University of South Carolina Libraries
.A3 Cf WILLIAMS & DAVIS, Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquly, Industrj"nd Llyu'p [T VOL. XLI WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING_1 S1Jj L 2S187 TIE 1s PUnti.fith 1) YIKEu.Y DY W I I. L I A Ml S & P AV S. 2rms.--4rhe IIVRA L I ls published Week y in iho Town of Viunnboro, at $3.00 n variably in advance. g|Fr All trnisientt A'vertliemrenrts to be 2'.4AIt IN A41)>VA NCH. Obituary Noiloos and Tributes $1.00 per i qunre. The Misssippl "Mussucr.' The excited haste with which Qov. ernor A mes turns tq the Presideut of the United States, siid the illegal character of the iutgrvention pro posed by him, together with the sporadic nature of the riotous pro. eeedings which moved hiin to such an exhibition of pusill. nitpity, indi. cate the unstable toundation of the governiiont of whilih he is a self cunstituted satrup, rather than a Clief Magistrate lteted by free and respoiable suliago. No public ad. mninistration can be safe which ex'sts in o'pposition to the pro-ailing intel. ligence by the force of numbers only. Governor Aiee is as mruclh a usurper in 1 ississippi as he would be if bhe dlerived his appointmenzt from the *hcdive of Egypt instead, of hold ing it by the twin devices of igno. rance and courruptidn made possible throngh the agency and exccioe of the niiitary power originally directed by himself. The coloi ed population in inIisissippi is totally and absolute ly incapable of enlightened political ctior'. The pretense that it is in any senrse lit to be entruotedi with power either for its owl1' or for State uses, is at bal-headed absurdity. It is potent only for mischief, and the t mure etlic..cious ani vicious teeaue it is c nitrudled by adventurers of the no t abandonied type. The domes. t tic estatslishinent at Jackson is as foreign in spirit to the real wants and needs of M ls.iippi as the pro tetutorate just set up by Steinberger in Sauia. It has no. baeis either in the respect or the cosiaent of the guvetned. Its foundations are rotten to the core. It is weak in all its n.atural tunctiOns. ;J" is strong on'.y to pervert, to distort, to inflame and to degrade. hence it .iuastakes a riot for at inaur cotioni and blanches and turns to Vushirngton, the solo reunaniug source of power that is left it, with. the shaking of every bough and the rising of every breeze. Tie Clinton trouble night have occurred in Ohio, or New Yoak, or Pennis Ivanilt, Or uninwhere during a time of political exhiteuent Such outbursfa are more likely to come to pass in the South where there aro conafi.eting race prejudices to foster, and uniontrollable rnce passions to foment thom. lit States like South Carolina and Mississippi the - rasoon dency of the lower order of society i creases the danger by. stim auting . ,e exasperative casus. A low white man is aboilt 'to' take a drink of ulhiskoy with 'a&k'utherulow white man, and a negro 'polioemnau no bet. ter than orther steps up utnd knocks thre bottle out 9f.his dard in 'the act of pouring 0b2 itadoutenits'; there is ruw for certaln. -Under similar ireumtance,;tbare would be ra row Wn Uinoininati or Chicago. In M is 3siissippi the row iq initensifed by thd -unnatural placement of the bot~tom ' of things on the top,. and national stign iticance is given -the reault by the party responsiable for it.. ',.he wires 1laak wihr electric and cstatie lying. Th adiceal piress teems with ex.' aggeration. Su~ppose it is as bad as they muake itbut-suppose there -is a perfect holocaust of blacek mecn -who made the direful ceircumsitenen pos sible, and whatt is'to'ly dan' abotnx Mr. Morton says "reconstruet the South over aagni. Very well ; let us have thap poligy as an issue in th4 next Presi optial camiptzign. The Atmerican peo'ple are ignorant of one half of thre villainles practiced iin the nlamea of loyalty, and it gguld do no harmn.to go over the fold of miiscon' struictioni, destruction and reconstrue tion uncoe more for purposes of e4 nample anid exposuue, The. nexb ro.. construction, bowvever, should not be civil, but milianry, dud should in elnde Maryland, -Kentucky and Missouri. if the negro is to be protecied it mrust bo by bayonets, and to be thorough, it must be uni versal. Hlf anr effort is worse thtan no effort. The 8outhern people nan masse algOuld be imade by M r. M or toni's scheme to unaderstan d that the' nregro, like thre white olephanit in India, is a sacred aial' ; that to touch himi except in the wvay of kind ness ia dea'thr ; that lhe Is the wvard 10 faet, as Ire hast beenr ini name of the, ztion.. Every town, village arnd hamlet in the South must bristle wvitha troops. Then, aind not till then, shiall we cease to hear of ouztrages on the colored peopie. For as long as re is a party in the South to bring coe conflioce about, and the same p~arty in the - North to use them as tetexts for the exercise of lawjesn. and proscriptive power, we nta6y be luro that there will be disturbances )oth real and fabricated, obstructing peace and the appearance of peace. 'h'bre are two roads only to tranquili y in the South ; the one is the, qs. ablishment of a strong twilit try gov Ltnment in each of the Southern states ; the other is hands off with she Federal power at.d bands off with tcctional supervision, the ctopIe of the South Uping left to their own Jeviceos In all things. The half and ialf policy is ruin. It ipflamnottae white people without in any sense protecting the blacks. Wherever there is a patural, re-. sponsible State Governumeut, there is aw pad order ; wherever there is not, .here is disturbanco. Arkansas is a model of quiet since the withdrawal if the Federal usurpation. It is lisissippi, it is Louisiana, it is South Jurolinu, the three remaining Radioal States, which furnish the country its avidences of disquiet. The repubiean party is free to nuke whatt it can out of the Clinton 'rcas. Such riots flew from lie Republican, policy. The g ,ad hople of the South are in no wise re 1'wosible for them, and in States like 4ississippi are powerless to avert or orreot them. The degree of blood. hed is of no particular matter. If it vere an hundred times as great it vould simply show the evil fruits of ladical mitgovernment a hundred iwes as palpable. All summiner Gov. ktues has been taking his pleasure in he East whilst a negro has ruled in is stead, This negro ha- pardoned riwinuals out of the State pi ison ; ts sold the patronage and inflaer.ee f his office ; has disgraced the name f free government in every way. Can nv one wonder that an Ex eutive )partment so manged should excite lie public derision, contempt, hatred nd disgust ? Can any one wonder hat Ates trembles in his seat ? He snows the unaubstantial composition if his fabrio. le knows he ha no egitirnate belonging or following viaore he is. Ile is merely an inter. oper held upon the shoulders of an >rganiz.:d body of jtanisaries. Thus ar his advetntures have had a dis graceful success. But there is no mowing when they Way not come to lisgraceful end. The matn, and his uuediate household, may be fairly lesoribud as provisional and taempo. at'y, hanging on as it were to the oat -ti. of providence, ready, like iids of pa..sage, to fly away before he first whiff of adverse wind. It it .othing-a wiserable nullity, this whole li.-sidsippi autocracy, held to ethey by good luck and patch-work, waiting its turn to go the way of the )ther Radical usurpations. k. We sab this in no unkind p4t tonal )r. partisan spirit. We sincerely believe it to be descriptive. Gov ernor Ames may be an amiable man ar a cultivated mman. The gambler often h+ his virtues. The adven turer is not always a villain. But the gambler and the adventurer trend in slippery wiays and take all the risks of their calling. G..vernor Ames is cortainly an adventurer, a r-litiegl adventurer. lie went to tsuisspi ia soldier, lHe bad n right except at his own oost, to turn biudself into a politician. Had- he failed, who thinks lhe would have re-, umaiaed ? lie is not a Mlississipian at all.' HeI is a New Englander, so joelning in Mississippi as a2aller ; to stay as long as h~e is up~ ; to go as soona as hae is down. Can any one wounder *,hat the Mlis sissippianas do not love him 1 Can any one wvonder that he is afraid of the M iississippians ? The whole thing is an abaomination an the sight of free. intittutiops, ati'd the Rteptkbll can par ty shatiid- 'be held 'to ithe striotest accountability.--LouivLle Courier-Journal. Vobticlans at Oranigc Speakers. - One mistake the Patrons often maake is to get partisana politicians to address thema at their pie nics. They are almost sure to slight thec subjects of real im portanee to thte farmers, and devote maost of their titmt to thec peculiar element with whaicha they are moro famnailar, and toq . 'ten those who htave come to learn what may be acotplisheid by the Grange arc dis gusted by the hauma drum rehash of political ptartyisma. Ina reuaud to polities, the country Is dividedl Into several distinct par'ties[ oaob hay irig its owna peduliar viewal and rio-spea kers wlao is wedded to one or another of them can successfually entertain an taudienice comaposead of persons belong. lag to all pairtao.a, unless he will avoid puhtinuul Subjocts enatirely.. Tiwilso.arcely ever be donae by the politiciansaj henIce the necessity of care being exeroised in the sulection of a speaker for a farmer's pieo-nio. Gocuerally end whoc is conversinag with; plain tera and Uranage maatters will give greater, satisfaction than one maore eloquent~ who cannot be con, linaed to thlese subjects. It is estimated thjat during the1l9a six months over 97,103 persoaig it this country hava heen killkd hio vin The Cotton Prospect, \VASHINoTON, Sept. 15. The Departmnqut of Agriculture reports the condition of cotton bettor in September thami in August in Alis. sissippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, .nd *6rse on the Atlantic coast, in Ala. hama and in Texas. The prevalent drouths of July were saicceoed 0y rains in Augubt too copious for th best results in the blissisaippi 'Valley and quito injurious in heavy soils o the eastern belt, causing rust and the uliuddine of leaves and fruit. and to some extent rotting; oi the lower bolls. There is a rank recent growth which will 3}eld largely with a fa vorable and long autumn season or prove a disappointment in case of early killing frost. In some parts of 'fexas the foe ng'j%'g 'ti' a pi-i weeks, a slnin the msn a constant decline placed the tieing price. We do not the most se% prophets, to predict Losses from be will be two days sa cely be tim nal from this fact product of ti, 1 counties in Ft publish market re report the are blamed if cotton worm is mor'fter when we give a MI s~ippi, "rs will please remember in a few ot mduloned Ite day previous !o pub. and in Coif the day subsequcnl. corresponde - which be calwing is the complete harbors on lo wide-spred onseboro for 1875: compared w~u iy'IM.AL4,~g only States now repor ting a lower condition are South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, and in the Mississippi Vulley the improvement is very marked, particularly in Tennessee and Arkansas, in which the average.i were very low in 1874. A large pro portion of the cotton area of the country is represented in the Septem ber returns, which includes no less than sixty cotton counties in Texas and seventy-six in Georgia. The Stuto averages of the condition are as follows : North Carolina 93, South UC'rosiina 80, Georgia 76, Florida 75, Alabama 87, Mississippi 98, Louisi. 88, Texas 94, Xrkanoas 99, Teunes neco 96. Editorial Kepakes. It is something ex quisitely nics to be an editor over in N evada, that Ia if we can belidvo what the editor of the Goad 1lI1l News says ; but we never did pub much faith in any thing conning from that quarter. "Sitting here in our sanctum," s.aya this veracious ink-slinger, "our eye mousingly falls upon a little keepsake. It is but a trinket--a senseless thing ; merely the old dragoon revolver we wrenched frow Buffalo Bill whoa lie came eha'ging in here to obliterate us for writing a police item about him. We buried him in our little grave yard back of the office, but we en never gaze upon that little pistol with out a feeling of admiration for his misplaced anti unfortuiate temerity. That classically moulded limb, pickled and dried, hanging on the wall, is the left shank of Six-toed Pete, the great Mud Springs despera do, who came to reno stratce with us for publishinsg his ma' riaage uder the~ head of 'deaths.' It, was a prinater'a bluinder, not ours ; but uo matter, we riddled him with that revolver, and then took off his leg at the hip jc;inI with the first, slash of our trusty little hatchet ; we should have comsplota his disemnberment had ho nol run away, coward that he was. iiii two big brothers, who camne fo'r tat leg and revenge, both rest in our lit tie graveyard back of the office poace to their ashes I That j igget and knotty old F~eejeo war club in thu corner, this dilaptdated nose an< broken jaw, as well as this bullel whicoh we still feel stinginig away ii the interior of our right lung, wer< left by old Ililfkinas, the editor of th< Gospel Bole0, who came on from th< Eaist, to kilh us for connecting hi, naume withathe Boeuher scandal, an< proving that lie vwas the father o. Bessi TPurnier, as well as the boson friend of Susan B. Anthony. Oui trusty pistol and little hatchet dit not bail us, and lie, too, lies, edito rhally, in our quiet little graveyart back uf the oilice. Tihat elonga ted scoop-shaped iuomento, which we us fur a waste-basket, wvas onico the ern of a Virginia newspaper reporter. II would persist In stealinig our items, au we were ousliged to go antd out off hi utar with our little batohet, fallacious itiking that that would stop him His head goes next." John1 Henrsy had a guest to dinne he cther day, and durinag a pauso il the conversation the enfant terrila spoke up "I wish I was you ' "DIo .you, little boy, and why d you wash you wore me ?" "(00s you don't get your ca r pinci ed whien you oat vittles with you We always recordl n ithi regret an instance of a man's strikind hs ai.ter-in law. It is a cruel intim tion to his wife's mother that he' never nmarry in that hnmily again. The Matter Ilil hisiRsppi, Or all the Stthdrn Statde' 'Mihd's. sippi is to-day the most unfortunatd South Carolina was prostrate, but when her and plight became knowea publio opiuiotn drove the robbers away, and the head of the Paluiottt State is once more lifted up.: Alt ba a, first pleindereal, was :thee .ilely slandered by her plundererqa but the slanders led to inquitta vhicl proved the tieans of her vindi. cation ; and Alabana is to-day loyal, peaceuble, and ente-ing uposta nev and brig,.t career. Louisia - . Man stripped and caained by the.ellogg usurpation. but she now ireatho more freely, and is hopeful. Vt' ginia, Georgia, and North Oaroliaa long ago throw off the yoke placed ,pa~thit neoks by the carpet-bogaers in countries wiurderly and mietasprably prevail. It wil!But in Mississippi th. ly deranginaemen goas on so slowly that clis, is hardly perceptible. Simmons Liverd ignorance have had a Jq eminently ere over since Adoebert b:ing kept rea<lhis own credentials as a rave many an ha Senator and beg-.n to a dollar in ti lovernm- t of the taite tfmer over iaslad receiving he(it of bitus sf and his nionials toits v Was a bad Sonator, and highest. charn overnor. lii; lighteat Einent phy t inattention to business; Most icial dishonesty has been Effe habit ; so honest and ror c .neumpti s s Congressman Laimar shoulders. Dizz e bloodihed at V.oks taste i'. the no door. Ills creatures, 'owever i'g'ortant, however debased, fill the best offi es in the State, and all legal efforts of the intelligout and and property holding people to oust them) have proved futile. All this is deplorable and exas peating, but it does not in any way juttify, although it nia, aecoutit for, such tea rible occurrences as that at t linton a few days ago. A white man brought on the affray, and al though the negroes first made battle on the color linae, the whites-more shame to them--excelled thom) in barbarity." in this case, judging it purely on has own merits, both whites and blacks are open to oeasure, and the whites, as it appears to us, should bear the heavier burden. But back of the whi key at the barbecue, the hot. tenpor of a young white rnfli-in, the quick prejudice of race, is the misrule -lung, persistent, mud. d.-ing-- Bich haa made such ooUn flie's possible. These riots are un knani in the States of the South in which intelligence wields the arm of GOvernuent. We hear tf no such nmassacres in Virginia under Kemper, in Georgia under Sini h, or even in South Carclina under Chamberain, because these States are out of the hands of en who steal the very land from under the plow of the lalanter and Whose petty oppaession lushes the people into desperation. Gov. Amos has sown the wind and is reaping the whirwind.-N. Y Tribune. There have been recently made -hinges in the postal rates of Amieri oi and European States which mate. riahly diminish the cost of communi. cation between the two he.mispheres The S.astes of Europe, the United St.ates and I"g pt have forned thetnselves into a postal union, and have decided on a unmiformt rate. Tht co-t of' enading to Europe lettona weighing a half ounce is eotered by live eut stamp ; any single newspa per not exceeding four ounces il be tr.anumitted fur two cents, niscel laeeous printed nmttor can be maniled at the rate of two cents per twa ounices ; anad the ordlintary onle-eei postal cards will reauch Europe if al adc itional c nat staumpa be aflixed t themi. Th'is revised SCale, sao far a~ France is concerned. doesa nout om lnte operation till the 1st Janauar. next ; and as yet, Spain is out of th aunion. The pos.tage of letters to th latter eoun try therefore wvill continu aat the rate of nine cets .per half oLAunco letter. IEletIin1 'it Mill. (Bly Telegrapha to the News.3 Pon-rr.xxa. Sept. 14.-O:ao hundred and forty towans give Connaror 28,674 and Rot erts 26,19o. Theli republi cn maajority wvill probably readi 5 000 against 10,000 lt year. *Thi econgreJaionald contest fir ithe vacadna in the fourtha ia olone the democr~t again in the Senate and the housei probably uanchanged. Ouae haundret and eighty four towns give Coino 34,874, Roaberts 32,193, ropublicai lose 3,945. if the ratio -holds. th republiecan majority will. heo 450U rPlaisted. repubicma, for conagrea.i aahead of his tiocet, ho is paobhbl These old menc keep toying wit, Sthe female heart. An old rasca weighing 200 paounads, arid pretenadin .to be a wealthy flalntear of Cenar:1 r Amierica, lhas, just married and de sertod a loving boarding house keepie in Lowell, Mlass. TPhe women thae y puts her faith m~ thae man who bit a passed the gaolden period of 353 yenar deserves to behunted downt by Coa Il trail A mericar, p1lators, andc th llissisappl Troubles. *H DKrhwt M E'r ob JUbTICE:' WAssItdTueo:. 4,,8ept.; l4, 1875. 1'o Qae . An.ee dJac4#es, Al i. this hour I have hadj dispatbe frggn e President,. .I,gn b ,,' ni vey tp you his ideas by extracts froa his dispatob. ' "The whole 'publio ie tired'--tid with. these i annual Autumnl out breaks. inb.te 8outh, and -the grea Vpgjoyity erq redy now to .ooitdemi ny interferenee outhe part of '1h< fJovernitent. I heartily Wish tha peitoo and good order wae be roathyen without issuiaig' the . proolaatio, but if.i is : noh, tibe ,proolpmij9; niuipt be is:ued.; and .Lit is, phsa~l iustruot ihe o01 wander' of tt'e force to' bsan no ahild's p'ldy. "if 'tilet' ii a neoessity for'*#tlitef i.terfemda, there -is justice in such intetference as snall dIetek evil doors. ' * I 1 would suggest to sending of a dispatoh (or bettor ; i private ties. songet) to Gov A mesia ''urging bime to-btrengthen his owns position by exhausting hip own resources in re stoaipg order before he receives Gov ernment aid. He oight accept the '5sbistane offered bY th citizene of Jackson and elsewhere. * + . Gov. Ames and his adviser cap .be made perfectlysaeettre. As mniirpy of the troops iu Mississippi'as he deoms necessary may be sebt' t6' Jackson. If he is betrayed by those who offer assistance,,'he will be in a position to defeat their ends and. puw'h ,the n," You see by this the wind of the President, with which I,; and every member of the Cabinet who has been consulted, are in full accord. You see the. diiqioitIea you see top reepousibilities, whiel yQu assume. We cannot understand why yon do not satrenge ben yiwtrAblf ai the way the 'Presidat - uggeet# ' nor do We see wiy you do ro call tbp Legisla ture togotbr, iti '6btaIti"ft6,h them whatover power& y6nby And armas you need. Thu C nktitution is ex plicit that the e~edutive of thueState can call upon the Pksideitt 'for aid in suppressing "domestiq -vib!enoe" only "when the' Legtlature cannot be convened,"'' d h e la .-exprehalI says : "Inl owa6' f'Wh indudotjutioln in any State, agaiiat tWfe governmutat thereof, it shall be lawful for the President, on application of thin .eg islature of such' thte', or of the lx ecutive when the fogislatrttie cannot he'onavenied, to call," &o. It Is the plain moaning of t'te Constitution and laws, when toilken together, that the IExecutive of the State: may call upon the Presidunt for mnilitary aid to quell "donmestie violence,' only in ease of an insurrootiun in any State against the goveriueta thereof, whet the Legislature carnot be called together. You make no suggestion even that there ,is apy insurrection against the Governument of the State, or that the Legislature would nol support you inl' 4ny'cai esures yot might propose to preserve the . public order. I suggest that you tace all lawful tnenus and all nee~od measures to preserve the peace b' the forces in your owp State, add let the couttr) see that the citige.pas of Mississippi who are largely - - epublio-In, have the courage and , the manhood te fight for their rights, and destroy thes bloody ruffians who m~urder the the innocent and unuffending freed' men. Every3Jsing is, in readinaesr He careful to bring yourself strictl3 withiln the Constitution, and the law,' nad if there is suunh rehistance t your 8tate authortities tis you cannot by all the means ats your commeani asupprees, the Fre.idopn.t will hwiftli aid you it, ofushgsa ,ewless rai tors to' human rights. Telegraph me on receipt of til anrd stato explibilly What you need aVery. resplotludy. ours.' .EDWARDS ERRlflON'l, Auoruoy-Genoral Inflation In. [he Pmast The bank note circulation In th United .8titea was inortuhsel fWor $6 1,000tI00 (in round tinmbers) 183J to $149,00'l,410O in ,)887; t equ deoiefrom (~55,O,00to.$127, $500O,000,000. Tirl'dii dnuib tfimeoail .which ,many of us btili retuerub'r e and by which the country was -pros a trated for yearp.' Again, the bantk note orirhior I which in 1843 wys ($,O000,0, ha r run up $214,0l,000tu in 185*/, har, ade posits, withbin the ewwe .periokl fror a $50,000,000 to $239,000,000, loan; .fromw $250,000,00Q9 tt04V680,09JQ,00 s Trhen thle second gren,) crisis ceurredi 'which, although 'shdyp~jer~ and ftir t-h timeo it, lasted more, destructIve, was of much shorter datation than th form~er on. Zrn 1860 the bank not Ielrgulatiots was $2 94,09,0.pgt. tht Spresent time ,the o ronulation of' lege top~dor anad bAlnifo ens5 id and for soti .years hasu been, has 1beert upward r $700,000,O000, while the 4eposits an t loaans.of t. o ba'nk havekieen ineoteass e ill a still greater ratio. i, "1 have bought tuyojfras Jus4,".. w. Too Aecohlidka, 'd i * * A California sheriff, who bdl got tir4 .pi ponslenoo-tiokew 'Nathan gym rdprea who-give thewpeivs !p ap dotrefree graaspoettatio 4o Neow York, there to expiate their crime on ithe'gdilo*s, addressed ths,lasat:;MD i, date. as follows,: "8d'o ;pot.. oon, j'ionoo~aip'4 easy, oh ?" "AhWqre plied the ma rderer, "I have the ourae of Ct in upon my brow ; I Vandbry wabr,' buit fGnd no 'restd' r,,%qwd ydn're the ,0n4.9 1'1, , egr,, dp,l you Avumnt.to be hsjpgt.d 1" "I eel that :1 shpp't resr easy" Aill'"fm' hn; 4ec." ."Well; my fri'ehd,"1 te+ ""the sheriff thdoughtheglly p thd rb ity treasuryi ais'tawelkijj b preebt, and I don't .gah eke. any riske .ia cope yure y t eai ned4,re jiet 6dhing t'r a r e 7ti v. W or 1oslded, "theo oNiw York gourd ocan't be - trustedtolhgng, a anti. Oi thea wbole, . as. you .,dor serve toIe killedLspd as it oast mg e puqig d ffpregee ,t you or, hooiey .how you are itled ad long 'as you are, T guedd 411. kill Sos rmyseli.I So ityibg he drew his revolver,,, but that conscieu~onaenie ou rear der had departed in the diteotion of Alaska with such fervor that pqoplo couldn't see that brund of'Cald 'won his bv'6Wfdr' dust. - -t ., 0 rlIri Q p.pJctieraic, (urtsney.; 'fr. ]Manton' Dabeau gibe*i0t the Louisville' Cohinewroial an itaresting aebounteofAhe. Gontederate ourboyi He Rays the tptatissu% uvertreajted1 $0,0094000, and its. doproeiution was loss than is popularly bolioed." He says the paper ' ddllar' #s wvo'rth l85 obatte in gold in November, 1861 ;' 60 -oents in July, ,-1863 ; 8.cugts i 4 i Xpvespher, 1863 ; 5 .oeus ,ipt Mp ;1864, from which period to t , tori 4Qaties of the wa it'fuhanuated, going pp once te 6 oebt'rGnd only 'fhilit' patirely as a mediom rin the last t*o" ,paopths. prior .to .the .o.epitulaou, hoeu, overy o0e saw. bak dofeat was inovii able. ' Ietail business of all khids edvtis4e imorp slowly than r was }hopad.-Bue r"w,e. rXO.apt to forge t the; lightkm .oauseq twhich deress or elevate this business, which, like a fine vast .web of threads binds the people of a great city; together.. Grout failuros or ohajges iyuthe cmrrpnte of trade. amnd their eYeotse are poroeptible to the dullest, but we overlook the domipura. tive trifles, the ohange of a styte' in dross,,the whim of fashion which, affects' the wellebeing of large ,bodies of laborers. Two winters .go fash. ionable wodistes suddenly laid a ban p9 the popular color of sage-green, apd, brought in navy blue ; in -obnses quocoe, 'otain mill-owners failed or rati On one-third time, tbousapds pf, I operatives lay idle all winter, and large numbers of dry goodse m'robauts found themselves shaken' and ' totood' to disut.iss half their ' oletkhs'1#aho' starved at home.r' Soaebodrevivea, t he -Trichina fright, e, sd puRtt perg butphee.moves lao~agm palor lih and turps off his harids,.andt .th hand" a nnot pay his' weekly sodre 16 the grocer at the corner, and' befhe'the winter ii Over so-se ,f the ljubcbar/s men die ina the Tombs. for *tpR|'ng,t and the grocer, who .war eal little man, is in an luibo'uso.aafi Ichildren of both afe set on''theIhled r6og url'ts downward. 'The storiy reobdy its 0iteolKa .thoiua atinage,. Noboy i tol 1a~e,,foy \his Jopg age cession of disasier but thle dfisasteer is ar real and bday~ .-N.Tf. '!P~IutI6 Senator Gordon, -of Oeorgia, chas written a letter, in which ho*pre. es ~hlnbelf. izn favor of lea~yjug ga fimasseial question out of. theDn. era4io..patmo't fatf&h nd mAii9 Lthef Gght onmnother Ilumar. dbedhi the fist object e6fib> Southdral, ),l id ooraoy bhqpq~~ 40 $4 geapga , -present ad ipigtrptaop ot, s hol lspon the country. The A (Gai.) Igorald is of the opinion tb~t S nine out oft~m of the ykhblio lraenloi I thec South take's similar- view oif &4e i inatter and expresej. j49 pp~ief tlit Sthea inluee of nthna Southern dole. -caest h aiiiorveintiod will ) be thrown against a deofratidif a'fo# ei'hmer resumnptlon or inBaoio's'hoset g' ever th6lr individual views 1t14y,.h'* The1e Bltimnoro Gazetwc pop peg that the contest ing n imyianga wtl e not -beoi thme curr46y; tut go the qu restIou of reforni-an daaraiuglg that is, upon the Rtadioel due~ pabl, m ns, *'lhe. contest e verpthere n . saping Itae)f more .definajteay In ;if ,1 $lrootIon. The ring follows..are try. c& ing ouery where to get up other Isgueh s but dhiat the honeuat museu Overy' a ikhere mean is to get r'id-ofi themoi~ 0 'Semuel liuokenaberry,-.of Alabanu: ',4nm't conia hayme at Uhs usual ip a' thea othear mighat, anmd w!.on hiis winf fouend imro hianging to a limub Lhd Wed d duy,da sh6remad. "I told bihi' d let then: hogs alone " .' a a A sl'aurp talking lady w0as re p.rove -I *iy haer. 'oan:d, 'who' vegnestoed hp~ a1.. nll. ews. )tows.. M" , , t , :,: rseo , Ai, atia N c ! 8oanlbdd1 j i8o! isoA fo p .tbitle g4lk 8 's tcr Riau 111tq irlMldtZ, 'uK,,. ad T F :,, " ,;An mdglie t *n4W a q+ ou+,tryot Es{kgo p1WYY'tie' doiible0buwa" Yio14016ybt o an oroheati'aia.;1a1way1* . brjidloaded,4 .' I'erhap81t i8 -beeauao thetl iacling violin tl k'ias N''o'tcW. Fattier Iw b'fI 8T I Iotluitind,""'It d,, faa just lived Oubhishi dreth.,,year,, It lemapbd, pbio 1ri*udr,.ho will 1iter{44 :pao ,4'y Yo'tffgtrl pg poxt Y i11',;ANl csny tot 1 .pu .ic : "Iwhuli to t'41?, ,cl tgni iul, fo . I yeti, o. n Qrwi , ui n oti' ,t a o t 8 tqa, i uoo. , t i1 e ''O a 'iii uuwl a stone insido' ll eigtiinrg ae ry elovtli'06iin'da.' IRA' , :eesritetl that too %b'ighe of , Provia., ... << 9 exq pppge says 14the, Jnndwwiol= aners, bbliovo that lielaobub wall tr t l eAiltla :ih ,t#e fo a), of -.a vvlit it'd, ,AA;i141 nal r au 11 o willr&id-4 bnu"ij, kIEiB t n"ho bstli+sv is eo oo ' aUUd P its tar,, uJ''ll ' 1lltl riyd . c g5 t:a. 'f,} a o' ish"Qi lis t;'hwilti to ihti z npn" aypouy af'h14t 1'e , refuso8 ltto'ta o rbrtl;" i ?t11 /"tatoinaoh.. F a: doad . selit to him fo&" 9null1jq, A ItJJ t1,e!ohoutiat bas now. two ?tow phi j i. tho 4oest 6,appo,'r to 1 uQb& nny lib#ol ' A owE bibi4't1' 'ots' '6f'-iA'rlemits ' Vard aaye t o gotlicll:buthorist usual. "" , 1V *6U with one log over the - artu Of hioldbMJal We had albdyi 'sup ceod hewrote-,wlth arpen. or, a.: pon" 411.;+ Uy to wtaite wiyh oyolog, over s pry p(,p c t io pt, sp! dilihiult as Q wtJ to witliouo urtu ovgr the Iii bli a dhitf'rT . ,: . . ten"' 6ivftS'j -', "tvittidlbe6lrt'n' .bo}se along llrldge,'strbet - Saturthtyr eaehailodby aantiall.,;l,.oy.; ,who our qA co ij tI)n Ii.orpowws fKl'.p;tlet ,''')to ,Pan d tilt. t y But a IV 11M. Whit ob ory'c'd " ,tit4"tb" 'aseal, .. r i utheY'ti like, tdv 'g'ii aWout "sudh a oridteeyuptb tho o1 urbbito, blow , the i I orgRnt pu0y8." 1,xit atg001"49y111, .,. ",..: , I' 4,jp4}qp i a Wos ertn State- .had e9R v , fi o bfda j' 1tiotj tI,:kob ,a . h ' J "' is rlpponp iti solithr yaoclgflnuwsitt,:. " n ell 1p,111a4, tw9: lq:.glla[bo .o.nq eso padqtCd hq!,wajpb1igd to ,ock .tl q gthpf o4t ?f the door tot obni'jly with the egulution: !'0llon '}} u' hfoot t s4hh t11 '' b'utit " .p11iyfS19iho drum, at the' Uvad of o, a! iot-of t*'O'-footr soldiers,.with a silok and-ihrass Mottle, you, may kuow. tuns,. ,his pq lj ;..has the preserving ft+ver, .nt;d dgrfp to.,tvrint; llyr 11unds and tvoudo1 Uwhat. ott earth ltaa' be- ' cloths of'f'hitt Will silo sent after Mrs. J'odeb''I ettle two hours ago. "4'11'0bQo onten have started a barber wouiau,, start a , barber ejlop once. Sbq gpg1a,}n with t1 cowhide in her 1tdw( an s4id's11o wuH joilsg t6 }1(ft"8r' 01 tlio ifi*n Avh6 Ihid ,been talkit g ubfbluflhr ; :acrd, eight inan wit11: toww We . saw ono Jdls unth rtheir o jta and - It 4hor on tkPt, 1fQ9Jtvillu$tlgd out gf tip el1air ai d .J rj 4l? fojt." the tank door' o., a. .jASIf 5 flanc,,lbt;,: jpst r; of tlicX111,1011111'. .. ... t:fAhPP.- .