University of South Carolina Libraries
A RE^x OF POPULAR EVENTS. JOHN C. BAILEY, PRO'K. ^KKKNVILLK SOUTH CAROLINA, DECEMBER R. 1 WO. ~~ '''VOL. XVi?- N**.' Notice FBfriwsto'WBrsR bate Jadge for OfMorltle Connty, for a final discharge m Administrator of the Estate of - a* WILLIAM HARBI80N, Ad'or. November 27th, 1889. 28-4 , ..... ...?? l. ? . Notice X8 hereby given to all whom It may eoaeern I that I will apply to 8. J. Doatbit, Pro* bate Judge of Greenville County, on the 28<* daw of Dwewmbwr nwxt, for a final discharge as . Administrator of the Estate of WILLIAM ROBERTS, deceased. J. B. ROBERTS, Ad'or. November 25th, 18>9. 2M Notice. , .A LL persons indebted ta the kstat* of . JV ALEXANDER NORTON, decease.!, by Note or otherwise, amy sere Costs by calling on Um Bnbseriber, or Msslay A Well#, Attorr.iy; for the Estate, oa or bqfar* <i? SStfi 4/ Dcc*wtb*r imtant, as all NeUs naeaMUiil by that time, la mm* way, will be put In tuit. .|kla 27th Dte?ab?r, 1809. D-1 A.B.8TBPHII*8,A1?L ? 11 > 1 nil. I ;/i Notice ALL persons having claims against the Kstata of DAVID BLYTHR, dsoeased, arc requested to present them to me properly attested, for payment, and persons In debted to said Estate are notified that they mast make neyrasnt at oaee an the Estate moat be settled op at the earliest day. A. BLYTHR, Administrator. Nov 24 *! > Notice 7 v TS hereby given to all whom it may conX earn, that I will apply to 8, J. Douthit, Probate Judge of OrconrlUe Oonnty, mi the 23rd day 0/ Drctmbrr sunt, tofl Final Dfsoharge as Administrator of the Estate ot ANN K. YEARGTN, deceased. JAMKS o. YEAROIN, Adm'or. Nov. 28d, 1869. 2*7-4 Notice "T 8 hereby given to all whom It may ooncarn, I that 1 will apply to 8. S. Douthit, Probata Judge of Greenville County, for a final discharge as Administrator of the Betate of TAB1TIIA D. CURTI8, deceased, oa <A? 2?r* dmw of Dooomier aoxl, I B. 8. 0 BITTEN DEN, Ad'or. November 20th, 1669. 27-4* ' fVNotice ? ma m ? wuuui u mwjr wnocru, bate Judge or (Jreeh, (nJI^ J. Doutblt, Prodi.ohnrge asExecator of the Batata* ?f harI MET 8. OTTS, d?ieeuacd, on S0(A <?,<>* December noxt. DA NIB L 4i. November 18th, 1880. 1 Notice 18 beveb? gives to ell whom 1t may concern, thet X will epply to fi. J. Doathtt, Probete Judge of droeuvlllo County, for e final discharge ee Admlsleiretor rfe home nee, of the Katate or MARTIN OTTS, deeeeted, oh the 80(A daw of Doeembor nonet. DANIBL FOWLER, Executor do bonfr won. November 18tb, 1800. 27-4 Notice IS hereby given to ell whom it may concern, that I will apply to S. J. Douthit, Probate Judge of Greenville County, for a Final Discharge at Exeeutrix of the Katetnt of NATHAN WADDELL. deceased, end LEMUEL J. WADDELL, deceased, on the 17 th day of December next* RHODE WADDELL, Executrix. November 16tb, 1868. Nov 17 ? | 1 Notice TS hereby given to Joseph Wynn, Elix* Smith end her husband, John R. Smith, end ell others whom It may eon sere, that I will apply to S. J. Douthit, Probate Judge of Greenville County, for a Final Settlement of the Estate of HENRIETTA BENSON, deceased, and my discharge ae Kxeeutor, on the lAlfc day of IVcombor next. JAMES M. BENSON, Exeeator. November 11,1668. t6 f'c.i I Notice i t T8 hereby given to G. W. CoIUd\ William I I X Hicksen and hie wife, M. A. Hlckson, ( f and all others whom It may eonecrn, that I will apply to S. J. Douthit, Probata Judge 1 of Greenville County, for a Final Bottle- 7 * * - h gm iMwi?vi nn. iHAKl A* BOLL* I 1ng, dtcmnd, md aay discharge m Kinutria of aoid Betato, ? the 14th day of Do c cerober ntil f L. 0. BOLLINO, Executrix. f Noyember 18, 1*69. 88 4 Hotice" 1' ? IS hereby given to all whom It amy eon ? oera, that I will apply to & J. DonlbU. 0 Frobete Judge of Greenville Coonly, lor a * Final Diaoherge aa Administrator of the Re n tata of FURRY BALDWIN, deceased, ?w I ;SX1f;.it-?iaK"?fclhafi will praaealthem am MidTday at the oflloa of a ssttMfca*'-?? D. a BKinnR1, Administrator. P I 2fov.88d.18M. 87-4 f< I ? * C Hotice hi rhavoby glvaa to aU wboaa H may ?oa . , ?uu>n *1 COODtj, for * Ih Final DtMbMfv w A<*n?lo4itratof of Ui? B?s U UU of. MARY T. ttARRBTf, doooaaod, on cl iho 11th <Uf of D?orohor fa DAVID M. PEDES. AAodaMnlor. S IfoiwWr II, IMf. I< " ' ' I I I , I I <1 I V ' BE MILL POND ^ (01H AWrmtT8VSTSM- 2 ^ UPPMKD lo^nanH^c* ? > *u?t p oreh?? $foOi j, tk H 0*mpb#ll,Dr. fli. J. BovMol, DooM <??. "inM. UtCrtAy & Son, W. Q. trtoflo, Mkm tol B. Hyan. ? No? 17 M II 8^ 4 ' fr. ii t ' "fa* h ^ ^ * ? I, ? ^ F* edi?^N?S, ^ S sditM*. ^ SasBOBiPTio* T*o Dollars j> onnumj H ADT?mTi?B*?irt? inrted ttiv. _ZT1_ of j( one dollar per square of twalr* V. ^ a (this sited type) or less for the firiS^^' e< fifty nbU each for the secondand thin i_.? ' tlons, and twenty-fire oanta lot nubie^-,,* insertion*. Yearly contracts wfi ha made. pi All adrartlaamauU moat hare the nam bet rv of Inacrtlons marked on them, or'hey will be K inserted till ordered oat, and chared for. Unlees ordered otherwise, AdreUlaoinento 81 will larartably be "displayed." :J Obituary notice*, and all matter* luring to 1 * tba benefit of any oae, are regaidad aa * Advertisement*. ^ g\ _H 1'.Ml II., 1?. ,J_ ,1 *|g, U Daughter* of Toil. C or OrAtr?ua? *. romrao*. \ O, pal* with want and atill deapair, U And faint with hastening other*'gain, tl Whose finely fibred natures bear Tho double enree of work and pain ; I Whose days are long with toil unpaid, C it.ii .k?i t. ? ?-- -?? ?- - ?hv. -iivi * ?v uivii %uwj uiwwunijj wbufc f j Whose nights irt short for rut delayed, ] And long for stealth y fears to hannt? j To whom my lady, hearing faint The instaoaa muffled ory of need. Grants, throngh soma alms dispensing saint, 1 The cop of watar, cold iodaod, The while my lord, pursuing gaina Amid tha market's sordid strife, 1 With wage lass labor from your rains * Wrings out tha warns* red wins of life? t What hope for yon that better days 1 Shall climb the yet unreddeoed east? ( When famine in tha morning slay^ Why look for Joy at midday-feast f Far shines ths Good, and faintly throws A doubtful gletm throngh mist and rain ; ? But evil darkness presses olose ,* His face against lbs window-pane, ' 1 What hope for yon that mansions Ires ] Await ia tons diviner sphere. | Whoaa sapphire wails can never be . Devoured, like widows' bouses here I ^ Too close these narrow walls incline* ' This slender daylight beams too pale, j For Heaven's aTI-lovlng warmth to shine* f Or God's trnc tenderness avail. ( O brothers! ri>ui I who would falo t Some balm of baallng help apply? ( Gbaar soma one agony of pain, \ Whoaa goo<fatf*T.d*"P'iri"? cr*~ e By tangled aocUl benda'rU'rnRl'ih O, read tb? Meiwd hbUdm straight; ! Do justice first?'ova nieroy next I , [LippincolCt Magazine. . . c FOB TUB SOOTHER* ENTERPRISE. The Anderson Fair. n Messrs. Editors ? As nono of * your editorial staff wore prcsont 1' on the occasion of the Fair of the c Anderson Fanners' Association, to e' give your readers an account of ?' the same, we thought it might be lc of some in tor 081 to your many * readers, to have a short letter? jV descriptive of what a M looker-on in Venice," saw and heard on that aj occasion, which occurred on Thurs- al day and Friday, 25th and 26th ult. rn In company with several Green- a villa friends, we left home on Friday morning, and reached Anderson at 0 o'clock, without any inci- ns dent of interest. As soon as we ?l left the cars at Anderson, a stranger ini could seo that something unusual, "I was on band. All the streets lead- w< Ing to tho pnblic square, were thronged with mon, women and rj children, in holiday attiro, wendng their way in carriages. bn<wri??- ,l* iragons, on horseback "and oiT7oot. oward the square. We directed {' >ur steps toward tbe same point, md passed an enclosed wood lot to llled with horses, mules, cattle, hcep and hogs, in goodly numbers, ?. ' ,nd an interested crowd comparing . he merits of the different variety 18 ' f animals, and speculating as to .K rhioh ones woald bear off tbe P rcminms offered by the Society. *nc feetino friends nnd JHJ irices at the gate, we passed in, nd had pointed oat to us the dif- .ftm >rent varieties, with their peculiar ,er ointe of excellence. W? mxr ?me grade Ayrshire* of B. F. Irayton, and abort horns or Dor- ?n , ami of F. Nance, and Devon* of J"* Robert Adgor, which, to our eye, ot * re model* of beauty, and, in PJei ?t, superior to those of the same 2* 0 ass exhibited at our State Fair *'10 i Columbia. The Ayrshire and urhams, we believe, are regarded i superior for dairy purposes, and #PJ0 e Devon* for boot and work ^oai Atle. In the hog Una, the dies- #ft ^ r Whites were the principal vasty on exhibition. Only one ^ r sex. The Cheaters wore fine, h! ooin pared most favorably with J?*1 ose at the State Fair. After spending an hour in this it" ww proceeded to the Court 11688 [ware, which was alive with tho beet I "IflHnjNenoD in atton- j jit 1 oriM Spresent win* i^g g00(j 1 ifejftS.dbtldrwi; and really, wc , id jflBBpsk that Anderson boast- , 1 so nitoy fine looking men; and \ ftgr the handsome matrons and re fry maidens, they appeared inOfr firiend B. F. Orayton, soon pied us, looking as if we were lost > thav sea of human faces, and indly proffered his Services in : lowing ns round, which we glad- j r accepted. We ascended the J k>urt Il? nso steps, entered the oor, and what a beautiful sight ^t the eye. The whole room pa'Vled, and was decorated with < tie v,ndiworks of lovely woman. Juilts, <*>?nterpins, blankets, mats, i deques, ano the 0^,er little et:deras, which w ^ make np an < nhnto wardrobe, V exhibited n cr eat orOrcmion. YW pon6ent is at a loss to describe,. j 1 irticlcs?as he beinir an old hat ell? I ior is not presumed^to know their names, &c. There were several iketthes in oil, crayon and pencil, rerv wcx-tby of attention, and we I lotioed r pencil sketch by Miss Lelio Mono, of yon r City, which we bought very fine. The jellies, jams, ireserves, et id omne genus, were an tali zing to the eye, and we doubt lot woulu have been exceedingly grateful to Ate palate. One side of be room w? appropriated to tho samples of the cereals,fltrjr and coton. Here we felt at home. The competition here was great. Wo loticcd among the articlei on exhibition, a sack of fionr, me-half jusbel of white wheat, anda sample of ginned cotton, entecd by I. P. Moore, Esq., of youi City. : Wo are informed that Mr. VIoore < bore off the premium on wheat ind ginned cotton. Tho sanples it wheat, corn, barley and oats, were very fine?also the pined sotton and fionr. The cars 6 corn were huge?the samples of elieat iplendid?same of the oat and larley, while tho stalks of otton ] roro magutflecut, uud the nt in ' irntmrfinn TT??? * ? -? ?, wuD w? ioua me i sfficient Secretary of the Sciety, 1 ramoe A. Hoyt, Esq., as bay as t i bee, entering and markig the I arions articles on cxhibitio, with | . pleasant word for everyone.? c le is the right man in tv right t lace. Tho room was densely 1 rowded, whilo every onr appear- t d to be in tho best of htmor, and ^ njoying themselves flnsy. After e >oking around to onr *ati6faction, ( e descended to the Jourt Yard, t id inspected the different vario* ? es of poultry in c>op8 arranged r ound ono side the building; t so, a large number of agricultu- c ,1 implements. Wo here noticed n little machine, which reminded v i of the old-lkahioned tread mill y rasher, and was wondering what e it could bo put to, when wo served a gentleman approachg leading a dog, which mounted t >on the machine, and away it t jnt round and round, with great pidity. It was a dog oAum.? e nave ratbor a alight fancy for {: tter and butter milk, and also tj e a dog in his proper place, but |6 our notion, his proper piece is g( *r, far away," from a churn, ? ile cream is being converted in- pi butter and butter milk; at any Je o, we do not fancy the position gthe dog during the operation of lrning with this machine. It m ather closer thai! suitb our taste. ni tome one now announced that the y( wing match would take place, pi I the exhibition of plows, some [ ( ?.y Xfttf'Wi&a; m I soon reached the ground so- t0| ed for the purpose. In a few fu totes (he plowing commenced, ir townsman, B. F. Stairley, |^? jrod his yoke of fine oxen, and .,r X Smith the Watt Plow, both gr[ rhich, we lear^ carried off the a.. Ultima ottered for the best joke Vu' xeo end the best turning plow. ^ plowing over, we returned to tre square, when tho exhibition of t|1( we commenced?and it was yc ndid. The one, two and three jJ0 r old colts were as fine as wo at the State Fair?the matched single horses not so fine.? nm young friend, Hex! M. Perry, an_ i off the- blue ribbon for the single harness horse open to world. Wo folt prond for hna inville?the best single bar- j8te horse, the best yoke oxen, tho dca plow, Ibo beet white wheat, ren J m ^ILL) ' 1 M 1 11 Jl. ind tho boet ginned cotton. A ' premium in each case. It was now 2 o'clock, and the < ong whietle of the locomotive i earned us, that in half an honr, < are must bo aboard the train ; so i biQ<\vr) n. ndicn to our Anderson ] friends, were soon on onr way I home. S .. I We had nearly fijrgotton to i mention ihe fine music finished < by the Anderson Brass Band, lad i by onr former worthy fellow-citi- i sen, Thomas Wildinan. They dis conreed ctfeolTcnt music, which ad ded to the success of the Fair. It was a success bovond a donbt. and ' the originators and getters up of the enterprise, may well and truly i congratulate themselves, for they i received the plaudits from every one, of well done. The great curiosity of the Fair, was a sucking i calf, of Col. J. B. E. Sloan, seventeen months old, giving from halfgallon to three quarts of milk per day. Wo had read of such a thing, out never before witnessed it. V-iUueh for the Anderson Farmers i? a?. wa8 a decided snccms, ?nd c<a.-, ,, moet favorably with the State Fot.,. ?the number 1 and excellence oftl.it ...,;olcB on , exhibition; and with a fewfiiv..<yjltg ] which suggested themselves to ou. , mind as wo iourneyed home, we will done with this letter. Why, Messrs. Editors, can not our County and City have a Fair next year, equal in ail respects, if not superior, to tliat at Audersor. ? Arc we behind onr sister Counties in the spirit and enterprise of the age? Have we not in our County as successful planters and stock i raisers as thoy ? And are not our < ladies as skillful with the needle, I and in all thoso qualities which go < to make up gooa honsowifory, us 1 those of any section of the State or ] sf tho world? Wo know from I secular demonstration, that they i ?rc as beautiful and intelligent as 1 my ladies in the word. It is not ! .heir fault; let the men start the < jntorprise, and my word for it, the 1 ladies will do their part, and it will bo well done. We must have 1 , *. - * i air iicaw year. 11 will not do 1 :o be behind Abbeville and Ander- f, ion, or any other County of the 1 State. Agitate the matter in your ( sapor. Call the attention of every a >ne to the importance of the en- i erprisc, and let us have a Fair lext year, that will give our Conn- \ y and City a reputation abroad, c vhich will convince the most t kcptical that Greenville is the 1 ^ueen City o' the Mountains, and t he County the garden spot of r iouth Carolina. The cost will be 1< lothing, for orery dollar that ono ii nerchant contributed, they will re- h eivo ten fold. Wo ought to have h , Fair. Wo can have one, and t< ire must hava one. What say ti ou f VISITOR. 01 M?kt- TT A Wonderful Story. h It is 6aid that in the tombs oi ^ he Necropolis of ancient Egypt IT wo kinds of mummioe have been ound. Ono is incomplete?that " ) to say, all organs necessary to P fe have been separatod from iiom ; the other, on tho contrary, ^ i quite complete. Having ob- n .Fira't ?!,! ~ O " ?.?? V.J JO, a oncuigfl CUCmiBt, " >r. Grusselbach, who has the re- ?' station of being both great and arned, Professor at the Univer- ^ ty of Upsal, has come to tho con- th nsion that the Egyptian mmn- U1 ic8 are not all, as has beeu said *? id believed for some thousands ot ?ars, bodies embalmed by ifoy occss of preservation whatever; it tlicy are really tho bodios of ? * * - .. WW liiw iiUO UV/V/tl IUU" "* entarily suspended, with the in- 9? ntion of restoring them at some 1 tnre timo, only the secret of a" eservation has boon lost. Pro- P^1 180r Grusselbach adduces many ra oofs in support of his idea; J uvucio, 1110 experiments u" ring tho last ten years, which, J says, have always proved snc- ^ ?ful. lie took a snake and iated it so as to benumb it as >ngh it had been carved in mari, and it was so brittle that, had *>" allowed it to fall, it wonld have ?"' ikon into fragments. In this { te be kept it for several years, p0. ! then restored it to lifo, by inkling it with a stimulating toc d, the composition of whioh is secret, > or fifteen years the ^ ke has been undergoing an exnee composed of suecessive wri ths and resurrections, appa- I tly without sustaining any fun barm. Tho Professor is reported to have sent a petition to bis Government, requesting that a crimlual who has been condemned to death may be given to liiiri to treat In the same manner aa the snake, promising to restore Lira to life in two years. It is nndorstood that the man who undergoes this experiment is to be paraoned. Whether the Swedisn Government has accepted or rejected tho learned chemist's proposal is not known. . The Solitary Grave. A correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, writing from the Wind T? J UOH VOIIaw TM?! J- ? *?* vi ? oiicjy vii IIJU JT1R1D8) QC" Bcribca a bivouac of the soldiers stationed on that poet, and relates the following incident: At the further side ol a meadow Btood n log hut, and near it stood a solitary grave. Here, all alone, had lived an old man named Fronchy, until last May, when the Sioux murdered him. He was a queer case, and came from (Jana da, where ho has a brother living, who is wealthy. Old Frenchy, as he is called, kept no arms, and did not believe the Indians would harm him. The frontiersmen remonstrated with him, and an officer passing one day with troops, before he was killed, offorea to i?nd him a gun and some ammunition, assuring him h e would be killed ; v.,tTrenchy do clined,saying, "I have u%ver done them any harm, why should the Indians wish to hurt me ?" In the East Frenchv would have been called a Quaker, but ont here everybody called him a crazy-beaded old fool. One day last May,while ho was planting potatoes, a party of Sioux rushed down from the hills upon him, and after shooting liim through the body, stnek a pick through his temples, so the point itnck in the ground, and so left liim, after stripping off his clothes. Major Baldwin, with a party of jitizens from South Pass, found liim next day and buried him. His real name wns T.? Pnm , 10 persistently claimed that his 'atlier bad served as a brigadier general under Napoleon, and that le had great relatives in Franco. Jld Frenchy's house was a curious tructurc, and worthy of a sketch n Harper. Near where he lived the timber ras very largo, and as tho poor Id man had no horses and no one o help him, ho had to cut the thick ogs in short piecos so as to be able o drag and lift them. With a opo he had hauled some of these og8 moro than a mile, and it was ncredibio to see what heavy ones o had lifted on his house, and ow nicely lie had joined the ends jgethcr, it taking two and somemcs three lengths to reach along ne side of the building. He haa iade an old-fashionod shavingoree, and with a rusty shavingnifo had hewed down poles and iade chairs, tables and bunks, nside he bad an extra bed nicely tted up; and to sleep licre and artake of whatovor be lmd to oat ? his cabin, all white men and In miit) wore welcome, lie never ifused to divide what he had with hoever came, and was the friend r all alike. I Savage, indeed, mnst have been i e nature, and hard the hearts, of ' oee who, in cold blood, conld ' nrder snch a poor old man. We < It, as we looked at his lonely i ave, that had we his mnrderers ] onr power they soon shotild pay < e forfeit of their crime; but me frontiersmen seem to have . ?iy maimu jawi rrencny's } se, for on a log near the door of b cabin is nailed an Indian scalp, d underneath, on a littlo bare ' ace, are written three words in ' de letters, that, notwithstanding ' a misspelling, have cansed more sn one heart to feel dad of thoir ^ itire. They are: " *Venjenoe for a enchy.w ii They must have a strong pcniitiary at Salt Lake. A tew days co a gentle zephyr took the root ? 3u*day horse-racing is very w pillar in Texas among tlie freed- tj n, and in Paris among the arisracy. cl Chore are nearly 200 persons in icago engaged in journalism, or ^ ting for the press in someway, q )carer than life?Fashionable bl erale. pr Audubon and Daniel Boone. In the recently published " Life of Audubon " is*an account of an interview with Daniel Boone, the Kentucky pioneer, at Frankfort, in that State. " While at the town of Frankfort (about the year 1812). Audnbon, had an opportunity of seeing the celebrated Daniel Boone " barking ^uirrels," or, in a less technical phrase, driving them out1 of their places by firing into the bark of the irCo immediately beside the position tliey crouch into. Audubon went out with Boono to see the sport, and writes: "Wo walked out together, ,and followed the rocky margins of the Kentucky river until wc reached a piece of flat land thickly covered with black walnuts, oaks and hickories. As the mast was a good ono that year, the squirrels were seen gamboling on every treo around us. My companion, a stout, halo, athletic man, dressed in a homespun hunting shirt, barelegged and moccasined, carried a long and heavy rifle, which, aa ho was loading it, he said had proved efficient in all his undertakings, and which he hoped would not tail on this occasion, as ho felt prond to show mc his skill. The gun was willfid. tllfl rMMV^Ai- mancBi-Ail J UV ?? % V* liiVUOUl V/VJj HIO ball patched with six biindred thread, and the charge sent hotno with a hickory rod. 44 Wo moved not a 6tep from tho place, for the squirrels were so numorous that it was unnecessary to go after them. Boone pointed to one of these animals which had observed us, aud was crouched on ft branch about fifty paces distant, and bade me mark well the spot where the ball should bit. lie raised his piece gradually until tho bead (that being the name given by theKentuckians to the sight) of tho barrel was brought to a lino with tho 6pot which ho intended to hit, and lired. " I was astounded to find that the ball had hit tho piece of bark I immediately beneath the squirrel shivored it to splinters, tho concussion produced by which had killed the animal, and sent it whirling through tho air, as if it had been blowed up. 44 Tho snuffing of a candle with a ball I had an opportunity of seeing near the banks of Green river, not far from a largo pigeon roost, to which I had previously made a visit. I heard many reports of guns during tho early part of a dark night, an<f knowing them to he those ot rifles, I went towards the spot to ascertain the cause. On , reaehinw nlono T ?1 1 Q x/b M. woo >\ CIU<MI)CU by a dozen of tall, stout men, who told ine they wore exercising for the purpose of enabling them to | shoot under night at the reflected , light from the oye of a deer or a j wolf by torchlight. " At a distance of fifty paces stood a lighted candle, badly dis ( tingnished in tho darkness. One , man was placed within a few yards \ of it, to watch the ejects ot tho \ shots, as well as to light the can- i die, should it chance to go ont, or \ repair it should the shot cut it ' across. ; " Each marksman shot in his ( tnrn. Some never hit eithor the ( innffor the candle. One of them, who was particularly expert, was c rory fortunate, and snuffed tho c jandle threo times out of soven, c whilst all the other shots either t 3ut out tho candle, or cut it immeliately under tho light. < f ii IgbtAll (318- O vsters?kerosene. ,, A bankrupt merchant says that lis business has boen so bad that " 10 could not pay bis debts, oven if * 10 had the money. * p " ITow doth thelittlo busy bee?" {* Jery indifferently, we should im- ^ cine, scoing how often it is found ^ i cells. j To quarrel with those who have ai high reputation for probity and tl ooanoea is to have all the world pi ike sides against us. j A A congregation at Chicago P1 ants a new preacher, and says oi mt beside* being a good preacher fl3 9 must be a man of good moral mractor. M g( Tlie Hartford Coorant claims m at " next to the ministry of the ~ hristian religion there is no noer profession than that ot the ?* ditician." ? .a !.L_i_sgaa?g^>ffli im li fr'-'-'-J The Byron Story?Bini# ! Mrs. Stowe m?y ?#< well, wo should eny, go to iHorid*, and there in some sequestered tele abide. The frequent shoving in detail of the inconsistencies*, of her story about Lord Byron arid his sister is now surpassed by the exhibitloh of its "colored, amplified inaccuracy," as a whole, which is made by a writer in the lost London Quarterly Review. The extracts from this writer's able summary are conclusive. They deal with the merits and the demerit# not only of Mrs. Stowe'a article, but of the entire controversy to which it gave rise, and contain 6ome hitherto unpublished letters from Lady Byron to Mrs Leigh?letters full of expressions of affection nnd confi uence, written at the very period when Mrs. Stowo would have tho world believe that Lady Byrog^liftd- ? ? already been cognj^atit -dfan incestuous intercourse betweon bcr husband and bis sister I The evidence introduced aside from thoso letters, is sufficient for tho vindication of the poet and that u Augusta " to whom he addressed some of the tendcrcst, purest passages of his verse ; but, oven if wo could go so far as to admit that Lady Byron ever did, after writing thoso letters,' tell Mrs.Stowe the tale which tho latter claims to have received from her, what kind of a woman must Lady Byron herself have been ? Tho writer of this article in the London Quarterly does not confine himself to proving tho spe cific charge false ; ho adduces additional proof to refute the incidental charges ol Byron'* uufeeling or ungenerous conduct towards his wife, and even carries the whr into Africa where he may have naturally enough supposed that Mrs. Stowe might bo driven by humiliation to emigrate, for the purpose of drawing a contrast between Lady Byron as sho was and the Lady Byron portrayed by Mrs. Stowe. Thus tho unsceml}' and regrettable scandal started through the world by an American woman has recoiled not only upon her own head, but on iln? lmo.i ._v UMIU VI I1IC >VIIO for tho ostensible sake of whoso memory, assailed by a mistress, sho engaged in what we trust will bo the last literary venture of its kind for tho present century. [ jYew Yo)k World. The Iolk Man.?Tho idle man is an annoyance?a nuisance. Ilo is an intruder in the busy thoroughfare of ever}' day life. He stands in our path and wb rfifist push him contemptuously aside. He is no advantage to any one. He annoys busy men. lie makes them unhappy. lie is a cipher in society. Ho may havo an incomo to support him fn idleness, of ho may ipongeon his good natured friends, lint in every caso ho is despised. Young, tnen, form habits of inlustry ; do something in this busy, vide awake world. Movo about "or tho benefit of mankind, if not "or yourself. Do not be idle. God's aw is that by the sweat of onr brow we shall earn our bread. This is a good one, and tho bread 8 sweet. Do not bo idle. Minitcs aro too precious to be squanIcred thoughtlessly. A habit in a child is at fir?k 151 . i spider's web : if neglected, it be:omes ft thread of twine ; next, ft ord or rope ; finally, a cable ; and hen who can break it ? Wk clip the following paragraph rem tho Telegraph and Mcssoner's Texas correspondence. Texas iust be a " beefy " country : It seems to bo doubted that beef (offered here at two cents a pound, n tho markets of tho towns and ities, it is not. In the country, can bo bonght for a good deal tss than two cents ft ponnd. A eef weighing from five to six linnred pounds cftn be bonght for ton pilars. The bide, horns and hoofs re worth $4. The purchaser does te butchering, for which ho is amly paid by the tallow and tripe, ny ono can see that beef costs tho urchftscr only a slight shade over le cent a pound any way you can i it, instead of two. "W hat I havo id is trjie. I would be glad to it a contract to deliver a t hound beeves on the west sido of tho rnzos at $10 a head, arcrnging 'er 500 pounds net. I will givo >0 to any man to obtain it for me.