University of South Carolina Libraries
WILLIAM &flAy;ro r 'A rarily Paper, Dv6ted- t6 Scin, 'Atr nq indus'try and Literfe. [TERMS---$3.00 Per Anu A IX]V WINNSBORO, S. C. WEDNESDAY MORNING JUNE - ~- ~ ----[NO.____. H 11UT I R MIL D' 18 PUD.LISIlED WEEKLY BY W I L LIA MS& 9 A V I S. .Tcrnas.-The HERALD iv published Week ly in the ToiWnpog W inaboro, at $3.000 invariably in advance. #t%- 'All tratsient advertisements to b PID IN AD V4NCE. Obitupry Notiss aLId- Trib11e0 $h-0 TllE BRIDGE OF SGII8. DY TISOIAS HOOD. i One more unforina'e, Weary of breath, Rashl- int.pont ntate, to ier deth! Tako ' -jit.nierly; Lift.ber with care I Fashiuned ao lenderly Young, and so fair 11 Look at her garments Clinging like cerreits, While lhe wave conlst..tntly Dlrps fromt her c!othing ; Take her up instantily, .oving, not loathiig Ill Touch her not rcoraratdi-y! Think of heor mnournjfuill, Genut Alnd' humibly Not of the sitinis of her, All hat. remains of.hpr. 'No, is pure w66iaily, IV. Make no deep scrutipy, 11110 her muji1 iny Rash and uit 11dutiful; Patiall dishlonpr, Urath lkas left 'en hier Only the boi.taitil. Still for all slips of hers One ot Eve's.fiamily W ipe those poor lips of herO, Oozing s o claimitily. Loop Oip br trosses Esenped front the comb Her flair anburn tresses While wondermntUt guesses, Where was4 ler home ? V1. Who was hor father ? Who was her tiot her ? Had sie a sAster fiad site a brother ? Or was there a dearer one Still, atd a nearer one Y et, thian all otler ? vii. Alas ! g Ilo rarity Of Christlan oharity Un1de.r the sui ! Ol ! it..was piiiful I Near l whole eity full, I onto Ble had none, Vill. Sister&r, trothorly, Fatherly, motherly Feelings had changed Love, by harsh evrdence, Thrown from its eminence Even God's.pr'ovidenco Seening evtrauged. 13. Where the lamps quiver to fur in 1he river, With many a light Froch winloW*and casement, froni garret to basement, She stood wilt g'naztmnent, lioiseless bay night, x. Tite bloak wii of Mareh Mlade her treble and shiver Bult. not the dark arcil, e. Or the black, flowing t-i*er Mastl.frop.i life's htistory, Glad to death's mystery, - iSwift to be hurled Anty .where-any where - Out of tihe -*orld ! xI. In die pl mg d boldly No mratter howt coldly The rough river ran~.. Over the brink of it! 1'ioture it-I Iink of it! Dmssohe'te mani ! Lave in it, drink of it, *Then,.ifpt .egn c Tae'er ntedrig, LifL.hmer with eare! a.shilonedl so elendet'ly, Young and so fair. K~ro bjir limbs, frigidly', Decently,-kindly, Smooth antd compose ltqin; A~tld her eyes, close thetn, Staring so blindly Drpadflally starIng. .Thtroughpuddy impurity, As wheb with the daring Last look of despiairing k'ixoI on futuirity. Xlv, Peorishinag gloo -nily, Spurned by coialumet'y, (old inhumnanii, . Intohher restl! -. Cross hter handls htumbly, As tf raying dumlply, Ovgr. lsar breact I Owning her weakness, Her evil behavior,. Apd leavin g witht meeknese Her 1in t hr Saviour I .Ad daring'robbory was pep iran on the P'enns~ylvania Rairotadi Trentda on Wedneday. Three tuen. tgot on the tl'ain and one of the:'n ~aahed a paro.9% froim agai8,,apgth er grabJ a iftxoc h-hc otaining $12, out of a lady's hand, while the' third hel4.,thp door of tle HoMt- I 4pen for his confederates :and all three jumped off the '.train while it was run ing at a highi rite of speed. Thoy 0Itoceeded in mang their escape. Aboul, Vqlifori tetr Sced, 1 onthe N. Y. Sun.' Several weeks since a subscriber asked fQr information iq ; regard to an article 'known to him as ' li fornia beer seed. We pleaded ignot raice in answer, andi asked our sub. scribers to 'reply if any of them hap. pened td know. hnytijiiig-of the ssed gII quetion, which turns out opt to br ,a sped,. but a fungdid. growth readily producedpiunder certain con, d'itiota, and an artiole long knowsi to na'as an ingredient- of whait is palled i, thle vicity of this city Jersey bug beer. We have received numer. ous letters in relaion to thec sub)eet in qucati6n', and 'give-the following extracts therefrom: Pike, of PikQ vontIty, Miss., says In reply to your inquiry about Cali forni.L beerseod l-will-state that it is a sm-ill beor 'oblored seed about the size of .'pea, and, gr'oIws &ed very fast while naakiig..bcqr only. The seed can be dried, and will keep for several month?,! .. John W. McNuty says that be ,does nt b'elieive there is atlly such vegetaile as Californik beer seed, but he tells how to make the beer, as follows : Take a piece of flour dough as ni'te as two ioNbmon si.ed bibcuits and let it stand until soured, then put in a gallopi. j.ar of sweetcued walter, and let it stand six hours, t'hen carefolly r.'ek off, and continpe the same process, and the 'e .st *will groi In quantity,..and wIll wake a gocd beer for tpble usa. A subsc iber, Bryere, Texap, sends another recipe, us rollows : If You wish to infilce California beer seed take three or four roots of ginger and break u'p fine '; ac6fr about the same qriantity of cloves place the Whole in a glass J Lr, with one pint of nolas. sos, And then fill up with rain water, '!laeo the jir in the ,,uu or otfher warm position. In two or three weeks the beer ;eed will fill it, and then a portion may bo taken out and used for starting anotlier j:tr of beer. ONE M10it.. To the E'dito, of the W'cekly San / SfGtT notlee. coiniunication ii) ybors paper asking for i.nf6rmation in regdar' to what is oglied "O4lifornia beer.s pd6" Wh'ether it oilginntod there I kuo& io',, b't it was .n.od here a grN1'deal. .beforo Ole rLeent disturbancehtween 'ths North and South ; but, .poinehow or other soein pe9plogot the idea jh their heads that i4 was poisonous, *l Ioh i. ot th'e okke,. i dwill tell you how it i'nade Tai a pi'nt bottle and pour a table spooriful of miohiusseI into it; fill the bottle half full of water ; pour '6 gently without stirring it up, aud lot it stand five or six days ; then poiir the water off 'Witlhit dlist'urbing the Inolas.cs ; %ndd about the sane quin tity -of water, and lot it stand as be. fore ;.you will then see a small sub stance forming in the bottom of the bot tle. Pour off the the second time i add as much swooteiied u ator, and 1 it will continue to grow as you add sweetened water, and you will soon have enough to suppLy your neighbors. A Sunsoiulna. Le xington, Miss. We might give several other recipes for producingthis neenhiar species of fungus, as well As'to make home made beer, but the above are suffi. aient to show our readers that "beer sood'' can be get lip ini various ways. Blogi;l tp. Engine' No..30, on the A ir ine Railway, blew up on Monday, at the water tank seven miles fromp Atlanta killing the fireman, Hlenuy Miller, colored) and dangerously wounding the conducotor, Mr. Adams. This 3ngine had beecn .in use for some time n the Rt.& P. R.. l., and wa's one >fthe fla~t to run on the Air Line. At hcst accounts the condition of the sonductor wvas..orikioal, Th'e engine wvas just out of.tae shopps, anid. must kayo been burned. 1t was drawing a :right train.. The engineer, we learn, was~ also very seriously wounded. A eurious, interesting , and 'reaully, valuable article appears in the 1iii imorvt Southern Miagazin'e,. ehtitled, 'Archonlogical Aspects ,of the Low. .lnds of the .Mlssissippl'.'. The an. hbo' is M'r. b. i. Du Pro, of thb 2omiphais A ppeal. Mr. Du Pro shows ~hat, the Amueri'oan mound builders in pro.'shistorio times by vast dikes and :rtifdoial ohianels, 'controlhled the lIissisi'ppi much as the Eightains o'f ast andl present times control the iile. f.tihe, Uniyed. States Govern mu. ife's ?6 aver't such disasters as the recent overi.tow, and to de'velop nd retain for all timue the incalcula ble ,rldltes of tthe ;M jsasssp h yalloy itwill be compeolled *to follow the 3Xamplo sot a ges ago by the anotnd builders, as grajubuoally d'esoribed by Du Pro. --o .Edibb Nayland, a-young.woman o vow. Tark, Went all, the way to )niaba' to-marry a laa with whom she mad a.ittged for matrimony through he Waverly Magazine, but before he wedding could .take place the annygero was arrested for Prophetie. . 1From the Constitutionalist.) Now tbat the Now York Times lia 0 patted Ion. W. W.. Eaton on th d back and enconrqgetl biw in hir, nobl undertaking of 'lnsiging '.pon th restorationi of State lights and loca i self-government, we look for a botto d coiiprrliemion at the Nor'ti of th< e South's greatest stixtoemai and politi a ol scer who taught Me', Eaton th< . glorious trutas lie kn6os so well ho 1 to enunioate even in Connecticut - We refer, of course, to Johnl U Calhoun, Below rill b0 found a f extract from Mr. 'Calho''s uddres to the people of the South, on Li, r part of the Congressional ,dele'ation c of this sbotlon, in 1849. Mr. Calhoul: D sa "If emanoipation ever should b'o of footed, It will be througb the agenoy - of the Federal Government, o >ntro 1. ed by the dom'inant power of the Northern States of the Confederacy, against the resistance and.str6gglo o0 the 8..mthorn. .Iean th'en only be effected by t6 prostration of the white race; and that wokld neces sarily engender the bitterest feelings of hostility between then and the - North. ('wing their e,njaincipation to them, they could regard. t.hei as - ,riendF, guardians and patrons, and 3 centre; accordingly, all their sympa. r thy in the m. Tp people. of t bf. North would not fall to reciproe-ito and favor theni instead of the vaites. Under the influence of such feelings, and impelled by fanaticism and love of'power, they would f'it. stop at emancipation. Another stop would be tiken to raise them to p political and social U1aality with their frnier owners by giving them the right of voting hold ing public ollicos under the Federa.1 Qovermisiebt. We see the first step towards it in the bill already alluded to-to vest the few blacks aid slaves with the right to vote. on Ihe question of emancipation in this district. Mnt wheri once -reised to an eqluality they could .becom.e the fast political associates 6f the North, act ing and voting with them on all questions, and by this political upion bet weep them, holding the white raco at the South, in complete subjection. The blacks and the pr.fligate whites that iniight unite with them could be come th1e principal recipients of Fed 0i1l ofie and patronage, and would in conse,queno' be raised above the whites in the South in the political and eocial scale. We would in a word chango con.di tions with t'hemn-a degradation greater than has ever yet tallen to to the lot of a free and enlightened people, and one from which we couI not escape should enatcipat ion take place (which it certainly will if not prevent<.d,) but by fleeing tho..home's of ourselves nyd aucostoik, and by abaudoing our co-intry to our for mer slaves, to become the permanent atode of dliorder, anarchy and wretchedness.. Vcry Grareful. -At the ceremotiy of presentir4 di. ploms to the succeossul cadets at the Naval Academy, on the 30th of last month, Rev. M r. Kown, one of the Board of Visitors, delivered an address .whibh i'nadd ijuite a senhation and is one oif the mnany signs of the times demonstrative of aniazing changes in public opinion at the No th. After complimenting Ad miralp Porter and Wordoen, as shin.. ing exemplars for thec naval eadqt., \lr. K(own, in the presence of a most brilliant assemNblge, declared "lhe should be untrue to. eycory soldierly and Christian instinct if lhe did niot pause to honor the memory of a brave anud daring opponent, of the Corfed. crate navy, the lately dlecased Cap. tyi: I Falir. linch/anan, a nastg(e of .1ayanti who found ed the .United St ates Naval A cademy, in i9I5, anid Iwho commanded the Confedlerat's ram .Mlorrimme in the act ion with. the United 8tuates monitor, cornmandedl by Roar Adutsiral Worden." The word ryems to have gone glon~g thie, ReI ephicap line to "'lot al1' og South. One ti uog is very certain and that ise. a most marvelous tender ness for thisnection appears to havg talken thte place of tJ e bitterest hiute in very igniicint giarters. f)cih froan tli iThe of A Rlattlesnake. We arc pained Luo record the death, a day or twvo ago, fuom the bite of a rattlosnak e. of an interesting .Ittle t wo-y ear ol dauugh te r (if M r.. W arreu A\dams, who resides a..fei niileA be' le w .Columbia. SI r. A damns hiad left the child for a minute or two, and on returningr found a bsmall kitten in contact with the snake, ani his little oh'irab screaming anji holdibg up her hand, which upon examination was found to havo 'b'en bitten by the snake. Tfhe,,child lingered twelve hours, when she expired, after suf fering . torr ily. This is the,, first death from the bite of a snake wbhich we have heard of in many years. Phanix. Collin's Graves' horse was born in New Jersey. It has a very limited amount of hair on its tail, an-i its ears are so long sp to le.gve. its pedi gree in considerable donbt The Leading .AlugnXa1cs, A New o1: correspondent of a ; hicage journi1 give-s some intoree.t.1 e ing information oncetnit the popu 0 lir mionthlies..He puts the present 0 circulation o'f Warper's at 1lot far frou 1 150,000. , .oefore tie war it l'nd i r circulation of 1'70,000 copios, a laI-'ge 3 part of whici was llgthe South, and it has not sinof attained to its best 3 ante-bellpm igures. lenry M. Alden is tbhproseut editor; eorgo . .Vn. Curtis doOs the Easy Chair, and m. A.. Beaver, the DIrawer Mr. Curtis has other duties, for all of which he ccoivPs.$t,000. . The Atlantic once had a circula tion of 35,000, but it ii below 20,0,00 now. Jlostoni.is fist losinig the lit. crary supremacy onoo onjoy'ed, and its favorite monthlies suffer accord. ingly. Wni.-. D. Ilowel{ edits th.6 Atlantic for $5,000 a yar', but he is obligatod to furnish to the .,tpoqtjQy a eertain arnount of matter each year. The Galaxy claims a circulat n of 35,000, and is unqderstood ti> e quite prb'p'Cros. Many of its con tributors are niuintburs. -This .peri odical often manifests jonrnalistioc qualities in the frequent publications of political articles that are of special ii.torest at-.the ti e-. I . 8oribrier's is next to Harper's in ,circulation-probally 60, 1000. Thlet proprietors of this enterprising a monthly eivo spent well nigh $100, 000 in advertising since its inecptiopt four yeats ago, and, like all lib'oral i Advei tisers have sowed a .harvest that will assuirdly turn to gold and a t glorious nuecess. The 1nagazine is a h model of typography and illustratioii, and what is better stilf, its editor, Dr. Holland, takes good care to keep , its pages free from all manior of skept-ici.sng, t None of the other monthlies have n aehieved greart prosperlity. n'i in- g cot's has a circulation of 7,000 ; its ( editor is John Foster Kirke. Old and New circulates about 7,500 copies, and is c.dited b-y Edward Everett Hale. The Overland's cir culation is put at 5,000. When Bret Harte edited it, writing the remark able sto-ies that made him fatnous, $ this magazine was itloly read and f( greatly adimiret. . b The only monthl.' that. has .'mAde any considerablo mptiey is Hlarper's d and magazine writing is. less pro~ta blo than magazine publisliing. Thp propprtion of opepted to declined C articles about one to thirteen ; and 8 every magazine has enough accepted matter for two years ahond. II.ar- ' pei's rate is fronm. $12 to $15 a pa-ge; tt th A tlantic's, .R10 *; Scr.ihner' , from T $8 to $10 ; Galaxy,.from $5 to $10 ; b Jippinoot's from $5 to $8, and the Overland's only $4, gold. All, ex cept the Galaxy, pay professional A writers on acceptance of nianuseri'ph. Very few writers ha'e been able to par% ; a comfortable livelihood by .4 contributing to the nionthlIies'; b'ut n. F great niany clever inen utilize their I pages to eke out an incomo that 1b would otherwiso be inufliaicnt. Lieutenant Darby, John PhInix, b the humorist, gets credit for tho fol- 1 lowing : One evening at tle theatre 0. P!womx observed a man bitting three 0 eats in front of$ h.im whoin he thought bie know.' he rec'inested the person a sitting next to him to punch th.e a other with his eano. TJl4 ,politeo stranger di4 p o, ;nntAlio ign'bal personi turning his head a little, he discoveredl his mistake-that he was not the person he took him for, Fix- 0 lag hiis attention steadily on the play, il anaffeting utnconsciouisnqsa pf the 4 whole affair, lie left,,tho man with the ,t cane to Rettle with the other for thbe f8 disturbanie' who, being solely with- 6 out an excuse, there was. of courseI a ludicrous and emnbarrotssieg socce, during tall of wilich, PI'ouix was pho. foundly iinter'ested-in the play. A t c last the man with the, cane asked ratlzor indignant'y: , , . "Didn't you ask mie to punch that v man whth my stick ?"j "Yes." * And what did you want ?'' "I wanted to see whether you would punch him or not." -Arrehla for Mitrdr, t A few days sine John Thompson was arrested for illicit trafic in whiis- I key, and was recognized as the same person for,whose arrest a reword had j~ven offered, on charge of being v aie cossory before the fsct to th'e kill-a ing of Walljy Fowler, *jho w-a killeda aboutt tho timeI Of'thelKu K lux ex. eitement. 11. F. lBates lhis also beenb arrested on tihe charge of beinig ac-h cessory before the fact to the killimvg of said Wally:Fowler. They were up before Jtnstices Irwin and Tolle. son on Monday, on habieaa corpus, and bailed in $2,000.-Carohna1 Sparlan. Arrest I1n Atkect. On Tuesday morning, two United ti States Marshals arrived at Aika C from Charleston, and arrested J. H. Quash, colored, the- Clerk of the. Court for Aiken .County, on the d abharge-of being a -defaulter in the f post offino at that place, about two years ago. k2he Truth of listory. Co.n. ood continues, thoul tde PoluMns4of the ,ew Orleans Times, to pour hot shot into GI- Yonston's Narratiyo.. Iis. last .o'ntritiop Is singglarly irqte:9. stig .spool thse uosing paragraphs rglative to on. stQi a reteraent from and .his Qwq4Q. 00tancoo oomifia . Pu lizhg lresid'ent Daves' tilograin diroejz~ him to assume the leadership of the Westo n.aray, itpk9 Pf Gen. John. ston, lood thus wr en' After the reoipt otho albov0 te. gram I returned to Gen. .Jobtns roqig alone,.and.urged him, for the good ofh coutory.,.to o kgt,pitp >orraspondonce, remain in command and fight for AtlantaI as Shoriaan was at the very Aate' of toe oit , l' thAl my secoota ppeal., be sua e .bout the samio reply a in tiR .flr 1t istanoo. I.thou referiedAo the 'greit )nbarrassment of the position. in vhioh I had boon placed saying 'that did not even know the position '61 he two reihaivig corps of the arm. With all the earnestnips of Wih nan is oapaula, I beSouglht him; if ie vouldl, under no circumstances, retain omnand and fight the battle for .tlanta, to romain with me, at least, nd give me the benefit of bis cun. ef, w ilst I determined the issue,. ly earnest manner must have ivo irosed him, as finally, .ivth a tear of a motlon getghr.ing in his eye, he gave rio the promnsie that after riding to tlanta, he would reLu'rp that eypu- ' ng. Although our relations were t he same they had been throughout c be campaign, friendly and cordial, t ,o not only failed to comply with his t roiniso, but, without a word of ex- a lation or apology, left that 'evening )r Macon, Ga. This explanation puts Rood before be South in a noble attitude and is o ot quite so creditable to Gen. John- r on. According to this statement, t on. Johnston.4 treated Gen*. Hood o cry muefi as Mr. Stephens thinks [r. Hill deplt with him. State Newi. In the libel suit in the citAe of the tato v. J. U. Th qmpson, of Beau. )rt, the Grand Jury ieturned no a ill. Frederic fk.fnnillton., ttiod ffor mur- w er at Boaufort has boe aoguitted. ,Tio ot'ore of Finlayson & Co., at heraw, was destroyed by fire last ' aturday night. ,.ly tivo yarels of land in Andor. b )n county ydvertised for delinquent LxQs werq fufojted to the Stae. hese comprise one adro each, and 9 olonged to colored men. ie pirta qprg. Court, unulor the 0 ow lav Wi convene nekt Monday udge Moses presiding. On Satirda- last Abs'o14m I-a ipe, ; boy eleven years of age, was killed ro j sonle crosstios falling on him, at rl Irryin & Uro.'s will, near Efliog: I am' .. a: Jiast of Sonea Cit' a tie w tokt 4 as been located on the Air. Line ailway under the impressivo name f Westministor. A depot has b9on 01 pened, with Mr. J. R. I_ Agent. - A serlouas fi~re oeou'rred in th e town b f' hatncaster, 8. C., last 8aturday, estroyang several houses.. Tbe loss I estim. t.d at4 not less than twenty- a ve hundrod dollars.h At a recent meeting of the boar'd aj directors of the.Darling IFgig Copg,. tc any, is was dotq~rmuind t;d have. ..an te thibition oA 'raists, flo werps and vege. a .bles on Thursday, the, 6th pof Au- t' ud, at tilto Fa.ir GJirtineu. Eastern outh Cardlina i avited to compete. riberal remiums and good music ~ aoy be expected. b ."(~aar Cavo,20je d f the recently ti onvioted County Com'mssioners of a ~arnwell has been pardoped by Gov. vi iostys. .It is giurstoo~d tlrat . thisi A as donQ on the recommqndation of W -adge Maher and Solicitor Wiggin."' 0 -Miken Journal.. Judge AIahor a'nd Solicitor WViggin ~ stalorizo us to depy the~ above state ont ::: regard- to their recommends on of pardon for the convicted com-. issioneor. The friends of the Governor would t1 ko to have the public believe that udge,Maset: hpd .approved of ..the St n..f. hliaExcelhlencyluas.so.Iany p1 ings to account fur thsat it wou' d be ti relief to have someo honorable men 0i help him carry .the load now bi cighing him down, but Judge Ma- ta er is notthe maa to help him out.-- ci 'ore Royal Standard and Commercial. i Omlnofts. It required the uniteri foroes of ri .adloals and Deuneorats to lheat ,the vi depondents in Oregan.-Even *1 th e' is aoslition, success was only par 'ul, for *&ho Independents carried to city of jfortlard', whiunh was1 th4 it bief objectivo point of their efforts. r< Riecentiy iA 'eas farmn' while igging for olay In: a gophoer hill und $100,000 in S panish doubloon, d ud now nearly ~alt tlge Tqg'as yog ths s< ro digging holes id soarenh of iol4. ( BIM6c News. Commoncement at DueWt 'o. logo on July 2. Qs Tuesday, qt*..t Pl. aniroad, sie bo. cars .,qrq. thrown down an embankment and literally smBshed.to pieces. A oolorqd id was onidf witi otswater. so badly a few days agp in Florenoe that it died in a few ours. . Tho rgdt(oftlhe Graod Jsry. W Darlinkton coupt Is ra o . *pea presenting a few bidens ob y In bad edfldition.. .. . 'Pilot Ch'lea Jbompsoni .S boeu suapouded by the Rodrd of - Commi, donors of Charleston Pilots for one rear, for allbwlti gthe grk- 'fatweeo ogo ontia bavsketh *while h was ilotin'gihor out of the harbor. . t' iterWol o ( ( an', whie es'9f late bep oP ay, es been eqigan:094,. in er the ea rra f 13.. W. West, ]isg., and promises o disepurse its dulct :strains a$ he various balls and pientos 6 thbe eason. Mrs, W. J. MaXwell, di d in tar ingtou county, about six miles from Iorenco, on the 3d instant, after * opg and painful illness. Her re rn w're oarriod to Charleston th' ame.day for interment in tho famill urying ground. A few night' since s'oie ine toltiily tiod a leg of one of the ables u der the shed belopging to 0 olo)ed vakn to tbe rear:-platform of he sloepilpg Qoaoh j 9a ,,lorooo, og he Northeastern Railroad, and, as natural consetiuenoe..whoi the rain statted, the table went. off for trip to Charleston. Amid the Frook of elements, and, the orash f worlds of crockery, the table went 3volving on its way, true to its at kohnout and d*espite. the wild cries f the proprioter to "stoy dt train." Pass 11aM Aroania. A young man, a commorcial travel'. r, put up at Rose's Hotel withouti ieupal,,big trupk dn4 satohol. He avo Ins name as Johp L. Davist geut for J. S. Taft and Company, ian1ufaeturortof.at.n6.-and earthen - 'are, Koono, N. ,1 Yeagorday John ut oput pa, iig h; l;ittle bill. Ir. Rose telegra ped to Charlotte here John had ono. An answer as retgreed say.is he. .ad. .arrive4 ioro, an4. that he, would pay the ill some other.tin.- Union-HIerald. A Germpn . (iigtan , Paul asalkel writes fr.1Chooter, where o is established, to William Faber, r Columbia, to say that ho jp very iuch pleased th re, Jd1, emp.1,o ev rqmios to jk o hinas much land a a may want next year. IlIe. is. do ghted with the plaeo, iptends to imain. and expcotq soon .to. et mai IsO This i tho. right sort .of' an nubigrant, and we trust that he and lI his family that are to be. may livo ing and prospor.-- Union-Herald. While manipulating the windlasp I a well the other night, a party Lb had been laying in a.,stock of hIekoyb before it was ill - seized y the pelice, let ibe handle slip hpn the, busket., Was half Maro nd natral ly enough 1eesived q iuck under.the chin tlat .kneecke4 m over ta.neighboring fenen. "Sol ain," .he mutteredag. l h a d his feot ; "might .snod-hio-~bet r than to---iq,-go foolin' roun' no uch water. I Beter boots I'llesticli whisky afterthie,"~ 4 :pagjifoent feather cloale wrai asted when icing Lunalilo .wg ur~ied.: They wapped,.hlm: in is ,ouigh it was worth $l.0,0QO0 .as If ebuoaper article would not have ser yd the distigtlied corpiio asgg . milliosh of birds of rare blomsgo ore sacrificed to farnsh'the material r whicoh this gorgeone"atfent *as ago, and 1t had beoud h angeo ,fown 4~tnahl~lg through geert Ions of ~yal chIeftains. Lancaster, County Commissionerg Ill grant no hicenso to soi iliquora ii iy part of the county il the nex6 volvo months. Crematips bst engii assum* esotical tQ~ 1.n ILondoni. . Updor the tie of'@he Crematioon.add Urp o. I of 4501,. fg t purpose....of rrtt oup .tiq90ss~y prrpnqemebats dnetowIthth.proceps. Tigonjais pdator.;"Xe, aSan,. sponlds o130 of his. rga is. . "q olspt the Nruth,' politeL rpgliea the 'is -conteziplated o bpdid a rail ad ,frog? Anderson 4q Easley, oli eo Air Ine 14tipay. T.ogty-one, thoussad three Sting red and ninetyapree of .land. .W9F >)d. for taxes il Orangebiel fount'y. Thletraytr of Morgan, Tio XansA 1ity iI' ime, of a r< oent ditto, had this us edltoripl oLe. . To on0 pol;so. in Little Rook, tl wvarlike preparation of taxtor an Brook6 brings any but pleasant r collections. 'The hills os East Tol nessqA, the beautiful little town. Greenville, thq dripping forest anl the sunshine atruggling tIsrough th mint -'f early morning, pass like patnbrania before her eyes-Ten yeai have pose'd aiway, .nd still she see n her dreams the speotree of war viajous of men on horseback lashinj in and out I.hrough long red, lines o battle, and the roar of artillety an, the rattle of fir-nrms dispel slumbb froip the eyes. There was a tim when Mrs. Williams gloried in. th triumph of her treaol-cry, and laughii ed at the misery she had wrought ier betrayal of tha' gallant Confede rate, John 11, Morgan-the oiroutin stances of which are too woll cneiwr to need rec'tal here-she once rega'r ded as her crowning act of her life Uit the hour of lier triumph has fled U!on her.once ravetq black hair car, bas sprinkled its powder of gray, an< over her guilty soul remorso has hun its mantle of gloom. The busy lire parations for war recall to tier iinc the bustlec an' confusion that follow ed heradvont into a Jarge gat of ti mountaims in Tennessee on a ;torm night in Augu-t in 1'761. Now si talep no part in what is going on wk e de was the leader of 'the troop: that marcheA through thie rain an( the gloomi to surprise the man wia had expected of tier hopitality, and who had trusted in ier honor. M rs Willjaus. ie still. a handsome woman i.nd a widow. She seldom appear upon the street, and when she does her fice is closely voiled. +lany conjectures are made concerning the cold beautiful woman who always *;ilks alone. but no one has eer ven. tured to break in upon her iedita. tions. What they are or how she passes the weary hours as they 'coIC and go, none may ever know. Soli. hnde is ilio tier passion and her misery. Often in the silent watcher of the ight Pl' is heard walking steadil. to an fro icross her chamber fi.or, tid this is nil that is known. $aoni those around her she keeps her history and sorrows. " Forgetfulties. is the . only thing abo craves, and death alone can bring that boon to her. There will como a timo how. ever, when all h<-r horrid visions will fAde awqy fqree'r, %7hon even the echoesof strifo and war will fail to reach hIer ears. Nothing disturbs the quiet of the grave." The War on the hievms. The Grand Jury uf Clarendon County, "after duc examination and strict investigation, havo found oinoial mi Co1inuet, habitual negli gece, corruptior, fraud and mal lesance in ofiee to have prevailed to such an extent on the part of' the officials of 'that County,'' that they felt corstrained to present them. The three Counmis.rionerm itre accord. ingly pt esented in six counts for do fr..uding the County out of a sum of money aiggrepiting $7,479. Alonk with the (Ooniujissioners iire present ed Y.N. J)utler sad J1. T. L, Thtamec on a charge of larceny and~ fraud, foi hav'ing bribed the CJommissioners ta sign warrants on the County Treasur' inu their favor; without having ren deredl any services whatever. Th'l present Commissioners and their pro decessors are both included ini th presenitmient..:-. ').'hcir names arc Moso M. llenhowv, T'itms Mollett, WV. P Melinight and 'fnx. Melton. Th< last na mied wis a moember o'f the lasi General Assentuily. The Gran.l Jury oif Williamrsburg Conmaty. hiave 'o pa'isenited WVihll iun Scott, libert TP. Sco'tt and A inbr.In TIi~'lalo, County Coiimmissioners, f'o cfieiigh n~iaconduct in ma)<igg con tr icts wit.h themIisel ve., and. d rawjns drafts in favor of thenmselves., based on such contracts. Theby also prescnt P'hillip, Ilehler~ County Treasurer, for payinig out tl'e CJountyfunads with out. sufficient or u ers, anid W. WV. WVard, the SheriffI of the County, fot fraud arnd corr'uption in office, to wit: IWor.perjury and for' ffei'ing brib'os to "certain e,*ective and judicial ofioers Wij~h inotg ot, to .infiunoics , t.beir aots and decisions in the disohargo of their onicial duties." News and Courier. (One of the best jury stories comes to as from California. .Tho.jury wgs out for sonmc time, when the Ahmeriff had been dispatehed by the Court to seg if they wpre likg~y q gree. Ile found tisem perI'ormuing a sort of tri umphial march round a big bottle of whiskey, from -which they had all been copiously imbibing, to the 'mus.' ic o( a fife and drum, the latter In. strunicnt bing borne on the back of the foremanp ind vigo6rously pounded by the next juror, while th3 rest .of the happy band were 'singing. "We couldn't agree upon a verdict no. bow," was this affable foreman's ex. planation to the Court, "and we didn't think it was any hurt for to have a social time e'long's we was a conlgan'1 hartr."