet was won. In England, every sev enty-third person one meets is a Smith; and it is estimated that two hundret] and fifty-three thousand persons in the mother-country arc so called. And should some hum ble Debrett trace back their lineage to its hidden source, that name would be found in every instance d be struck out from the sparks of smithy. Next to the Smith family, come ic Joneses. St. John has given lore Christian names to Christian abes than all the other Evangel its. And John's son naturally ikes the patronymic of either ohnson, or Joues, or Johns. Over vo hundred and forty thousand ersons in England bear the name f Jones, besides the numerous imilies of their iirst cousins, the oh us and Johnsons. A host of lrnamcs are derived from Chris ail names, such as the Williamses, le Wilsons, the Williamsons, the homases, and the Thompsons, the ic Jameses, and the Jamesons, en orally the-patronymic-bears the ithcr's name; but sometimes the lother transmits the name of .Ncl's >n. Time and habit have great in ~ .1 uence in soiceiling mo uursu iuuus ndcr which our ancestry first as mied their titles; and a foreign inguage often elevates democratic rigin into most aristocratic socie \ The Malebranches of En land would decidedly object to aing known as the Badarms. [any a fair reader of "Ivanhoe" ould lind her cultured taste shock i by the conversion of Front-de ocuf into Bullock's-head. The ilebrated engineerTodlebcn would tus be anglicized into Mr. Death i-life; a pertinent name; by the a}r, for one who sentsuch slaught into French aod English ranks, otwithstanding what Shakespeare ivs, a rose often does smell sweet t? its possessor than if its name a/1 trnlrrar oaunnintinna Tims thn istocrutic Foljarabes would de dedly object to having their young dies Saxouized into the Miss Bad gs. Ail history tells us that the early tvellers upon earth erected their ineraents upon the shores ef lakes, ong the banks of rivers, or close y the sea, whence so much of icir food was drawn. A'fortunate iscator would naturally ucar tno irae of his finny pre}'. And so eliave the numerous Fish families, ; the head of <vliom may be put ic father of our Secretary of State, reserved Fish. Fislier, Hook, ate, Batcman, Sholes, Dolphin, hrasher, Eels, Conger, Salmon, ake, Bass, Codman, Tike, Roach, otch, Place, Whiting, Herring, [ullctt, Ray, Lamprey, Pollock, haddock, Trout, Roe, Spratt, Lubb; Turtle, Finney, Cockle, id Crabb, all of them good old nglish names. There arc fashions in names as i all earthly .thinsrs. In Crom ell's time, Puritanism weighed ;ry heavily on the tender babee rolight to the baptismal font, ume gives us the names of a jury i the following nge, among whom e find Stand-fast-on-high Stringer, ill-sin Pimple, Fly-debate Rob ots, Fight-the-goodfight-of-faith iThite,. More-fruit Fowler, Sleep :>t Billings, and many other such iblieal worthies. These names idicate the wishes of the parents ither than the piety of the chil ren. And xvc are not aware that ic Parsons, the Priests, the Chris ans, Deacons, Creeds, Churches ; Devotions, have any better chil ren than htfve the Hoggs, the !ams, the Bawns, the Clays, the [udds, or the Nettles. A member f Congress rejoices in tlie name of cdlove, but is scarcely more pious lan his congressional feliow-sin ers. Isaiah, Daniel, Jeremiah, [atthew, Mark, Luke, and John, ;e often bad boys, bet their sisters ivino, Faith, llope, Charity, aud iove, arc not much better. Till thev reach their maioritv. oor mortals have no responsibility )r their names; that matter is ,'ttled by the fond mother .it bap sm. But when able to reach ,venty-onc and the Legislature, it ithoir own fault if they retain the atne of infancy. In this amusing ccouut of Suffolk surnames, Bow itch tells us that, in 1875, Pepper lixer, Esq., was pcrmited to change is mixed address, feoon after Mr. \ iiuviuub ui U19 1UUU -LIJ 848, a whole family of Vests di ested themselves of their old aino. In 1850, Thomas Jest de idedtojestno longer. A distin uished lawyer of Middlesex Coun y, in Massachusetts, named Burn ide, disliking his Christian name, pplied for leave to change it. Un n-tunately, he wrote a bad hand, nd so the clerk of the Great and ieneral Court thought, he also pe itioned to change his last name into lumsidc. The Legislature granted tie petition as the clerk read it, nd, when the law passed, the gen eman woice lip to tlic fact that lie 'as Mr. Bumside. For one year, nd until the Legislature met new, did that name cling to him; nd then, by dint of writing a lain hand, he was legislated into is old patronymic. G reat names sometimes come to an jnoble destiny. George AVash igton has lately been sent to the reorgia State-prison, where Thoni 3 Jefferson and Daniel Webster rcre already confiued. Iu Decern cr, 1869, Henry Wilson was rrested for selling liquor without license. ISfapoIeon Bonaparte as but lately received Lis just mterice of imprisonment for life ] an American jail. And surely mong <n*oat names may be indu ed the late Mr. Knox, of Boston, hose first name was Aldiboronti hoskiphorbia. But this lady [ways signed herself "A. Knox." In the i'ale College catalogue, of lirty years ago, we were amused it.li a student's name of Spear, to hom a poetical father had given le Christian name of William hake. And Dickens tells us that is well-known epithet of Boz riginated in a playfi.il application > his younger brother of the name f;Moses, from the Moses of "The "icar ef Wakefield." First, it was [oses. then Roses, find finally and ircver 13oz. As wo turn from the name of the idiuidual to that of' tho locality, we nd the same general rule that early reumstances always emboby them ilves in the designation. The name ? the town will generally unlock to 3 its early history. We might be ire, even if tho New England histo an did not inform us of the fact, lat our Massachusetts Boston was ittled by those who once lived in St. otolph's town, in England; that the irliest citizens of bewitched Salem ero thoso Puritanic forefathers of irs who came hither saying "Let us ave peace ;" that our oldest scat of aiming received its Dame from Cam ridge in England; and that that iaco in its turn lifts its scholarly ?wers where a bridge spans the Cam. ut as this country expands and rows oleter, we find a great paucity I* original names; first settlers arc 3t usually persons of much mental tlturc. Tho nurabcr of immortality-socking lal-cstato owners, who would pro ct themselves on to posterity by eighing down whole communities ith their baptismal ugliness, is un rtunatoly very great. Over sixteen jndrcd post-ofrico villages in tho nitcd States wilfully terminate their lmes with villo. fYom Abbeville, of liich there are five, a3 well as one hhovfilln t.hrmnrli Grtibvillo in " J J O" issouri, to Gillvillo in Alabama, and iousvillo in Indiana. And, in. the ?ar of graco 1S69, Strong Pepper, sq%, deerecd that tho villago around is residence should bear tho name of eppcrvillo. Five towns rejoice in tho name of apoleon. Our Catholio proclivities e shown by the fact that one hun cd seventy-four villages commence icir names with tho title of Saint; iree hundred and thirty-seven begin ith ilount. "Wo have spoken of ino carl*' home of our Puritan lath 's, in 'Massachusetts, t!)P town of ilem ; thirt}'-one other towns or vil ges bear the same peaceful designa on, including three Salem Centres, a ilem Chapel, Salem Church, and vlem X Koads. Sinco the Mexican rar, twelve Buena Vistas have irung into existence; eiucc the re .'11 ion, one Greenback, in Arkansas, here arc two Grceleys to ten cntcr ises. One hnndrcd and ninety-two wns verdantly begin with Green, of inch twenty-live aro Greenvillcs; lirteen, Greenfields; eight, Green nus; ;; ureeaup, anu :i uic^nutc. orili Carolina lias its Lone Lady; ow Jersey, its Long-a-eoming; and linois, its Endor, without a witch, dam is represented among his mcrican posterity by twenty-nine twns; while the more popular John milh has sixty-three villages that Dnor his name in some shape. Tho iiternity of the nomenclature of the >\vns and villages of the United tales is a fruitful and suggestive udyj but, unfortunately, endless. A n.fln till vnn f.nmnnnnili) r*;i tl ironO!' ikiijjiu-uii.wn ^? ~ O""; ly be traecd to an ambitious desire > immortalize the founder. Dodd jquires a property, and, as popula on clusters upon it, calls it Dodds orth. His next neighbor, Mr.-Grim, as a place close by, and, not to be itdonc, calls it Grimsby. Men of calth naturally desire to write them ilvcs of that ilk. Air. Carroll, tlio rincipal settler of the District of olumbia, before it became Federal rritury, called it Carrollsburg. Mr. [organ is a man of culture, and em nclies himself in Morganzio. IST. P. ,rillis goes out of himself and ca'ls is place Idlcwild. John Quincy dams writes au official letter 10 liarles Carroll, of Carrollton, and ntcs itlfrom Doilhorgan Manor. We commenccd this article with 10 statement that names are the 03-8 of family history; they arc no ss the keys that unlock to us the istory of towns and States. Let us include tho artiolo with the app!ica# 011 of this rulo to the great States irlicst founded on tho American ontinent. Massachusetts and Vir iniii wury mu jiviu raon,ivi.i^m..> Vi lose who laid down the two policies nit have always fought and warred pon our American soil. Massaehu ;tts is of Puritan ancestry, and dc ghted to name her towns Salem, oncord, Sharon, Hebron, etc. Her irly inhabitants held in high honor i? nobility and localities in the tothcr-country that connected thom slvos with the Oromwellian era, and 10 later struggle for the rights of io people. And so wo find, in that ommonwealth, towns and counties tuned Hampshire and nampden, htttham, Essex, Granvillo, liarre, !ardw:ck, Brewster, Shelburne. rnfton, etc. Jn tho equally ancient ommonwealth of Virginia, wo find io old aristocratic spirit developing j self in names which the Cavaliers delighted to honor. Her conntics are named Brunswick, Gloucester, King and Queen, King George, Prioco William, King William, Princess An ne, Princo George, Prince Edward, York, etc. Ono of its .oldest cities, Alexandria, lias its principal streets named King Street, Queen Street, Royal Street, Duke Street, and Pitt Street, All Virginia bears the impress of an aristocratic foundation. And he knows but little of his couniry's history, who cannot detect in the names of both towns and families, the Puritans of JS'ew England, the Knickerbocker element in New York, the Friendly qualities of Pennsylva nia, the Pranco-Spanish origin of Louisiana, as well as tho Cavalier spirit of Virginia. Our only past lies in our names. WILLIAM R. HOOPER. Senator Scliurz and the Duty of Recon ciliation to tlie South. Senator Scliurz 'lias largoly added to his reputation by his able and ex haustive speech, made at St. Louis on Monday last. He reviewed the career of the present Administration, and exhibited how it has disappointed every hope, and how under its aus pices the law had been converted into the very instrument of tyranny. General Grant, whatever, with iiis dogged pertinacity, lie may have proved in the field, has signally failed, either as a statesman, or a civil rulor. For these ho has no capacity. The fact is, and it has been mado to ap pear, through the sufferings and dis asters of the past few years, that on all subjects of statesmanship, he is simply stupidly dull. For these he has no capacity of, or inclination for, comprehension. lie is without ability to comprehend the true nature of our Constitution, or the character of our institutions. Iler.ce, there has been little respect or account for freo gov ernment, and hence his rule, by such men as Colliding, Morton and others, \y ii\Jj vtiv L/wuiuuJiOj jivsvui ivat u( and still in a time of peace believe in tbc hates of war. And this at a time whon both tho general welfare, the necessities of tho times, arui liborty itself, demanded tho equality of all tho States and people, tho cessation of arms, and a return to tho peaceful agencies of self-government, irrespec tive of Federal interference, whether hv ils iir>litir>'il nnwov nr t.hn linrslmr coercion of the bayonet- Events have all, with their sad history, demon strated that reconciliation was impos sible under the present Administra tion. Its hand has been against the restoration of the South. And to-day the stiiple of all the speeches made for General Grant is the keeping alive of the issues of a war closed seven years since, and of all tho passions which surround and belong to a condition of discord and dissension. !N"ot one word <i9 WC hear of a common concord and fraternity. And yet without this how can tho country ever be one in reality and iu happiness . Under Geneial Grant's Administration it has been one merely in name. The South has been left at the mercy of plunder ers and thieves. Every effort for honesty and reform has been met with the mailed hand from Washing ton, at the throat, sustaining the un principled and depraved in position, until at last hopo has almost yielded to despair. And this with free Amer ican Commonwealths, and free Amer ican citizens. These can never be free in reality until th'c mailed hand, on which the robber relies for his Dnnnnilv i J mimrtMil ?i rwl niilv be effected bj* a change in the Federal Administration. As Mr. Greeley well says, "tbo blacks have been enfran chised. The present question is the enfranchisement of the white race." (3ric of the most vital of the points to which Senator Sehurz refers in this connection, is the great duly of con ciliation to tho South. lie well says: "The first great object of our policy should have been to rcnationalizo the South, to revive among the Southern pooplo feelings calculated to attach their hearts again to the foi times of this Union. For, let us not indulge ?? * < Ka ^lnlnci/vn t)w? lml<linii* 1 A ill lliV V4 V?l llOiV/tl llliVU I II V UViUtiig w I gether by force of its component parts ! ia a basi.s upon which :i liepublic can I safely rest or long enduro. It re- j quires that bond which binds together ' the hearts of the people, and noL their i bodies only ; and to crcato that bond ; was for us tho highest object of statesmanship, In order to revive patriotic feeling and national attach-! nient in tho South, wo had to convinco i the people that we were their friends, ! and not their conquerors only ; that! we had their welfare at Jieart, and not our advantage. Only when wo made thsni believe in the purity and j unselflshnes3 of our intentions, could j wc hope to gain their affection*. Let j u.s see what was done by the Admin- j istration and the ruling parly. ' The <rreat social revolution crrown ! out of Lho war had resulted, by logical ; necessity, in the enfranchisement of the eolored people. Only by tho ex-1 crcise of political rights can tho free | laborer maintain liis independence;! but tho colored voters, untutored and ; inexperienced, fell under tho leader- j ship of unprincipled adventurers. As ! it was, a system of robbery and ruin- j ous misgovornmcnt ensued which has i hardly a parallel in history, -lost of, those States were, with incredible i rapidity, burdened with enormous J debts without any equivalent. Scores ? of millions disappeared, a?; if by magic, j in the capacious darkness of private pockets Impoverished as those States were by war, they were now stripped naked. The public expenses bccamo absurdly extravagant; the taxes un bearable. Under such loads industry [ was discouraged and (lagged, ilutcr priso sank.down with hopeless de spair. Production diminished, and incrcdiblo as it may seem, while tho rest of the country was progressing prosperously, the value of real proper ty in many of those States appeared in tho census of 1870, after five years of pe$co, far below tho figures exhib ited by the census of 18G0. Such have been the effects of so-called car pet-bag government in tho South. Who was responsible for this? Those governments were and aro at this moment carried on in the namo and under tho auspices of tho Republican party. It was through them that tho Southern people felt tho touch of do grading power. It was in them that they saw the spirit working. ' While the most reckless and rapa cious of political blood-suckers were thus plundering those communities, a system of political disabilities was maintained which excluded a large number of the intelligent and proper ty-holding men from eligibility to offico, and thus from active participa tion in tho administration of public affairs. A large number of thoso who had the groatest st.ako in good gov ernment were thus told that it was no business of theirs. While in this way on the ono sido tho work of the rk1iinrlAi*nva woa if iroo nof piUiJUUl 1^1 O It luvtltvuvvvtj IV ?l IIVV wonderful that on the other the sum mons you shall love this Governmotit lid not meet with enthusiastic re sponse. The removal of political dis abilities, although its good effects could not havo been doubted, was studiously put off until it could no longer bo denied ; aye, until the Cin cinnati Convention had shown that the question could be trifled with no longer, and when amnesty was grant ed it was done with such useless re strictions and with such a grudging grace as to make it appear that thoso who gave it would ranch rather have withheld it. It was 'simply the first victory of tho Cincinnati movement. Look over the legislation of Congress touching tho late insurrectionary States. Study attentively tho bayo net law, the Ku Klux law, as they now present themsolves in retrospec tive viow. "Not only did they, while protect ing the rights of some, break down tho bulwarks of tho citizens against arbitrary authoritj*, and by trans gressing all constitutional limits of power engender tho rights of all. Not only did they awaken in the breasts of many, however well dis posed, tho grave apprehension that a Government or ruling party assuming so much would stop at nothing, but s?cn measured servou uirocwy 10 sus tain in powor the very adventurers who, by their, revolting .systemr of plunder, were violently keoping alive the spirit of disorder which that legis lation would repress. "It is in this light that the majesty of the National Government appears to those people, not as a friend to lift them up from their prostration, to guide them out of their errors with a generous hand, and to make them lo?)k up to the national flag as a sym bol of iustico and fairness equal to all: not that, but as the ally and abetter of tho robbers who suck their blood, as tho mainstay of a system which drains their resources, blasts their hopes, emasculates their cnorgies, mocks their enterprise, and condemns them to utter poverty, distress and ruin. You honest Republicans whose cars have, been assiduously filled onljT with horrible Ku Klux stories, and whose mind is unversed in tho myste ries of party management, }'ou may look with surprise at this picture. You understand that tho affection of these people cannot bo successfully invited l>y the cry, 'You must lovo us, if it takes your last penny." ''You ask how it is possible that so wicked a game should bo carried on by tho leaders of a party wont to r\t !la nv'nmnlrvQ Tt ivmitH UVtlOU Vi 4 W.I V4?W J/. I.iv.j/iww. ? v T> VM.W be impossible lnici not that party fallen under the control of a selfish ness so unscrupulous as to put party success above the best principles it ever professed. You must fmow that carpet-baggerdom is exceedingly faith ful to the part}* except, perhaps, when its loading spirits, quarreling over the spoils, fall out among themselves. It lives npon party fidelity, and it prcachcs it as its political gospel. It relies, upon the virtue of party fidelity to cover a multitude of sins. It sjnds its representatives to Congress strong III II Ulll UVI LV UIUI1U 1IJ/ lU(ljv;i ities. They arc tho staunchcst and most zealous supporters of tho Ad ministration for value received. They nro tho household troops, always ready to march forward and back ward, and to wheel to tho right and to tho left as tho Administration man WhrttAVAi* lorn *31.1. Haul's IIKIJ uiiwu n ....iv.i,. .x-jj.-... live scheme the Administration may set up, by whatever means of partisan tyranny in caucus or in Congress, tho opposition of independent men is to be put down,"those household troops can be counted on. They faithfully aid the Administration in governing tho country?in governing you*. For that they reccivc their patronage, and b>- that patronage tho Administration aids and sustains them in their Statos. They distribute tho offices among their retainers wlio arc equally faith ful. Thus the}' organize thoir home / /M.AAti f Uham^K tttKnm f lt<Mr 4 I* n JUIXVO, Uiiuu-u ?? iiuut tilVjr iutw biiv party-at home. Thoso forces arc at their .service,* and through them at the service of tho Administration. Thus this system furnishes votes in Congress delegations to National Con ventions, boiling over with enthusiasm for the rcnomination of tho President, and it is expected to furnish electoral votes to continue hi:n in power. I suspect, however, it will net furnish enough. In the meantime earpct-bag govcn.iuout, sustained by the patron o of the Government, and, l>y?the untcnance of tho ruling, party* losti plics its trade and fills its: pobfitets, d you, honest Republicans, -wdtfder )y the lute rebels'will npfc Efccqme ral enough to vote the Republican ket." . Missouri was tlie first of the Suites which past issues woro buri?d, and 3 hands of the patriotic of erory rty were clasped over the Woody asm of war. - The object was liigli d patriotic. It was thotot'uw to v and pcace, and too ceas<en 01 rsonal government and irresponsi ; and unconstitutional-rale/danger s alike to every interest, whether property, person or freedom!' Un r the lead of Carl Sehurz and Gtatz own, Missouri was redeemed^/ind day peace prevails through, all her rders. So may wo hope that rough the patriotic spirit: of-^the who assembled at Cincinnati fcnd iltimore, the same glad result i?ay attained for the whole country, d the shackles bo stricken from the ibs of all the States and p'edpfei of i a 'AAm m An nAtinfutv fTliAfi ira/) /irt/1 to vv>mmVII uuuublj'< J. uciij luuvcu) ero will come a real peace to every mlet and fireside, and a T^pgBe, ateful to all within our vast , ox use. There will be then botfi % ose of seenrity and a realization1 of ;cdom.?Charleston Courier. : +. : "Wet and Dby Bathing,?If any e in theso days will exercise lQi.iho cd air so that cach day ho wiJl^cr ire moderately, and if fie will wear in undergarments, or none* at'all, d sleep in a cold room, tfee*fafcc ina of the skin will snffeftlittle or impediment if water is withheld months. Indeed, bathing is noj; d only way in which its neaUh/ol tion can bo maintained by itieea ing under the conditions at present isting. Dry friction of er the whole rfoco of the body, once a day, or r n l r> fnrn Antra la nlVftn nf m AM 'vice than the application of water. 16 reply of the contonarian to ffco luiry to what habit of life he at buted his good health and extreme fgc-vity, that ho believed it due ,to ibbing himself all over with a cob ery night," is significant pf an <im rtant truth. If invalids and pir is of low vitality wonl^ nse dry ction and Dr. Franklin's *^ir bath" ery. day for a considerable period, i are confident they would often bo satlv benefitted. Cleanliness is xt to godliness, no doubt, and'a aper aud judicious use of water,is bo commended jbut human beings a not amphibious. Nature indi tes that the functions of the skin x ould be kept [n order mainly 6y iscular exercise, by exciting natural ispiration by labor; and, delicious is the bath, and healtbfhl, under opcr regulation, it is no substitute tli nt: AVArnoA nf thft hodr vilhnnL rich nil the functions become ab rnal.?Dr. NichoV* Firaidt Science The Ballot in England.?Here er, voting by ballot will be the sthod of expressing tbo will of the 2 people at elections in Great Bri n. On the 15th ult, the ballot bill, rich has so long been under consid ition in the British Parliament, is fully disposed of in the House of >rds, where it had met with penis it opposition, and it has since re> ived the royal assent. The bill sscd is tbo bill of the Commons, th two amendments by the Hoose X/ords. This is deemed an expor ental measure ; indeed, the opera n of tho law ceascs in 1880, unkgg ievv bill replaces it then or earner, it there is not the slightest pro ba ity that the ballot will' ever bo sen from the people-after it has once cn adopted, though it is likely that perienee may load to many iin urements in tho details of the law ovidingfo** its use. Greeley's Mission.?"The mission Horace Greeley is to Hot out the me of rebel from the books of the" id." Thus spoko Senator Trumbull a Northern constituency a few' ys since, and the sentiment met th a fervid response from the hearts those whqgBupport Mr. Greeley for o Presidency. It is because the aiiIo nt' f lirt Smith hnliftve thnt tho ssion of Greeley iB "poace" that ey give liirn their earnest support; d when a lending and conspicuous ider of the Liberal PepuoUcMrS;" d a supporter of Greeley, givea blic expression to sueh sentiments wo have just quoted, the Southern oplc take new courage in the con :t which lies before them. Wo \'e suffered under the government liato for more than seven years? i now givo our support to a map 10 coracs to us with words ozon ation and poace?who asks ns to sp hands with the North over the >ody chasm made by tho war, and "tno name or" reoci do rorovcr >ttcd from the books of the land."i~ rouicle and Smlinel. . How to Tbeat Enemies.?Go aight on, and don't mind enemie*. thoy get in your way, walk roaod >m, regardless of ihoir spite. A ebratod character, who wu gar indod by cnemios, used to remark, hoy nro sparks whioh, if you do t blow, will go out themselves." ivo down prejudice," was the Iron ike's motto. Let this be your foel j while endeavoring to live down > scandal of those who aro bittor ainst you. If you stop to dispute, u do but as they dosirc, and open ? 3 way for more abuso. Let the or fellow talk?there will be a ro- jj Lion if you do but perform your . ty?and hundreds who wero onco cnatcd from you will flock to you, d acknowledge their error.