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"Its PIKE S S. (1- rl'U S A ,FiN A Y2 19 Voll. xl.x A CONVERT TO DAVIS. J A N1E Rl'1)PATH, A BOLITAITNIST AN) UNION AN. einnirksablo ternure iois a xtrut4u o l -ev--Thae iPl'.- 'I ixtnil s' of thie Cutedernte Eix-l*retv iii No Rebel ork' 'rItoior --Tie Case cit t lie !-o ii It I ,'en.-tied ino n Nutseiull. New York World. DiENyER, Uol., F-> 11). "INcither lebel nor Traitor." \Vtitinig wit this for a subject, 'rof. .ames Redpath, in the Commonwealth, say of J'ljvrson Da vis: "I spent nearly th-o t tire sumier of 1I89 as a guest of ).tivoir louHe, the hole of he lat Jeleron Dav is I was il his coipauy ; r !Iom Aix to ten hours every dy duing tie whole time of 'my visit. g that 1'riod we talked of every i.c. or;,t evexxt in his long a1 id event fOit i d1e, aid dikuss ed almiost every ik-ue, I-etweell the Noth a mid Sotil. 'My prlAti-on enabled and aut horiz.-! me t, :, d.k questions and to introdtov Ipi :i .ieh other wimt' it might .: l'0 11 th1.!rLCiou,s, to say the lea4, lo in 1. . form, as the hat e.e ph ' :o re:c : inx the homxe o. 'tw eX P'reS,' t of I hw COn federate St ; nby an% '-rtheiri; writer, vspeci :)I :,e who, 1ke mi\self, had been all Aholition ( of the a. t radical sci. I from oarli-t I: uhiod-a lact weil kti.m)\ to mi ve. ralh'e host. "I liemt, met MI Davis i::- h' suno - nr of' 3 Mr. Ailelu 'i'normdikw Ric > h.1 detirmined ) to .:eparve as a con nuiol1 volaniie to h1s-i Iniiscen OS of Aln-Rahaiii Liincl i, I a sort, of' C .sderate supp flent , a volumie of I -x.'iniW ences of' Lee au -:iwall J:ick-on. Having coniv ed him tlhax it, would bo iipo.35ib: to sectire th0 contributioms henc'- .1rom fa, moIs SQuthern-1rS withomU1 a Davis's CWoNervot ion, I was com o iSsioned to vini. Beauvoir adxi seciure ' and to oh tat one1 ox' Lwo histoical .:xy: from H m for- tie North Atneriea x:eview, 40, Which at the time I was th' anag in g ( lt'r. "4Wl, I reached Beauvio: ia' re !ainhid there about a week. ; 1.r'e I 11 !i ;,cell wvidh Mr. Davis olhrvo 'lays k, 1 . r: -ca cc i ved idea of' bi.. i. . t erly mtill forever disapp-ared. bdody dioub1)ed Javis's inte1-(cLuad capacity, hit it waim not hisE3 mew power that mxo. itn"prt..ed me. it was hi good nisf;, lirst of all, and then hi : iit.ellect ial into' city. I never ;:kV a I old man \\ .wc fice bore Ilor'. Lmi'latic Cvi dence of a gentle, reline-d a br;iig nxan11t ech-racter. lie seelt tI o we10 the Idlt m1.odiient of' lcdte ti ig t. II is convursa' i 6 . - %v,-4' that het hwd '._:harity fox i- a I xaniee to It at noe.'' I never ! I h:m titter . Ili ki.!a world of any I; .,!, .nld lie I:(. of nearyi all of i- 1 r0 famtous oppo&_-nt:. liik wI., coll.dl best t.- ! . : w1 as rai cio ,i4 so exqui-itely re.iod .\ > courtiy yet aii t -w Iri. The dilxm'ty of Imost of our public mn '-Itefl rtmindh; q!ne of tle hod;car' itora slit' it i; so evidently put o; .u. I ill~ fitting-. "Ir. Davi-!s digrhty was as nati,ol - ad ns c1liinhin u - the per tmc of a ros<--the fitting expressi.m tit I serenie, hetigli aind co1ely mol')ral iat'le. I lowever hatnsoime lie : .ay h-ave bee1 whenll excited inl a':b or do,ate--rnd at iich timies, I wa- told, hx. - !Zeemed an i;ncalrnation of b . Iost poetie contept ions of a vaiiaw. knight -it surely vas ini his owvi iomie, withl hi-i f.uanily andt fr'iends bles'; anid that best was t i hi-;xest po) it of grda' and reClimi men ihait 1th4 Southler :chart iacteir his ever each Mir. Redl paith telIs of his gr. i-n Iexlen .ahin f'oxr Jeff'ersoni Dav'is, andco tinuiis: "l'.ut, with this slights dii nm;aequtixe x pm''-ion of' Iy affil'oln for' .ir. i av -, I xmiutt nmw rest o :uote, in or ' der teo stna.e as cle arly .1 Ui:tesely as nay wh y th~e cid Co. vm'rate chief. Itaini never 'repen~ited,' hnd why he neve ('i'etgardd h im lSa . as teitheriii a reh:'o a I r i- or. fhx' acoutedl iuch tit ie', whenI,' a' ttnphiid to hiinxself or to t hie Sioiuthert p zple &, is a prxoof' thaf ti he litt erer of thei 4 wax ix ignior1at 0f x'onlstituitionxal lawv and( s e::' true na "'I returnmed to Beauvo.ir -ud riniii id :hree or i f'otxi monthils ai sisting Mx. I ):vi, a. p)rep.laring a Shx aa hlistory o1 1m IC(o.i feder'a e States. .A f'ter the last pae oft that wor'k (niow' ini press5) ha: been't miled Mi'. Davir (onIsented0 t( 14re; axi for' the same pubalb.:herts an ex ti ended autlobiogr'aphy if' I w.ould re im- in to assist him. Il[e hilx: 1ot pro0 L lexded tari wi th hxis life lbe'fore Ouisinies reca'l Iled me North. Althloog.i I rec turned bi a fiew weeks it wa's 100 111te as inl1 the mean time Mir. IDavis ha< v isitedl his plantation at lBriarfiel w' heie he cauighit t he mlril Ie vei' than endedi'i inl hiis death. "Ini ordler to assisit Mt Da)xvis witl he least fr'iction and los - i tine, baecamme ixecessarxy at the b;egiinning a mx:: w.ork tha,t I should clear'ly unader stIian d the St ate R ights doctrim as Lob by' t ho Ionfeder'ate header'l. Mir. D)avis tiv.recfoie. gave me such of hxis wii ings on1 thle topic ias embhodlie I i IpeI tonrau1' views amax also oth ir arIgumenteu I hitt he( apptrovedl. lIn addition to thies docituments 1 had4( miany and long coi v.ersaiti us withl Mr. D)avis unt il I fel ('ow pet eint to stite the Souithern'L theor without aniy doubht as- to the cor'rect ee of' umy unadexrstanding of' ji . In i 1pape)(r I will priesent only suchx view. sM r. D)avis himself' maintaine'd, I it. u nd"rstoo 00thiat the languaxge oii of whiat followsi- is mine; the 'st aitement xare t hoe of Mr. Daivisi "A traitor is one who violati his1 allogianace an P betrays his -oun tr\ "A rebel is one who revolts fro the country to which lie owe- ;leg : Now, firom the Southern pDOl it, view, nlo secessionist violated is legixace ot hetrayed his country b~ cause11 hie held that his allegianice w~ due t o his Staite, and he was loyal his StxAe in Nolowidik its f'ortumnes aft it witidrew from the Union. Of cour uinder this deofiniionl the Secession cold( not be a rebel because hie mai inlinna hia alleginncetn his anovee State, and 'sovereigns cannot he reb els. A citizen's allegiance to the federal government comes only through his al- 11 legiance to his State, for the federal government was only the agent, of the States whijh Formed it, and they never surrendered their severeignty to T it. "What, thou, is the true nature of' the federal union? If the fathers in tended to create and did create a na tion, then it follows without - dispite that the Coulederates were both rebels C and traitors, fOr they certainly did , fail in the ir allegiance to the federal government for four years and the.7 certainly were rebels igainst its au thority. 1 But if the fathers did not crette nor intend to create a Nation but only a Federation, then tio States that seced ed only excrcised an inhirent, right of 8 sovereignty in wit hd rawing from the a Union they had voluntarily entered, In and the only question that remiuis i., rather' a Ioral than a '0olitical one - were they justified iu' withdrawing? Practically, such a tustion cmn never be considered, for if a coimm11unity has it the right to secede, it must also be the de judge 0f it.s nieecessi ty. T; -- power that holds the Whip Ifby the h1.o-lle ievei. does recoglizq the need of the groa ' and kicks thait ( fr11. I*.m, the ho.y m11 that, stanls 'at 1i1' other et! e "Mr. Davi. min.tainled th..'t the Vin dication of the sti uh reted ou these t wo conlside, rations-thleir r ,Iht fu '(I power to secede and the i e. h iat justified the exercise of that. power. "I confiess that. while his argumntii in Ii favor of that right seeIIed to ; v ext cee<ingly sir"Ing, y et. I do not. seu the' saIi' :-- :. lis Statement of the l justliicai - -. exercise hat. then, I I w at tin otlih., vild of the vhlip and M I i jut .1 Johni B ron."1 I Ari',cc X., an ,,mn,-nimenfit of the all Conzz'* WOn, Iedcre- thtI: - 'Tie f Powers 110: d(' a''itel 1,; the Unit-i t1 tates by the C 'atlitution 1 norn proiitiied IV it to 0h" t. e ac re-i served to the .tatvs ti vel v (I the a people. "'his amerndment w on_ of te th cond itions on whiclih litl Consf itit tionl was ratilied. It sitiows I1 ha.. sovereignty islmitned with lie to 61tateg." I e Th writer states the coi..- it it iou 1.1 would not, have been ratifiel bv Ilie m11jority of the S3tates had it. heen m for th. 'ssurance that, this amen.hnent t. Nwv li I m a .lo p te il . 1 h a ta I w a ki s by the Southern leaders is described as w follows: J,ir. Davis subait ted as it ju- i:cation ll of tlho vitldrawal of tihek S: ut iheri a 1-tates in I8SSt: "The dest ruction of the halah-'e o : power which exist cd when 1te Cm.st i-p mutionl wals adopled. and1 uw1en11 legislation for sectional advi:: e" ruther thn the genvial wel!far. !o- il gethier with pro.,!, antl pr.distet 'who A tions of obligat ions which t he .' ates it had "Asuimed in the formation i the compact, of U'nion, a<hling to uneiinc hiostilIity shamefullIy d isplaye'd and1 en miniating inl invasion, Which tre'ted I t,he fel ing that the frateriity il which rl the Umon was founded hI i u kl e1 ed to NN exist -that t he Un-ion wts a'':s no lo'ig 1 er one of the heairt." t "Were tlie Secesionists, then., 1r1 a to the faith o .t deliv 'ICl to tlie a State? Lday he? And y-el, riht here, I it seems to me, i., both tir'' best. de- I fense and their weaket point. No ' .! live rave constetils for 'e .0i to be n ruled by dead mnd,. E.eMi, nration Imaunges.4 to rule it4elf-i ahy the 3 letter of the law or or r i i :-t constiti Iion th by an_ en dm : - ' con ti - i hi I t ion atic reison of cri'C( I never miet, t anyi putie mi uan w ho ii .'em~needI thei C.oinstittutionu as Mri. Davis :eveca e .iet it. Lest any~ fore'igner shiotild reat'i i aricle~ let me say~ foi' hiis beneflit, tha t ther'e site t w o J eflersoni )uv i ses in American i. st ory ---one is- a coinspirator a rebel, a triitoi', anid thle 'F"iend of' AndersonvilleI'-- he is a imyth evolv~ed fr'omi the hell1-smonke of' eitr'e war--as purte'(y itnag.inary a pei'sonage as Me phfistopheles or the Hebriew D)evif: the other was 8 st:' tes.mani wit hi clean hands and IptireI hearit, u ho served hiis people fai thfull y fr'om hr ddinog mani hood to hioary a t:e, withom thouMghit 01' self', with unbeiiuling initi'giit.v and( to the hbest of his great, ablility lie was a man of whtom a!I his eornimtrymaen who knuew hitm ih:rsnallyv, wvithouti dist,ine tion of". ecd luuot ical, ar'e pr'ondt, and prhtihd that, he ias thfir i cotrintrymuati,' iA)ltEl'S It NP I,E'TEti i-'.(lT N ci.w I tur:.us, IXebt. 19. -Thec 1,t auisi - - na loattery Companiy is mnaking: ai des peraite ecfort t-a retin its ('orprate fife. -Ti hti fiileul fto 'euire a r:inuter fruom I siid, Iw~ill bec tin cait unoiu a hih to' lie ,ILui?jiini 1'gishltture' ftr a renewA.:l of its t pnsent ceb:auter, which will expirte tw .ure arbnce Pi pro:Ssi?tin will bet to I payl thae enire itatet debt, amunctit:: to 1 from $1 I ,000.000It h $1 2,000),000. 'The f httery is i nn''5,0 0: o t,o - f'd,t0.000t per yeat~1r, net. Many proci 1 rnt IL'nuisiianis fear that the bribe - T'o Sp,y ( )it Gcoep,ia. 8 A'rLAN'rA, Feb., 28.--An excursion 0 will ler-ve D)ayton. Ohio, on Feb. 21 -for' Geor'gia, corn posed of' i'oriesenita ive armiei's ami himsiiness men of the SMiaimi valley. Th'le party will make a - touri ofiinsyeetion of'thle agricutltuiral, man ufactturing and fr'uit -growinig see t Iion:10of the Empire State. 0 A telegram from C'anajohatrie, N. V'., Y s'iys: Jamnes Askell, \V. J. Askell and B.]ei'nhmardt G ilIam of the Juidge and Fran k L esl io's, wvithi their Ia mil ies and as several others, left, lier- ini a sp ieial car thi-t moy ning for a t oiur of t lie Hoiu lt. at t,he invitation of Glovernoi' J. U. .n Oordon of Georgia, G( overnori: Gordon Swill accomnpany the pai'ty ina thieiir visit cfto the important cities. LI- s ami White. as RALEI(i, IN. C., Feb. 20.--The Su to prome Coutrt has denied the motion er to grant an arrest of judgment ini t he s~e case of Cross and White, the Raleigh ist hank forgert. Therefore they will in- have to serve out thetr resplective gn terms on the County r'oad. ARP'S PHIL0PHY. ILL TrAL S AiOUT TIIE m ISC IE OUs LIrTLE ONES. hl D116eenct, lietweent lMachlevounuol n1114 .141ann1empt _%o0110 e ite arkaL oil til 'eivanlimitiel 4)r . l oyR. There is a wie diifference betwee 'schief and mlaness. But mischief ose akin to it, when it injures anl idy or hurts their fcelings, or break e rules or the laws. Most all bo3 ve a liole uischief. I used -P .o' >od deol. I runember when we thougi ever s- smart to alip around at nigh d change gatIs and the signs, G retch a rope aere:s the side walk, or ti 1oat inl the bchool houe, or put on ans hoise in another mnri's stable. Lve worked mighty hard at such thing Id I did think it was just as funny a could be, but some how or other )m1't 9(c at bit of fun In it now. I won r what 's the matter with mne. M ildre- irii-ited mischief, I reckon so I ivo to excuse them, but whei y li.tlc girl thoughtlest1y pulled th uirI awaV j1st Its I WILS a,bolIt to si IWnt. :ud I cIme down with a shoc %t jartlo t le lhoue', and my feet flex 1.1tld oeI e :cd tie lamp oil the table %-sA ma13d, very mad1 until I looked a r ail aw how ightened she was, fo c hadt Ii comun cd on ich a catastrimhe I temip:rd dovi, pickcl up the bro A fragmnt ts and t.ever said a word d was a mitnute before any body spoke rs. Aip was the firt to break the awfu c C 7i',% at) kXpl1o0o of laughter d t h it stat ed the children, of coursi all but Jessiec, poor little thitng, w<I me to nie a.d said, "'apa I didu' an to d o it." I knew that she dida't it im Tended dignity was tt stake dl llg,t m, another Flmp ndiil went. tf iting. I w ate~ to negh as much i: ey di'i, btit I Wou11datZ. That wYa itr yeais ago, nud AMrs Arp. is not donm ni.;intg at. it yet whenever it is alludel I believe it would do her good ti e mne bump the floor and kick over mp abot.t once a week. I wab run I:iatilg about this becaus v boy caie homit; from school nhcad o i t, : dwn beire the fire lookin1 temu ai I ad. I was writing by th indow and wonderett what was th atter. For a while l'e never moved o m)ke, but -uddetly he lot tied up at in d said, a pit.iful v ieC: "'apa, w1 m (ier suspetied?" ".3ispended id 1, "1 don't inderstan(l you--sut n-lud< ho,w? " "Suspended froi iol," said he. "Why, no,-' said ] What makes you ask th. qu-stion? c chokedt up, and said: -Well I i3pht.eld!, and so isi Tom Miller." "I y ,asibliv" said I, as I !li.1 down iml 21. "What have you been doing?" : -he !old as hw lie n T>m1 3 t.:iwing water .t .!a:a -tn h t! LI - ,ofe )r was in the otl )om inl how lie tmissed Tom and th hole dit,per fil. truck the blackboar ii puLt mut th,- kium and ran down upo ic 1i )r, and tho piofessor caic in ju the von- time and asked who did i ad stupe n,id him and Tom, and tol itm to t:,ke their book. and go homu felt t:A-ly relieved of cour8c, for Iw tit It was tmisc If and nt. meat e', out I never said anytliing an lokel solemn and estimed mv writin Mw, it disti. eses my childrer to see ni istressed, ald that is a gcod sign. I tmg as a biy lot'eis ihis paren ts, anid rouledCi w hen t hey r.re - troubled thei I hope of t hat boy. After a while I: i:"Papa what must I do obotitI 'l doti't kntow"' caid I, "un itil I see tI rofessor. Not long ago we had up a,e oif suspjenie~on, and the board reIn d to take lie ! sy iick, 1 (1on1't kno 'tat they will do. wVitO you1 and Tom. xpect you have been trying the profe or's pa ienice for somel timel. TOU a ot bad boys and are very good scholar mtt your disposition to mischief b rouible<t him and set a bad exam'pl hle othier boys are tialkitig about yo oui say that the professor la partial ou andi Tloim, and I'm afraid that hei tim 8lhid th't he has stopp)ed your mi hief." lhit i.. catte out all right. TIhe 1b0 et-e inot suispenided, and they wei tack the next inorninge and n pologize md no-v everythting is calm and serec the boys must conformi to the rulesa. tie bhy thi:ows V aer, all the boys ha te righ' to throw water, and th: wouldn'lt do:, and a sensi blo boy kilo) t. Let ery~ boy net upon pincip luey m-tay iie tmp)ted to tell a story t ot o' a little scrape. But it is bett (o tell t he truth. The trtuth is thte thi -the biggest thing I knlow or. If I h a great buiniess that wotuhl give. c phioymenmt to a thioiisand boys, and( I hi to gio abiut andl seleict them, the fi qulestioni I wvold-a .k would be ''Does iavys tell the trulthIt ' I myish the b)e anid gu isI could realize how muli a.nx they giv uiIs. Iliure aire 4100 going Vchtool int ou r little town, and in af years thboy have got to take otur plai ain make t he laws atd do(1 the bn.sin and mike uip society and establish moral s of the community, imd upon0 th conductli the ha ppiness and good tutnme the peoiple will depend. TIhe you mnen oIf tis gene'ratiion will have Lto 30 the race p)roblenm anid the other tri lemts, un d upon t hem will deCpenid the istence of tlic govornment. We thi about thu aiiH good dlerd, for it affects< child len andti grand child ren. It tr tiles uts )i to h about wairs tind anarc and re voluot ion andil ablout t Iyrantse bad metn getting into power arid ab the ich getting~ richer and the p poorert. I kniow 'liat it will beC all ri if the peoplle will d1o right--if the c dren gro)w upl with good morals goodl princiles. We have got g schools almost everywhere in the Sot I know we have in Carttersville. I pirouid of the p)rofessors atnd the Leacd and the pupIls. We tire a long w tihead of H1uston. Theme are no p)octs in our schools-ano kicking teaichers, no baind cf forty thieves. have Chiristialn teachers and the m training goes right along with the scl boo0ks. The boy or the girl who geti more teuction) thlin can be hadtI iD schools has the fotndation laid for beinne in life AN ATTACK ON GRADY. An Esxplotet Story Itevamnaeed About Fx Senator [ob 'rooibm u,d ahe.' Ioil or III saves. Bos-roN, Mass., Feb. 20.-In his lec ture at Fremont Temple yesterday, " the Rev. Joe Cook made an attack upon t.he dead editoi, Henry V. Grady. He said: "I think Boston ought not to cheer treason. Mr. Grady wes a man of genius. and ho is now in his grave, y but his principles are not i't their , grave, and therefore I take tho occa Sion to SAy that sinco a sotll.her)l Sen ator threatened to call the roll of his a slaves on Bunker 11ill, uothing has said tmuelh m1ore atrociollsyv ill t suitag o Notthern sentiment than r the allirmation of tho Soithern orator before his Boston au-lience, thlat evenl e if tie nation were to 11 forth it.s C whole military power, tihe -outhIl I would yet tramilplo onl the iewe-t par , agraphIs of the Constitution. hat i calling the roll of sla.m on tChe ! heights of the political Constinution I itself, and the slaves are tho-e viho . chte isir sucht polit ical seut i ment I."' A BOSTON MAN'.3 -iVALLOV. A it Litalurisnsu ii a1ttlical k Iim. bti Fre*C,elIv 1@' We.I it ' I n~t,ct ii. Thmre were a 1mnber of ug in one of the Lond-n tlveris made faious by Dickeiss, wletn a great big fellow t slouched in annd made himself very dis r, agreeable wi-h his mouth. One of our party ws a imari from Boston, and inl s01meC way oc other he and the big man came to exchange words. The first we heard of tho row the big man was saying: tYou Ya'mkees i.- grea: o the b1rag, and tlhas all you (-al do." "Well, I dunno," rvjlied Bu^i on. "But , do. Viin did you e% L'do a blooming, bar:ed thing?" "How about i776?'" "Never heard of' it." "llow about 1812?" "Never h al .1 of it.'' "Did y ou ever hear of' Bunker Hill?" ''I have .!ir. Tha-t's whore G!"0 red ceats licked the life out of' 4,00t) hrag ging Yankaos!" "I guess not." N i Doe's yout dal-e to dispute thle Liverpool Kid?' "You'd better read what'history U Says." r "I have done that 'ere, you bloomi, Ing idfiot, a..d it says as how all you Yankees run at the first fire! Don't it "I never hard t1itit. did." "Don't it say that?" ' lhe big follow had pushed up his sleeves and . put uip his fists, and it was plain t;nat a row was on hand. IHo was big enough to eat. up two such men as Bowou, while he had fh iends y to look oLit for the rest of us. Our companion tLerefore took the most prudet cour.e,and acknowledged that history might ray so andI probably did r say so. This satisfied the big fellow, and be turnod away and glarad at a Frenchman, also a tourist, who had i come in later. After a long stare he t walked up to the Crapco and si'outed: "Blast yer blooming parley vouls, but we'vo always licked ye out of yer boots on land and sea!" S " You speak von big lie!'" shouted - the Frenchman, hot in a iinlute. d "What? Call The LiverporIt Kid a - liar to his face?" e "Aye! and I shall now givo yul von 2aw1ful leg licking!" s~ "Johnnty" got out of' his coat int a e jiiffy, (lanced aroundt with htis hands me utp, atnd to our uttet' astonishment the Kid wentt r'ight (down intto his boots eC and slunk oui. of the room, having nto a more ptltuck thant a henr. WVe sat there 5- for five coinutes before any 01ne spoke. w Tihon it was tire Boston matn who I sa1id: 8- "Jutst think of it! I can lick six fel re lows like~ that, banty Ft'rnchman, and1 8, yet that big (duffer made me swallow 'iS two wars for itndependence and Bun e. ker Hill on top) of themn.-Newv Yor'k li, Suit. agage,. Itooms l'oei a Year'. Th'le Chasrlotte Chtrotnicle state. tlthat Mr sThromas A. l lison htas engnged a sitt o ro'u'nt in that city for a year. They wil next t welve months to pursue their mio ve ing investigations among the the mtrine of Sout,hwe.stern diorthi Caroli na, which vshe declares is the richest minieral regior eC. on ihe gi.>be. to- -- - er 'T'he O)il (ompany113' ICee'pnibtil ity. N LnuHr, Te'nn., Feb. 20.--Int th, Sthe sum o,f $i12,000 damsas againsit tht adStrandard OtI Company, in the suit whici rat has occupiedl the attention of thIis cour he0 for a week. 'Tho plaintif[ suted for th .Y8 full extent of the dlamarges, amnountint to $l14,000, sustasined August 2fi, 1880 to by the dest ruction of htis marble yrd Win th2 nlorthatern subutrbs of the city a by the burning of the standrard ( il CJon: "" pany's establishment. T[here is anothe .l suit against the oil Gompany for the de eir etrucOtion of the bonided wvarehtouse of of S. Pears, from the snme cauise. in th "11sum of $15,000. Ive ex- Sht hlis Wir am *11I let'r itnele. nk CHIAnRildTON, S. C., Feb. 18. >utr double)1 tragedy occurred -her'e lam ou- night. Napoleon Laval called at th: :hy store of B. Feldmuann & Co., an inol asked to see his wvife, who had b)ee alit separated from himt for some time oor Whe the woman came downr Lavi ght shrot her, and thon entering the ston til- shot [Feldmannr. She has since die< ted F"eldmann will recover. Mrs. LaRvi od was a niece of Feldmnann, and hae Lth. been living with his family for soms am titme. OIn being arrested, La7 ar stated that it was mnerely a famil ar aflait', and that threre was nothir bIo~ more to be said ab)out, it. 'rho alfa o~'j has created a great sensation, as LI We parties ar'e well ktown and prominei oral in bnusix esa and society circles. no ---Thte Russian Nihilist Stepnir outr writes all his wvorks in English, am any the" are revised b)y William Westhra the simov1ist FLOGGED a WOMAN. HOW MADAME SIGIDA DIED UN DElt 'PlE CZAR'S KNOUT. Tiele 411het Fe-1ani114) PIsonerri. Ft.nrifg lier Fute, 4omainit Sililde-Sorrow A iso Drive" Two 3[en to )entle-tmmina AtrocilleM. Provided with a eable dispatch of in troduction from 1co. Kenan, the cel (,brated Siberian traveler, the L(lodo agen t of the Associated Press called on Serguis Wtephnian,",the well known writer upon Russia's political and ser ial conditions. Stephnian was aske,I whethcr he could give any informa tion in r(gard to the outrages in the political prison at Kara in Eastern Si beria, rumon about which had re cently reached the public press by way of t lie Rus,ian colony in Paris. (NI,V A iNT O. THE TRAGEDY. Stephnian stated that the reports already published gave only a hint of tile horrible t agedy enacted at Kara. Perfectly trust-worthy information, he sn.li, had been reci ved in ciher let ters I ha .-ucceeded inl getting through to Paris and London from exiles in Eastern Siberia. These letters, which are nething but, "u-eagre scraps of pa per, tell the story of the recent horror only in its main outline, but one who knosvi about Siberian life docs not iNeed a circuinstantial recital to tin deistand the cruelty of the discipline and the agony of -uflering of which this horror Was the enh1ainationl. 'I'he 1ull detils of Lie dreadful story can not, be long now in reaching the Wes tern world, coming so soz;n after the ublicity given to tho Yakutsh atro ci,y. It, --an hardly fail to deelpen the senuc of horror already folt, by the civilized world at Russia's trea'tment of political ofleiders. ONE WOMAN FLOGGEDTO DEATH AND TH!REENsU CIDiE. "lie ficti so Far received are as fol lows: Madamlc Sigida did not coml mit suic-de, as thc earliest reports stated. She died from the effects of a cruol flogging to which she was sub jected. Tho flogging took place Wed nesday, the 6ti of November. It was continucd until under the brutal blows the unhappy victim lost consciousness and lay as one dead. The poor wo man never revived from the terrible shock, but continued to grow weaker and weaker until Friday, when death came to her relief. The news of her shocking olicial murder produced wvide-spread dismay and anguish among her follow prisoners and three of them, unable longer to bear their wretched fat , committed suicide by taking lOison. low they obtained the poi:un is not known, but probably they had it a long time in their pos. sessioii and were keeping it as a last resor. The nanfes of the women were Alarie K alu;h, Maria dadlovina Karalcf-kega and Nadesenta Smir netka. SAD FATE IOF A (IRL. Maria Kal-tish was arrested in 1882, being then a girl of 18, on chaige of' disloyalty. 11er father was a iereh ant at Odessa. During her imliprison nient every meais was tried in vain to extort fii ! her a confession implica ting lier friends. At last Col. Katus kye a gen d'arme oflicer, brought. to her a skillfully f.rged statement, pur porting to be a confession from lier fellow conspirators, and promised ha.-. munity if she also confes.ed. Marie fell into Li e tra1, and confessed, and her conifession was used against her filenads, wiho were sentenced to penal servitudle. When she learned they had made no confession, but had beent convicted on her testimony alone, she procured a revel ver and on Aug. 21, called upon Col. Katuskya and fired at, him, woundinig him slightly. For this attempted assassination she was condemnecd b)y court martial at. Odes sia On Sept. 10, 1884, andii seniteiedt t o twent.y years penalt servitude. TroRN FRnOM HER HU lslAND, iUNAsoN iLEEs. Mlary Padhovina Kar'alefskega wias a young married lady 8: years of agt a daughiter of a well known halaned proieitor in the seuth Iif R~ussia Paul Vorautsog, and a sist er of' Iasi VorautsolV, one of thle best knowi political eonomists in Russia. Sh< joined a secret circle, which was sur prised and capt uredl by thle pol1icc ii F"ebruary, 1879, and( wits senteinced t thirteen years penal servitudle wit.l exile to Siberia for lifo and depriva tion of all civil right't. H-er husband though not, presenit, was sent by ai administrative pr0cess ai thlousiami miles from the mines to which sh. was sent. Th'le sepiarationi di ove lie insane and she was put in a straighi tjacket,. In 1881 she was allowed t a joinl her husb>and in the hope of restor 4ing lier reasoni. Shce recoverecd, bu the new gov'ernnoir separated thier a again and she was r'estomred t o t h - Nadlesenta Smirnetzka was 33 yea r old and( aistudoent, ini a-woman 's collegt She wvas sent to the Kara mines f1c f ifteen years with penal seirvituide, C HloRROR DRI YEs T1wo MEN TO D)EATrJ clhortly after the sui('ide of IhI three women, a brother of Mario Kr lush, also a political prisoner, (lie i suddenly. It is not definitely know it as yet whether lie too (lied by pioiso e or whet her his de(lath was the resuIt, d overpowering grief on learning of tli n (leath of his sister. i. Another exile, namedl Bobokov< Ll committed sueidle rather than submit, -e the cruel humiliation and suflhrning< I. flogging. Blobokovo was a universit ii student. andl took part in some pulli d (deimonstrations of the students whic e were displeasing to the authoritie. 1 lie was therefore, ordered to mnali y his abode at P'inego, a small villagei g the province of Archangel, the norf l Ir ern-most portion of Eturoliean Rus-si to From there he attempted to make h it eseape, and, for this heinous ollens was exiled to the minesof Eastern a beria, 1k THE F"LOG(GING O'F MADAME SIGIDA ud The flogging of Madame Sigida o ll, cured uinder orders issue~d by Lieul Gen. Baron Kofi governor.gne of the province of Arnour, in whicn the Kara mines are situated. These orders directed that the secret edict of' March; 1888, signed by '3alkino Vraski, director-1general of the prison for the empire, should b) enforced. This edict was to the eff'ect that polit ical convicts should be treated by pris on officials in precisely the same man nor as criminals condemned for com mon law ofrences. Political prisoners were thus made liable to flogging for breachesof prison (iscil)line. In what particular way Madame Sigida had transgremed the prison rules is not clearly explained, But the flogging of a sensitivo and culturk-d woman to death for any lack of conformity to prison regulations Stepniak thought would impress the Western world with a profound horror. The political prisoners at Kara, Step niak said, had in some way learned that the political exiles imprisoned at Saghalien had also been subjected to cruel flogging. They wore constantly in dread of' similar torture to that inl flicted upon Madame Sigida. FLO;GING ottDERE> BY TilE CZAR. Stcpniak wias asked whether lie thought the czar, in view of the fact that the exceptional horrors at Kara had been made public, vould mitigate the severity of prisot discipline in the case of political convicts. He replied that he thought it was not, unlikely that the publication of the facts would force the .c.tpcrior ollicials of Russia to take some notice of afll,irs, but he said flogging and a'4 other brutalitis were entirely due to the direct orders of the central government at St. Pc tersburg, namely, the edict of March, 1888. The governmentN was, therefore, directly responsib!e for tle renewal of the corporal puniLs1hmcit of political prisoneren, which had been suspended in 1877 after Trvpoll ordered Bogolu boll, to be flogged. A FOUL MUll)E1t. -lhnl,:od !Ln .ged ii.1%h of san,l Killt-4 A Nel:4 r krre fedr r 141 lte Cr' iII---F4n.1-4 or it inlhinlu Cit1m Ili-. M-1,1ovnll to ('oi iillin for siale.,v. O Aul.oTTi-:,N. (.., P eb. 1 .-J h lirod, the father o. SherifT W, 11. Ioo, of Chcter S. C., Wa. .hI;)L withl a doil ble -barreled shotgun, nu 1 1:i0led, in Chester, Situniav i ight. Mr. I loos body wis foind at 7 'clock SInday mornling. SuSI)icionl pwinted to Green Blrown,v a niegro, as1 thle a IS8Ss1i. lie was arrestcl. and t double-barreled gun was found in !-is h )se. with mud on the stock, and apptrently having been only recently shot. 'Flie Chester ciiresoonilent of tbe Chroniele says the evidence Wai so strong that fears were entcrtaired of liowii being lvtr bed, anit Governor lichardson was iniim.nediite!y telegralh ed to and rked for instc Utions to re move Brown to Clumbia (I elsewhere. The Governor repth(d, instiluctiig tha;Lt the Lee Light it antry be calleid on io protect the prisonee,. stinday atternon the prisoner was taken to Columbia. As to the cause of tlhe mnurder, and the v~rdict of tile coloneCs jury the corrs poident says: "Other facts gathered by your correspon.eit are that. Brown sus,peted a colored1 man of bel g too intiiate vith hi . i ft A S.t I Id Iv nitht awahied iI ahibusih Ili,- object of his jeaLmsy. WNlhen il ood passed by on hi, way from visiting some relatives, Irown mistook iii for tle other party and firt d. It was on a street without any lights whatever. The verdict of the coroner's inquest, helid here Sunday, was that .lobu ood came to his death by gun-shot wouinds at the hamba ofI Green Brown teolored.)"' Mr. I lood wvas 79 years ol. Moltaiility3 I'omu SimallI-1'ox. SAN A:NroNlo, Texas, Feb. 1. -Late reports from thle small1-pox dhistricts along the Rio) Grande show an a ppalli ng mortality list. (Oni a imnche in D)uval counity. 147 out of 150m emphloyed weri stricken with Ithe disease, and 115 of them d ied. There is a great scarcity of turset and( phiyliciansi. A nu tmber oif thn younger doctors of thli pla0ce are : ing to visit the aillicted plaice. Culie.wo, Feb. 20.- -A special froin Little liUek, Ark., says: At :8 o'cloel Sunday mlorningz, tirt broke out in thi boiler room of the Insaine Asylu tm nea this lacie and spread rapidly' Ithrouigh out, Ithe enIi re builin g.Tbhere werie neairl 509 patienits ini the building all of whon were( riemov~ed fromn the ditTerent ward. to t he i rat, fl) yr, pre parat ory to t ain them from the asyhiin l)uring t removal, a scene of pandimoniunii reigniedl, thle patients areaitiiing, cuirsingf andI sobbinmg withI terror as the keecper h lustlend them f roim hJoor to floor, unti they we re in comarativye a fetIy . Men while the waiter gave out iami only3 tli Stimely airiival of -thc tiro engine fror1 ti. CityV prevented the coiiplete dlestrue' -tiomn of the biingji. (n ieinclded thi bioiler irom, pumplil room, eni"ne ho us< 1laundry, ury housiie, kit chen, bath room attl l)anties, were destroyed, entailin a Io-ts of bhout 85,000). There is no ir 11The Groegia .\IIianice. AA.NT.\, l'eb. ~20. .The tate l Imer/' AllianiiCe has tatke poci ioi o its new and more cornmodlious quarteci - oni the ctrner (if Iluntecr and F'orsyVt ii st reets. Tlhe All iancte ha is beeni expe< n1 t ing to imatke thle (ha nge for mon th: n Th'le buildimir was donted for the ui) pf of Ithe ordler for five years as one of I11 e inidutcemtentIs (oITe:r bILy Attln for It eating the exchiange here. Th'Ie secr( >, tary of the Alliance;and thle organ of ti o brotherhood, the Sou thern Alliance Fi f mler, also have rooms ini the exchatnf y butildinig. iman namiiedi Boot,h waylaid Rev. Mik SWhiisman, near' C'ompton, Ky., an fatally cut hinm with aL knife. Whiismia lived two hours after receiving hi e wounds,1 and1( made atstatement ab)ot Shis attack. Booth was accompani( iy a miati nma Sparks. WVhisman had once punished Booth while tI -latter was a school boy, and( Il001 e- had threatened hen to be0 reveng< -and hiad never forget his fancih al wrongs. WORK OF THE ALLIANCE. HOW THE ORGANIZED FARMERS ARE PROGRESSING. The Prompect of lite Ordvr in w4eugh Ce v ofinit-Cheoring WvordIm Fromt Preswdout The Alliance people in South Caro lina have now eutered upon the second year of educational and co-operative eflbrL on the several lines of Alliance woi-k. 1888 was devoted to the work of organization; in 1889 the work of organization was continued, and is now- -8th Feb., 1890--planted in every county in the State. Tle planting, under the direction of your Executive Committee, has becu done at the min imun of cost, and this work will likely be very nearly completed before your second annual meeting in July next. Our desperate condif ion, fiu.ncially, rendered our organ:/.-tion po,siblo, and to the betterraent of 'haL condi tion our gruate-t efilorts have beeu put forth. Last year the eilorts at co-op riv~e t.rao was by Sub. and County Al,,*a1ce; securing for ihemselves the beut terwpossible. The results ob taiiled, vliiie morc or lesssatisfactory, were vei y unequal, the saving eflect ed being estimated at from 8 to 33 per cent. on last year's purchases, do pendent largely or mainly on the financial condition of the dilerent sectioiis of the totate, the larger saving being only possible on the credit sys teml of purchasing; and attention is cs pecialy invited to this as showing how ruinous has been that system, and as ruinous morally as financally. Let us not blame others solely because such a condition of things was ever possi ble, but lc t us like true men assume our full share of the resnonsibilty. Reckliss risks denanded ruinous prolits, but we now see our folly in consenting or submitting to such con ditions so long. And now that we have organized to correct this and oth er abuses, we must be careful, very careful,about the character of our mem bers. We have taken in and must c.,tinue to take in members who are '"financially bankrupt," if they have "good moral character." T's is right. We honor our organizations by the effort te hift them up--to improve thcir linancial conditioi-n-but we can not allord to carry them if they should even seem to be careless about their financial obligations. Should they fail to practice that strict economy, or to exhibit that industry and constant application to businessso necessary to Success, we must expel them. To re tain them would be wrong to all who are hatiling for the manhood and in dependence of the farming and indus trial classes. The financial depression caused by,a partial failure of the crops last year is a trying or(leal to our young organ zation in sonie sections of Mhe State, which is a matter of deep eencern to those more Fortunate elsewere, but their activity and forw%,ardness in pre - paring for another crop prove their indomitable pluck. LI some places last year the crops were less that half the average. In such plac i depres - sion like E.-yptian darkness Aust be felt. Just how .uch conditions are t.o be met and overcome is a problem difli cult ofsolution,but it will best be done by our people standing together a uni ted brotherhood. The ellorts at in creiasd industry and a closer economy lesen the (danger fr'om such ci'op fail uires-, buit for the I)ractice of such econ omny andl industry last. year., the deC presCsSion growing out of the cr'op fail ure would hiave. been more extended and trying than it, now is. In prlofofo this, it may safely be claimed that the South Carolina farmentrs, taking' the average of t he whole Sial e, commelInee tile year' 1893) in bette ci iaaiicial condi tion than they dhidit ia year 1889 notwithstanding the short cr0o), the shior'tness ofiwhich more t h"n od'iet the higher prices at which it wats sold. A laiger p)ercenitage of' the supplies bought for' Alliance formeirs in 1890 will lbe bought for' cash1 than has been so bought any previous year by thce same f.r'mers. I shouldl not dleemi it necce-shary to r'eindt t.hese cash b)uy ers t t hey now have a State Busi ness Exchange which they can use in thle purchase of' snpp)lles andi sale of fatrim pr'oducts, but for the fact that they haive been doing this very same busi ness thr'ough agents of their local or ganizat ions so successfully hefrme the Exchange was established. Y'ouir bus iniess agent can be, mle:t be, the larg est cash purchaser in the State, and should beC, and wit.'i your piatronlage will b)?, ab)le to ptiichiase more chieap I ly t hana any other. It is your agency - and will be what you make it. Buit I have possibly said as much as I should nowv on the financial outlook. The etiucational work of the Alliance is pr'olably more advaniccd along the ,i uan icial Iino than any other. The inmthlods of learning along this line are e inenil'itly practical. I intended to - extend this letter' to convey some thio.ights oni political economy, and1( ourI organs, State andi National, but I Iintd it will make this article too long, -so I must defier any attempt in that, di' f rcCt ion att i bis time. s My recent visit to the dhifferenit sec hb tions of the St ate suggested the pr1o -piity of what I have written as wvell .as whait I prloposeC wr'iting in the near e ft'utre, ats r may have opportunity. I e gr'atef'ully acknowledge my indebClted i ne:-s for per'sonail kindnesses wvhile on - this tour', and may tuialified admira c tion f'or thet devotion of 011r pmeOple to .the pr1incip)les of otur or'der'. E. TV. S'1'ACK HIOUYsE, RALiiGiH, N. C., Feb. 19.-T.hiere har beeni a great sensatioii at Smith field the paist fewv days, on account of the trial of J. E. Stai'ling for n-,eder. It hae resulted in an acquittal. Hie was cnarged with the murder of an iaged womatn, his mother-in-law, and little b)oy, his nephew, wno were n fund dead, witlitheir .skuills crushed, inabranich near their home. d --The Senate has ratified the British d extradition treaty, with unimnpor tn.nt amendments.