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V. v Desportes & Williaihs Proprietors.] A Family Paper, NOWte to S cience, Art, Inquiry, Industry and LiteraturiLcis-$ 0prAnm nAvn~ VOL.*I. WINNSoBORO. ". C. WED)NESDAY MIORNINGMY3,(~ FAIRFIELD HERALD 1 FUDu.t3E1) wKKKI.Y 14T DESPORTES & WALelIAMS, Term.-Trn IlarALI) Is pubilahe.1 Weeks in the To'wn of Wiansboro, at $3.00 in uareably in ddvance. $' All translont advertisements to be aid in advance. Obituary Noties and Tributes $1.00 per square. [From the Saline (Mo.) I'igress. teuiniscences of Old Rob Brother oA the CelebrateA Kit Carsot. This celebrated mountaineer and trapper 3et lives on the Missouri River, nigh the town of Arrow Rock ; is hale, stout and hearty, able to niuk u marny wore like trips. lie is full of nnecdotes, and gives us man) hair breadth escapes fron mountain storms antil Indian lights. I. say* the last tight place lie got into was 'i'the )'car 1846, during the Mexi'in wa'r. The Mexican's were cUmmiitting de'edations (if all kiuds, and had st6len home 'f onr 0 ove'nient horses and thules. Uhpt. Price-af terwards Gen. Sterling liric was in command of a company of IJuited States: \'olunteers, who were ever Yeady for a scout or a fght. He was '6rdered to thke a detail of twelve of his beat men anud send them in search of the stolen propef'ty. Twelve choice and well tried men wY're cho Sen. Then catne the query-who is able and willing to take command of this sviuad I It inust be some man who can talk with the different In dinu tribes through which the pamiy have to pabs in jurbuit of the 10i Ca Ns. Luckily for the squad, at this mo ment Bob Carson rode up, well miount. ed on his favorite hunting horse heo. A shout from the twelve brave men bid him weleome ; thei' obecot stated and requesting him to tuke command. Nothing suited Carson better th&a this. Ile told Capt. Prite that lie could follow a cold trail as fast any living man could, aid to gke himself no unensines, that lie woAld bring his twelve men back and not lose it scalp. The sequel showi how he succeed ed. The second day out they strudk the trail ; late in the evening they saw in the distance a large part 3 InJians, and as the were on friend. ly terms with the di erent tribes 'ar son and his band hurried to overtake them, hoping to gain tone inforna tion coucemning the stobk-. The Indians as'w theth apotroehif and halted for thema to cone up. A. Car,oe and bit, men came nigher, h i. kien eye di.-e vered that they were on the war-path, hut knowing no feanr *e rodo up to the indiaas, 1,4 10 ,t1 adlg rounded them. San livere, t he chief closed wings and. completely sur rude up to Cirmou. exclaiming: "Yeds tedolyP'-you abro my prion: eOi asrson, after questoning th6 MileI a 'hort tiiie, found that they weie also in pitrseut of lost tock, stolen, ai they COblbidered, by United Statei ttoops. Th' e M1exicans had tl him tili1 * tale to screen themselves liut al bf intrigue could nlot inddee 8alidl. vWre to releabe him and his t~elve men. Tile next' tor.1ing tile old ohic coinweniced " niaking 'prepiatations td shoot sad sdalp his prIeotIers. tOar sont called him daide for a talk; drn4 bed (liallylgersaadedbhim toi sebd on< of isbet rnnretoCapt. Price' Scaini an~d if things *ere not fotanj '4 just as represented, thait ovi th6bftunl day fiom the dejiaradre of saiid run ner, at tidlve '6'elobk 116 rhight d wih'his prisonere as he pleasbd; Tb runner started. OarAon and hia meca spginethatever~ything w#ould pirov Ssatdiefaotory, to: the cbief; rentainei theIeptioneraeheerfully 'and -.hap . 6r the wofnibg of thu fourth da all were m'uentarily ekpeou ing th t*toer toappdr. Teh o'dtlock can and'no~runnet Id 'sight. Hvdrythinj ii eamp was,Oxcitenient and aitillio 8in,.andivero was certnle-ija tan her had been foully dealt' with, in ihis. abget .,bade properations fo admwary vengeanod. :Twelve o'oloelk kn arUnner itt eight as far'- as tb bye could roabh. Carson thought his hour bad come he preparatiods wor. ptde ; andl, wel knowing the teifms would be. eerd flioc lvhe'h eole~d "8itddivere sfid l jilh h4 wdubi like to have a talkt nit' h ief bdfersho and hig mn were sbot Ua&ensnd' " didivere coriirhehbe' ttfe talT,'rAt1 in the #feinttIli Midkingslowlf andi leietdtely frdhtl thl saddleegbla kte 'te.,er$ all done among'kisatrioal ' ' ' " The chief was -tiuih interested a pIesaet'with thiw idonatiib tI'ad tlstiethey Were eIghty toone bdr dreglyar in "the 'hldian' denm whVel da.et with thedelterity of a old mutiet kef~ boot leg an ugly looking holster pit toa ooned and pvosente4 direetly I the L.ue of the old chief, exclaim haig: t "8tand, air I you are my prisoner." "What do you mean I" askcd Saudivere. "I meanjust what I say.lf yoiu move one itlh you are i dead man :" Tie Indians seeing their chief In danage-r started t6 lot fe'cue', but Car. son told hin to mo't'on hiA mcn back, or lae would bo't 1i71 on the spot. The old chief, %o61 knowing the man he hud to deal with, instantly con plied and motioned his mnu back. Carson then told him to orde'r u$i M. twelve men with their horses jait as be had icceived them, and Leo wit-h them. This was instantly complied with. Carson then mounted the old chie-C bohind one of his men and started fm Cpt. Prioe's camp, who.e Sandivye," found things as represented by Car bonl. The runner had been there. but had lost the trail, which had otised the delay. Capt. Price gave the chief many presents, and escorted him to his tribe. Ie ever afterwardi was a true friend to the whites, nues in ntany inhstances did very valuable service. Thus by the coolness, cunning arid downright bravery of Bub Carson t.hi. devoted band of twelve brave imena were resuued from certain death. Parties right here were with Carson at that tito and can vouch for the truth of the above statement. Long live Bb Carson. J. P. Lost Reis of the Past. Among the sa.iddest losses the coun try ha had to mourn for spme ti'te is the destructibn of old o06ial and rovolnti'bnary builditigs by fire at Alex itadria, Va., last Friday. The country is just getting old enough to cherish warmly the memories and relics of its young days', and when it is known thut uthong the hou.es des troyeA by th frt e were the Masonic I dge of which Wahington was the Miaster, and the old Colonial Court Hlouse, in which his provinial troops \V6re iuartered in 1754, fCom the dod6i-' f Which Braddock marched to hi d.feat Sn 1755, and in which ex. Pl'sideut Washington gave his last vocej in 1799, a feeling of genuine o.Irrow is likely to come over our h'eafts. We could better have spared tAny richer and gi-ander edifices. Teld6 Selles arc the thins that certify the tr\kth '6f hi.tory, aid in this age of igeaolism, wlen It i airgued that Williaih Tell hid ShAkespeart' are mythsb th'ere ik no 'certaiinty that ere long borne irtlevbrbunt eueiy of the Ar. hingt not yiropoie io ovb thnit thtld %1.'t1 no &411 lie ,A sb bcor0e Washngto'.. 'Iho ol revolutionary Iags in 6t Colurt dIouze were aved, honae\er -the 0811 of Xan.hnijto's body pUde, the 1A of l-ijl J>ne and that dW a b.'wpany of Al xandril tihnit'l.Ib,. 'Thes less h ,tie mis f~tuie lin s'o6 degrre, butt it a greatel- lo-s thian busy Ya nkesdlnArd of lhas time tu brood oer, thil loIi thae bantt nd old landmit nrk$. of the rt-vol itionary days-Niiw YorA NarroEscae. - i Prdfessor Torrey nutdd ai balioou esteioni,1 froio iyton, Ohio, a few Idays sinee, ineftin~g hais ballion Initii hot air frosm a fiurunee set in the gtin 4Just' as the air-shlp fos( fro II t~le iafti', thb 1 tinet part of il Icau tght fuen, unknown to the ieronant ~who went through a number of evo, lutionA ott the trapenre auspended bj isoptesfrpdm the dar. At the heigh1 of 1,000 feet, the firs blsazed arount the balloon, which, with the cooling o: tehot air, caused a rapid descent Fotttnatel&y;thtt burning globe cawi in conatdcL with ii willow trce, wher Torrey, leaping. into .the tiranches, broke his fall by snappilng' a lawg< lItmb, and sustained no tuore seriona injuryr than h sprained ankle, as ht fell upon the ground. The asietit, ot tuwore p roperly the dlifestiil, isdesttrib tiii as thb most ekeititig ekhibltion cl tile kind tter witnessed in Montgodei e ry count)r B heeting trdinl tiit hadnlelc failorfb flis- Atgusta 0onstitutionalist 0 Tuesday, says: Katpeof the "Standard Sheet in"tfaianufactitre qf *hhbh lia juAoi~iled al the' Uttnagleg Mipl 8. C., was left ona .sbibitin athi office yesterday.. It will bear favor able comparIson with the goods o likes elas tifrhed out b3 fidvi ?indila1 edtiblishmenit, North oi- Soutif, anf in'ioates that these millo' sill 4 once take high ground itt publio af preciation of their product. A n ap pi-optiste trade mark, consisting o Ei te mottu "Froe. Trado" enadorsec over a pair of htU8s looked in friend 1 ry~asp,b.s b'oee Kdcgid for'thI Tte'No-K%'x 61Muior raintl wit so 80 pdfh d1ie sill nota' througroif t tidl odi efit lig th6 Iindioald its Jattria k148'6ref ohalostief l4ottaro tout' by "Oaptain Sua B SAnthong'." How the South Is to be Delivered. In recent di.aeussions of the is8ues of 1872 we have int iiaAted tha't 'tie we't 'presaideutial coutes:, would lie one lor the deliverance of the South, and that such deliveranoe, if achieved lt ail, would have to comao from the Denoeacy of the North. The south.. er people are the full eq uals of their rI thEerni 1e'threu, in . all reipoets ; and pa'triotisin are illuatrated on every page of the nvtional history ; and it is not surprising that a people on itous of their capacity to take an eminent and honorable part, in a great national con oversy, should be relue tant to ocpy A nii.or attitude iu the impo tant aii dbeiive 'dntrover. sy of 1872. But it is in precisely ttis way that the South can do itClf the greatest service and render its lrteudi, th0 greatest aid. The south ern states are 'bot fre' b they have not possesaion of their full powers - their .lction is fettered ' and even their .1ounsels are \var ed by a' hiflamed .ense of their wrongs. Their litubs i.-e hatupered with nianacles, and to -xpose theuselves in the fr'nA lne Of the con1teht is only to invite tbei massacre. The southern . statei 'are .le special objects and victim. 'df all that violent and vindictive ldgl.lation they ask to e ielivere'd f9om t an'd the terrible lessous of six years have taught them that their belple.s out cries fur relicf only provoke fresh measures of oppression. For them to deliver themselves has, again and again, be6n p'ol/e'd 'to be an impossi. bllity. Their indiguant remonstran. ces ive hot listened to ; and the local outbr'caks which their wrongs excite are sure to provoke aggravations of those wrongs. The ruliug party does at the Suuth whdt it would not dare to do at the North. In fact, it assum'6s td do anything it wi4hes to in the south ern states, ai.d thus far its usurpa. tious have sarcely elicited a remon strance froin the country. The South then must rely upon the Democracy of the North to fight its battle, and to secure its deliver anee. The northeru states are still compaiatively free, though they clearly disoein that the dread shadow which envelopes the South is steadily moving north vard. The struggle for the deliverance of the South is at the same time a struggle for the mainte inanee of thc:r own freedom, anld a colnsciouHUse of .th fact will, if it can, lend fervor to the efforts of the northeirn delvering ho-ts. The South cru S. aItes nieed to recogize the in., exorable fact tiat they may not be aule to doi 'n)thing whal'ever, for thelai.'1 in the approauhing coni test. They asie in the ga ip of the new enlurcent nt act. Southern Peioicrat believe they can carry Gddeg:"A, Nollrtan Gamolina4, Alabama, Tennessee ad 'ck.v ; but Wo to.1 them tbait Georgia, Noith Carolina, Tenredesoe, Al.,bomp and Texas will vote jill.t S the ta'dcal bndidate fbr the presidein'y shall pernit, theti to. h. is tnot improbable that all the Stit hern gtates ruay be raide to vote an approbatoio f hiir .dwB oppres. bions. by givi g naj.>rities to 'rant. Is it wi,e for a people thus helpless t8 do ayahuat 1I- th*i0nshlves$ to in lSt on planlaig the oti-side 6.unijiaigdI for theilr deliverance ? The battle for the rights of aill the ates and the supremaby bf the toinsiltitI'oh Is obBfight on norLiern ski; and as northern Democrats tunst fight it, they mnustbe allowed to plan it, and chtose the ground for the conit. Southern fletuni-~att adld Cdnserva tives will nudd to aitord Whatever aid they cain brin., ; but we tell them in all candor, that they will most effectu ally strbngthlen the arnis of' their friendIs, and oontribute ruost liirgely~ to a successful tosult, by *.abaining from all acts and counsels that can be ensitched up by their eneieos and turned agsanst, their frienda. The (paditid~n di publie entiient at tfle North Isorie of~ sensitive expectation. It Is reaff~ to sidle with the Democ racy upon all pound s f1 diAgut'c .e* 6ept an untiat ddent Uf the doiistitu tional aiinendinainte ;. it is ready to go tigainst it, if It plants iteof f 'on that fgrousnd. If the Detmooracy shathl b'e so foolish as to fulted itself on (14e lplatfditfl *ttich Men at or l.Iirton lias fhiade f8r it, It may, as decll yijeld th$ bolibsty at once ; but if it b1Iall res jet tha~t platfortil and go befose t6'5 people on a btsis of individual and Bestte rights under the donatution, Ih n~b n asaidratioe bf liberties to thosd *ho how yo8eegs Lhhfti, ztdd-a restota tion of franchie to thoeie #ho have Ibebth divedtedI ,60theus its 'e use will be invulnerablb, and its triumph The acon(Ga. Telegraphs and Messenger is one of taany aintelligent journals at the South thatpgreive the necossity of entrusting the plan of the qomlig campaign .to the. nozrthern Doweaneay, and-we couli ask' -fromt It and 4he gouthern people lhothing lbette' than theeprddedt words u *A Denldratib administraitfod nibat nbeesarl ly'eproudnt, t0 a great ex ?ent;'Eett .n0ebiIg"ando ofiwyioYd. It will 1'ste'ff otr eupport id a' ~Il sympathhiaWithblrbtifbI a , as we abut our eyes, we. are bound, thetafare, to sae that the Nefthoia uasses will be p-cculiarly seitivc and suspicious of a p a ty rev'.lutioni 4 d a U6emocrotio uecesion. Wv could comprelend it were the condi. tion reversed--were the soutiern btates asked to ibupport a nsrthern opposi ion candidate after a gaeat War of scolions, in whicl the auncieat dotrines of his par ty had been put down by the bayonet. in harmony w ith the grand sc-henmc ~f fgit'ing the North once more al thee Ku klux mioveienat.,-ail the attempts in every hape to ropreient the sjuthern stitce as deternin. ed to use the Democratic party to di,turb the politica l remlts of the war-unsettle the existing ?tatus-rjeopardiao in any w a - the value of the natioiial aberiti' a-or affect tinfavorably the personal rights ln< e Ences, or the civil and polihi oil p ivileges of the enfranchoised biyka. The southern pepllde and politleitns will b vary iind if they rail .recognize the extreme delicacy of the si ation, and to see that dofeat muUst 6ertitioly Edliow aniy policy iA otdr part lending the slightest colQr or foundation to thes'6 olhargeh. Orant may be beaten , tut i' beaten, it will be in pursuance of a course of man agement adapted to quiet the popular apprehensious upon which th' Jta.di 6als will base their brand appeal for a release of four more years of ad minitrative powers.-Minouri Re publican. An Arnty of Caterpillars. For e'veral days past myriads of little black caterpillars have ap peared in various sections in this vi einity. On the line of the Mississip. pi and Tennessee railroad, a few miles outh of this city, they covergl the railroad traglt to ah an e.t:otit t-hat th'e 'WheeIs of the railway trairrefus ed to pass over them, but whirled around with such veloelty thdt the trains st'dod Mill. Up6 reAching the "'varmints" the locomotive crushed them witht a popping, snapping sound for a few hutidred foot, and whn the wlcels were well greased with 4t It would stop, and hUt udit th&-razk was swept and ianded would the wieels perform their duty. Shortly after passing lhe ogterijillurs again svarmued over the ra i f and the tiext train passing had the Eanq work of sweeping to perform'. They hav' also been seen, thouth l's iuhAer ously, on the blemphis and Chiales. ton and Mlemphis and Little Rock ro.ds. Out at the race-course last we'e ' h was stated that when persis 4st flown on the ground only a few. n.) ments elupse-d before the "ittie" wal covered with the cieqoers, wvich seemed to rise from the fet'y earth or some other hidden abode r It is stated- that a i100 Jake 6r sheet of water, some sevetln mle.s fron the city; near Nonenmah, is literal. ly bwartlingl with caterpillars, which, haing drowddd around Its bdrderd it sn2h douuntRdss numbhore, are evt'o)w ded into the water by farce of nuin bpors fromi the vast artuies in the rear Thi phenoinenbh i; #be tuo st remarka ble incident of the seasoll, and none ci ae'bltiut for the unexpected 'ilt. A Two Pound Baby, happy fatlher of an infant two weekr old that is only nine incehes in length anid weig ha but two pounds. It is re ntarkablhe fNi- its hiyuelty and ,ohieb fulness, anid is '4uite prctty. It ear turn itself in bed and cries nest Ins tily when the light is extintg'ished. The appearance of the habe lis very similarfto a large tind beatiful was doll. It is perfectly healthy, nati strong hopes and eonfldence in being able to raise it are entertaitlod by 1tt paretits." 'rhe hev. A; W. Marsliali, whil rdading tho Litany iu Sr..Iin Chapel, Sunday, fell down in a faint ing fit. gsveral members of the eori 'regcttid ,tart td the' pulplt imtme diatdly add oarriel .hirdi ntd tile tea try room, where Dr. iPhillips, wh luckily hapottfed to be presernt,.ad diinisatered iestofativesa wh ich had thb dd'elted eftet. 'thie services hiov ev'dr, *ei-e oled and the congi'e gation dilsmisod. Trhis hs the son time that let NIr. MIarshall ha fainted in the pulpt.--C/ur. Cotlrier bodtfidt6ad 111 oanlyvania. On Tudeda y, 9th instant, the lows house 6f the PednAlyv ania iLeglslatua jaaslid to aseorind .reading a bill af peopyiating $5,090 for .tbo use . Washington demetery, Mayf'a4, t be ex penOdd in temoving to said corn tei'yi1b& Badies' of~ *onfederat e saol dis b~ried in seautiered places! I Pentiylvania. The yote~stood m yeae 'The Oolumbi~ Ubn 'of Mond, has'tho - following : .A -ms naupe Reeben,Doplase, pfndetitO94 t5 frgs 4,rt aolima, wias. artr ~ t yejd ' y Cief of l~ies i de e -of 4he f6f - awes . enaon ihla The Mon.tgoincry county Demo eratic ('ivention niet to-d i. r. Va.,ll,,dihtu, froin the Coimittee on Rcs.olutions, reorted a now Demo oratie departure platformu-, intended fo'- t h groundwourk of a nationtl plat form. The lesoluitions, which were prepared by Mr. Vallandighi tin, declaro hat they unite upon th' living issues of the day ; accept the legitimato resulti of the war, so far as w.ged for its aitensible purposes, and fully concur inii the thien .,everail aimendutientis to tm'.11 j .titutim re. cently adopted, and nc'oui-ec iu the simto as no longer is-nes befote the uuttry ; declare that the Demo. cratic p .rty pIledges itself tothe f.ithful linl' absolute exCoutionl and enforce. ient of the constittiljni as it ncA. 1., so as to se'oure eY:inal r'fglt to,) all peronw, without disitnctIon of race, color', or condition deniuid abtsolute tia r'ntyorach and every Sta'te in the LUniou , oj'bosbcel.tralitastion ani the 'ois61i'ation of power in the Goi. eral Government ; demanid gotietal anInesty % favor k1e payn'Int of the public debt as early us practicable aud consitent with moderAte taxt tion, and call for strict, economy and honesty in all departments of the Government ; call for reform in the internal reventc system nud civil ser vice ; favor a strictly revenue tariff, aind declare taxation hObuld be based oI wealth, not population ; demand a speedy return to specie pay:nent as possible ; symp:,thizo with the labor ing class, and state there is no neoes sary war between labor and capital ; oppose the grant ' ing of public lands to railroads ; oppo-w the acquisit ion of I San Domingo ; denounce the bills ' passed by Congress known as the bayonet bill and kuklux bill, and I claim that the lie )ubl ican p.rt y i 4 no| longer a Union pa 'ty, bAtL the Adniin istration party. Mr. Vallangigham made a speech in support of the resolutiouika, which were adopted by aecolamiation. Ditovery o'a Vessel Einhetlded Si FMt tieo tht S'drface of tlie EarIll. Yesterday, sal tho SoVauniah ad vertiser', of the l..th instai. while the dred'de boat lIa chladge of Captain J. S. Keona i4l waseiclgaged in eteava. ting the emba kment from Ni frolt of tile proposed entraned to the new dry dbek, about sbI feet elow the sur'fao'e, 'atid t! a distance or about soventy-five feet f otu low water mark, at .amall vessel was discovered embed iled ith the solid earth. After remov Ing Lh6 0 earth tfiliuiently, the craft Nas iis'iW6vered t, be thlit, of a 1mall subooner. ier masts, which pro.j ctetl lengthwis i towards t he river frpsit wheor6 she ad careened, were tahdo dit of hir. Thori of is Ie teling how long the vessel has been buried from sight, iii all pi-obability, siace the days of Oglethorpe. An she noi9 lies , seventy-Me foet froil low water mark, it. would scetii Iatilural to suppose that at . the time she was placed there the tide reached that mark, and eonsqruently, th1t at some renioto period the river . was tki'Umh wider thiil tit, present. It is hoped sotte fiirther devel6pmeits in -1ation to this craft may lea.1 t her ide~ntiiibati'oh, or at least the discov. erg of her aige: Could tie lattei- f.:it be dlsedvcmred, aOme interesting spe it lations miight lhe indulged in rela-ive Li, thu gru al i aung up of the river Iaong the city frotit. Marriage of Astor's Son. The Poughukeepsie Eaigle states that on Thursday a Rlountdbh livbry he'ep or was ordered to furnish a carrdage to convey a clergymiani at Port Ewon and the family of S. W. Cornell, cof Eddyville, to the residence of a Mr. Dynoharti nent- Rhtileb'ek: Wheti th'o cler-gy ai'rived, hie was infern ied that he was reiguested to marry Mr. henry Astor-son of WVm. B. Astor -to Miss Savina Pyriehart, datighter of' the gentleiatn nitined. The ceremony was soon concluded, arid the bride and groom were driven to the elegant residence of the latter, hear IUarrytown, adjoinin~g that of his fathier. The fatnily ef Mr Astor en 1 avoredl to prevent the ceremony, his ;bret her WVilliami arriving juat too late to enter his protest. Miss diynobart is d escribod as of . fine personal ap pearanece her father work~s a small far mon shares, and is honest and it. d ustrious, but poor. As M r. Heonry A s tor por-sesses an indepebdetit fortifnse.of his own, he has had only his own in) recihation to consult in choosing a - Iad~calK I lux Ift Nonil( Vdrolind. Ot ..Wedngisday night last; a eolor ed lRadIcdl nadied Silas \Veston, .with his foci- ohildren, wore murder e d, and the house fired over their b*eds,.by ajfarty of colored men. His white wife was badly wounded 'but dianaged to aos 4$, arnd tostined against I t' murd 6rers, wlhd haive all 1bden arrested1. teiackceyr'6f Oliarleston, has actfed the Trial Jpstices of that odythat no mnom' prdonot can be p.(b~e*e1eJl om as t o h i6 dounty asathor Ies beinginaerso paueehta Adre; Tto New York Mail denounees Every Sat ureay and lilarprs' Weekl' for reppblishiig (harles lteade's new novel. The st'ory edito. 5say, is 4)soil inl; the hitherto fair pnves of llarpmi Weekly." 0 )e gods !hs it cone to this that Realo eal do so ensil whAt 'urtis anid Niot have bee: str'!ving at for so many years ? t.ede's t-tory is one of lovo and passion, the worlil's throbs, iid about which all ion know s much anu d wo. m1 en1 tO, as th e 1'y sho01bl, an1d w hich occipv tlie thoughts of Ah froim youth to iibeeility. I. there only harn, anid immisuOrali ty in IoVe wiheni it an sumes, the wildest atid most reckles., form ,Is therc Io immorality in 8lan'der I Is their n1o immerality in hatred, in veikeance, Il falsuchood I boes hurnau love Io mioniopolizo all crimes of humatn kind that when its mad doings are sketehed by miasterly Ta1.ndan ti recital murt soil tle piper ou V sueb it i-1 published I liah Harpers' Weekly was soiled long ago with Ilime and blood. U1p to the war it .is proo-Suthernt, but the South excluded it from in sstinet, ansd theni the publishers turnel upon its former patrons and showed their teet h. Curt ho editor, wrote mna appeals for ve'ineaneo and conitnil ulaugh. tor ; he maligned and mis Iepreselited the Southern people ; held thIem up) t > the scorn of lay men and the ana thema of religion ; and Nast , the sketcher, drew such scenes of false hood, such tableaux of lies as shocked even the most violent abettors of coercion. The portraits o( sick prison. ers were shown upon those sotless" pages, to rouse to greater heat the passion for revengo sgaist the South, and every imas within the comlipiss of a coward's pen or I liar's pencil were Invoked to swell the rich river of hatred anl launch upon the floods largie fleets for desolation. - A'etb Yrk Democrat. tomnltg Out Sqhiarely. C. J. Lockwood, lately Captain 13th I.Ugiment, .National Guards of Soutlh Caroli a 4th llrigad e, and ict in* AisistAnt A-jutmt! tert a resigned his position, and1 publishes the following latily card in thle Spar tanburg Republian explaining his r'e.osols for so doing iMly reii1ns for iesigiing and pIb. lishing the loregoiig 3re, thit I wil not support a governient, evon by ho!ldiaig so inlsig ificant IL conim iss iotn as this, when I am convineod that they aro infinenced alone by a wish to (htnili wealth at the expense of the tax payers of the tate. F either dlo I ink lie Sm ate authori les a er: terion of the Re publicn party, believ ing as I do that they would not re ceive the support of the (eneral Gov ernmlent, Republican party, or the honest people of the United States. ifuthey wore cognizntof the frauds and i iiiposition practised up1o10 the initelli gent tax-I aying people of the State of South Cairolina. A Ropublicns I am and must re main, but tiot after the stylI of the so-ealled Republican party of South Carolina. Hlereafter I must act with the tintelli ent and hoinorable iartion of thei citigens ol' cloe Otste ini endeav drtig to put it utop to thio outrageous frands practisedl upen them. To act wtherwise would be w-ong and crimni nal wi-h myl preAsent conicitions. I waito you this, M r. Editor, freely, wvithout asiy cJanniilhit ion.. with .alny dile witbodt auby K. K. K. 'idei-s, and eithout anly personal violence abould I remain anl ailherenat of the present official incumbilents, for I hai'd ijoto o eisy in sit my ae Yours, v'ery res peefully, C. J. LOCKWOOD. ilydrate of Chloral. Another death from the use of clbloral is recorded as having~ taken jlage in New York on Monday. It Is btrange, says the World, how wide: spread is the delusion that this pow erfaul and fregueatly unmnanageablo drug itt a safe and unirorsall panacosa. ein use it to propuro sleep; afhd, wvomen to calmi tlieir nierves. Its rapid actIon, and( the fact that it (les not leave behind it the usua! teaction onosequent uponthe urlo of most narcot ties, had gimven it a wondorfuul popu, l arlty; And yet both experienoeo anil th'e testimony of medical men have showpi It to be estremoIf dati. ~erous.. T1he v'ery nature of the drug Is yet imperfectly understood. The public cannot be too earnea'.y warn edl against its udo coept under bom~ Needless Exeilement. The Washingtda papers are aghast beeL~se6 a lively undertaker of t hat piidus city has been cauight stealing a dead body out of a sofria; lhh ap I Some of those Washington rhien-Bon Butler; for ekample-Wdala ndt hesl tate to leah'. the dead body (nd stead only the coflin ; ospeoially if it had any silver plates attachod. "N~o* thius, my hdartiesA' said a gallant captain, "you have a tougl battle~beore .yoa. Fight liks boron till you powder's gone, 'hen-run 'm a it'f fs ame nd Il start nor.'' Early StruggleA. Nothing says tho Now Orlead& Times, so couplotely moulds Chari'. er, and while porforuing this great. ost of agencies, is less e8teomod, thah the rigid nurse of greatness, which iM .Mr ignorance, wo sometimes ianao nikfurtuno. When a groat man or w6 man rises from the mass of humanity, And establishes high claims to th6 consideration of mankind, if ive lOok suriously into the history of such aA individnal, we shall be likely to find that early encounters with a sordid And deceitful world opened up riell fouintains inl theIr owVn sotil', which, but for adversIty, had remained seal dtl forever. It is for this reason that Shakspo.tro declares its uses to bo ".sweet." What groit. eterpris was over Won without toil I Who ever aseended a tuonitain side or reache4 its apex, without labor I Early atd late in life, honorable exertion makes man healthfal, and ch iates lih phy; siclly n'\d ibornily. It is the only guaranutee for health, usefulness and distinetion. \Vo are far fromt believ; ing that, to be gre.t, a man must be born poor on the cotitiary, we are indlined to think that i cettain refine; ment, resulting froim early odn eation, is often in his casie wanting ; yet the puro gold of right princi.le and honor able feeling are not wanting in "chil. dron of the hamlet l' neither does re. nown hesitato to placo her wreath' when deserved, oii their heads; witneal llenry Kirke White, Robert Burni and a long line of naties, the bare mn1Ion, 6of whibbc dtAblislh the fact that high birth and delicate training are no indispensable aceossorles to the attainmuent of that. fand which OssiaA sas "rises from death." l letribution. general luval was made prisone' on Chatillon Heights, and was on hij way to Versailles with the several hundred other insurgent prisoner. 'aiptured at the same timOe, when, at the crossroads where the Becanx; Paris, Versaillis aid Bievre roads fork, the prisoner and guard met General Vinoy and stlAff who were riding t6 ChatiIldri Ielghts., He or de'red th'o guard to halt, and he dis mounted, went t-) the prisoners and said : "There is among you a Mon sieur Duval who calls himself Gene ral. I should like t6 see him." (eneral Duval stepped from'the ranki ealmly onid with dignity, and said "I a o Ie." Ocneral Vin6y added: "Aiid there! are two 'coefs do batall lon' also with yo i." They also stepp; ed forward. General Vinoy said to them : "You are frightful wretched (canailler) ; you shot Gonoral Clemon Thoiomas and General Lecmpto, and you know your fate." Turning to thd commander of the guard he said I "Captain, detail a plitoon of ton rifle men, antd oyou, gentlovien, go with thlem to yoider field. 'be insurgent officers quietly walked to the spot in dicated, a narrow flield on the road td Moudon, and lying on the dorthord side of a white boundary Wiall, od whiih is Ijairited in very large let tors : ")ival Garden." In front of this wall Genoral Duval and his com; panlons stood, throw off their coatdi and placed themselves before the platoon ohiargod with their oxecutioni WVhen the munsh~ets wore leveled ati their breasts they shouted "Vive 14 C omuinne P' and the next Instant fell cor pses.-Pairis Letter. Past Trnins; A London exchange says the new express train from Plymouth to,LToni don wrill probably be the fnstest train in the world in the part of its journey wvhich lies over the Biristol and Exeter anid Great Ytern Railwaysi Leaving Exeter aV 10 .30, it is timted to reach Paddin'gton at 2.45 ; inolhi ding a stoppage, of five uiinutes at! lhiistol, anid the inevitiblo arid vozas ti(Jus ton milittes at Swindon, the journeying of 19.1 milo6 will ecoup' four liours arid a qdartei'. The lr; limited mail, hithertd codnsidered thq fastest traln, occupies aik hours and thirty-five minuter, bdtwe8n Londed hlolyhtead; bding at tlio laeof only~ 170 miles in four ho'ursdnd d quarter. T1he fastest tidinm on tlitd Great Norths irn line is between London anid Petorsborough, seventy-sii mniles; which is done in one hour and thirty seven mainutos ; but the Great ,Wesi tern's acelerated express ikill roid frie 8wirhdon to London, seventy sdven riiles, in one hour and twentyi seven minutes., The Ii .46~ train fronj Paddington will pe rform the journey to Ply nmouth in on ly lbe inutes mord time than the now up~express. At their Oonvenlton In Ne' - Yorli the 8hriekers adopted Lesol'rtiis du dlaring that A'hey afe grown weari of daiting upol~ the government, and will no* p'r odod to anot for thodn selves: W. Nall ne Ot expect to -heat that theAe IrrItated- tabbies , avd ebstged iipod "the government,"bid.' kin and totting needl e In hand, and demolished the Capitol, to slow -musi io, by a sewing.machine. It Is prof or to add that we hope suoh a mznelank: oholy catastrophe magire 4detd It takes 200 d4omen two yea I mnako one polot lae shawl,