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" - - - * - - - - - - - s Y FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF USEFUL .INTEIG E [ a, . _ w A WEDNESDAY MORNING,, AU InaR elbc esi beaue hey w $. ?How is ~ Hi eirtdcche e, r&od st ja4cMtv -- 'eife " _th * amase iaehlepubr~ !ow st~sct> - is aai d. t . e intelietad os 40ofivthtclse and make w-ould hldt anidcmn't ihto rinse abvete cmarmon - ma~tiei ol ve eal peatta ming,hepviee and he.n - angeitey woer itlwas ve' - .~b ihi and hae to~ ed '~es prssed' no * g 1 vise man ygeaat ie@mtt~aslave -h-had ac-4 qU.4 reo enedcon al to ronpti, to voe to l the.h emtaes esd. p ossse n t ii wolhe eabsaf t e brb back.i - this -a,h bold dring and i~~s-tbey ntellierean most -io tdbalu of the css r, and k tIenweood bieizens, isafead fome would lt nidcmett aB,twho haveianytdisposition or hv e!onnevi oud 1 l&wo rel fi)~ romi,L -a I suppose ver few, theerT ez at4east, advoeati tb 4}cafa-Convbution by whiel aiersa-negro suffrage is.to4e es tabltshed. Flikowise advoeated, a e same_ tire,the propriety . tting-,egroe4 te, give testi mnry-ai-lcaes. in.Qur court- e justice. 1his; eo;wasAsternly:re sifrb foseel o'ie wov wil .li i tn n~nfe'to the negro th+ p idia efr etWe they .Qu bed p despised " crdianIy. - -Io one of my previous =eo d *Iainii atated that Profe$so s ad . en conclusivel that the negro was f an- infe-o r .ta,the white mian; ad had-, t okiggn.; ti saying this, di ->rod:efd "eiei 5.at a -so me.o the 'n eboe. seemed -t< thiink 1 did-, that God was' no ther fatf r'';=s WelW is tke wh?t . . a_ hber: " re e_e'rairfj cratiQns -.the saige..AI mag-ty'hand. They are.dowi ess, too, e140y uuder the .pro tggtion ofthe Alnig}t andegnal ly: ear 1i -1m.inthei respectiVE IO~ keres.^ i , i . w ie ha he" T em siFM-esd jtfew tp* 'a'lketh S -tea tie ol"Ui N i&breet them of he same type,d-or:aa dtieid -.aHd -the -sne aniiaal iswev ;-tme- beaay f fr *:tr rsitit -and reent n abd.,to the :ot1er irength ties. So.he ha. distinguisliedld Lweer'e grEah<Fjhe /wih< han. Ithe fornier-he haggivo a.blia ai . .Aooy bead wietr-strengiphaa less '-brain e hs.adapt tifto labr, ron Vhs poerhvk t tas given a w'hite sking 'aff1d og,bairy.less snug ndar er brain; adap ed ,,iger tMhr to and.grea,er intel ectou iiipiove ation equally,, ad' ts to b seeet h e ;k sthela'wA:re grd foihe od*' has - ,sa for , ap so Vit -'tb orse aand the neg f at "s ; LAO f rg as 121 the ' y n9man ri r faa the.*partz of the -epsot:rA -8s i st .-arg -- O,sc D MitedfA/9e et essfand so with the- negro ; he has notr"bee Sby-jd?w h 4he -same iim in science and knowlege ihedu*7e'aae inferipr o the hot-se. 4!4tshoh of makng ,r~ a8mis{s%ki&gie1fmet ost.e w ivti'tp' ode' aie race gre~imiren gaitl heeot ofur a,jak'hela o. iy gr ae~ogas..the ribof arar lendg and ietiigan.:raolfste ge insIdJia-a egi ;:adncd, eae ot fiently, a-terur Lifetio tot1/ ande1 oea-e ai; on the sobjete enemyt bt iigoaite ie mEn~iandr ute s, scflyo dferatemptins esdto filaturenti plaes in tesso ngatsiz, The nearvar Crmorue, hasscust the ost learhd fbid hetifyientrs be whitld-masve proderd,a the el1ris thost cofidhele, ftra life-time asfi thugohen ofsea tions on ther arbet. sTas the ue grad thorwity, "onveroe breated asspecifical diferent be tnthe l and ervouseyser er the tehointe. naThene-r >r. mifortun thanith foms hek kind of paricr. ehisrb acisent or msorne. inThe negros o rie the whie sman'sbhae sth,an te :>wlisn ortheicall of the aeo opsthan th as stha th of theht borse. -Theero boe,ss tin samer greate authriety,e "ofe nca bandalye spefi differente be-i tween theat whic nrous isys tem f the white man. thee ation, orjhmicall giaof"thcam T the white man as it- does from u that of the chimpaazee-that isi in -his bones, muscles, nerves and Lfibres. The chimpanzee. has not f much fnrther to progress to- be eori:e & angi'o, thai the 'iugohas f to become a-white man. This faet -- scienee inexorably demonstrates" - ': Ie agreed by *ll scieitifc men who have turned --their- attenfidn r to his- bjeet, -that'?the rapacity; by:tieisumrnerit, '- the - kull of . th *hite an =is ninety-seven ebiinehes, that is, the- average of one thousand, or, any greere. r nuumber-of skulls. The inegro-has . sixty-six cubic inehea:the..Nrth . American Iridian has sixty-three r cu.bic inches; thonative Aastralian h. as fifty-six cubic inebes." i l Charles Lyall,. than -whom there can'e.. o higher. aut'hority, says tL ie feet and hands The arms and legs o.the wh4e an and neg ro aie unlikein measurenient T.e hand of the negro is one-twelfth larger, andone-tenth broader, thair t.fiind=of the white man- his fodt =one-eighth longer, -and'one ntth roader; 4h'-the white ;his fore-ste-oristenh: *opteM a-the saie is.t o te .bouesdronz4be -kneb, Ar-.tht anklo. Vbe-._$e eton is nljke i: P. :the wpole in weight and m euwe -mnt, .ad unlike in. qvery bQne -n -the mostadmirabje.speech, of t,:. " . . Man gan-, of :i lately delivered in CGngress, (and. to whieh I am greatly idebted f?p ich that I have said,). it is y-ase t ed, on the znthority en. icen1 _that the wold d not,ofd an stance or a Y iii"a ta tiiexf net; > e e ' ti eleratidri;(ffire t ie3h a, e inteixed witine or -Tbe 6thei ofthe'rgial'rEes. So k1 With.all aninal.-The nule does -not breed at all.f =P he:"wolf and jacka., theadog and f.x,- -ave educed hybrids,. :zhivb a1way b xtinet .in'4hetird -gelte rl_n .Tese sanio als, ;le the '.o reiad .; hite ..man, wcere .ge gardel-at:oue time, s only differ eit YarieteS,.of-the samce spedies. , ipeinrelit shovs them t4 phe' 2ii differan'lrerehtiOns, as it .co-te"negro and whfte an -- J xepeatt. watI1rve- said i-n forrmer articlo, that I haye 'ver beein the fiend and prdtetor of the iegrothrough life. This my .'frinetsf ves vwl%toxeh - or me. My -houso-servants, eight dr-ten in mmber, , have :fev.er left. me7 jthe same .terms -they .did;n.hilst. s1a-es It is because l ish well 1o se hhiplaced in htf'fI poSr ste.; IHa is-uifft tao drxei'e he 1ihf 'df suffrgeidWiFbeconte el auenrd tool cof base- and -dsigning:miea. -A war/df-races w~'tensue, and- the- .-negro, being -the -weak-andJ-less intel1igent, sal eftha. great.. booni, b.etofd on them.for the ale purpose of strengthening the radicat ir.ty ! Tceai-eenjainin F. Bu'tler said 4iA in;ilititmniiths age, that alt the -rtdical party wished was,. to h'ave-"impartiaksufrage. He said that we night declare that 'no one should votoe- unless he -was a graduate of the .South Carolina College. All that "the radicals then thought of was equality be tween the races. But now, they are determined to have the negro vote, in order to radicalize the South. In the negro convention which sat the other day, in Columbia, it was claimed that, in the next Presidential election, there should be placed on the, radical ticket a negro, either for President or Vice President. It was contended, too, that the lands shouild be divided into small farms, so that each head of a family might get a homestead. If the land-owners refused this division. then their lands should be taxed so heavily as to . force .them to part with them. There is considerable in genuity in this scheme of confisca tion. The whites who vote for a convention, to avoid confiscation on the part of Congress, will find themselves nicely caught by the negroes in convention. As I have already said, they will find that, after sacrificing their honor, the rights of the State, and the prin ciples of self'government and con stitutional liberty, they have lost their lands into the bargain. An other scheme of the negroes, pro mulgated in their recent conven tion, is to have nothing taxed but property. This will release the negroes fronm all taxes, as they do not own property. Then, the p-,oerty o rhy $ti Mitt to fn tiW 11 Ied, to establish free schools -nd colleges all over the State, for the education of their cbildren, .with out expense to . the negroes.! Again, they declare in conv.ention, and have made it a part of- their platform, that the old negroes, and inf}m negroes and paupers, are to'e suixted by the property of' the At instte4 -of-t'king eare_ f their town ,gad ,par nta and'paer kindrea. -In th e twelfth: 'artice: adlopted bythis radical:. negi-oa inention, theuaoWopenlyetheir pipose of disfranchising allwho: have serv eed in the Co'fdeJrate am-ni, or aided and abetted the war. They are disposed to take a.step., and a wide one, beyond the r'adicala iu Congres. The white radicals have disfranchised only those whohave filledpublic offices;brrt the black radicals are determined to extend it to. all .who were in the army, which includes .almost the entire white population. ~ This will be accomplished in that comvcention which-the white people are going to-vote for-a coniventioi to dis franchis' thomse,ves; confiscate thgir,ropety arflpa:ee the Stato. as'lju.tely- .under -tbdce otrol t aegroes. rs there ever efl folly and =adntss4eaid"pfsbcfore inthe: oivilizod .worild? in 'sack -cloth-.and':ahes, they will have to repept of thoi- stupidity- and dis hoaor. - - This negro.. radical convention (_fnrther demands a i-evision of, .our laws and the re-organizatioii of our courts. They,a set of paupers, ignorant and debased, are'to gov ern the State, and the white men, wl own all the property, are to pay the expiense. ftii4 :State. They speak ofbuilding raitroads! No dou.bt -a thousand:sehmes:will be. concocted ..for spending the white maa's. ony,'orithe.benefit ofthe negro, before tiey ':proceed totake it fror hin' by -tt:cor fraudulent legislation.' - Hornble, most horrible, is the future of our poor Sta- ad degraded 'piopIe. Noond'deems to ralize-ur %$ 1e situation. It is noiw as.it was in the- days -of- secession. :'We are standing, like idiots, on:. a.aga zine.of powder, flourishini ln our hads a. fire-brand, and Iug~hing at the beautiful ring of ribbon it makes in the dark. The explosion wil come, must come,. sooner- or hater,-and 4bring with it - univeisal death .att destruetion tothe peo ple iad-pioperty of the:State,- - Ih Liberia. where therelia. mation:!of Jiegree, sent,,r'rn the United.'-States, aid wbgra, they1 base. tormed a- Goverriegt,io hiema.n is~ -allowe.d ,o..hQld fox aay offiee.' This .- wis*-.an gapetTand they have thovught.,. it naess&y Tomake This exelysio?f ?Qi theji- 6wirpeace adjrdsperit. IIave~ liot The w'hite''nien ime ~~~ iighi to .4chdd6 .tne negrd froro - ~the right -of .-u~frage,; wh.e4hef -know . that. thee' negr,oes.@-.a majority- in the State, and a will seiza th~e Governmiht ofthe-tate, if prited to vote? It is idle folly to tell t'he pe'ope of Sohth Carolina' that capital pul-' immigrants will -nfow .intg the States wvhen reconistructed on ~tbo Black Republican platforn..- On the contrary,-*as soon as this .negro government is -organized, ;every dollar of foreign capitatl in South Carolina wil~be withdrawn, and not one ceirt will.come here seek ing investment. Nor will any foreigners more here to settle, under negro rule, andI the confu sion and disturbance which it will ive rise -to in the State.'- Mr. Calhoun predicted, years ago, that if the negro was set free, the Northern people would insist on his right of suffrage, and if allow ed, the negroes would seize the Government, and the white peo phe would have to leave the State! He further said, that the former owners would lose all influence' over their freedmen, wvhose symp pathies and partialities would be for Northern men and vile omis: saries sent here to control them. I think i-t is pretty generally ac knowledg'ed, even now, that all~ control of. the negro, in the com-1 ing election, is already gone from their-former masters. Gen. ilamp-' ton and his friends had just as well try to control a herd of wild buffaloes in the vast prairies of. the West, as the negro vote of Columbia. B. .F. PERRY. GREENVILLE, S. C., July 27, 1867-, With what fear, reverence, arpd holy joy, should we open the Bi ble, the book of truth happiness, which God's heart open ed to man; and yet the whole, and every part of it.~is seereted from him. andl hi1 nrr nnI imnlenetrn.ble' veil. A Batch of Blacks in Congress, and what then ? -The New York Horald .is -ever prepared to veer rcund with - tkze current,-and its many.changes. of course during the last few months prove itsauxiety not to niss the occasion for increasing it eputa . tion Yor enterprise ,sagayity anf i1consisatei :are thaii one- it lias'hinted't'aet te attif- 1ond be fx'etfu' aid snappihtfi- d&-e trine of legro equality were push ed:too far, and in an editorial .ab lishedeon- Frinay last,-. it makes the-issue fairly and then squarely-: meets it. - The. Herald,alludes. to Mr. Sum ners' adnionition tlat within twelve nonths..there -would .be in the Unitced States Senatoa spriink ling of colored 'Sou thernfenatoar, and says it wil ndt ;b enrpised if the outside States send teii or l twenty such to the hails of 'Co gress.V 1n tise estinato- -that there illf be -in tlo -South fike hundred- thoasand black- voters gairst ix hidred and fifty thou saud white voters -And-that,--. k lowing -or-the disfl-anchised-.- s :es, the indiffere-te disgas= e'f khe- hites'who are not-dihm chised and the: fraoions :of-ths ihites whi.h wil - go wi =th blacls;-'fror the Pof&nae" o the Tid..rai de,'thie Rs 1i4elic n= ih ti.irbiMack vote -an viiie sdp p'rt,,yill hold the gaame ..in .their olen hands.= The Herald co ntin ues. as blos : - So, frol.the facts and: fiues before-us.1le gota' iluatioN of tiligs-:wi"raants -the.. eono iion t rl tho'1publican :>ar.f wi Y carry nearly aIl, if nor al1E. tiese: tow outside revolatitnized ~ #ut, drn States-in. their wdrk dfr-eeo - strueieri:--Nor is -it ikyb-thcde tlie -blacks, cou titiig in 'fl tiesStatesle bufljrd $tiegh of th4e party will consent to d .,Q, the work without .ny of -itt ge wards. They have.only tp.4v" nd a share of-the honourszand .eies to~ 't ten. - Hence;. wirnay eon dontly expect, and during the present Congi-ess, that4frintd Iing of meinbers of African deseen iu both Houses suggested bF_ Sei ator.Sumier. We are calledt.ej, to iuuire whab-will be.'the- m ola tfec? in the potltital workl: ef_o t bis :start& ii r in-novat-ion upon .tr- -ok t = der qf things 9 We nay 'is that iq ~gai proclyz a itsft hroun negry :vdigtL4 Intaa )of-ad inIprss1in upon the- p&rbaie n;ind. throughout ths MtN.~ %W appr*en&i thif'the 'ret r -&de ; for we.knokv that.the is-egi;4ger walel.f wbite .prdQJu ti-inggaiiset the iiegro. in .the1 North -than -exists in the South. Phis prejadiue eleeted Buchanai bad th:e.: Oharlesto.n OofweiitiQn onsenteC to, unite upoj.-hs. We may expeet, then, :whe4n -the backs dissinme the- political bal aee-.ofpower of ten -reonstrue-] &-Sonthern States, and sen d.up ~heif black representativeerto Con ress, thbat (here will be -a: revolu io.pgry reaction against theni among he w?ites of the IYorth which will pset the Republican party. T his ay be the real object of thosej eading Southern white politicians ho are urging" their, people to he experiment of allowing the Radicals and the blacks all the ope they may desire in this- busi nets of Southern reconstruction. et 'usdpsh this thing of negoro. eguality, say these Souithern lea-!I ers, into Congress, and then -the aboring white masses of the1 orth against this Southern ne ro political balance of power will1 ake the alarm, and a Northern eaction of the whites against the1 lacks will be the inevitable re alt ; and thus the Rlepublican ne ~ro party will be destroyed by its wnl weapons. This will, in all probability, le. he solution of the experiment of' he p)olitical organization of the lacks against the whites in the outh-a reaction of the whites . ~gainst the blacks and the Republi ,an party in the North. Meantime, 3 owever, we suspect that the pontaneous and powerful popu- e ar movements North and .South ~ n behalf of General Grant for the accession will carry everything i efore them ;but with the settle-I ent of this question there w ill L nquestionably come a decisive C fortern revolution on thiis other t nd monmentous-issue of negro po- e itical anid social equality.a Bre1ad i event v-five ner cen t 3 To-be Saved for Reference.' We present below a table care fully compiled by an accomplished r statistician who has revised and revised'it until there can be no - possible doubt of its perfeet eor= r rectness. It points a moral, and is worthy-tho deliberate c6nsidera- I tion of all 'vlro come ubuet itsi hea'd. Draiyour iferce'from it; ong men. "Calculate as mueh as you please, but you eanino.tfalsify 1 it in any. particilar,.unless. you take' as exceptions, w bich.by t he way4. only.*proves he. r.nle, embers, of Congress. Here it is:.". Ten ,loafers:make,one g-o shop : On grog shop 'iike fifty rnk ards. . . Fifty drunka:ts -uri fiftyffmi? lies. - Fifty families fill one poar"house Qne poor house and jail'. maie I one great; il of costs.. - One great bill of costs make one L poor town. One poor townn drains the couity treasury. I One:bankinptA. asury is agrat t statetx-...r .-..-.- -. ne groa stte tae t exh'iiit. the natiopal fund. Two looM .kes onevish. 1 -T wo.wisenahe onie. Ean1. Two alt&nae one iolvit.iton; f Tree -invitatTona 1ia . o.ne sliatn. -? - - t Four- drarns= Iiiakd one non siii. 'Five non. scruples *mal one C spree.. _.. Two sprees-aike.o;dchigL. Twcv.liigbs-reake one tiooz.. j T Wo boozes make one how-como- ' vou-so. - T aiot come ouso'S -oa e-n drunk n x d: o e-:frt. of ! deiru.tf-f rin T-brea _ti-sf delriun t tredens make ori.death.:_ NrAIysmi .PR.ESaW4E pears-t at the inewspaperfortfi t !9pCeW'ay 1tfhet th- eerse,t af t j tifie . ThoetNYork eradh hasa thlj dismissed.a large. number of employees from_'its.edi torial --rooms, -Some forty. men ' wre isniesed in-alt.. This great rednetion in force is owing- to the i es.treme dullness of btrsness. A- o though ~thc.lela14 is the -iches! paper in the*"orld;exeeptingper baps the London Tnnes,. and- re- h eives the iost exorbitant Pries or dvertisernents, it cannt staad h the pressure and is eompelled. to reduce expecs.' . - .If t ose Wiho rcandwa'pt and criticise newslapo.nerrl rultyna3dersto9st the va.st- am ounit af a.bor and exgense wh.ich, mnst t be iueurred- to-get up a god. paper, r th w5nld be indu4gnt t.ofrards #htAhey deemr L *rant of hidnst . Gyy aility :adTh o t o zfvAj; pp'ro'ye. It takes- ai eombinat4onj tj iraih#r and-enei--gy, to' keep - in bade ThH-'head of .irtellectu~al and phye~nl it ee'sr? o>inake i s t go4d.paer. af-ta ciigg tion.L must becpaisl. .. B.ohskserig sins tEmd advertisemeno~ts -age -ne-o 2'ssiary to-support a paper' The >rie of sujscription-is kept-sdow4~ h -very little beyond. thle cost 'f ixtensive advertising .pagnage d io paper can thrive.~ A CI1A5CE FoEl .OJN.G .t.: [usbands must certainly. be-.int e: emand in Virginia. The Nor- r olk Virginian suggests the in-it ~orporation of a "Grandc Matri-s nonial, Domestic Felicity and ~nti-Caudal Association." which is< hall be .empllowered to procure 01 ~0.000 marriageable men. to be f lisposed of by lottery, with tickets s anging from $2.50 to $10, each fc ;ieket to draw one of the hus >ads, who are previously to be e ut up in assorte'd lots. The Char ottesville Chronicle approves of o he plan, but considers the prices oo low. It believes "the scheme gi vill take like wild-fire among the w Lestitute females interested." Ifi Ssupport is guaranteed the hus ands, it is probable that the pro- st ectors of this scheme can easily p enire their full quota of men. The ci vhole country swarms with young leI nen, whose ability to make $2.50 t s too doubtful-to allow of their re- ei ecting this chance. p In some of the fashionable T hurches strangers are seated ac- o ording to dress. If elegantly de ressed, they are shown up the v road aisle near the pulpit ; if di rell dreesed, they will secure a tr itting about half way up the r read aisle ;if ordinarily dres sed,ith hey are disposed of in sonme oneri f the side pews under the gallery, s d as near the dloors as possible. 'rily, --to ihe poor the gospe! is ,-c.eel hitat a ru:ii'anc. A .H I E EENDrNEG PIsODE. Che London , Morning Herald% nMlita4:y errspondent gives the ollowig: story.: :. : Parr lihing in a hale. sear Possiiitz, had a wife. and yo' hildren, and sdc1 was that 'd-. nan's terror of' the Prussiali'< vhen she heard "they were co-n ng,~that her huIbaind to, satisf ier, placed her in an11n toitt ' ellar;-with her twe ~ftti Ad built rp the doorway,;~ea ome food :insid&. The "PrussianW. mtered the place, and, among >thers,4"aiged- this poor n. to ecomp$u.them, ithi 4isGVe . nd eai-tVfoi f d6yjo t aid: -B3ut the man 'was ra mn froni plaerto plae, andatIar - vlT he tas stfdred to retnr ad -re'ch hisvW hoiise, se i'i Lays-had elaCpsd. On the~*v. ) h beg'n' to calculate ho' itthiifood ie.ha'd left witlf. rife"and cbldren and or ,ti-icken atthe'dreadfu*''thii , bat tiwir cries_ ,nigbt not '. ieard, .his. air, is. said ,to havw ured ,white . on- his hoipew $ o rnev His feary were .bt,eow, eak i otore dewn. tc 'Moy -teh-defbr those s,e deae ti,--. )nit-on'3 found threeJif les- "'e' sTafdenurd bv ~a-ts. Reas6# eFt-1imathtcdreacUu sighS e is now in.the hspital a t Jo nRa_.is sce a war ? i in the Bauerpfl@e, 0, tk ille, which resulthd-n ac e : -uptur . between -the p4.1ishdes Che other dgy, in coi sequence uk breahin the Bankerrre 1cor'pribtedi bz Mr' -V m, ibl.sher. of 'tb. he~ ud '-mt,~ :r eelcd an,. ord bat he .must not do any.:ip riting, 4thder any MCUn k fak the ,Basner.- Regasdib. bis oraer-as an dnwarranOtb erfetelce witIr hiswhies*f 1 Vp idoff ant discharfed'4lhe om positors in -his of'e bdrg1nf 6 thd Union, and'Mr. Wattedr,' ftheBanner,' iet North t'o~.* ur.e cainpositors for both e _ shpeaits who are not nkc c f thelUnig. 3[an i4e snl.4 roprietors and edit9rs. of, .tgg,. )ur$.al$ a& are pratieat prntpo. are rolled up their-ls sa one -vigorousyto wr u elp..ain be obtained. -'The Typ& raplicad Union printers, are-.1 eedirigly -belligerent, aid'me6t Whtit om to the bitter e. A SAD OceURRENCE.-d. sad fs stroplie has ocedIredF near Pr sburg, Ill.. Three little c.hildren, me'dHarr pf, itho ly'd2diea ber ~ig i.lnot recturi,. and it w'as aedthat thaey Jrtd.gcnehate the6 ver an'd inect t heir deth-a. fear t afterward proeod to .be te me,. Whien the first-eanno& was rd:ai .Perrys'urg, oigthe. 2nern, goft,be4th,.ad whiil.e Mr. Hp,r etwas standing on- the bank af eTi''rer, looking in The. direbioan [the spot w'.ere his lost chikben ere thoughtt i.e gone dows.n e saw tIhe ~dies-af his- thr4e tib shyiet the audae; ,bih'ed igee'ri 'the ecd emb q*$f eth. ~ -. A W-4t ANEnaoT DuR far a refielddier of straction was travelling by rail )ad towards the-frist,adwish rg-to journey in comfort, took his at in a vacant ear.:- isi visious 'luxurious ease were, however, ondisturbed by the appearane ['a courier, who pompously mi rmed him that the ear was re rved for General -, wlien the ~llowingx colloquy ensued: "Hell, bc .isus. here is room 10agh f'or me and the gineral ." "Yes. but I must hiave the rest the ear for his staff." "Staff, ha-then, be dad, till the neral to stiek his staff out of the indow." Salt Lake advices to the 8th in ant give the particulars of a rticulars of a shoeking massa - near Glenwood, in S6vern Val v. A man anld his two daughi rs, aged respectively fifteen and hten years, were captured by a rty of Indians, led by Black awk, a blood-thirsty fiend. b old man's brains was b"ateni it with clubs, but the fate of his LPghters was still worse. After olating their persons, the In ans put them to death with ex eme- torture, by thrusting u g-knotted pine sticks intco eir bowels, causing a most hor e death. Their bodies were on afterward discovered. The eigrht hour excitement hais