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FAMIEIC HERALD. WINNSBORO, S. C. Weiedslay Miorning, Dec. 22,18'9. D. i ;y's3, W l li am3 & Co., Prop:e ThIe Prope a E ference. '+ The Chai.leston Courier closes its comnmien.t upon the Georgia bill by uaving, that "all the South can do, is t. wait and hopo." Now we cannot " p miile of ground for hope that j r inney of the congressional ' a hether cf the Radical, - ie .r Denmcratio party, can r.. "n except by armed forco, nid an di: ever no sense in rcaifing a inu iia y wuent. What we can do, we ; ,!, at once, arid it is a very ri np'. th g. though 'Tlhad. Stevens notili I t t it would take "twen . y '' o it g ts to it ; we can us.; c' . I.: w. een? immerndiate/yl sub nAl, ab>solutely and conil te"y. to the Congqrcesional jna.,rity, and leavo to ot.z;ois the pi otlen of overthrowing the usurpations of Congress by force, for it is sher lunnay, as grcat as that of the idea of "peaceable secession," to suppose that they can be over th r'wn except vi it armis. We can :-unman t. r-C e i remember that we are - jugatul prov:nees, and that it is not .,, us to at ahtrt the principles of liber ty. but to hold theit in abeyance, whi!o conforming to the very last con ditiotn of our setjngation. In l'ndo ral polities, we should bdong to no party, but, as a general thing, run ad ministration eanlidates for Congress, and in South C relina,, run Whipper or Cardoza, if either will join us, against Bowen, and Wright, against Whittomore, along with two white men. Thu!,, by executing to the let ter the ver.C worst measures, intended i to fret and aggravate us, so as to fur- t nisah opportunity for future oppression, t we may induce others (for we cannot) to put a 5top to Congressional tinker- t ing with Southern Reconstruction in five ycurs, and disappoint the arch- i iend'a expectation of "twenty years' ' use of such an instrument of usurpa tion ;and revolution as Southern Re- 1 construction otherwise proanises to con tinue to prove. We counsel, that our 1 (pinions and principles be held in abeyance, as becomes a subjugated section, anad that we allow folly to wor k its own cure, by taking a (passive) part in exhibiting its fruits. Free provineoa m say have opinions and dis- s cuss garinciples, but subjugated prov ince3 must ncept them as fixed c facts, as sign-posts by the wayside, and aim after a practicable policy, at po- i lit 1cal prnidcnce, ad t th al t- e sh'uld run a black and white admin-t is ration iloket for Congress, andI t bla~k and white tickets for thec Gone. ral Assembly. Nor must we commit v the blunder, which seems to be conun- t sdlcd by some papers in the State, of c pros.eribing as a c/Us the so-called I souaawaga and carpet-baggers. In our e condition, feeling and principle aret nothing--policy, everything. Th'le i degradation of such a course, about t which somue people prate, is exactly e as much as, and no more than, the t degradlation of L~ee, when ho handed , his sword to Grant. This is the inner a logio, the proper inference of the ease. Tauth and goodness are insep. arably connected in God's plans. K~nowledge of a fact Is ever attended E by a blessing as its fruit, itf man will V o'iy pluck it. If, then, Congressiona- I al sup.reacy be a truth, wvhnro is the ii good ne-s 1 if it, be a fact, whence can ~ we of the subjugat ed sootion pluck the o blessing, save in the most absolute t submissiou 7 It is the business of " others, not of us, to resist, i f they sec il fit, b~y protest, by argument, by bal- r lots, and 1 y bullets, when ballots 0 fail. This is no longer any family n quarrel to the people of the South. i] Let it alone. f Congress Suapreme until JAs- t3 paersed by thae swordi. Those who strive to avoid all party ti shackles, and exercise independent A thought in politios, are somnetimoes $ startled by the boldness with which li 60me plain matter-of-fact looms up K< and stands out before them. The of Phanix will scarcely naow read the ai Georgia and Supreme Court bilis, and ei Sneer jocosely at our conviction, that al ours is a government of the Congros- a) tianal majority, whose will is spremna fr ter. States, as snythinag other than h< nmunioipal provinces of Congress, have ceased to exIst, ad the fruits of this oi great revolution in the character of d4 oner g'vernntpent will be exhibited, g among other things, in the coniplote t( fiaillaont of Thad. Stevens' clear. m sighated paopheoy, that 'Congress will ti not get to;the Mhd of Sohthern Re. t et vtruoth adRO, TyrENtY YEAhI p' .T'nkering, yllta reconstrietton serves ton as both the p~rodueolig cause and net tI nd-symptom of a fatal naladf, A) Now tbe cogviotiQ has fore. it elf upon our tnind :ith .a oer jn hat. py caused usd . embl h;ta ho usurpations of 'Congres can b verthrown in only one way--eforce md that the Acoerlcau people wil urely demand.thoir overtbrow-in tbh sourse of time. Civil war is, tlhei, he certain future of the Unitel Staus ! What a horrible'future fl aolicve in for one's childreo, and fr he wreck of one's country that ono ivil war has already left us!' What' i dark resting-place for one's con .eientious convictions ! The Flag. Principles are ever symiboliztd to :ho vulgar with a power, and in a rna~nner. that-they do not themselves understand. The negro, Nash, only ,tatod the truth tho other day, when bc ta' ! in the State Senate, that there vare but one flag in this country, and re didn't botevo that the State flag had any right to be hung up side of t." Wh- t flng is it? Niah would reply, "the flag of the Union." We inawer, "the flag of Radical Demc cra 'y," triumphant hero, and destined to .plit the Union, militant in Europe, mnd destined to revolutioniso its every government and its every people, and to drench its soil in blood. That flag, the once glorious star- pangled banner waving over a Federation of Free States, is now the symbol of Union? -believe it not -but of Radical Do mocracy and its consequences, what 3ver they be. With that proclivity o self-deception that charaetorises oor humanity in every age, the Radi ml Denoornts a? them.selves Republi ans. But a republic is a govern. neat of regulated liberty, of the will nd wisdom of a people as expressed n permanent though expanding insti utious and principles, not a govern nonb of its temporary will and fallible resent judgment or caprice, This lat er is the governmout of a Demoora y. And the fact we wish to notice s, that our flag now symbolizes not mnion, (devils, awsiting the dread hir ory of the future, make the depths of toll re-echo with soornful scoffs and ears at the delusion) not regulated iberty, (that, too, has gone) not Re mublicanism, but pure and unadulto ated Radical Damoeracy. Now R idical Democracy has hither o always failed. M an being the same, yo would say eategorically, it will fail gain, but that we think the progress f soionce and the diffusion of knowl. dge does constitute a difference of ircumstances never before existing. Vhat say we, thou- t Why, aimnI ~iami t tu t-tidst of a most olosral experiment that has to be red. Conform to the miovement of Le age, for it is irroeistible, and try his experiment one miore, as fairly as to can. But we needn't dream that he pierpetual union of these States is ne of the consequences of the princi hlo now in action, arid sy mbholized by ur flag, for it is riot. It is too clear o be doubted, thait it *8isnot. The Tini may last a very long time, but Lien, again, it may not. The first iovemcnt of organization is towards he centre, but further progress re ults in differentiation of parts and p~eeialization of function. A Fisha CommisIonaer. We are soon, it seemis, to have in outh Carolina a nahi-commissioner, 'hose duty, we suppose, it will be, ike that (of the apostles, "to fish for len," along the banks of the Savan ah next fail, without regard to col r or previous condition, and bring temn to the polls to vote. It is also cpected that lie will take a census of to fiddlers upon the shores of our vers and creeks, and recommend to ar legislators, when wearied by law aking, a diet of lobsters and crabs. [a himself is expected to be a drum sh, and to drum for the Radical par IHe will, undoubtedly, also be Squeer fish," for it is anticipated at. just as the Commissionet of griculture, Sparm.ick, has drawn his 2500O, and confesses that he has done ttle or nothing else, owing to "the stility of planters" to the purposes his commission, so this fishi-commis onor will draw his, and report, at the id of the year, that, though land arka have been plentiful, several teals of sea-mullets have been driven om our coast by "the well-known >stilit y of our planters to-oysters. Now we know that the sinoority of. Ir Republioanianm is sometienes ,ubted, but we will prove that is is inuine, by suggesting, that the pa rnal care of this onr beloved goyern ent should extend beyond the OAb of e sea, to the fowl. of the. air, and to e beaste of the field. The coloredi iople *ill ,suppor6 na when 'we ebli a* "wule~oomlnssioner," jnd ipon at mesre watropose to ran.egla * IA~rald .u e WmaeAjnos ostat'f 6100 'oailtuenoy in' rtrcthi /tleiome measu o p lie f ast.i ; while we are H d tthat 4i5 O ommassioner find ocoupatlotn be 6efeial to the S e even the city of olumbia. To 'his latter suggoatlon some sober people might objoot 4hab-n if.atbeofito af, goose-co mmissouer be once esta le . ed, the State *ill 4 porW ept A' j died with the officer, no matter what party comnes it9/go vey' aff a;t le fore, by the adv<.eay of the oTher ue astii O'd'ff ainilil=tl'i: t sti e '"t t Ie hope to'nke 'our wajy 'anirei44b. h claim to fatn'. O'i N the Itadicral l rty bttnt up no bankrupt jockey for 1 o plre 1 Will nuaorofdho itasur. a 'e conmp4Aies tako the rink of the a ndnessand the lives of the n.iles I uch is ot.e view of ' t bi. matter. e other is, that by a f':per and j' d- lons syste m of ptholculgure, every st, atnin the Suato way be inude al o with 'fi I, and seriously, we th k that money' might' be wasled on a rae expel iment,-if, tbat is, if the Gsh ommisioner do hi dity. Inetxo rable Tate. o are told by Milton that "Old expo 'lence doth bestow SomnetthaL of prophetic lore," or,'i other words, we may judge of the turo by the past. If so, the out-cr gaiinst the eruuade of th! Itadi is againmt the Supreme Cout, that nosy being raised by some of our e temporaries, ii as foolish as it is vai~j The ultimato object of the impeapiment of Andy Johnson was the dearuction of the supremto Court. That particular method of aoconmplish ing theobject failed. But the logic of revolution is inexorable, and the Supreme Court must, in orio way or another; be shorn of the prerogative of being the ultim ate judge of the limitations o.,tablijhdd by the Federal constitution. It is a political, a logi cal, a moral necesity, rpringing from the usurpationsr of Congreo,, and we have, for two yo-irs, considered it as good as accomplished alreaidy. The theory of the sovereignty of the States, a9 d that they were the fn il judges of their tights, was the only practical cheek in our Fedoral sys tem,:and'the country may yet uake up to lainpnt that th..t theory did not tri mph ih the war. But it did not, and we may now look out for. the con sequences, and stand from under, it we can. It-there be ady truth in his tory, the sleds of tertdfi intrnal con vulsions are now sown, and the future must bear the dreadful harvest. . .sP qotton. The well-informed London corre~ pondent of the New York 'limls aIites: The question of cheap cotton is felt more and mioro to be onre of life arid death to Lancashbire. Nothinig else can save the greatest mranufneturing~ interests in the juited Kingdom. Tire MIanehester Cotton Supply Asoiamtionr has been unwearied ini ita iumiries as to where cheap cotton can tbe had; but-hitherto with DO' success. Alge ria is too dry ; Italy has too many products; the Weost Intdies find it easi. or to raise coffee anmd sugar: Brazil needs -reads and labor ; Peru has the latter difficulty ; AustralIa has good cotton regions, but; men will not work S0 near gold diggitigs for lessm than ten shrillinugs a day ; (Jhina and Japan can raise plenty of Cotton, but they hrave manufautories of their own, and have even carried off. 200,000 baleis in a year'fromi thre Botnbay market, when the price suited: them. The India cottoin is peor and dear ;.it can he pro duced in prett.y lam e quantities ar long as the price is high; when it falls the natiu.s either spin it, them. selves or atop producing. Egy pt and Turkey ean rai. e a good deal, and someoOf good giality, but Austria, near at .hand, and liussia, are getting to be large consunmersd After all, the difficulty Is not whol lin the supply of thre raw material. France, Switzerland and Germany can buy cotton in Liverpo.1, take it home, manufacture it and-sornd it 'to Man obester for' sale and make money by it. As long as 'tharte starte of things exists, what is to save fianeashire'? Take off yout' d etles an b, t ton goods and they would servt you the same. As the wortl i now -n'rran 'ed, free trade rmeans'the devhl'take thre hind most, and just at thid 'm:homent Lan. oashire 'is the htrndmdst. -I am and always have been for fI'e-.de in the abstract. In the concfteo I don't see it. There will be unireal tthe trade in the millenlud An old lady, who pretnds to "know all about it," says thr oily da to prevenit stesmboat exp fonb ik. .,to mrako the eng ineere "bil theoir water on shore."' 'In bet oio og, "allthe bustin' Is dode by eookiig the i dim on -bdard theboat. The Cho*uare Reer -.thwt he ha seen *tU the t14 i to pt' *iAe .4eublics~ an rty bnC le MI wIte, b anad' n&d, ed the tIree seaM etQ ig esases C tribe pre egeW.IAce an4 I. 95) 968&Eis tnot Qgba dIjdstat. iiableoae ,NAh srm a e ra Ti A Y D a0~ s. n 'c S t, of ' Byr mn te Sfu ho a w er in 0Nd lull ho tha 'hie f ete-ho fou ' ,r rl q5 I ma~te frion 8." j cording to t t, lively correspondent, whose story w< find in the Echo, "Lord B) rou, was as to gg ayh :to1dyeJ"luO g net458 be biigdqoWn o mn&'mt n ,,atJad a eilaUl toil, r' pair of rudinentary horns, and short tab fegtAiti for ',Arg a' fgin the t,s/ep into twot part., instad 'of be was. horn his n other haud beeu oun; greatly torricd by sdch1'#i when in r very delicato State of health, "th eclehiated pituro of Satan Spurned in tho galli-ry at LIHAyo, and iit result had been the fashioniig of he1 child to 'somie exteozt after the mo itrous fat mo of which the sight CtuOet her nlarrm, and of which the contiinu ota rt c ,i!eostion could not be cifaeet by any tne'mns known, to h)' t" phy seliti At the time- of her cvoilit.eient i Iwas at firt snggeted th..t t.e mons trosity should not be suffered to live but the child's body, as a whole, was ao pelfectly ahaped, and his face t< wonderfully beautiful, that the tig gestion wts forth tw ith put aside, ac 10rigland was not deprived of who evoto become in due time one of iti hiefest ornumenta. Poor Lady By ron never recovered wholly from tht shock caused by her discovety <f al- a her 'hug and toally was; and partly throdgh excess of imagination, ptrtlj .iu ednsequence of bad advice frou personA who shall -be nameles, tih felt 'ltto be her-duty to insist upot her busband subject log hinse if to cer. tain painful operation?. Bat thiu Lord Bjron obtinautly refusedto do He urged, and with considerabl< force, that the peculiar manner it which he wore his abunutaut curl effectually hid from view- the rudi mentary horns; and that, as he never appeatod in public without i.A boot"i and trosore, none would ever suspeco the existenceo of his other defects with thb exception of his valet, ir whom h placed implicit confuience.' THE DECLINE IN PRINTED MIsT.rNs -'The following statement in -egard to the rde&ent decline in printed ints, tins IThi keen made in New York "A segret touching the fall in pri:t ed musliu has ju-t leaked out. Sprague, of l'rovidenco, ham iii hit employ a young (0.runn nraned Pr'aff who not nd ago invettcd 'a ethod by which t printing of cotton cloth in the Pr idence mills is do~e ata sav ing of fro cne to two coe:tsper-yard. While e gaged in 1.s es perinew he moade a di.-covery of dtill grt at. or import ne, wherehy thchloaching which n, requires forty-eight hours, way be tlI roughly complea;d in le.. than one; ur. These discoveries en able Spra ne to undersell all other manufact -ers of calicoes, and give hitu virtu fly control of the market. Praffs in ustry and praoti aal scien: i ,0 iktl n geob ha..va .. a -_ Tr-lto'ewar'ted ; but it is sid that hi s' are in the result of the valuahl di oset ies he has mude will be a lit tile short of $4,000,000. Thela WVabbington correspo:ident ii the Uzalti merO Anzeri.: a says:o "Th l'resident, ia cornvration with seve ral Southetn gentlemen, who callet upon hint ou the 25th coneerning (th Ar~sociate Jidgeship itn plale of Judg Wayne, indhitated a-willinigness to se lect a South htn man in case he couli find one qu~lifled for thte positior Several nanas have been suggestedi among thenm 1Draut, of New Orlern; and Judge Marvin, of Florida. Re specting a successor to Mr. Stantor t he P~residout Is understood to inclini to Judge Strong, to whom he offere the posit(ion 'of Attorney-Generali (lie event off Hoar's confirmation fc Aseciate Juitice." IThe TIribqa finds fault with Senate Wilson for sating recently that thi Cubans tare "eotitled, if they deserv it, to self-p~vernmnent" It saye "As a general ,fu, we hold that (her is nto qtuestion of merit involved in t1] pritnciples of self-government-a people are eatitled to free dom; whether in the opinlon of earthly eri ies at least, they deserv'e It or not. The very effort to'setro liberty prov< that it is desery'dd ; afid every societ which has beutt' enslaved must la emnancipated befo'it can fully appr< ciate tile blesaing of freedom." Trho New York Maili says :"A ih dy--evidently Onre of the beau mond, --attrnctod coilsideraible attent h yesterday by p~ saing' up itroa dwa with an immense' np'pendsge of da: hair reduced to an lrngaroy shade b means of an application of white ponu dor. fTis fahion-hbas beet) grad uall l i. hn' 'S was ti. tir.,t iqppsrae of it at) the prt-n.onde witniionesd b us.. . * The State Treasurer -giveb ntotte that the .tutorest maturing ' .Januar lat,- 1870,on. theobonds~i f the'St of South Carolina wilibe paid' in gok on demard, at.the ..banaking hou e< the gS~ ,of South~ Carin o. a aubtrept,'eW tork~ (t s4 b S3tite wil_ NA Wa i a ws u rr 7i-NY 'fls Uni ver ow ft oig the broad Ne an oprn e o 1 d onidas ra s I to its oing, in the Vant felt io the vaious Southera State, of :, great Mr duta ial institution. t. g an( r09 tti of INorjh Carolina, hay 1 ! iardlina, Georgia, Florida, a Alabau,, Misilssippi, L.ouielina,'rx. ( , yksans and 'tift ee,. i is .corn er estone wae laid i6 Sewanee in a ] '"- > t 9a a ,n.ed l uth location,. nd onie atdiurably suliteti for the purpors 'Uf. a Uai:ersity- It has survived the lat-- w.,~ and to-day is in successful i operatio , It has lt4s buildings, and ] a fiIl an able corps of Professors, wal arid one i .dred sttidents. Such I , been the felt neoesblty at I this day of a Southern Uuiveity, t that ther are over two hun.red ap l 'plioants t bo are unable to attain ad. C. to isI0 n. 'T o-nigh a meeting +'f all interestod in te on so of Southern education u ill be held at Ilolmes' Lyceum, for n( the purposa of bearing from the Agent del l of this valable iustitution a report - of it prosent condition and future to purpofes. 'Thero never was a time Af ..when the education of our Southern .the I youth was of such vital importance. hat We doubt not there will be a large attendance of all of our citizens who In are interested in the cause.-Chiaric-I ton Courier. Ae I his not 1CC.ary to .numerate all the tl. places in Wyoming, Utah and oth- fes er Territories whez e coal has been Sca discovered. [: is enough to fay that fur it is being found from time to tike in different localities. And iron ore (If me superior quality appears to be co(x. bot tensive wth the coal beds. This iS especially tl.e CsO in Colorado and Wyotting. It is impossible to esi mate the importanco not only to the yea Western people. but to the conter- Ku cial and mazuuf.cturing interests of the whole country, of these con) lands 1,a of the West. It is the coal of Great ea Biritain, liaited coiparatively as it die iscompared with the-o immense de. ad posits, that ha. aided largely to make the her commerce ubiquitous and to car ry her. tanufetitures .o the the renio test corn'es of the earth. I do not u"f think that D.-. Hayden w;11 object to son my mentioning his nane in rcpr.oduc- t*j, ig a renark he mnade to te when Tih riding on'thc railroad. Alluding to the coal beds directly on the line he * said that they contain "more power flit than all ,he musclo that now existo, pat ever has existed, and ever will exist." And said another geologist, 'IThe dis-n t civery of gold in Califi nit and of "il is l'ennsylvatit do not compare oth iu impoitance with the discoveries of upt e tal :ulning the .eiky Mountains."-- stit . . Ilra. Ci The Empress Eugeuio, as she sp peared on the im p.:rial yaelht, aII h. Il crowning point of the Suez eeleh tion, is tiuj sketched s 'i sponet ent :- "-.it!O.ie, .. I t all men spetkl( eOx n - I,.. I ; t ', a but a flioe wa tio . w th mi,ia - remarkable about Is, excpt, hecr gI rious form and unos i i.sad grace o' mmoement. Her eye-s ar ie ghi.ssy, and , f give, ut far.st tiight, tin imnpression that e . sile Equiatts, wvhich is by no meni s -j - H-er eyebrows aire a peculiarity seldom bra I seen, but yet do not doerct frtn hor I a good looks. Hfer inouthi is nieither prc a iolas.,il nor Romnan, nlor of tany parti- tar - oular lind. The upper li? is cut I strtaigli across thle face, and' contains TI .several seams in it as she speaks, whicL ,2 is never pretty. The under lip is ill- lar , formned in every way. The mouth is - positibly too tsrge, sud the way ita i, exhibi's the teeth, when op-nta dora pai e-Inot se(1n nico. Her nose, thouyj~h wt t ii faultlss, daes not necssarily 00co1- soc n manid critiaism. It is the narrow ni r foreheid, the Mlassy, expressionless eyeow i d tho coarac mouuth, which od evoke- a critio': dislike, but thlose ob- wil r ject1ils tue all lohst sight of when oneu of e gozssa the miagninicont figure of the ori e .0mposand tile glorious und ulationsi - 'or le form. The diress she wore ex. I pose~her boson) rather more thlan was ITo e necesary."'$ OnrP.ItlIo NU'gF. PL.AN OrF NANCa.-IL is understetad thlat Gene- 'O ral 3lter will soon again bring for wartlAhe plan of finance broanhed in s hisodebratedseech of last Fbrus. 9 Y ry.'th-e prinipal feature of this odi orlai thgration~ of.etcortietes ofpr valu or reeback, rceivblefor tarer and illegal tender for all debts, C *pubbt arid privnte,seeptsueh of thetr a formera sare specificulfy made p~'apa. gat ~,ble e specio. - n thes cortifieate of the l svaluf the'Ote~rnment- Is nobt to ipromn yisdoothr E*pres sly or impliedl., to',t C py noh specie, buitio many "do' yI ars,9 ta term which t lsla~ parte of tfnk - the Giekeil' pla-to dhpive of any sig1 y ref'erstlk to a specie dolr- Laon- ama MI I/gh y An ~ishan of Dunsore, Pa., on Ima being bplied. to:.for his.*ignaturo on .1 a petiu~ n for "Free Cuba," exclaim- ar, e eod "A IlW,kyWhalt y uwant 4 yon wanittinlner cianady, a d git .Ctbs. e Then,#en thy ecomie nother draft 4, wq poordivil will hive ut plaice to f o to4, il not do it. e head, was 0. tion, n 'h8~ e v pagp~. *dt a, gqer,. ~w~es a~ y rafl . e 4,e GreCW J An l wh dlerdo . thAN < u hwt.pda e~~l of C. L'add1 Ahbe Is. old, torue tried teaehe', and loserves the 09989e Ri. hq p bli4. . eo the Notice of hor suppgaed to. e stolen. Aand for Salo-W. Ti'born. oru Meal at Matthe'. mport ant Sale--Tt L. Peay. ,OO Busbels Corn-.*. F lom. ,Morganltont, N. 0. / Algs--Jas. R. Aikot it. Zion Institute--l A,1 ood. d,' Prideipal. ' ebsol fur Young dd}s,-- I art, P'riuoipal. e.. :obange of S061Ie of. the D.& A. It; R. - S.dmuinistrators, Exfstors, Assig a, and advertisers enerally,'and inqluent subsoriborsr re quested QteU in and settle geir accounts. or the first of Jatiary many, of so accounts will beblczced 'in the ids of it collector. teresting to LaWerla . writer in the (hiiago L ga'l we urges the hold '4Y "annual stings of mombers The legal pro ion from every pa of the United tet for the discu on of law ro ns, similar to mie ingi held by a~bers of other lear d ptofessions h in this country al in Pirope. al Death." oroner hlawthorn id tit, inquest toiduy, over the bit .of Mr. Green rieoy, who was found dead on the emont in front of BJrown's hotel, ly yesterday tmording. The. ver. t of the jury, was,(that the deeoas came to his death 1by a fall from third story window of Brown's 0i, while if] a fit of &irium. This ortunate gentlemn as frnt :Madi county, Kcptoky, apd lepd boon ,urning with u. but a shoot while. )ugh a btronger, every 9ttentioun shown -hin. The rolutt's 'nd uds of the deco.;ed hive ha- o, hy of this conamu. it. . Zion -Instituite. 1o are glad to Mov that thor are eta he-ides ou .ces, 4o look n old ,lt. Zion as at first Olns, in. ution. T':e following ii, fra4,mi the rieston !' nrier h' W. ZI( t . ,a i suto .at Vnn S St t T .. rt t' ,. l f I ,. l ve " b i. 1 o'U." e of n r ett (" tahlts goteeratlly. adiscipliie, theL In)stitute tfoara tty miuch to v~bt obtains in all h. y Academy. en sumuter' IVews. rhis paper bast reoently been en, red and furanshed with now, type I ranks doservedly among the besi acse it attnnunedt in its Inst Ir. ,that thet pubiertivtn of ant Origi. Story, from tifo pe of the~ talent. writer, Johnt WitIsesspoon Erwin, I Ue commeced about the middle January, to beo fullowed *by othe: ginal atocries duimg the yet.r qow is a good timeo to subscribe, rmts $8.00 per year.--two. copiet 00. Addres~s Darr & Osteeb, Pro otors, Suniter, S.& )ar formei- fellow-citisen, Col. D: ratt Aiken, so well knoWn through. the State, has become jointe pro prietor of the Rural Carolinian,. enel A. will devote hisv time to yeoing through he Sotfaites, b~oneAt of the~ magauine.: ,, - L. couple arrived at Mr. B~oa'b tHot Suntday moraihng, unrder "verffo rile Clroumsta'nces; ~ud *ere as. ted rooms. Their wante being le known, the Rev.. J. S Cdanor sent for and the happy pale were e ne. 'wo inore ~japish tpa v iD pors.; (thereao iepeeted. 'esterday was very-coi;l dtidr WInd3 n o.h . N.S a ' hala Qj o I ed m regoIdAo ~a~hnable again. .a a, * f* cloud *t loetistg, aeten miled by , ddfo4 floadred desde n6V o 'sinaoe~ l ortisto lourts are tq try abreo$ komie.sttthe fair pouuinne I edito'a devil. W - te.-d m me, , refit,. We are poorer t han Job)'~ a. fortu'iato tuirkey /iIW 'eTb'b r tgTmga a cntoppt; -QOPenpalfrgng hen h? gobbled. If wholo grocery stores were selling for a blue posta e t;tp apiece. we woul i, 1xya~ a (epity mzankerel kit I I ritad ! Good ien.lgt this paper dlown atd think wo rnoi some othe r itliNil i.bI1 ''A .only 'two dollars and a haaIf, but a tho)usnzd gueh trifles , ekop42,59'tyitrheis', a. big thing for g z~oNpaper--enqaugh to putlns firmly on '0 r 'fdet again. Pay upi I'ayup! Southern Conmervative. Gen. D. II. Bill proposes to begin on the kh of January, 18.70, the pub lieation, in the city of tbtyrlo'tte, N. C., a weekly newspapert be called the Swhern Vnoservative. It is to be do voted to the vindication of truth, of Southern History, the preservation of Southern Charaeteristids,'totb docl optment of Southern Resources, under the changedh relations otj64tp, ,ys. tern, and theiadvancoaentof onthern Interests in Agriodtoel .Mini g, Manufacturing and the Mleohauio Arts. In actditi->n to the so6ti liutjotIs from the old corps of wtiters of "The Lamdn Wre Dee L ," the servious will be secured of thorough mon of-Slenee, and of Praotioal Farmers, Minere. Mr ohinlists, &c. _ Ct- Terms-$3.00 per, and uln, in advaanoe. The rcmittanoes in every oase must be by Cbeek,. P. O.' Order, or Registered Letter. More ;Incendliairism. The barn and stnblcs of Mr. Thu3 R Cockroll, near Blackstock, were destroyed by fire on Thursdayrnight last, to ether with his entire-crop of c.>rn and f.,dder. About six' huudred bushels of corn were burned. It was wigh yrbr, difficulty the n.ule. were s.ved. ,We hopo that ,o0o0undrol iay b~ jJseteetrd and iieet bi just. re WJit. Wom ei-a if G v. Scott will offer a nw.ud rca, I te f p I-nI -iOt oi f tl e i.- en. y ? ''uhe abou '- r t.lay. South Carolina Conference. 'T'ljs 1.1v l- .-oiv.n, d at Ohes aw 8 (". Oti 'S'C 15' h t.t. 1t'hae 'rippoii+" lid ti ,l 1 'i II. a,. ' or, aifor a feav w.arka ihneaas . e hlear es a Pail faniily to mournth loss. Our rymnpathy is wite bh reaved. Blaugh)1 Raw DouSIO! We iijte the attention of our* f amern, ind othern iuntere~t d, to thba uahca tisei-eLt of Afr. J. N. 1I.b.,1 Sale Agent for thi Stg ~.for tb 'ale of t e above manure. We a persaonalir cuainted 'with #J . Rob: non, arid fee safe in IaI~gi \b hi wol elin no artiolpt gehn 4n AIMr. Ro0byn has had an expeonee ' thirty (80) yearn, and was among th first~ who (otroduoLud Gu&*bolnto thi .State. -r -e J. l[. Cathoart oftWalo the Agent for this Ditrit~.-' Thme Rivrsid. The Ritside begins itse r1~ 40!o umne with hn illustration rIi nent oha rit id of . t tnagqsin fot young people.. vlsgolei *h famotts -bld of *M3obH 9 i1ves a strfting largopi6 - f an~1 tells tbout Cowper M aptboa~ the ballad. Immediately aftbi 1f ted' al f 'jbe beet of'od' the~6me e noistolybth bif thme )aptagepiby* oggy' sorene laid k01KaOtuk7., M Figtftha rpar(tf f1ttb~ tbr, Jake' a dl~"Pal l manutit of thie 'BlYe Pn~8,Pw dtliglitfugy ibhu41id 6qg1ha .try 0 lpwrekiock~ ~ g raj i~~tj~