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A pamily Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &c. VoL XIX. NEWBERRY, S. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1883. No. 10 EVSRY THURSDAY MORNING, At Newber,s 8.'C. YY THO8. F. GRENIKER, Editor and Proprietor. T'ernss, $.oe per efssasus, S- invariably in Advance. -The pper is astoppd at the expiration of ime for wh it is The H mark denotes expiration of sierption. BI h 8$T 4ND BO8T STOCK OF OLOTHING EVEI IDITED II EWERRY, CAN BE FOUND AT 1RIRT& i 1WCuPPOCKS, Every Article In the inne of GENTLEMEN'S WEAR, FROM A FINE PAIR OF Shoes up to a Hat. Q ER WEAR a Specialty. A FINE ASSORTMENT OF lotWing for Youths. nno cement No.11 We wioffer specisl inducements, for the nest suty days, to all who may want de Clothing or Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, &e. Our bargain Sable has been replenished by adding thereto many garments in good styles and sithout lfeet from broken suits, all of which will be e g do a way, without regard, to eeat. This feature is peeially fuil.in Yo:k'asnd:Boys? Clothing. tall and get N 1-Overcoats fr Men, Youth and Rap as low as two dollars. RIGIT& J. W. 0OPPOK. Jan. 4,898l-tf.. .Wf8eeUaneeus.. ifEffOIllA S ARF COMING AflNOW18 TRETINE TOPRE PARE FOR TEN. IET .VRIETY SF TISPISAL FRIT IN EARnT. Fresh Oranges Every Week. RANANAS, COCOANUTS, G.C RAPES, SNertheim Fruits. Peanuts, R Ian Nuts, Citron, Currants. WOrders illed with dispatch. C. BART & COs, CHARLESTON, S. C. Nov. 80, 41-Sm. suBSCRIBE FOR.THBE WEEKLY PALMETTO YEOMAN, COLUMBIA, W. C. It Is an 8 page paper, designed for the peo Alfled with interesting matter-Pamifly - g, News, Markets, &c. Subscription: nYear, $1.50; Seven Months, $1.00: - Three Months, 50 Centspyabl In ad vance. For Sli Names anda ine Dollars an noon paper, Is $4 as year. -C. N. MoJUNKIN. do-ti Editor and Publisher. Clubbed with the HEALDt at $3.25. CRAND (JRAi IIBTEL, COLUMIBIA, S. C. THOUGKLY RENGYATKD, REFURNIISDAND REFITTED. -TAS, S.0G To 53,90 PER SY. J0IN T. WILLEY, Propriet'r. *No'.10. 4i-tf. OR NOVELS For the Seaside, Chimney Side, Sunny Side, Shady Side, Right Side, Left Side, or any other side. A large lot just received at the HERALD BOOK STORE. Feb. 5, 6-4t Passen2ers on both the up and down Strains have the usual time for DINNER at Aiston, the junetion-cl -the G. & C. R. R., and the 8. U. k-e. R. R. Pare well ptrepared, and the chare rea sonable. MRS. M. A.E ELINS. Oct 9, 41-tf. WRIGHT'S HOTEL, COLUMBIA, S. C. This now and elegant House, with all modern improvements, is now open for the reception of guests. S . L. WRIGH~T & SON, Mar. 19, 12-tf Pro rietors. BR. E. E. JACKSON, iIRCMI8T AN (ItMIST, COLUOMBIA, S. C. Removed to -oee two doors next to Wheelerliouse. Orders promptly attended to. Ap.l, 15-tf .1scelaneous. I Can Tell You How to B Tour Own Doctor I If you have a bad taste in your moutl sallowness or yellow color of akin, feel d spondent. stupid and drowsy. appetite w~ stead, Irequent headache or dizziness, ye r lions." Nothing will arouse yot Liver to act on and strengthen up your sy tem equal to SIMMONS' HEPATIC COMPOUNC Or Liver and Kidney Cure. REMOVES CONSTIPATION. RELIEVES DIZZINESS. DISPELS SICK HEADACHE. ABOLISHES BILIOUSNESS. CURES JAUNDICE. CURES LIVERCOMPLAIN7 OvERcoME s MALARIA4BWOD POISONING. REGULATES THE STOMACH. .WILL REGULATE THE LIVER. WILL REGULATE THE BOWELf THE LIVER AND KIDNEYS an be kept perfectly healthy in any c; mate by taking an occasional dose of SIMMONS' HEPATIC COMPOUND, TE GREA T VEGETSBLE UVER AND KIDNEY NEDICIE, DOWIE & MOISE, .PBOPRIETOB8, WHOLESALE DRUCCIST: CHARLESTOi, S. C. E ':FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. :I' And in 1jewberry by Dr. S. F. FANT. - Nov. 5, 4.4y. WANTED, 15,000 TONS 0OTTON. SEED. Highest cash price paid for Cotton See lelivered in car load lots at any R. R. De )ot or Steamboat Landing in South Cara lina, Georgia or North Carolina. Highes ias price paid for Kerosene, Card an, Whiskey Barrels. FOR SALE, COTTON SEED MEAL. The Jest and cheapest food for all kind >f stock, and the cheapest and best fertilize in the market. Write for pamphlets con ,aining analysis by Dr. C. U. Sheppard state Chemibt, and directions for use, to CHARLESTON OIL M'F'G. CO., 28 Broad St., Oharleston, S. 0. Dec. 7, 49-8m.' GERMAN KAINIT, (Direct importation.) ~ PERUVIAN GUANO (Direct from the Agent of the Peruvian Government.) FISH GUANO, (6 to S per cent. Ammonia.) Nova Scotia Land Plaster. SOUTH CAROLINA GROUNI PHO.SPHATE, Fine ground and of high grade. For sale by HERNANN BULWINKLE, 1B1WS WHARF, . CHARLESTON, S. C. Dec. 14, 5-8m. Docs atud Statomresp. NE MORE, AGAI Ie6p it Before the6Publi The largest and best stock of BOOKS, STATIONERY FANCY ARTICLES Ever ahown in Newberry, at the~ Comprising in part Blank Books, Memorandum Books, Pock4 H~i Books craPBooks Bibls, cellaneous Boks, and oter Photo. and Auto. Abms, Visiing Card rate Bor,Bristo Board A B C Blocks. riigPprsuhas Note Lettr Cr Ew Ienks-blac, ble, prle, rd, Slate Pencils, Card Cases. noes, Checks, Games, Toy Paints Slates? toy and plain, Rubber REmgs, Era sers, Chalk Crayons. rancy Papetesi, Colored Paper, ia DIesks, Work Boxes, Noa h's Arks, Pens, Tags, McGill's Fasteners. And any othe articles not enumerate CH EA P FOR CASH. Thos. F. GRENEKEII PROPRIETOR HERALD 8OOK STORE, Nov. 30, 48-tr. ROBSON'S COTTON AND 00RJ FERTILIZER. RONsorS coNFOUND .ACID PHOSPHATI These grades are richi in all the essentia :onstitoting first-class articles, carefull prepared from best materials. Our lot experience in the trade, together with Pro 3hepherd's analysis, are guarantees tha they are adapted to the wants of census For sale at market rates for cash, time < iotton. J. N. ROBSON & SON, Jan. 11, 9-.aos 68o t. . lad"y.. p NOW I LAY ME. Golden head, so lowly bending, Little feet so white and bare, Dewy eyes, half shut, half opened, Lisping out her evening prayer. Well she knows when she is saying, "Now I lay me down to sleep," 'Tis to God that she is praying, Praying him her soul to keep. Half asleep, .and murmuring faintly. "If I should die before I wake" Tiny fiugers clasped so saintly "I pray the Lord my soul to take." 0, the rapture, sweet, unbroken, Of the soul who wrote that prayer ! Children's myriad voices floating Up to heaven, record it there. If, of all that has been written, I could choose what might be mine, It should be that child's petition, Rising to the throne divine. Inedt (toqp. A IitMP SDRPRISE. -0 During the summer of 187-a merry party, ten of us in all, camped l out in the Adirondack wllderness. - There were three guides-I mention the guides first because they are I the most important members of a camping party-two gentlemen, two children, two ladies, the children's old maiden aunt, myself and an s English nurse to help take care of r the i uuay-m.wewrm -e glad to see him. D. M.C sson, who is just home gralthe Nastville Medical College, shotssee, was in town Monday. - e heale highest honors of his class. for Robert Green, of Pennsylvania, vas a schoolmate of Maj. Suber's timer, and whose sister married Mr. Aas Crooks, of our County, was in .last week. ,veni ,dit Tuesday two ad ladies, Mrs. sd rt and Mrs. Shealy, of Lexin Od Newberry on their way to Jala alwf rail. This was their first ride e cars. cam Isaac S. Boyd. the General scart of the London Americanl cor in ion, whose office is at Atlanta, m isited.Newberry last week. He Stheyphew of the Rev. Mark Boyd. buck ing left in charge of a guide, and after talking it over a while the gentlemen finally agreed to take all the guides with them, and just be. fore dusk started for a pond some miles distant from our camp. We watched the boats until they passed out of sight, and then stroll. ed about the shore until it was dark. Then dra~wing near the tents we sat down en some logs around the campfire. Touching a match to a Shuge pile of brush hard by we sa. gazing upon the flames as they leaped upward, roaring and crack ing, and filling the forest with a cheerful glow. Eeyone, we suppose, knows that being courageous in broad day. Llight is one thing, and being coura Lgeous in the dark is another. We had been as brave as lions befor'e sunset, but I think the feel ing that we were alone in this im. mense forest miles and miles from a hunter's tent made us feel a little nervous, for I noticed that we start 'ed at every rustling of the bushes, looking up anxiously if the wind gently stirred the branches over head, and the English nurse jump. ~ed at least a foot as a loon sent forth his mocking cry. "Was that a panther, eh?" she 'asked in a frightened whisper. "0, no indeed," replied the chf1 dren's aunt, and yet the feeble at. tempt at a laugh ended in a little shiver, and I saw her glance quick ly over her shoulder in a scared esort of way. Piling several logs of wood oii the fire to make it last as long as Ipossible, we withdrew to our large sleeping tent. -The English nurse headed the procession with an old rusty hunting-knife she had found among the -cooking utensils. Rob. the youngest boy, lugged a broker oar into the tent, while aunt brought Iup the rear with a tin pan and pud. ding stick. "I have often read that any loud si noise will serve to frighten away Ywild beasts," she whispered to me, r. pnid I thought these might be Lhandy to have with us." After securely fastening tHie can. Svas flaps at the entrance of the tent, we lay down on our bedsno hemlock boughs, but we didntt seem to be very sleepy, in fact we were too nervous to sleep at once. I was just dropping into a doze when I heard a sound in the distance-a kind of prolonged howl. I raised my head to listen-so did aunt. "What was that?" she whispered. "O, nothing but another loon," I answered, as calmly as I could, but I knew very well it was not a loon. Eor a few moments all was still. Again the same unearthly sound broke the stillness of the night. This time it seemed nearer-a long dismal howl. The children's aunt rose to a sit ting posture. The English nurse asked in a frightened whisper, "In dians, eh?" "Panther, eh?" "Nonsense," returned L 'iThere are no panthers here, and as for In dians, there isn't a red man within a thousand miles." Here I stop ped. My hair was braided down niy back in a Chinese pig-tail, and it seemed to rise straight in the air as a gust of wind brought to our ears a third howl, followed by a chorus of unearthly yelps. We sprang to our feet. I felt some one pulling at my dress and heard Rob's voice-the oldest boy was fast asleep: "What is it, auntie? is it a wolf?" Then I knew that his eyes were as big as butter-plates. "Whatever it is it shall not hurt you, dear," said I, putting one ' I on his shoulder, and feeling The the other for the rifle which n nof the gentlemen had placed in usual rner of the ten' that very af thissu culatecon. sible ieunt, where is the rifle?" Real Eid aunt, who had a horror of were,*ns, confessed that "only a few durinpents before she had carried (t of the tent and laid it down i "re bushes with the butt end to Pros the camp. son, Jut it wasn't loaded," I replied boily. Sil Vell, dear, rifles go off some Worl when they ain't loaded," she No.' t" odd,h wered. I knew by this that aunt was very 'nervous or she never would have made such a foolish speech. "Our last hope is gone then," I said with a groan. "Now kee still g ran Q. Fellers, Jan. 30, Perh 200 acres in No. 9, bound~ed by aotl Pat Bowers and others, $2,700. inton Birooks to Ame1Ma Brooks, ing 518, 1833, 103 acre0 in No. 7. Tided by' lands of &. G. DeWalt >thers, r ominaZl price. Engl!gal J.Lake and Lucy C. Long alonE to Sarah A. Longshore, Dec. 28, hr49~ acres in No. 6, bounded by hr; of J. B. Floyd and others, $350. agair,zabeth J. Lake and Sarah A. be-shore to Lucy C. Longshore, bee28, 18, 49( acres in No. 6, faint ded by lands of J. B. Floyd and anyti4Longs.hore and Sarah A. "Hshore to Elizabeth J. Lake, Dec. '250 acres in No. 6, bounded by of J. B. Floyd and others, $350 what y Wheeter toMr& v crackling and rustling of twigs, the noize of long leaps through the underbrush,. and then, oh, horror ! the sound of animals rushing madly around the tents. The children's aunt had been peeping through a small hole in one side of the tent. "Look ! for mercy's sake, look !" she gasped. I put my eyes close to the tent and there, rushing wildly about, were four great, lean, shaggy brutes ! By the light of the camp fire I could see their glittering eyes, red tongues and sharp white teeth. I drew back in horror. "Try the tin pan," said I. Rob beat a lively tattoo with the pudding stick. For a moment the patter of paws ceased, only to be gin again more madly- than be fore. "0, dear !" moaned aunt in de spair, "Any decent would wolf have been afraid of a camp fire, to say nothing of suc'h a racket as this." She seized the oar and put her self in a war-like attitude. Just then one of the creatures outside brushed against the tent while another ran sniffing about and even ventured. his nose under the canvas flaps. "Something must be done," ex claimed aunt with the air of one re solved "to do or die," "I have of ten read that a wild beast w.ll human eye. "Then she drew her self up looking the picture of a veritable Lady Macbeth. "The trouble is, I can't look in four pairs of eyes at once." "And while you were staring at one wolf the others would eat yon up," I answered. "Young woman, this is no time for jesting," said aunt, solemnly. "Heaven knows what will become of us." At this instant it flashed before my mind that there was something familiar in the sound of the howl ing outside. I took another look through the little loophole, then whistled softly. Dropping the hunt ing knife I had been brandishing and running to the entrance I be gan untying the canvas flaps. "Aunt," said I, "listen ! Do you hear? Those are not wolves, they are dogs; I am sure of it." In another moment four great, tawny hounds were leaping about me, putting their paws on my shoulders, nearly knocking me down in their attempt to express their joy. I led the way to the tent where our supplies were stored, and throwing them some food knew from the greedy way in which they seized it that they had been off on a long trail. If often happens that hunting dogs get lost while on an animal. In such cases they al ways make their way to the nearest camp. After the hounds had satis fied their hunger they followed me to the sleeping tent. I found the children's aunt and the English nurse pale but calm, with the happy Rob between them. We l4ft the tent flaps open and the cherry firelight shone inside the camp; the largest dog stretched him self before the entrance as if to say: -'I'm going to keep watch here to night," while the others took their places by the children's beds. Then we fell asleep, safe, indeed, under the watchful care of our new found friends. OUR NEW YORK LETTER. From our own Correspondent. WHOLESALE TRIBUTE TO THE GREAT AND GOOD-A HOLOCAUST OF IN CENTS-RAPACIOUS OFFICIALS Si lDULGING IN sUB-EQUINE-AB terelRACTION-sTABLE-DOoE LOCKING -A LOOMING IssUE OF THE DAY sucelMINOUsLY LAID OPEN TO VIEW CDUSTRIAL CONVERSION OF A a bi OUs MAN-OF-wAR - LENTEN aWoe AND FAIR .ON LIGHT FAN ShrijTC TOE-FREAKS OF FAsHION ly OsIBLE CONsEQUENCES OF noW,R PTITIOUs MAsQUERADES ThisKE CARE OF NUwm"R ONE. berr*Ew YOnK, March 1st, 1888. o nto' Birthday, like all ~gas, broke up business gen efIyin the way we all know by experience we have to expect, and yet for which no one to my know ledge ever gave any attempt at a rational explanatioIn. There were the usual patriotic celebrations, and a good deal of wine and hard cider under various disguises were offered as a sacrifice to the names of the Father of his Country, and posthu mously of all the immigrants who pour in at the rate of a million or so a year. Some of them had a celebration yesterday. It was the funeral of sixteen little Bohemian and Polish children who were crushed in a panic when fire broke out in a school conducted by some Sisters of Charity. And the under takers have their eyes on some more victims who still endure agon izing remnants of life. Of course the Building Department is now as noisy, active .and inconsequent as so much pop corn, and old - Pop Esterbrook laments the loss of that wonderful bill of his which, undeI the deft ministration of the Real Estate Chronice, the Legislature squelched last year. He also com plains of a paucity. of inspectors. If they devoted more time to their ostensible duties and less to spy ing on honiest msen and mousing after "perquisites," I fancy the number would be sufficient. Of the kind we have, thiere are too many. The Coronrs jury.. who sat on the remains were- nearly killed by the odors in an alleged playroom, which rather reflects on the Board ol iealth, another much-talk-and-lit tle-do uanna There has been .a rumor that Mr. Vanderbilt, the son of his father, has become hopeless invalid in mind and body. If true, it is quite sad. Of course the story -has been contradicted, but the man of billions remains in deep seclusion. The old struggle between Dem ocrats and Republicans is becom ing rivalled in importance by the fight between free traders, tariff for revenue and high tariff men, and the way the special organ of the latter, the Protectionist, or "Pirate Technist" as it is called by a pun ning opponent,. has been working up public sentiment, Is annoying. It is presumed the paper has'some pretty heavy backing, in view of the fact that it has been getting up expensive public meetings, and circulating several issues of late of 150,000 copies. Our prime pro ducers seem to be tending to free trade as against our Eastern man ufacturing interests. It does seem hard that a farmer should pay $20 fora suit of clothes that an En glishman or Canadian pay $10 for, but if the duties were taken off the people whose wages run up the prices of domestic goods would be starved out, and if they all went to digging potatoes or raising corn produce wouldA t. bring as much as it does now, and the farmer would find it just as Lard to pay $10 for his clothes as he does to pay $20 now. Benevolence is all very fine, but charity begins at home, and for my part I want cVy folks to be comfortable, ad ,perhaps they wouldn't be if we got cheap Cooly labor, whether here or in India or. China, to make all our goodsfor us. Gorringe, the Naval officer and engineer who brqught over the obelisk and set it on end, and who, on the Pinta in the winter of 1878, brought over news that the Span. iards had knuckled down about the survivors of the Virginius massacre in . Cuba, a very solid man, with a smooth, benign face, has resigned his position, not unnmingled with disagreement with Secretary Chan dler, and is going into iron ship building. He wants his materials free and then says he doesn't care that wages here are high-he'll try and make them higher-for with American grit, genius, improved labor-saving machines and hand and brain-work applied just where they will do the most good, he can compete with the shipbuilders of the Clyde or anywhere else, and get tihe best of them too. Gorringe is a good. fellow. Long may he wave ! It is understood a number of capitalists with very big bank accounts are backing him. As you are probably aware this is a season to be observed with great quiet by numerous religious people. But everybody doesn't keep Lent, and the maddest, wildest ball of all, that of the Arion Society, came off the other evening. There were 20,000 present and the ex penses, direct and incidental, were estimated at $250,000. Many of our "highest -society" were there, it is said, under close disguises, and decorous matrons and discreet dam sels managed, just out of pure curiosty of course, to see a great many curious things, and If they staye4 late no doubt got quite too awfully shocked. Fashionable break fasts the next day were late, and refreshing little pick-me-ups were found quite necessary by way of restoratives. Now we have so many rich among us, people who think nothing of paying $100,000 for a house, as much more for the furniture, and as much each year for feast, frolic, fine feathers, fruit and flowers, where "Germans" and dinner par ties, supper parties, riding parties. breakfast and lunch parties, theatre parties, afternoon teas, lawn ten nis, scrambles and what not abound, the chief end of all of which seems to be flirtation, platonic or other wise, in the most elaborately ex pensive way. Weddings, which used to be the chief of all grand parades for brides, are tending toward a modesty of celebration that is re. markable by the contrast.- The latest neat thing is toslip out with bosom friend or two and get quietly spliced in some- out-of-the. way church withoat anybody being any the wiser till, after a week or Itwo's sojotarn in some luxurious hotel, the status of the happycou ple is made known in the news papers. There have been several examples of this thing of late. The great Irish Chief, "Number One," seems to be very numerous. We hear of him in all sortsof places, and the consumption of whiskey in the search for the hero by his ad mirers is immense. It is calen lated, by wellinformed statisticians, that every time a landlord is killed in Ireland it increaVs the revenue of our landlords of gin-mills at least one hundred per cent. It might be argued that to encourage our infant industries in this direc tion patriots should be subsidized to go across the Therring pond when ever business slackens of and get up, a little fresh excitement.. If Gladstone were "removed," no doubt Fifth avenue would change hands and be painted green in its entire length, from basement dome, so much money would pour in on certain purveyors of bile and bibularity. RADIX. A LEG ON A TEAIL How a Main Ea's ArtMi iob Aiad Ua=Mly ad Q.a ed I# Tehsek Major Todd of Bangor, Maine, lost his right leg at the battle of Fredericksburg, and some time ago he purchased an artificial leg from a man in Washington. It contained a system of springs which enabled the Major touseitinsuchanatu ral manner that when he was wal ing along the street nobody would for a moment suppose that he had not both of his own legs. On Sunday, while the Major was on his way to church, he slipped up on the ice and gave the store leg a severe wrench. He must have dislocated some of the springs, for after reaching the church and taking. his seat, and while the clergyman was reading the Scrip, tures, the leg suddenly flew up and rested on the back of the seatin front .of him. The congregation looked at him with amazement, and he grew very red in the face. As goon as he took it down it jumped up again and wrigged about on the back of the pew, finally kicking Mrs. Thompson's bonnet to rags. The Major suppressed it again and held it down, but it instantly began a convulsive movement in his own pew, during which it upset the stools, plunged around the. hymn books and hats, and hammered the board beneath the seat until it made such a racket that thie minis ter had to stop. The eexton came rushing In to find out what was the matter, and the Major, after ox plaining the difficulty in a whisper, asked the sexton to let him lean on him while 'he charged on the front door. As soon as the Major got into the aisle that dislocated leg kicked the sexton siteen or seven teen times in a most insolent man ner, varying the exercises by mak ing eccentric swoops off toone side, during which it kicked eight of the high hats at the pew doors into black silk chaos. By the time the Major reached the vestibule the leg had become per fectly reckless. It Sew up before and it flew up behind. It butted against the good leg, and darted out sidewise, and described circles, and tried to insert its toes inuthe Major's coat tail pockets, and to whack him on the nose. When the sexton came with the hack and put the Maor in it the leg banged through the window glass, and when the driver got down to see about it the leg brandished itself in his face and concluded the exercise b~y planting a terrible blow in his stomach. Then the Major told the driver that he would give him $10 to take the leg of,; and the driver accepted the offer. For several min utes it eluded all his eforxts toeatch it as it danced about, but finally he got hold of it and hung 'on while the Majoi~ tried to unbuckle the straps. Then it came off and rolled the driver to the mud. He got up tomwatch it. It~writhed and kcked and jumped and throbbed and hop pod .an& whenever It would make a dash to one side orthe ote ti crowd would scatter lnorderinogive it full play.. Fjnally- Ben Wooller set his wog on It and a-oe citing .contest ensued, the legd or three times running O(W1Ik DOARI dog; and'-i - dg woultd be wi pelD.. leyg blow' at the 1irffb - h dog ir be w--ed ed it again an derg, and the. 1 f - The Major droveb . .; crutchies, and al eoneds bi8#tq woodenlik hu ja~ Hre I& wht ' worth, f U o "' er part of-"at on his fmat6beis aglDover, ; sup ase lisMeot 4& pomnds to-h--l, the.crop-ft an a - X cents per pomd,- iwc $68. fThacarn,at'1 bushel, swti$6L?h at $5o fes E4S the aottton =' 12t eesper i heI and the rnsob b least $15i. Th s total of 186:for e~r, nothing of the eats farm. Senpoe_. tiodsI make t e:rop 4"s' income on a4 ! , four-bore farm.M made ' bales :sbe bushels atn beses ?wt THE FATE OF MimST. A gentleman who visite4 - T. Polk yesterday Iie jIsays thatheeaa.''" eaten anhin since If and that if conhied In jaill hi not live more than a moant. thought that hecannot lvA than six months eveIfa of jail and afforded alHh also stated that the ae from the river into hsfl sufferable, and that l~ enough to keep~oned1e man Caldwrell, of this I s will die inutwenty day. 0 4 derstood that CoL Polk's Polk's liabitaties biy thepqnm $200,000 in n.ew1360. "e. Ta LAEGEsT PCI~~iA5 Amxcra-X?r W D. Mei2E the MdAdoor ioneps~ es~~ C., by mfstakeordeedfrn York house a plate cftsehp 32 feet. He eant inclae.M but he repledit was ll. nhey wreoe him aat at necessary to Import the glass, told them to Impor Theli now lies on te Wharf1s a t of vessel from arase, Charlotte. Mt.'Xci4o&'ak $3,100 to pay, and will paibably~ more carel nxtthe Col. T. J. Lipscomb, the up~ intendant of the?& asi Jones, A. 3. Nori, 3. W.U H. Clark and G. V. Ws~~ bonsmn f heEdge6eldTmS and Augusta Baikroad, for4~ for some escaped convicts. Edgefeld CMmoilecoollyem~i "Of cor- they will nv& verdict before an EdgeOeltIJ.j and they know Athis bece claim is unjust." A little Swedish girl, while lng.with her father on a night, absorbed in he.skies, being ae of what was thinkingreplied: 'Iw thinking if thsiwrong sideotisn as so glonioal vbat mustl th th ease oXal -gbi the whilte the