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Williams & Davisq Proprietors.] AFri aeDvt c e OL X] WINNSBOROiSS..A Cp WEVNSAY aNF ArtB nAuY ndustrv and Litera[Nes$0r VOL.s IX.] WINNSBORO., S.C., WEDNE SDATMORNOTING, FE.BRUARY2,1'4 T1 I1I Fj' FAIRFIELD rAi IS 'Il 11iS1D WEEKLY BY *ULIAMs, & DAVIs. Tsi.-T'i ; I sat';.I is publisted Wi in the 'rowp of Winnsboro, at 93.00 it v ariably in aidv'ance. AId-' All traisient advertisements to b( p aid inl advance. Obi. nary Notices aid TriQtEis$1 00 pei 8. guare. - * I agslativeT1IlIiisgale. That the people of the country may see f6 themnselys. what kind of men conduct'the fortunes of South Carolina at this time, we make sBme extracts fron the debate on the salary appropriation bill bn Wedne'n dlay lust, as report ei in our Columbia cor cspontinend. The tspealers were the leading members of the House of 'Represent atives, and *lie qestion was, whether the house apprppropiia 'tion bill or the Senate bill bhould be pansSe d. Bowley (the colored chairman of :tiicoimittee of Ways and Means {) C'Every year the Senate has managed to get the House under their control, by, iold ing th toalary uppropriation bill in their hands. As matters staid, the house rather hI the S:n ate at a diudva agd, und I 'ropose to ktep theima :'o." . . Gtene (e->lored :) The nmbers of th1e llouse are needy and can't go into a fi'ght with the Senato, which is omposId of thni o mcans, who could offirdl to fight it out on thie iine il' it took all sumier." [iunbert (coh-red :) "'I de.pise such a ivishy we .hy way ,f doing th i nlg." Smith (colored:) " 'van' iy mnoney, and urm ready to comprise with the Senate in order to get it at 01104." Mackey : "What is the cause of the wontderfil change ,in the opinion of certain members 1 It can 1e readily uniderstoocd, when it is re Imembered that t'he Senate bill pro, vides for cearly forty-five thousand ilolhtrs for incidental expenses. The h ill L. "-%la --- _--- n Iareeny chetee." After some further debate, the. ILuse took up tile tappropriation for t'ho Peniteiitiary, whiheb ., Myekey moved to reduce from $65,ojo toe $45,000. Tb1is led to a general ndulgence in lbiling.gate. Minort (coloied: "'Ie 'proposed .appropriat.ion Is a whit too large.' Ilumbert (colored :) "The pro stitution ought to be velf sustaining. Te inember only widtits a grab at the money." . Ilurley (coning to Minort's re lief :) "Mr. Speaker I rise ." IHumbert (in 'lurley :) "You sh'et you mouf, Sal !" {tRoars of Laugh' ter I G4reene (eelored : "That thief from Darlington." A delicate allu si-n to llumbert. Humbert : "If I have robbed anything, I expect to be Ku Kluxed by just sueh highway robbers as tile member (Greene) from Beaufort. If I get into the Penitentiary I.went 'ask ror $65,000 to suppor t mC'." Greneu (to urleY :) "You 1luow GJove rnor's contingent fund." llurey :"At least no0 Oa has been abe or ever attempted to re fute my charges against the dover nior, and his Excellercy will not 'dare deny them." Greene (colored :) Blut if the Governor were not such a coward lie would have eowhided you before this, 'or got somebody else to do it." llurley :If the gentleman from Bleaufort (Greene) would allow the weapon named to he sliced from his cuticle, I might submit to 'tb ch's tigationl." On Tfhursday, Greene, who had probably seen his Excellency in the intcrval, proceeded to explain. that he did not mean to say that Moses was a coward. TIhdts: Greene (rising t6, a question of priviledge.) "It was noit tile Governor to whom I ref#tried, but his aidles. What I said was, that if tile Gover nor's aides were n-,t cowafdn they would have cowhided Hurlecy, anid if I were a membher of the Governor's staff I would hee done it bei-o're this." HI urley (rising to a dounter-'cuei. tion of privilege :) "iNobo'dy on thne Gov'ernur's staff', nobody lie could put on there, not the doughty ge'ntleman from Beauifort, nor the valaint Gov ernor hiiself, dare uIudei-tae te COwhlide mie." hsking for Self Prolectiodl. W~AsutsatoN Feb. 14, 1874.-Senia tor H Itchcock, Gov. FumrnasS, A. S. P'addook and S.11i. Peake, of No braskai, called uipon the Secretar-y of War ahd General shermad to-day for tlie piirpose of getting drmns fot the people of that State; iti antioipa tion of a genetal tndiani outbreak The requotit owing to exilitinig laws was denied. Secret anj felkitap saih be would shieerfully omply wit their request it~ it could be don, without vIolattati of the law. Tleulai-kable Opera Troupe, An extraordinary public enter tainnient bas been produced in Limo. PerV, by an'Italian nair.ed Contariaai, who proposes to.carry",,his exhibitin1 to Europe. lie has taught anid train. ed, by dint of patience and perser. verance, an opera company, made up1) of thirty parrotc aid paroquets, who vaerform. tywo of Bellini's -operas "Normanm and "Sounnaanbula"'-onl a iiniature stage, with full chorus and recoitative. The diye'etor and mana ,gny' veccomnpaples the artists on a piano harmonium, and the porfoction with which each bird singa. his part' and the excelleneq of the chorus nie prodigio'os. Thedebut of this lyrico ornithoiogteal company in "Norma" wasattended by the wealth and fash ion of Lina. When t e pIcrotiglet that sangthe contralto finished the allegro in the "Salntation to the Moon,"s Such was the cnthusisIm, the bhouting and tAhe uppl'auso at hearing a biard sing the "Castg Diva," that the bird company, afrighied, took flight and sought refuge amllong the side scenes. This interrupted tihe perf6rimianc for fully, a hurter of atu bour, nud Signor Contarini hoI to trait,(quilliz the "arti, ts" by giving themt breadsoakcd in wini. Ditd. Robert 0. DeLtarge, (colored,) of Charletton, d icl ott Saturday, in that city. DeLarge had been in, failing health for nady m1,0nths with that slow but sure ditc:so, consunption. ' be deceased 'figured 'fuite proni. lilently in'the polit icat (f'outi Caro lina sintce reconst a uetio)n. 'le was a r meI .er (if the f ast . deneral As.,ein bly, and was the cuatestaat of C. C. ilowefi, Esq. for the seat in the last Co'grcss. TI0 afso held foy a. t.hot d time tho posit ion of Land Cornmis sioner of this State, nceeeding Mr. Leslie in that. oAice, and for the past two years'has been a Trial Justice e of Charleston County. He was wi-le ly kniown.-Union. A tIeccipe for Courtship. threc dears, and two or sweets, two or threo balls, two or t'.hrertiiadeq givelt as a luid, 'tivo or three u0athsj how Tnuch they endure, two or three Meast.nges Feut in one da3, twoa or three tites led out froti the phya, two or three tickets for two or three times two or thice lov;e 'et'ters Wr'it Il 1i 'thyme's, two or t bree nmonlths keeping stiiet, to these rules., can never fail making a couple of foOls. A terrible railroad accident occur red Mouday n-orning on the tehigh ( and Susquaehina, Railroad, not far a from Allentoown Pa., case'd by the 1 train runining into. a ,lnnd nlide. Eighteen heavily laien freight cars were t'hroivra fr-om'll the track, nd their loads sumshed to pieces. TheI engineer and three ttnlknown meni were killed, and not a single train hand e'scaped with sompe inj urg. The IUng of Ahantee, whloi's just now having his rhanty set in order by Queen Victoria, has cotrre out with a newv royal 'uniforn', in whlicha hp reviews his troops. It consists of differenat colored la bels peeled front medicine hoatlrs which have been sent to hais Majesty bty the patentecs.. Ile drinks the ytnediacine by the bottlo and utilizes the label.-&. Louis .DemocruV l'gecial dispatches to theo Cincin'r nati dazette from the various partts of southwestern Ohio, repoit that about ei'hty out of one hndr'ed anad fort y Slaces wvhere liqutor was sold, htave eon closed since the begmnning of the temperance movement. These 'r. ports come from fourteeti towns aid villages A nee. despatch fromi Florida bay of the 14th says :"It is rgporti ad by the steaimer Maargatiet. whieh ar rived yesterday fronm llavaa; thact martial law land beena declacred iza I lavantia.. Vet unteers to the nntalber of 7,000 have taken posassion of that city, c'cmpelling the Caiptain Geta-a eral to take refongo oli board the war ship Arapiles.1V. You cannot taste in 'the dak, satid a lecturer. "INature has intended tus a' ce ourt fod, "Thetn,"' inquired a forward ptipi "how about a .bitnd rtan at diuater P. "'Nature, si," tan swered the professor, "lias provided "if,"' adertiso a phlilosphaical vie. tim; "the person who took a fancy to may oveorcoat wais influenuced lay the weather, thon all is serene ; but if he did so frotm commiercial consid. orations; I am ready to enter into fitnancial negotiations for its re turn." The celebrated Rothasobaild family, now having. some twelve business houses, are found to possess fully one thousand millions of dollars, includ ing the private property of the prin oipals-a sum equal to the net in. demnity paid by France to Germany. What is the Mutter Now. The York Tribuno, of Saturday says: "There were laid before u-, yesterday, certain startling. doeu. mntits gravely affeting high Aioials. Tho pubiiention qf them teems to us a clear d.uty ; bet we are unwilling to permit our columns to be used in promulgating papers that must hiing such discredit upton the American name while thcro is the remotest pos. sibility of our being able to establish their lack of authenticity. We ha ve therefore, set on foot a thorough investigation that will soop deter mine the matter, while, Meantime and tor this sole reason, we reerve the documents themselves, and all expressioi of opinion, eo-cerning the conduct of the officials involved."' A Vashington telegram, of Sun day, to the Baltimore Sun, says-: "The greatest anxiety and interest is felt in all circles here over tie diselosures threatened by a leadiog New York paper, said to implicate high onicials. It is asserted, that the mutter alluded to is in connection 6vith the Government subsidies to the Paeiig Mail Steamship Line, and nid that one of thc offcials alluded to is a menaber of the Cabinet., and I nother a still higher personage. L'ho testimony, taken in the Con. gre iona l ivn est igat ion into this subj,'t nt the last session has never teen diselosed. and is now in the 01;'s3.io1 of tile Commuittee of Ways ind Meatas." Electrieflas0hes. Th-e Masachusetts L-gislat.ure has ieseinded the censure against 6enator inmuer- 118 to 49. The dissection of t'e Siamese 'Itds Igan y(sterday, but is col. secret. The roman's tenperance move. lent, a la Ohio, has been inaugurat. d in Brooklyn, N. Y. Julius Howe, of Soutb .Carolina, on'victed of Ku-kluxism, was pardon. d yesterday. A telegram rays 125,Q0Q.. val.va ot olice yesterday. Tlhe City of Antwerp arrived in ew Yoilc ye.terday, having met on,.h weather and lost her second fliecr overboard'. The ice gathering wns stoppvd esterday on the Hudson by a big haw. roposed Abolition of all Description 'f 'Oath.. WASINOTON Feb. 1874.-A sub ouinunite of the Iouse t'ommittee mII Judiciary have prepared a long eport in favor of the abolition of est oath in all eases, and mill this reek p resent it to tMle full Cmnit tee l'he temper of the llou c is in favor >f such legislation. The bill will re ieve pecsioners and deputy post unsters from the exactions of the estoath and totally baniishthe iron lad oathl prescriptionls. low the Yankeel liianage Ciil Rights. TJhe floston Advertiser nays: 'When a colored man site down on sivil rights bill and a seat at dc 'ust table' on the Lake Michigan ittairmers, they' have a neat way.. of tcading off his enjoymnent. The wvaiter comes around aud take his >~rder andl huis plate, knife and fork wvith it, and- doeodt comae back ragain. Uniltci Action'. There i~S no timer to be lost in htarl. ing our thieves a,nd ,'robbhers fromt their p~flices, anhd if' the Taxpayers Uind Grange C2onvntioniuhnite in their action against them, they inay soon be accommasodated with free odgings in thre penitentiary. All Ovcr Ie 8t'te'. /.mng the additional Delegates np:intei f. aun Aiken to the tax pay. er C.;nvenrtion, there is a colored un:, namaed Sam'l. Lark. Among the alternatos there is also a colored man. Bensible negro'es. The Glasgow (Ky.) Tnimes in reK pornsible far the following :"An old darkey was riding .a brlind houne, the other (lay, with his wvifuu behind him. A fellow on the roadside stung out -liallo, old fefll,w, I sseo yotu have got yon anniy up." "Yes, 1've done rmorc'n dat-I've straddJled the bliad," said the o'.d sportsman, with a clever grin. ''he Government troops in the Weost are preparing to move on the red skins, andl, huge lots of ball aind powder are going forward. E. A. Lawrence, president of the San Francisco Young Men's Chrristianr Association, has been sued for $500. Hle does not deny that he borrowed the money to bury his child, but claims that, as the debt was con traoted in 1862, action is barred by [~ Lsatuen of ikitation. llobert 9tuart BrlA. Tho passing away of .po. of the fathers of the comnmonwealth, hisla I, bors cndcd and his good woik done. touches withl sadeiioss, the hearts ol the people whom hcajer'ved'; but th. sorrow is deeper n nd more enduring when tho Shaft of th.e fell arober pierces the breast of onp wh1 i.( still in the prime of ctive life, riohly en. dowed with intelleet and culture, I'n ornament to his country and th pride of, bis Stote. Such a man wa. Robert. Stuart Bruns, whose dat h, on Saturday morning, it is our painful duty to announce. For long and wa-y monthsihe lay proie on thel bed ofsickness, bearing untold tor. tures with the fortitude of the stoic and the patient resignation of the Christian. Day by day, he drew neamrer to tho.;gtes ejar.. 'Fully con scious, for Icare past, that his career was about to close, he looked calmly into the future, and never for a mo ment lost the blithe cliecrfulncss which was ap:rrominegt trait of -his character. Some tinio bofore :his death, he became a communing mnem ber of the Protestant Episiopal Church, eagerlyembracing tlo cross which the Master had retuirod him to bear. As he had fortitudo beyond most nen, it was meet, in God's ey, that his suf'ferings should be beyond thoo to which poor humanity is ordinarily heir. As be . had borne wounds and. dolors innumerable with out a imuur or complaint, it pas nront., in OGod's miercy, that lWia daying moments should be as peaceful as tlio:e of a slumbering child. lo ha pabed through the dark vale, and at last is sIt rest. Mr. Bruns was born in Charloston on the 7th of Septenmhor, 1834, and was the ICcond son of flenry It. Bruis, L. L. 1). After finishing his educationi, he began ~is but-iness, life in the louse of Bancroft, Betts & Marshall. A fe w years later lie en tered tihe BAuk of Cha-leston, where he fisled tle position of cash book. keept r up to the-breaking out of tbe war in 1861. Ile was among the l:st of Charleston's eons to tender i ang-n me * htird-fought ' campaigns in the West. Ile subsequently went to the battle fields of Vinginia, whei e he servcd for a .kig on, the taff of'Gen. 1',iins. While actin'g in this capacity he was so severely woulde'd in one of the earlier on gagemncits of the war, as to compel his retirement from the rigorous qnd exactin, duties 0 lied service. lie wet imimediately fo 'olunbis, where the Confed.-rote 'treasury was lucated, ond gave his further aid to his country as deputy to the assi-t: ant treasurer, fur which position hia long acquaintance with banking opleratioins peculiarly fitted Iim, and the reipomsible duties of which lie diselarged with signal ability. TIe b'Urning of Columbia and tlie quiekly following collapse of the Southern cause cor npletely exhausted his I esurces, but with tie elasticity of temperament that was ebraoter istic of him, lie entered at onee into the auction business, and t4y his ex.. ample and influence infused new energy into minyi who were well iiigh despairing. Shortly after this h.. returned to Chrarloston ; first eni tering the grocery businets with Mir. Bee, and ini Novemsber, 1867, form ing, with WV. Y. Leitch, an auction arid comnmission partnership, which ho continued up to th: time of his de eease. In Mlasonry, Mr. Bruns was nni jecrsally anid justly regairded as one of the distiniguished of the risirng generation in the South, hiavig at tainied eminence both as a ritualist and in the mo're occult departments of 'the order. lHe was initi'ated and raised in Orange Lodge, .No, I4, cof this city, in 1856, pf whic~h, lodge ho was clecd Alaster in 1859, and twic re-elctod. Here lie shiowed great earneestness and enithusiasm in his studies, haying, by skillful labor, Ilie solid foundations of his future Masonic career. A~ the annual orm meuniention of the G 'ran'd todgo of this State in 1865, lie was- elected Junior Grand W arden, and in 1866 Grand Secretary, in the discharge of the duties of which office his re ports,oni foreign corro-p~ondenne gailn ed a prompt recognition of his tal. enits. T.lo this office, lie wats ro-eleot edl in l867--68, but delined further re-election, in 1822, lhe was elected d-iamd Master, and continued in .thme faithfulI d ischmarge of the responsible iuties of the position, until Dcccom her last, whenm his rapidly failing health induced him to resign thme oflice. lis. farewell ad~hres, was read by his sucoessor in office, Gen. J. B. Ke.rmshaw, and cxcited univer sal adnmir.tion by the otastonega and beauty of its tone and style. In that, address, ho foreshadowed his ap proaching .death.- Charhsion Ness and Curier. When a colored mian sits. down on the Civil Rights bill and a seat at "do fust ta.ble'', on the [Lake Miehigan -teamers, they have a neat way - of heading off his enjoyment. The waiter conme around and takes his order, and his plate, kni o and fork w ith it. and--don't corme baok again. A Father folsons Iis Three Childreuimid then 8hools liiisclf, Aletter fromltutledge, Ga. to lhe Atholta ierad, dnted the l ttl, gtves the following particulars of tilt) uarinival of death briqfly reforred to in our telegriphio'column : The bloody tragedy enalied here last night will tt'nd a thrill of horror to the hearts of our- readers, an.i cause the blood to oardle it the bru (a] and inbuman act whiel it is ottr, sid province to chronicle. John W. Woods, a farmer iving about a mile and a quarter.-from this place, onI Friday night, administered morphine to his three children, aged repeerivc-' ly fourteen, ton and. four years, and then deliberately alipt .himself. Mr. Voud a'nd his-wife had been married about fifteen 'years, durine which time they had not lived Verv happily together. .. He was in th'e h14,it of .comiiig home drunk, and hen under the influence of liquor would beat and abuse her terribly. sometimes pulling her from one room to tnotlier by the hair of her head I'lcy separatud sevoral times, but for the past year had been living peacea bly together. . On last Saturday, Wood camto home drunk and comr luenced threatening itan(d abusing lier. Lie finally made a ruih ait har and ouglit to seize her, it is thought, with lin j 'teution of killing. She clubb d him, and Lbd to a neighbor's, and, lid rot return till this morning, then the horrible news reached her. Wood went to Madison, Monday ast, procure i norphino and returned otiome, inteuding to . accomplish his ark deed Tuesday night. A friond whom he iid not ecen for several cars, and who'm he thought was dead, ailed upon Tuesday, which delayed he execution of his fell purposo. dtou '0 o'clock Friday night, ho 3nt a nego. girt to this plaice, to roeure More morphin e, which 810 uoceed od inl getting fronm )r. Mont lomery, and ItCuinled hone. On oing t- the house early this mnor n ing, lie found the doors harred in such a ianier that nhe .utd not open them. hie-uiscoveren *% oou iyntlg U1poti tiad ar.pet., with % pillow under his head, n('discovered blood upon his breast. he imnadiately raised tle alarim, nd son .the doors were forod open y some neighbors, and a bight tmlet, heir gsoe which, mig1ht well nppall lie 'tuuteist, heart. Jying on theo oor was Wood, the life's blood still zing froto his brotist, igite dead. li the. stme rootm, lying upon a >ed, with. bis head temting upon the .illow, looking as though a ili plUee ti allumber, was his youngest son, eorge, also deid. In an adjoiniig -'otm, in the same bad, were his old -at sont and daughter, both Aleepiig he sleep of death. The coroner holdt an iinuest, over lie bodies this afternoon, at 3 o'clock, rheni the following verdiet was re urned : "We, the jury, find that he decensed, Chas. Wood, and the >ther children cameo to their (deat iI )y niorphine, tiadministered by the 'ather." I The taine verdiUt wust ren. fered npoit all the childrni.I "4 We v; ,he jury, find, upon examination of: ,e wounds, that the deceased, John \V. Weod, ame to hais death by a pi)stol shot f'romt hiis ownI )1( hn."' On the 9:ht instanit Wood wrote a letter tb l4is tspothor in regard to his past muniserablo life, sating I hat het| preferred death to a conitittuance of htis pr'esent life of imisery, amid askced' her tnot grieve whetn ho was gone, lie said lie could not ,bear to) leave his uhildrnen behind, and would take them with himt. In hiis letter hi.le request od that his body, and those of' hiis child ren shoul d be but ied ini the sametI grave, and thtat of his. yowungest soni to be bturied ira ,theo,aame coflin with himn. Th'le mu rdered children woe bright atnd inteoligent and beloved by the whtole,coutmunity.. Th miothter is representted as beitng a good and sifl'etionie wife. She loved lhe' htusbamnd atnd children as only a fotnd mtothber clan love, butt th0 le nion di.jok reared its hideous form between her anid happiness, anil at last htas left her a childless wido~w. The Granugers at Work -The Order Gruw RA1.Eton, N. C., F'ebrumary 18. Tlhe Staite Grange, iDr. Co~tlumbu Mlills, Manster, nat, heroe. t >-daiy- 134 Granges reprosented out, of thu 235 irn the State. Greetings were reatd and retutrned from the State Grangsi of South Carolina atnd Ohtio. Thbe electj~on of qflicer's to fill uniexpired terms, resulted in. the electioni of, br. Columbus . Mills, of Cabarrus, as Worthy Master : Rlich'd. Williams, of Pitt, WVorthy Overseer. he.o body will bie in session several days. The order is represortad as rapidly increasing in the State, ndII already has seven thtousand members. In his day, Brabantio, the Vene tian Senator, must have. been one of theo Conservativo school of politi clans, opposed to the "hayseed" movement, For he says in "Othiel Io," act I, r-cene I :"0What tell'st thou me of robbery 1 My house is Inot a grange I" Col. Mosly onl Virgilitl'o1illrs. . Cl.. John' 8. .M o-by, in) vii inter view with a reporter of a Washingo Paper, gives hi, vie Ws on tite politi1 situation inl \'igini. in aiswer t tihe reporter's question he s: i.. W are all for G rait in V i ri ia. (v Kemper has cimea into lt l ehey i, The platformn of thIle \'ir'inaia in scrvatives, the third rwolulti'n it which I hall introduced, pltJgs u, no tLa ncek to prolong imuit s of the civil war. Goverior Keimper al President Grant will proailly confor wih each other pretty on. I ha ve int one object, and that is 5) have the white ien o the Suith and the white meni ot tihe North co-operate for the general govermient of the cLountry. You nusft ciarly see that .since the war no SoutLern white has been a ponderable <pi~anity at tho federal meat of cuon rmen. Until I broke through my ptejudices anid iet the I'reident, 1 ld i small f.ie tin of Virginians in him fvoir as against Greeley. When the pvcond election ine oill in our Stato I ell to iay to the Prnesident : "ener l, for mtie to expwt to have any iinu 011ee ith the. Virginiai pe, pke ad"I go for litnghes wotild lie a lata! a,; if you had abanidoned y'ear at:Iy in the V. ildeintits and (tied to p, to ihiofi, mord ahle. Thie only. ::ilability I have is to krep in it nable hir. addS that the RepuIlican pAr 'rty f Virginia has alm,1ost di.SAI pemitnd iqeo their Inst dfeuat, rniil with thent tho negro has lost all diiU.tiiveces. rillpe ranlCeC out We.st. TLe ladies of the W a:itl .outh west have gone on a regular eiu:a:ide )gaiist the siloons aiid vrocerieo it thoir respective localities, nlinig ioral and physical.fotre, entirely re ardless (if the cllom uceces. W0 :hiik this is a stel in the wrong di. 1 tion. Violenc ne ver wa a po. ent kir tuc3essful illy of any calnt', and it is to bo l:iented thit tihe adiei of h() bi hav 1 , r~ . . he nob1le caiuse of teiipranen. It is I in 1dmnisriol thit the Good 'l'onl ar >rganizition i a failuro ; that it'hs lot realized the great, expetationsi of A bii it has given uch erarly ad kibundant promise;, arl.d( hi- wo hinuk the only tcalns (It savi the al len and koeiji :- It.:sfe f.m l'he wvo enCn's lt \ %:t i : .i ilely to retard the au it < : .%3 to 'hamlpion, and the illegal 1or-yes m:de on I.e prollerty of liem.s.edi Ie~ler::will recoil ipon the. l0:Idh Io hstrong-tindee and braWny..:armd bieauties wh ha tve gone into itl bar ret silashing Suiu<.ss with such estra Ordinary vilm and mulisclc. The fnhidiHi of ('or lloin .nis. An import.int ense, shbowirg the binding chractor of cottoni liiets and the absolute neIiesisity of phots o1mp13ing with the 2t rict tells of their cont rack. leis just been deCided at Anderson, C. We iote fromt the Intlligenerr of tle 12th iinni: S-The Stu te vs. II iran W. Majors, sell i onal property o whiech I lien existed, withouit gi:ilg not ice to piurcha:ser. Thii:: wasl the first eaise of' th is tnattire that, I I has come1 up, anad much interest wits evinced. Tho~ Juudgi's ihiarge t) thec juriy wa':s clear iundi ei:plicit on the Ilaw pointfs, andl In senteninig, the .Judige gave Ithe reasons foi thiis atuLite, whIiy it. wais made(1 tan indictalhe til'ence, andI the to pay ai Iine~ of fifty dolilars amli-0'erv twelve monthIs in the State Pen'iten-,i Liary att hiard har, saying th.0 hi ititendieol to have the pelople to uni derstandtt that whieni they matde ia conl tract of siplieis furnti'hedl undert~ the A cts of 18GG awtl 1 872, they had tolL itt iok tip t o them or bear t lie e:>nse Thec lnians aff, t thIeio (Old Tricks. GAr.v.:srzoN, Februaryr I 8.-A uspe (cial dispaitch f romt Atiu.in says tha:t a. x eitmns of JU;aver Grea k, tniar Fori t Sill, wero irobbedl of all their bois:e. by Riowa Indiiii.s fromll te lcservaition. Fort y Ihead oi(f horii s anid imutles wore tto(lent fruit r ichies onl the fio G3rtandle, 30 in i ICa abuo Fort Quitmian. Mr. StephensI Se~rioulsly lil. Mr.Silephecns is ..erioiisly ill with neuralgia of tho kidneys. Several phtysicians arc in atttendanie, iand aifter conltItatioln d eel ared htis sl ek ness was serious. ie wvas somewhat better, however, yesterdasy. Thist is mtost distressiung ntews. We trust that the greait Georgiani may be~ loiq spared to ilIlustranto his Staito anlu servo his ci ountry. Descpatches from the West shonr the wvomen'a raid uponu saloontsspread ing. 'lThe ntumvbers are not large but they comprise a determuined clits or the fair sex. Fa eons close uipoi the a~tproach of the wometn, and operi after they leave. A 10:liti'rfu (nive in rth I iC all II he r-ie ngt Of mountains ill W%.. torn North ('arolina, known as I. Io01 ki 0;n, a Inuot Singula r ph nomen- on exists. It is i b a . ea vo. Inl th14 vioner tonths a cut. renit (.f air vomles1 from it ho ;tIron I y that a parron can't walk jiaas; J, while inl thle Winiter1 the .sucti'm v, .lust as great. The, vool air . f'ron, he ttiunt aiins ill he Sumn ..b: f-L t; for in , " ill a direct line fr-tin t ho m uti h 41* tihe ' v! . .t tilnca: it ltuot, "n i 'n nt tdor is . i d upon I t ennen Pri rrm t he dvad cyarn!s,.esatf a it Ih im alss Ced in and killed by till: viol-once. Th 1,a Il-, , 41f c al Ile auI1-1 stock in thait e t in li W initer iA zi.. tnounti It r in this V Iy : The%. r:tgo too near the ttoth1 Of the CL-I ;n ti e li' ctrretit carries them inl. At 'in its, wheln th i banpc finnr o inh ilin. to exhalng bel.ut, the air is filett vith varions hairs of ainimals, not tn, frequentlIy h-'oa atIeil whole carcasses arl! Seen1 Miles frloml the place. The air has been known (o ehange t not~ Iially mi temnpr'Iture uling exhala HiAm, Ir"") quite cool to uilnph1--1 illtly h1"ol wh ring'. vege-tationl uithin r-each -tlt :hc, po e y a te ri le oar , g ti lin rntal, as a l-t loiling. ;nell wI o laive <xuto ined A, though b" xjlrimation cn take place. It is I ared ty : nainy thatit avo!eanic erup i ont ay brea k forth iteresome titme. Siti thing;!s lIm e oeetrred in plae., as little expitectd.--.IS/,e//e Citien. Griltral Plirsolflis. The son, daughter and widow onf J . P. R. donme, the novelist, are reidi(Ieints of iau Claire, Wisconsin. Mrt Valero, titiuh inistrtrI of tho Hanvain hot tery, 6a in jail. lie ill chi t ' V withl steailing ald fmwindilIing. T i.ent his Avalanche speaks of (ili o n-. I. . F,.'ote as "1the Amieri Canl Ve.-uvius.''I Sturplli -io ha it n expressed in 00mo of the Ileper, that, thle Into Himn Jobt '. lal) Int0 ouly $15,000, ve ui,- the tvirse remark - "I bo {{yit nlot beenl reduced to asine. TI I L r', . :ncl ofI the I h nlite WIt The return of the 1; itish army frot Cmoium'n:-Sio i. nInuntceCd in despI:, th s froI(.S Im t htie (1,01d Coast. Tlt Varlh been tnil alliost bloodless 0one. ;tnd ri l.ctS great, en dlit onl the( cooli.:, oriti'ey 111n lr:ight of t h lhiishGenral. T heren is little (duhillhit tho l Ihv dopted by (eri it WVolsly Ut re.f'utstig to wasto thn liv ls of Ii- mien in, us ess :kir lit bilt f a valg ft e wM a wiso one, .in I tilf! n: ir*- t ltlh (ooln nele, thoug l ni itini I it firt hais tht n li y its inol is th t t iti SI h (n.un [1nder4" .1 correctlty ti m itan teis1 t cIlly (o wll, 10waS Opposed. irtin's of iny n iy. Rtnt depltche ifrom tihe South twet. indiae nn roing war Mlud tiltli ainm I i ic inin. tml aii i i o I l i in alni thn tptj r ed l \\'.er. W ar ties [if K a all mlinll- -s ann r i Id ni i n1- v .ngu t y p(111 1inrd tio n i alo.g nIh Bi rat. zoi a I tl i lolor ad(Ni all' lea\ luite o ded t heirt operat i, to nt e watiao iles~n fiI) ttir~ iii iervagtin Iente (nth tth-/. ni ae ben munt~ oerne in the Isai:;netio t. nII o doubt~t that~ci thel m' i ditrers were fromt.etie of' KliowaFscfa Siianbshko \V:~i d ilg o-n ir nlv is itanils in voue iA/et thevertlux, ta~ wenty thd prefttya tt a: (e ia, a ti ati it Aswego e-mn tu ,i tam ,0dayt mio, twe~. re hir lovner byprodftitler'. b.dsimonsl of pStt.yoh.ile wa-vnwre;fr 'ifmnr trkin .'ga o, ead heauow, gir thubed hc nie t ane ind ma-i iN. . iceiliy doelmirtn all-oritjob (l u~ing Limt out:, oate grend 2pam. ani died.,'IIiith rehs' nio inLoityhdii. tif them Snti rse ithey lsupport Clarete' roeolu tion fotr of n w elthygn. ma o rifa thea Freeton' Savng lank iofa izes thtteento ona the. defoala tion at o the blNch York 't'Atlnabis aboutit hi,00 rbut t visfurely coterd bytheidet ulter'nm bondame atsjn al. dtti woark i m ot 2:7,2:8:wan d2:.