University of South Carolina Libraries
IV r-r, -) \ * t'. j . THE E’E-Ul-EE ■I—■ ? JIOM.'V W. NOl.MBH. lidltor. THURSDAY, MAT l 1879 ... t '>s r-.-TAl,. . mr Wk are out rwipoo»lb4« iui ttie vu wo e not reapoi of our correapondai The at a. MP ' - - " ' " itVtlrol or Rcliirioo France. la Soaiti 4'aroiraa oratory. Ouc of the most remarkable religious Htwements Whiclr 1 haH r chftrctcii*(Ul tl»e . presort druiaV) 1 tf now progrewing in France. FrfniT «U wc can gather, this move ment u largely indebted for its origin - and vigorous growth to the patriotic contktions of intelligent !• rencumen that there can bo no hope for rational liberty and the permanency- of llcgubli- <*an* iuMHuTfch*, except, M Fuat Boa* « hard says, “ Through the fire of a living faith, that element so indispensable to the"life of nations;’' for, as Dr. Toc- qmvSl'rt has wisely expressed himself: Dlbpotistn may govern without fuith, but liberty cannot. Religions faith is more needed, polititally speaking, in DontocraUp republics tbati under any oilier f>rtns of goVemmfcnt. How is it possible tfrtt sccifty should escape des- Iructi m if the moral tie l<e not strength cncd in proportioh ns (die political lie is relnxeil? and what can Ire done with a people which is its own wastor, if it obey not God and eonsclchec ? ’ The two most prominent arm] rtalous propagandists of the new i^ovetnent are Paul Bouchard and Kugcnc Itcveilllmd, the former a by preacher, proprietor of extensive vineyards in the neighborhood of Beaune in Burgundy and formerly mpyot of that city; the latter, recently ordiiued a preacher, though born and educated a Catholic, has for many years identified himself prominently with the mo Jem school of materialism, and has been until recently a professed free thinker. In the mtturan of 187# Reveilland seems to have been the subject of a re markable conversion, through a boatifle vision, which appeared to him as sud denly as to St. Paul on his way to Da* mason*. Ascending one day a Protes tant pwlpk in the south of France, Re veilland gave ah' account of what had occurred to him the previous night; he spoke of n vision, of a sudden light, a baptism of grate which was vouchsafed to him. , Both these evangelists arc waging a desperate warfare against materialism on the one hand and Ultramontauism or Teulr \o’*lk«iteter; Q $SViM M and ablest statesman that France now possesses, and who, as a materialist, tells the mtittitutfc of his countrymen, “ after fhw life annihilation, when the body d es all dies.” Paul Bouchard, with terrible earnestness, thus addresses the skeptical President of the French it semblv: ‘''And when you shall have created! a nation of materialists, what will yvtw have produced? Desperate covetousness, insatiable appetites, un restrained nmbition and incessant revo* lution, arising from the conquest of the good things of this world, not by slow, persevering, honest work, but by po litical games of chance, immoral enter prises, deceits, robberies and lastly by force. • * * * \ liberty cannot exist with Ultrainon- tanism, whose principles arc doimuaiiV'Q and servitude; neither can liberty exi ist with Atheism,-whibh denies God and the future life.” This mighty contest may bd the dawn of better things ih|!t unhappy France, torn, al it fias been fot nearly a century, by anarchy and revolutions. There is much in the present moral and politb osd condition of the Gallicsn Republic both instructive and suggestive to our pnople, and we‘earnestly inviter their at*' tedtfon to the new movctoicut, Bou- ohaiVTs interrogatory to Gambctfa, and its soltttioft, seem worthy of being writ ten in fetters of gold on the walls of our Nationtl Capitol for the special edifica tion of those unscrupulous Republican loaders who lifeve so long aggrandized themselves ns propagandists of the doc. trine of 'hate, and wrtlo yet cling with* th% desperate energy of despair to those positions of plaoe and power which tficy have acquired “ by political games of chance, immoral enterprises, deceits, robberies, 1 ’ and which they seek to perpetuate “ lastly by force.’ 1 (J-Yo*! ttn> IrUh World ] * Tire climate of South Csrolhrr. scorns to be a? favorable for oratory us that of Italy fs reputed to bo for mi sie. The crop is pcrcnnL.l. Not crop* of meife rhetoririnns, but of men of thotuilit and purpow. John (’. Cnllionn was all logic —“ logic on fire, ’ us Gcp. .Shields sayg. Of pulpit orators Dr. Biker, of Charles ton, was the most eloquent we have ever heard. It U necdlesss to say anything of the renowned Dr'. Kngland, whose fame is known qu both sides of the At lantic. Of all the hidiopi in the United -States to-day Bishop Fyueli, t'.ie siwrccs- sor of Bishop England, is intelhchlally the head and front. And now South Carolina opens her cl- oquent mouth once again h» the pciWn of M. P. O’Connor, on the floor of Con-' gress, whose brilliant spccche*, when his tongue is once let loose, will make mu sical the halls of the Nationn' Legisla* lure, and recall the silver trumpets of a generation gone by. But to what purpose will this flood of eloquence be poured out? Is it to win a niche for the orator in the temple of fame or to advance the cause of God and man ? Mr. O’Connor is aa honorable gentleman. lie could not bo induced** uudor any possible circumstances, ever to stoop to anything mean or despicable, or to oppose anything that he couscien* tiously believed to be for the common good; but Mr. O'Connor, while be would do nightly service against the in- .aolent pretensions of a hereditary aris tocracy, is not, we fear, entirely free from the trammels of professional and society aristocracy, and, whilst '•the Democratic party has unquestionably won a valuable acquisition in the man, and whilst we, amongst others, must en joy his orations its masterly literary treats, wc cannot help regretting, at the same time, thnt be has “giverrto party what was meant for mankind.” Yet an agreeable disappointment may be in re serve for us. IMF COrOMRft EIODim. Aglinriron on (lie flnhjrct In She Country. Tlie Army Hill PiiMitn* tlic hen* ate. Waehi.notos, April26.—The Senate, soon after meeting, proceeded to the consideration of the reeolittlon rela- lating to the appointments to office by the Secretary and Sergeant-nt-Arms of the Senate. An amendment declaring that no Union soldier shall bfe removed except for cause, and that no Confede rate soldier shall take the place of any Union soldier, was defeated "by a'strict The mass dMetlqp at the Cooper Union, Now Yurk Clfyvojt Wedneaday, toexprees sympathy with Hie colored people who nra leaving Louisiana «nd M'esissfppi, to seek pew homes In the West was large In numbers, the audir; once consisting ahnoSt entirely of col ored people of both sexes. The fea tures of thS affair Were the bitterness of what was Said anifTheluslguiflcanee of what was dbne—ofjly 9234 having been doltedteir. The following liberal ly saVage resolutions were, however, adopted : ' Whereas the colored people are leaving the South by thousands ond^ are seeking new haunts In the West; whereas their Innocent fathers, nloth- eps, brotheft, Bfetefs, wives, and other relatives’add fiiendrf have been strick en down fb CoM Mood and their life less flesh been left as food for the Southern tnrkey buaftard ; whereas a tree has been made by brutal men a perpendicular delivery bed for ad in nocent pregnant wife and a mother to die on ; whereas the colored people have tolled without being compensat ed, and have been mercilessly robbed ; whereas extreme extortion has been tho policy of those who have furnished them with the needs of life ; whereas education has beep dqpied them; whereas they have not been permitted to worship God In peace; whereas they have relied on the Federal arm at Washington, and it under the con trol of professed frtnds, and found no protection and have been made to live a life of peril ; and whereas the colored refugees have horror stricken fears as to the state of things which will be true of the Sbuth, should the Federal army after 1880 be under the control of those who have affiliated with their oppressors. We approve of tHelr movement to such a new home In tho West and re solve to do all In our power to assist them, and do call upon every man, woman and child to extend them a helping hand. Tburlow Weed and others of less note, black and white, spoke. Wendell Phillips and William Lloyd Garilson sent letters, the reading of which called out the most enthusiastic ap plause. Wendell Phillips wrote : *• I am exceedingly sorry that I cannot be with you. My health is not such as to allow of it. I have no words to de scribe what I consider tho Importance of your meeting. Only two paths are open to the colored men of theboutb; one is to resist, and protect themselves against intolerable oppression by arms; the other is to leave, one-half of them, " “V”—r -~.~T^rTjr**r?7. STATK NEWS. Several mad dogs have been killed" in the vtotoUy #1 Orangeburg lately. A cat load of sb#p and cattle were shipped from Rnety-ftix to Charleston last wfek^ Collections for the benefit of tbeWal- terboro* sufferers uro being taken up in all points of the State. The Ninety-Six town Council have passed aa ordinance prohibiting the storage of guano in tbs town limits from May 16 io October L . «)i’< Dr. J. J. Boseafd, of Sumter, has been nominated for Senator by tbe Democrats to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Judge Fraser. Orescent t A raft from tbe Saltke- batchie river, with several men on it, was taken to sea across St. Helena bar and was picked up at sea and brought Into Bull rlvpr. A couple of our young Mends called <Jn a young lady one night last week, and their rirralsbip In starving each dt her out found them still sitting * hen tbe bell rung for breakfast. Miss Ella Blake, of Newberry, has ^Challenged Mrs. J. C. Gilbert, of Charleston, said to be the best female chess player In'the worhl, to contest a couplo of gam% by correepofliteuce. A negro womau of Ceotreville, Colle ton county, left four little children shut tip in her bouse, add when she returned found them all burnt to death. Such unnatural carcleesless should be brought to the notice of the proper official and measures taken to stop It, While the revenue officers were en gaged last wqpk In the destruction of a distillery near Spartanburg, the of ficers were fired upon, and Special Deputy Byron was wounded in tbe thigh. This la said to be the second attempt to assassinate revenue offlpers In that section within a week. Of thirty-eight thousaid bushels of corn ground by a Columbia mill since last August only, one thousand bush els were raised In this State. This is the way we have grown poor year af ter year until the country has just about struck bottom with strength hardly sufficient for the rebound. No people in the world ever prospered that did not raise their own supplies. Abbeville Medium : There are still a Murder Near Graalterllle. The body of Hastings Holly, an old white man, was found on tbe side of the road leading from his house to Graniteville on the l&th. Theremains were barbarously mutilated. They were found by son* of the murdered man and some friends who accompa nied them. Mr. Holly bad started for GranMevntt on'the JItfi, to attend the trial of Wiley Floyd, white, for adul tery, he being a State’s witness. Floyd's friends bad secured a postponement of the examination, but on the 17tb announced that he was ready for trial. Mr. Holly’s family, who had supposed him to be in Graniteville all the time, finding tha‘. he was missing, Instituted a search for him with the above result. -Wiley, Caroline and Jack Floyd and ■ Eliza McGudon have been arrested on ’’the recommendation of the coroner’s jury, and lodged in jail at Aiken. The evidence against them is circumstan tial, but strong, the body having been found near their house. Holly and *Viley Floyd were brothers-ln-law, the former being seventy-nine years old. party vote—26 to 31. Finally the res-, thd j r h oine anc | teach their oppressors geant-at-Arms absolute power over * - -* —»*««- removals and appointments In their respective departments was agreed to. Tho Benate passed tho army nflpro- prlatlotf bill os it came from the flotfse without amendment. Latkr.—Washikotox, April 28 —The best fnvormation obtainable dc‘ the subject of the consideration given by the President and members of the Cabinet to tho army bill Is to the effect that It will be vetoed. Tbe rrembertB of tho Administration intimate that the Cabinet Is unanlmons. In favqrtng such action,■-and that a veto message will be sent to the House to-morrow. t'rlmrM and Casnaltlcs. m. li Speaker Randall has been very par tial in the appeiutmeut of his committees in the House of Representatives, and by his counts has shown that the objections urged to him by his opjtotients were more than eleetkmebring dodges. Not that the appointments arc in themselves bid, but that they have been made throughhtcxmnabl^ partiality and preju- dice. Fife instance, hi has failed to give a single chairmanship, to the State of South Carolina. * r .. In another column will be teundAB article under the caption of “ Thor Col ored Exodus.” It gives one an Idee of the talas of Southern brutality that are daily bein« nnnufactnred for politicnl ♦tr^f ‘-'TW* 1 Sii men were burled by the cave In of a portion of the Lehigh and Wilkes- barre Colliery, Pa., Wednesday, and despite Immediato efforts to relieve them they have not yet been extri- cabfdr The et'anaehip City of Kio' De Ja neiro reported at New York, brings Information that on April 2Gtb, at 1ft p. m., in a dense ipg, she collided with the bark Volocity, (Norwegian,) from Hull for Philadelphia, U‘ ballast, sink ing her In five minutes, xjer captain and tknof her crew succeeded ju climb ing oh board the steamer by tns an chor chain, but tbe steward and • bey went down In the vessel. George Einslg, confided on Friday last of murder in the first degree for killing bis wife, committed snk'ide in his cell at York; Pa., last Sunday morning by cutting bis throat with a ^ razor and then hanging MmceH with a piece of rop* and a towel-, A-Danville, Vh., dispatch, wtiith bAs been published, gives tbe following particulars of a tragedy heretofore briefly reported r ** B. W. Palrfier,' a citizen of PHtsylvanla county, was on Wednesday kitted by Dr. Craighead Cabtll. a young physician and nephew of the Hon. Ueo. O. Cabell, who repre sents this district In Congress. Cabell and Phlmer were returning on horse back from Pittsylvania Circuit Court, ut Chatham, to their homes neat Cat- lands, and both were more or lees un der the influeoce of liquor. While rid ing together ou the road they got into a dispute about something, which "fed to blows, when Cabell drew his pistol and shot Palmer through tbe head. The latter reeled and fell from his horse la the road mortally wounded. Cabell then, with the exclamation, * 0 my God! what have l done?’ dis mounted and rendered Palmer all tbe aaeietaace la hie power. Two men travelling along-the road fpund Cabell bathing Palmer’s bead^tbe latter be ing in a dying condition. Palmtr ling ered until lest night when he died, abd Cabell #as arrested. He la a popular young physician, well known-through out this kecfloo.” log. Leave the tyrants and bullets to till their own soil or starve, while they do nothing but wrong and rob their laborers. Without laborers theSoutb- ern acres are worth nothing." Even a Southerner will come to his senses, or If ho never had any senses, obtain some, when he Is starved. I trust the North will, as In Kansas days, organ ize and help (o open channels and con tribute means for a large emigration frotri States ruled by thieves and cut- .•thioats, who know no means of getting their bread except by robbing their neigh bdts.” Aftef regrets at his inability to be .present, William Lloyd Garrison wrote: “ The Spectacle of thousands of half- naked, empty-handed, despairing men, women and tfrilldfen fleeing as for their lives fronf one part of the country to- another, preferring to risk starvation and death by the way rather than re main were they naturally belong, is one calculated to move pitying Heaven and to awaken all that is sympathetic and generous In thk human breast. Their claims for Immediate charitable relief are eqlially Just and iinpafative. In these Southern States conspiracy and usurpation successfully bear sway, 'in all tbe late I&bel States there scarcely exists a single legitimate jftale admin istration ; for ho eTedfon has been per mitted without bein^ cop trolled thofe or iwSS by fraud, Intlmfdatfoh ahd law- lessnea^- It is clear that tbe battle of liberty adoeqPsl rights Is to be fought over again, noC in » party sense In the .ordinary use u^at term, but by the "“uprising and opnsoli^atlqg of a loyal, Jreedem-loving North, overwhelming in numbers, determined in purpose, in; vincible in action, and supreme jn pa triotism, based upon impartial justice and an alf-cmb'racing citizenship. While therefore grave, exciting and relatively important as the present “exodu* of a few thousands of colored -refugVea from Mississippi and Louis iana may be, it is only au incident of the hour, demandlngeuceor and aid fft various forms, until they havh tiitfe to ‘select their dwtlllhg-plac6s. But what of the four millions of colored people Id tbe entire South ?* Tbelr exilement Is a question, not td her seriously en tertained for a‘ mhment, either as a desirable or possible event The American government, Is btat a they ars to ha left without protection as ohsop iff tbs Eidst of wolves. Let the edict go forth, trunvftet-toogued, that there shall be « spOedyieod potto rallying cry be beard from the At lam' tic to the Pacific coast: “Libertyiaod equal rights for each, for all, and for- ever, wherever the lot of man within our broad domains.” Florid ohs ontbwird, la, has sent her flrqt watermel- .’Jjjic.:' sL.r.'ad tJ country is slowly settling down to the changed condition of things, and. with all the drawbacks of heavy frosts and hard times, the crops this year will be larger than last, and at the end of tin year the farmers will hare the money forme:ly expended In splitting rath and running fence rows, either in furn. Improvements or in their trouser*’ noekst*- Chester Bulletin: Near Orosbyvltte, on Saturday last, George and John ston Crosby, sons of Andrew Crosby, had been hunting and were returning home when they became engaged in a friendly scuifie. George accidently die- charged his gun, the contents taking effect in the head of bis brother. Though the bfdl passed through tbe brain, the unfortunate young man has lingered several days in a critical con- diGoo, Press and Banner: A report of a distressing case of the death of a little child of Mr. Rowlett, telegraph opera tor, comes to us from Hodges. It ssems that the nurse, tfho has had several year* experience as a nurse, had laid the child to sleep under toe much cover, Its fade being covered with the blanket. Borne time afterward It was found In the agonies of death from suffocation, and It died lu a few min utes. The child was about four months dO. Three colored children were burned to death on Jbtta’rf Island, heat Charleston, last week. It appears that the parent*, after" cooking and eating dinner, and dzClngutshlog the fire at* they thought, put tbe children to bed. They then went out to an adjoining forest to out wood and had trot been at work but a few moments when they saw smoke la the direction df their house. Hastening to the rfjtot' they got there Just as the roof was faffing iu and too late to save the chlfcft-en. In speaking of the frequent occur rences of droWning |f late, the Beau fort Oreaceow bays: Only a few days ago oufVulletln annC/Unced to the pub lic of the drowning' of seven persons from a boat donfafning eleven, and then tbe death from the dame cause, Ot' Ferdinand Robins ui, a colored man, who h-td taken some^bee£to a vessel lying In Doosaw, and now the rumor comes of another sudden ending' of life by the cold waves, the particulars Of which have noiy.et come to hand. —■ - of tbe Columbia, April 24.—Judge Thom son, of tbs Common Pleas, rendersd a decision this afternoou, in the cass of Bwaffleld vs. County Treasurer Gibbs. The decision was upon a motion on the part of tha plaintiff for a mandamus to compel the treastfref to show cause why he should not receive bills of the Bank of tbe State for taxes. The Court dismissed the motion. f: ,V The Republicans of the United States -'cnate nominated and voted for cx-Con- gressmau Rainey, of South Carolina, for Secretary of tho Senate, a position to which they knew they could not elect any person, with a view of exhibiting their frien dly disposition to give the ne gro an office. Rainey, however, was not to be satisfied with an empty honor. Ho has been so accustomed to enjoying the receipt of Ins living from the pubTic crib, that he does not see how it is pos sible for him to get along without some public position; and as the people of Soutn Carolina were too ungrateful, as he views it, to return hira to Congress, he has in his extrem ity turned to the President for an appointment, asking for few oppoaera of the etock law* tratti* W 0 f Third Auditor of the Treasury, which is a very comfortable and desirable position. But the Radi cals have no idea of giving a good place to a colofted man ; and, therefore, one of Ztch Chandler’s friends from Michi gan obtained it, and Mr. Sherman, the 8acrctary of tho Treasury, offered to give the ex-Congrcssman a minor clerk- shin instead. This Rainov has refused, and since his recent discomfiture it is said that he is very much disgusted with the negro’s chance for office at the hands of the Republican party.— AncUrton Journal. Tha endowment ot a university by Mr. Vundeibilt is certainly an act of great benevolence, but tbe endowment to Buffering humanity by Dr. James L. Gilder in hie'celebrated Gildxb’s Lit- eh Piles meets the greatest want of the American people. For sale by G. A. Phillips, Wiliiaton, and Druggists generally. Dr. Pratt, tbe dintingutahed Georgia chemist* la endeavoring to form a stock company for the manufacture of fertifiz'tre in .Atlanta. He saya that wlthio the limits of Ghorqia are to be fonod aH tbe Ingredients tor first-class l fertHizsrs-pliospbats*, and the ma X&LUVl XVCSU KW ▼ vrs UHU'TLTV MW KTIXV K9 ill VH-IV* * • * » . J *V 'rrudO'Mrn. to ho ovOrlhrowo, If Wrlolo tor .ulpburic acU., ..lu ot aromhoia, and potash. These cab b« prepared, and a superior fertjfiznr made for hope use with a capital of 9100,000. Yet these resources are, all tht. bloody mtorul. ; .od let tbo !•» farmers send out each year 93,500,00p for the purchase of cooHBerctal gu anos. Hs says that If tha people only knew of the safe and handsome profit there’was in tha enterprise he desires to estabUab, the money for putting It la operation could by raised in a week’s . The President continues to talk free ly concerningJils attitude toward ti e revolutionary projects of the Demo crats. In conversation with csverai 'Republican Senators the other day, he declared that he was heartl’y lu a cord with their position and bad no hesita tion in saying that he believed tbe Re publican policy to be the true one fur peace, security and liberty of the coun ty- — 1 p i — Out of 362 members of tbe present Gmgrese, 241 are lawyers, ten are edi tors, and eighteen are gentlemen cf leisure. In the Senate there are nine teen Confederate soldiers and four Onion soldiers. In the House there are fifty-eight soldiers and thirty-offe Union soldiers. A dispatch from Yidulla, Concordia Parish, La., reports that three thou sand negroes ars Ota tbe river bank awaiting transportation to Kansas. ADVERTISEMEKTS. "WM. XATTHIESSEX. L. B. DOOLITTLE. IhTTfeffi &' DOOLITTLE, FUHNi&HlKCI GOODS AXD XINX CLOTHING FOil MEN AND BOYS,- clothing Mass to‘ order. ACADEMY OF MUSlfe fiClLDWO, Charleston, *- - **• C. ION t» L. J,.A irihAMES *t m .4w«ie yrtcci. tv SEHSfb for prices. . 1 No. 6. Orangeburg Sweep. No. 4. Batesburg Sweep. No. 12. Diamond Point Bull Tongue No. 18. Cast-Iron Turn Shovel. No. 9. Magnolia Sweep. No. 1. Wrought Lapring. No. 7. Heel Bolt. No. 8. Grass Rod. No. 17. Singletree-Irons No. 2. Greenville Sweep. No. 15. Scraper. „ No. 14. Steel Turn Shovel.' No. 11, Greenville Bull Tohgtie. No. 10. Steel Shovel Blade. No. 5. Wrought Clevis. No. 3. Wrought Clevit. No. 16. Plow Singletree. No. 18. Harrow Teeth. No. 19. Harrow Teeth. I • • < . > Wood and Iron Heel Adjustable 3?low Stock/ HART & COMPANY. CORNER KING AND MARKET STS., AltLKS'I () N', « Ct , Acrents for Avery & Sons’ Plows. nov28-6rn A* IMPORTER, JOBBER AND RETAILER OF DRY GOODS 194 A.ND 196 BROAD ST.. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA? HAS IN STORE A LARGE AND EXTENSIVELY ASSORTED STOCK OF JKITISH CONTINENTAL AND AMERICAN 3 Well Suited to the Wants'of this Section of Country, which js now being Offered at Prices that cannot be Undersold in the South: Importing Direct, and having contracts with the leading Manufacturers in this Country, with the Cash hi hand to take advantage of every turn in the market, I am enabled and pro-" pose to offer Dry Gooda at such Prices,that admit of no Legitimate Competition. ‘ WHOLESALE BUYERS * Will do well to visit my Establishment if they aim to obta : n Goods at Rock* bottom Prices. . , TO the LADIES of BARNWELL and surrounding Country their at tention is respectfully requested to the fad that my Retail >tock is laid in carefully with the view to the requirementr of City trade. Novelties, as they appear in the European and Home Markets, are presented without delay at Prices to suit the most exacting. Correspondence Solicifcd. Write for Samples, Orders Promptly Filled sod Satisfaction Guaranteed. GOOD' GOOOS AT CHEAP PRICES.. A. Gray, »prl7-3m. . «/ £ m AND 196 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. WHOLESALE OOMMISB^POIf HOUSE -OF- 911MS SHAKE & SOH, ■ BOOTS AND SHOES. ' 13S'Meeting 8t., (OpjScslte Pavilidn Ho'tel) Charleston, South Carolioa. Cheapest House in the South: W F. 1i»t« » large and w*U *»sortfd stack *M receive large inrolroe hr evrrr stramer dlrrct from tbe Far- H trtriva In Maaaachuncttt, Visit u» when you come to the city. W o can Holt von anything in the HOOT Mi>IIOK linn as cheap es you ran buy in Boston. Our#fal* are the aamc as wld by any athwivfcoiaeele hener In the city, and our prices are from ten to twci.^f^er cent, lower, liberal tenaa to parties giving 8m Augusta Flour Mills •fort* M. cfcARK 4 * CO.; Prfepriefora/