University of South Carolina Libraries
THE FAIRFIED HERALD WINNSBOtO, S. C. Wednesday gornig, Sept. 30, 1808. besportes, Willaims & Co., Props UNION AND PEACE4 For President. lION. HORATIO SIEMOUR, OF INEW YORIK., For Vice-President. I1ON. FIANK P. BAIR, OF MISSOURI. PUBLIC MEETING. A call meeting of the CENTtAL Du'A0 CIRATIG CLUB, of Fairfold Distriet, will be lcid in t he Coirt 1Ionse at Winnsboro, on Salurday, the 17th of Oolobor. Matters of uimorlance will bo vonsidore<l, and a gone rIl attodan1co of the citizens is earnestly requested. w. IR. ROBERT60N, President.. 1. N. Wrriinis, Seorelary. The Federal Guarantee. NO. I. Tle lovers of peace, order and I ibor. ty, when thay look upon the condition of Tennessee, Arkansas, and other States now oursed with bad govern Ilent, soarch aixiously in the (on1ti tution (if the United States for a remo dy for the prosent condition of affairs. They are disposed to necept tite por potlity of the Union, if it can be muado a Constitutional Union of free and sovereign States, but they shrink from a national unity that will prove the germ of ceaseless revolutions in tite futuro. Such a remedy has fortu. nately been provided in the Constitu tion, and lte occasion of its applion Aion, for tho firs time in te history of tho country, has arison. There is a clanso in the great Charter of A.norionu Liberty, which the ladi cas have potvorted, as they do every thing in tho Constitution and out of it to its worts uso, but which olearly providos any fa'ithful servantt of tito peoplo and sicore stiuetint of the Su ptromo Law of the land with all that ito could wish int thto way of direction. .lere it is: Art. IV. See. 4. "The United States shall guarantee to overy Stato in tis Union a ltopublican Form of ioorunmont." mieanat, that the FederaL. Government in tall of' its three (Liegislal ivo, Judi cial and Exoocntivo) branee, shall do nothting and allow nothing to be dono to (destroy the llopublican form of Glovernmnit, then existing in to tir teen States, antd shtall admitit nto ntew States wichol aro tnoc simlarly, Repub. lean itn fortm. Theiu rights which in 1787 1 olonged to te Statcs and wero then oexercised .by thton, are thEe -wivh oentitled thtetm to be called re pulican in form, and were not to bo Interfered with by thte Federal Gov ernent,.nor to bo.allowed by It to be interfered wvitht by any, other power. 1. Thte whtolo constitution imiplies to impossibility of' the Unitad States im. pairing te Republican form of' Gov ermnn in atny State, so long as thte United States conformed to its char. ter. If' therefore, any party in pes session of one or more or of all of the departme nts of to United States Go, ornment, were 'to imptair said feorm, 16 6w14 d et plain ease thin the applica totn of thue Federal guarantee, so. soon~ as the *government passed .fromi the control of sucht usurping faction into the bands of thoso wbo would admin ister It h'oeX'dhig to theoir eathbto sup. potrt the Conattitioen. N,ow th1 rf W'of. controllin~g suf frage within its.own borders, in l787 exlx.ed in onok Stato, was reserved by eah, to ,itnd guarantogd to each bythelastso of te Constitution under ilsoussion. Usurplog, parties, calling .thofuusivoa the U-8S. Congrdssphlavb ietNi hIs rig 6' from ted$aog o ein elo ag n S4tos, gina V ~ ~ k tt rto this~ trhonin t~$o1a~it~tialso suro a i inot of the United 'Swtes, C 10 .oulj call attention to two natte- b3 -0solut;ot, butf,b is 60 Anty oUb "upiome Couri to adjoaoate ...h luestion of right., as between a usurp ng faction and the ton States, an hoi the duty of the Exeocutive to ap ly the reiody. It is a 'inattbr" vhich the Logislative Department ha 1o control, under the Constitution, an< ,onsequently the question of a Dom ,ratie Sonate -is inapploable to-th4 liscussion. It (loes not require thi ,onsunt of the Senate. It sinply re juiros a twiinority of Doiourats in tl lionso large enongh to provent th inipeachinent of the President, an ten a Presido:nt oonscientiously trui ,o duty, whether Grant or Seymour i i matter of no consequeneo, to exocut lte decree of the Court. Suol is th peaceful procedure marked out in th D'ontitution. May Seymour e Urant be guided by it. It is the oni road to peace. No. it. Wo repeat., a faction calling itso the Uiongrcss of the United Statel having got control of the Goverr ment temporarily, have committed th gross wrong, which the constitutic scom1s to have viewed as almost in possible, of impairing the Republica form of Government in ten of ti States of this Union. By anti-repul lican test-oaths required by then solves or by so-called Legistures i their oroation, they have passed bol bills of pains and ponalties, and exo faicto laws, which aro expressly fo bidden to be dono, and have created favored class, a quasi nobility, or quo si aristocracy, i.u the shape of a tyra nien faction, in Tonnossee, Arkansa and other States. They have also c tablished in South Carolina an Ign rant mobocracy of alien and soni barbalrous Africans, by violating tl right of controlling suffrage with her own borders, and bestowing t1 right to voto upon our lately eman< pated slaves. As all hypocrites cot mit their vilest outrages of persoc tion in the name of religion, so th( have destroyed freedom in the naie liberty, and cla ii, with bold 0offront ry, to have perpUetrated their tyra nies under th sanotion of the yoi clause of the constitution that forbi thetn. "'The United Statos," says the co stitution, "shall guarantee a Ropubi can form of 0ovornnvot.." To gun antoo is to protoot and make sure wi already existed in 1787, and It never ceased, since then, to exist four of the original thirteen Statt Not so, say thso oliarlatans, Congre (not "the United States" with i throo branches) of 0overntnet, b Congress alone, is flrt;t to settle wihl a Republican formi of Glovernmont, a ter the linpso of' a century, now meem anid by legislation, is to force that u on the totn subjugated States, and s terwards (look to the consequene,~ umon of the North,) either Its present' some othier future notion of what o stitu tos a Republican form of Govori mont, upon all of the States. Ar this throuign tIhe army, at the point the bayonet I In thte development of this theory interpretation, the Radical faction has thrust upon seven States constit.utiom disapproved of by all of their legal a f'ragans, constitutionts, which admit of white oligarchy, as in Tennessee, ori a hBlack mobocracy as in South Carol na, a-,d which are altogether anti-R piublicani in form, according to the on1 meaning that the Constitutionecan has intended. Not only so, but they ket Mississippi, Virginia and Texas, und< military dospotisms, in order to compi those once proud States to consent to tli prostitution of their liberties that 111 Radical faction propose. Titus doe Despotism, Oligarchy, and foul mobi eracy equally comport with their pri tended desire to guarantee Republicat iam to the States.. The worst feature their faithlessness and corruption is I foal hypoorley. All that we have stated demands rmed it pthe hands o 'iei. Unite States. The Jutdleiary and tko Exect live must do their dutty. Tlhe punisl montof'crimes, ay, even of the crimo rebellion, so fiercely charged, so feobl proved, belongs to them, after triai conuviction and sotonce, .and not Congress, much less to the facie claiming to be Congress. Ani up'rigl Supreomo Court and a conscienciA~ iCecutive and a people ready to suistai thoem, are all that the country deeds to e2 tricate it from its oaIanrItio;. Goc athorne quickly. G enueral Grauit' Cofis(rvisja '-tI dioal party are play ah untry a trump eakd . npurposos tendone sand No 11 earnouou omthenfm, few ey then hope j 8% tue, as horotofotos --t rulo at n~ihi~ b q~i are consorvati"o rs Ibrk hi to 2iipub lioan party, but I i'tho rty utindor their control ? I It 49t ggboy6d the inauelno of: fie wisdom and honesty of its sin I cerest men ? And.when its numbers are increased by twenty Senators and r seventy. Representatives from the o. g called reconstructed States, men of I desperate and rapacious eharacter, is It likely that there will be a change for the better in ts measures or its 3 designs ? No; and General Grant will be as powerliss as Andrew John e son to day, to obeck the excosses of Radicalism. His previous record would lead us to believo that there is truth at the bottom of those rumors of Iencral Grfnt's conserratism. H-o is and the truth is, the whole Radical party also are opposed at heart to negroo suf. r frago, though willing to make use of It for party purposes and for purposes of vengeance. The course upon which they have entered, however, admlitm of no halt-, and if the Southern Statok cannot manage to control the nogroes, so as to hang Haman on his own gal. lows, and defeat radical ascendency, n we see no possible i8su except one ol force to this question of races Suet may not be the intention of Ropubli can conservatives in acting with th< radical wing of this part>y, but suel will be the result. They must leav< their party and cooperate with th( I Democrats, or revolution will come Far from their policy being peace, i means nothing but continual war This is so palpable, that we look anx iously to the October elootions, ni hope to bo able to assure our reader that it matters not a great deal whether Grant be cons-orvative or not for be will not bo.olocted by the peo ple. Their candidates are Soyniou: and lilair. n Demooratio Moeting in Winnsboro, lo The regular montlly meeting of ti i- Central Domooratio Club of Fairfioh 1. District, convened in the Court House LI. at Winnsboro, oi the 5th inst. ly Judge W. 11. Robertson, Presiden Df of the Club, and delogato to the Stat . Central Club, submitted the action a . that body, at its neeting.on the 29t0 -y of September. The report embracel is inany points of interest, was and receiv od as information by the Club. . On motion of Mfrr. Corley, i. R?esolved, T1hat I his mIeting cordial!~ r& endorse the action of its Ciairmani, it reference to his nction inl tile recommen (iatiofoComniiisioiits of 'elecdion fo is Fairfield district. In On motion of J. 11. Rion, B. Resolved, That the Secretary of thi is meeting be insticti l t. co ilm11nical I to with Gov. Zebiulonl 13. Vance, of Nurtl Carolina, inviting him to address th< ciiAzens of Fairfield District, at such tii as ie may designiat, faibsu.n to 1i1 f- 20th inst. 5, On motion of .i. Hf. Rimi, p- Recsol'ed, That tihe Secretary of th f. Cent ral Club be requtiredl to call tihe rol re by Clubs, at each meetinug, anid to not >those Clubs whIlich are re presentted. On motion of 11. E. Elins, Rcsolved, That Col. J1. H. ion, b< jrequested to addlress tihe Central Chul d atts nxt meeting oni the 17th inst. Th''le f4llwingresolution passed b3y the State Central Club, on the 29th~ "instant, received the cordIal approval !0 of the nmooting, viz: Is " Whe~reas, It is important that tlu '. officers of Commiissioners and mana a gers of Election, Magistrates and Con 'stables should be filled by intelligout; pr tudent men, we recommend the citi. zoens of the State, to accept these po. Y sitions, for the purpose -of soonrin~ e peace and relieving our citizens of P hardships, whicoh would be entailed Ir upon the State if ignorant and un. 1 principlod men filled' themn." 0 On motion, the meeting adjourned 0 to the 17th linstant. a ~W. R. ROBERTSON, P.1rosident. I. N. WerlHERus, See'try. F Lcoatuiders D.1 s Mr. Editor: I will be npuoch obligelb to yont if you will allow me a small spae in,your columtns for the purpose .of correcting.the gross false. hoods In circulation about may -politics,-and f or the purpose of putting myself rI'ght'be. fore the .good'peoplo of this community. A ,short time after the "Union League" wai est ablishedl.In tis flado,! was soligited by a very partioalar~ colored friend of mino1w 'join it-ssuringa re t'hat2 ither* was no 0 hlarm in it, and'tiat ii *ate gd ihhig. a 1 jeined It and remaingd a mohecbe uhili .t some timo during the .pst sumsr, when, s becomiunatisAted.thet thore s ,so good ini, n that itiasewell Oalowlfted to pro due animosity anoiuensbtwe l t 'epect.able wite'opeople *nd Ihe , coord ~populatio', and was gotten Q w by, .id foi the bwnent of Uhesm'og acallawag'NKanad odeurptbaggera," d.i.'ler0ined'te quW1t sad hare nothing nbe(to do wi(h ft 'and , oisequently'#hakb ot been near ene01 the~ir nal4bo since' d4yvnow dtterm~ini *4 tb &v6 itothhugo e i&h' "Ley,i e. tn gMeys," s4hAgo EouI~.all . re, d o ~~O~r4 bay thteOt det try, atd AtIl4ch *r ybh4iour lit tere~ to wIit3Vt6 tng them ou erimsoftkindntesp and, 10'adshipi': WO a. he of servIOW o hem and they oorve oW ifs; whilst on l49 other hand tlie. sqallAf age ad carp.ot-baggers care n(hinig tor us but ,to get ouar votes to, put th ' m 1ito O-Or, flecs, and in that way to make Ioney o'at or us. It is much bettr for us, and deold odly to our interest-, to cultivate tile friend.. hlip of those willte.people with whom we have been raised and known all oor ilves, Ilian it is to disregard them and reject;telr counsel and advice, and seek- the counsel and advle of these Northern htrangers who use uv for their base And tocan purpoes. Tie Southern %thite people are our. read friends, and we should by all ne'a)s stiok to them. They are the ones who aro golig to help us when we are in need aind dis. tress, and not these office hunters. Let us have less to do with politios, anl attend more to such duties as will enable us to live honest ant industrious lives. Let - us en trust the makingof laws and the govern mnout of our country to the sensible white mnon whom we have known all cur lives, and not to those low soallawagis and North orn earpet-baggers. These are the senti. menis of your colored friend FRANK STARK. [coM1UNIAAr'ED.] Mr. Editor I enclose you a copy letter sont by a friend, purporting to have been written from Cloaveland Springs, N. 0., and published in the Standard at Raleigh ; a paper recognized as hav ing already established (under Hold. en rule); a fane which characterizes it as the vilest Radical organ in the South. Tho Author of this villainous epistle gives full Vent to his political feelings, by pouring out a stream of indiscriminato sailiva, intended to bury in.oblivion, all the visitors, from every portion of the States, but more erpocially, the few who wero from South Carolina. Ie says "they are traitors of the most malignant type." That our &essionists, (does le nionti the patri otic citizens of the Old North State ?) are perfet gentlemen, compared with the Soutl Carolina breed." "That lie would give a liberal sui to have a "'lod" man to talk with ; that they in tend to commit fraud, forco, intimida tion, or assassination on the eve of the election," with snob lilCO epithets, as you will perceive, on reference to his communic. ation. To those, who were contaminated with his presence dur ing the pnst summer: on reading the above, it will.bp very clour to recog nixe the author ; there was but one solitary individual present, from No. Ca., who coulo. possibly be guilty of such -abo miniallo ni isrepresentations, and his 'locu1 n quo' can be easily spot ted-uffice it to say, he was an ap propriate and qualified Delegate of his a party; a'low down sneak of the Jaco bin tribe, whose physical mnan, indioa ted tho very quintesenco of everything low, grovolling, and base ; lie eurses the Springs as a humu/mg, beeause the waters woero not like thioso of Abanar and Puarphar, capable of purifying and ||cleansing [hisa bodily corrnp tion ; and his minsd necessarily, contaminated by those vile principles which have characterized him for years past, and which are well calcu lated to make 1im, in the presence of respectable peoole, an objoet of scorn and contempt, "diseased, dejected, de flamed, despn'sed." Wiho would desire the association of' such a reptile ? oven apart from his political opin ions, there was nothing about him to command resp4ct ; the gentlemen avoided his his presence, and nmore than one of them refused an -introduction, and he knew it; the ladies turned aside fromi his putrid carcass, relinguishing at, tries, th'o ploaares of innocent aWanuse meat, least he might sttempt to jntro duce his filthy presence ; one.of themi personally manifesting a spirit of dis dain, which made overyOaroinianm pre. sent proud of the noble women of the Sou4h; for It is the nature of every ook of her seo, of refined cultivation, now and ever, to spurn and abhor, the low. and ignoble Sauthern renegade, who panders to the vile' prejudices, which characerizes 'the party now in poepf,. 'But 'Why oennute--nor do' t i t down aught in malie?' This lbeauti ful sp,ecimen of humanity overheardu convoeaatlon, (and-perhaps heard daeity other things equally disagreeable) "that the South aroliinna wero al ready preparing to arm thonisolyes with an Improved-klid of gun, Lkat, 'hou&l 'kill twentg.one Jlecunt ta eingle ho' and as tiidy Intended to une tein in QPse tIlo.JNdlon 'pary va successf'ul in the.Presidentlal clqctdon, this frightened dlsoiple of 'Itolden, ~aloP' iske tho 'if hbroiis 1 (1 powders in thme ditatWogipugk6i4fup d(ent to firo off hiph'etoshoti hi il 'opitle and -left IhnmedlItely, for the gtatd Po*-wow, h6id #6 A~lg en 10h, tl,Where fs~i hik1~a mnang dog, In b4oWp iio, the eoiinghotthis; jays , f~Jp toioy o this letffI.QaOtrf5ob qo9tep dto h,,be t~1 .4 chiexed at *,sgqi At rh rIis _ted the kno'oudderhgp e copy of tho fdirrilote. paVer in 49h,It. was inton'eda to be publithod. OomUni oations of similar ohractor are being Inaliufacttired for party purposes, and i whlst they uay ffoid a sooret g ati. 6 f51oI91 to .h9se who pen them, they rd 6I oil aIttlated to keer alive the projtidiees that nor ai:rieiust aliays bxis6ibetoeen the tidic'a ad t4e tatsian ; tile patriot anid the pol troon ; the scaawog and the gont'- li It.SON's SI-tN S, Cj,MyAVI.AWD Co N. C., Sept. 11, 188.-Dc r qr:-I have coniclodud to %Vrito you a row lines. Mv Ileall I has not unch improv6d and I have about, cotne to the concliision that g.ing to the springs to got cured is a humbug. Time passes with me very slowly. I have no papers to road aid qo one to talk with. I expect to be in ITaielgh on'the 16th inat. I would givo t a liberal sum to have a loyal man to talk ( with. 'l'he visiturs here are all seces sion taitord of the most Inalignant type, ( and of the very. worst kind. I thought I wo had some inemi secessionists in our i section C;f the .'tate, bit our seccssionIsts aro perfect gentlemen compared with tbe i Sou1.h-Carolhna breed at the Springs at i this time. .Thera aru not so many of them here now. Twelve or fifteen of them left on yester',jay. I had iothing to say to them. I heard themr talk to each lither. They say that wheIn they { get into power they intend to hang the carpet-baggers ad ecaflawags, meaning the Union mnell. They fregnently make ofTensive reniarks in my preseneP1 w1hi6h if they were geilerhnti or had any principles of a geit.lelen they would not do. They say that South Carolina will rot submit to have mtalers us they noW Stand; 1Ihail sh1e 1will take some aj tion soon. Some of tiem are advocat ilg the lI)tnlig of the improved kin of gtiis that shoot thirteen or t,wenty-one times; that they thinl< these who have the nioney shotld purchase ror those wi) have flot Ile mntlln to Inly with. TIhese ineii, inl ay opi:ion, will resort to alny means tocarry their poi-nt., frand, force, intianidation or assassilation. . . lhink that Republicaits shotild make every effort on the inoxt election and leave not hitng tundone which tends to vi-:try. I do not believe that the "Iord of I[eaven anid Earth" who has all power to control the dest:ny of na tiotl., will ever permit. t.hwse bad traitors. to have the power ill their hands again to intraler atl)d oppress men, From What I can -earn these men do not watit Ilie Nort to know what they intend for fear thnt ii will itnjure the eh:ction of the locofoco ca Ili. )1 aes in tlo - Norhernr i States ; i fact I hellrd 801110 of them admit that they hr-ld back on that no coint. I (hinlk on the eve of the elec. tion when too Into to got to the. Nortt IitaL they will commit mlany ottragoe. Otr )arty shotld send men to the North. ern States to lvt theni know what 1he traitors iitetid for I cannot believe that if the people of these Sta'es could know tie fncte, that, theso candidates wonilt receive the ielectoral vote of a sinlgle State that was opposel to the rebel. lion. VA,UADN Co-r-roN S~.a.-Wlo take theo followi.ng extract fromt Wmt P. WVright & Co.'s new Y ork Uoto Circuilar or a recent. dateo: Foster GUwyn & Co., sold on Monday to 8. Atuan, Son & Co., one bate cotton' at 67 cents, for shipment to iavro. This cotton was raisedl.by Johan II. Green, Esaqi, CCrroll' Parish, La., fromt Peeler seed. The staple Is extra leng, and very fine. This variety of cottan (a single planat) was discoveret by,I Mr. Peeler on htis plantatlon in Issaqnesna counaty, Miss., about fifteen years ago ; since then he hans b'een devoting muclih time in i cutltivating anid bringing iftto perfection. Thte.quality is neirrly equal to Sea Island. From this It ill be seent how imuportanit It is to plant steed of the best var.ietles, Aesars. Foster, Owvyn & Co, write to Mlessrs. Polk, Bostwell & Co., of this city, thtat they believo~ they. can sell the Peeler cotton at 40 cents per pund or more dluring the entire season Jorany furt .er inaformiatlen on the subject, call on the latter named' house. Sinco arrangements have been rnade for a tharougth rate of freight, to New York, t, mlghi L'be I :well for ,onr mercltantts to try thtat market I ons c'olten.shipped away from this plaoe.-a Vickaburg Timie, In conoeot ton with the above we would annonnoe, that. ie;s1s. P. AloFarfen,'$p'Co., h~avarangemseats, b vlichtthae will soen be~ able to furnish ,the plasnfers f. Ranklin and adjoinidig -counties, uithtb' Peeler seed. In'- consideratioh of' the hIgh. price whIch this cottons always comns 1ln ore will at onoe see the comads pdat ea plat tegreat: rho ele oce nearly twice diritkhprot. 'rom thle same amount of labor. - - This Ia no hunubbug, .A-- ,Irtr $i. SUWa1Ui. i.It' Is Wdbtlted that'evouienavy synp.tors eav broken outsity .4htq everw faiithfal Jelatidlof Ooa.: Itf h*aye tnot as get ~ho 'i hlal. muost Qertaidl abe M adaitee'bef'oo( longs9 *ith thk Iintejit-:;lto the latid 1 the opntangion from the mother cottr7, 'i '9 ~vew softttt. -contingency, therq.tmay b& t In9 Oort"u"4,ot 'r ear t ?*ptre that taIab e oe of rnoperff, Yhitnosi saId "6Ver faithfal Isind," at te4 legs fla~n cost~ Queen.Isabella his sker t.ot. tinq)s ai~ $ goa dn~o a4 j o even now she an117 tiat tpe tol ndt ~3*. ~Ds.J..Gn. Thomnas XIcft,a;wto wa .as ~n4tcd at his teI-k , 4UsJe. f)issi ; 01e fre4 a~ be~ h the s e .t *els eti tqt~ 4 ~ Localdtems. o the Oetral Uliot 014bs f Sq ith I fn ac;Aalle wiii NO r0osolutiot of the tate Central Club, 6i, its late session, we oro instruoted tbnotify the several Dis. ict Contral Clubs of the Democratic party o State Central Club Will b. j>o%. In the 1y of Colutubla, on the th' Aly dob. or instant, at 7 o'clock p. M. And further 13truoted.to urge upon tio District Contrnl ubs'the great inoportane of having a full teudanoQ, ofoelstes, tJgg* ippeo . ig, as business of groat importanqc will be rought beforo 'lie Stato 0hiftal Club at i lat time. In thos+ Uis(its where tibre ru no District Centrl Oflubs organi'od, (l' Iero bo any Distriot withotit stuli ) we r6 iot ftilly and earnestly tijo tipon the Do idorati0 party the nocessity of- at oice or anizing*s1cl olubs, and s6nding delegates n ithe day alreridy indieted; and should ro timo be too liAlted to effot iltis, then iat, At least a delegation4 frp the 0mocra o party of such bletrits be sont up to (11 tra tneplog of theStato Central CIpb, on lie 15th instait. On behalf of the State lentral (lub, we,,wQuIl repeat ,our earnet olioitation to,the neinborq of tire.Donoora lo part,y, to not. in tie premiisen promptIly, calously and in a spirit of harmony, for lie good of the oomtuon cause and the reat ttermst of the State. JOSEPH OANIRL POPE. Vice-President. JAMR sG. OIDUEs. Secretary. )otton Market. Sdes of the past week about 202 ales, prices opening at 21, and gradu. ily advaiciig to 28-1 at the close of thre 'eek. 'reaohory. Will the Charloston Courier inforn 1o public whether its. Now York cor ORpondeit Pink is il tie pay' of the Indical Party ? N. Y. in n bad p1ce.. 'ho ( irous is Coming. The people of Fnirfield are promis, d a very rare treat on Thuriday 22d istant, when Mnginloy & Carroll's Jirotsiaro to exhibit in Wionsboro., Phis copniny has been lately reor annized,'Z'd tie Richmond and -.r iapois speak in the highest terms of ts porformanfces, ladical Pow-wow at Winnsboro-Th, Rog of Ohio roots for his Four Thous and among the N.grots-Small Boys Hiss Him, and he Threatens them w,th Hell-fire n e attendad the Radical meeting Lt tire Court House, Wednesday night, o,amuse oursolv6s w7ith clap-trap pro ared by thoir oiators for'ndg. oo gu - fflity, and were not dia pppihtod. Th 110eotiig consisted of a lar go olleetion" togroes, with about a haltf-dozen white nen and about twenty white boys, and as first addressed by the Dduos irones of the Senate, T. J. Robertson. rho Honorable? Thowas, with pro letie wisdomu, expressed the strikiig y original iden, that Seymour's ele ion would produce anothr war. Ass 'A. S.) Wallace tlron brayod f rthr rome inookecrenrt gonsonso. h .lo flog f Ohio then followed; with back up, quealinmg loud, and rooting tunolig ho negroes for his fouar thtsand bold y, and p~layod'upon' ol strirrg of dok verasuo. wito.oforn er slave gainst fok-rner s lavo-hrolder, as only took-fromr Ohio' oan do. itIs impos ~i'befor6no of thra mp6rted breed to ~runt or pqueal' for any length of hame, ran1 not sihow ,the tusks of in ron taalice and iratrod for -tihe quiet nid eourt3ous gentleman. The emall boys at length conki no loti or restraIin4reir indignton,. nn b"w an,. upon his saying that the major:6y of bose who had been cruelnias:ers: were -emoorets, to bies. Tire I-Jog a&x'4.d 'rtthl abdattenmpt,d sarcasn. Tte ovye answered byisees, -and 'one of hem moreover asked about "Newbor. ?- Thlo Hm.g, upon this, could no Ion :or cont.in~ hris vcnonni and frantig with' age, with bristles up'afhd tusksa hQwing, e threatoned. theni with Utrlted tafeg roopis (Grant's 'trirngrn if~e4& f 8'6eI1 ad saidl el)ro *bit 91 dj ,' 'ai tir kind of hLaIl' plack Pt N' ore 'he boys notwkthAtilndiog, thengh 'ish oi'bfn.i tim, cntinued 'to 1h4d,1 Clr~io glt@NestTi@ lead thermt,af ri CourtUoddge, getting rp atnd aying, et's alileavb,".and -they mar:red oft -Single fike, through clth hrofig6t i oes, hissing it the top Mtjrop Ve did not mapprgvoa.bmst. severtholdse6 io1k with;h'registiblo iaurghltor, and'i tuined behinA."' , . . imThi IA st di n6er ted miteok ftQIn OpC ca ,as like a Wet bihtnet upon. de g.- Tihere. goolog4 y e eWo 1 . lIt11'phtolets .but It~ a, ~ E ~ G~*neven ad r4tus reV witlttlouble-harler *bfoedt he wAed me {b4104 14Jittde o ~*~ i toK ng-most ibbnid 'eiti P of t1 sonthor tr gainst aro s voting, "Ho4 about.it i yoIr own Stat, Oio?" anrid attempt d to answer the hotdo' erust. ' - e4id, hie had left ]1*8 Ow1n Sthte, Penn%ylva. ii, because it, wotil no. allo w him .to ,ote." (An answor with a veincne,) And beH sdAOhj ft. t()h'Yt) honld fvtyh .Citbliuiago ron iAso. ?" )no oratorical flight.of Purevs wa%ilito muggestive, in view of the attitling fact lisclosed by solithoi nr fo.r the ratio of deaths is it Viriably nbotit V CaRe.) le iuormed his sable Audi .orl.tit "intdr t tw doQi rino of eqI1111 ights to. tk and white, Skuth Jarolina w,as at t'nier tipon a nm ariex ofgletous 64 dim iitled y. laiioal .Pow-wow at Ridgeway. Wednesday, to 30(h uit4 a ;ala day for Nogro-Soalawag-1teptb icanism at itidgeway. The freight ia~h bi6iigiWAialIn e-'~'g-V-, ni 4 ush, Purvi and To i IobIrtson. Im nodlatoly .thereafter, shotiting Was toard'In direotiori of .Longtown-Road ind a company .ofOffioed iit appa retly thoroighly, organized nogroes inarched up-the shoul(doistroped no fro emiltivy (besido other things) coul mands that neither'ho nor his company undersioOd--tey inarholed through tie villago t "Idle- Town," and thoro form d upon a second company, also officered shqulder-atrtippod and with flags flying, and red ribbon streaming from the shoulders of the offlicer of the leaguei they returned through Itidgoway-singing "We'll hang Jiff. Davis,on a sour apple tree,!"and "John BroWns sul is a no10doring in the elay,' "I'm gWino down to Sandy pint," & ,-to a grove tiir the depot, and there received the vomit ings of the "Bright Galaxy,,-n ention ed aboVe. Tom Robertson, -from inability, said Very little. Wallace preached a Sermon upon the delights, and beau ties of Radicalism-said that the rcn. son he was in favor of re-enslaving'the negroes-in "58, was because the "free niggerR" were in such a wretchod con. dition, ho thought it an act of hu ianity to' provide protectors -for thoem ! Oh, Wfallace, how forgetful of Annanias and Supplitra I I-og-0 made a ha'angue, which is considered inoendiry. He told l negroes to vote for "Grani'if t4oy ciqe and starved for.*1 Said o a not in'favor of soditljg. lif ( eause the freerImen ere too high above the Demoorats, aild should not condoseend to associate with them. Purvis madt by far T o-St ntol lectual and genlp.at!y.diplay an was vory-mod.rato! in li,.expression of him republican views; his language was puror and in every thing hie is far beyondti the *iite renegades with whom Ito is .equa?li. assocketeel. With one exception theoC'speotaelo'~ passed off quietly ; an intoxicated no gro (1 bolleve one of the officers) iti sntied a young mnan tho pvc tion, aind the young gM& str1ge z avithin liis ivory, when be (h0 ro)t1I od a blow at him with a besty at~k whioh was caught Vi thinoting nt on his forearm,-the ioro was ~e carried off. . j While the delcge?on w .s wai.ing fo the train a "big buoh ni gger"n ~t to,Tom Robertson and. said (heldin out his hand)Pfgood bye Mr. Robor sny".. Robertson hiirg his.hQadrl11 stack ont his olovon paw, andt1bl (Oh, how sad) had-partod I (I ?f Praise-worthy. We utnderstand I hat etr' h&o this town, inki n dd't f'a holiday p.ed of1 tlioe ; 2 whbm4attendhr, have .been earn4~ unhhgeeded little sure~ of nty ~4b p'ickin cotton for th& neighb6iinAi'r teed of futunre go4 tq thor counjy auy Lhemselyesd . . *' eo A4yertisements . s Thle WVinnsboro Restadhrant oota treat att act io'l tierofkoo6 *eoytai oihWr ng 9th newgood5Andili6'W Qrooole 'bi% Ast&oA1 Bb~.N M44.4%defidthat anetine botat - pret9x& of Lkhin -e g thein