University of South Carolina Libraries
THE ?RAN^BtJll? NEWS, PUBLISHED WEEKLY ORANGElf?RG, S/c. C>^rVc of ilthtteutioii on Market-Street over the Pott Office. SAMUEL DIBBLE, Editor. VIRQIL C. DIBBLE, Associate Editor. CHARLES II. HALL, Publisher. KEXDING MATTER ON EVERY TAGE. Items. JForncy talkB about tho President as the ser vant who wastes tho public property at Wash ington. How about the senatorial penknives and shears, you Treasury leech ? The great objection to smart children is that when they commence having whiskers they leave off having brains. By forcing children you get so much into their heads that they be como cracked in order to hold it. A silver tnino has been discovered in the farm of Mr. John J. Larow, ten miles south west of Staunton, Va. Surface specimens of the oro have been analyzed, which are said to bo vory rich and to promise a fine yield upou going deeper. Tho- Republicans of Albcmarlo, Virginia, met and revised their Convention ticket, leav ing off tho colored candidate, and nominated Judge Rives and Southall editors of tho Char lottcsville Chronicle, two prominent, wealthy citizens, A diamond in the rough state was found at Camden, Mississippi, during the war, but at the time was considered of no value. Since then it hns been examined, and in the opinion of in telligent men it is worth 850,000. It is in the possession of Dr. Tom Cottou, of Camden. ? Grcoley has written to a friend in England, a note cxplanitory of his inconsistency in op posing female suffrage, Ho sapiently says that he gives the negro a vote because he wants it. He also thinks female suffrnge would lead to quarrels in families. Peaceful Horace ! The following is a recent revenue decision : "When land is leased for a term of years un der a contract that the lessee shall erect a building thereon, the title to which .is subject to the use of the lessee during the term, the expense of erecting the building immediately rests in the lessor, and is in the nature of reut, and is returnable as such in his income re turns. The packet ship, Golcuudu, Gnpt. Lovitt, owned by the American Colonization Society, arrived at Baltimore, on Saturday, from Mon rovia, Africa. She will sail on her return voyage to Monrovia about the 26th instant, touching at Charleston, from whonoa olio ia ex pected to sail on the 11th of November. Al ready, it it stated, some six hundred names arc enrolled by parties going out in hoi, the most of whom will embark from Charleston. In a speech at Galc^ Illinois, Congress man E. B. Washburnc, details Grant's views. Orant sympathizes with Congress in the recon struction plans, and advised an early session of Congress. He favored the House Bill, which required the consent of the Senate to change the District Commanders. He accepted tho Secretaryship of War from a sense of duty, to prevent its being filled by Johnson men. The acceptance was with the knowledge and con sent of Stanton, after a full consultation. Wash burnc said he had no right to speak regarding Grant's Presidential aspirations. The revolutionists are invading Home on all sides. The Garibaldians whipped the Papal troops near the Abrazzia frontier. Prussia ap proves Italy's appeal from tho treaty stipula tions requiring her to defend the integrity of tho Papal dominions. The following plan has been agreed upon : Italy is to take possession of Rome. The Pope will remain until his death, when the temporal power of the Pope will coasc. The Garibaldians are marching on Rome. The Florence Press urges the govern ' mcnt to anticipate them. Garibaldi has issued an address denouncing Katazzi. Minister Von Valkcnberg gives an account of Christian persecutions, heretofore reported by telegraph. There are twenty thousand na tive Roman Catholics in Japan, descendents from Christian converts, left there t wo hundred 3'cars ago, when Japan stopped intercourse They nro scattered throughout the empire. There have been no new converts. Their headquarters arc Nagasaki, where there is a Bishop aud several Priests. They have held iheir services in .secret at night. Many of these Christitins, men, women and children, liavc recently been arrested, as criminals. Mr. Seward through Minister Yon Valkcnberg, urges the abolition of the laws against Chris tians. The Trial of Mr. Davis. The following facts relative to the coming trial of Mr. Davis are from the best authority : The trial is set down for the dth Monday in November, and as the Government will not interfere, there will he no postponement by counsel on either side. The offence of levying war against the United Suites will be testified to by .ludgo Scarborough, of Norfolk, Hon. Judge Goode, member of the Confederate Con gress, and Captain Hendrett, who were com pelled to appear before tho Norfolk Grand Jury and testify to the facts upon which the indictment was nindc. There will be very few, if any witnesses for tho defence. Tho fact of levying war being admitted, the prosecution frill then proceed with the legal argument that tlio priRonor is guilty of treason, and tho coun sel for tho defeuce will argue that boiug a citi zen of n ?Stute, and under its laws, the prison er^ allegiance was due to it, and 'not first to the Unitod States. It; h.as | boorf positively asserted that Judge Chase; would preside, but as the Supreme Court commences its cession on tho first Monday in December, this is not possible, This trial is expected to last several weeks. [till view of the triul of Mr. Davis, doublo the usual number of petit Jurors have becu order ed to be summoned for the fall term of the Court. lion. James Lyons has been furnished with a copy of the indictment against the accused. General Wells, of Alexandria, it is under stood is engaged on the side of tho prosecu tion. ./, ^ . ,< The prosecuting attorney, Chandler hoB gone to New York to consult with Mr. Evarts, who assists htm. THE OIipiGrEBTJRG pWS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12,18?7. While toe reserve to ourselves tlie right of defi ning our own political position by means of our editorial columns, tec icill be pleased to publish contributions from- our fcllow-citizims upon the. grave questions which note agitate the pubfie mind, whejthrr their opinions coincide, with ours or not. A district newspaper, tee consider, should be an index of the, various shades of pop ? ufar sentiment in the section of country in ich ich it circulate*. Our columns are open, therefore, for uny communications properly written, accom panied by a resjMjnsibfc name, not personal hi their character, nor absolutely injurious in their tendency. The Northern Elections. The news over the wires is encouraging. The extremists, who were bent on running this Government to destruction, arc meet ing with obstacles in their mad career. Penn sylvania and Ohio, two of tho largest and most influential States, have, we may say, gone Democratic. .Even in Ohio, where some doubt may still exist as to the election of a Radical or a Democratic Governor, the Republicans themselves united with the Democrats to vote against negro suffrage ; and the negro is there disfranchised by n majority of fifty thousand. But let us not indulge too much in dreanis of hope. To ameliorate our condition; nihny greater successcr must bo accomplished than these. These remarkable changes in Northern public sentiment do not indicate any sympathy with us : they only show that the people of the North arc not willing themselves to CDdurc what they intend that wc, conquered sub jects, shall be combed to submit to. Hut to otic class bi* popple in our midst, there is in nil Ibis a very significant lesson. Tho defeat of ?cgTO suffrage in Ohio by the votes of the Re publicans themselves, should show the negroes of the South the truth of the lesson, which the white people of the South have ever endeavor ed to impress upon them, that the Yankees of the North CARE NOTHING for Til EM j and should teach them lo distrust still more the hypocritical pretensions of wandering dem agogues, who try to gain their votes by great promises of what the Republican party will do for their benefit. Let the colored man ask the next one of' these apostles of the Radical party that comes along, the question : ' What has the Republi can party done for the black people in Ohio in tho last elections?" and we think the Rad will bo slightly embarrassed. Let the colored man now learn the great lesson, which to know, is to be capable of free dom,?To act his part in his proper sphere, honestly and with good will to all; and to take counsel of his known and tried friends, in mat ters which he cannot of himself understand, in preference to the wordy advice of every mouthy vagabond,, who may come along, and try tu make him imagine himself a hero. Our Charleston Letter. CIIARLK8TON, Oct. 10, I8<57. Of local news here there isa very great dearth, and were it not for the interest now evoked by the elections at, the North the wir? people would suffer from leisure, and the newspaper men would bo forced to imitate poofs and draw largely on their imaginations. Ah however the popular pulse is now being quickened by the exciting tidings of the wonderful speed of the re-action harbingered by Connecticut last Spring?and as all are speculating on the re sults for us of tho defeat of Radicalism, mat ters of a strictly local character tire lost sight of and the want of homo news is not felt. So much apologetically,?and as a premonition, that my letter will be barren of news. An order from Genoral Canby, designating the time for the Convention elections has been written but has not yet been published. I have good authority for stating (hat it will be promulgated by Monday next. T have been unable to ascertain the time at which the elec tions arc to ho hold, the military being in this instance signnlly reticent. No candidates have yet been presented to the people here, but nominations will be pre settled next week. The Radicals design hold ing wnrd-mcetiugs for this purpose* und will probably present a mixed ticket. It is very doubtful- if any Conservative or Democratic nominees.will'be made. Hon. F. A. Sawyer, I have heard it stated, is an aspirant to tho honors of the United States Senate. A portion of the Iludieals here have endorsed him and every effort is to be made to bring his name prominently before the people. It was principally with this end in view that forty thousand copies of Mb lato speech here have been printed for broadcast circulation. The party endorsing Mr. Sawyer also design laboring to advauco the prospects of Chief Justice; Chase for the Presidency. They have .hived the large hall iu the third story of the Adgcr buildiug aud will mo it as their headquarters. Among the literary and scientific, a con siderable interest has been taken in the dis covery last week of an enormous fossilized"hu man thigh bone and other relics of a former ago in the pott-pteivecne beds in this vicinity, by Professor Holmes, the geologist. Prom the age of the Stratum in which these nre found the Professor advances the opinion that there were men anterior to tho Indians, and proba bly before the flood. Among tho relics are bones of the extinct Mastodon, Megatherium, Mylodoli and Taper; also of the native Ameri can deer, raccoon, opossum, beaver and elk, besides those of the horse, cow, sheep, dog and hog, aud, most marvelous to relate, stone hatchets, arrow and spear heads, and fragments of pottery, all evidently the workmanship of man. DELTA. Mr. Pcnt?cton on ltepudiation. The Democrats of Cleveland, Ohio, having serenaded Messrs. George II. Pcndlcton and George K. Pugh at a hotel in that city on the evening of the 1 Stli ult.. Mr. Pcndlcton, in his response, took occasion to explain his position in relation to the payment of the five-twen'y bunds. He said : Let me state to you the position. YV*o have an enormous debt. We have a rate of. fixa tion beyond all example oppressive ^c h;iY" a .system of legal-tender no-^ auJ a q( national banks. T ^rt^u navc.?oeu them. I did notv:;i0 for tl.Min a ? M{ rps . lie 1 II . ior them. They are great evils. They ought tobe gotten rid of. And if they present any means of assisting us in getting rid of them, we ought to sehec it. Tho ;:.:.-inh?rcsl paying debt, consisting of greenbacks atidnm. liquidated debt, amounts to about 8S00.00tt.O00. The proposition of the Republicans is to con vert this deld into bonds whieh pay interest in gold. The interest on those bonds will be 848,000,000 in gold annually Tho result will be to increase by that amount the expen ses, to convert active capital into inactive capi tal, and thus to increase the number of those who do not pay taxes, and to increase the bur dens of those who do pay taxes. I maintain that this debt ought not he so converted; that these 848.000,000 |n gold should be savod. There are four hundred millions of these bonds iu the Treasury as se curity for the national bank currency. They are represented by a nearly equal amount of bank notes. They call for $2-1,000,000 in gold annually as interest. Now. 1 maintain that these bonds should bo redeemed in green backs. The result would be that greenbacks would take the pluce of the bank notes, whieh would bo called in. and that ?24.000,000 of interest would bo saved. If that $24,000,000 were added to tho 848,000,000 of which I have spoken, you hnvo $7li,<OIO.0Ot) in gold annual ly; nnd this, properly compounded, would pay the whole debt, principal and interest, in fif teen years. And now observe that thus far T have hot proposed to add one dollar to your taxes, nor one dollar to the currency. 1 am satisfied that they can bear more now. 1 am satisfied that the good to result will more than compensate for the evils How far the expansion may be safely carried, 1 cannot pretend with exactness to say. All that 1 maintain is this : That just as rapidly as the prosperous condition of the business will permit it, the bonds .should he redeemed iu greenbacks; for just so fast will the interest be paid, the taxes be reduced, and labor be relieved from the burdens which now so heavily oppress it." -???MBH?? -> IHM - [From theCohuahin Chronicle Hilt in.-i.J Death of Henry Timro'J Esq. Who will not. be pained to hear the an nouncemcnt ol the decease of Henry Tiinrod ?he whose name has bccoino "a household word" in every home where presides the diety of love, intellect and Christianity? For several weeks his health has been de clining, and recently a series of hemorrhages confined him to his room and bed. Yesterday he breathed his last, and, in the prime of his manhood and zenith of his fame, was gathered to his fathers. The open record of Henry Timrod's li lb is a simple one?very unlike, however, that of other men. He knew nothing of the world. In thought, a giant; in act, he was but a child. Horn in Charleston in 18H0, for thirty-seven years he lived tho life id" a poet ? nature deny ing him nothing which belongs to the pact's birthright, and giving him iu death tin. open scroll, on which was Written his reward eter nal. Tho father of Henry Titnrod was likewise a pqct of no ordinary sweetness, and when the mantle fell upon the sun) the "living fire" grew brighter, until it became a fixed and brilliant star in our Southern firmament. Tn the school, at the university, as an editor of a daily journal, and amid the busy haunts of men, he lived, as it were, by hiuaadf?among the creations of his own fur-searching mind, nnd in sympathy with the consciousness of its unseen powers. His whole life had flowed from a mysterious urn?a sacred stieam, in whose calm depth the beautiful and pure alone were mirrored?and when the end came, he returned to the nature he loved and the God he. worshipped, with the calm, sweet, prophetic certainty in his soul that Heaven was near, and immortality about to begin. The secret of his success as a poet was his love for nature, and the rare genius he posses sed in portraying that love in language which stirred the heart. He loved Cod's creation, whether in the heavens above or the earth be neath?ho loved music, sculpture, painting, all things pure, or grand, or beautiful j "the set ting sun, a lako among the mountains, the light of an ingenuous countenance, and, what transcends them all. a noble action." Nothing unworthy ever came from Mr. Tim rod's pen. Years ago, a volume of his poems was published ; but since then, his fugitive pieces have not averag? d more than three or four in a year. Who does not remember the thrilling lines with which he was wont to stir the feelings of our people during the war?his ?'Charleston." "Cry to Anns" and "Carolina?" We have seen audiences at their recital rise to their feet and send up cheer on cheer. These poems are destined to live in the English lan guage, and with them their gifted author. We may not have appreciated him while living?genius seldom enjoys its reward in the flesh. Hut the time is now near when the name ofTimrod will illustrate in literature the fame which South Carolina has derived front others of her sons in the forum and upon the field. Mr. Tiinrod could not be a poet without be ing a Christian, and as such he died. Ho citing to lift- and those he loved 'with wondc-'; fill tenacity, yet bis faith \v.:s tirm.'"^ he fal tered not the <!;?'..,u hoUr reproached. Some one rem-;^ej wl?ilo ;;e ^ ?tt|fcrintf. -Well narry, you ;ffln soon be at rent. "Ah, yes, wr.f, tno reply, i* stronger tttutt uVu/A. ' A little later, he found both. The full" wing i.- the last poem he wrote: and being written upon the very bed where he died, it will be read with melancholy iutercs'. and peculiar applicability: IN M KMOUIA M?It A it H LS tMMOXS. uy ucxrh o. j "True Christian, tender busband, gel?tie sire, A stricken household mourns thee, but its loss Is Heaven's gain and thine, upon the cross (Sod litmus tlie erown, tin- pinion and the In re : And thou hast won them :?!!. Could we desire To ? iiii-iicL that diadem's n-'.estia! lijjdit. To hush thy song and stay thy heavenward flight, I'eeaitse we miss thee by this autumn lire? Ah. no! aii. no!?ehaiii 0:1! ? oar on!?reign on! Km- we tire hotter?Hnai art happier thus! And haply from the splendor of thy throne. Or haply I'lom ti." echoes of thy p?alm, ?Something niay tall upon us 1 iVc? ? the calm To which thou shall hereafter welcome us.'' Cotton?A Gay Deceiver. Down?down?down?from fbrty-Hvo au?! fifty to thirteen" cents a pound! What d-.i : it mean? Simply that we have lost control of the staple of the world, and been deluded by the belief that all mankind depended on the South for what they \\<-ar and tear. No mis take ever was limit' grievous. England has developed the resources of India to a degree which made her almost independent of the South during the war, and she continues to grow more so every year. Magnificent rail roads, one thousand miles in length, enable her to penetrate the heart of the India cotton re gion, where labor can be had for five cc.ts a day. Magnificent lines of steamers Communi cate weekly with the Indian ports, and nearly a million of bales are uov in course of transit to the Liverpool docks and warehouses. Blind to these facts, our people have gone on making cotton, trusting to tin* chances of weather, rust and eatcrpiller. hoping tu realize small fortunes quickly; crops have hevn mort gaged in advance to obtain fends, an?', large outlays made, in the confidence that the high prices to be received would morv rhnn balance the account. Now. what n disappointment. Few planters arc likely to realize their salt. Half the crop has been ruined in many Ideali ties, and tin- remaining half must, pcrforco, be immediately sold to meet the demands against plantations by factors. In all this there i., a lesson; ami that lesson should teach the importance of changing our style of agriculture* and grow crops that triff pay, and ate not subject to the immense specu lative fluctuations of trade. Let our farmers turn their attention to corn, wheat, to ground nuts, fruit, vegetables, to the growth of sheep, cattle and horses, ami to manufactures. Let the cotton we grow he made up at homo. We can save, fifteen per cent, in its manufacture alone, and probably thirty percent, which now goes into the pocket of the Northern specula tors, Y> c have gone through enough purgttion to haver learned some sense, and it is time to use it ??Columbia Chronicle. ?tat 1 a? . A wrong impression prevails amongst some of tho planters of this histriet that it is necessary thctaN should In- paid on their Cation before Ipdpg shipped from this Dislrht. This i- a mi.iat>. The tax must be paid on Cotton before shipment towards Augusta and Columbia, but there are j..; re iiktiuii. on it In in- ?i|i to 1 'harlc; ton. The Begimiing of the $nd! . '?' I '?" ... I ii THE EJECTIONS IN Oliio ?and Pennsylvania. CJ UEAT -DEMOCRATIC SUCCESSES 11 Negro Suffrage Defeated IN OHIO!!! OHIO. Cincinnati, Oct. 0?Noon.?The election excitement is intense. Betting it* high that the Republicans who favor negro suffrage are de feated. The Stato Republican ticket will he undoubtedly elected by a reduced majority. Cincinnati, Oct. 5.?The Commercium of | thjs morning, says that late dispatches show such large Democratic gains as to leave the State ticket iu doubt, and make the Legisla ture very doubtful. The Cincinnati Gait-Mr. and Commercial both telegraph here that negro suffrage has been defeated by 50,000, The Legislature is Democratic. They claim that Hayes is elected by 3.5?0. Private dispatches make Thurtnnn's election highly probable. Cincinnati, Oct. 10.?The Commercial of | this morning says that over fifty comities have benn heard from, giving Thurmau i Democratic candidate for G overnor) six thousand majority. The remaining twehty-fivu or thirty counties, embracing several in the reserve, will certain ly reduce these figures, but wliethcr ciHilujh.i** elect Hayes (Had.) the official eoun* fan nlnn" show. The Legislatur >- hopelessly g,,,^ Democratic ? ? he J'Zijuinr j'linrmau's majority is '..<?:>. The -jjegisla'.ure stands: House of ile ' I'res^itailves?Ha.licals. 50; Democrats, fit-.. Senate?-Radicals. 17; Democrats. 10. W.\sHlNOTjg(N. Oct. D?.?A rpucial despatch received in this city to-day from Columbus. Ohio, snvs that the returns still indicate Xhu. mau'a election. S. Si Cox toh'graphs ??? the Now York IJ??/? that the, Democrats have completely swept tin .vhole Slato. (.!o!.r:.:ct ?! Sr. in. Oct. to.?1 P. M.?Tli -(?turns show that lla;,e> (It- diealj i- inid'Uili iV.Iy elected Governor by ouu or (>\n thousand majority. The legislature i^ Democratic ... Jn.t1, House? by s'n..M i:i.ij-'ri:;cs. Carroll. Hocking .'-i?u NiAiU- Couutlc.t remain to U heard front. PKXNS Y.L VA .VIA. . 0*1. The circsw.. ri--????;!. fron. Philadelphia, etevwn o'clock tbw morning, stato that tth. .-'notion wa^ }??- 'greying ?;un :!y. The Republicans clam. ' ' ''V thrcr limit .-and majority, which i- gOlltsVaily ccv.cc.'lctl. The Herman.', with few exceptieiit?, voted tl?c Demokratie ticket? P.Mi.Abr.s.i'itiA; Fj.IIO i'. >:.?It is WlLvctl that the Democrats have carried Philadelphia .by'?.0(111 majority. Great enthusiasm prevails at Dotnoeralic headquarters and the .!;/'.? efimi. Wnntlwarti, Demo.rar. is elected iu the !2ih i Pennsylvania District. Tho Democratio ma jority in the State is about 0.000. Pini.A?KI.OIM.V, Oct. 0.?Thirt*-five coun ties heard l'roui give a Democrat io majority of (>,5St>. IRilf the counties unheard from. Piui.ADKi.PiiiA. Oct. 10.?The statistieal table of election repotted iu tho hedyer of this morning includes 50 counties, showing a ma jority of '?.279. Seven counties remain to lie heard from. These gave Jr.st year an aggregate Republican majority of 5-1S. PllII.Al>KM'UIA, Oct. 10?Kvoning.?The Republican Central Committee claims theState hy 2,000 Majority. The D-un?tratio Commit tee claim it by '1.000 to 8,000 majority. OTIIKK STATUS. Washington, Oct. 0.?Scattering Returns from various parts of Indiana uho;^ Domoorntic gains. Allen county give., n doninomtio gain of 300. The city of jiidiannpuli; has n Uvimb licnri gain of 4'.,,?. The I\ow York \Yurtd%* Connecticut dls pn.lcli claims a gain of 11 vb towns In yesterday's municipal election-. Tho Radicals gained none, lladieals 'nave been ousted in New Lon don, Ghistonbery, Lyons, Seymour und Kil lingey. Besides these gains the Democrats cany Awlovcr, Windsor, YYntcrfordj Prcnton, Mristol. Holland. Ilut'lingtoii and the cities of Middletown and Watcrbury. The charter election ol .Newark, X. ?)., re sulted in the election of a Republican Mayor by :?.") votes?a radical le.-s of 1.200. No figures from Iowa yet. Ail Appeal for Aid KOIt T!IK Mothers, Widows, ami Ihttojhters of Deceased ('ohft tit-rut>? Soldiers, The undevsignod, n Committee of Ladies, propose to establish in the City of Charleston. S. ('., a ||t)M I') for tlio Mothers. Widows, ami Daughters of doeonsod Confederate Soldiers, who may lie in destitution or want. '1'1k> plan will bo. a! first, to furnish rooms lo the destitute, at a rent merely nomiiiaj, |p,ul ultimately, if possible] to enable tho Inmates tu defray the expenses of their rout, and aid in the support of the institution, by giving a por. mat tiou of their time to such labor or employment ns ?ball bo respectively suited to them, and as shall be provided by tho Association. , At tho outset, the "Home" will be measurably dopbn- ' dunt upon the contributions of the public; it ia hoped, however, that in process of time, it may be made self-sustaining. ? . The lurgc number of Ladies who have been* reduced to extremity by the exactions and un successful issue of the late war, render such an institution-not only a meritorious charity, but1 almost nil absolute necessity. "If our affair* wero now prosperous or promising, there would not be so much occasion for it, hut the. ?ccp depression which seems to have settled down upon our fortunes, make our future PtiUT More gloomy, from its uncertainty.'' ? ' There can .be no class of persons more worthy than those whom this institution is designed to' benefit?helpless women, who have seen better' days, and who have lost all those means of sup-' port, upon which they formerly relied, . There cannot he a bettor opportunity for the" Benevolent, upon whom tlm blowing of wealth or competency has smiled, to spare something? from their abundance, to assist their suffering/ fellow creatures, whose only crime ie, thai they' aro the Mothers, "Widows, .and Daughters of men, who have given their .lives for a- causo' which they believed to bo that.of Justice and! Freedom, .< ? Mr*. M..A. Snowdkn'/ Mrs. }'. C. GlLLARD. Mrs. }), K. Utur,n, Mrs. (Jfco. KftHKUTStiSr* Mrs. Wm. Haver*!.. Mrs. J, S. SS'owrkk. Mrs. 0. FlTSIMMO.VH. Mrs. IIknhv H.\ vf.NKL. Mrs. W. K. MlKKLL. Mrs. (.'. S. Vedhku. Miss .Matilda Middl*Von Miss M. B. CamUJi".:.t,.' Miss K. E. F>'-mbh! ! Miss A.n-a Simpson. Mr" \.t. i\ tfj ATT.,ijjjr.' . V ftti*'a \lC\(\ |,j pecci\ber in aid of tho e,,toT'x,?iScj nliu contribu.ipmi of awuoey^ p?v visions, plain or fancy work, }iifile, catsup, of' any other articles will ho v?y acceptable.' Contributions from tht> l>i^tth:t may he sent, to Mrs. S. (1. ?J AMIsoN?'wu? wiSl takeplens?re* in fotwnrclimr them Vj *>h& 4WmiUec in Char-' 7 A!XTKL>.-~Jk Uof?d Cook and \V A^- ilTit: Apptv a-?j t&ta <t5%v.G. t 1- Z ' . *f CHEAi; BACON!!! ? I * M W Vri-inv Shoiiht*r.?i *t?l& ?*?&>'*tii//dfc* \';irn J'-!?r ivsrfc't price. Pry <i'oo?f*. fiv\<?r\e!>. Sli?h-< l.v.,'ji.>! : .i.//tt d .'inA fv>r :-.Av low for ru>u m t . , . . r , . T"'*:voi::?"r? i>. "s?lfe. I !\. . io 'Aillcii?L's. U-.csseH Street j F. E. W. Briggm&nn & Co., I "vrk r.r.ti i.RAvj? to' ixyfaiM frikxds I \k y custti i?t^. thill ire InrVe. ni:?de.arrnng<* I i?e?u t.?Mi? vlv them with FKKSH EOLTKD (?EIST j ..Um* meal,"at CJlAr.I.ESTdS I*.;*.'"r:s, expend* j irijly ndtled. j a mil will satisfy till. June f5?\j jil^IOV AL, ! I rnir;: i!xi?i:i;s;?xki> iiavixo eemi-ved to ? ,' ?? Office tornierlv occupied by Sntii'l bittmt*. Ks.,.. (xt.Au'.Y CJM'OS.ITK IMH OLD STAND,) will in- jrhtd Ui sCC i'i "hi friends am! customers. r-v." I'ltrticnhii'HticWiou paid to eultinpt for tho n.uairv. " " JAMES JONES rept-Jl Plantation Wanted rpo rent l oll the COMIXG year. a SMALL \ Plant at hm m order; would prefet to Lease for several Years. Apply to JL'he HOIUNSON, nepl 2S?cow it OranjseburK\U WANTED, I/A/A/A DOLLARS IX CURRENCY, for which 1 iJvM ' K?f?l Estate will be Mortgaged to 9? e re juiynient. Apply at this Office. FOR SALE A y ixeciieni 6pR^ unticOT^^ -rtATjOS /*_ consisting of 7?# ncr?V.**lt J* yituatrd ?boit three miles fro- th(4 ^0n?4: ?v?l a?s yiwl Sin*ftU' Aucou,"loof,U<!ns, ? DwvRlus auv\ OmWibtiuK^ f*9 v^,iloiiWra athlreiji 3. Dt*?Rl; '*'' sej.t s?l~4t* MattUpws, s. p. EZElOELKOHN 4 1?AVS HAVE t).\ ri.VXP, ftKt*T hock IIJJE. Tlust received 25 ImrrelN. fell u;) c %t p. - " ~" ? ? v- - - ,)n HAPlyS ntESll liEOiHJlA FLOUR, just ^\ j i'cueivcd, of tlte I'cst uualitv. anil very cheap "? MoNAMARA'8. fob l?it ly Attention Young America. 4 X EX Til A MEETIXO will ho held Oct lfith.. J\ ltuslness of importance to Kb trancaoted. rTv onlcr of tho l'rcsidcut. oct ??it V?". li. HULL, Secretary.. Demorest's Monthly Magazine. tTXl VERS ALLY, acknowledged the .MouVl pnrlor J Magazine of America; devoted to Original Stories, Pot'nis, Sketches, Architecture and \t,v?cl\ Cottages, Household Matters. Qetns of Tlumglu, Personal ami Liiernry Gossip i rhcltuUng sROf.(ol dc-'. pnrtmeuts on Fashions). Instruction;, ou |len1tli. Gymnastio, Equestrian Excvel^ea, M^jiy. Artmsel inputs, etc.: all hy the best authors, njjtl u^ofuscly ? aid nilislienlly illustrated ?itli costly ^iv^rnvings. Hull size).useful ami reliable Patterns, Ktnhroiile ries. Jewelry, and ^ c,i;im^m Murers.sivui ^ ?rtistio.. novelties, with ttt?\er k 5cf.il ?ad CH^fttUlluig litera.-. t ure. Xo person ,\f refinement, erovni^iic.i^? hoiiseu\ifr,. or Indy >u' taate, ran nfl'opl to d>wii|i*out the Mod ern iiienthly, Hjugle rnpicH ?d ceuJv< hack nutn tx i?. sis fpcciiiicn?, U) vi'in, : fjtlter mailed free. VeartV, S.t. \\-iili a vablable i^*einh|Vn*j two eojiies s.')..'>ti: tt,;>(.(. eople/tj #7.".t);-jtve copies, $12. and splrmbd prciiiiuiiit lor clutv hi J?.4 oneh. with the first |uciaiiirii:. i.) each .*irh*cr\hcr, Address W. JENXhNtlS UK.MOEEST. No. 4*7A. RrtfadwHy New YerjN, Jleiy^resi ? Monthly and-Jrimug Amerira. toiiatlicV. I?I, wiili the prcmitm.s for^mdi. ??