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+ + , ) Al#4 M : .a SsLIAM & AVIS, Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Dev'otodto Science Ar nquy ndustry and terature, [ERMS---$3o0 Per Annum in Aden6t VOL. RX.1 - WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNgId Y MORNING, AUGUST 12,1874. Q 4 THE A RiaIE L'H B, I I1, lD W I I L . A I a 1V A V I S. . irme..-Ahe HRRALD 1Ipublslahed Week ly in the:Toa o awinnsboro, .&L $:$.OO inuar4 4 In Oveanc. All tranSeOUt advortisuieants to be P&4D IN Ab VANON. Obikuhiy NoieIaes and Tributes $1.00 Tka, Ore CT.re _____ WASIHIN0."I . August .-&W. Suitho the SOuth. Carolina colored cadet t West Pint, who wai ~dis. mAshod for defiionocy in philosophy, deaills.the history of ls examination In A- owrnuilioation ,to. the Now N4AJonatEUra showing>thkat .the ro Ori#o. a4insi.hirq wa not for do , e* ;Ma accord ance trith a slggestion-frOtn-high aothority not'to alloW him.to gradiatet and thereby sae.the war department th-e onerous ia of finding s% suitable.a8bignment in thp army where he would-be wel. comed by. the white offiaere as an offlaer and a gentleman. Ule quotes the .-following from the Brooklyn Argus "Though he has written letters to his friends and- is quite sanguine about returning and finally gradua. ting, the professors-and cadets say there. is not .the slightest chance. Said a professor to a friend the other day : 'It will be a long time before ay one belonging to the colored race can graduate at West Point." le then goes on to say that he has a few pertinent questions to ask which ha would like certain people to answer. He says : "At an Liter view which I had with the secretary of war, on the 17th instaut, the secre tary said that he went to West Point this year for a purpose, and that lie was there both before and after my examination, and convorsed with some of the profe.so.s concerning me. Now did that visit and those conversations have anything to do with the finding of the academical board I Did they have anything to do with that wonderful wisdom and foresight displayed by the professors and cadets in commenting upon my chances for getting back 7 Why should the seoretary of war go to West Point this year, for a purpose and converse with the professor about me both before and ufter the examination I ]Besides, he spoke of an interview he had with Col. Ruger, superintendent of the Academy in New York, on Sunday, the 12th in stant, in reference to me, during which 'Col. Ituger had said that the Academic board would not reeom. mend me to return. Is it very won derful that the ;Acadonia board should refuse such recommendation after those very intereeting convor aations which were held both before and after the recommendation I Wby was the secretary away from West Point at the time of the examina tioq~ I" A Fire Boulevard. Chicago, which seems disposed to learn by the experience of two groat fires, now proposes to build what is called a re boulevard. The sugges. tion, as explained by the Chicago Tribune, is "that a belt of territory of the width of a block, running west from the lake to Ashland avenue, and thence north, should be purchased by the city and set apart as a peo. pie's pserk and boulevard, forming at the same time one of the greatest per. sible protections against and proven tives of the spread of fire that ean be deie. Suoh a boulevard, the Tribune says, will be built in twenty years. It will form a barrier beyond which firs could not extend, and, more than all, the editors adds :-"It will penetrate the most thickly settled port ions of the city, giving breathing space and relaxation to multitude, who are now confined to the orowded tenements and narrow streets w a.ert they live. In a few years this park, planted with trees, will be not on1t a place of healthful, recreation, buti will be an ornament to the city be. yondi comparison with any othei public improvement. In point o1 necessity as a sanittry measure, ani as an all-sufficient barrier againt finr its. value is not to be computed in del lars and cents." The municipal elect'ion in Vieks burg will be al most a matter of races The Re'publiean t:oket presents the names of six colored men for Alder man, out of eight.. Soien coalore< aldermanie candidates were at firs niominated, but one of them "nobly' withdrew in favor of a "white" candi date. The peopl si' ticket is eoms posed entirely of white men, and I described as follows :"There ar three Irishmen on the ticket, thro Germans, one 8wede, and fifteci Americans ; two Israelites, two Blap tistu, two Prebbyterians, four Metho dists, four Episeopalans, six (lathe lcks, and two scattering?" The corotwag t.overnor of Missis sippi has again regnested Grant t, send him troops. Eltion dayi coming on. Grant positively refuse to ;rant the scoladrId'. request, -Mlscellaneous Items. An English paper tells of a British damsel who has just walked 1,000 milea in 1,000 hours. . Wasn't it ''talked 1" Tweed wears dark pantaloons, a white vest, an alpaca coat and a straw hat, and in no respect resem bles a zebra. A Detroit Judge keeps the small boy in something like subjection by threatening to have him pi noed to a wall with a crowbar and hold until lie bleeds to death. Punch notices an orator who con. tinued speaking for three-quarters of an hour, after having expressly stated at the out-set th.t he really had no voice in the matter. At a Presbyterian church, in Sara toga, a sermon was recently delivered on the Christian's regatta toward the heavenly goal. Ile was described as feathering his oar with precision, turning the stakeboat of life with all the resolution of faith, coming down the desperate course of the home stretch with vigor, fixing his eye on the heavenly Referee and taking good care not to imitate the disciple Judas and break his soull.-Boston Post. Just as she was about to take the seat lie offered her in the street car, she taid snappishly . "If there were any gentlemen in the car they would not allow a lady to go the length of it before giving her a seat." Then the brutal man slid quickly back to his seat and quietly remarked : "I think the ladies are all seated." This was followed by an audible smile from several malo tyrants in the car, and the lady (?), making a frantic plunge fur the bcil-strap, was soon ushered into the btreet, temper and all.-N. Y. Afa it. The ronance of L. J. Dreiboldes "Ile left his family on a farm near Dubuque, twenty-five years ago, to make his fortune in the go!d-fields of California, was brought nome last Saturday by his son from Council Bluffs, where he wrote from, inform ing his family he had no funds to get home. H14 gladly received back to the bosom ot his family after his long absence. His farm having in. creased in value as the years rolled on, is wyorth to lay a sum of that will make him independent for life. His wife remained true to him, although he was given up for dead ter years ago.'' "You have not sent for me, but I have come I Your name, sir, is known and honored from one end of this great republic to the other. When the National Treasury was threatened by a horde of groody Congressmen, you Ftood like a wall of adament be tween the people and those infamous salary grabbers. "Lend me a dollar I" "My dear sir," the colonel hastened to explain, "you mistake the case en tirely ; I was one of the grabbers." "You were ?" (Grasping the colo nel's hand warmly.) "So much the better ! Lot diie congratulate you that a parsimonious public could not frighten yoi oul of wbat was fair re muneration for you invaluable servi ces. I am glad that your peouniary ciireumstances are so munch better than I supposed. Make it two dollars I" And the colonel did. It was the only thing left for him to do. If the coming Chautauqua Lako Assembly' for teachers and others rails to draw a large gathering it will not be the fault of its managers. Not content with the natural attrac. tivenessof the place and the occasion here is Rev. D)r. Wythe, chairman of the department of "Rceto, doing a really novel thing at the site of the meeting, for the profit and an tertainment of those who attend. IHe is making a Palestine Park of It -or, as the Sund ay School times des. cribes it, a vast miodel of the Holy Land laid out on a scale large enough to enable visitors literally to walk about the country to ascend its mount ains, tread its valleys, go dow r, by the shore'of its miniature lake, and its sea, and cross its semblance of a Jordan. It will be as near a model of the geographical and topo. graphical Palestine as an intelligent .etudly of the original and skill in landscape gardening can produce, and will be ore of the grandest object l<ssons in Scripture. geography ever .attempted." An original idea, ocr tainhy. It only remains now for -every teacher to make a pilgrimage I to the new P'alestine.-COhristian Union. On the paternal side of Theodor4 Tilton's family his uncles have beer1 eccentric, and two certainly, if no! three, of his cousins are, or have been, lunatics. On his mother's side, his grandfather and his hilf- uncle, the son of that grandfather, were lunatlos. There was an intermar. riage between the Tilton's, Thbeo dore's father and mother both being Tilton's ; and from that union came i dXgar, Theodore's brother, a lunatic, a and Theodore himself-about whosE * sanity there is at least a gray( doubt. I From the Raleigh Crescent.) Autoblography of a Cotton Bale. IN TWO C11APTERS. CIIArTV I. I was raised in Wake County, North Carolina, by a, farmer of mod orate means. At an early kge I learned from a conversation between the farmer and a neighbor, that I and the land on which I was raised were mortgaged to a Baltimore firm, who had furnished fertilizers for the soil, and also to a Raleigh merchant who bad sold supplios of Western bacoh and corn for the support of the field hands, and Northern hay and oats-for the mules. The farmer copnplained that necessity had forced him to pay a very high rate of interest for the use of the capital invested in the above mentioned fertilizers and fat-u supplies, and that hp bad in addition to pay a heavy fee for drawing and recording the mortgage securing the commission merohantp. I noticed tha the mules on the farm were poorly fed, and that as they passed the lot gate they eagerly nipped a few bunches of luxuriant clover which had sprung up from seeds dropped out of the Norttern oats. The farmer said, as the mules passed on 'I would sow an acre in clover, but I need all my best land for cotton.' I have nothing very remarakable to tell you concerning my youthful days. I observed that the hands emnploed in the field were poorly clad. Most of them wore coarse, cheap Northern u.ade clothes, shoes and hats, and from their rude talk, I found that they had very little edu cation. The wives and children of these farm laborers frequently camne to the field, and I saw that the women wore Northern calico dresses and that the children were growing up in ignorance. After being picked and packed I was taken to Raleigh. The oem mibsion merchant said to the farmer : 'Cotton is flat to-day, but we expect it will go up soon.' The farmer sighed and remarked : 'Well I guess I went into a large new brick store and accidentally heard the merobant say to the clerk. 'Insure this bale of cotton and charge Mr. A. with in surance and storage.' I remained shut up for some time, when the- fur mer came in one day and the mer ohant said to him : 'Cotton is po better, but I am compelled to have some money. I will ship your bale to Baltimore and do the bes% I ian with it.' A dray soon came up, and, as I was hoisted into it, the merchant said : 'Iave this bale insured and directed to W. & H., Baltimore. They will pay the freight and in surance.' I was hurried over the railroads to Norfolk and thence by steamer to Baltimore. I was then stored for some time, when I was sold to an agent of a Rhode Island manufactur er. As I patssd out I heard the merchant calcutating how much was due him as torage and commission on my sale. My purchaser was also busy in getting out his insurance on me and arranging to pay freight on me to IRhode ls'and. Nothing occurred on the route to my destination worthy of remark. WVhen I arrived at the factory, 1 found several thousand friends raised in North Carolina. I noticed the women and children seemed cheerful, but none of them wt,re Southern made shoes or Southern made clothes, or ate Southern bacon. The dray horses were well kept, but did 'not eat Southern hay or oats. The own or of the factory, they said, was very rich, and had made his fortune manufacturing ootton cloth for the New York market. I eas hurried through the factory and came out a bolt of nice smncoth cloth. I was hurried into a bale of cloth for a New York wholesale house, and as I went out everhead a conversation of the owner of the mill. He said be was realizing handsome profi-s from big factory, and besides ho was giving employ mont to a hund red families, and was one of the largest taxpayers in the State. I then went to Noew York to the establishment of of one of thme muer chant princes, and w.ns delighted to hoar him say to a clerk, 'Send this bale to Messrs. Tucker,IRaleigh.' As I had passed over thme route before it was not new to me and I arrived safely in less than than a week. By charce I was put on the bottom of a large pile of cloth, and having noth in g else to do, I entered into a little calculation. I was as follows: I have changed hands often. First the Raleigh merchant realized his profit and store ge. Then the Insu. ranee agent. Then the steamoara got their freights. Then the Northern Insurance agent got his per cent. Then the manufacturer got his profits, The New York wholesale merobani got hIs per cent. T1hen the railroadi and steamers got their return freight and the insuranoe man got a'i6them per cent. Messts Tucker must havE a per cent. and -- - har & ceark rcmnked down and pulled me out Aitb a Oerki and lo and behold ! my old P)Atvrs the man who raised me, said,be,ould take me, 'thht he wautefd so einorrard home sputi,' atidt was bnid lad ind am now at.mY old bomp in 'ake, expecting shortly to. be,oist-up.. CIIAPTFit?. I belie*6 when Mr.' WT er's clerk broke the thretd-of. f4 disiourse, I was making a calculation. I had told how h.e followink.persons reali;. ed profts on me : i I. The,Rsleigh Cotton Factor. 2. The Ao:niiroad&, and Steam lines. . 3. The Insurance agent$. 4. The Ilaltidke Merchant. 6. Thie Notthen -ailrouds. 6. The Northern 'I0hurance Co panics. 7. The Manufaoturei. S. The Wholebale Mbrhant. 9. The railroadas.onlturn freight. 10. The Insurance men ba return risks. .f. The retail- dealer. These parties all show a deep iq. terest in me, and I wielito say I en tertaip no unkind feelings toward any of them. The profits they realised from me were legitimate and proper. But I feel very kindly for the man who raised mne, and when I considered that ho paid all these acoumtilated profits added to the original cost, I did not wonder that he dressed poor ly and was bard pressed, to support his family. I have travelled around and listened to oalculating men talk, and I intend to whisper a word to him through the Crescent. What I want to Pay is: . Raise your own hogs. Don't buy Western bacon at a high price when cotton is liable to be at a low price 1 Sow an acre or two in clover. It will save corn and dnableyou to feed your teams better, und will cost you loss than Northern oats and hay. It will enable you to feed your cow4 bettor and they will give more and better milk. Your oalvei, will grow larger and make finer cattle. Raise yotur own own corn and wheat. Don't plant all cotton. If your land is pior, sow peas and improve it. Save all your barnyard manure, compost your vegeta le mould, and don't buy worthless fertilizers. And when I get through whisper ing to the farmer, I want to say a word to onpitalists. Cotton must be raised in the Sout i. There will always be a demand for the manufactured article. We have waterpowers in abundance. If Nor thern manufactures can pay tranpor. talion and insurance on the raw ma terial, and manufacture it on the frosen streams of New Eogland and realise handsome profits, why cannot the Southern manufacturer, who can purobase at his door without freight and insurance charges,compete suo cessfully with the Northern manufac turer ?, Our waterpowers are as good ; streams are seldom frosen ; our ulimato is better, we can work more days in the year ; labor can be had as cheap. 13erides making large profits on the capital invested, you will give employment to our poor women and ohildron, and the cost of manufactur. ing instaed of enriching men a thou sand miles away, will be lpent with our own merchants and tradamen, and thus improve ,tho condition of our own State. I do not wish to be misunderstood. I do not desire North Carolinians to invest their capital in factories be cause I entertain any unkind feeling for Northern people. I have had enough sectionalism. I was once known as King 'Cotton, but my crown if not entirely rained, is badly damaged by sectional difficulties. I only mentioned the North because most of our Mtaple is manufactured there. I wish to see all our people North and South, pro.-per,,tbuc I eon see nothing like prospeilty for the South -for North .arolina--until her people learn to raise their own food, manufacturo their own staple, and give employment to their own jne Louisiana Politics. Nx.w ORLEANS, August 6.-The Louisiana Republican State Conven tion met in this city toiday, at the St. Louis Hotel. David Young, cot orod, a Packard candidate, was elect. ed president pro fern., having receiv 131 votes to 76 for Lieout.-Governor Antoine, Pinchback's candidate. A committee on credentialie was sp~ pointed and t:ho convention adjourned until to-morrow. The most inpor tant contest will be over the State Treasurership. Mr. Duboet, the present incumbent, having opposed the sohemes of the 8tate funding board, will not be supported by the Kellogg and Packard faction for re. nominatien. Naw OnRLEANs, August 9.-*The Democratio convention met ato Baton Rouge. .A omittee, .oonsisting of seven men, motiin the. .ewening aand issued an address to the people of alt parties opposed to the,Kellogg Govb ernilhent, requesting them to elect delegates to a convention, which will decide upoun the cond o6 of the camna,gn. The Alabama Tickel. The Democraoy of Alabama hav put a ticket in the field, which ti Montgomery Advertiser describes i "exceptionally unexceptionable.ft Every part of the State is represeti ted by men of known integrity an ability-men that have been trie4 and who commanded universal cot fidonoe and respect. At its head i the name of George Smith Iloustoi who was nominated by acolamatiot Ile entered political life in 1835 and his hinorable and active caree since that time is known of all men. II is six fe< t high, of large, frame a goo, laWy(.r, and the beat stump orator ii the 81 nie. Gen. Houston proposes t untiringly dibouss the issues of thi important eanva.s, and we may b sure that his popularity and strengtl will materially swell the Demoorati Majorities. Robt. P. Ligon, the candidate fo Lieut. Governor, is an able lawyer o Tupkegoe. Rufus King Boyd, th nominee for Secretary of State, is i trusted Domocratic leader of Madisoi county. lie bears upon his porsoi honorable soars received while oharg ing with Bark8dale's Mississippian at Gettysburg. J. IV. A. Sanfor( the candidate for Attorney-Geners Is a native of Milledgeville, and re ceived his education in this State He is a prominent member of th< Montgomery bar. Daniel Crawford candidate for State Treasurer, is a planter of Eutaw, ani a commission merchant of Alobile-a man of big brain, and great wealth which he sue cesefully manages. Messrs. Forney and Lewis the candidatos for Con. gres-at Large, are mAn wYho deserves the support, of every Alabamian, and the three judicial candidates are not only able lawyers, but men without blemish. The ticket as a whole com. bines strength and popultirity, and we have yet to read the first line that casts a single reflecticu on the in tegrity of any name on the list. It is in strict truth exceptionally unex coptionable. The platform is equally happy, em. bracing only those active and praoti. cal issues which will lood enthusiam to tho.canvats. The part that relatea to the civil rights bill is clearly drawi. The necessity of economy in pubelic expenditures and the other live questions of State interest are laid down in a few well chosen words that all can readily understand. With sueh a ticket on such a plat form the Democrats and Consorva, tives of Alabama con0dently antici. pate the resouo of their noble State from ignoble hands. The men who own Alabama and have made her wJhak- she is, propose to. govern her hereafter. Norse-air Snakes. (Turf, Field and Farm.) The common belief is that themt creatures are a transformation of v horse hair that has remained for som< time in the water. "When a walk. ing-stick," says Dr. Slack, "becomei a snake, a horse-hair will become i worm. Aithe the forner miraclt has not taken place since the depart. ure of the IsraelItes from Egypt, il is safe to conclude that the lattei tranaformation has not recently beeri made. A dry hair placed ini watel will absorb the moisture, and, fromr the unequal expansion of the exterioi andl interior layers, will become con, torted ; so. too, would a piece ci two--inoh rope, yet we have nevei heard of the latter having been so cused of possessing vitality. Th< hair-snake is a living cresture, en dowed with organs of locomotio,n ani respirat ion, and capable or propagat ing its species. Scient ifoally it, i known na Oordlus equaticns, th< generic name being derived from thb Gordian knot, in allusion to the tang ted appearance often presented b,y toultitude of these animals.Th specific name aquatieus is not so a p propriate, for they thrive out of wa ter." Dr. Slack has taken Gordi six inches in length from the bed; of a Grsshopper. They have alsa been found In the stomachs of in sectivorous birds. The grasshoppers on their wa; South stopped a railroad train an< got copies or the 8t. Pauel papert When they read that only a smnal portion of the crops ha. 'Noen desn troyed, they started back so finlal up the job.-Msloaukee Sentinel. The New York Advertiser state that It !ately "sa w a negro ooip) in the place in the tread mill of a cide manufactory on Broadway, that wa formerly held by a, dog." It eon ment. as follo#s on the fact: "Mr. Blergh, succeeded in hjavin the dog removed from the treadmi on the ground of cruelty to animals it will do Mr. Borgh's humane heal good to see how tha negro fulfills tlb pit of the dog. We presume th oh'eof one darkey power is on t1i g~Ieoiple of nattiralI selection-if ye ettgot' a og try e negro.'' 8tokes, the murderer of F'isk, said to be slowly dyIng of consum, ion in-Sing Sing. The Presldcnt's Organ 8'peaks on th "Seuth Corollna Campaign," TIlE NATIONAL REPUBLICAN ON Till SITUATION. d The South Carolina Ropublicar Convention, at which a candidate for Governor, to succeed the infamom Vrank Moses. is to be nominated, will soon be convened. In the meantinic the Conservatives of the State, at the democrats like to call themselves are busy with schemes to demoraliz the people and secure such resulti from the convention as will insure v repudiation of its action by the Re. 3 publioan party of the North. They know that the President, loading public and party sentiment as he does regarding this subject, has in a most unmistakable manner set the seal of his displeasure upon the effort to renominate Moses, and for that rea son are earnestly engaged in aiding Moses in his attempt to realize the dream of his ambition, to be re-elect ed. Through tho co!un'ns of their subsidized newspapers, on the stmpi, through correspondence, both pablia and private, they are at work for this purpose. Every now and then wo find evidence of their success in the publication of brief paragraphs de nouncing Mr. Chninberluin-who is in reality the atronget, most populnr and ablest candidato for the nomina (iun-as a Ocarpot-bngger," while Moses, as a native, is puit forward wR preferablo to any Republican in the field. But this gIame is too trans parent. The people know that these wily politicians never take such a deep interest as this in the affairs of their opponents, unloss some mali cious inspiration is at the bottom of it. They also know that Moses' namo has becomo a by-word of re proach wherever Republicanism is known. They know, further, that for his sins and the sins of his part iters in iniquity, for his thieving and plundering, for his corrruption of the Legislature by the issue of pay certi fleates, and for his levies of black mail upon subordinate officials, !the day of settlement will soon arrive. Utterly unprincipled, utterly soul less, and devoted only to schomes for the maintenance of a luxurious lifo of lasoivious revelry, compared with which the tales of the old time pi rates of the high seas sink into utter insignificance, Moses has gone from one extreino to another, has been driven to the iiwt de,pi -ble make shifts, and has fimlyad 1U."t tIlle little personal popularity he formerly bad. Ilis present strength consequently resides in the patronage of the office he now diagraces. If Ie had develop. ed even the most ordinary oxcentivo ability, his claims for "virdication" might be entitled to recognition ; but, a it is, no man, however humble his position or whatever his polities, enn suppqrt him without being subjected to the suspicion of corruption ; in other words, his strength as a candi date to-day is confined to men who have been bought by him as sheep are bought in the shambles, or to others who seqk his renomination for the purpose of continuing him in office as a disgrace to the Republi can party. Wte repeat that the pee ple know these things, and we believe they wvill visit upon him the punish ment his crimes deserve, iIe certain ly is the last man they should, and thle last man they will, select as a standard-boarer in the coming cam paign, We give the above, although con Itaining false-hoods, as showing the temper.of the administration. It is rumored ~rin oumbia that. F A. Sawyer is the man who is to boat Moses in the contest for Governor. Moses is fat i losing ground it isaid. That he has been losing money is of equal force. The coming election wrill be a lively affair, both for the Chief Msagistruacy and for theo Legie. laturo. Judging by the numbter of candidates in Siumter-70-and in Abbeville somewhere in the same amount--there will be a thousand -aspirants for the loaves and fishes and reform. LIA few years sine at the clebra on of the national anniversary in I New York, a poor pedler, who was .present,. being called upon for a toast I offered the followting :'Hlere is heaIlth - to poverty ; it sticks to a man who:1 all his friends desert him.' A rural papeor'ob sere ith greal felicity of expression : 1Thies< s moonlight nights I Ah, by hov' g many vino-embowed gates 'sof r eyes look love to eyes that speal 5 agaIn,' aud the pressure of a tin2 -hand in the buge mascnline pas wakes to cstasy the living liar." jThe Wilmington Star says that ot ..Thursday evening last during a se .6 were thunder storm st MagnolIa e Duplin county, the lightning struel js a tree within ten feet of the stor a door of Mr. II E. Newberry, of this u plaoe,killing instantlhy a young ma by then ne of D)aiel 0Olisson, 'wh was passing at the time, tearing Int le shreds his hat and shoes, and settin - fIre to his clothing. Ihis skin wa lit.arally cooked froum head to foot. Ssoulk Carelismt a 'Th' Timmonsvillo town t.49rteios are enfforibg tli6 vagrant la v. The Pedoo tIivqr ,roa.,)1f 9 (Act last week, anda reSiot I hraton. ed. The colored ),ope T09110 i aro-about orgin 6l j meranco society. ~;,- na ''' The Alkon HotbM pp 'y"i ad. vertied for.sai. under d: f6r66ibbe of 14ortggo. r : i The setrvWing, niftnbr'ti blivile Riqhland Volunteer ,iie %obnttiy havo dtoros, %9 f,.vjg%M6S the From pho ; 1873, to tle"' t of June, 7 341 bales of ottbn Viei'i 0per th9o 8partauburgand Union h" Nielf Cnpbol, lore Ia over and killdd b. a fiol t'rain opi tho WihningtoniColutniaandAd. gusto, Railroad, neir, Florenee lait woek., . Sam Harris, Ybovhas beennop pointed jury commissionor of Union County, .issaid to be orntioilcus ne gro rowdy, agajnqt!,ohors.-ee#4al suits are pendinf, iu th9 9qurts.. Information has beenr' efeted at Columbia of the death of,1.-Qorge H1. Cathcart, a native.of that,qity,.bpA who, fur four years 'past,ha4 at Rocky Ranho, Toxos." Capt. Johu . , A' ns, near, Spring Grove, in Laure x o t, produced this season, f N611 1 dal patch of throe-quartorh of rAn"'dol"" eighty busholo of odts.' The. o1ti wore sown last fall with tkirnipai. ,. Judge Mokoy seldv.in the liconts of his speech at Yorkviillak ,week i ' "In York County,,werp, you to gq out to-night with' d 4uble -barrol , ahot gqn and fire it'at rnd6f, tAfAo oandidates would juip out Iof. Sor - bush.' , ,f.it m ai "e The Union-Titne%sayr 4Vd aro infornel kat the notorious ,*United States Marshal Hubbard is noit d inventus.. , It appears that hse b am been levying blackniiil upon a num ber of citizens, and the chief Inarshal hearing of it Ilienfta-fo lIm';'"butP Hubbard was too old arogue: ito--berf caught napping. 'Ho's gone whoro. the woodbino twineth,'. but we bppo to hoar of his being fout d whore a homp-ropo twinoth.11 A I SELLING OUT AT AND- DELOW IkTEW YOMP A r11 1111. undersigned prti es b ;prdi' t make room for a large Fall SLock r lug their puumer goods at COST.,,~ COliBISTING1 0! (Grenadlne. enly "i cenits' J~ yli4 r (.alicoem 8, and 10 odntm por pard~ Uunderskrts 75 go $100 eachm, and a great other artI eles for the lado@ AT C08T, A large lot of white covei'4ts,' prides5 I from$SI,25 to I6,Aes.2' i A nice stock of white and bMuna h1c c ) suits. POSTrIVELhY.AT COST, 10XJ~ 8. .Idv/Z J O.NO 00e july, H, - Tt D 3rt-vv ,<o n 1000 musioars. 1 1(Companera Cigars. S 1000 Cheroosta Cigars. fthb 14 U. 0. DESPrORTES &C.