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t-. , . W Desportos, Wii & Oost -Proprietors,] A' Family Paper, Devoted to Scic~ce, Art,, Inquiry, Indusfry and.. Litertrb nm~A~n VOL. VfiWINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY I1MORNING IN 9'8O ~[O THI l FAIRFIELD HERALD IS runIIEiIsu WKKKiY itY I DESPORTES. WILLIAMS & CO t Terne.--Tu lIsIraV. i published Week. V y in the Town of Winnsboro, at $2.00 in. I ,areably in advance. i .W- All transient advertiseraets to be paid in advance. Obituary Notices and Tributes $1.00 per square. Doubt. a In June, when the ross hung Over the hedges, heavy with dew, And softly the skytark sung. g Out of the cloud in the endless blue. I walked through the Summer land ; t A delionte foot. kept step with mino, I In mine there nestled a darling hand, o And life was a thing divine. Dot now. If the roses burn, jl Pouting their lips for the sun to kiss; I It all things lovely return. is And only her beautiful face I miss, What shall I say to this heart. of mine This heart that is only waitig to break y Waiting, waiting.the word or sign d I To break for her darling sake 1 0 h A Black Domosthenes. d tl What Henry Boyd told the Negroes of " missi esipi. e err. d Part of a speech delivered at Car. h rollton Mississippi, in May, 1868, by a1 Henry Boyd, colored, on the subject 'r of the adoption or rejection of the y scalawag constitution, disfranchising j twenty thousand of the most iotelli- tl gent white citizens of the State, s which constitution was voted down by a the colored vote in Juno, 1868: ti My Colored Friends--I appear here n to-day in your interest alone: The k white man is able to take care of him- c, self, and as you all see, I have not one el drop of white blood in my veins ti [laughtor]. I am a regular old fash- g ioned, plain, cornfield nigger, and ,, have not tho capacity to instruct k white people as to their duties. 'yAn - f I bad the will. I.was a slave from 8 my birth--I always endeavored to a, serve my master faithfully nocording f1 to that letter of the Bible which ci reads: "Servants, be obedient unto I. jour masters, for this is right." And. can lay my hand upon my heast .t.- a, day and say, before God, that 1 et,- ti teitain no ill-will toward any white f, man on earth, and least of all toward (: my old mauster and his sons, whom I ti loved as my own brothers., and with I whom I played in boyhood. In T, all our neighborhood romps and fro- p lies and fights (for boys will fight), h they stood at , my back, as I did at t1 theirs, whenever it came to the pinch d [laughter]; and, thank God, I will do ti o yet. I will stand by them so long as they stand by me, whether the up- n, pression comes from the Yankees, or h from wherever else it may. When- a ever it comes to my makiag choice , between white men, I shall prefer a those of -my own section to all the C carpet'bag :ers in the world. (Laugh- t, ter and applause.) There ain't very ti toh .difference - between white men y and jYankees (laugbt--r), and whenever , you find it at ll you'll find it ip the t white, mans favor. White folks are a all pretty niuch out of the same cloth, il and both.qeotions haive made their o love for. ho niggersa to subserve their il osvu into ets: all men are selfish by i' natyre, atd cant help. it, and I can't blamei them.T Whn thdI late Warbi'oke out, I am L, free to soknowlege, I was mighty a g lad of it. 'soinehdw felt that my n, freedom was going to come out of It i, )fome Wy or other, and, as I am, 'er- el baps, as sefls1is a white man, I1t411 I you I didpt-.well, I.didn4t oty much a at the prospect. WVell, when the, fbt D oompany left my woountl for "old Vir- j, glnny" to sght the TankEes, I enlist- f, ed with the haalneof theta, and went * along as first cook aAnd hes4 waiter a for oneoof my young masters. 1 had a pretty. good .time, too, for while the folks were ont fighting and marching, I and suffering tnd dy n, I was lof og li back witahq eat ad pread wagon, 1 -([Laugtr]' I felt, for one in my t hf/tWsi ety-otkn to be I -a niger aft all--for the white mgd j go oM, .)noprs Xweegt very anz- I ious to oleither. .: Binewed laugl4 'l tei.)'I kdbw~If -Ih -been along oil a .'the Yatab -ide I wdtildn'it ate thad e geh an ea time, for ns'delfshts the t Ian ) to get. ' ting samtb ytq liIg'lag for 3 him whepegpr. heq opol4. Not he.-. 1 (Loudt.1inghter.) Somen foilassaybe ~ was w&a)ipg.epough to let the .94th $4 lb-all dnrlng the Mexican war. [Ape I vad e' hs endeely attinicd I riolgu. 4o1 My young mase aS ~aeg ghtll 3fIpr a bateadtsaybes ur, we".e 4 jdtt ii~g l~rata a W4 I ,(,unle ,pkhe nigge I ethe bilggers.e Bat. hs didn' koep 4 the Vaeol e ray eyes long .1 IWatebei. ed 'em mighy close. UOeals he nams amea npta tha ~~~ -4 ir inoola had done issued his proeld vation, saying that if Mr. Day could lay down his arms and com ack in the Union, and go to payin ariff again, the Southern peopl light have their niggers ! Thinks ] umnph! miglty poor chance to g< nyfreedom from you Mr Linecot Langhter.] I tell you what, I fel eighty bad for a long time. I ha he blues so bad I was almost blael Laughter.] I think in two weeks ave fell off twenty pounds. I wt frai4 Mr. Davin was going to do i couldn't sleep. But by-and-by th ood word come that Mr. Davis sal he'd be d-d if he'd do any sue hing. I ain't fighting for the niggers .et the niggers go. I'm after in we freedom first before anything oe the world." I tell you my hear imped up right up in my mouth hinks I, bully for Jeff. Davis ! He' y man! Ah, my friends, if th ankees had been in Mr. Davis' plae ou'd a been in the cotton patch to ay with the whip after you, instea f sitting up here in this court house saring me speak. [Laughter.1 Bu an't you see the. difference betweel )e Southern man and the Northerl an. The Northern man never mise I the chance of taking care of th Imes first. And now the carpet-baggers com, are and tell us they are our friends rd the Southern people our enemies hey tell us they set us free. Oh as, they've done it all, no doubt. hey st us free about like they so ne mules free; Ben. Butler set th >rons free. [Iummense laughter an )plause.] They done it all to hel e Yankee and injure the Southeri an. They can't fool this nigger. now who brought the nigger to thi nuntry, in the first place ; the North -n man brought us here, and whei noy began to lose money on the nig ir they put the nigger in his pocket old him down south, and then, t ep the Union to make her pay tax rand the mule and the spoons free d they wouldn't have set anythin ee [excepting the spoons,] at the mid have got the South back in th nion without it. They.promised him the "forty acre Rd the mule." [ know five nigger at starved plum to death wantl r that mule and that torty acres. Iaughter.) I'd like' to know wher ne carpet-bagger got his forty acres on all remember the devil took ti ord up into a high mountain, an rowised if he'd fall down and serv ims he'd give the whole world, an to old scoundrel knew all the time b idn't own a foot of land on the con nent. (Great laughter.) The carpet-baggers ask me to cas y vote to keep the white folks dowt o .r all I ever wanted was to get o level with the white man. I neve auted to get above him. They sa nigger is better than a white man i inoinnati. Well, that may be th 'uth-in Cincin'ati. But it ain' 'no down bere. It is my interest t and by the Southern man, and it' y wish too. Whatever law is mad effect the white man's plantatio lso effects my little cotton patch i 't same way. The three cent ta n eotton hurts me worse than it do no white man. But it puts nmone the Yankee's pocket. They want to disfranchise the whit aon, and make the digger put the, ito office, and they niay have taxe nd things their own way. The ever would have passed a law allou ig niggers to vote If they badn tough ~he imgger would vote th Wopubliban ticket. Nevcr,. NEva EvERn. Who believes othorwise 1 [ot this nigger certain. The Yanke rotight the rigger here front Afrie >r selfish purposes, set hiuj free f~ sliah putrposes, nn4 nzow ey wAR > oehmfor,e16sh purposes. A RIVAL. ion BIONNER's DtX'rER. Lt a race on the Magnolia curso, lobile, on the 27th~ of May, a dar ay horse, foramrly owned in CharleQ non by a qarppater, .trotted a race ye bests to .a awagon -weighing la~ oudde,' and the drI~ew weIghing 1 ' oupdp, Thw last ad a' sIdgest -het rastreate4p ja%;5 'The ndiansp Is horsewas heatens only. a 'ook,9 akg the traok at ftve . second. slos ud eight '.ueebude for wagon, it wi mare with the fattttm a ad( lie o'st trdok in th eodrtty by ti rhite legge4 hay, Mr.; Benser we et haverto. ful idel promise to pi as. bandred thousand dollar. for orke thateaan trot as fast as Dmxte .N& 0A45 FQIS LQNGRRsp.-We ca he attention Qk ,.Capess to the ou age des~rlbed In the. following paru ftq t l e Lyndh 'rg Republiea "d4The ofgiml -Mr. W. l lpyed aar eteeki Av bo~' of hi. distities, was oeeaaodeJ, 'u< esws ii rorsa, 1 RO tain hle Oo se .ttket 4te lae mnhielp dad1J - : a. L. Our Oandidate---A Sketoh of His Career. is As a matter of general interest. we e publish the following sketch of the B life of the lIon. R. B. Carpenter, the ? candidate of the Union Reform party i for Governor of South Carolina: Judge Carp enter was born in F rank ' lin county, Vermont, on the first day d of January, 1826. When twelve d years of age his parents removed to Kentucky. Here the judge received an academical education. Wheui rea a dy for college ill health compelled t him to travel, and about four years e was spout in traveling in Texas and d in the Southwest generally. When his health was restored he returned to t Kentucky and read law in the office y of the late Hon. T. J. Morehead, at . one time Governor of that State, and ' also United States Senator. On the Sfirst day of January, 1847, then being s twenty one years of ago, the judge ? was admitted to practice in the Si e premo Court of the State of Ken - tucky. He commenced the practice of law, and in 1851 was elected at. torney for the commonwealth. This Soffice he held until 1854, when he ? was elected attorney for the Chicago, " Alton and St. Louis Railroad Corn puny. After holding this office three ? years, living in Chicago the while, lie returned to Kentucky, where, in 1862, ? he was re-elected commonwealth's at. , torney, and retained that position un til 1867, in which year lie came to this city. He was appointed by Chief Justice Chase, registrar in bankruptcy a for this district, atnd discharged the ? duties of this ofice until the second of January, 1869, when he took his P seat as Judge of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, having been elected on the i 9th of December, 1868, by a three a fourths vote of the Legislature. As Judge of this Circuit, Judge n Carpenter has given universal satis ^ faction. It is thought that he will re ign his office, to accept the nomica tion, as soon as the crimiinal docket of his court is disposed of, which will probably be befcre the close of the present month. In person and in bearing, Judgo Y Carpenter impresses all who meet him e as a man of 'singular ability, energy and force of character. Forty four s years of age, and of commandig S statue, his features bispeak the pies 9 ence of an iron will and a dauntless - determination. In the bitter politi ? cal contests of Kentucky, in which he I has taken part, he has gained no little ? reputation for ready wit an!d effective d speaking on the stump. In address ? ing a public assembly, hi styli, is di d rect, earnest nod imrpressive ; and e those of our citizens, of whatever col or or political consictious, who may have the good fortune to hear him, in t the course of the approaching canvass, I- will see the veil torn from the organ n ised rasealities of the Scott ring in a r style at which the arch robbers in Y Columbia and their underatrappers a elsewhere, callous as they are, will J fairly wince.-Charleston News. o Disn A E..--Hawthoroc, who was q Minister to England during Pierce's e administration, tLhs de'cribes him a By and by came a rather tall, sinn. n der person, in a black freck coat, but t toned up, and black pantaloons, tak. 0 ing long steps ; but I thought,- rather y feebly or lirelessly. Hir shoulders were round, or else lhe had a habitual 0 stoop in them. He had a prominent ni nose, a thin face, and a sallow, very a sallow complexion ; *' * * and y had I seen him in America, I should *have taken' him for a hard-woerkod t editor of a newspaper, weary and worn e with night labor and want of exercise t, --aged before his tine. It was Dis. - rach, and I never saw any other Eng. 'e llshman looking the least like him; a though, in America, his appearance PL wtould not attraot notice as being ain TAxrta BoXDLs-The Ciunnati - Daily Enquirer says :--"The Ohroni. Ltd cie speaks of 'Congressional taxing ol k bonds being in defiance, of an express *contract.' Will it tell us where that ft contract can be found ? We affirm 6 that the Federal Government, when 2 it issued the bonds, reserved to it sell *t the right of taxing them'. Every 3- purchaser of a bond did it with the - full- und erstanding that' they were r, liable totaxation by the Federal Gov. II ornment. In the-new Funding Bill it n is-proposed tofat'render this impor. e tant privleoge t hns In the st rongest *y manner recognlsing Its present exis. y toee. It lk a edandal and a' shame R that, while the poor man's salt, tea r. and ooffee are heavily taied, the rieli nanbradashotild be eempt I" St. rdva fTH E' YE8r. *flord Maournai.w..-That problem of a many -fatueus. mechanics, a machine 4thtt could get type, is sol ved-'.nd t.he maohise 10 fotund. Just now it is making bootaein, Maesaehusetts, but ).It'ill .nota loug; -be- restrided sto ad nldssvythet odly. oheapensashoes! 4 h~e uhepo toeti type iis/roquire4 > to tlidkw4.ibilittle 0: a ve~ wer t little-bat more ,thana~ bras amide uta, b hogany ;ooald >be.- made to. .. John 4 Ohinaman, however'i isetp to. the .rea sh quired measure -of- intelleotlon and g not'so far she've ies so intrfere&Iitt r. the oheapeaof hbis labot'. There at a roulautieb 1d' this'mhohine.a-N,.4 Samb as Soul inDar. We have ; ready shown by st!.tis ties that the - tendance of the color- ' ed population in the So.utha at charch had shown an tarmitig d.roase since the war. A c rrespondeut in Virgin ia, formerly aunlava owner, endeavom a to explain th'eeause for this. ]Hof.tre the war Samino, by the proccds of his labor, conflibuted to the su'ppoit of religions connunities, and church os vied with Bach other in etoirts to save his soul i-n other words, e-luinag for his religioas and moral trainih.g. Since the war Samh flnils that ii. stead of payitn for religious culture in labor he ha: to pay for it in cash ; and that being' he case h(} prefers to " pay it to preao ceas of his ow: color, or, as it happeti in too uaty inst tac es, not to pay Anthing at :l1. Hence it is that he is :arowing careless and indifferent aboe t religious matters and unless something be soon done bt his Northern fr ads and sympathizers to rescue him, t .kere is dvnger that he will eventually ralapse into his origi nal condition of barbarism and vou dooism. h!ere v an opportntltity lor some of the alf-scritieing, strong minded schoolm rmts, and others p.ii anthropically itialried in New Eng. land, to lend a hand to save the per. ishing snt of poor Samho ore it siuks into darakness an4 oblivion forever. N. Y. Iherabl. Rejeo.ion of the Negro Oalets at West Point it seen that t e two negro cadet appointments at \ est Point, one frot M issisiippi and tlu other flom Sut h Carolina, have I oth been rej eted. The Washington correspondent of t.e } Richmiond b)isputlA says: The editoral coaiamenmt of the boatrd of examiuers at WYest Point for their action iu rejecting the two colored canditates for cadtohi ps as invidious to the colored race has .callod forth a statement from General Shriver, In spector General to.tbe effect that Mi enael llotward (coired),, sut of a member of the Maisisippi Legi-la ture, nominiatetd by Mlr. 1' urse, wasI examined and found to be, physically capable but utterl] unfit, meutally, having attended 1,01ool not over a year. In the otlk dansJohu W. Smith, of. South' (arI inn, the board I of medical exaniners unanimon-ly certify to his physical incaciLty, ie is nearly blind at times, and has affee tion of the lungs. It is stated that these two boys 1:are been treated n ih uniform kindness at the Ac:ide my, and tho t rieks ttat. the boys gene rally play on new-coners hate been omiittedi io theii case lest it ttight be s:tid they were roughly handled be cause of their coloI. The board of ex'ainers are of the highest re:peetIas bility, and a majority of theta Re publicans. T im MAN Wio hi.. . Zo LI.iCov FER. -The Standard (Ky ) Dispuleh tells bow Geneial Zollieallur, of the Confederate army, was killed, and says the fatal bullet was fired by a young man named (brisnta, who was in Colonel Fry's regiment. This Dis- I patch adds : "Young Chi isman, after the war, brooded over the act. until his frietis began to aijprshend danger of insani ty, Ie was a brave aind honiest sol dier, and could not possibly haive felt any compo notion of conscience for killing an enemy in aetual buat t~le, but the reflection that lhe had killed a hu man being who at tho time could have! been made a pristoner by the mere strotehing forth of his hnud -who was powerless to do him ay injury-so wrought upon his consciene-proyed, as it were, upon the ver y vitals of his mid--that he finally sank, and, it is feared, into hopoless insanity. "A few days atgo a writ was award. ed against~ him by the Judge of the Wayne county court, when the fore going facts were elicited, which his dejected and forlorn condition of in sanity fully esttablished, and he was sent, for the more skillful treatment, to the lunatic asylum at llopkinsville." I . most reniarkaeble illustration of Iman's proverbial discontent with even thje most profase plenteousness (if Pro vidence is aff~ rded in Mr. Sowdr4's letter toJudgo Camipbell, un4er da~te of the 9th inistitnt, wherein lie hays of hais righi nnr that "eit has for' soiue fyears rei'dsed to write as macuh'r's ~I willed." 1s it'possib'le that four~fifths of is correspondence ha's boen- con ducted with his sinister hhlt~ Or are the 1aders of two conients thtus for thie hart time awakened to ft teali zipg sense of Incaes adsble gattide forthe the overuw elming unwritten surplus which tliy have happily e5 ofpet $$ a nmoreiful special, dispensa ~b alp ig from "tOld Abels'fde p gyi,} ngla~ss: "I1 am. not, pipd ngtobve en, itpaVOOm( igg voters or juirora of negroes, n~~\ queli fying them to)eld.office, nor to inter-i marrydish~whitos; ahds 'wil say -forthpry In addition to thise that there -f ' physioal difference between the white M4 'blsek 'aces, ' whoh i *bo lietre will forever for bid the t~wo races livIggasp terms -of social had.i politi eal equality." - - 'l n .eaDo-vw Eas~t, '1'%e (ariluaiz, t:;,t i", this .,:t~n1tkaas f I. crih IiAdzains anid M ;I:4IStl ( LLt, i: it r 4i.1r, tt r:lio over the hat.'. , It of tsi'm~ are' at whit: lia .t', id 'hots' grr':it 11 ) lilo orlot 1 'yrt llu1 lit thei 'as ailiP laaelI.' ((attapins, uiiifa ii~l (en; tie,) tuu i a e a~ig"t the newi s \\ laei l the irit an j'a ed i'i lZairtli A-i ls Pon,(, latvs figo. ,taie ('r; tr'avi, andil I I ia' we're hle'ir at ,v the liswr? 1''' ') VI': oif' tlift. r' \,"wv ll:sgl:atdi' iiasilali' lUiipr (f'ri'.;iii' W!vht .i ii irt wa'nt, "! aL~.if) :liiai, 1,,. ^o 11-"t\' . u 'a ils of :\s a! ,r Iti" .a sn' !li'tir;'c'. T'I'v have tei iv i forutssats, si's e 62 it noath, withi A)ing ant flee 1, ai d ba:ard' thiemselves !o Ithe~ir '.1 V'II :iishii, their',ilijhl a,' i' un Intwo ( n(.ii' It is a is. S~lutts p'othIiat i iia the d i!ii.t u ty d'aill thle (). isp:ii 1, :and thIe~ 'o'"tm d:tv hat they~ n",itii"(i himn in May' Itlt th nv tisnlif Ialut iwork for int It o inrtzd vI' iii hitizc:ellC, 411 11on mttph after faIid't t. Leoneui wi'tit Il ia (.'ll:zuaui'. ,.A. i I~ Pt' f' '1'ae~d~la 1:1;4L 'ltl AN urtii- ilt lazll A party V af'i1 t I V-five Ci; iia'si cnli 'rant,, gr I Iii* aev 'u* ialr. C~'~ T. n(ir, arive 111., ht e vening. JTiiey ran' h': !:,uitle )uft t uiaIa of :urgi; 1' i: 1 Iaialain'lit IIta(l III) far t hemt. \\r her it., strnngere a rri tJ it luri'e (21owaf t jflI )h'al toi If, da ' .)I, fII~qog flU1M Ill::(.;,~ ~ ~ sig~ l!. l a ror,"viiu hie (I:, lt3zii'i ;,.,1; it veary' l"'a. !v. 'hei loy'al pi e shio~V(t( it firm' froiti r.,1 nl 01tto or Iw W(isiifrt psizhiltjs ser;) usda', [lhi putPt raLtolr of w fstalfa wet' t~tazl TI y r:.il i'l id ii ntd(. 'le a '(qtrS)iui'' tutu' ..iljl il r!it,t e.\a'i',oai''i~t. I x)"111"1;; to entiii lt as I,) iflslr'1 (aI ief iii. ti lst Llhenau Cfheaply-Wo'rillg _'' p'slts t~'I .ij1Vjt'iP' i. l v, :l;' s!a''.'u .:4t. ha rl : ati t'aig:1 iii tiaau'. a to Il- aI pfuel .aiil enitetarrise. lIe L (d l I thtt;"ell s .tti ifl i t fiiu e 'i:ar tuiIJVs atLIII' +stll.ig awl re':i safte t ILi1r aura.''. but >,'zie l:as' truad tir i:tig 1 th le' Wan 1!irap , 0 r4 Itl .I ft ,111stattIl Ir dli 1'qiat'Cl irs Ity hi L ll) 1u.idiites int ':iruar:g wha.t azi 1~)(1 1 )- 1;.''v t'Itd a. (a i iti. 1 ii'1 e 0I' IthaS LV yaaszhag.5,nJ), willi, and :iJ.pter to fie grel;y pv pWised vi tli t hir lit ~t gli fi npsO of Naew hniglniad (en(.ry 411(1sa nnersii151s. They Iso vo a oiaiiii nn fu' Iizr ow'ui rmci', 1111'1 'uui lk ul':' i 3001 Ii and1 lodaging ai Itiul, heya fioaldili g h LIII. i,''. I S ilhi r w t it btr)!.lu' gliai lcal 01) ali(CiiLt of 3Ii'.p1 t lre'tt of if ! ing Il it lt), I',it 110 i)I11C(! i1 sa'ri - zei Is ij .Irz'fueiol1aal, he ath no C Iiiiut isizli n w vtuV'ilre o~f! thle rlonii('s for 1tle 1)e."" 'Pnri: \'iw 'Y ~IIK 'flairs (N TI1I": (~IN'..:io I~N.-Th1e jar. sol jll iV in ower'ai IS fl it. I'('l! y Repulilan 0 It irisad ssiumed his1 milariC itoal acted tit-(er fj1 is guise for. its aowin ad Vu:alaO'ni asnd iower, It Its fa'~en dh.ow u'used_ ly nl~r-f y ezvery sobstan t.in l a'"puiihtau joiiirain 1t. till,- Kurthi. '1'hoa New York ?To'nes lIdpiI~I caU) t'i~airiI'8i~ the Uion t Re'formn Pairtv as rseeepaary fill u 'etlrili'1 "And ho Passed On to Sh mom." The words of my text, my. hearers, you will lind in.l. Kings iv chapter, verse 8. "And he passed to Sbunem. 'Tako to heart the lesson our text teaches, anl when temptations try you, and evils lie in wait to ensnare y ou, "iass to bliuni'Cin."' When you ioo tuen of wrath light ing and breaking heads and sticks, and heur them cursing and uweai ing omind the words of the text, and "pass on to Shun'em." And, oh ! uiy hearers--if you should come into 0u113of our little towns and behold a row of nice little oflicos with tin signs on the doors of each, and hear men talking of attachmentswith out afleutions, and sequestrations without gniet-ah, and seire-yours and never their-eah, and abI'rtL eter. tidally going to law-ah, it will be to your lploGt to mind the w..ds of the prophet. "and pass on to Sh'un'em." And if you go round. where the nrohants are-ah-and they rush out to shake hands with you, are especial ly anxioui to learn the condition of your w ife's health and the children's aini the worms and tle crops, and of fer to sell you a little bill of goods a good deal lower than their oust, on ac count of love for you, and for cash-ah, -"''pas on to Shttin'ei." And if you should happen to go to Cosmoipolitan Corner-and see in drinking beor, that will bring them to a bier- and ginslings that will sling down the strongist, and smnihos that will smash a man's fortune fastener thau coinnission merchants who ad vanced supplies on the crop-ah--oh, "pass oi to Shun'cin." ltit oh, my hearers ! if you should go down to Now Orleans--that mod ern Sodoin and (loniorrah,' where t have lately been-ah--and where the gas lights are flashing and, oh, glir mering, and the oabis are dashing along the streets-and obliging dti vers ate of'ering to cat ry you where only steamboat captains and the first gentlemen go'ira-and St. Charles ,greet is on a rip and a roar-ah-and the'brass bands crashing music from balconies--and men in little holes are ready to sell you little tickets to go in and see the Black Crooks dance with nothing to wear-and make spectacles (f themselves-ah-oh, my friends, "'pas on to Slun'pm." And, oh I if later in the evening, wth it very particular friend--you go up stairs into uotsploudidly furnich ad rooma-ah-aud see the supportable spread with delicacies from every climo and country-and teal-ducks and snipe and yellorluggod pullets and pheasants, and all that fbsh, flesh and fowl osn afford-and champagne and brandy, and Biurgundy and Chateau Lafitte, older than Waterloo, -and nothing to pay and all free and a nice gentleman with rings on his fingers, and a diamond breast-pin, playing with little spotted paste boards, and arother hurting a ma chine and dropping in a little ball that rolls round and round and stops sometimes on the eagle bird, and of toner don't-and where the players put down more than they take up and mno sometimes win, but mostly don't-ah-Qh, "pass on to Shur'em." And in conolusio'n, my friends, when the world, and flesh, and 'the dovila-lie in wait for you-"jass on to Shun'em." Neows from Boston. The editor .of the Ilandolph (Mo.) Citizen has been shown a copy of the "Now Eugland Weekly Journal," dated Bo.,ton, April 8&h, 1728, one huntdred and forty-two years .gg, in whioh he finds the following adver tisementsa A.VE~RY lIkely Negro Woman, .who can do houshold work, und *itfit either for town or country sier vice, about 22 sears, to be sold. I:n qoire of the Prluter hereof. VEIRV likoly Negro Il bpi A.3 or 14 years of aoge, speake gdod 1poglishe has been in theo country spmn arsa, io;9e sold. 1.n( Qire 9 Thoeoditor oomments on tlie above as folowsB :- '* '. " A - r 'filow Is that~ for Blostona A lke hynegro girl'-'hasebeen in thd ooun try,-long ernough ti 4~peakJ:English.' Tihiunk of that, ye -long nosed bandy shanked, oarroty-headdpi -whining, uantng, snIvoling, hy pooe itidal eneg'o thieves 9f New iRug Iandrand see hdiw 4gouil practin'forefathers .kiddapped pegroes, Lhere from:~ thei' horsest ande 'dold tiemtto the- people'ofthe, Bouth .fromn hom you1, tbeir..worthy .descent. *e i alow16dng~pa btoreoaodll 4,e enugeddAht ssaelfgamt btull4ss blis~in ikidnappingnegroees1 Just songas 4heynecbaserodot'e' your tiokoban fba~ flnd uatnarket fog ba' te' a e't. ; oA w 'ho Cuban QiieationT-G#onora1 Grant, Pon globs tqid the Reopublican Party. lt' I 'ri.'iden ii tiled an in pot tt i ict v)y('I ( ay in C')ttirs4 o it. .i, qlu ~t 'n, ill t il aidoptioun--103 9 *-o-i, lt:t'tdi 4s sitl's'luru for Ill. .$lAtt5of C; n.tir:t1 13:111k1"1 frot ille ihi)t .iit e resolttt in btigy :t folli iv "; Thlat, Lhoi iedeutt is itCrelby an tt ier. (1 to rtoieist rut" n gaitist t h rhlI:~t ltaulter ill wliici. thi' wa'r ini ('ta lI. i."litiit, SolicitL the ~oojern Iion of ,tphut A) v'rti titt itt 'itcht i imstt tes n~s hte intit ctent ttIcCissar)' to m i(etlo (rotil ll, I i'rii inding p,' rtie8 tilt olbserva tl(C of I th twoa of war Ftgeoiz d~( by all civ iiii~u'il att ioins. '1'i11 is cli'iivadoitt to thew adoption of lie Presidtit'S lute spectial ltitez'iie Cont iho suhjv~ci, ntu oly) by th ltvot'e, but, V ti~w retputblican party of timt l boide ir ititly a small ttioriLV oif I ita party~ 'oted ini the ttcgattve. Severali imupr.r t poits aria 1t1us i'staldlishdi. Eirst, i10 l'irestldttt. is stictuitted by~ ( ongteis nl by lisi ptrit.y, which i.s tilt' tispottsi" it' party iniCtg~~ tStit l1, his po. it ton is stritl "tilt iiild t ti gullress :I'S I lie I1t I)' iiref(r rtinco to thl 1'e2i.,ta Ilii'eL'i9 OIit ('hitf Ile is Stitugi ieli'ii 1tt'e g;en.'tnl pullets of 1113 :tdmini t ra * 'rtii c oir our htritio Mf t axes tn(!ill i ttltt I:l itol t liiiitiu anti dobt. J'iilia. tt .1 sc11 I I t Voice ha ih t iilt trII \i i.. I te w~ at. it. (lt its beef) T'Ititc 'rtiaHx I tt I N A ki A:t1Aq\ - l t tic ti11t3 ii' jt:ael ;'\"1it a p. 'i bi VAt k.tisas iltl lv p1 +~ on I'''tII Ia imtning tho cotton. lt rose, .is twnr a~s cooi a' msert linei iii Lit' vii;lty of Cl it it vertr at thlit jiot rind strikting M 1issis. ip~pi at or noar MiiatI' u at1iung, :1 itt) ' iiich iy pin owtt to ti Io indtt of i'; 'coulnty, uir ie hvoti, ,%vot'.4 h ali ,fet1'(i', tir'~, o le,, nni l crttiik. uI v ap1.rehttndd, toit lossa of We, I. inritook of wiuadl, raitn and 11,,11, w Jicli '111n1 down 'withi terilheo 1it% t. Tilt) 'att of thie n~orrn \v is "about I ivo ites wilih. Thei crops htutd beent ailimos I :ttittllV promtiin g, hLot are tin w bltc!: nid prostrate. Thef1 Tornado was repeat. toit S ituttJ~i, p)asittg tneatly over lie course of Lie (h I '1 iol u ri:u thy to the" tntm =t .. ,r. i'v l'ite. Th'e hail ;t.'*.- , \a . :i ott ~tidav wovrn latrgo and round, otto 01 honim Wto~hing lour ouncos. 'V to teS vl hch caise down ott te stc'i'd day yore j~lt d, u3a devoid of (.,rots its tar11, atnd 111(1 Cf.,re ttlore intjtrious. 3o violenut It storet) hias ntiver been (eX )tirieticod in thte sect ion tlroutgh whticht tpostd. '['e damage m8 itncaculitble, And so far n3 tte Cottloitis coiicruntd, at t~a tl, is irreparablle. OUT itt fort"it8 ufl'crcd ik lioss of somne one iiiiui'red iti fry tacres. all of' wich was millt (uttiriiiy vattate 'Ho ropresett that i.t6 talotosf tar twig is let living in is yat h. lt a itiso trt-oit tpropitud.--41fcavp I~i's O va. 1uCiLch Jhuo I t.