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THE FAIRFIELD HERALD Publiabed Every Wednesday at fl WINNSBOR1O, S. C, by Desportes, Williams & Co. T?RMS-N ADVANO. One Copy one year, - 800 Five ~ ' - - - 12 50 Ten " " " - - 26 00 Obsequies of the late H. P. Feugas, 1 We weie assigned a part yesterday < in discharging the melancholy duty, of n committing to the tomb in St. Lawrence I (Catholic) Cemetery, the mortal re. I mains of l'im whose name heads this 1 paragraph. Mr. Feugan died at his r residence on Broad street, after a briof f illness on Tuesday evening last, aged a sixty-four years. The respect and I esteem entertained for lin in this con- I munity, were fully evinced by the largo ' concourse of mourners and friet,ds who filled Cathedral Chapel, in QuPen-street, on the occasion of the celebration of his funeral rites. A greater solemnit.y could not well have pervaded any as. remblage than did thi. as the imposing rites of the Catholic Church were nor. formed ove tlh retnains, by tho Rev. Dr. Quigley and the Rev. Father Cro. ghan, the first officiating in the altar serv;ces, and the latter pronouncing an C -oulogium on the deceased, which was as truthful and eloquent as it was touch. ing and deserved The late H. P. Fengas has lived in Charleston the greater part of his life, and although modest and retiring it his nature, was always looked up to and regarded as a fit representative of as many tf the higher virtues as any man within the circle of our large acquaintance. He certainly was a model citizon, a model friend ard a model relative, and wi1h these added to the fact that he hiad greatly endeared himself through life to the young as a teacher and particuilar friend, inveats his loss with a sorrow 'that is ethaps almost universal in our ci'y. Mr. Feugns has left a widow to mourn him, and although this dispensa .tion to her is indeed heavy, she has thie solace, that the'pure. and beautiful life he had led on earth, is the surest test she can have that Jo has now but com-I menced to live another and much hap pier one in Heaven. We mingle our warmest sympathies with here in this mournful event.-Charle(on Courier. Do Our Farmars Want Proteotion? It scoms to ho the chief ain of ,i. class of persons who pride tihens.-ives on the title of Protectionist to try to -change the nattural occupation of our people into some other that. does not Eit them. From the ,orure of our soil. the vast body of our pople are farniere. This, it is inaintainod, is all wrong; we must become a nation of manufacturers. So the man who could make iirree -dollars a day by farming must work in iron for one dollar, and the general public must make up the loss by a taxa tion called tnriff, which assumes to fix the price by daw for every thing we -consume. If we were naturally mantu facturers, the same people would shout bosannas to agriculturn, and would try to force tue to proditco what nature never fitted us to produ'ce a;t all. Of al11 occupations by which man gains his hyving, none is so long-lived, so healthy, happy, and congenmai as t.hat of the vast, majority of our peonle farming. Out of every thouisand "farm. 'or,, the~ tablet, tell tus thtat only l12 died to 15 shoemakers, 10 grocers, 17 tailors, blackemit:hs, anji carpenters, 20 miners, 23 buttchters, and 28 a'e hoiusekeepers. The fact is, that large cities commence the destruction of maunkind, which is facilitated so largely by herding themt in close, ill.ventilated factories. English economnists ha~ve always declared that ljfe in large ctties is even more preca rious than duiring memorable battles a,nd sieges, as witness the following fig, ures: Ai-'tho ;ie'ge of Flushitig, Flanders, the chances of life were 450 to I At the siege of Antwerp, the chances of life wore, 80 to I At the Battle of Wal. ,terloo, the -ohanoces of life were, 30 to 1 While in the -close, ill-dtrained streets of British cities, Shop keeping in Liverouol gave, 10 to I Weaving, Manchester, gave 17 to I Siw.grinding, Sheffield, gave 30 to I This is the banq~uet of death which t.he Protectionists sqwite and urge otur farmers and theoir sons at,d daughters1 to partake-exchange their pure air and water and uinadtlterated food for the uneutterable abominations of tenement. houses and crowded cities and swarming factories. Do the fat mere want it ?-. Free Trader. THE RicHMoND DISABT9R.-A mom ber of the Legislature describes his fall as rollows: "I heard a low rumbling sonnia and VAlt znyaalf ain'<ing rapidly. I was facing the gallery and saw it falling toward me. Fortunately it did not reach me. I saw the meat scrambling over each other in the gallery and hieard whi seemed to be one unearthly yell ofagony. Then came the crash and I enk c no darkness. I found myself 'nder a mass of rubbish with a dead poy over ne, a woundoed man tunder 4 ,and another at my side. The poor flow tinder me said, 'Oh. me I Buat if I could only fenr God always am I do nnw I How wicked I have been all rof days I Oh, God, forglve me; spare spae and I will be 4 true follower of a J.-snie The san at my aide exclaim, c 'Oh death, wher. is thy sting I Oh,.e grave where is .tby vtegory I' I heard A. inmber of cries all about rme ; som,e c wvere ipmiking about their w'ivee, others of their children. while other. w,.re beg- t ing for air. I believe many of them i led from suffocation, for although ,nt ttle hurt myself, I ahould have died -om suffocation if I had not .beun emoved when I wa. The Largest Farm in England con. tis of 3,000 acres, and bolongs to amuel Jones. In its cultivation he allows the "four course" system, the rhole extent of the farm being divided hto four crops--750 acres to wheat, 50 to barley and oats, 750 to seedh', oan., peas, &c., and 750 to roots. Its live stock is valued as follows : Sheep, $35,000 ; horres, $15,000 ; bul eks, $12,000 ; pigs, $2,500. The oil ako and corn purchased annually mounts to *20,000, and artificial ferti. zers about 8,000. The entire cost of nanure, m various forms used, annual. y, is about $15,000, Sheep are claim d as the most profitable stock he keeps, rein which are realized about $20,000 year. His income from the whole arm, though not stated, can be little less han $100,000. WINNSBORO. Wednesday Morning, May 18, 1870. A Interview With a* Native Georgian. As we got upon the cars at Chester, in our way to Winnsboro, last Sun lay, a mulatto brass band, with in itrumonts strangely out of unison, mtraged the religious associations of he day by blowing harsh discord up )u the air. A very respectable old gentlemen, sitting near us in front, who we afterwards learned was from Jiarke County, Georgia, and had boon President of a Railroad there from 18 to 53, turned and asked an expla ltinn. We jooosely replied, that be band was colebr:atiug "the Fif eenth Commandment," which so far is we could gather, reads, "Vote the Rtepublican ticket next fall." We hen told him that the County School Jommissioner of Chester had been sked by a lady, what was the mean ng of the band, the procession, and soiso going on the day before, and he replied, "celebrating the fifteenth amendment." The lady asked "what is the fifteenth amendment I" To which the sapient dispenser of litera ture and knowledge to Chester Coun ty is said to have replied, "Well, I don't know exactly what it is myself." The old man then inquired as to the ado,ption of the New York code in South Carolina, and upon our explain ing how the constitution commanding nr South Carolina laws to be codi led, had been interpreted to mean the aopying off the printed code of New York, he seemed both amused and outragr~. After a long pause, lie b.ai,l "W e will have another fight, Sir. It is obliged to oome. We can not escape the fate of all nations since the crent ion of the world. We will have another fight, so soon as the S3outh gets ready for it. Is not the hatred and antagonism spreading ? De not all hate the Yankee, and is it not going down to our children and grand-children to hate them?i Is it not a sacred dut.y to bate them, and to hate themi with an everlasting ha trod ? It is obliged to come to an ther fight, and the next time, the South being prepared, will whIp hem." HIe then went into a detail of soir.e of the pilfering and plundering of of Sherman's army, of their stealing the books of (private libraries, ran' sacking bureaus and drawers for eloth ing and jewelry, and drew such a pica ture of outrage, that we wore suir prised at ourselves to find how quick ly the spirit of a fight could be roused in us, by a plain unvarnished recital sf the wrongs infioted on us during the war, "Yes," we said to onr selves, "yes ; he is right. The mem9. ry of these facts cannot die. They will make their impression on the In genious minds of our Southern youth, md our full rights in the Union, or a loody fight to break out, is, indeed, eertainty of the future," The old gentleman then wet% o to lay, that the North had perhaps lout ts liberty permanently, and was des. mned to be ruled by a despotism, but aot so the South, because she bad ever been whlliogly enslaved, and It vas not in the char,soter of her people A) bubmnit to an Asistic despotism for myye length of ti,ne. The North, aid he, so far as I can learn, are com plately confident that they lhave fied ,hings permanently dowp South ; but think I know the blood, and it will ot submit to Asiatic government a ay longer than it can help It. T'he ountry is too large. The West will plit off. Tbe South will Bght. An. ther war is inevitable." Immigration, he thought, would be ory slow, and ovety real peetnianent ettler. woul4 have full time tso he.. owe .* thsoropgh 3S0uthorp ase. here was no dangefrof the dltuotlv. hatactet of our people being.log. The tdaoks, he belIeved,f hat takdmmnu ed toA sp edyeltinctin. Io did aot believo ofruld safely trust t e United. Statet; oepsus about to F, o taken o4this piit, If taken faitb fully, however, it would disclose a fearful decrease of the race. Swell farmers from ..,the. North,r:4o. believed, would come here, and soog er than Euroipeans. But it .would be a slow increase of population, and they would be .thorough Southern men. We need not fear any. man who identifies himself with our soil. But the Southern people intend to keep the control of their land for themselves, Manufactures would, doubtless, spriug up, but would not increase our population much. W o need then to assist our own poor people, and un doubtedly will huve thaw. Very soon, the Southern whites would control -the Negro vote. To this the Yaokee Coagress would ob. jeoct, and pass bills of pains and pen alties ; but no inry in the South would convict. This would negessi tate military coinn,isdions, and that, said the old gentleman very coolly, will bring on a fight. That Sort of tyranny is just obliged to come to an end. We could not but .feel inferested by the old man's talk. He evidently had both a mind to think with, and a heart with which to feel. The little picture he drew of the vandalism of the Fedenal army opened our eyes to the magazine of passion that the fu ture agitator for revolution has at his command. There it is ; and twelve millions of brave people must be exterminated, to extinguish . it. Who then, can foretell the future, if radicalism is not overthrown ? if con stitutional government be not restor ed I "Corsair" and Education. "Corsair," the classie correspond ent of the Charleston News, suggests that the Reform party make their neglect of education the strong point of attack upon the Radical party in South Carolina. If the Reform party thoughtlessly do so, instead of letting well enough alone, the State will have to carry, next year, an addition al tax of a half million at least for Yankee School-marms. The Radical party, through the Freedmen's Bu. reau and otherwise, have done much more for the education of the Freed men, than the members of the Reform party have done. 'Thi fact alone wilt answer fifty well-put points of neglect. They have not done all that is possi ble, bat they have done more than the Reform party, and as much as was judieious, through State legislsa tion, under the circumstances. They have not added to the t-axes of a peo ple, who, out of one short crop, have paid two taxes to the State and one to the Union, and ver-y heavy taxes, for the purpose of promoting education at present. In this, they have done wisely. Northern benevolence, they knew, would be continued for some time longer, until the State somewhat recuperated, and the blacks sro satis fied. Next year, they will vote more money, no doubt, but gradually, if let alone. Taunt and badger them, how ever, and our laud-holders will have to foot a very heavy odueation bill, next year Let us, too, exatniro the special elharg~e of' "Corair." It i: thatM. Jilison does not undertamke the support of the Howard School of Columbia. hlow could lie do it with the means at his command t Ricbland's share of the $50,000 appropriation is about $1,600 at most., and of the 'poll-tax perhaps $4,000, that is, about $5,00 in all. Of this, say $2,00. is given to Free schools for the whites, and it will leave but $3,000 for the blacks throughout the entire county, and the whole of it would hardly pay the teni teachers of the Columbia floward School. Mr. Jilleon, then, simply can. not do it. But we know who can, and who will. Why7, the Columbia Radi cal Coneil, we predict, will make "Corsair" and the GuardMan, and othera who are not content to let well enough alone, pay the bill, an~d that very soon, if thi, attack 9fn a poinut on which their party itas been both con. siderato and moderate, be kept usp. A Late DIsIueory ot the taan. ter' Newe. 'e samter News, with some of. frontory, epeaks of this paper"having the face to nomnate Grant for re electlon" as "t.akiog the laat plougi down the saolit ge8Q@ggus.n gOr liaps we can ta er oCfQnr political' morality abotetr *.ll as the Saner Newe dowiof It:joutInlIitib'ufannev,/ For If the Netor had "Vek Ming niri ~ ly,t o pp svgyggen a and a'o a tfdrof Guun abln.sv pay *4e~ te##t$ed$6d b7 iliVWinshibda 'Valke in Virginia and 'enter in at renn?eee, after our postjlon had T been d$Sned ; the evident s01it of th4 d Republican party on the floor of Con p gross, and the ratification of the 15th ti amendment and acquiesce of the a whole country therein ; all go to con. b firm us in our judgment as then ex- ti pressed. We will have a constitu. o tional party, the groat need of the country, by forming on the column of I Lonfervutive Republicans now in po- t sition to Oongreee, or we will not have w Constitutional government again at a all; but anarchy, rather, and milita. A ry rule and fierce revolution. Those e who see the dread alternative as clear- e ly as we believe we do, would stifle v passion, and prejudice, and work I earnstly for the only practicable poli. jt oy as it seems to us, of freedom and d hopeofpeace. The Radical Party and Edu cation. t Whom the Gods wish to destroy, they first make mad. The attack on the Radicals that they neglect educa tion, when it In well-known that they wish to make it a national j,,b, and have. actually reported a bill to be considered at the next session of Con. t gress for that purpose, is simply ag ging on additional burdens. Why, their educational bureau is to be the R.adioal propaganda. . It is short sighted to make such a charge. A few figures answer it. In this $tate, education has been postponed, it is C trues and would be wisely postponed a littlo longer, if let alone; but as a party, the Radicals have done for edudation alrc.tdy, what the annexed figuree indicate : a AGRCULTURALCOLIGE SCRIP. But a few years ago Congrcs again disturbed a large portion of its public lands among several of the States in the shape of agricultural scrip, as is shown in the followingiexhibit : t Statement showing the names of the States entitled to agricultural college , scrip under act of July 2, 1862, and supplements, which have accepted the grant and received the scrip, with the 0 quanity of scrip, viz : States. Acres in Scrip. < Vermont, 150,000 a Connectient, 180,000 f Rhode Island, 120,000 Kentucky, 330,000 IllinoiC, 40,000 New York, ' 990,000 Maine, 221,000 Pennsylvania, 780,000 New Jerasey, 210,000 Massachusetts, 360,000 New Iiampshire, 150,000 W est Virginia, i50,000 Ohio, 630,000 Maryland, 210,000 Indiana, 290,000 Delaware, 90,000 Tennessee, 300,000 North Carolina, 370,000 Total number of acres in scrip issued, 0,000,000) G eneral Land Ofice, January 8, 1870. Statement shmowing the quant.ity of public lands estimated as granted i by the United States to the several States containing public lands, for the support of common school", and reserved to be hereafter appropriated for the same purpose in the orgaiIzed I Territories ; the quantity in the Ter-i ritorics being estiated on the pro. sumed bais that the grant will be ex tended to the TerrItories by congres sional enactments, Vis : S tates. Acres. Ohio, 704,488 Indiana, 650,3171 Illinois, 085,066 Missouri, 1,199,1391 Aiabama, e'02,774 MississippI, '83?,584 Louisiana,, 786,044 Michigan, 1,067,397 Arkansas, 880.460 Florida, 008,503 Iowa, 005.1444 Wis,onsin, 958,644 California, 0,719,324 Ninneso a, 2,969,090 Oregon, 8,829,79U 8tates and - Acres. Territories. Kans:f s 2,891,809 Nevad a,.8,5/8 Nebrska,2,702,O44 WVashington, 2,488.675 New Mezlo, 4,809,368 Ut, 8,008,619 Doao, 5,860,451 Coloado,8,715,65 Montana,5,112,085 Arizona, 4,050,850 Idaho,. - 8,068,231 Wyoming, 8,480,281 Total, .67,9302 General Land Office, .Jan, 8, 1870w Bre eaitlto-r We We believe that the interests of the entire .coitry, ampd epe'ially :o the' South, Jemand. anew Oonstitutional, party of Equal Rights, Internal Ita.'. prqvneen and Industrial Develope nt~ apG 'have 'deolared 'durselves a' iNqf ti1att~ OoDnarWatiVe Repubi. e saw*-t the.eoeetry4eoutheb oleu p pevwhlh sttelt a-me# pgi1% enthei o,0tu1 .40( Weo e n Iooi on . 9 . ,c' 4'wrwrt aiot botbi'and in either. bis.. eemsuo6,iste' political uallets, wlo ' the 'face of, every 1g6 of hltto<" , bdldly. aisert that iere can be but twofpoliticalpdrties, ud who, therefore, styleio'fire upon oth Radjpals and Dotroorata "wris ng first on one side, and then on the theti.' 2. We bold as firmly as the Mobilo 14bune i:self. that the fgrded of na are, In their normal developiuent, ill restore to the. Southern white ian in due time, politioal supremacy. t i he same time, we hold that the fort, the experiment, as we have ver regarded it, to conciliate and ork harmoniously along with the locks, so long as their temporary umerical superiority exists, is the ictate of both wisdom and charity. et those, who cannot make so easy a istiuction as to circumstances and as a time, regrrd the two positions as inconsistent." Not at all so, it eems to us. We make these explanations *in eference to the criticism of gentle. ion for whom we have great respect. Ve believe, too, in the third place, hat if the government of law and of he constitution as amended, be nut estorod, fierce revolution is the oer. sin future ; and yet we believe, or tleast ardently hope, that a new Na ional Constitutional party will re tore just government for a generation r so at least. These two beliefs ave been pronounced "inconsistent." Vherein ? We simply cannot see It. 'he misapprehension has perhaps risen from viewing our opinions part from their connection with ach other as to time, or as antithoti al correlatives. One thing, however, is certain ; 't is hat in our selections we give all par ies a fair showing, and often furnish hose disposed to cavil at our moder to and conservative positions, the ery notions, through our selections, hat they misapply as objections to urselves. We belong to that class f men who are never afraid to find ut the truth, who are over searching fter facts as they are, and not as we ancy they ought to be, and are per. ectly fearless in stating them. "Plebisoite." Some inquiring wag sent the follow. ng pote to the editor of the New Or eans Times: "NEw ORLKANs, April 26, 1870. "Dear N.:- ihclosud find $10. Vhat the devil is a /'lebiscite F "Yours languidly, J. CWwy.n The importuned editor delivered imself thus: "Measuring our cor espondent's anxiety by his liberality, 0oth gratitude Knd compassion prompt a early reply. Having once passed brough a similar condition of mental ixhaustion in endeavoring to compre tend the "Schileswig-Hlolstein queos ion,' we can feel fo.r our frio',d's lar.ed condition over the 'INebiscite,' ,d shall therefore proceed to answer "A 'plebiRoite' is a thing only a e'w e.tllows' can understand. You ee, w'ten, in the course or humian ~ventq, the policy of a governmnn, u its transcendental relations ivith be political economics of a State, be omnes imbued with the spetral ana. ysisof alnormal influences, infring.. ',g upon the perpetuity of institu tes at once det rimental and nuga ary to the abtruse interests of theoc ney ; why, then, a decent respect for nkind requires the protnulgation of opular analytical manifesto, in which *. . Jn short, a 'plebiacite' is >lainly a 'plebiscite' ; or, in other verds, it is Fre for 'Shoe fly, don't >odder me.' There l'" ANoTu1Rn PA OoN.--The Chester R?eporter says: Nancy Hudson, who ras sentenced at the last term of the tourt to 80 days' imprisonment and a fine of $30 for receiying stolen roods, - tas pardonsd last week by lovernor Scott, and all the costs of he' prosecution remitted, thereby bhrowing the burden of their payment .pon the county. What a farce jus ice has gotten to be under the Ohio lynsasty Ii I,tis reported that the re. idence of the.said Nancy is one of he places where the League meets egularly. Thie accounts for 'the niikiQ the codoaniut." .Arpaper is going the rounda about i lsiCeter. Vt., ~dying fNom ighit lacing. A n editor, commednting mn the f'rof, says : "'hese ' norsite honid be done away Withj ind if tal~ ~iria can't live without #ing siueg d, we supposd mren b'an b oidk' wonld saorrfid'e thiernsh'elVs. AOcld a we are .we would rather devote bree-bonrs a dag, u4itboit a e'ent of ay, sWa brevet 'c0:aef thi sto thesi irIs dyig ofl' lif tiat uiifr. Oceo 'ours almost any tiima." [We 'ate tsoteso stiVebM 'ourjdtoVi rould prefer the eerset -contract to e third petty moveenzt.j'. QRant62,eIk :RAndna 3 aterrya-We yttbligh al ielegrare blob'was forwatdU f 'dvn* CaleO tta odauderdae'oftlna28th oft A pril ftd ylnted sud aeblshedThrfadSi leves - o'eok aI the -foren-oon the irme .dayN'. Paehres'r Work C5cob#I. lishode'.-Wete York tlrqkM. A (040 ree6tsmrtedeopl EXlgelj4oN iN PARLIN T N. 11 Friday's j , tib 6W inst at ro named Pau rown, cpnlqted of muIdI at,h'=laet. tem , the Darlington CoUt'b, ,as cxbite&di in the I presence of a lrge concourse of peo ple. The Demoorat says The pris,oner appeared, calm and collected ; h expressed himself as 1 being prepared to meet his fate; H , ascended the seaffold with a' Atesid step-prayed and spoke'in a firm and eQlleoted voice : sung a hymn in ao eustomed tones--aud in the. sight of about two thousagd otlxoggp,, he died. When the drop first fell, the rope 1 broke, and the poor culprit was lifted up seemingly insensible and carried again upon the drop. Another rope was procured, the poor follow was placed upon his feet, the knot adjus ted-or mnis-adjusted---the drop fell slowly, he was eased down-ho: strug gled volently for a time, and in about twenty minutes was 'pronounced by Drs. Lunney and Parker to be dead, Let the young-whites as well as l colored--rewminber Paul's last words: "If I had followed the advice of my father and mother, I would, instead of being where I am now, have been at work." CIALLENGNo KsNO DEATH AND WINNINO ON TITE FIRST ROUND. Yesterday a coal-beaver, who had at taiuod to the patriarchal age of '4 years, after oarry ing a half to of coal up three flights of stairs, was invited by hie employer to take a drink in a Bowery saloon. After imbibing, he remarked: "There's no strength to the whiskey round here." "how so 1" inquired the gentleman. '"ure I've had about thirty drinks of the crather in ine this morning, and divil the whimper of it do 1 feel now." "Good heavens! IHow much does it take to affect you !" "Such stuff as they have in this country, I could drink a gallon of without tazing me a bit. I'd rather have a drop of old potheen 'at home,' than a demijohn of the whiskey in these parts." The bar-tender overheard these ro. marks and jokingly offered to giv him a pint of whiskey if he would drink it ull on the spot. The coal heaver eagerly conseated,'and it was nieas. urod out and poured down by him at a single breath, to the horror of the witnesses. The phenomenal toper went out as straight as a liberty pole, tand in the course of an hour returned apparently sober and desirous of try ing it again.-N. Y. Sun. DsSTrnuc-TIvE AIrT. STORM.--LSPt we4.k the section of country lying near the line between Greenville and Laaurens.counties was visted by a disastrous hail storm, Alout four miles from ClairSpring, the'storm of wind and hail raged fieroely,' doing great damage to the growing orop, the hail-stones eoveriug a large area of ground to the depth of three lches. The loss is a very heavy one, the wheat in that belt beiasg entirely des troyed. The window glaesed in the rebidonce of Dr, Hunter, faciug the directfon'from 'which 'the sto'rm came, were badly shattered, and the wind aai'so strong as to excite much appe hension as to the safety of the hous~e. The h-ill foIl also in other seet.ions of the country, but, fortunately, not in sufficient severity to do great inju'ry. RF.CONSTnUC'TON- IN a NUT-SukR.1r.. --Some fellow, whose head is level thuns defines Reconstruction : "Which is it that is the best gov ernment the world ever seed ? Geor gy ought to have found -out by -this time, having run some fourteen or more since Dixie wedt -up:''First, territory ; second,- provisional ; third, no gov6rnment, (jnst alohbin' 'roundl loose, like 'a stray dorg ;) fifth, civil and military mixed ; sixth, in the Un ited States lone-fourth ; seventh, plum out, etc.d etc., down to the fou? teenth-which started out tryin' to run a sorter double-barrel fitina'that is, civil when It suits, military whetn it dlon't,'and it suits and don'6 about every now nooui. L'rxcu Law.,.Lynch law .is tolera bly effective, but it has its faults.-e Mistakes are liable to occur. The ot.her day, in Illinoi.s, a vigilance com mittet hung a man because he looked like another man who had stolen -a horse. The mnistake was disoovered after the man's,.neok had been twisted all out of shape, and the breath had permanently left his body.. He us. turall,y felt a little cooltoward that commiittee, and no amnount'of apology on their part could restore ,him to his proper senses. -The lynch 'law . men should he sgre they are right .before they go,so recklessly ahead.. NTEnE8TYNG TO. - 'ARMERsU AND OARDNERs.-Tb:e Commiss,iiDners of Internal. Revenue has , decided that farmers .and gardners who Siell only th prod ucts of' their own farms and g rdens fromp the,3r owd wagons along thie streeta, whenever .the~ ea0 obtaig I prmI uion to temnpqrarni7 place the:p, haviug no regular splage. upon ,the street for their Wgons where their eust9mers.,may expect to find tlin,' one .dsy.in .one place and ani>tt er In A another,, do not by so doing render I themselves liablp to specil tax. as produe9 rokers. Th9 president of the Santbh ? elfterath-osa dh4.asaiired'tha ok meon of San Franoisc'o %hat it 91,0 006 iiby is vote'd it .ompnuy stn th7tJief6n0 It shall lie O*efded ( no,Chi se labbijf il 64 sInpl y t'd9lgehution IYFfbe oA P Thy small.por~ IMUan 'o Aeon. Misterlhble ext*anki Jison efruty Iensee.'0wa oh i i Fo'elffn News. PAn19, May 14.-Great prepara ions are progressing for the proola. nation of the plciscite vote. The Fwnperor will deliver an oration. 3eveal editors implicated in the Feb. uary plot have been 1lberatad, iooluo ling Millieso and gault,. of the s'ellaIse. The tnag atrutei tester. lay convicted forty-nine persons and icquitted eight. .ONDON, May 1e4 . tdhii. nent of dollars from Mexico is ex. '' 1%'t# "tifPT*f di s. "TiPr "ment )redicta that woman's rights is doomed n tlpiw Parliament. iheobbdies of the viotitns of the )reek brigands arrived here to-day. Fron Washtngtosi. WASINGTON, May 14.-The Score ary of the Interior, by direction of he President, has issued an order for. >idding the railroad . companies ex ending their roads into the Indian erritory. The commauder of the nilitary district bai been instructed o enforce this order. Sumner's bill supplementary to the ivil rights bill requires all hotels, res nurante, railroads, thentres, churches, imnert halls, aeadenes, common chools, colleges, etc., to treat per ions of all race or color alike, and nposes a penalty punishable on con. iction in court of any refusal of any rivilege to any one on account of he or be being of African decent. It pro. ibits cemeteries from being devoted o the eepulture exclusively of white people. - The bill was referred. The Indian Bureau has advices that he Oregon Indians are preparing heir reservation. No trouble is ap. prchecded as the government will use orce to hold them within bounds. District Attorney Pierrepont has resigned, .to take effect June let. A lozen New York lawyers are scram bling for his place. The Mayor and other corporation fioors were summoned by the Senate jommittee on inquiry into the solven jy of the corporation. . Muni jipal politics are hot. The negroes are boroughly divided. Newi Itenzie. WILMINoTON, May 14.--The steam. ar Saragocsa from Savannah for Balti-, gore,.was towgd into the mouth of he river t4is morning, with her mailk haft broken and.completely disabled. SAN FnA1,ct9co, May. 14.- The Japan, frgm Hong Kong, brings 1,400 passengers, 1,300 of whom are Chi sese. Sixteen of the Japan passen-. gers are for Now York, and.thirty-six for I'urope. Included in her freigh t, are 147 packages Qf silk for New York and l,0.20 pa ages of tea, and 150 bales of silk or Europe. FQRTuES8 1MONoE,. May. 14.-The monitor Terror, Capt. Ransom, sailed at noon to-day'for the West Indies.--. 3he is convoyed by the United States teamer Pilgrim. Cor.UDBiA, PA., ,May .14.-At a nesting of the. irn masters, held bere yeoterday, the" unanimous feeling tas to stop the production of pig iron, Rhich .annot be wade at current rates without loss, and the probability s that in the next sixty days igearly. f not all the furnaces in this vicinity will be' cloed. Mar~ket itelports, NEW YORK, Mlay 14,7 P. M{.-. IottoI) heavy ; with A sales of '1,700 sales, uplands 234.. Gold 144. Cuanr.EsTON, Mlay l4.--Cotton dull, -tniddhuog 224.; sales 500 bales ; re me:pts 162. Lii MRPOoi,, Miay l4.-Cotton-up ands 1l ity Orleans -12; eales. 10,00(j ialss. - A. 0x.x.AR WEiX.--A writer in' flee, I and home says: "I dug the well in my cellar in tlig usual way until a good supply of water was reached ;.then stone dit up abopt three reot, making a good reiservor ;. theei mnserted li inch.galvanized iron pipe, placed some flat stones' ever the well, and filled in even with the cellar bottom wth dirt. T~he pipe leads ~9tly. te the sink, where a good iron pump as attached. The advan hages are, pure water,, absolutely free fromn insects or vermit9 sad all surfae ruhlish, and a saving of the. pxpopse if toning up to the surface. I' am rery mn oae pleased with the plan.' lic' JIRVMAN.-A .Quiney cow respondent of the .Tallahasee Florj. iw rotates the following .bpoident as baving occurred in Court there re meitly: "A negro juror was a'aled i the 'cting states Attorney If he ha$ ta cen an oath In ahy~ secret organisation iben .ppin6 de a juror not to bring in verdict aigainst any p.no of.his color shore a whit ma wa nereste.d, lIe teplied he had Th Judge .n' mmdiatnly. Qrdered his ae to ANNTIkR Mly' DA.--A to dg go, CaptaiK-DIedy andi his oon tabularyr force trrestedAb'am Jagn. Irum, doloted, 'obdgedLwidi 4kiltir rehb Besb, 'coloMd j, Iidn ' 6t ,t1 >lantation of Mir. Jdm'ry 'G'audtey, "du he night'. of the' 26th of 'APsil. - 1 lause?eaIled him ab't, jot ip9% nu ely an altercatldn ensued thae.e piox LindMfn fi I uBre t 1deh wtll (10oded musket,hklltag his lagg -~t kshdruin 1W ln, ,jal1f. bd and -hi era I eahat- e a 4ebdr~g~'~btoV.'1're twtSa