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THE FAIRFIELD HERALD A l'ublished Every Wednesdny at th e1, WiNS LOO, S. C., t * P DI1 Desportes, Williams & Co. oe00 TERMS-IN AD VANCE. w no Copy one year, - - $ 8 00 PC Five " " - - - 12 60 tl Ten '' " ''" - - 25 00 t fo Letter from Senator Sawyer. pl The fact that, says the Chester Re- Pl porter, many men were being nomina- 01 tod for Congress whom we know to to have been honorably engaged in the w late struggle, together with the ex w prossion of opinion on the part of - many with whom we met, that the to oath prescribed by Act of Congress, 11 approved July 1, 1862, had been en superseded by the fourteenth amend- bi mont, induced us to address a letter to lion. F. A. Sawyer, asking for an authoritative statement in regard to A the oath required of members of a Congress. In reply we received the t following :W UrrEn STATES SENATE CIHAMREn, t \VAsuHNGTON, June 4, 1870. m Dear Sir: Your letter of 1st inst., d inquiring "whether Congress now re quires the test oath of 1862 to be a taken by its members, or whether any d person who is laboring under disabili. ties by the fourteenth amendment is "t eligible to a sent in that body," has "l just been received. In reply I have " tostate, that all members of either house of Congress, and all other ollivors of the United States Govern ment, are now by law required to take the oath prescribed by Act of Congress, approved July 2, 1862, except those persons only who have been relieved of their political dis abilities. The latter cla,s are requir ed, before entering upon the duties of the ollices to which they may have t been elected or appointed, to take and subscribe t,he otth presrihed by Act of Congross, approved July, 1868, 0 which is simply an obligation to .rup- t port and defend the ontit ution of x the United States ain*!:i:t, all cuemies, - forni<n :ind doiesi is ; to hear Li ti t fuitlh and ali;giniuce .o the same ; and to well and faithfully discharge the h duties of the ollice on which the per- o sons so taking the oath is about to on- d ter. The Senate has passed an Act re quiring the latter oath of all persons not under the disabilities imposed by 0 the fourteenth anendment, and who tl cannot take the "test oath." But the t IIouso of tepresentatives has not yet j acted upon the proposition; though I am in hope that it will do so before n the sossion ends, or certainly berore t this Congress ceuses to exist. Very t respectfully, your obedient servant, t F. A. SAWYER. E, 0. MCLu, Esq., Chester S. C. The Northern cotton firm whoso t failure has already been briefly an nounced is Gorham, Gray & Co., of New York and lloston, and their liabilities will be for about ten thou- i sand bales. '1'he firm commenced a buying some two months ago, and the t boldness of their oprations is said to . have beeni a loading cause of the steady tone of the NQw Y!ork market during that period. The losses would havo a beena far heavier but that t.heir liabili- c ty to make good their otfors was ques. f tionod. Alust of the contraets were in the name of the suspended firm, ~ though a Pearl street broker is down to the tunto of' two thousatnd bales. t Thme firm fi;gurod largely in t he Sop- , temuber gold panic, ini connection with I Jim Fish, and wvent to protest for a heavy amount owing to the repudia tion of their contracts by the latter. 8 BAD TAsrE.-A Pittshurg paper heads its F'enian news "The Thief Mosby on a Ranid." This style of language at this late (lay is, to sayt the least, in very bad taste. Trhottgh I Colonel AMosby wvas a rough rider anmd c a thorough partisan, he held his eomi missioni from the rebel Government, and was no worse tIhan other "rebels." 0 lIe foutght for what ho bolieved to be t right, and fought mantfully. IIaving e received his parole, and settled down il to the pursuits of civil life, he is utn deserving of ny such opprobriouis ~ epithets. Seime papers and politi.. cians can seemingly never forget that ; the war is ever, and that the North f1 and South should now strive to devel- c ope amicable brotherly relations.- - Neto York C'ommnercial_( epublicanm.) TilE PREgsgDt.r OPEIG J hi SUM,- I MER CAMPAICIE --The President atnd his family will leave WVashington to. (lay on a holiday excursion with Sena. s tor Cameron oeta few days amonig the amuntains amnd trout brooks of Penun sylvania. Some of the politicians of "the Old Keystone" are puzzled what e to make of this influence of Generald Cameron over General Grant ; but thed oxplanationt is very simple. General f Cameron is a genial and hospitable si man. lIe iovited General Grant and d< famtily on this little excursion, and ~ General Grant, satisfied that he and . his family would enloy the trip, aco'p. ted the invitation. It is a very r simple affair, and oredita blo to all con. DI cerned. d, IHo,. DANIEL VooRmitEs. --The* rn Phtiladelphia Age has the following:b' lion. Daniel Voorhees is aroubln al the people oif Inadin by powerfuf t p~irrs of the co,iditison of the eoun-t try searobing expositions of the cor rumption o,f thme party in power. The P' boat speakers-.of .tho Democratic party of in all sections of the country should th "go and do likewiso." Let the pee. t, plo hee~r.tbhe truth,and they will soon do4lthroqo the falso teachers and Itoh. P~ log-palmed.scoundrels now ruling and t ruitn atut fatian_. Tum SLAVsaR O CORN UYgus. statem(nt was publiahed in one of e Montgomery papers that about ghty car loads of oorn are transpor. d over the Montgomery and West >int Railroad daily. The tuskegee labama) News, commenting on this, ye: "If, by an acoident, the supply of rn and provisions from the West is out off for ton days, scores of our oplo and all our work stock and cat 3 would die of starvation. There is t in Macon county ten days' -rations r the population. How can a peo e so dependant on others, so -corn otely at the mercy of spe6ulators, 'or hope to prosper ? Eighty oar ads of corn are about 24,000 busbhls, orth say, $38,000 a day, $266,000 a ek, $4, 140,000 a month, and so on -and pay or starve I People may lk about African slavery, or turkish avery, or Algorine siaviry, or Radi l slavery, but the ootton slavery vats them all." SICKNESS IN THM SPRING-HoW votnan.-The reason why there is ways such a demand for physic in e spring, is because when the warm sather comes people keep on eating ro much food, more than can be anaged by the stomach excepting iring cold weather. The result is, o stomach is overtaxed, the liver id bowels obstructed, and the blood sterioratoe. The true method to be observed in ich cases io, on the approach of >ring, to eat loss food, and that of a ildor nature. WINNSBORO. Wednesday Morning, June 15, 1870. Stanid Still and Work. If we examine the matter closely. e will find there is a vein of roman lo delusion running through many of ur repinings at our lot being cast in is or that locality, rather than in iotier and a different one. There 1, in the firstplace, a morbid love of io idea of mirtyrdom in the human eart. It would destroy nine-tonths f the staple of existence, and totally eprive of the power of conversation a Irge part of mankind, and render icm even moro miserable than they onfoss themselves to be, to take from hcm the notion that they are mar Fra to unfortunate circumstances. tet thoin, therefore, indulge the hu ior of martyrdom, provided always 6af tboy ronoabo., "6. e wha,a hey will, the same or similar unfor unato circumstances are sure to fol ow them. But it is 'id, and in part said truly, h,% our i';-. ai s are not prosperous ad are not making much headway. 'erhaps if another idea could grow ato favor amongst us, that planting ud trading are not the only occupa. ions that a human being can engage n, and that there are mineral and nanufaturinmg resources in our midst, nid a practical education needed to evelop theam, planters might then ourish as well as if they were to emi rate to the arid highlands of the Vest. It is not, then, necessary for s to prove that planting upon a rorn-ouit system with unsatisfactory ibor, is quite profitable, to argue in hvor of standing still and building up radually around us, as a better poli y, than seeking a remedy from with ut, or by running elsewhere. At the -bottom of this whole discon ant with one's locality is a fatal fal icy. It Is that which attributes sue ess to material prosperity only, and iaterial prosperity to fortune and to hane, to "good luck," rather than to he honest achievements of manly haracter ; which exaggerates the in uenoo of accident, and belittles the ower of will. "The mind is its own lace, and can make a hell of heaven, heaven of hoil." And he who will inig aside the delusion that his sue ~ss in material or moral aehieveme'nt dlependent, in the maln, upon any ther thing than his own right arm and is own steady will,- Is already far Ivanaced toward. the goal of his do rcs. Thme Duity of Candidates. WVe held it to be the policy,anod ren more, the duty of candidate., n. mr a free government, to electioneer r the votes of the suiffegans, and to are no means, short of personal agradation, to coneillate their fa&vor. efore the war, If the tints gIven to ectioneering, and the money con ibuted to the support of party jour til, to the publication of campaign ouuments, and to other expenmes ado neesesary, or at least e*pedient, p the charater of the suifragan., be I considered, it would -not be ex avagant to assert, that even bsere, In >nth Carelina, where we had but o00 rty In Fedehti politios, thie expesea 'an election resotsed ovr~a laun4re ousapd dollar.e. Now tha'wt hsve ro partin iets indged, In poIiticaf 'inciple, but in personal oharaoter o party of. pfuaaers, ay M- pa . .ladtd ; the -robhham '.4.A m robbed ; a ring of office-holders, and 1 the tax,paying community; it would be well if property holders were to spend at leaebth'ee hundred thousaind dollars on the fall election, and save it out of the very first year's taxes. Stand Still and Grow. We have been trgod lately to move to one of the Western States, far greater pecuniary prospects being held out to us ; but deliberately re plied, that we considered this portion of our country wealthier in natural resources, and at least a century ahead of the West in the character of its people and'the type of its civili zation, and therefore, preferred it for the future home . of our chil dren. If any of them shall wish to emigrate, they can do' so, after.we shall have given them a civilized education here. It is very well for a young plant to be set out in a new place, and to grow up there. But we feel for ourselves that we will do a surer and better thing, if we avoid snapping a single one of our roots, at our time of life, and grow to our due proportion, whatever it may be, just here, in the State of our birth. Firm ly entrenched, thus, in the impregna ble fortress of our individual exam ple, we can speak to some of our rest less and unhappy follow-citizens ex cathedra, and give no offence. Growth in fortune, and in what is far more importent, in manliness of character, my friends, is not promoted by ill-judged changes of the locality of your residences. If you will re main stationary, every ebange condu civo to your good, will, in the majori. ty of instances, take place, in due time, exactly where you are. Your rivals in business will die, or become your friends and oopartners. Those who h'ave hated and suspected you, will begin to love and respect you, if you continne striving to do that which is good ; and your friends will think it high time, if you have steadily and faithfully exhibited the ft uits of vir tue, to honor you, and idsist upon your accepting the attentions that they desire to pay you as tokens of their esteem. Have you faults ? Then, begin at once to correct them. Do you fancy .you can do so better among a new set of people ? This is a grave mistako. A clear ease of reformation, by bla Oino bontacunee ofr tisab ustlul" ful Heavenly Father, whose goodness we the more and more most fervently and humbly adore, has greater power to conciliate favor, than even original righteousness of conduct. This truth has been beautifully expressed by Shakespeare : "For like bright metal on a sullen ground, MT REFORMATION, GLITTERING O'ER MY FAUI.T, will show more goodly, and attract more cyes, than that whkich& hath no foil to set it off." Besides, that same merciful Provi dence, while preserving for you all of your early friends, brings you in contact with a new set, of people in your business every year, who are willing to judge of you, not by what you have been ln the past, but by what you are in the present, or prom ise to beoome intheofuture. Your little children at least, God bless them are willing and anxious to be deaf to the voice of scandal (whether true or false) and to believe you capable of all that is good. Stand, therefore, immovable in faith, strong in hope, patient under poverty, con6fdent in God, and having done your humble part with manly dignity, and with un. pretending integrity of purpose, sink gently to the bosom of your mother Earth, and take your rest in sleep. This is the way to live, and to grow, and to bear fruit abundantly. Of the man who can set this noble part, the beautiful figure of the Psalmist Is lIteA rally true: "lHe shall be like a tree PLANTED BY THe RivERs oP IVATER, (they move, but he is fixed,) which shall bring forth his fruit, IN DUE SEASON, His leaf also shall not 'wither, and look, whatsoever he doeth, It shall prosper." Favery : nterprise Shossld be Judged by Its Direct Rtesmalts. We think that much prejudice ex ists against many a profitable and practicable undertaking, by reason of its being thought of in connection with the secondary advantages It may brIng, and on which its advocates of ten too exclusively ipsist, rather than in conneo;ion with its direct advan. tages and' results alone. We endeav or ouw'gelveg to avoid this way of pre sting what we earnestly approve of, iso pcoetton an other jnanufacto ries, direct. trade, immigration,, and the liker .It Is tree that the indirect me6ondefg) a6titageae our comma. nity of any o e f these enterpriacs ce uoarq4Iy bexeaggerated, and ybt it Iiot ew aeunt of any remote or inbideVatil -$.d'te cotde 'frori thenw b 4se AI.etp o4nged.expendi4 *Mise of - esh aund the ato.ame >enefits that each will confer, are so rery olear, that their cause is weaken- M id by distracting the attention away from them, even for the purposo of xhibiting other incidental blessings w ;hat they will bring. i If it is not true that the South pose 0 teases advantages overall the world for spinning, as she does for ginning the 3otton, we would not urge the subject Df cotton manufacturing. There was a time when cotton was sent in the iced to England. To export, it in the by iced now, seems to us .ery little more be ;hort-sighted and thriftless, than send ing cotton in the Hut, as we do every re year, instead of in yarns. ob Again : A direct line of steamers R Sal to Europe will pay handsomely. The be businet is a perfectly sure one, and th money invested in it, is money judi- m( aiously invested in a most profitable su way. Therefore, let us take stock in a a steamship line from Charleston to de Europe. It will pay. No other ar. in gument is needed. Lastly : Those who have introduc. ed five hundred immigrants into New. h berry and Laurens, find it very pro- o, fitable. It supplies labor where It is of needed. Money is made by it.- wi Therefore, sober men advocate immi- be gratiod, because it pays. A plain presentation of the merits a of progressive enterprises, and a clear Ft statement of the direct and necersary fe benedts of them, such as we have at. t tempted above, is better than dwell, in ing on side-issues, whether social or A political. 01 The'Whites and time Militia. c The apprehension that organizing to the militia would produce bloody riots, ua has passed away, and in our judg- pi ment, our young men had better or- ta ganize companies, elect their own of. P fioers, and offer their services to the n" Governor. They would also do both of a wise and a patriotic thing, to obtain no as many of the field appointments as to possible. The military humbug ever or will be a great electioneering engine, b and if we wish to be represented in the J Legislature we would do well to en- tlh deavor to use it, to gain the votes of the al suffragans. D To time Point. th In a political paper, the Old Guard, to for Jun " fter considering the situa- so tion of Democratic party and the il qunry, tW wzIhe.a . at "What, then, is to be done? Why, d if the Democratic party can not pre. sent a united and thoroughly consoli- th dated front-against the Mongrel p arty, or will it not be a thousand times better r to keep out of any campaign alto. gethor, than to go in for the privilege o of being unavoidably beaten? If o there be not virtue and pluck enough ae loft in the party and in the people of . the States, to resist the Mongrel can cus Amendment, then the next best in thing--and the only thing to be done --is, to stoutly refuse to go into any campaign at all, and lie tremendously stilt, on the high ground that the Cnstitution has been subverted in such a manner as to render at! voting a fare. inflame, as nr.uch as possible t the minds of the masses with the feel- fo ing ttat the States have been forcibly 4 tr ipped of the great and sacred right se of independent franchise. Set them bn on fire with the idea that the white ma~n's vote is everywhere neutralized, i or taken from him, by the Mongrel ' camnpalgn Amiendment!t Show thenm that it is useless for them to vote, ox- o cept they vote as niggera, with that or measure in force. Work this fact hi into their hearts and brains, end i t will not be long before they will send the 'A mendment,' niggors and all, both black and white, down such steeP M plaes as the swine, spoken of in the No ewTestiment, never found. The -i sight of a great party refusing to go t into a campaign because the party inb power have, In effect, stripped the t S tates of all theirinost sacred rights to of franchise, will arrest the attention of the worldi while it wit! sow the a seed of a pol itical upheavel, here at home, 'which will hurl the Mongrel di party from the throne of its usurped bt power forever. This3 we say1 seems the last and o only resort of the Democratic party, Lh if the fraudtilent Amendment is to be bc regarded as. a law. And we have ser the Demooratlo Legislature of New as York, under the lead of a rough and Lb ignorant ward political adventuter ofa this cltgy, hasting to recognite it as law, even before it has been decided to be so by any competent tribunal (for Grant's proclamation does not bi tuske It law) and thus the example ofb a universal caving in and surrender of th the patty, has been started. It Is scandalous. A great number of leading Meon gre! statesmen are of the o?inion that wi the so-called 'A mendment has not be yet legally passed.. They even try to Lh kceep the qnuestion fromn the Supreme th Court, which is not filed with lawyers w, of their own party, dreading that fa the7 may think more of their own wi legal reputation than of auch a soanda- au lous party measure. And yet, we re- p peat, that before the legality of the p pretooding A mendment has been pro. o nootnoed by competent authority, and f while even leading 'Mongrels' affirm it to be not yet passed, the DemocratIc Legislature of the State of New York fa' bastena,t.embrae ita If it was eyqe ne proper to speak of a Legistature.as an' Ti se.p..,it strikes us that we bey. BR found a case hare. [commeri4no.] "Iy attetion has jjt :.. called the published pzocbedinge Of the eting hold in Widneboro on,ltleday June, as printed in th'e NEtws and Plad [therefrom, by. ix" 1 am confident and feel satisfied at the true purpoit of "the interro tory propounded, and the phrase. sy of the.motoa mpd9 by- C. Davis, was not cfearly woderetbod' the Secretaries, or they would have en correctly printed. yudge William R. Robertson at the lest of the Chairman, stated the eots of the meeting. After Judge obertson had concluded, Col. Davis d "That nothing that morning had en more foreign to his intentions 4n to make any rematks at this seting, that he was neither ready to ggcst, nor did he desire to advise ything in the matter; but simply shed to know in what manner or un. r what heading Would the proceed go of this meeting be published hether, as a meeting of such of the izens of Fai,field as were in favor of ding delegates to the Convention to be fd at Columbia on the 15th instont I whether as a meeting of the citizens Fairfeld ? If the former, then it s a "party meeting," and it would improper for an "outsider" to op so, by publio discussion here, the eots of the meeting, but if it was public meeting of the citizens of airfield, open to all, then with per et propriety could any measure, mo )n or matter, submitted to the meet g be discussed by any one present. e a public meeting open to all the tizens, it was legitimate to discuss e question as to the expediency of mmitting the citizens of the County a suggested policy, but at a party eeting, specially called, no person, t a member of the party, with pro. iety, or in accordance witb the die. tea of good taste could arise and iblicly oppose the objects of the aeting. That all classen, asaocia me and combinations, of citizens, whatever intentions, aim or objects, t unlawful, have an undisputed right hold publio meetinos, without let hindrance, and . datever action is taken at such meeting, was only nding on the members of the party. tdge Robertson responded by reading e published call for the meeting, d other remarks. Whereupon, Col. vis said that he then understood at the delegates to be appointed at is meeting were to go entirely un ammelled and upon their own re insibility, and that neither the per. ns constituting this meeting nor the tizens of the County were bound to prove Qr endorse the action of the legates nor to adhere 'to, no'r to edge themselves to pursue or follow e policy suggested and adopted by e Convention. To this Judge Rob tson assented. Col. Davis then oved that, when this meeting ad arned, it stands adjourned to meet the first Monday in July. To re ive the report of the delegates to be pointed at this neeting. The mo >n having been seconded was sub itted by the Chair and unanimously 'opted. NEwHon ATTENDED THEN ETIo IN A NUT-SuEtL.-The Mobile Re ster thus salta down a truth in a few ug sentences:' "Ct'axing is just the way how 'not do it,' when you want black votes r the Democratic ticket. You may arcoe or knock a bird out of a bush, at there is not Irish blarney enough the world to 'beguile' him out of .The only and r'ne best way to irsuade negro votes is to let them averely alone,' (and by the way the roce bill' commands that on penalty fine and imprisonment,) put him his o wn responsibility, and show mn that white men are strong enough take care of themseplves." 13a WisE AND STAY A T flObE. any of those who have migrated eatward, under tihe glowing descrip >n of the "chances" out there, and e interested advice of those who sec lands to sell and "paper cities" fill up with inhabitants, are meet g with disappointments. At Hum 'ldt, ICansas, recently, there wrere arly a thousand emigrant wagods, lad with distressed women and'ohil en, whose husbands and fathers had en induced to abandon their homes no more substantial grounds than atements of interested partiqs, qnd e delusive hope that they would tor their condition, without know. g how it was to he dQne. Iu Kaon a City the wages of labor are lower an at the 1Rast, and employment is boon. So says the New York mee. Those beautiful and forceful corn nations of thought, never attained the vulgar, and so effective with s well instructed, must ever be ntin g where general reading is no aote. An intelligent toind seizes the Ideas of others, mingling thema th its own original conceptions, not trowing, but employing them for a elimination of still greater aughts, of which 'they are, o it ire t4 geie. Industry. seldomn lIa of achieving noble ends, apmd, en conibided withart, is ure-to be seesful~ 8tudy a$debelli,hment rfect not only the on'tor, bm . the afesioditentleun wito mottlook netithe. out of the Aale.of his gro signi less he stagnate within it. PaumnswTAL,.-Wndell PhillIps rorn Surner and flevels for tEe at. Ra&dio.l Peiddhtji.: ticket. eodor. liiton -Prefers .Bmtler and valen Whyr ==1.-. = n was also referred to the Judiciary mmittee. Market Reports. REw Yont, June 11, 7 P. M. tton quiet ; with sales of 800 bales, uplands 22. Gold 131. CH4nLsov ,W'June k -t";-Ootton middhtug;21,; sales 150 bales ; re Lpvenroor,, June 1.--Cotton dull,. uplands 10ij ;Orleans 4 ; eaes. ,000 bales. . In the first article of the constitu n,,seotion four, are the following Yd . "'Tue times, pla8ces aid -nau r. pf btoling elections for 8$onators d Reprpsen tatives shnal 1Q., esor,ib in each - 8tat' by 'the sgislaatu'e iroQ; but the Coogress ma at any e b 'law make or alter swoh egu iQns, except os to the ,plaop. of oosing Senators." If this is not.gn thority how can authority be given ? tre is only one limitation upon the wer of lpongress to sweep away 3ry line of Statc law on the subject the election of members, and to t in place of that law the will of s nation as expressed through Con ass. Any arrangements as to the mction of Congressmen hitherto made the States Congress may modify, or may completely substitute others; ly it shall not legislate as to the ice of choosing Senators. All, orofore, that is in this so-called fif. mnth amendment bill is as clearly thin the- authority of the national iislature, under: the "constitution it was," as is the power to pass a turalization law..-New York Her. Naw ENGLAND.-New England los the United States and Boston lea Now England. Here is Wendell illips' description of Boston : "Boston is a city in which every ath person is a criminal and every enth a pauper. Three-quarters of r farms are mortgaged for drink. o-thirds of the pulpits are filled th drunkards, and the bench of jus e is nearly vacant because one-half the judges have died drunkards." Now, let someboly reform .Boston. at is our only hope. A lady in Virginia has been living 'ear or so on nothing. She is kept ye apparently by rubbing a little on her breast.-Exchange. We assure certain of our subsecri re that this is the only known case the world of a human being able to ,o on nothing. They ought to pay Frogs grow fat on air, and would tke excellent editors. We are not rog.-Columbvs (.Miss.) Index. THE t'Aw SPOT.-The procurement a pardon from the best govern mt the world ever saw" has to be omplished by jobbing. 'There i$ a ularly organized Pardon Ring. So ig as a majority of Congressmen, is th Houses, share the profits of this rty traffic, there will never be a neral amnesty for "rebels." If rney wants a thin whitewashing, let m expose the villainy of this Ring. t him do it for revenge instead of -ty cents a line. Tur. INDIAN WAn.--A Chicago dis-. tch says that news has been reoeiv from General Ha4nooek, in Dakota, the effect that such disposition of a troops has been made as will se. re settlers against any further In n outrages. The General inti tes, also, that unless the red-skins have well in the future he will ike them a "terrible blow." Woo to hims who lacks energy, inl is Age of Push. Hie is a pigmy 'o,ng Samsons. The little lite ho a in him is sure to be trampled out. inward is the word, and the vigorous Lrohers are pitiless. They time 3!r stops to the quick beating of 3ir own he arts, and keep moving 'ille the pulse throb lasts. Two Irishinen were traveling, when sy stopped to) examine a 6tiide ard., "Twelve miles to Portland," d one. "Just six milea apiece," 4d the other. And they trudged e'n, parently satisfied .at the steall dis ice. It appears that the Demooratie. par have swept tije State.o(, ew York. e latest reports foot up a majority nearly 90,000 votes, and many of a rural precincts heretofore.- radical ye been carried by the Deniocracy. A Wisonsin boy, nanted Alfred B. 'oper,- aged 13 .years, 6ntnIitted leide on the 4th ,inptan,b hag ; himself. - '- y bang I see the villiaui in you,raee' iE a stern judge to >an .Iris prisoner. lay it please your worship,' ieplied le 'ht milst be. a personal 'reflee nl. A Poutheru psper announeds i that a editor is fortified agaient snake ie. Somne one-has. sent him a bar or whiskey. Moat of the,.salad oils now broyg o the maikot are made of .cotton id.oil, refined and blpached, . )hich said to bo a good substiti. iri'arquhar Tapper -is writing l printing'some- more Pro . rbiai Ilosoph.y I 'And $t6 pt-a "si ndou. policeman his ' th'-gh~ it tth his while-to lntefo.g beh ErtpressaI~geniehas eppared Ipwest.. ' [t ls proverbidj that entse are "hard l990.' .Recently a cab was taken m J.eok.iom 3o0i%y, ddianaa to oinmat,'hbaa ia days found her y baek to'r.j~e:arma B e tio LoN ,; 0. T .e th of Charles Dick ns" as plunged the na tion into mourning. All the London papers have obituary articles this mi'ning The' Was's ayerthOordina. ry expressions of regret are nQW cold, - and conventional;. itniliads of 'pepfle del fool a personal bereavement. States. ipon, savans and benefactors of their 'ace when they die can leave do such 1 void. They cannot, like this great novelist, be atr idtnteoofrevehVyhouv The Daily Newsa says: Without an intellectual pedigree, his writings tic form an era in English literature. WC He was generous living and univer ne sally beloved. Ho.leaves, like Thacke. An ray, an unfinished stQry. ed The Morning Poat says Mr. Dickeus ti did more than anf, contemporary to til make English literaturo lodod and ad". 1i mired. oh The Telegraph regards the distin. ad guished dead a a ' public servant H whose task is nobly fulfilod. po LONDON, June 'l 1.-In the House ev of Commons, last night, Mr. Craw- of ford moved that' a provision be made Pu in the reduction of sugar duties for a th drawback on stock in store and refine. gr ry on the 12th of April. Several elh members attached the government on in the subject of sugar duties, charging it it with bad faith. Mr. Gladstone and on Mr. Eowe replied to the 'harges, and pl, opposbd the resolution.1 th The Messrs. Laird ask for a suspen. too sion of opinion for a time respecting wi the new turret ship Captain, just le1 built. as Upon the announcement of the na death of Charles Dickens, the Queen al hastened to send a letter of condo. lence to the afflicted family. The last letter written by Dickens was ru dated June 8th. This contained ex- ru pressions of deepest reverence for re ligion, and is quoted in the newspa. pers to day as repudiating any contra, to ry impression which ight be derived se from accidental expressions in his ou books. In his will Dickens leaves "All the wi Year Round" to his son, with many tis valuable suggestions about its man- of agement. The Boulton masqueraders, includ- TI ing the American Consul, Mr. Fisk, have been committed for trial. MADRID, Juno I1.--The sessions of a .l the Cortes has been for the most part oil monopolized during the past week in debating a proposition looking to the be abolition of slavery in the Spaninh in colonies. A bill for opening the colo nial ports was well received, and has i already been read twice. There is up still some excitement over the ques. a tion of the future ruler of Spain. a The Orlpanigto in the Cortes have been joined by those who recently of adhered to Lspartero. These now I all favor the Duke of Montpensier, ac with Marshal Serrano as a secopd re choice, if the Duke does not accept, loi or cannot be chosen. bo ATNs, June 11.-The chiefs of di the brigands have escaped into Tur- e ke . FLORENCE, June 11.-The Minister 6i. to Pvrtugal has been recalled. L .Another revolutionary movement is fo, impending. The government is alert. PARIS, JuIno 11.-The postal nego tiations has been revived, with proba- pa blo acceptance of the American terms. ed Messrs. Melinet and Carnol refuse to the Masonic honors recently tendered th the m. go Exclusive privileges to the French di; cable were formally abandoned to-day mm by the contracting parties. be .CONSTANTINoPLE, June 11.-It is si impossible _to say how many lives werg lost during the conflagration. Some put the number at 300 ; others th at 1,300. The Sultan has been mgotive ani in extending relief to the sufferers. ha More than 1,000 Turkish houses have Or been thrown open to Chrisitians who mi were burned out. Large sums of th money have been subscribed for them th by the people, irrespective of sect. wI CAao,J June I1.-The obstruction in the Sitez Canal near Lake Tamasee th has boon removed. 'be F-m5Ui WaaniiEuIjgio. sa WAssuNOToNq, Jiune ll.-House--p more petitions for a tax on whiskey tam at the stills oneapacity basis. Butler, of Massachusetts, asked leave to in- ty troduce a bill to repeal the tenure of Ti office bill. Poland objected, of The Senate Finance Committee will th hold the House bill reducoing taxes ha for a week or ten . days. it will pro bably go to a committee of confer. ence, with the income tax stricken out. The Senate Committee will bsu interfere with the tax on spirits. A Democratic Congressional ,eauoug ap pointed Senators Thurman. of Ohio, we flamiltoo, of Maryland, and Re pre-." sentative Wood ward, of Pennsyl- ' vanla,. and Brook, of Kentucky, to tlt propose initiatory measures. The Sonatq bill relating to the cen- th tral branch of the Union Pacific Raim- biI road was passed. r The Senate approp riated $50,000 r for the expenses of the Indians visit ing Washinagton. in' 0coers at WVest Point have been se compelled to take -pains to secure is Impartiality towards negro ended: - Pat Woods, alcue Dooley, of 'Rieh- a mend' V., *as brot 'tto- the bat'of an the lIonse, charged$1th wielatig'the , privileges -'of -Holt. Mr. Porter, by beating the mnember In -Rlohm oid: ThFe' matterwa. r'eferred to' th'e J'di diary C)ommltte" with powerv itG end for persont abd $pers. 'In the mnen, 8b time Woods Is held by the Bergeant- wb at-Anrs. While the vote was -pro. fol grossing, ireveral member. convers.ed 1 with the prisoners which the Speakor. to deeldd ont'of otder.t 'Kerc -movet, fro as tkbysuonei pobr,thse4he Houspe Cii shouild aign hilt counsolt 'Tis mo- **