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- -+ Desportes, Williams & Coo, Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquiry, Industry and Literature [Terms---$3.00 per Annum, In Advance. VOL. 111.] ... .1 WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 6,1870. [NO.42 THE FAIRFIELD HERALD 11 PUBISHKFD WIEKLY BY IDESPORTES. WILLIAMS & 00 Terms.-ritx lIanAL is published Week yin the hewn of Winnsboro, at $3.06 in vareably io advance. ft&- All transient advertisements to be paid in advance. Obituary Notices and Tributes $1.00 per square. The Day that are no More. fOh, memories of green and pleasant places Where happy bi:ds their wood notes twit tered low ! -Vh, love that lit the dear familiar faces We buried long ngo I From barren heights their sweetness we re menber, And backward gnzo with wistful, yearn ing eye-. As henris regret mid snowdrifts of Deoem .bor, The 6unimer's sunny skies. Glad hour. that seemed their rainbow tints to borrow Fron so ne illunined -page of fairy lore; Bright days that never lacked a bright to. morrow, Days that return no more. Fair.gardons with their many blossomed al 4leys, And red 'ripo roses breathing our per futne; Dim violet nooks in green sequesteaed val. leys, Empurpled d'or with -bloom. Sunsets that lighten up the brown-teaved beeches, Turning their dusky glooms to glimmer. ing gold ; Moonlight, that on the river's fern-fringed reaches Streamed, white-rayed, silvery cold. O'er moorlands bleak we wander weary hearted, Through many a tangled, wild and thoriny mazo, Remembering, as in dreams, the days do. parted, The by-gone happy days "Sarkatical"-Louiian Term for Negre Labor. The following ironical preseutuaent of the present supposed relationA 'of' plAitek and freedmen -in the South is the produotion of the' West Baton Rouge Suar tPlanter -du R',@Wk-g * 16A ridoxh. In order to populate our planta tions with ladies and gentlemen for the coming cropping season, we re speotfully beg leave to offer the fol lowing terms to talented artiste who distingnish themselves in the speciali ty of cultivating a branch of our great national staple: "Gentlemen may also' dictate their own terms-wages being of slight consideration compared with the wel fare and happiness of our newly en franchised fellow citizens and broth era. In all cases their desires, tastes and inclinations shall be consulted. Their apartments will be decorated in the most luxurious manner, not omit ting Turkish baths, which may be ordered at any hour, with the necea sary assistance. Wines, liquore, se. gars, etc., of the most approve'd brands will be furnished at all times, and in any quantity. Several of the most famous chefs do cuisine have been en gaged to serve up all the delievaies of the season in the most recherche and approved styles. Servants will be in attendance to assist In dressing, and to ascertain their wants for the day. The choicest steeds will await their pleasure for recrcatlon, or convoy them to their labors and baek. "If desired, accomplished gentle manly assistants shall plough, hoe, etc., so as not to disturb. their dole farniente. Schools for the angelic little eberubs will 'bhe establinked. at whicjh not the slightest -allusion shall be niade to the vernacular :of Dahomey or A'.hanitee. The dead and livinig languages shall be. taught in their pristine purity, and .allthe embelishments of fashionable .life freely eniouraged. All paternal care imaginable shatll be exorcised to secoure the most ample satisfaction in regtrd.to health, eoqpfort.' apdi conve nience. No gentleman manager shall, under tbe severest penalty, so far pre. sume as to ring a bell, bloja horn, or beat a tien pan with a view .of .refer uing to periods of .commencing ordis continluing rural,- occupations. Any interference or imperttinence on the p art of the manager amust ibe prompt ly roeported, and will be suminarily j punished by forcible ejeotjnent from the premisee." .-. terms *s to position and qonvenIssee, and halreceive three times :,more hathydemand, with (alhl privilege to inrsethe same~ to asy adiq. Sumptuous saportpi1esta~g ,r~v with polite, and--attentivea ,, who will servo theip .th , de ate nourishment in th~e maoy pgap i suffering froin theeslightest lndispe - thlnpent osfth nodeuaae4 6 besxadted,% ' p einwaiting d eelh arriages are .i const& attei da The better to preserve t6 fres.. ss fa ther on.oi.. d...a the noontide heat, umbrellas will be used to protect them from the rays of a vertical sun. Sponge oake, ice cream and lemonade will be furnish ed during the day, or any other re frevhront-the comfort and convetni once of the ladies being more highly ptiized than filthy luore. Balls will be given every night during the week or oftener, if desired, and New Or leans shall be laid under contribution to furnish the most talented musi cians. "It is particularly desired that the ladies should make their piinutest desires khown, in order that they iney be rigidly complied with. At the close of the soason one-half the entire crop shall be divided among the la dies, and a donation of $1,000 in gold Ahall be made to each (which. it is, hoped will be cheerfully nccepted,) with the privilege of as much more as n6ay be desired." A SHIPTING POPULATION. - The number of colored emi rants reported to have passed throu~h the town of Chattanoog4-31,000 in the past year is said to be the official report-going westward indicates a movement that will bring important results to both the SouLhwest and Southeast. The States from which these freedmen are migrating are Vitginia, the Carolinas and Gborgia-mainly the Carolinas, for Virginia travel goes mostly north of that point and Geargia south of it. Of these 31,000, probably 8,000 go from Virginia, 8,000 from Georgia and about 10,000 from each of the Carolinas. This drain upon the supply of la bor repeated every year will soon tell heavily upon the industrial interests of these Atlantic States, and, as a large proportion of these are men, not inappreciably upon the ballot-box. To counterbalance the former of these depletions, we must push every means of encouraging immigration; and, as to the latter, we must manage to stand it as best we may.-Guardian. OPPOSITION 'O WUrTTMoRE -Won CoNGREss.-Fri a private letter re ceived in the city, 'thb Charleston Courier learns that ,aptaln 0. T. Dianp of Little Itver South Carollr na, will be nominated for 066&reas by the voters of Hiorry District to fill the place disgraced by Whittemore The writer of the letter says : "Cap tain Dunn is Conservative, and Horry will be a unit for him. He is an honest man, and has been residing at Little River since 1865, plapling and otherwise developing the resources of his adopted State. I think him fully competent to fill the position, and, if elee ed, will give general satis faction to our people," The writer adds: "I have been personally ac quainted with Captain Dunn the past three years, and have always found him a gentleman." An elopement is the latest scandal in - England. Lady Blanche Noel, eldest daughter of the Earl of Gains borough, hus eloped and married an organit iamed Murphy. Lady Blanche is twenty-Ove years of age ; Mr. Murphy, who has been in the employment of the Earl at Exton House, Rutandshire, and was Lady Blanche's music-master, is twenty twd. They are all Roman Catholics. Lady Blathehe came to London to be married ; the Earl followved her, and obdurately refused his consent. They were married notwithstanding, at the Catholic Chapel in Cadogan Place Chelsa. COorEDns MfEU ItIvIrRD.-W9ther there will, or will not he colored men ~n $be. Convention, depends upon the action, of tihe primary meetings. These meetings will consist of both whites and blacks, and the colored people must decide whether they will be best represented by;.mres of their own color., For our oltn part, we hope that thecolored per-io will be represented, not by white delegates, .hut by respectable and intelligent colored men,-Charleston N~Vews. CoxOLnaK PetorL.s AT Til TuEAgras. "Zeta," of the Balimore Sun, nays: Considerable excitemoet 'was ekhl 'bited at the National Theatre, Friday night,ever the aduztison to the,priva*.e he~xes of the theatre of fotur elored persons, who.oceupied the same dur lng the perfohmance. No adverse demonettiione was inade. It is the .fist ionildnt of th#iif tbhn ha~ oo curred liere, tov .Wm~. A. SmI~ th D o.ne of ehofi Epise a. btrq The tree Trade Movement, On Wednesday last thirteen hun dred of the most prominent citizens of New. York issued a call for a mass meeting to bo hold on the next evening in the hall of the open Board of Bro kers, to yrotest against the present un just and intolerable tariff legislation of the country, and to advocate a strictly revenue measure. The signers of the call were men of all professions, and of both political parties. Could we republish the list, which is headed by Brown, Brothers & Co., and Duncan, Sherman & Co., our readers would see that it comprises an enormous pro portion of the wealthiebt and most iufluential citizens of the floancial and political metropolis of the Conti neut. This unanimity of sentiment may be taken as a fair illustration of thegodral opinion of the country on a question which is now exciting popular attention to an unusual de. gree. 'The meeting was a most im posing demonstration. Jackson S. Schultz, Esq., presided, and among the vice-presidents were such promi neat gentlemen as Samuel J. Tidden, John J. Cisco, Wilson G. Hunt, W. B. Duncan, John Bigolow, Stewart Brown, Henry Grinnoll, &c. Speech es were made by William CullauBry ant, Jackson 8. Schultz, Mahlon Sands, Wm. Allen Butler and Charles H. Marshall, and a letter was receiv from Henry Ward Becolier regretting that a previous engagement ptovonted his being present to speak for free trade. The following resolutions were read and adopted: Resolped, That with the settlement of the political questions of slavery and reconstrnotion, it has become the primary duty of American statesmen devote themselves to a teform in the to financial policy of the Federal Gov ernment. Resolved, That the impolitio and nojust tariff system which has been imposed upon the United States, has greatly impaired the prosperity of the country'; has added elmormously to the burdens necessarily created by thd wart and !haas. borne. with sInp4qial severity upon the pqorgr 0os1 -,by inoreasipa -tpe sOeq IV I. Wlilolas lng1o Nef o e industry," it has, in fact, fettered and crippled the industrial energy of the nation. It has destroyed the pros perity of those great branches of manufacture which were formerly en gaged in the production of articles for export to South America, the West Indies, China and India; it has prov ed ruinous equally to the wool-grower and the manufacturer of woollen goods; it has so Iocreased the cost of iron, coal and raw materials as to im pose needless and oppressive burdens upon all Ameridan hidustry engaged in manufactures; it has added enor - mously to the expense of railroad construction and transportation ; it thus defrauds American labor by needless obstruction to the exchange of its products, and it adds to this oppression by enhancing the price of every article which the American la borer may wish to purchase in 'ex change for the products of his soil. Reolved, That the present tariff has destroyed our shipbuilding inter este, while our unjust laws prevent the American shipowner from coinpe ting with the English, the French and Germans in the ocean-carrying trade. Our shipowners need no subsidies, but they .have a right to ask for the abolition of legislation which places them at an irretrievablo disadvantage, comoparred with their foteign rivals, by preventing them from .purchasing ships in the cheapest mnarhet. The Grand Jury of York. County, in their pi'esen'tment to .Iudge W' M. Thomas, consider the clrcumsatancel under which Gov. Bcott sent a mill tary company into York, and conclude as follows: "We, therefore, present the rmill. tary company commanded by John R, 1"aris,under the anthority of-the Gover< nor of South Carollng, a. undeoessary for the preservation 'of, and f,danger eus to, the peace of this County ; as wholly inicomnpotent to enforce the laws, in case- t heit~ "ald were ieded for that puupoise ; as a' nuisance to th< townshipi In whiohit is statierted,; al an unlawful andunjust perden. upor the Contys on accounts of the ox, pense thereby throws upon our citi tens, which anioints to a large' sum: as a VIolation of 'the Cocatitution ol these Unitgd States, which guaranteel to overy;8tste a ReopubIcan forlia 0 Governaouot-.-a form of goyernmnent which panndt' esist where, tho conatil tuteaii dudli~rities"' iay' isY se beslde, at tbd pldssute ot' a' GoverHIrl who Is amenablo .to so - tribunal abu bi o oreign l as bq f Wo.i~ 4 prp m %otk e 66%,W i Robert E. Lee. Yesterday it was reported by tele graph that General Leo would pass down the Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta railroad, on his way to Florida. Soon the report spread from mouth to mouth, and by the time the train was due, 5 .clock p. a., Col umbia wos alive with the joyful tidings. One and all were eager to look again up on the noble featureo, the commanding mien, of the mighty champion of the South-the greatest inan of the age. Thougi torrents of rain had been falling all day, and oQn tinued to fall-and though soaroe a fourth of the crowd weie enabled to sceure oonvoyances-yet, when the train airived, the platform and. grounds adjoining the depot were. thronged with a mass of eager and oxpectant faces. Col. A. 0. Haskell waited upon the General, in behalf of the citizensi and requested his appearanco .upoh: the platform-the orowd being ar ranged in a semi-circle around the hind most platform of the pausenger coach, no that all might' see. The noble hero stepped forth, and. was greeted withstoh a shout of Joyous recognition as no other living man of the age could elicit, 'Shoqt after shout arose, so that the introductory re; marks by Col. Haskell; appropriate to the ocoadon, were almost drowned. "Our first in war and in peace" he was styled, and upon this the excited throng burst forth again into prolong ed hurrahs. The great 'rman modestly raised his hat and bowed, and re mained for a minute or two with his venerable bead -uucovered, then quietly withdrew Inside the coaoh. He was, evidentlyj deeply touched by the manifestations of love and esteem with which he e grqeted. The.trombling fip and mpatened eye spoke the emotions that '4wolled that breabt-so dauntless in kl'# -so re. sponsive to expressions of love. The General is on ...,way to Florida . to recuperqte his healtt, which is very feeble, thoi gh, in sp pearanoe, he "is said (bly, bose w1o Mbte*with him then) to b b -little ohanged -from what tke. was on -that %ouorab q aiy a- tox grant a speedy restoration of strength to him who is so dear to the millions of truly Southern hearts.-Southern Guardian. PLEAsURE.-Soeiety is not, and ought not to be, devoted to serious concerns. The beneficent Creator of the universe would not have adapted human beings to the enjoyment of His gifts unless He intended that they should be enjoyed. With the law which enjoins industry comes the- law of fruition. Why should the eye be formed to perceive natural and artifi cial boAuty if it is not to be used for that purpose I Why has the capacity to make instruments capable of emit; ting sweet sounds been given if such sounds are not to be heard? Why should the human structure be eapa ble of the sweetest melody, and of graceful action, and of the delightful expreesion beaming from innocent and heavenly eountenanees, if the pleas are from such sources were forbidden us? Why does the grape ripen, the silk.wori, the annual fleece return, the diamond sparkle, the marble yield to the chisel, and the canvas catch and preserve the inspiration of genius, but to awaken piuman desire,. animate industfy, andi reward with frtitio'n1 It is the excess of and the abuse ~which is forbidden. CoL~ornIAel 0? -rnE INpr!A s.-A bill to reorganize the system' of gov. erning the IndIans has been 'comnple ted by 'the House -Committee. -It proposes to colonise themn all in Qone territory, under three classes, a gon oral superintendent to have charge ol each olars, and no mere treaties to be matde with themi. In regard to' the colonisation scheme, It yet .remains tc be seen whether it will work or ,ngt, Some time ago a system, of p utting the tribes on reservations was lustitu. ted, but It does not seem' to have worked very well, owing to the diffi< olty of getting them on the reonerva, tions. T ho same diffc. Ity of catch, lug the hare p resents itself in the 5col onization semeai. But there is n< question about the expediency ci abolIshing the treaty'system. It i an -a-nomaly in legblation to make treaties with the inhabitants of ou1 own land-our own citizens, in fact and the syatem .bhs long been vehicle for abuses and swindles thal will only cease .with. its abolition.. ~N Y.iierald. b B.ornta 'rn-PAniT Pnobx s Irsou..-en Butler Is credited w il Isayinig tp a sniote of the AQdtk mrA;Iqn ~O1 we. "The roroes of Nature" -Yairfield "Her aid." The Faiifield Hereld of the 16th inst., in a short paragraph under the above heading, delit es the status of the Laurensville lrald, and summa rily disposes of its philosophy. Our cutemporory writes well and elaborately in advocacy of a conserva tive Republican party. We think his logio the very reverno of "hard horse sense.' There is no such party theroecan be non. American Repab lioanism is Radicalism, and It is a contradiction of teras to say conser. vative Radicalism. The one is the antipodes.of the other. Radioalism, or Republicanism, has its degrees of intensty-just 'us you have a Thad' Stevons and a Bleu Butler, *ho are dyed enore deeply, more thoroughly iusnaersed than'tbeir fellows. Thus wre 9 the positivo, comparitive and superliiye degrees a politics as in the foris of -speech. This Third Para ty, or Conservative Republicanism, is simply Radicalism in the. second or comparative degree. The imp's paw peeps through, however. The voters who elected Grant are Republicans, who say they wiat "peace," but Sum ner wants confiscation, and a clear wipe out of the Southern white race ; and yet, neverthelebs, is a Republican in the same ship with the former, and odmmatiding the crew. lEdnu Butler is a - Rpublicoin, and spoons a favorite tltcfl of-his in the Chicago Platform. Now our Faitfield coteoporary pro poses,,imply o styike out spoons, and pnse t accepl the eitunateI, and step upon The board with Tenjainin.' Th"- Laurendvill' - Herald finds the negro uanipulated by the carpet-beg ger, unprincipled natives, and North ern pallticiaps in solid antagonism to the Sogthor4 white maen. The posi tion of the white man is forced upon him. 'He Is drivenbe 'has no 3611 tion. Now, if there are .elements that elect to come to the white man and vqtqwik 1 eU ti.y wijl be hoer iyn , ' white man must 10t go ove . WI a# sdaalf hestule t6'any lbourse bj!wtebU hdi -olid' phalantof, good andotrao Uwa the South, and in V q tats n.y bq brken and ond a goreid. 1h t'~aIht man is a political organization 'by blood, instinct-a common history and a common ruin. We feel and believe with the Mobile Tribune-let as wait the effect of time and the ''forces of nature." atter wait un der desperate circumstances and mis fortunes, than by a sacrifice of princi ple achieve a triumph that must bring along with it certain political demor alization, and loss of self-respect. Laurensville Herald. An episode acourred in the Iowa Senate on the 8th instant. Soon after the Senate was called. to order the doorkeeper announced '"lessage from the :se," and Miss Mary 10. Spencer, engrossing clierk of that budy, appeered and modestl said : "Mr. President." That o oer re plied, "Miss Clerk," and Miss Spencer proceeded to read, in a clear and dis tint- voice, a messenger from the House in telation to certain bills which had passed that body, At the conclusion of the messago the sna, tori approved of this first offiial aot performed b'y a woman in the Iowa Senate by a general clapping of bands. A sohool visitor lately gave a teach or the following sentence to spell. Robert Wright, the beautiful write, of Wrightvill e, down In Torrington claims the oelus've right to wri rites and ceremonies of his church, and has secured a copywright for his writings; but Henry Wright, th< writing-usaster, also writes thros< rites, now Is it honorable for the Right Honorable Ulenry Wright bold ly to write himself upright In the pros enco of the right'handed wheel-wraght Robert Wright 1" 'IA Lrogno.-There ,is a -batf legeod illustrating the blessodeespco performing our duty at whatever.oos to our own inclInatIons. A boautifu vision of our 8aviour had appeae t< a monk, and In silent bliss he was gasn ing ponit. . De hepy pariygd A which he was to find ,the poor of thb convent.,H lingered not in his eel to enjdgv the vision, butt ho left to' per form his humble duty. When 'he vi turned, he found the visionseti)l. walt ing for him, and utteri og these worde "Hada~t thou styd ns 've id' Hlowa Ftsit or A t.-..4et #saatn talk *nuoh and talk well at ,.om.e father who lahaltally41ilet Ipbl 148ami. Ve mtes-seeparent 'beit4 tre" 3fe tf .eveygroodpaa kiel AbJA~~e nd84Jai 34 Iog a? q Southern Manufactures. According to the able report <A Col. John B. Palmer, of South Caro. lina, which was ordered to be printed with the proceedings of the last Con. miercial Convention, recently held in Louisville, Ky., the Southern manu. facturers can now make yarn cheoper than those North by Do. upon each pound of manufactured cotton. Yarns can be manufactured and delivered in Europe at 41c. cheaper than the cot. tin can be exported and manufactured in Liverpool or. elsewhere. Thes< statements are supported by fgures and minute statistics as to the price of wood, labor, cotton, and by actual showing of books in different facto ries. Au ordinary crop of cotton is worth to the. South . $225. 000,000. Were this-cotton crop, however, man. ufactured.into yarn, it would give the South $100,000,000 morb'of revenue. As the matter now stands, the South has only 199,772 spindles, where the Northhas .5,848,477. Were the whole crop manufactured here, it wou,1'ay t!teiabotetg, ablefly wo men and ohildren, $36)000,000. It would pay this sum to theolass that are ordinarily .non-producers. Spin. ning is comparatively simple, and but little Northern capital is invostcd In this pritnary oeratiou. It is in the odriiplioated labo- of waving, dyeing, etc., that the heavy demand for copi tal begins. Were these operations performed, as they will be some day the amount of wages paid and labor ers employed would be immensely in creaseda Col. Palmer's suggestion is that the property holders and planters of the South band together and occu py the field with t'eir own factories and s ladles. Once these are esta' lished, his proposition is to ship direct for Europe, and drive other yarns from the market. The cost of a spinnirg-toill, giving employ ment to ejgby-seven operatives, and consum. ing 887 bales, ought to be $50,000. T~he esthnated not profits of such *a factory, at Northern prices, would be $117,748. The foregoing statisties are endorsed by. F. Cogin, Superintend* ont of the Augusta Factory, and'that they deservo conuIderation, there can b6 no d'nl, The ounolusjon they l6di to is at ydll aamplet should be selt ininiedi ely to a ecHtnin, by positive experinc;.(. and in but Ihorita. tive form, what the precise nargin of difference in prices is. If, after con sultation with the manufacturers, deal. era pnd others, redding lii Europe, thesostatistics are verified, us they doubtless will be, an impetus will be given to manufactures which they could drive from no other source. Phenix. TwITTINO ON FACTs.-The following pnssage occurs in the late speech o1 Senator Revels "It was the ntable sons of the South that valiantlv rushed to the rescue ; and but for, their intrepidity aid ardent daring m1an1y a Northern fireside wonkc miss to-day paternal counsel or a broth er's love. S1r, I repeat the fact that the colored race &aved to ihe noble wo men of New England and the Middle States the men on whom they lean to. day for security arid safety. " Many o my race, representatives of these mer on fields of battle, slep in tihe count-si graves of the Aonth." IThis is a . very direct rnd pertinent allusion to the fact that the hnsbanda am sons of "the noble women of' Nev England and( ther Middile? States," Ins stead of going to war in their individus canety, wvent into the market am *bought black-and~ysllow substitutes a so mutch a he~ad, and sent them to assis ini fillin~ htle countless graves in thi South. hue Radical love for th negro consists principally in using hi person as rood fo~r powder, and using hi vote to perpetunate Radical power.-[Si Lo)uis Republiean. . waAD BbftlvnR LYTTo BIAnT.-Ger IButler has a gre'at dislike to Buiwer, a the ,glish novelist is generally calic I and this dislike. is of very recent origir f It is said that' ho read the novel cndle 6 F'A~'raege Ntoty," to a certainij pat 1i sa'ge, p hldh prov ed so offensive o him that he threw down the volutie I - reat wrath, and declared iflitulwer .ha 6 been. in Pompeii ispits last days, it, woul a h~ve been belt tr for the world. 1~getdtemain who was preseht at this on Sborst of passion. picked up t~he vohim I .As the General fiAng out, of -tihe root -. withi mighty tride. ant) fonnd it open : this phg :. "Ay.,;. trf4e ; the vulgi *i proierb sait'rt good to be both wit 1a Mllvet utooU iht' dne'sg nidat h ; 'so it a1 wheitvo Iottefiwon'*cen rfwrily - dreat < Silt; bnbwhmit is ~a p n whit Ma..pcgle~ eop nis ,~hhk isp)) ' rest dene'or8Iredjakttafterth. *tpdibn1 &h ~rufritan'ft~lIm*ir~ - N~iiteh~ *es GearlGrtib The Oadetship Eales-A Story of a Crary Miller. The plea of Mr. Whittemore, ar gued So disastrously to his client by General Butler, that the cadet iuon'y all went to the poor, has revived the old story of the miller who sometime., had crazl fits in which he always imagined himself to ie the Lo.rd judging the world. On these ocea sions ho would put oi t paper crown, ascend a pile of meal bags with great dignity, and call his neighbors in sue cession. Tho same ones were always judged ; and they were millers of his vicinity.-The first simmoncd was Hans S chmidt. "Haos Schmidt shtand oop.-Htaus, vat is peen your ,ishness in dat old worlo I" "I vas a miller, Oh Lort." "Vas you a joot Wos " "iVell, von der vater vas low anl the pihness is pad, 0 Lort. I some dimes dakes a lectle exdra doles." "Vell, Hlana, you shall go ofer Tait der gotes, already yet." .,.And in succemsion all were tried and immediately sentenced to go over to the goats. Last of all the miller invariably tried himself in the follow ing style : "Yatoob Miller, sltand oop. Ya cob, vat vas your pishness in dat order vorld 71 "I vas miller, Oh Lort." "Vas you alvays a joost mon, Ya cob ?" "Vell, Oh Lord von do vater vas a leetle low and pishuess pod, I same. dimes dakes soeie leetle extra doles; but, Oh Lort, I all do vile givea docs doles to the poor." [After a lung pause.] "Ve', YTh M ill:r, you cot, go ofer mit de sh ops, but it is von dan tight squee:ze.- rsh. Cor. Cincinnati Gazet te. Fried Bread.--Dip st!.lo bread in water, slighty salted. Fry brown in lard. Cracker Pie.-Two eralcker., breken* flue, one cup of s.Jg,1, )000 Up1 or boiling water, onae tL a;poon t.tat.n aoid, two crusts. Lemon P;e.-One lemon choped, cine cup of sugar. one-and-a-half er , raade.6- % throai~la.4-,htn. ter, two crestw. Loof (ake.-One cup of sponge er two cups of light dongh, one enp tX sugar, halfa cup of butt.:r, two Vggs. ha f a teasipooniful of soda, (te cup of raisins. Spices to the twste. To Remnvc Ink spofsfron. Linen. Saturdte the spot w itW lrd, awl ex pose for a day to the hot Fun ; then Wash and boil without s..up. F nit, stains also should he wnahed without soap. What a million is worth in some minds may be judged from tiese wo bon mots, which have just cnme to light. Hope, tie cel"lirated Londou banker, who was suffering from an Inexorable malady which preveitci him from eating, seeing a friend at, work upon a chop, exclaimed with accents of emotion, stopping hi, friend'sbhand as it was convo3 ing a piece of chop on a foak to his imouth, "Oherisbed friend, I would give a m!nillion to be able to eat that chop as thou art doing l'" And M. Nathaniel Rothschild, who was paralyzed, on hearing of the accident to his brother from a fall from his horse, exclaimed. .*'Ah I how happy he must be to b~e I, able to get on horseback at the risk oven of breaking his neek by a fall 1 I would give a million to be able to risk as much 1" IsnARLIiTas tN NEW IORK.-lt is stated there are more Israeli tes in New York city than in the ILoly Land .or In all Syria. There are about '70, 000 in that city, and this is probably a larger number than now inhabit the -Soripture landa above mentioned. Of .that 70,000 there are not 1,000 that a can justly be called poor, while the [majority are heavy owners of real es .tate., and also among the most active and enterprising of tho commercial -. pople. TuiE INEVITAniE RERULT. - Tho d Schools in Washmngton are beiig des. d troyed by the negroes where being pushed forward rapidly anid iindlaaious. ly, and wth very evil reaha. N-arly all ethe white children have wit hdrq wn fronm one of the schools, aind thei triinees of it the piablic schools are davisineg-means to * prevent their admnissin to another h public school in the District, n Soro SEua.a.-The, people of the h"sOld -DominionPt ucoed as they have ete:P been for their statesmaunlike sa Vsaly seem, as a general thlig, clear t:ocomprehid the key.stoneo or the ani~idir Nnth, and th at Is no at mp of' nddlle with national polities. ~qhn Jt a~rt $%1 objAots to the ,S;~ti sVb hig beke ninej y equimeca ri. We , p hitg84Niith minority i& req ;fndreqb~ousesanid en. - ?ts99,gn redes*trayedI egg ggp gy p(Qiop