University of South Carolina Libraries
r Desportes & Williams, Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquirv, Industry and Literature. [Terms--$3 00 nr Annum, In A dvano VOL.VIII.] WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 16, 1872. [NO.18 TI' H Til FAIRFIELD HERALD IS PUiL.ISIMFD WFEKLY BY iEIsPOiRES & WILLIAMS, T .- t'u n Il Ia t.n s pu blished Weel -iv in th' Town of Winnsboro, at 03.00 i variabIy in advance. :gy- \il transient aivertisements to be imid iI adVanln. Obituriry Notices and Tributes $1 00 pet i..u-re. A Westrern Tirnad -An Arkansus To wR Aliost Destroyed The mail brings reports of an un usual number of acciden-s from the recetat iorm of tite Lkes una I in the Ilississippi Valley. The followin-g special despatch to Ihe M isouri Rn. publican gives at stariiing account of the gale in Atkansias, on the 29th tilt. Stie st ea mer J ullia, that cam0 down lat night, reports a terrific tornado as having occurreJ nitiety miles above here, yec.-terday .fternotin, at OeCola. Ark mn..us. 'Ihe storm struk tie town, containing pethaps 300 houses, aboit. I o'clock, coningl from the Sotith-we-t, aind before the citize's could realize its extent, or before they could even get to their doots, it had burst upon them witl utnprece dented fury and violence, sweepin i before it houses, trece, c.tlh, fences and everything movable. 'Trees wet e carried by the winds like straws; cattle, hoses tind mules werC blown ab.,ut the streets, and, becoming wild with frigdt, ran hltner shelter in all dircotions, and the air was literally thick with f aitgients ofr everI y itnagina bie thing. The cotton fields were completely riddled, thestalks torn up by the roots and the lint blown from the bo16. Fences were torn into kindling wood, houses taken up anid caried entirely from their fouunda. tions, and rutfs and piarts of roots were whirling in the air like autu mn leaves, aud in less time than it has taken to write it, the town, once a beautiful place, was a manus of ruits. T hire chiurches and six school honses were blown down in a moment, and many of the heaviest timbers carried eitirely awny, and nearly every (waellitg houe in Osacola and its immediate vicinity was eitler blown down or unroofed. The mills and enttioi-gin belouging to Mlr. Eddins, nea- town, ve2re torn to fragments, and haidly a vestige left of the buildings "' nark the spoot where they stood. In :all, eighteen pesons wve re killed or badly -.,ounded. Three, two men and % woman, are known to have been killed outtight, and others will die of their iujarmes. After spendin,c its fre(, tlhe tornado crossed tihe river an i went dit eetly up:.t ean ten miles, twis i.g laige forest trees up by the root% atl throwing some into the river, while t hors not ,o . rge, were carried high in the air and lodged in the brancohos of larger Ones. Its 0curC is m irked now by a barren wast on bth sides of the river, en tie cot!ton fi~ds us i ng h been laid levOl with Iihe earth, and all buildings in its courre rai ed to the ground. When it left the ttver it to k a Nr thta-tci ly d iection, swI epiiig e'verphIling ml its COnA.-. F.jitunal~te. 13, tiw s eaimer Julha barely missed t: . Hlad ahe been it, course, the fte of h.er passengera would inevitably h- ave be n death, and the bont wou!dI hiav~e capesizedl and went tc the but tonm. T A uongh est ima te .f the loss to the ~jj town f O.-ecola places it at *20fl,O00. SOne Negro Cleaves the Skull of Another with an Axe. ~j A difleuhty occurred about II o'clock on Sa turd ay nigh t in Mri. .y Gray's ytard on St. Phillip street, near Morris, between tiwo negro mn, ,1 Ellis Allen tand Robert Brown. ~7B. own struck Allen on the forehead wiith the blade of an axe, anid cleft the skull perpendicularly through a a pace oif four inches. The ciause of the difliculty is obscure. Both men lived in the yard. T1he two men had disgreed on sotno political suhject, abouie an hour before in the store~ Mr. J. . Ludeni, at the cornaer or WVarreti and St. PilIlip streets. The wouind is pronouneed tiortatl, but the wound ed man was alive at seven o'clock Sunday evething. Hie remained to tally insensible fronm the time of re ~ eirvmg the blow. Brown made his esca pe andl has not been heard of since. -Charleston News. Palier and Doolittle. An overwhelming mass of pol turned out in Anderson October I, to hear Governor Palmer and Senator Doolittle. No demonstration df the ~jcampaign can compare with it in nuim. bor. Bands anid banners and march. ing men were present, anid the speech. es were listened to by 10,000 people. Nosucoh outpouring has ever been Switnessed, and the recent failure of Senator Morton to attract a crowd at this same point lends special impor tanco to the event. From the interior towns the sane evidence of ardor arc Sgiven, and in the way of eampaigniug at least, the Liberals are carrying all Sbefore them. ~'A colored Misslitjppi. pol~cicean, Snamed Wield or, has kil led antother ne i) gro for atboutine Greeley while a Radi. iI African Execution. The Wet African Herald of Ju'y 31-t, states that the capitAl sentence t pas.,ed on the three men who were a convietvd of the murder of Lieuten- o ait J-ost, a Du- ch ofileer, d us ing the 8 di. tubs anblice whilh took ILco at 'I Emiuna on the 26th of last April, was V e roied into execulion on the 22d of i Jaly. Up to floou of Saturday, time C 20th, (says the Heaid) the uiajoPrity o the ietole of Elmima, inoluding I the Ii it g and the chief.-, could not ;1 mikp- up their minds to bolieve that i the Bri ish authoitiies woul-I actual. t ly pioceed to inflict the exire-.ne peu. ii ally of ilit law upon tnese unhappy l e and deluded n retihes, sld am..ngst* J thebe wi,re mitiy io .ited to think e that the threist, %'hie hail bou[ ul - tered a. t , he dtemi.uit..n of the 0 Kiting ..,.d pe..ptle of Eiua to remist a by force oti as ta the car, ing sout of C, the sent ence w ould be quite -tiffi .ienit 6 to pmevent the exectutio of the coln-. fI denumed. h Nt withtstanding the fact at an in- s, tot view which the Ki.g, Uhiefs, aid t le.:dmnii of E lmitsm tind with the Ad- is miini-- r .tier in ii - h anth-, on the 19th, f, 1111d dhunnig winch [lis Excellenly in- d f.irmed them th.At not ily could be d hold out no hopes f ieprieve or com- II liutation of trie senteice, but the ol Excutive ws dete, in ned to carry it h out. yet haidly any one if the m could IL be persuaded that the Government ai would not, at the last moment alter 1l its deterominati.n. At 7 A. M. (n tt Mondaly, the 2-.h, tie 1:.usse:s bl of the l'utice, to the number of two em hutid rid men, tnder the orders of h M..jor Broninell, took tip their ap- nj pointed piitiotis inl different quarters tr of the toAn, the bridge leading to the Castle bing held by tile nai- 1 liies and bluejaukets of 11. M. S. [I Druid. ri At a few minutes before eight at o'elock the three culprits, wh..ae ol nmimis were Qiaki Tawiah, Z swe it Kessic, and Qutaminah Fobsoo, were w led to the plie of execution. Two h. out of three were terribly ovetcome b< as the fatil moment, approached, and c< cried like childbeu ; they upbraided al the Kin~g of El mima for being tile a cause of tleir death, and called upon I him repeatedly to redeem his promise q inid come to their rescue. The third fc met his fate more nmnfuilly and w chided his two companiuns for their ti fems. Tie most perfect order and a< quiet prevailed, I --- - .e. Eastward the Star of Empire Takes its ' Way. - By advices from Calcutta we are informed that Russian troops were advancing on Khiva and Kandar on the 27th of Augunst, aid that the t1 soldiers of the Czar had previou.sly occupied Ui g, nj and razed it to tile b grountin. Tiere are two towis minted u Urgenij in tile dom1inion of the Klan of Khiva. One is situated on tile badqks of a canal tear the Oxts ; the p other some miles northwe.st of Khiva. TI fir.. enjoyed great commercial b in.po tatice at one period, and is, no a dolnht, the objective point of the pres. ent tre-h of thesolriiers of the nurth. y 01r,1 Elmperor. The tuovemont is of al %cry great importance, Rus-eia wishes w it m y be to size the great E.stern . hive of mauflieture for silk, cotton 'd and( yar n, aind thbus becomte, to a great b extenit, indeilp'ntlenOt of tile loomlls of li Francee antd Eigiand, besidles 0obtain- Ja ing a good str tugie foothold for her h armiies ini the event of a war clash, Lu with she power of Britaini in the E lbt. hi -.N. Y. lierald. ti A Serious Riot ini Cinclotati, b The seed sown bmy Secretary Bout well atnd o1thers who, like him, have strivens to enh;t thte colored votetrs asna a body as a distinctiave poli ical ole-i menut inl I his camlpaignt, isl beginininig to c bring forth its iegitimtet fruit. In Cincinnati there are mliay negro re deits, sand tile hostile feling excited bet weeti themi andi the dem'orata lhas evidently b~ cn intense. This ai miosiny, it appears, last night broke tii out into a serious riot, ini which pistols t were freely mased, and several per suns were set inusly if not fatally a injured. It is itmposstible to say atm present how the, lamented affair corn nisenced, or whieh party was most to N biamne ror the collision. Our special despatch lays the responsibility uponbl the negroe, but, however this mayb be,, the moral is the satmo. Thoj1 affray shows the evil efct of exciting a pre- h judice o1 mace as elemenit in a politi 0e11 oampaigni, atnd no line can resimitli the apprehensmion that if the policy pur. stued by the IButwell orators in the present eleetion is to prevail in the future the riot we now chronicle will * only be the precursor of yet moret serious and fatal disturbanoes. "I The Columbia Union reports the fe remnarkabio fact that a woman from VI the adljacenlt county has a child with her whose mice exactly resembles that re of an ape. The hands, though well , formed oItherwise, have unusually q long fingers. Tbo child snaps ints teeth, and makes other desuonistrations r similar to those made by monkeys. a1 The woman states that the child wasi left upon the steps o'f her house some time ago. It is now about ten years p old. r A Vomon on the Bench. I My last gave in brief the history of' ie piesge of the Woman's Suffrage t in Wyoming. I will nowgive somie f the practical workings of woman iff.age and womani uffiee-holding. 'he firAt action taken under the pro. isions of thi., law, was the appoint icut by the Seeietatry, as acting rovernaor, of Mrs. Esther Morris of outh Pass City a. a Jus.t ice of the cace fur Sweetwater e,unty. Mrs. lorris quahlied, aietnitted thr usual De $5" to the Secretail), a1d eutered pol ile duties of her ele. N.th I' unusulai occurred for some days verybod) was satisfied wA ith the new ua-tizc. and the r.ev Ju-tive with ?erylb d3. O.- daN, however, the lise if titte a le- s s un'.. - ins bel ip ..f bliw, 'm oti. iihstanding her oimanly and wifely fteian.!, %he, ws, ompA.le-i to uriik it. ller better -1., who was no w DO t ini ehAgC 0 e domiest ic dep rtment .of m he firm .Ai, Jrevious , i, le.- etirea it nt to tihe ral-rs of dlometiclIO lite, occasiulaliIa ken a social gh-s ht., frienids. T.,k lie aidvar.m ige il i as weakno,.s, suie itends waied up'ou Mr. Murri' oiuc ry and havinig iade Mr. Moil runk, led hini iito a bre..ch of ih 3.Ce, then bas-.enud to the C(juiire's ee atd lodged a e aiploint with r IHoir ag inet her Honur's "liepe rd and tmiaste,,' that used to be, id dem atded a warrant of arrest. rs. Ju -tiCe he.itated a m eit nt. on e bnlklik of this woanunli's Rubic m, it like Cae,ar shle W.a. equal to the i uergeney, aind prmuipti3 cro.-sed inato -r loro's dontminions, and her forna.e, aster was drugged before her fur ial. Mr. Morris' head was not sniMeient. i elear to comprehend the sitnation. I e beg.in to asserL his sovereign glitse tl Iontempt of court, until ddenly iruught up by the oficer ini edieacea to the Court's order. Seo. g that tUinga had changed boml hat, land thit OthllOvl' ocolipttion id been at least suspei(led, lie -gan toexpostulato first with the offi. ir, utitil infor mued by that function- a y thathe had no discretion, but was ting iieler orders fron the Court. "W ho is the Court (hic) ?" inl. dired M r. Morris. On being inl ruied that tha occupat of the baneh as the Judge, Mr Morris looked at 10 Ju.-tiue with a puzzled air, ratched hi6 iead in an effort to co 1 et his scattered thoughts, and neulated, "[Ier-her-l(hic)-you d -fool-she's nay wit'e-(hic)--she -that's Etsther - my wife EHther )u're drunk, or-oh, don't bother me lic,)" and lie started to go. "Lock up the prisoner for con. nipt of court suid Mrs. Morris to io officer. What have you'tosay about,it oh ' lurted out Mr. Morris, staggering en -cingly towatids the Judge. "You will find I have all to say uiut it. Officer look himl up," re lied her Honor. Although badly mixed, Mr. Morris agian to got a gimmer of the truth, id began a parley - "Now look here Mr. Officer, don't )u be in a bairy." I didn't menn I tything wrung. I want to just talk ith my wife a minute. Now, Eather, hail's the uisc of foolia'; you just git awn out o' there, and go horae rand shtave youiraelf. I'll tend to rhisa tle dtllioulty myself. Now go right enag, the babhy wanats nurs.ing. I de to give it. Mrs. Winslow to get it sleep wrhena I camue doawn. lie's angry, for he won't use that old bot e, and I don't blitame lima either. lie dishtes iin't, watahed, nor the dsd miade, neither. And what's O0:e, I ainl't goit' mo do it at.y imore, 'w. You hear thtat. Now atart omng. 13y the time Mr. Morris had deliver. I himiself of this, his tone had angedc as his feelings warmed from rat of expostualation to that, of comi and agarie, and thie effioer forced ms into the rudely conaetruoted look in rear of her llonor'se cour t, and ore Mr. Morris was left to reflect on the mttuati~on, atnd gttze upoina e dividing wall between himtself d wvife as the dividing line between un's and ormn's rights under this w diapensation. Ou the following morning Mr. 'err is was arraignted before her onour, and in the nmost sober and bdued mianner, anid with the deep. t hiumiiiation, pleaded guilty, a-ked e pardont of the Court, for contemupt, gged its clomentoy, and then awaited a aenatence with humility anid restig tion). After giving the prisoner a Caudlae oture as amendeed by the laws Wyomiing, her H~onor imposed e usual finte and reqjuired the pile. er to give betnds to keep the peace, >on wbieh the Court gallantly of. red to let him go, and Mr. Morris nished. A young man rode ten miles in a ilway carriage with a young lady th the intention of popping the estion, but all ha said was "it is iiie mooney to--nighat. "Yes,'? 'she plied "muohly.'' 4nd there wasn't aother word said. Isaao Pitman. the great patron and rojeetor of phonogra'phy, Is batik. n. Col. Hinton and Beast Butler. Our distinguished friend Col Hlin ton, says the Norfolk Virginian, ad drcssed an immense Domocratie an Liberal mass nceting at Columbuf Ohio, on Monday night, in which I took occasiou to pay his resp-cfs t Beast Butler in a pungent Wannor He said : "Among others who are travers ing the State of Ohio endeavoring t stir up strife between the North am South and to keep alive the animosi ties engendered by the war, we fim that living upon the character am liqnity of mati-BeIjanin F. Butler I see it publi.hed in the papers o the city that I atn expected to pa; 'lay r .pect.s to this bad man to night L regret this, for I can find oihe &pit's upon which I prel'or to spe-k A., a slanderer, as a perjurer, as r poltroon, ub a plunderer as an assassin it is without a peer in the enlendai f o iie. He has earned for hinsel i i famy uif uha racter in coipa risor with which the blackest fiemid that ,it hes a mid the agonies ot hell tould shine fOrth as the imnipersona. ton of honesty, respectability and rittue, I would not speak irrever, mtly, but in some quarters it is yet ioubtful whether a pinae has yet beet >repared for the .pirit of this tad mat lieu it leavcs his mjorttil carcass, lad we a pipssport to the b:nck cham krs of hell, and power to -ilenec for while the doleful howligs of iu lootied ithiabitttits, had we authori y to bid the billowy surges husl heir bla-phemitous vtoioe anmd were we here to ingnire of each of hell'.s in Miates in tuin where was the cell 'repared for the spirit of Bin Butler, he universal an-wer would be, it, lia, 1o place an.ong us ; and mIs we turn. d to trace our footsteps, sickened at he appalling scene around us, the >laintive shrieks of the damned, choing and re-echoiig aniI the ebon val s of hell, would, like the ghastly peotors, baunt us, still to remind u. hat, in the economy of Divine ?rtoviderjee, a pltes had not, yet been >rovided black enough, deep enough, ir hot enough, to hold thme wicked pirit of Beast Butler." Carpet Baggers. Theodore Tilton in a late numbeT If his paper says : The worst fire--eaters, the hardest lave-owtiers, the most cruel slave Irivers, ind the politioinins who made *le most trouble in the South before lhe war were northern tien. The nost scirrilouv papers printed in the 3outh like tho Newbern Times, are >dited by Northern adventurers Jonsidering these facts, in connection mith the fact that the carpet ba governments have robbed the South )f about two hundred million dollars, it i, not wonderful that Southernern look sonewhat coldly upon an in yreuse t f Northern imtigration. Where is the Northern communit3 :hat would welcome the population u Blackwell's Island, and put a pre. mium upon the immigrants of Sinp Sing ? Try the broth yourself be. ore compluining that the Souther ers stomach does not take kindly t< tuad soup. hiasonic limblems rannot be Used a Trade Marks. Acting Commissioner of Patenta rhacher has rendered a decision, or in appeal fromn the decision of th< lecision of the examiners, affirming hie action of ti e latter in refusirn hle registration of a Maeonie symbo: >n a trade-mnark. In his decision Iudlge TIh.cher says lhe is clearly oe he opinion that. these symbols cannel e used as trade imarks, and adds: "Among Masons, with whom this oken ha~s a mioral signifdcance, its uat a that capacity would undoubtedl~ >e regarded as a base prostitution of t to mereenery purposes, while withi ithiere its mystic foico would often lasipate its virtues as a trade mark, mnd, perhaips, in sonme instances, place he article it. appeared upon undera >.,n. If these trade marks could be anctioned they would toad to detfetl he fundamental object omf the trade ijnik law which is an offshoot to the itaclent 'law merchant,' and like that, lesigned to advance trade and manu An Involmntary WIre-Puller. The people living in the vicinity of ?ront streer, below 13.own, Philadel >hia, about two o'clock W~ednesday nornming, were startled by loud criet or help. TPhe strangest thing wam vhere the cries camie fronm. A mar n chemise, was h niog high up inmng the tehogr'aph wires. When a seued, by the aid of a feather bed ipon whicbhle dropped, having reneh| id the extreme point of exhaustion, mis hands were found to have beet oeverely ouit by holding on so tena. tiously at this perilous height. It im stupposed he was suffering from an at. a.ek of maniaaporto, during whiech 3e must have sprung out of the wizr low and caught the wire. The missionaries in Nqew England have found that kerosene is a sure sure fcer ohronlo, rheumatism, and the rMacooery has infused New ZeaI-and soundenoe into' depressed oil pro dere.h Ten Reasons for Voting the Bolters' Ticket. Editors Carolini'An : I send you ten reasons why T, as an ultra Democrat, am compelled to vote for the Bolters' ticket, and trust they will bo sufnicient for others to do the same : 1. The elcetion of this ticket will ,utterly rout the Scott, Par ker & Co.'F Ring, and disclose the infamous acts of the present adninistration. 2. The electiun of this ticket will be the inauguration ol a reform, which will result in uniting a large pm; tio1 of bonest Republi::ans with the Demo. cratic party. 3. The Demnocratio party is pledg ed to the party who would inauguraei reform. 4. The Rolters' ticket is the result. of s;iuch pledge. 5. The Blter's ticket is the best they could give out of their party, aud should be accepted by the Demo erat.s. 6. A nomination by the Deimo-. eratic party would result in defeat, aid re-unite the. Republican party atid thu, destroy thet bope of reform. 7. The Bolter' ticket can he elect ol if supported by the Democrats. 8. Because as a citizon, I am boun~d to) use every effort to extrieto the State from thiuvos and plunderers. and tuit u.,c the best ieaus at 1.y -commnand. 9. Becauso every good Ci thZn shoutld vote, and in the performanieo of a icred duty, I always choose the least of two evils. 10. Ieentuse reform can alone come niomi the lRepublican party, aild as such I sutain thenm in Oiair honcst efforts in that direction. AnBEVILL. Georgiu Sympathy for South Coroiua. We make the following extract. ftotu an able and cli qui nt speech, delivered before the Deiocracy of lich mond Coutily, Georgia, during the recent camti paign in that Suate, by Mr. Patrick Walsh, one of the editors of the Augusta Chronicle anti Sentinel. 'Mr. WalAh i- well at. favorably kn iown in Charlestoi. 1ero the days of his youth were passed, and he has not ceased to love and celish his former home. His manty frien' will be gratified to learn thatl bo has just been honored by a seat in the Georgia Legislature Every prit-ciple of nanhoo:1 and of honor, of interest atid of duty denad I that we should aid our Southern sis- g ters to ameliorate their condition. i Look at. that once proud and gallant C State of South Carolina-tho very I Niobe of nations-prortrate, bleeding 11 at escry pore--political vultures eat. ing out lier vitals-lher children in chains and in exile, her high places, her altars and her temples profaned by impious hands. She appeals to I you inl her hour of ailietion, in her time of adversity, to aid her to fall into line and ma ch ndiler that ban -i tier which, if triumphant, can alone I bring to her that substantial and speedy relief which she stands so < sorely in need of. She appeals to you 1 Georgians to march utider the Danter I of the Liberal Republican party that banner unfuiled at Cinoinnati 1 and at Baltimore in the interests ofI reconciliation and fraternity. Ihorace I ]Greehey, as the standard-hearer of that party, holds out to the Southern 1 people the olive branch. ie is for hiurying the dead issues of the war lie is in favor of local self-government -ie advocates unuiversal amnes t~y and the supremacy of civil lawi over military rulo-thie restoration ofi civil liberty and a return to the ear lier anid better days oif the Republic. An Immense Cookery. The uninitiated would scarcely conjecture that pie-baking in our large cities is a natter of so much~l imiportaunce, involving a large capital anid etmploy ing an armay of operativese, but such is the stubborn fact. Sev eral of the most extensive pie-bake ries in New York have recently eon solidated iinto one maimmiothi concern, and have established themselves on Sulivan street where their etombined business will hereafter be conducte dl. Thelia weekly consumption of material is 140 barrels of flour, 42,000 pound a of sugar, 5,000 pounds of lar d, 5(00 barros of aipples, 60,000 piourda of pumitpkina and squiashios, 60,00 eggs, 500 bushels of be ries in their season, 800 pounds of beef for mince, 1,6(00 pounids cocoann lt, 100 boxesi of lemaons, and eptices accordingly. They also have in constant use about 150,000 pie-plates, and give oemph'ymnent to over 100 workmcn, lunning twenty five wagons. Unknown Relations. A will case involving $100,000 is before Burrogate Hutehings in New York. The will is of Mary L. Bishop otherwise known as Kate RUidgely, proprietor of an establishment on Duane street, and said to be a sister of Matilda Heron. The contebsnts are Mlr. Danielbon, wife-of a Philadel phiia jobber, who olaims to be testa tor's daughter, althought she niever saw her, and Mrs. Mary L. Johnson, also claiming to be a daugh tor of she deaed.m A Big Scarc. The following story was told me by * fellow passeoger, who has nev.r been scared since the time t iht h'e oaded an old Queen Atino's u.-t; kr his father, said ho "You see the old man wa' t ,' t teach mno to shoot blatckbiro .i boast that tore up the yoing ecoru aid uch things, so that [ eov bhIbe tf some use about the farm, becaume I wami't big enough to do much. M y gun was a i-ingle barrelled .h ,,. ind the old nuan eirried ain old1 tleen Anne imusket that . wr thout a ton, tnakinig a rel ' t 1thiud'r-elaip'aiid kicking like a nu . l'ho old miian watited ie to h t the musket sometimes, but I wais 0100. 0n0 day, though, I got her d wnl, 111.n taking her to the hired miin, atked iii how to load her, beeautse the ol Iman1 was out in) theJ fields. Ilir:m iaid, "Do you see them mnks on the toek-an X amid a V I Well that means 10 balls and 5 slugs -thaAs ber loid. " "'11t how much ponter ? "Oh," it-, he, 'it, do't matter: pIt inl ,our handrldfl-.'" Nu I lothied np thl. way,.1 n1d it was iin n i lu cII arge- I bI 1 !, sI ! enongh to see that---nd I startod i. I leveled her Oni it good I'ain , bIut every little I pilled the trige.-, I .1hut nl.y eyes and willh. d. I \ ,II iif aid of her kick. Tar& iii mn i 1 letwhed 0q at Ih bot-, iid ih. i was the ol nan r1t utg en poan rch. 0 '*Iltei out hutint, 1:avyn 'r' "Yes, ir"s td 1. "lii 't 1:01 an t hing, vir-- d i h: 'I .hoot her off. I 'w.. :.traid .A . lick." (L knew very w at. "Gimni us tt:a 0 un !" ti e .,M n.Im Mid, IIs Mad At hiln. "l :uu aI.* tAv up'liin ?' I saw it and i enan Iniors 44 Sdtiager. 'the next niwm' it . I, i eatrthqake, and tih Qu o!; . thiil.-d und over end in the wr,: he old initl 'pi iling 4i"nI r eol. with One hvg ip, ;.i . Ii I:l:. Im his jaw. nd ithp iak A'ii g IOw hot tire. Th. old inuw'.m oluh - et back four inch- s and li., jiw turn 1 black iia'I bluo, and he h..l I .Y p fAr thiee day. I haven't Li. u: rced tine." Murtler in Union ontilv. A letter, which time cov.apelbel o written il lMa tV. mt a ent]iuIan oft Unioni, coni a ceounut of a dastarly I at iuk ii; olored citizens in Uman e..nt' t, .urder of oine, antI tho w-1 u inh iny( I tiothor. Froin the eitlttis of I:.' ett(er, it appears that on . ati .k ight lust, a party of cNol men w : eaking nlong upon the road il "an ne ville toWnshi p, wH ni th M, " red upon, by a (qu.l of whim umeO ; loheit detter being killed untight, nd Jeffbrstn Spencer shot i .< :h he upper ip. At the dote of i It log the trial justice was holding an Hquest, a coroner's jury having Icen 1imipanuelled. It is stated there %: to cause known for the -hooting, on here was but little cxeit:nwti p -ailing. It was believed soe of ,I >arties cngaged in the shouting wou'10 >0 arrested. F"urther p'articumlars are roimised. Since the above was receiv'ed w invo met a gentlemian from (:ni -. ounty, who states as follows "TIhe two young moeni, who weure~ vitnessess before the coroner's j-' , aid they did not know the nime.- a he perpetrators of the out rage, lbut atvo given the names of two wi e non to other persons tas having comn nitted the act. A bso, that the cans af the trouble was alleged cotitan tealing ; but that the two meni whoi vere elhot know nothing of the cot toii heft that was alleged to have been :omnmittd."'- Union. lumportant to Btiders, A suit of great imponrane to )iilders lihas etn dlecidhed in the Nowr V'orkc Court of Commnnon Pleas. A iik-masort 'agreed to build ai houn Lind chiarge $6 per thou-.and forhy ng the brick. When lie came to na 0ihurie lie b rick he it masuitred all fthe >peninag winadows do I nors & ., as solid york, maiking his hi'l $2,300t la rgrr ban it would have been had lie onl y neasiuied the solid wail. TJhe roan or whiomi the work was done refused ,co pay thi1 $2.300Q, anld the mianson ought iit to force t he pay)mont, eleadIing the enistom of brickmatsoinis n his favor. JThe court docidied that is ebargo was illegal, itnrd that lie had io legalI righlt to chiargu for lay. rg brick that were never latid. P'hin decision is important to buildetrs id cont1 ractors$, as oilier Stainte Courtsi would be likely to follow the dici-iu'n ind precedent set, by the New Yoi k ~ou rt. Two children of Rock Creek, Kin. anq, aged evon arnd twelve, recently, whilo playing, climbedi into a large ,best, thbe lid of which closed wtith a prinig, and whon fotund, some hours iterwards, were emothered to death. A Frnc woa nssi that she oved her childron when they weto, little, ihe replied, anid diamuonan vha.r thoy eo arue. Balile of te its. I m a pedagogfe in the rural dhia. tries, ,I N-wt..n eii ' v. en i iasouri, and nv 'whilIu vo h'-i lo-ci infestod for sral imonth, by a -; von' of a largo blacl anto, :11h t') 1, 0 Ilo 0an0e of '. lFtle l'altfted tch .lars, and tir ,1 '1a to be* no way of get. ting r1. of thi- p,-t. latit what wasmy i-ltoii at a uew mornings tince on e'-t neint my ein l-b uwto flod the : ' eliv.n it rewn witlh dead i : t-,: i npen a closer ex.. !6 i 0I i Ill 0-.t a battle vas la'nt tini any I ever i- o- nel 1 a w mianv a hard. fol11g,.!t h attII, le d riv': lit. la ta 01 tiplell:;#4 a'unelS -Q 1t3: l it thle an-nals of h1is t ori. A I.. ti ' t;,r i ltimt1b:or vero ly ilia 'ii j o 1lft engagod, -endl I thereb: o 14d tha t tho bait. t'f b:.3 I .i 1 .\1 ost of the imbatii- ' illwre grappled in I d -%bile lthers but r1 n11,t un were stallndiig ;'r 1- n 1- . .%idh all the iscience of th- 1' 1 *'xt'ile swordsmien or I: Th, tP t fl- i!at al poiint of at 'N '. - ' ior whioli it sccm.l <i a ua 1u 1 , i the i gamiOUt he 1 i!. .d tU' i ailn bod1y w ith the h 1. T i vil:.! mosadat r once seized It.po t I, delat sue -t i' n a r l:, and the r t u t . .. Ir lor auother Sfi avl aintage was taken by h(1i-r i aly, :m11d no twoi would on 0 :['1 er inwLr a singl ono ;nor ::.. hlinichng or wavering hi' Li I :'lo ,'! e , for whenever two he01 lll Il-t it wv:1' certain death (lO t ti I t ii,. Ne!vor, perinhaps, Mle. ul eI ially match Il l un r, lten;. , a nd. conlso tly ~ ~ it 01h0ee o h battle, a - two iin lil's and i day, as - t u - c.i'thu il t arrive at v W n -t, tilic wore but few left j .fttliI i.y n--in of' the vaInquishpl * I v, I ., i ing 'ill valor of the Lcso ih Af una i iid t he Sparttin I a si'ht difforenco inl the ; , oe Af lite co t tstOno sot b 'ii. np lr y bla*k, vith a large i, wii be o.-thcr was nearer L. i, , ith : .nih!-l(r head, though ih. b ail..hy ll:Ltualhed ill sizo and I nL' b Dimi inbered ligs were '1"( 11:11 rift 11d h n n nfortuniate bou.- i uh ero,'k3 being entirely L-ed li hill SUliportelrs, Was thus , , S r ll de em ba,!1 ) (ldie onl thlo iblf. The ni., ti ffi)ilnig I vept up h ,0 :11 :lil di ill , f bhot I armies (for I nlll iiot ililill I hem wI hile en "r. St /. i- j dsn IN of 1,"Ism lillin ill Smlianniilt1. - * . g 0cw:Ily aInd invoi i rv 1 i .t % s l i dt (1n Friid ay or I . .,4:41 up inll ros pai Of %V1:11 Cow-ul "1The ji 'il Ii Jirtula what cowv tr l ~u tdt Ib,ii-rable J. E3. i Vr aint (i. th '.! i;:-ta:nlt, will be 11:111c t. , L that wdhiicil tley Can't c". Ii I - t "I w as no aignature thfil J u.I, tutrtumhlhnt. Cowards ward i. ,i f.r.-rn.," atll we~ wvould gra~t y :<i u. a sLrhing aissas I1. ' L' .;, a'4imit (') oCarry olut rhi ' t . The'.i threats Itna Ii a li~ees of the fht]d or tied bykt 13 thoim, and thei i.: :LU alIlkanni . It. vould be rI e ant'II unn~sfe :t ~t~ to carry ti oi: cwar !y :hireat! ~in, exoeution b it' o 'rer ing ) respectaible c'iti t. ii wa t td , aind ifC the wi rIterft 1hl , 0. 'Liomuri.cnh is not care--. ful It- nie 'el tha~L t uich hie can't ; ee.' rr ly at tihh anly impi~or tancet I. thre11lt, bt ILtI is dvisable that ibe-a' pu ti' wh in adO thaoun ilionhil know'i that thiey are trmndinig on d'rnsgroundiu. Tif. ro is no vio lit'' lor iiedigitjy offeed them, nor wii th -re lu any if they conduot t'om-5ve asI i Ilaw.Ihidlir.g citi'zensi, no liatIer howy nhnioxioaus they mnuay be, pen .,nally aind( 0oltiially, but ruoh IKo Klu~i. iim as this will not thrive wii in I blis comiimuiity, arnd it is aid viable f--r taidig light to meal ize thet fact."t A Clergytnun imuprisonied for an AbH8|ve A (hrmian paper aates that the llev. V'on lelstow, a Dotn'zie0 Minister, Ilhas bee condemnehirld to ai month's im-. pr 15 isonmen in a Pr'ussiian fortres.<, for having on the 21st of January last, in the course of a aermon, used oppro fuious tpihte against the Jews. The 'min t, de ided t hat such expressions were intiru<.ly at variance with the chiaraetor ad position of a minister of religion, and that fanaticism wouldJ not be toherated in a coun try in whiob all citizens, irrespu Livo of creed, were equal before the law. If this law were in fo in Englnsr.d and the United States, we fear~ that the jailsi of the country woulai be filled with viotimeq. A hna avlaiof ahmt--'1.Dion