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"BY CLINESO??iEg ? LANflST?Kf . ANDERSON, S. C^'WBDHESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1901.. . VOLUME YYYVr?ato an r t Off ^ht v y w v FOR That is exactly what we are giving in merchandise to our customers diiring tMs Twenty-five Per Cent Discount Sale. If you will but ?top to consider that enr Clothes at regular prices are always the lowest in price, you wiUreaaily see that this Sale means more to you than ? casual glance would indicate, Xff vre were offering you old Goods or Clothing hast?j^ then such a reduc tion would mean nothing to the economical buyer. But when .you Can yurch&s^ at an actual saving of one-fourth, then you are really getting one dollar for seventy-five cents. This makes our? % 5.00 Suits and Overcoats, 25 per cent off, $3.75. 7.60 Suits and Overcoats, 25 per cent off, 5.63. 1O.0 \t ferUta and Overcoats, 25 per cent off, 7.50. 12.?.0 Ssrits and Overcoat^ 25 per cent off, 9.38. 15.00 Suits and Overcoats, 25 per cent off, 11.25. Leave one-fourth of what you expected to pay at home, the balance will pay for the Goods. . This Sale includerall of our Clothing on hand. Nothing reserved. We always do as we advertise, and our patrons know it. Better hurry. vans & Co, THE SPOT CASH CLOTHIERS. WHITS r t^When you are buying a Vehicle that life depends on at times, buy ? good one. If you don't know what maker to choose from, buy from a reliable dealer whose word is his reputation. I have a splendid assortment of light-speeding WAGONS, FAMILY CARRIAGES, FAflSCY TRAPS, And are made by fee best manufacturers, at prices that wilj surprise you. Come to see me. JOS. J. FEET WELL. DON'T FAIL TO SEE Wow being shown by the Evans' Pharmacy. _ All kinds, all prices.. Huyler's Candies-Fresh. Get the first look and you will find what you want, EVANS' PHARMACY. SOME BARGAINS ! -o i H?VE ? FEW PIANOS. Of the very hlachwt grade -nd latest atyl?>, TO GO AT C??x F?U A FEW DATS. This la an opportunity of a IH'e-ttme. f ?3???J*a.,ve lBte?t Improved ball-h#.?.inir HfW HOME MEWING Mi* ?HING? I.?r jftSO. Vibrator Stand*, d Machine oniymoo. OfiGAHS l)HEAP. ML !.. W11.1.1?. ISouth Main Strett, Anderson, 8.0. frfo?irfwmii mil I ?in Ml mflU FROM THE NATION'S CAPITAL. From Our Own Correspondent. Washington, D. C, Jan. 21,Iooa j Compelled thereto by the agents of the Asphalt Trust, the United States Government has sent <var ships to IVenAsnehi T-iihths ?VGwe? objector ! Interfering by force of arms to prevent I the disarmament by the Venezuelan Government of the employees of the Trust, who are reeietiug the decree of the courts of the republic, in favor of a weaker rival, which is also an Ameri ca" cerporatioa, oui which has not the ear of the administration. It is some what difficult to ascertain the exact situation in the asphalt regions. This much, hov/ever, is known. Years ago the Asphalt Trust obtained a conces sion in the State of Bermudes. Later, in 1888, it acquired an additional con cession, which contained asphalt de posits. ; A few years af to; this, a Vene zuelan company acquired a tract ad joining that of the Trust, and promptly transferred its rights to as American company. Disputes soon arose as to < ho boundary between the two, the Trust claiming that it was the mean dering line of a foot path, .through-the dense woods, while the hew company asserted that tue line should have been straight. If so run it would throw Lake Venezuela, which is very valua ble, into the grant of the new company and out of that of the older one. The case was arbitrated and decided against the Trust,' and President Castro order ed the property to be turned over to the smaller and weaker corporation. At once the trust declared that the arbitrators had been bribed and refused to surrender the land in question. Ob viously, the United States has no right to interfere. It is the right as well as the duty of the Venezuelan Govern ment to maintain order iu its territory and execute the law. A quarrel be tween rival American business associa tions in Venezuela over concessions of territory concerns the Venezuelan Government exclusively. If the case were reversed and rival syndicates composed of Venezuelans and holding mining > concessions in the United States were to fall one and resort to force to Fettle their disputes, our gov ernment would not tolerate interfer ence by Venezuela in behalf of either of tho claimants, but would compel the rivals to submit their claims to the courts. The new method of combination by which the railways are dodging the anti-trust act and the act forbidding pooling are pointed out in the recent report of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Tho Commission has no official knowledge of the extent of re cent railway combinations, bat it has informed itseif as well aspoBsible from unofficial sources. Disregarding mere rumors, but taking account of well authenticated statements, thero were absorbed in varions ways between July 1, 1899, and November 1, 1900, 25, 811 miles of railroad. There are in the whole United States something less than 200,000 miles of railroad; so that more than one-eighth of this entire mileage was, within the above period, brought, in one way and another, un der the .control of other lines, When it is considered what has actually been done, what is undoubtedly in contem plation, the entire feasibility of these schemes, the very great advantage which wonld result to the owners of the properties involved, and the fact I that a step once taken in that direction is seldom retraced, it becomes evident that in th? immediate future the main transportation lines of this country will be thrown into groups, controlling their own territory, and not subject, with respect tc most of thoir traffic, to serious competition. If this continues, it will soon lie within the power cf two or three men, or at mout a small group of men, to say what tax shall be imposed upon the vast traffic moving between the East and West. The re sult is already manifest in the tremend ous increase in freight rates during the past year. It now seems that the cause of Sena tor H anna's confidence in tho pas&ago of the subsidy bill lies in his intention to tack it as a rider on to the River and Ha."mr bill. This sort of thing is ad mittedly vicions and is absolutely for bidden by the rules of the House. The Senate, however, can do what it pleases, and if it should adopt the plan mentioned, the House would have to consider its action. Meanwhile, des perate efforts are being made by Sena tor Hamm to create a sentiment throughout the country favorable to the bill. In this city a press bureau has been organized for the purpose of supplying newspaper correspondents with information bearing on its pro gress. Another has been mailing by the ton literature favoring it, and a third has been directly in correspon dence with leading members of busi ness, financial and commercial exchan ges urging action in its support. Such bunauB cost enormously, and there is much curiosity to know what disinter ested citizens are financing it. The war-revenue reduction bill is being purposely held back in the Sen ate Committee on Finance by Senator Aldrtch, the Chair Vsys, who has per sonally requested the members of the Committee- to refrain from discussing the measure in any voy. He is par ticularly anxious that they say nothing about progress upon it, or any commit tee action. Il is understood that it will, when repotted, authorize a redac tion of about $40,000,000. although it has been the desire of the Senate lead en to keep the cut within tho $80,000, 000 recommended by the President and Secretary Gr-go. It is probable that the taxes on a few Articles will be re pealed entirety, and that all tho rest will bo reduced by a horizontal cat of 85 per cent. By holding back tho Revenue bill Senator Aldrich hopes to forco the ok ."Margarine bill upon the calendar, where it will bavo a parlia mentary status that will enable him to prevent what he believes is the pur pose of ita HunTwirr.-ere?th?t is, to ha~? it added as an amendment to the Reve nue bill._ Information Wanted About a ?South Carolina Ex-Confederate. Tho Governor has received the fol lowing from far-off Alaska: j J??c??, Alaska, Jan. 1,1001. To the Governor of South Carolina, Columbia, S. C. . Sir: I have the honor to inquire of you concerning Richard S. Campbell, who was killed in Porcupine city, Alas ka, June 24,1900. Mr. Campbell belonged to the Hamp ton legion and was captain of his com pany at Appomatox. -At his death he was 64 years old or thereabouts. If you have no personal knowledge of him you will confer a great favor by en closing this communication to any Confederate Veteran society in South Carolina. I have been appointed administrator for his estate. Ho has somo property in Porcupine district, Alaska, which may or may not be of some value, hut in the event it proves of value, I would like to know who his relatives are and where they can be found. Col. Geary, afterwards Major Gen. Geary, was at the beginning of the war colonel of Mr. Campbell's regi ment. Very respectfully, Roy Burnett. Address Haines Mission, Porcupine City, Alaska. "Col. Geary" is evidently intended for Gary. HIS BROIITEIl FOUND. By the publication in the State of Sunday of a letter received from far away Alaska by Gov. McSweeney, a brother of the man concerning whom inquiries were being made, has been found. It proves tobe tho pastor of the St. John's Methodist Church of An derson, as the following letter shows: To the Editor of the State: Tho letter from Mr. Roy Burnett of Alaska to Gov. McSweeney, inquiring concerning the relatives of Richard S. Campbell, refers to my brother. He connected himself with the Manning Guards, Clarendon county, (Brown planning captain), and his company, with others, formed the old Hampton Legion. Ho was among the iirst to en ter the Guards, and fonght to the end of the war, closing up under Gen. Mart Gary in a mounted regiment. He was a brave and cheerful defender of his country, having been in almost a score of battles and skirmishes and only once wounded. I have written Mr. Burnett giving the facts. Very truly, J.< B. Campbell. Anderson, S. C, Jan. 21,1901. He Was up fo the Limit. A young society lady in this city is telling a story of a very little newsboy who so appreciated her kindness to him at the newsboy's Thanksgiving dinner that he went to the extent of great Buffering for her sake. At least she thinks it was appreciation, but others have doubts. At all events, the young woman, who, with a number of others, was engaged in serving the boys, no ticed this little boy way off at one end of the table. Many of the larger fel lows were already bard at work on the various good things, but this little fel low hod evidently been neglected. Clearly horo was a case of urgent charity, so the amateur waitress Hew to his side, and for an hour she saw to it that he did not lack for anything. Plate after plate of turkey was literally showered upon him. Finally, as she set another piece of plum pudding in front of him, he rolled his eyes meekly toward her and said, in muffled tones : "Well, l. .}s, I kin chew, but I can't swallow no more."?New York Sun. mm * mm ? Oriental Laborers to Colonize Mexico. San Francisco, Jan. 18.?Tho Call saye: Back of a steamship company recent ly organized in this city with a capital of $12,500,000, is a plan to colonize Mexico with Oriental laborers. The promoters of the scheme, it is assorted, have obtained from the government of Mexico a vast concession of fishing privileges and lands adjacent to the fishing grounds. They propose to bring tho Chinese to Mexico in tho canneries and warehouses along tho Mexican coast. A circular has been >"-S?rd in the Chinese langnage stating that "the Pacific charter company pro poses on behalf of the Mexican govern ment to encourage Chinese ns well as Europeans to come to Mexico where they will have special privilege." Tho circular adds there is plenty of room for a million fishermen and invites Chinese uierchauts to subscribe to tho capital stock of the company which it says will make * contract with Mexico and China to admit free of duty all Chinese necessaries/ such as tea, rice, etc. STATE NEWS. ? Smallpox is raging at Beaufort. ? A negro was lynched for tho usual crime in Barnwell county the other day. ? The mayor of Union recently sent a chicken*thief to the chaingang 120 days. ? SpcuUtuburg county had but four Clerks of Court during the whole of the 10th century. ? The annual spring mooting of the State Agricultural aad Mechanical society will be held on February 0, in Columbia. ? Tho new prison building in the penitentiary is said to be one of the best in the South. It is built of gran ite and has 280 colls. ? Two girls, Leonora and Flora Daniels, of Columbia, were . hit by a shifting engine. Miss Leonora was killed, being run over by the engine. ? EliDbas Dawk?nA- ? negro promi nent in the religious and social circles of his race, is in jail at Gaffnoy for murder. He threw kerosene oil on his wife and set her a?re. ? Sumter is to have a training school for nurses. A charter has been applied for and the leading pbysicians'of Sum ter will lecture to the students. The I institution will start about February 1. ? Tho Edgefield papers are fixing things for 1002. They havo agreed that Hon. W. J. Talbert shall bo elect ed Governor, and that Solicitor J. Wil liam Thurmond shall succeed him in Congress. ? The town of Little Mountain is partly in Newberry aud partly in Lex ington county. An election has been ordered tor the Slst inst. to determine whether tho Lexington part shall be annexed to Newberry county. ? Deputy Sheriff Coleman, of Salu da, was sent to Savannah last Wednes day to get a murderer under arrest there. He got helplessly drunk and was robbed of $40, and his handcuffs. Ho did not know where ho had been or what he had seen. ? Tho laws of tho State are stringent against prizo fighting. Some sports in Cincinnati recently sent Governor Mc Sweeney this message: "Please wire us whether you will allow Jeffries and Ruhlin to fight a limited number of rounds in your State in case tho fight is prevented hero." The response was: "Under no circumstances would Jeffries and Ruhlin be allowed to fight iu thl* State." ? At Spartanburg last Friday morn ing at 2 o'clock Wofford Fitting School was destroyed by fire. There were 40 students in the building nil escaping uninjured. Tbo building and contents were valued At $15,000; insured for $5, 000. The fire was caused by coals from the grate falling on tho floor. The structure will be rebuilt immediately. No suspension of work will be neces sitated. . ? The one hundredth anniversary of the appointment of John Marshall to the Chief Justiceship of the United States, will bo celebrated by the law yeracf South Carolina in Columbia on February 4, 1001. Judge_CharlesJH. Simonton will deliver the address and an elaborate banquet will bo served. An executive committee has been ap pointed, consisting of prominent law yers from all over the State to have charge of the arrangements. ? Several members of the South Carolina delegation in Congress had a hearing the other day before the House committee on war claims for a settle ment of the account between tho Unit ed States and South Carolina, growing out of war of 1812, and tho Florida wars. It is said that no action was taken by the committee. The amount involved in the claim is $300,002. Tho delegation are working, and hope to get a settlement of the matter during this session. It is thought to be doubt ful, however, if tho measure will be gotten through the House owing to the limited time of tho session remaining. ? The Superintendent of tho State Hospital for tho Insane gives tho fol lowing figures in his reports : There Wf.ro remaining in the hospital Dec. .31, 1809,1,002 patients?white 595, colored 407 and 448?whito 242, colored 300 ?were admitted during the year. Tho total number under treatment was 1,401, while the average daily popula tion was 1,043. There were discharged during tho year 418 patients, and the number remaining Dec. 31, 1900, was 1,023. Tho annual cost per capita ib for this year $103.07. Compared with other States the expenses are among the lowest of any institution for the insane. ? E. P. Wyntt, a well to do citizen of Gr3ers, killed himself last Thurs day. Three years ago Mr. Wyatt was paralyzed. Since then ho has suffered greatly, although able to walk about. Recently he has been in low spirits, but no suspicion was entertained that he would take his life. He was fifty years old, unmarried, and lived with his mother. At noon Thursday he took hisshotgunand went to his ?table, a short distance from the residence. He entered the building, shut, the door and in a few seconds his mother, who wns standing on tho piazza watching him, heard the report of a gun. She run to the stable and found him in tho --.:?,. 7t? i_l_; ?.ou ?,? uvniu. tiu uuu I - dently placed the muzzle of tho gun iust under his right ear, as all the up per aud back park of his head waa torn oft", leaving only a part in front of his ears. His brains were splashed around ou the walla aud floor of the Btablo and death must have been al most inntantfinrouct. vKNKKAL NfcWS ITEMS. ? A negro rapist was burned at tho stake in Leavenworth, Kansas, last week. ? It will ho necessary to recruit about 30,000 new troops for the Philip pines before July 1st. ? It is now estimated that tho iu deuinitfes that will be asked of China wil[ amount to $000,000,000. ? Tho $10,000,000 cigar trust, a kid of tho tobacco trust, wili probably increase tho number of pipe smokers. ?: Galveston has expended two and a quarter millions or dollars in now buildings since the storm in Septem ber. ? A negro has boon lynched in Ocaln, Fla., for wrecking the Plant System fast train near Dunnell. Tho mob took the negro from tho officers. ? In Atlanta recently a man ottered for a building as much money as would be represented by siiver dollars set on edge to cover tho roof but tho pri?e was refused. ? John D. Kockfeller, Jr., son of tho Standard Oil magnate, has subscribed $230,000 for the founding of a New York institution of learning for poor boys and girls. ? Including the national capital there are 45 towns and cities bearing tho name of Washington, and Washington, Ga., has the distinction of being tho first of them all. ? Southeastern Texas is excited over tho opening, near Beaumont, of an oil well spouting 100 feet high and pro ducing 10,000 barrels of petroleum in twenty-four hours. ? J. Ogden Armour, who is now head of tho Armour business interests, wiii be only 37 years old next month, but he was connected with tho late P. D. Armour for 11 yenrs. ? The "first bnby of tho century," so far reported, was born in Cleveland, Ohio, at 12.01 January 1. It was a boy, and they have called tho poor Iit'.fc fellow John Century Thomson. ? Charles Steinbrink, who was con victed at St. John, Knu., on forty-nint counts of soiling Whiskey in violation o*f tho prohibitory law, was lined $4,U0C and sentenced to forty-nine months in jail. ri ? Capt. S. S. Brown, of Pittsburg, n civil war veteran, has given $500 to tho fund being raised lor tho enter tainment of tho Confederate veterans at tho coming reunion in Memphis, Tonn. ? J. E. Thompson, a prominent mer chant of "Fairburn,-G a., has been ar rested on a charge of arson?setting fire to his own store and burning it to gether with three other on tho night of December 31st. U . U'i uHfHi ? In a voluntary and amicable agree ment of separation .between Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Merritt, of Arthur, 111., the 5-year-old baby was turned over to the husband in exchange for a Shetland pony and a Jersey cow. ? Both Arknnsas and Mississippi, which aro to have new State Houses, to cost about $1,000,000 each, have, by n singular coincidence, selected as the sites for the buildings those formerly occupied by penitentiaries.) -a$ Ah ? An enthusiastic Woman's ^Christ ian Temperance Union in ono of th<j smaller towns of Georgia, finding a few moments in which to think of other subjects than that of liquor, passed resolutions denunciatory of kissing. > ? Grover Allen, known as tho boy giant and probably the largest boy of his age in the country, died in Ander son, Ind., the other day. He was eight years and ono month old, stood 4 feet 10 inches high and weighed 251 pounds. ? A suit for $50 damages, which had been in court at Portage, Wis., tor more than two years, and tho costs for which had run into the thousands, was cided the other day by the award of $20. The participants had nearly bank rupted themselves. ? Felix N. Cobb, a politician and lawyer of Carrollton, Ga., committed suicide in Atlanta Wednesday night. Ho left a letter to his parents saying domestic troubles was tho cause of his act. Cobb was tho candidate of the Populists for attorney general of Geor gia in the last election. _ ? The Atlanta NewsVrecommends that everyone drink more"wnter. That may be very good advice for Atlanta but it won't go in South Carolina. ?The ery hero is to drink more dispensary whiskey so that the school children can be better educated from the profits.? Ai ken Journal and ficview. ? Considering the fact that the average man only has use for live or six hundred words, there seems to ho already an over-supply. But there is greatactivity in the dictionary-making industry. Tho new Webster will con tain 25,000 words not found in the most recent editions of that work, and an even greater number of verbal novel ties will see tho light "of print in the massive Oxford Dictionary, which has long been under way'. ? To-day tho stars visible from the first to the thirteenth magnitude ag gregate to about 43.000,000 of which nearly $10,000.000 have been photo graphed. In the most powerful tob scopescven the fifteenth magnitud-, perhaps 100,000,000 stars are anspected. but knowledge concerning them is un certain. In the Milky Way alone theio aro some 10,000 stars, separated by vast distances. To the oye at the telescope the sky seems no longer dotted with constellations, but powdered with gold dust. 1 Portman News. It is said that in largo cities whoro tho reporter is required to provido his daily melange of news, that when from somo circumstance ho is unable to do so, his chief says: "then make it." Tho reporter, to Becuro the continuance ?~?f his position, seeing perhaps two bootblacks in a friendly Rpar, writes up the: "Severe Scuffle of Two Street Gamins.?Work for Homo MisBion Along tho Degraded Streets? Tho report is highly colored. Tufts of hair, broken teeth, and toe nails scatter I through the narrative; an excited crowd watch the scandalous affray and block the street. A policeman arrests oue of the gamins and is himself tram pled by tho mob! Next day tho peo ple say: where was the fight? where was tho crowd? we did not see it. Tho inference is, they were behind their counters or back in t,h??ir offices; and they don't bother about it, they sim ply missed seeing what others saw; but the infallibility of tho report is never doubted. Such reports aro numerous. Tho scenes aro continually being enacted, every hour has its affray. There are ten thousand to ton who never saw ono of them: tho ten saw the friendly spar of tho boys; but a city has no time to look at such nonsense; it pushes its heavy human machinery along, and tho ten, if they give tho af fair a thought, eay: that must have happened after wo saw it. There is no doubt cast upon tho emissary of the news. The columns of metropolitan papers are pretty well filled with this exciting education every day. No one takes time to investigate; and vice? from the report of the sensational re porter?is so common that people ignore it ns news, but expect it in their paper as evidence of tho strenuous trend of tho metropolis. On the con , trary, when news reaches tho County . nowspapor from a correspondent in > tho country, tho report may bo regard ed as true. In a section where there are no saloons, no distilleries, and , whiskey is as scarco aa hen's teeth, tho , author of tho report rellects before he ! sends in news of tho vicious transac tion lest tho readers of his County should regard tho account as over drawn; and so careful is ho of veracity , that if auecdoto is not found ho will not nnd never from his County editor is required to "make news." Tho word, news, it is supposed had its derivation from tho initial letters of North, East, West, South, such letters being cap tions for English papers expressing re ports coming from thoso points of tho compass. Finally the N. E. W. S. bc eamo a word denoting what wo under ; stand it to be to-day. Tho writer remembers n.hen in a . large city in the North there was a blockade of ten lines of street cars, tho crowd being so dense on their way to and in the sections of streets whoro a phantom buggy had been passing for days. The crowd poured in from hun 1 dred8 of surrounding miles. Tho s phantom buggy passed on a certain place at a certain hour every day, passed, repassed, nnd disappeared in tho sight of tho bewildered crowd. Dashing buggicb and carriages, tho i eyes of whose horses or drivers were closed?as all Wore not permitted to ' see tho spectre?would plunge into tho 1 phantom, not knowing it was there: women and men would scream, and try io eenarato the colliding vehicles when, lo! one of tho buggies was the phantom and tho others run through it i as through thin air, tho crowd falling back fainting and horror-stricken. For a week this was going on; tho pa pers were full of it column after col umn; the writer lived in tho suburbs, and was distressed at not yet having seen the npparation. A gentleman relative in tho house was requested to ! act as guide. He, however, kindly re fused, saying tho crowds would simply trample his protege to death. After a ' week the sensation died down, the bug gy censed parsing. Tho gentleman in tho house?who was a newspaper man connected with oue of tho big dailies ?blew tho buggy to atoms by explain ing that it was a hoax originated by tho merchantsand newspapers to draw a crowd which should advance tho commercial interests of tho city. Such is a specimen of journalistic enterprise in a large city. News fro"i Portman, that is sad as it is true, is that Mr. George Busby, who, in last, week's *<jbuo of the Intei.liobn CEit was i Mentioned as so humanely in terfering in tho Clark-Davis all'ray at Asbury, has himself, on tho evening of tho 10th inst., at tho power house at Portman, been so severely injured that a few hours later his foot from above the ankle had been amputated. Mr. Busby was assisting in conveying heavy machinery for tho new generator into the power house, when uy some sad oversight, a bed plate on the ton of the dray fell, and imprisoned his foot beneath a weight of between 0,000 and 7,000 pounds, Under tho Impulse of a miraculous feat he endeavored to extri cate. Iiis foot from beneath this weight when he tore the Mesh down over the i us top, and broke into splinters tho hone and joint. Dr. Heller, of the Fork, attended temporarily. Dr. Orr from a telephone message sent at onco Doctors Gray and Honry from Ander son to attend to the sufferer. About 11 o'clock that night amputation was found necessary. The man's wife and a largo family are in great pecuniary need. Miss Annie Barton is visiting Mrs. DoWit Paltrier in Anderson. Miss Eloise Milford is engaged in Mr. D. P. Sloan's Manufactory, Ander son. Mr. and Mrs. Eubanks, of Illinois, bavo been visiting with.Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Milford of Broyles. Miss Gelestino Paterson, of Pendle* ton, visited friends in Portman Sun day. Miss Leila Buchanan and brother. Mr. K. A. Buchanan, from Ant tin, and i Mr. Sylvester Elrod. of Denver, were ' guests of tho Hotel Sunday. I Mr. William Miller, ?.?f. Anderson.!! few days ago visited Mr. and Mrs. Busby. "The children said he "played tricks on Wm. F. Leo's violin." which means, according to report, that Mr. Miller is a musician, and would he gladly heard in his favorite art. The Ilev. Mr. Bailey promises to give f-reat satisfaction ! Iiis new ' ungrega tion at Asbury. 11. Ii. Ij.