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WILLIAMS & DAVIS, Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquiy, Industry and Literature. [TERMS---8&O0 Por Annum in Advane, VOL. XI.) * WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, AUGUST 18, 1875. [NO. [i THE ' FAIRFIEB DIIE RAID 18 IUnLTSIID WEEKLY BY W I j L I A M S &. I A V I S. 2rms.---The IIRA7D i published Week y in the Town of Winasboro, at $3.00 nvariably in aduance. S}" All trnslent advertisetents to be r.A[D IN AL) VANCR. Obituary Notioos and Tributes $1.00 per t quare. The State of llusiless aid Whdt It 1,01101108. The fact that tho failure of Dun can, Sherman & Co., carries wiith it so fewe evil onjsequences to businiei s in gener;l, is a happy indieation, snatched out of private grief, that prudence just. now controls our mer cantile op:Erattiols. lu every branch of uin ihe s, mk.l are studyin 4 ocono. Iuy, osrutinizm3g credits, drawin g iln Fail, it) tact, anid kteeping a.,harpl look out for breakers. The t,vo years tiuce thi p-tnic of 1873 hav ~beou spent in r he . celo th es of en forc.ed lasting !roml bpeculattion. ))blts have been paid and c ioetted, aend bazardous ventures scrupulously avoided. Meanltime, however, the people, thlough getting wiser, havo uot boont growving ricer. Yet they are laying &.oldii the toundatious for futuro pros . )atpritby. 'iho decline in values which appeared at the tile of the panic Was not ict.itiot.s, but real. Thu m1;an who e:.timha toi hil p1operLy ive neurs ago . I a tillion Must cut dOW that figure by beveral hundred thou 'tud dollar, If hie deshes"', to ciphe1r out its preCSCtt 'aortht. It is true that, bhle sac..st ia tosuA nent stooks are very hiig ; but t hatt is anl indication thIat tuch1 stocks are ifw in number, ami as the chances of good investuient are grcatly re, duced, those that two first rate comt )Ualad a big price. This price brings dfown the interest on the invest mnt in most, such cases to five or si per cent. Vast sums of tnoney are now lying idle, bringing in no iuoauo whatever the faci of many a ii.ii ;nuito us he dricks his Congress water at buaratoga or drives his drag at Now. port.- iU is to the present reaction 0i couervatism that tais hoarding of inolny is very largely duo. Capital dares not como out of its holes, and will there remain in dorumant idleness until the busiuess world puts ont a brig :'r and more inviting face. A failure like that or lluzuana, S11er manl & Co., maker; it draw in st.ll further its timid head. The low rate of interest for money now prevailing-two ortihree per cent. is giving the banks ia hiow, but one which they can stanid. It cuts down their profits, next Janmuary's divi dends are likely to show how serious ly. CJotmtci J paper for discount is bot dangerous and less freely ' offl'ered than formerly. Mioney i: a drug, and fills tho vaulty rather thar earns money by lending. ''ire prac tiee of sonmo of the banks and banking houses of paying interest on certain large out of L.JIwn deposits is one that mus nt fall into (disule. It was inever sound businoss policy. WVall street hats too many bankers. They have swarmed thero slioo the war ; an , when mIonecy could uhnoist, bo p)icked up on the pavement, they of conise hlolld thetir pookets. Just n fow, htowever, there is precious little p. 1rofllt in bainking,' and such a failuro as that of D)uucan, Shermant & Co., will make men cautious about trust. ing any except the few htouseis whlose3 fiunncal loundations 8r0 laid on a golden rock, anud whiose ei edit haa stood' the blamsts of many atormsn. 'Thei bus inmets of plac~ig fancyy railhvay bonudi, w hich birl up a best of bankh c an, is prett~y weil do0ne n ich. There I is lt no1 dmain d exOcpt for purie spla- m tioti for anmy sourities0 extucpt there~ whicmh ha ve aetuali antmd asurted val uo leouid the ontiary cihanges8 antd ha' es of fhtancil e(x per iec e. Teear igh buas fe havt usi ; for pepl relaing~e that th t old a uterest incrases thmoh.ist good even10 t. a yoin andl otpi s W ~i couvnty wihpshralas ou tOeiiA ,Opi t, nto the deseri t and) ui lds facr torhie in leveryii PI caI o.So o.9 al wii:1. owlr 'A ( a tet c a ntral .- urity . It ho ever not go in for show but for safe in vestment, promising satisfactory re turts. Buildings so costly as the Drexel, the Equitable, and the Wes. tern Union buildings, for instaneo, are not likely to be again put up for < many years to comoe. .The tall tower t has arien as a late And most pro. 'J postorous addition to ho arohitectu ral display, but it will never be com pleted. It furuishus a lofty capping for the gorgeous rum shop in the 7 cellar ; but it will never pay a fair a interest on the money. Though it Carries the building furor to an ab sardity, it yet is an outcropping of the fully so prevalent a few years ago U of patting up business structures more with reference to show than to their adaptation to the require monts of trado or the neucs sities of professions and corpora. tionus. A quack doctor may find use in the advertisement given by an eccentric or imposing busineus estab- t li:bmont, but it is not 'Icoessary, or even a vaaluule help, to a sound and prudent business. [Thus allusion is to the New Tribune building.] The growing popular demsand for tho reat rather than the fancy, for the solid rather than the inflated, r will have a beniuecial effect on public Morals. Business gets back to those 0 well-worn clauniels which wise ex.. P perienco has wade, and thougir it, flows with t less tumultuous current v it is safer sailing. Our entorpiiso a which has givon us a bad namie tltoughout tho world-for it often b was nothing more than at sort of I ronfidenco gime-is too much check ed fur the t ime being ; but, that con- a lit ion of 1epose i better than Jay b (ould's management of Erie, or Jay I. Uooke's soattoi ing of .N'rthern 0 Paciliu bonds. The stato of things i Bloes not alford occasion for johilstion. , The period of f:tsting is never that. But it a Wfords no ground for deep des pon)1dency. We mast gird up our l',ins, lay our hands to work, save I uur peonies, nut, to be in such great basto to get rich, and give the honor i not to success, but to iutega iy, pi-u " L ance, taithful ahilitj and wise ' adapt ation of means to end,. Then 3 even if we do not all live in brown 6 t, . ....... ... -- 1 .t v l iveried turn uaS in the Park, we yet shall pay our -ilis and live cleanly liv.3 before c Uod and men.-NY. Y. Sn. I it Scieaitifis Ob.crutlols. The highest point in the world C where c tran gionents are made for seicntifi; observations is the sutornit u of 'ike', Perk. There, 14.366 feet above the level of the rca, is a rude- a ly constructed stene ho'iso, where t live tiree uen, the observing Sor- 1) geant and his two assistants. )ur- n tag seven months of tibe year these i men are shut off from all intercourt,o e with other human beings. .arly t in November they house themselves', v ond livo on the 1rovisions they have a stored up and the meats they have d ouried in the snow. N hen the at- t, mosphere is in a proper condition I for the telegraph to work, some p scraps of ntews are obtained, bet v they cannot reach the world below u nor the world get to them. The ob- y servations made from this lofty point are .sent to almost every enlightened Enuropeoan nation. The station was establishod heae in August, 1873, t thle spteiai ob'ject becing to learn somhing about theo upper currents of the astsuesphere. The principal ianstruments used tare the barometer, t thearinaomet.or, hygromneter, anomoine ter and the rain gauge. One of' the most, remarkable phenomena seen on Pike's Peak is the elects ie storm. A correspondent of the Now y ork Tribune recently visited th-s sunamit, signal station, antd to hita Mr. Browni, thte obseiving sergeant, thus do .scribes theso stormis: "T'iiey generally begin with hatii, atnt l.a t romt ili an hott r to four baotrs. The whole atttmutphere is fullI of' electricity. Sheets of fi, g are every where. Sparksi oracka. Labout ) our clothets tand in your~ hair ian14 fill the hbi~ualiobo and s h t broaugh the roof, through tie win - dows unid up fromn the floor, it seem a1 s thtough you art> ini a batte ry. If' )ou goi uu'oors, a cloud oft clueti icity roats on tlte whole Peak. . conmes frt.mi the rock ; the clouds .re full of it. The h lihting phlrya below in fear faul nttensity, One 's I hair literallly stands ont cnd."' Mr. Bruwna also atateli that lie had( sceet athe fro~t, a loot decep all over the suuinanit, ont wvindows, doui s tocks, and partienLiaroly oni mtaltt s. Somtimesii0 it, g atnters on the tele ga sah w ires to then depth of eight 3 inenesj L and rquenit ly breiaiks, the line ansd . a ps cottauitto.tatiun . Such aroa somet of the features of life on Pike1s Pecak.( Tlhoere are saaid to bo some parts of Musougeo County (Ia., wvhere the recent rains did nut fall. The gro~pnd is parched, and crops are .almtost ruined. Th'lat aoetiont seems to by doutod to blight. Jst mes Smith, who murdered Mrs. l'epS Austit, n Wake UJounty N. C. .,. 3-' : soinO Sie reiuted to A Slow Clock. HOW IT MADE ORANGE JUDD RIChI. Orange Judd, the veteran editor f the Amerioan Agriculturist, writes be following letter to the New York 'ribune : !o the Editor of the Tribune : Sin-The aooount in Saturday'a 'ribune of its now clock, with the ppearanoe of a false story that just ow wet my eye for the hundredth or aousandth time, leads me to send ou a t[uO ace unt of an incident in ,y business experience, of groat in. frest to me and probably usefully uggoestive to others. The old Tri une clock was an important factor in ho transaction., Some twenty years ago, having just i..cooded from the editorial chair to ia proprietorship of the American .griculturist, I decided tW aacertain y trial whether advertising would ot do as well for a good thing as for utent wediciuos and other humbugs. hough having a small working capi- t il, I resolved to do what was thon a tber largo thing, viz : to- take forty nes under "Special Notiues," all in ne advertisenieut. .Being unex, .etedly delayed, I reached t .e 'ribune oilico at 3 p. in., with the ad. ertisewent biall to write, while an ngagemaent in the country required ie to take the four o'clock boat frti ulton-slip. Sceuring forty lines paue at the head of the first column, s ent to a little desk on the southwest de of the oflice, over which hadr rood the old clock for many yoars. intended to write r..pidly a variety 14 f mattei during thirty minutes, and i the next twenty minutes pick out iae strong points and condense to the )rty lilies. Keeping my ego on the look occasionally, I wrote on "letter. aeks" furnished at the desk, and abted them1 together until Iha urteet or more of copy to condense rom. I turned to the clerk and skod if I could have a line or two iuro than forty. ''Yes," he - maid, on have the first place ; tal e all the pace vou want " chin,1;-o to utauo thei City 11.11 clock, it pointed j ten iuinutes of four. Tle old lock bad stopped at twenty minutes ast three, unnoticed by we. I at iupted to d~iaw the pencil through )me portious of the manusoript, and idespair threw the whole at the Lerk with an order to insert it, and in for the boat, to save a nino mile ight wa.k. The matter troubled me all night, s an over-basty thing, and I feared J bee th '1'iibuno aced the probable ill. Starting before daylight the i ext morning, 1 bought the first copy j i the hands of a newsboy, ant; count d 196 lines, costing $24 50 at that me, when ordinary advertisements ere eight cents and specials twelve d a half cents a line-a terrible ose for a literary man, now in ther usiness and with a -small capital. Fastening to the Tribune office I aid the bill, and slowly and sadly cut down to my second-story otlioe, lly re.olved to ot more deli berate in the future. 1'he result. The bold advertise. I ient, conspicuously inserted, at. racted the atteution of the multitude ningn in on the morning traing. )ver 100 dropped in and subscribed a their way to business ; ethers sent u messongers, and others called on heir way to a noon loub. At 8 p. i. [ had recived 226 subscribers om that one advertisement, anid more camne next day by mail. I re eated the dose in the l'ribune and : ther papers. This experience taught ic that if I winted to move a crowd dith a big rock I would hurl it at hem, and riot throw it out in bits of cobble oir sand. From that day to his I have noer been afraid to ad. 'mi time largely and boldlhy-the only imit being the time I could devote o~ prprn good, truthful adver iseents, and to seleoting good mue iuius.-theo latter a work of no little bilicult.y. MIy succoss in business ins beenm ab~undauntly satisfacto y to 13self, and, 1 trust, to my patrons lso. My rule ha. been : Find ouw. omiers by free advertising, and then :oop them by supplying good arti les and tny fair dealing ; and what ver of success I haive htad has been agely duo to the old Tlri bhune clock, ditch stepped so quietly at, tke prop' r time for mec. OR ANGEI JU DD. Now York, Aug. hS. 1875. TIho fasion letter to the News nd (Cus ier states that ladies' skirts ro still drawna tight. Extremists rvo repudiated olastici arid instead, -ave adlopted lading back the skirt la corsets. Corsets arc now madie to flatten lie breast. Th'le whole idea of ashion at present is to approach a5 nearly as possible the olassic atyle, the styl6 in wbich Venus is >ortrayed, when rising from the .ca. One consoling circumstance s that ii this style becomes general, ;orydoi an sR it up o' nights as le .s he pi eaes to PhyllIis with .il feaLr o ruing linag or other wise uitrneaige attire. Glycerine Thermometer. Tho glycerine thermometer is a recent invention brought to notie by M. Jaksoh, of Bohemia, and is -uito a novelty in it4 way. In its 3o struotion, an ounce bottle is ;wo-thirds filled with glycoerine of tny desired color, and the bottle placed in a frozicg mixture of sal aammoniao, saltpetre, and water, so is to cool the liquid to thirt3.wo degrees Fahrenheit. A glass tube twolve to fifteen inches long, is pass. ad through a good fitting cork, so as to dip nearly an mob into the gly. 3orine. The cork is inserted in the bottle and rendered air-fight with caling wax, or a coment of varnish md chalk, and the thermou'otor is ,hen ready to be graduated. On userting the cork, the liquid rises i the tube a few inuhes. 'he but. to is now placed in melting ice, nanl ho lo- of the liquid marked thirty. wo degrees, if the scale is to be ?ahreuhojt,'s. It is next plaeed in caret water, say at the point of one aundrod and thirty two . ogrees, and his point is marked. The pac ,ented beatwone these points i, ividod into one hundred parts, and his division is carriod down to ye larenheit zero, and upward to the op of the tube. A Singular River in the Black hills. A Npw York Herald corrospon. lent, writing from the Black Hills, ays : A most remarkable stream vad discovered and appropriately mmiod Amphibious Crook. Ito vaters sink into and rise from the arth manny times in their journey roa their original spring to the outh fork of the Oheyenno. A well vorn bed extends a.l the way, show ng that in the wet season a torrent lows on the surface ; but at the ,resent time not at vestige of the our ent may be ton for miles alter it lisappeara, until it suddenly bubbles. ip again from the rocks and rolls inward to the next point of descent nto its subterranean channel. tieams of this character are so oommon on the great plains that, hey are not thought remarkable, but hey are rarely found among mwun, ains, for the reason that the sub. trata is usually composed of solid ock lying not far below the surfaec, mid afording no room for a sub-pas. .ge through the sand, if that should mappen to compose the soil. The Bludgeon and the Press, Last night, a little after 8 o'clock, a Mr. John A. Mot oso, of the News ,ud Courier staff, was walking dowrn 3road street, he was waylaid and as aulted by Bowen's champion jury nan, W. II. Abrens, who was kulking in the dark alley which eparates the store of Messrs. John . aul & Co., from lrunning's bar oom. As soon as Mr. Moroso had mased, this cowardly footpad, taking dvantage of the darkness, rushed out, and with a stiek of some kind (ealt him several blows. Mr. Moroso irew his revolver to defend himself, when Ahrens incontinently fled ,hrough Brunning's bar-room, naking his exit by the baek door, mnd so suceeedd in escaping the >unlishmenlt which ho so richly do erved. It is impossible to say vhether robbery or murder was in ended by Abrons. Hie will, how. v~er, have an opportauity of xplaining his felonious purposes in he courts, as he was fully ideontified, n spite of his hasty flight. In future lhe reporters of the News and Jourior will take care to be read5 or footpads, midnight assassin's and 'intelligent jurynmon" like this WV. [I. Ahromus.-Netou and Courier. A Youthful Murder nd attirderer. On Monday evening, the 2nd of August, a negro boy, aged eight years, living on the plantation >f Mrs. Massonburg, near F'raneklyn, Va., being left as nurse for his little r'rother, aged two years, lost all patiecel~a with his charge who began srying for broad. The little villain cook up his sinaller b~rother and alammed him against the floor, knock ing him breathles.s, and thena threw Ilimi out of the docr, breaking his seek, from which ho died ins9tantly lBrother Lumber one then left for parts unknown. A jury of aiquest was held unext, day, which render'ed a verdict in accordanuce with the abhove nets.--Roanaoic New. Recen tly a foreign embassay souglht hle assistance of the Enuglish polic o find a young girl who had just bee. ome the heiress of wmny millions. 'ho instructions wore vague, and ,h task was nece~ssarily given to >ne of the keenest detoctivesm. At he end of six weeks the dotectivo -oported at headquarters and handed ni his resignation. "Well," said ho cbief, "and what about the foung girl ?'" "I found her about i month ago In a dressmaker's shop," gras the answer. "And what then 1'' 'I married her yesterday, anid this moorning I have just received her die mions All for The board bill of the Beecher jury has just been paid. It was $1,. 502 75. There are not as many old fools in the world as young fools, but there is more hope for one who belongs to the latter class. Three prominent citizens of Dwight Illinois, lost their wives by elope'ntnt the other day, and the local paper heads an account of the affair "Glory enough for one day." "John, I wish y ou'd close that door," said an irritable father to his son. "Your mother must be scold. dine somnebody at the other end of the hall, there's such a draugt froen that quarter." Speaking of the senti-ent, "She who rock, the cradle rule:s the world,' the Momphis Avalanche says: "In this section she is generally a colored girl, and we don't believe a word of it." A "world's brass band tournament'' has been seriously suggestud as a, pleasing feature, for the Cetntennial celebration noxt year. The band. master of the Now York Sixty-ninth Regiment (nukes the proposit ion. lie should ie bound over to keep the peace till '77. Danbury News : At the funeral of a woman in Slawsou, the other 'lay, a neighbor in attendance, feeling it necessary to say something sympa thetie to the afilinted husband, kind. ly observed : "You've got a splendid day for the funeral." "Alt, yes ; the West is not entirely useless in the vast economy of nature' remarked a Bostonian. "It furniWos the pork to flavor our beans with, you know." Then lie resumed the study of his "Prinoipia."---St. Loter Jr. publican. "Another trial !" ejaculated the sick man, starting up in bed with a look of pain and weariness upon his face. "Another trial," repeated his wife gloomily. "Well Mary(" he replied, fulling back on the pillow, "you' can dis charge the doctor ; I guess I want to die." An employee of a large establish men in Wilhington, North Carolina, remained over hii; vae.tion at a sumc mer resort and was telegraphed for to return or lose his placo. " Don't want the p1 ace ; have a $200,000 girl in love with me," %nas the answer. But he came bt.ek in a week and took a place at $30 a nonth. * It is seldom easy to see the hidden bnofaotiun in that which is an appa rent afliiction. A boy who was "con founding" the mosquito was told by his pastor that "doubtless the insects are made with a good end in view," when the young scamp replied, I can't soe wether it is in view or not. At any rate I don't like the end I feel." Useful lifornntlon. It is said that half a oranborry, bound on a corn, will soon kill it. Water window plants with tepid water, andl the loaves often. If'you don't want milk to sour during a thunder storm, kindle a fire Ia the dairy, even in hot weather, the purpose being to drive out moisture. To keep seeds from the depreda, tions of mi~ce, mix some pieces of camphor gunm with the seeds. Cam phor placed in drawers or trunks will prevent mice from doing thema injury. An ceellent stamping ink that dries rapidly and is free from grease may bo cheaply prepared, according to Muller, by dissolvintg one part of erystallized-moalld-red analino violet int thirty parts of alcohol, and adding thirty parts of gl crii.o to the solution. This colored liquid is poured upon thte cushion and rubbed with a brush. P'lates of pollshed siato are recom. mendled as a ..nbstitiuto for biox-wood enigravinig. It, is declat ed tha.t such saga aved plates w itl furnish * no huntdred thousantd itnplressions wit t ont louss of (detail ; a~nd that they will not warp andl ate not eifteted by either oil or water. There i.,one draw. back, htow.ever Q thbey are read iiy scratchedl, an objection from which wood is free. NellIc's Butby. One of the prettieot incidentr coni nloutod wiuth (ien. OIrnat' gi anidaon is the reply of the wife of the I(tei dent to a guest who tasked her why Sartoris, Jr., had noet opented his eyes in the E~xecutivn Mtansion. Mrs. Grant said :"It, is so much healthier for Nellie here (Long Branch), where the atir is fresh and tuto broczes cool, and we woretn't going to risk our daughter in the heat and excitement at Washington for the more privi l-go of havn a gran dsoni born ini the White Ilouso,' Mothetly and sensible. The President will leavo oflico with many ueemies, nut, his wife will win the hearts of all good people. Cptlire of a Desperado. Last Sunday, while the family of Mr. 8. Fairly, of Orangeburg, were at oburoh, his house was entered by a negro, who immediately began to help himself from the pantry. A young lady, living with the family hering the noise, w nt out and found the fellow. Ie attempted an indecent assault upon her, and was prevented only-by a fearful ro sistance. The cries of the young lady brought in the help of rorte r.egroes near by, when the flod fled. Iwwodiate pursuit was made, but the scoundrol avoidea arrest until after five days search, when he was taken by a party of white men. An aceomlplice of hia was captured also, and is in jail aovaiting examination. Tboy gay their gang numbers twelve, all colored. A meeting 'of the few persons who advocate a greenback ourrunoy was held in New York on Tuesday afternoon fur the purpose of organiz. ing prior to the calling of a public muuting, "to advocate," as stated by by one of those present, "the use of the crodit of the United States in the form of greenbacks, thus saving $20,000,000 annually that are now pa:.id the national banks on their bonds depositod at Washington." 'T'his gentleman furt ter stated that an organization was. effooted, and a suffluient amount of money subseribod to insure the calling of a meeting, probably a't Cooper Institute, withiu a few days. More than this, how over, he was not at liberty to state at present. Among the names of por sons mentioned as taking an ntivo part in the movement are the iHon. Richard Sobell and Geo. Hoffinan. -- ---------- -. 940 - - - The Pardon of aln Indiain MIlrderer lie.. cotimlicdt'd.. The Washington Star says the In terior Department is in receipt of a communination from lieut. Pratt, having in charge the Indian prisoners at Fort Marion, Florida, recommend tng the pardon and release of the (oldo Chief HIu-wah-nee, confined at that place for the murder of E. B. Osborno, a son-in-law of Black Bea. ver, the recommendation being signed by the widow of the murdered man and her father Ifu-wah-neo is well spokun of as a faithful scout, and it is boliuved that his release would be beneficial to his tribe. Democratic Confidice n iho. From the beginning of thiscanvass, says the Cinoinnati hnquirer, we can say to our friends at a distanee, there has not been the slightest doubt of the election of Governor Allen. It was never doubted by any intelli. gent person. Since the financial <1%ostioii has been made the only issue, it is conceded his majority will reach high tip in the tons of thou sands. (ovurnor Hayes has as n-uoh chance of being elected Governor for a third term as he has of being struck with lightning On Sunday, the 1st instant, Cynthia Quick, widow of the late J. Stafford Quick, was found dead in Reud Bluff Tlownship, Malboto County. The dceaised was at the house of Charles D). Qjuiek on the night of Tuesday, and left to return to her own home, a short distance off. Nothing more was known of her whet eabouts until theo finding of the body on Sunday afternoon. Both the upper end lower jaws wore broken, and a large pool of blood was lig near. Thle murderoc Is not known. iet theno only the grasshoppers that fsttewestern part of the country, but unow the papers say a plegue of rabhlts has visited cte ranches on Fish, Creek Nev., totally dlevastating tbo crops, having drautroyed more than l1lt acres of ba;-ley, .The ranchers made an attack on them and destroyed 200 an a ei'gle night; bt it, sur mod to miako no difference in tLhii r niumibet, andi the'y ewa rmted inito the fiold~s thle next day. A negro entered thu ebiakent coop of Mr. Giarvey, of Ta':lbot County, Georgia for the purpose of "fitoh. ing out a inio fat piullut,'' but ito eooner had roachodl the roost thantt he punt his foot into a large steel trap. A further reduction of railroad fare will probably soon beh made by the various roads in thet State. Tlhe presenit rates are so high that travel rig for p leasure is fast diminishaing. Colonel 3ottdinot wianits the Ohoc taw Indians represented in Congre~ss. lie thinks they are as good as ne g rues. Ir is proposed to cnneot Newbor ry, Laurenas and 8raartanburg by telegraph with thu Southorn Atl1antic linea Six weeks dIroich has tut t y des troyed th.- corn eaop io a great por tibn of ilhufort count.y. Gotton will yield but iti tie. Northerna Kii.-lux. The outrage and Ku-Klux busi. noes is now carried on principally at the Nortb. Scarcely a State in that region has escaped some outbieak, such as strikes, riots or lynehinq, during the past year, and the indi. cations of popular disturbance are by no means over. The Philadelphia Enquirer, prints long catalogues of aesasslnations, assaults, house burn inge, obstructions to railroads and other lawless acts in the mining regions of Penopsylvania, and the largo organizations of strikers and other turbulent spirits are anything but assuring to the future peace of the State. Such licentious and violent demonstrations, long continu ed, are the sure preocursors of anarchy and military rule, or rather of both, the one sucoecodiog the other. Negotiations have been for some time going on between England and France for an exchange of territory on the West coast of Africa, and have just beeu concluded. England is to code Gambia to France in ox change for Dabon, Groat Bassam, Assimo and the river lollacoree. The object of the exchange is to bring the possessions of each country into closer contiguity with each other. In the treaty made the res pective rights of British and French subjoets in the territory coded have been guaranteed. The ratifications have not yet made, that of France being required by law to be made by the Goueral Assembly. The Leavenworth bolle is frequent ly forced to take whiskey in self. defense. At a ball given them ro oontly, as a young man was gather. ing her in for a round dance, her nose went up like the leaf of a sensi tive plant, and jerking herself loose from him the exclaimed : "John, ain't you got no more of them cardo tnon seeds Z l3eeause if- you ain't I'll have to another drink or change my partner."-Brooklyn Argus. The other day, lo a packet was dropping some people here, a small colored boy, whose parents were pas songers aboard, fell into the river, and was rescued in a half drowned condition. He could have easily beon pulled out b negro floating along in a skiff, and hen some one swore at the darkey f r his lethargy, he replied : "Die .yore is my last paper collar and do boy was kicking water like an alligator."- Vicksbug Herald. The Korsbaw Gazette gives exool lent advice that committees be ap pointed in every township to ferret out and proirout3 every case of theft. If this were dune there would be less thieving. It is hard for the farmer, after making his little orop, to suffer loss by the idle vagabonds who infest the country. They should be hunted down and made examples of-Newberry llernld A fourteenya'roidgirin Sandy Hill, N. Y., eloped with a school boy, got married, and returned home with him to be forgiven. She was soundly spanked by her mother, and thme husband on his waiy out of the house wvas kiced eighteen tImes by her father. TIhey had never read anything like that in novels. The UionTiesas : "It is very strongly suspected that Yooom, treas. urcrof Chester county has shaken the dust of South Carolina from his feet, and in his hurry forgotten to leave about $4,000 of county funds behind. Almost every cuntylin the State of Georgia shows by its statistics the very gratifying fact that the number of hogs for killing next Winter will be quite large, as compared with pre vlous years since the war. A ealoon keeper in Louisiana has just been compelled to pay $1,200 damages to a woman for selling liquor to her husband. A daughter of 'A~ir.Munts, of Greenville, was fatally injured on Monday by a buggy wheel passing twice over her broast. The man who wvill borrow a load pencil and return it to the owner un asked, is the kind of man we want at the head,of our goveirnment. The alarm as to a possible over. flo* in Loui.siana is subsiding, evcn faster than the waters which inspired it. tLabor troubles have broken out in England again, and a largo num.. ber of cotton mills have stopped operations in consequence. Some writer lhas said : "0, wife,, if there is ona feature, one trait, one notion of your husbands you spprovo and admire, praise itand be blind to all thme rest." Is not. this suggestion just as good for the husband ?: "Geon. Grant is tho last of .oigh. teen P'residlenat of the U~nitch States" ay n exchmange. Hie will bo the tost of the P'residenrts if ho is rot do moated next year.