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THE FAIRFIELD HERALD Publishe.d Every wedne.sly at TVINASBOR, . DESP~OwR iS & WILLIAMS. 7I'lE.J1S-JN A) VANCE. ue Copy one year, - $ 3 00 -ve " " - 12 60 Totn ""1 25 (0 A Case of let Ireuki.ti: Lp Nuildnly -- Drsperate Efforts lo reetie itruliyzed Alen--Seveli Ilours on a Frozen Island An(lI len fleseted w.en Almost Wusen sible. PovalnixErsi-:, Feb. 5.-All day es:crdaty tnd tlie niiht prm iaus the wind 'e .v 0. hor i io t Itt all p ti 4 on the Hude 'M. c aming from the North and We't. TeL Moreury in thu thermomit-eor dri pped tie-, ani the cold increa ted in intetnsity hously. Ice g utherers at all rnivrters suffered greatly, :sd had it not been Saturday wirk would have beein abandoned. Bilt they are not the only toilers on the Ice on the Hudson ia the winter timue. They have comrades who f-l low a diffeient avocation-that of fibhing. It is estimated that over ono thousn.1 pIerso1ns gLi a liveli. hood on the r;ve-, in the winter time by fishing. Theirs is a laborious work. They watch the tiles, aid h acco r digly. 'The 'e-stoh" in cildes whit, and yellow porch, btri p'ed hnto, and piokeral, which eoll reaIL ily at trom 15 to 20 cents per pound, thu ewibling th fi-hermen to make fron $5 to $10 per day. In llavervst raw Ilhy 011 Satunrdasy there wore about on1e hi und red aii aeventy tihermen ut work with their nets. As before st-atcd, it was a torrible day. They were ascattered all over the ri ver. nfit AvING ilEa cuT I'No, Pir.nc;aNc; ivjN intent only tipun ending up the week with a "uc li Cull of profit, and then going home to their families. At 41.30 P). M. a ery rang through the erowd, "h'lie ho is moving ! (Jo for tho shore !" in an instit the wild er t ex itement ensuod. Tihe toilers looked to the, northward, and observed cloar water betwe-i the ice they were it and the #olii fC ozen bridge north of "Crugers." Tho entire field of ice, emIbrucing tho whisole chi annli of Ilivorstraw Dar, was on the move, an11d carrying n ith it, nearly two hun. dred humian being,. Pikes and nets were droppod, and then there was a ru1sh1 for safety, hile the air was fill od with cries for help from the thrunts of the cut-off Ilahlrmen, who could be seen ntUSllINO ABOUT bIAI.V ON TIE ICK. In teni miinutes after both th 3 east i rn and wette in sho e. were lined witi vallogers, who r an about upon th< heach, scarcely knowing what. to do, Finally a few of the moret ool-headed I i itolied o ii r boa ts it nd sta rtad on a daingeronstovage of rescue. In the neantime reoryes of fislieruen Iad reaciehed the edge of the ice neares t , rhore, and trusting to luck, plulgi itto the freezing water and reaclied terrafirnn in sifet-y, covered fron iteid t) foot with a thick coating of ice. It, wi then obsersod that nine wero left and t hat the surging tidt wats swingi g the field of ice far out tti the river', the lindson at the ;oint snmo| Iliing ext remely wide. Agin the hoats stasrted to the rescue but, before they reached 'ITiE ?iROMEN ZsLA NI, five out oif the isine wero in the rivel stri ogling fr ant icallIy sig'sinst dea (th Just~ as t y werLe about givintg up the bots reached them i, anid t hey were dragged in e'impletecly exhausted, and two of themn had fa inted. In an in stant al most their clothinig waks frozen stiff, and the rowe rs iith great tdilli.. e6 ilty keplit tho l aliiiiive by consatant antd v gorouts uin iing unt il the shn )l was reatched, when their beanmbtsed fors wereO handed over to wvilling htawls and carried to warmt Ii resides, where they soons aIteri as.e d signs of life, but lie hand oI f all were badly frozen, as were alsoa the. r ears. As acoon as they wero laitaled uspon the beach the boat, agasinistart ed tor the ice field to, rescue lie four aurv iivirg fbiherman. By thisa t lit the detetted icc had floated downt t h . iver two1 miiles, and Till' (1RIES P1R lfELP FRtODI THlE 'THRiOATs OF Til. UiNFORtTUNATEu MNN wvero goniszing in the extreme. They could be scOn ini the centre of the field stampinig and running and throw. ing up their armse, bu t nothting could pirevaihiluponi thin to leive the een ire, as the chopping waves wvere break. ing up tho edge of the ice, anud now and then htuge cracks would run a long the froisen sutrfae for hiundred of feet, giving w aiining to the fihermen thiat their floating ice island was, by the action of the wind and waves, breainsg to pices' beneath themi. Darkness camte, anid then the moon rose upon thie acene, and still the winid blew with g eat violence. TPhe fouir small boats, containing brave hearts, were fastened to the ice-field andh lostedoi down the river with it, the (ccupantsi of the boats vainly endeav orilng to got the now perishing mien to comse tow ard 4 them. Ten o'clock c inoi, and atll wore six iles away fromt the "bro sk off" when the men in the boats niotied~ a cessation of the cries fromt the fishermon. This to them was full of hlorror, am it gave token of the possibility of l!E UNFORTUNimA atEN FREEZING TO DEicAT II. WVhatever was to be done must be dooe quickly ; so a hurried consulta. tin was hiad, and It was resolved to make a desperate attempt to save the-m. Accordingly, "fter several of. forts to gala a foothold upon the tee,during which three or four of the haatmen fell into the river, a, firm standing-place was found,. when the boats were dragned on tho ioo. and then all hands started for the fisher. mlon, whom they found InI a terrible ounditionf, with feet, noses, hands, and Cats frozen. Tby had given up all hopes of Auecor, and expecto.1 death in a short time. They were hurried to tle boats --all getting away from the ice field in safety, and landing on the west sho ten mnihis from m here they tarted. Th e horneft v. ere I then taken to C(roger'a where they iow arE with their respective ftani. lies, and receiviog the best vmedical ntiention. Their situations are pre. o C ious. thaoulgh it iS )O-sibio they mvay rcnver. Their nans(-a are Peter loran, William Browni, J.14. Clark, Ths Riley. I wish I kce v the namesof their recauers.-New York St )1do d. WINNISBORO. Wedneday Morning, rob. 15. 1871 The ~allot. The ballot, like the trial by jury, is regarded by some political philoso pierA as an nd in its'lf, and not as a lICas for securing justice, j ust as the mier love, not the uses of gold, but the gold itself. Ience the fanatical IIoTaense utndor the name of "mats hood suftrsge," under the iispiration of which the experiment of negro suffrago was inauguraited and ii now boinig tried, with what result the gen eration after the next will best be able to tell. Up to date, it has not proved a very flattering success. Ii deed, it is only where thu whites out number tho blacki, that negro auffrage is regarded as tolerablo. 'W hihel proves to our minds that there is a flaw somewhere or other in these ab stract reasoniiigs upon human rights bo tatisfying to philanthropists d well injg tit ditance, and to adverturers gambling in our midst. Wo confe4s, we cannot refuto the radical reason ing. From loyhood it has made a serious impression on our minds. It is logical an(d consistent with itself, but not with facts. Therefore, there maust be in it a flaw. The amajor premise may he true-it seems to us, it must be,-that all anon have oiual rights to claim perfect justico from all other men in their dealings with thom. Where, then, may be this flaw in radical philosophy I It seems to us probable, that it is just here, that the ballot, a means to the end of justice, is exalted to tibe reverence due to justice itself, and due to justice alone. A!as I mnany, many other things nust exist as Conditions of J10 g wiment, besides the estab I J u' a -x fro ballot. A free ailoq, in itself considered, affords little hope to the philanithropit. A free vote resulted onco in the choice of "taot this man, but Barabbas," and "crtcified tile Lord of Glo.y," The use of a free ballet has only, thus far, established "the right of theO people to nolsmfanaage thir~a ow~n bu.-iness in their own way,"' or blunidering nais governmeilnt "of tile pleopl by (lae people for the people." A free bal lot may lie the fav->ralo condition for the development of tihe good forces of society hitherto suppressed anid barr edl of their free play ; but it is not thosec forces themselves, anld it is also the condition of thie active existence oif some of the very worst forces thiat corrupt and ruin society, Ini conniec tion with mere ajority repre-onta. tionl, it is the fomeiitor of rapid revo lution and change, the parent of in security of per.,ou, and of instability of property. Will Americans cheek their poliic al fanat ici.-mi, discuss the differeuneo bet weeni principles and miistakcen instrumenitalities for em. bodying thema in actionl, and give to mfinornities a share of those political rights, whlichl they loudly proclaim belong, by virtue of their manhood, to all men01 1 Educational Value of Sur. firage. The theory of thle trial by Jury is, that at educates tile people in a knaowl ed go of Law, and prevents the perpe tration of injustice. Its workinag is that it lowers the tone of legal attain lmint in the legal profession, and en courages chicanery, wile it spreads a smattering sort of half knowledge of law amonag the people that brings the imaprudenlt inato misxchiief. So the theory of extending suffrage is, that it educate. socially andl politically. We admlit that it ought to. But whast is the faot ? Is the right of auf frago valued by our best citirzens whlen it is mnade universal ? Do they not keep away from the polls. Does it not make politics a gamie of prejudice and passion, and fling power into the bands of adventurora I Politioal philosophers docivo thenmselves. Tbe people must be eduoated, to be. come educated. Education is a mat ter to be attended to per se. To do. grade suffrage is not to protnote edu ostion. Had suffrage been denied to the blacks, for instance, for ten years, and then made dependent on educa tion, they would hay, mae ..eat. progress as a people. Tboir political power they now use in upholding cor. rupt jobbing under the guise of to. I gitimiate legislation, and it will react b) their disadva.tage in the end. And t 5o women had much better beeducat od per se, than given the ballot, in order to educate them. ilow to UElve Friends. It is in the hope that old truths I may make a new impression, that we t venture to suggest to people that are not loved by others, that the trde reason of their It nelita a i, puthaps, that they therm elves do not love ot h- I ear as they should. I i., a ilceer im. n possibility for a hai.i .n being tat in. ane, to be convinvo.1 that ain,ther loves him, and nut he roved by the fact ; to know that he iakc, a synpa- ) thiziug interest inl his j I)s and his lurrows, in his enres and his 'g..od for tune, in his we.kiiesses and his re deeming excel Iuch s, in his bin anl t his fall, as well as ii his co, fliat and a his triumph, and not. lc intercitted, in turn, in that per-on't wolfuie. Ihence the profouivd wisdlom 1n %Ni h which Sdlo muou sunis up the whojle phi'osophy of fiiendship in the proserb ; "Ie that hath friends, MUST 811P.W niJAIsIMs FItI:ENiY. " lteiader, would you have nnother ho your friend 1 then, be a true friend t. him. Would you have another love you I then, love him sincerely. Is h, cold antid i mnpasive I he warn and attentive. Is le pas. 2 sionate I be gentle. I., lie cruel I be kind. Love w;11 iit tho hardest heart. Love is tnuipotent, for God is Love. Men with few or no friends, as a v general thiiig, have no res/ect for oth, t ,r men. Becau-e, perchance, they * iro dull and stupid, they despise hemi as fools. Anil yet what is their I >wn proud knowledge and qucricness t ut a somewhat morei learned ignor- f nCC ? Because they are wrapped up t in the circle of their own personal 0 >aros, ambition and hu8inesP, and be- i com narrow-minded with grey hairs, t lhey scorn them as sel,;sh. And yet wVIo can escape thi4 specios of Solti*h ess 1 Who can deliver us fiom the body of this death I To feel that those sympathies once felt with all that is human, have been, and are being stifled by the growth of skill and interest in that specia.l businessi which is one's pneuliar duty, what a grief it is to every generous mind ! q Ab I aill you de-pis an(d teorn your - tellow-ian becausa o te inevitable 1 0 Will you not rather pity him ? Will you not rather, if gifted, talk to hitu c kindly, and gently turn his eye from the little patch of gardei upon which , it is his appointed lot to labor, 'I around, to the fair laildseapes and i bright sunshine of ciirth, and up wi ard, to the inlinite expamnse and a the serene blue of the spangled arch , of heaven ? This, this is to be friend- a ly to him, anad to make him your friend. But says some morbid sufferer, longing for thamt hiimani symapathby u biich is so sweet, "I see few people, or rather, 1 see none, of whom I de- f sire to make friends.'' We answver I emphatically, it isi your own fault. There is no human b~einig, no, nict one. wvhose love is not a passessiou mostt highly to be pi ized. Look to it, that. your own sensitive hoiorishness anid n lack of ordinary courtesy do not lose1 you the most precious of all treasurese, the love of fricitda. The ladies of tha South do not de. sire enfranchmisemnent, and would not axercise the right had they it, given them. Our ladies have no wibh or dlesire to abandon their present sphere and mix andl mingle in political moet-i inigs, harnanguai the populace from the hastings, indulge ini street corner po-. litical discussions, stand around the polls and argue wnithi ignorant negroes, t drink whiskey with doubtful electors, squeeze in this crowd aind out of that, have her ribs miade sore by the punch. ing of Tonm, Dick and Hlariy, both white and colorcJ, and be forced to tudure, see and( take part imn an hun.. * Ired other things not cmpatible with ier sense of propriety. . We say we lo not think our ladies, for these ai~d ther reasons, core to have conirred ipon them the elective fr.,nechi.e.t No, no, a thousand tinmes no!1 The ladies of the South, proverbial fonr heIr sweetness, modesty arnd high ense of bonor, as well as their ind. pendence and-there!I we like to h~avo maid toenper I--and matronly qualities, iave no wish to thus unsex themselives, nud invite familiarity and insult from " ho meon. They prefer the bigher and a iobler calling of remaining women, 0 naking home happy and contributing harms to the family oircle. So far has the oustom of dedIcating t ong t iterstngfemales gone that a ipi t aul a musio publiabing y louse has Issued a piece of, mnusio - A lediented to "Old Bets,," an Indian e qonaw of 320 snmmou " What Can be Done in South Carolina. Mr. W. A. James, residing near ishopville, says the Susiter Watch an, gatherod, - last year, from a welve-acre field, an aggregate of six iundred and twelve bushels of corn, f fifty-ot.e bushels to the aere. This 'as in addition to a "wildernoss" of ens (estimated by him at six bushels o the acro,) from which eighteen flue orkers were prepared for the snoke. ouse, and his milch cows streamed heir rich currents of milk, to Eay othing of the und.-.utally heavy orop r fodder gatLhoid. The land upon which thiscorn. etc., r,4 made, was sch It, it is estimated y Mr. JAme<, woUl1 have vielded hmt:' thirteen b,01hcls to the uure, -i I hou: f.. ItIilI ze. ; ) P p ied, wyere fer y Lushel. of cot to: s e.1 Ill.d t A f n 'ititD . red anl)d eighty i.oumi., of Pi iutiin i 11.1110 to the ae.e. The land was well roken and the ai.n ure all put down wo or hrce weeks prov.ous to plant Ig. 'Tiw corni was planted about the (Ith of Mareh, in lows rive feet two i.d-ai.ha-If it-ches apart, with a dia. aneo of twenty-one iinohes on the row, nd cultivated in ita usual way. rSTI.MATI PER ACRE. 51 bushels corin, $68 75 6 O pes, 7 50 00 lbs. fodder, 6 25 $77 50 'aluont fetilizas, $24 00 !Oit cu:tiva:inga say, 8 00 $32 00 $32 00 et pr, fit per acre, $:15 (0 ggregate profit on 12 actes, $54t 00 Self Ainputatilion. The Fernandina (Fla.) Island City ays : "A man, by iho name of Wim. It ir g, a ailor by profession, rhilst under the influence of delirium remlens, waTilered off front Hi vessel Cl<riug that devi'n uevro in pursuit limit. When found Ie Iid amputa , or rather disjointe d his right hand t the wrist with a dull knife, stating hat it, hall offended him, arid there ore he cut it off. Ie was brought a town, and Dr.. Iluot and IHor.ey, fter all cXamin.ition, deeied it ne esary to aniputate the arm higher up, n order to properly care for anid pro vet it. lie says that his father is a net chant in Nt w Y.r k, and that I e &s been discarded in conseqionce of iswildness."' A Reniarkab e Spring, A correspondent of the Boston ournal of Chemistry rends the 'fol jwing aceount of a remarkable spring I Tv."s : "About sixty miles north f Oalena, near the town of Liberty, hcre is a sping, the water of which is uito avi,, resembling lomonade, and lose who taste it liku it so much that iey drink it almost iimoderately. Vhel you feel hot it. is quite deli. ious ; and under any circumstances, -hether you are hot or cold, the rinkihg of it produces perspiration, ith no unpleasant effects af'erward. 'he sprieg has no apparent outlet or ilet. It is probably sixty feet wide, md it is covered with a white froth or >am, whiich, upon01 close ex utniiat ion, ppears like cream of tartar on a 'inie eask. It kills insects, worms nd other small animals that come ear and use it. No fish or ether videiioe of Life is seen within its Negro Squautters, A Washington dispatch ays th~at rom various accolants which have een received, United States troops ,ill be required to asist the local and lederal aiuthorii las in certain pairts of hie .South in recoverimng for their Ie itinmato owners lands which have ceen squatted upon by negroes, whoi efuse to vacate and allow those to rhom they belong to entor in poss-s lon. In the Pasca where such a con ition of aiffas exists, there seems to >e a arrong comnbination of blacks guia.st pieace and order if thi-ir occu ancy is quLestiano~d or interrupted. Presidenit Grant's Indian Policy. The WVashington Chroniolo says hat the Indian policy of the Adm in str ation is: I. 'rho Indians to be made lawful itizens of the Uniited Statec. 2. They are to be educated. 3. Agriculture, mnanufact ures and he ats to be establishedi among themi. 4. It will be renidered safo atid rofitable for them to invest in lands, Luses, railroads, and other publio mprovements. 5. The qualified among them will e elected to executive, le.gislatis e, ud judicial offices. hlydropilobia. A German forest-keeper, eighty. woyears old, not wishing to carry to he grave an itmportant secret, has uh~ ished in the Leipsie Journal a eeipe lie has uised for fifty years, aind htcih he says hats saved sevetal men nul a great niumber of animals from a .rn abde deathI by hy drophobia. The itu must be bathed as soon as possi le withb warm vinegar and water, and rheni this has dried, a few drops of .tuintie acid poured upon the wound ill drstroy the poison of the saliva nd relieve the patient from all pros. nt or future danger. Beau Hiokman, though for the last wronty-flve years be has ben chief >f the Washiogton Bummers, hasu't ken any liquor. Ask him to drink, ud he apparently accepts, follows ou to 'the bar, and takes-~-oiwater. Now," says he, "I will take the o~ge you would have paid for msy What Next! to the United States Senate, on Tuesday, the Vice..Presideut submit tod the follo*ing : The Secretary of war has the honor to submiit to the Senate of the United States an application from It. L. M. Cam~den of Piladelphia, for military protection for the euhployees of an association engaged ingold mining in York County,South Carolina, uaainst the outrages of the ro-called Ku1'i1X Klan, and to invito attention to t01e reimiarks of the Geber.a of the army thereupoa. . W31, V lELKNAP, ecerotary of War. W AIt 1r nV A Rtaar, January 28, 1871. A Time to Laugh. lBeecher tsys : "There is a time to laugh. Whmeni it Comes, every 0h is tian Should improve it. MoreoVer, it is 1articuilarly inacumbetat on iniuis ters to set the flock a good example in this respect. A Ives ry heart doeth good iko medicitiec, and is ich easier to take. Tie minister has no right to wear himself out by unneees aary friction, when the oil of glaedness is dropping upon the pastures from every hide To maintain cheerfulues1 even in, the faco of real diffieulty aond trouble, is oame grace of Christianity, and tho inisilter, even beyond other u.Cn, shouldtecek for it." When the elder Napoleon overran the German Stater, he sys-itematually stripped every oine of them of valua. ble.i sand wo ks of art. Publie and private buildm.s, from one end of . is to the oithr, were adorned with spoils. Lord Casteereagph, to whom was asiedthle ta.,k, c.,tilmaed thle vailue (of the booty whbich Napoleon bore m~ay from other counttries to France at a total of 9,126,684.581 fra necs ip to the peace of Canp o I.r miio. Of thi.s sum, exceeding t woI hiundred umillions ofdollats, the bulk came fromn termany ; and 11, niap harto preyed upon Europe for fifteen years after thit." When the Allies cap tured Parismany of the Europcau rulers made de umands upon the citi. zons for the return of tle statues, pintings, etc., but the Parisims re fused to vield them up and they had to be retakein by force, the Diuke of Wellingt on su perilntendiig tie rto, rat ion. We have no idea, however. that King William will follow the precedent., lie has shown that lie i.s actuated by far different motives than those which influenced the elder Napoleon. The Senatorial Contest in Virgin ia for the U. S. Senate seems to be I c tweeu Johnston, the present Senator, and Mnj. W. T. Sutherlin. li'r.'m this stand-point it appears to is that the latter gentleman is emphatically the man for tha times, I n I can do more towaids building up bleed ing old Vir ginia than any other man in the State. Suthei lin is a thinking man : a real live genius, with a head as level and placid as pond-water. Ile has eaten a poor man's bread, and knows how to aympathize with poor men who get their living bj hard labor. Too few of the representative men of the age have ever eaten a poor maca's dinner or hoed a row in the eorni-field in thle hot sun, "And that's what's the mat S-r AnunlycOn ats.-Uiooklyn lhas a startling sensation in the pierforman <Cs of somne mnysteriousiyouth, who hias beeni going about the streets after nighitfall stablbinlg girls with a pen knife. Ihis modus operandi is to dart out upon them from behinid trees, stoops and other places, and after givin~g then a thrust with his weapon lie suddenly disappears. Tfhe police have made dliligent search for him, but thus far in vain. As many as a dozen gIrls have been stabbed, two of them dangerously. A story is told in Viahbington at the expense of a well-known Senator, wlho is notom ious for ta.king two cock. tinils in succession before breakfast One morning, while the senator waii practi.-ing at the bietropolitan bar, a finemd put to him the pertinenit qu'ie, tioun, "Soanator, whly do you tako twc cook ta ils a a enstom? WVon't one tone you ?'' The Senator drew himself up "I will tell 301u why I take two cock tails. WVhen I h:.ve taken one, i makes me feel like another ann Well, you sre I'm bound by comx mon courtesy to treat aniother man ; am I take a second.'' There is a hoantiful girl living neaa Mont, eal , who, thony h she has hos hoih legs at-on. her kniees hass recei i over a dezmen offoso~f miarrinage dutih lihe past Wen r, andiu refuised them aill One of her lovsers is a amember- of tha Domnin ion Pa rl iaminent. TIhis i.fil ;et: girl ipeaks . seven languages, anw charms everybody who collies nea, her. *lMty dear friend," said a gentlemnai to a bankrunpt. the other day, "'n sorry to hear of your misfortunie Your famiily has my warmitSt syimipa thies."i "Oh, doin't troubhle yoursel about my family. I looked ont fot them, you bet I Just save your 3 m pathies for the farmilies of tny credi, tors." A Virginia paper eltes as a remark ble instaneo of the eflicacy of aib staining from medicine, a lady in~ that State who has reaehed the age o1 ninety-slr, and throughout all -the long years of her life has taken but -three pills, and has buried three bus bands. AWestern gentleman lately put himself to bed on the steps of a ohoreb, and,, trying to fold the snow flakes around Ihim, deolared every tim hegrapod a hiandful that the daredshetsalwa. tQm so THE WAR IN EURQPE, Latest Advices. LONnoN, Feb. 94.-Jules Favre, in thainkiig the mayor of London for provisions, writes, February 8th, that the diktress was very great and still continues, but the city is tranquiil. Te Sedee.nship Crescent Cty, of New (Orle-ins, ik aground off the coast Of Irelind, and a total loss. is appio iendedd Ti.o pm.cs-cugers, o.(-eW and specie are wife, but little hopo 'of saving her cargo. A fliiivre 1ipatci s %yte Thirs, Cordier, Ouir'er and Duce .ave be n chosen to tlie i.sseiljy for the depitt inent. PARIS, February 1O.-The elect ions eer tilly favor the Orleaciiss. I'loilcox, Fobrular*y 1 .--'lie elcd tions iave undoubtedly resuiltol in a conexIrvative triiiph. lRvturns from eleven French departments iicicate the electioni of Bnaparti.t, and clari. ca41 cancdidtes ; but few Replblicanes are elected. A dispatch from Lille sacys a inoni archical triumph in the Dep:artment of the North is certain Djon and Toulons have elected Republicans. Naites, Caihons and Auch, and the Department of Crease, Dordogne, Mayenace, Vendea and Loire have cho.en Conservative, Moderate or Liberal Union .cindidates. No exten-on ofthe armistice will be0 declared until it i6 kown Whether the National Asscmibly favors peace. The 0 culois reports that Pavre has goie to Antwerp to coinsult with .the Orleancs Princes. 1 iee rctu, s to Paris are opten. lBismucarckei illieeent causes iuch un ei a Il.-Iess. Tcere has been a violent gale alg the euatern coast ot Encglad. S Ix hips are aishore near S.tith Sields and several lives lo t,. N . irimes w ecks are up:relif nd' ed. Bit r -r, I bruray ll.--Tie verita ble caule. plagueF ills ilcpared .m,1 og1" acise heereid. ofc cti e going to I!Aris. It. being imep os.ible to 1ring ttie dtcul cattie, their e-casses have been1 lI-a d ed c.n wa.itr \e cls, ctakeu to sjec MId s1111C. MAnnR, Fbriuary 1.-The Corte, has pi's : the act mII dking the 0ale of Cuban tobacco a Monopoly i) tle hands of the Government. From Wa1shlingtoit, WASuIINoTON, Februray 9.-From an army oflicer reports have been re ceived tht the troubles in Robeson couity, N. C., are in no way the re sult of political sentiniets, either one way or the other. He thinks the citizens by united action, as a posse cotitatus under a sheriff, could sup press the outlawry, thich is fast de. vastating that section. No news whatever from the Ten nessee with the Domcinican Cominis. s8on. The absenco of news causes uneasi ness. From Georgia. SA.YA NNA II, February 9,-The tele grain rnelat ive to Lthe ship Southern l ightsc, ;s incorrect in several-particu. hars. Thec s'hip remanins In Tybee Road, acid has not been to the city, Three cases ofsmalI-por were taken frorn her and gent to thce Leczaretto. Fronll Cuba, UA va sA, February 9.--Nothcing heard yet of the semer TIenlma~oce by inqufiries nmade at all points inc Ice telegraphic coin mtnietioncs with lia vaina, Market Rteports. Nr.w YonK, Feb. 1 I.--.Erenilng._. Cottoni quieut, withc sales of 2,000O bales at 15[. Gold 11 6. CHIAnlKsToN, February i1l.---Cott, a qiuiet-micddehnys l4}~ s 14# ; beales 600 bales, receipts 830 bales. LItveurc'eoo., Febrmury II.- l&enr. ing-Cottoni steady, uplan~cds 715; Or leeans 'l ; salIes 10,000 tlee. Tribute of' Iespect. At a iti'e lar Communc. icaion of Coleman Lodge No. p7. A. F. MI., held thcis day at F.eastervill Februatery 4th, 1871, cthe ft I. lowing resoleh*ons were ucanimouctsly adlopt. ed : Resolved, Thaet Colomanc Lodge No.07i, A. F. 31l. mnounesi the leess, by thle hamc~l oef deathe, of ourc worehy lOrocthers. Alinster .Ala sons, of thli I~odg~e, namecly : Ilcaire 11. liiley, W. Prestoen Coleuman, It. Frank. olin Coliean, Jucecoh F. E 'oean. WV.-iloykine L3 les, llenry J 1 Lyies. Andrew J. Mic i nnell. Jnmli~e1les Jenings aind it. Ed~iwerd S e taIeon,10 broties, podm actd tre, lecy fel by elm rnc a ndcuor it ar. -Jemsoloed, 'Thatc in ib vilmitation of thce icancd ofl man A 1w de l'iroln mJente ouir I.ocdge has lm aetaoe or iees baest ucete rial, 0.ur Fric. Seriiy somtae of its caos zecalious freds, aced omir cotuntry someC of es becst citizenic. llroledc. Thai oucr a nimahiics. mus a band ot bhelerm. whoemse.o, hami In it broklen, we tetdere~d cn the famil f. andc friends of otur dcc asted Or ot hers. Reso/r'ed, That thIese re aucciones be cen Ier- oncc te flmnums of fl's l.ndge, in mnenmry.of' our deccen..e.I, wort y lbe en hers, *end msite ccrdl of this leecge. /?solved. Than the, age., dai e of deatih, andl place ofC 1.I a e cente edl oppomsic e echm biot1Jel hec ae on litheem inte. of this Lodige Ree.ocdred, That, a copy of esoe resmolu-. I ions be ior'wardled me the Fair -Id HIerac/l for publication, aned Ilhat one py of the Faic field. Ilerald, cont aining t h e resolu. lions Ce ailed to thce families of our do ceased brotheers. J A M ESF. V. [PEGG, See tary, Coleman Lodge, 14o 97, A.f F. M. Dr, Tutts Pills, Is a purely vegetablo concentrationi for keepIng the Bowels inc natural mnotion and cleansing the system of all lmpurities, and a positive -cure for Constipation, . Thcey restore the diseased Liyer, Smomach and Kidney., to a healthful acion, while at the same ticme they brace and lnvigorate the jwhola eywaam Dafensive Medication. Investigation i as neceasary for the pro. toet ion of the hunan body against disease when uatilidlthy inftiuences are abrond, as iron armor and granite easements are foe, the protection of ships and fortresses wherl assiiled by shot and shell. Hence, it is desirable when (hose potent enemies of vi. falify, damp and cold, pervade lhe air we brenthe, to put the egeten in the best poh. ible condition to encounter thetv. The stoniach is the organ by which every o'hor organ is noiislied and sustained. and theteror-) ipon its vigorous and regular ad lion di-r'enils. in a greal 1iersu1e, hIt@ pacity of the systemu to tsist the t: sault of he iivisible tnemxies of liealth itd lif, by which. at, th is inlemieieng st-sotn, It, Is sir. ronitded. Ilostet er's Som.ch Bitt rtIn, aft adnirible ionic anid reguliting medicine for tall seaisono, is nevet- mnore t-eded thatt in winter, wlien i lie torpifying intifuences of a chilly tfliosplilere effects all 11he vital iitunions and renders the body extreuely susceptlic. By to:.ing the digestivo or. gins, t n lite liver, and the howels witi 11is unrqualloil vegelablo speellc, a physia l, cooiiton is aiainel wh.cli secens to be proof iigaithst iall Iarielies of telipo raturd, an' that is iniiical in IhI atir of W inftel. Defeltsive ined ierft ii is a pi'ecautiot whielt iiould never le nteglecied when danger id present. and thereforo a course of file Ilit., ters.nt ti. season is paniicularly tiesirabid espeially for ihe feeble and sielly. As a remedy for biilliott4ness. dyspepsia. nervous. ness ald bowel cnnplalnts, there is nothing comparable to this wholesoine restorative feb I____ __ - 1840 187O0 Travelers are alwaiys linble to sudden stl tact a of Dysentery and Cholera Morbus, and theso oecurring wien absent from home, nre very unpleasatit. The 0 PAIN Kir,.r.u miay always be relied upon in stick cas's. As soon as you feel the 'lyinptonis. inte one tenspoonful in a gill of neW milk und oinlws ees and a Otill of hot, Water, elite well togii her 4nd drink hot. Iepeat the dose every hour until riiet ed. If the pmtns be severe. hathe boWels ftnd batck with the a afdicine clear. In case of Asihma and Phthisic, f ikG fa teispoorlful in n gill of hol water sweeten. ed well withit . olassos; a'so bathe the thrint :0t-stomnch f-ilhifully with lie moe, di-ine. eleur. Dr. Sweet siiys it ta' ei out '.le soreness in cnses of honese-ging faster than any thing he ever applell. Fisaer-naen so often exposed to hurts by havilig their skin piet-ced with hooks. and filn - (if f!h. wnn he relieved bv hal bin , with tie' lain killer as soon ne the accident oc curs ; in this way ihe antignish issoon abat. ed ; Itlie as offten Its once in five fiinutes, say thirec or foitr timies, and you will sal. dcni have any trouble. The bites and scratches of dogs and cats arc soon cured by bathing with the Pain Killer clenr. feh I A V1notlDE.NTAr, RiRint.-The Mot-, goose, bitten by a poisonous serpent, seeks a certain plant, cats of It and recovers. Ir like matnuler thousafnds of Eatopean dye. peptics, and victitns of liter complaint, dis orders of the bowels, debility, dropsy, rheumatism, &e , fiock to the Seltzer 8prin' in Germany and are cured by its salubrious waters. We have this spring, in all its sanitary perfection. multipliedl ad inflniturat, in this country, in the form of TAPRANT'S SELTZER APElR1ENT, It is thie Spa madle portable and available for the uses of the million. The milllon use it. It is th, great. household medicine of the land, at onoo0 delicious, refreshing, and1( unequaled as a corrective and altera tive. SOLD BY ALL DRS'OGists. feb 2--2w AbiONG TItE INOuANs,--Lieut. lierndort tells us that no tribes of abnrigittesd are found in the deepest forests of South Amarl en, fromt the Andes to the Aihantlo coast, ilhat do not. have endt use D'act. Ayer's me-. dicines and L~owell cottons. "Tauxow," 'SUFlvlK" 'lloofy," are seen st amped in large red and blue letters upon their gar. muents, While Ayer's Pills and Cherry Pec. tortiai are among the trcasntres of their ha bititions. Thieirvnative soil furnishes thenr aill iheir food and most of their remedies, but they suffer from some afflict ions which ranet have flue interpr.sitaon of higher skill. -Sentinet, Liberty, Va feb 1 Oun MaarornovenzNi INTaans'rs.-----The manufacturersi or the North hav , skedh for and obtained the naH'istance of the Nationail Government until they have become a bur den to lhmo people at large, and the tax paid by the United States for. the support, of these thanufacturer's is equal to all the oth, or taxes put together. Let our- manufac. turers miake goods of bet ter quality, and at lower prices than other masnufneturers, and they can defy competit ion wihout Govern macni help. This, at least, is the plain ef .%lr. P. P. Tonle, of Charleston, 8. C.. the largest. and most sucocessful manufacturer of doors, sashes, blinds and meuldings in the Southlern States feb 1 O'T10CE TO TAX~ig~ I ~lI visit thme following places as py iI. C. ltoshorou 's Ptore; IPobruary 26 Feast ervillo, Feb uiry 21 and 22. Alo)nficello, Februa '3. Jlonkinsvrilo, Vebruary 'cidgeway, February 27. Ja ll M W. (,Ag gg~ fe b--x2 C'onnty Trealsurer5 Cotton for Gan $1,000 PRRGUM i, Eprops selling a lhmIted quantity of ouruanos for Middling Cotton, at lb ots., delivered at planter's depot by 1st November next. We also offer the asagniloet rweautw of1.00 for the best yield frtn ogar For particnlars apply to our flestes6 Agent, or address as for olroular. WILCOX, GlItBS & 0O., Importers and Dealers In OGuos, Charleston, 8. 0., SavannahadAsds Oa. - febf 1d-ira Florida Syrup. 2BDL8. excellent Florida Byrup. -Als 2 e. laGags.Efsl