The Darlington democrat. (Darlington, S.C.) 1868-1871, June 21, 1870, Image 1
€I)c pcmturat.
rrnLisiiKD
KYK8Y V. EDNESD VY ’IORKINO,
TERMS :—$2.50 l>or annum in aRvaucc.
Ad^crtisemsrls.
f)n<» S.pnre, fir?t insertion $1.50
One Squire, second iuserlinti .... j .00
Erory subsequent insertion ...... 50
Contract A Wertismenta inserted upon themost
Ueasensblc Terms.
.'Jani ige X * c^« audObiluaric. not exceeding
€ imcM, inserted fre**.
ik-jf* All communications intended for publica
tion in tlie Darlington Dcn.ociat, most be ud- | IIMC O
Crossed to the 1‘roprietor. ! *
BY A. P. LUCAS,
•'Man's noblest mission to advance,
His woes assail, his weal enhance.
His rights enforce, his wrongs redress—y’*
$2-50 ^isnsmas/E.
DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, GENERAL INTELLIGENCE ‘AND INDUSTRIAL IMPROVEMENTS,
DARLINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 21, 1870.
NO. 34.
Pqwrtincnt.
The above Department "ill be promptly at
tended to, and ai! work in thie lino executed on
:he moat satisfactory terms. We niil Aunifb at
short notice
LA W BLAXKS.
IIAXI) BILLS.
rOSTLHS.
CIRCULARS,
BUSrXLSS CARPS
WCPtHXC CARDS,
BILL IILADS,
PAMPHLETS,
LABELS,
All Job Work trill he Ctsn on delivery.
HEALTH! BEAUTY!!
Siren!:, Pitre and Rich Elood—In
crease of Flesh and Weight—firar
-Skin and Rcanlifcl (otsplexion,
SEtXKCD to ALL.
RABWiiY'G
Sarsaparillian Rosolvent
has madk Tin: most ast ixishixo citik*.
SO Qfll'K, M> K.pjll ask TIIK CIIASOIM,
THK JB.itlV CNUKKOOKS ' NI«t:U T'lK INKI.O-
. J'-S'fE THIS TL.ULY V, SlJJittl-liL MKUi-
C1SK THAT
Every Day an Increase In Flesli and Weight
is Seen and Felt.
[From the XIX Century.J
The Status and Prospects of the
Negro.
[COXCLCDKn.]
For weeks the hitter body sat in sullen
eilence. refusin': to act upon any subject so
long as their opponents preserved their in-
1 dividuality and consequent counterbalancing
power. Tltey demanded that the two houses
be thrown intj a single deliberative body, or
in other words, that the preponderance in
numbers which they possc.-ned be constituted
the means for passing any law over the heads
of the nobles. With a fatal irresolution the
peers consented to this exaltation ofthe people.
The mad ruin, the deluge of blood that fid-
*be j 1, vvrorl nof'tl nn <1 isnr:r»ti U1.
Within the past
! ten years, and for the first time in the United
States, there has been a complete separation
of parties—sectional and political prejudices
Scrofuln. Co:i«nm (»«io*i, Sy p'yiliw.nnpktr*'!
• ’»tl bxtliv ^^•e^lt*ti ^ r euct'«ni. 1'
forms, C; In nil it In r (lis**:i-r t tiff
nioi.iii, Tuitiors, Nottrs In ll»«i i i .„ C J f . pc< l no .IJ-crim
<alnu(l>., r. ml «.iii#r pnils of lii** system, * \/ca, '.CCU IlO llftcr.pt
b»»re ‘ ‘ “
“k!an. /s'.'“I,"*. *“Vt.a, I States, there has been a complete separation
Kiii^ Slit lilit-iini, ••'.rywl»i(*l is,
Acnr, UlMfk >p.>ts, Wmms 1»* tlie Klcsh, ,
^rrh , ;.Vi.!« , r;.u‘p:\\\rl'roiR;:::rhb^'N\^. , t i conspiring with financial interests. The con-
fuJut) ,V,i thence wasa quarrel and civil war. Mauy
» 7cw Jo”;'.'; lathers examples of this kind might be ad-
rrr.n.. i. r..r riit.rr ..r ti.sx f....... or duccii buttbeso are enough. They present the
SaiMc.Mir. ii* power to cme tlie-m. i “ me
.no. .aiy a»., th. sar.«iMin.«u i<c...ivrnt | hurtorics of the great millitarv, the great
♦T0t;i sll snovn ii-ni** Iml ucruta, its tho i-n.c t Crtrumi*, j c w > 0
6cr-i'iir.< .Com lip. i ..ml.sU...niSrpUt i' a-.i-ut couitucreial, the great manufacturing, and the
it n l ie :.:y {>•• it vt* reraody tor JK.I lory. H'a'liler ? r> *-
\ riiiui-y, a»tj \\ omii ctuca.rM, tiravri. i»i:%- j .rrcat ii ,r i icuituiai Stated; and are drawn from
■iftcs Oropsy, StiBi-i.ige of Water, lui-on- ’ ” 0
tlueitceof I 1 i.ie, Hri^tit*. AIU.mm-
inm l.i, Hiifl in nil cases \vlier« I lu re are
llrlr :* iliiwt tlrpowtls, or I lie -water is thick,
Clomly, in 1 vt*»| will* sub-i a tier* lilte (lie
White of mi e^/4. or (lirc.vU l»U.f while silk,
or there a tu-arbld tln U. tiilioas appear-
mire, ami xsliile bone (lust <!« po-.iln. oikd
wliern there t* n prlcklik^. tmrtai,>4 sensa- .
tion when p.iM^in^ win *ii<f puiii in «iic situated and occupied. That reseiublauce is
&.*iull of the l*n>-k. an<l al .»i^ liie Istiinx. In 1 1
all Thoc con,,i11*
1.
iho ancient, the middle, and the modern
nircs. Ngjy the feature wherein they resemble
Inins the ruin which uuifurmly overtook
people so different, as well as »o variously
ex pi
*!i turse c<»u.:i<ioo« i<a tway** v«rj.apari!- tills: iu every case prosperity and content
l-wn Kcsol v« I«l ataiMl l»> tike iippliralh.lt of j J 1 1 ^ .
I*.i : T»V , h Hp,i .* f. ■.*• * i ILDowed the union ol all orders in the legis-
while disaster and ruin were the in*
f'lii-j -,I r II m y, VIII soon m-.kr it [
V:l
convict of interest
between tl.e.n, contests for supremaucy will
h • unavoiduby carried to extremes. In
j order that a political organiaatic n may be
;«tnb!e, it is necessary tliatthc various natural
divisions of color, profession, religion, econo-
be overlapped; and a publicist who should
ttf (fir. Ii.11 l< . nml « hr !S.»;« l-vic^uln-
irii Ith one «»r I wo of K«m( vv:« v*»
ittix PiII-a p r liny, v 111 soon o*. kr ••«.. = .- . .
.-Ir. nirr. in a frw il i> «. Hit ;> .»•< »it «% ili I CVitablo COIlSCflUeiKVS of tliO SCIZUlC 01 the
l«> >i.,]| jili-i «i ist'lt :i It Im wm 1 r» I 1 II 1 1 I
Hstum.iy witti .iti p.*in n -ii iin r»»ur .%iii 1 whole uutbority by any one alluded to, that
lie t es...i-m! (.1 I.* uatuj ul clear, outl Miilbfr ^ ,
• r sherry color. , where vwo or inure classes wl.ieh arc clearly
.u .: . T : , ' J” vi I !,r".Ti.i u mi t ih.t : veparated live under llie same commonwealth
1 imi<in*s .-01:11-1 iru tur*. : f..-tt : -t-.i 1111
>v»kd*K>.>.i i-! ; o«s, ei.hvf j>ii.i, «. r i-'i.'i.xr.ibi j “ there blioultt be any
of Oitf v\ Oin 1, L ioru-,. or Uliior <u ns . I.---<u»r*
rh«ra. «.u tl.upt ve <li'-!. tr,'- ,. ,if . v. -y k |, ( ,r
t o r. vifV. ux- of s .1 1, .,u I.*.,- u;, t
•oi Vfttriv*ai 01 ukvis. <» thio. irti t'.;c
#*p.rt.ivc | o. ix -.f I. \ liW A Y £ S.\ i.-A I'MI.L-
J*iAX, are :i.rosivJ, uni tuo ruprurj-l Oi-.-uib bi'alui
jut: TftcK Tin: mv op
V. \T)\\ VV SA SAI-A 11L!,1 Wli' U.VEXT
*•>- tin: rf-:n t ';r ( .u, U ia-- h.«* • (. nriuD, -hv u.-d
s . a-iiij. t-ms c-ais-iaunts v itli T.i-uc- in .. i •£», t'lcsli
rotA.Mg, LI-n or C i’.oriu rm t Fit ra ■»■.«.ir •.a-mcn**.
^wil o. i 1 ,ii j .1 a re neurit • rtjyiuq. ,/•./
t , rng K ninn. 1 .'i-j tirt, IJ-i t. /;■ ‘u.>ii drirt*
-<>iu 0/ (K- he, ’; ll: ■ [.jn.i 1 ta ot 1 # t .v >' 1 Co:n. 1 >iion.
<.» -'i; 1. r. ».\ wmn; Di.oraf,
i'l*;ill.»H. « v .\*CV.WHFH & . ,.,o all - r a
*8ci -lU-UtlS :l il , lil-l ,.s • 1.. ,|V V. llh : 'he riWiitlVC
r-:i^ i.t ilic >AU>.\i'Ai:iLLlA.V UL uL Vi..M !
1 1 hit S.t 'fu’.i, hr whnt-rer r. suy do^Tn’.tcO, is
^lie rcnait * I as tin -i «a imd
l*. Chl-llUi .lioll. l int U...-'.! .lop.u. M t.il.f p'noo
y : *‘*n Pi • S •> i j ->r, to-ah, u i:' i j/. :m.i in-j .iii}-- c, t
i. -i-l'ii l r pi m.. a ■ »i u- M.oiM-r <’..u t u-ii-.e. , jr t 4u m tli (;
]».c#cr:. e o, so..iv v.;u- ..r [-.uoi. m iii • l.ioo.i ;;s .'J.-r-
'e.'iy, t iiionivi, i'.*rr .%*.«• vluli.r 1.1.«:.i j-i i., ; u j, >.
CiiI n w *'i :-! r -iry < x c tlior n unt -, ; ; n ai. -n, .i-
sci.ne, * : w . -a -1 . i .f Iv in thv OMl.iino.l : I •*. :-S d
Ss.ua i; .ir.ii.t . .nil’ A i» ■* »ii ■;;; L> l.».; CilA.N ui. Lj
I II,.Hi A A i’« l.AL CO.\L»l J xUN.
2. That (loj roj.nirs or tin:rimf :i‘s nr-':*r.^fo r 1 attCIDpt tO Weld them tO;
tuan t.»e waste's it t ••■•t.iti -i »n4 ie»^iv wii* -u- i , . . . .
jw-iTenr, an i ii; r>o-v iv of i.i'.,* bocemr t-«hm i. cbise.nent which wok, perhaps, judicious, was
J. IV*. the .ijrnx cannot 1-e s.iKtgi.c) osi any !
tre• .Til n: o' lii.-.i, i. h vxh:iu-.!»j ihc e-VSlem, or lail*
tt.'SStJS:; . .. ,n v. |The Uuek. now east their votes in mass; so
r T T^a“H«uvr*y.. Snr.rp.r-nm.. n.«- ! do the whites, a ml the race whose numbers
to a vc ik t suyjutcsj • want .icvci bcfoiui-o . c.s «m or irnowa
to kil t in r.i-it • t»e, : lit tim new f-.un i pi.-.-eqde
[From the Chail<alon Daily Ncws.J
the isduxs.
THE an.VND COUNCIL AT TVASIITNGTOS.
Anuasss or -ErnrrABT CMI, avd seriT or beo
eujl'l)—WHAT TnaNlBWtA.M DU1KC.
The grand council iekirten the Indian del
egations, the SeeretBiyof the luto-ior, and
Oommissioncr Darker, Was held uttlie Indian
office in Washington, <ffi Tuesday morning
last. Several geotletion holding ofheial po
sitions under the government, having rela
tions with the India* tribes, were present.
The red men took their neats in the council
chamber about ll otlock, and tiie confer
ence lasted until 1. They were arrayed in
full Indian costume, and were evidently
much impressed with the importance of the
occasion. After the usual formalities of
hand shaking, the conmissioner announced
to the chiefs that what Red Cloud had spo
ken to them had been thought over, and the
Secretary ofthe Interior would now reply.—
His words were the words ofthe President on
the subject of Red Cloud's speech. The Secre
tary then addressed the Indians at consid
erable length, in relation to the requests they
had made, and the feeling of the govern
ment concerning them.
He explained to them that when our peo
ple grew so last as to crowd upon the plains,
we wanted a place for the Sioux to live,
where they would not be disturbed. For
that reason, our great soldier, (General
-Sherman,) made the treaty to give them the
country which they now have, and to take
our own people out of it, so they might live
there alone. Lately, some of our young peo
ple wanted to go there again to look for the
gold in the hills, but the President refused
to let (hem go, saying it had been promised
to the Sioux, and they must keep it. They
may be sure, therefor*, that the President
v. ill do what he said, and they shall not be
disturbed while they ae in peace in that tcr-
man melted away like tho snow on the hill
side when the sun is warm. The white man
grew strong in number. the red man grew
weak. Ho you treat us as wo treated you*?
You say the Great Father of the white man
is good and kind to us, but I don't sec it.
We gave you our lands in the East; we went
to where the sun sets in the West. The
Great Father sent his people after us ; they
came from the East, from the North and
from the South—even from the West. The
white man has driven us upon an island;
they are around ns on every side. Have you
children ? Do you love them ? Do you want
them to grow up around you ? I have chil-
Kully for Chris:
The bystanders around and shout the
the Columbia Hotel, Thursday afternoon,
were excessively amused at a little incident
that there happened, iu which the Hon.
Niles G. Parker, State Treasurer, and Chris
topher llaynesworth, the well known and
highly respected bai ber who keeps a shop
there, were the parties. Chris, it seems, was
resting him from his shampooing labors,
leaning against one of the pillars in the front
of the Columbia Hotel, enjoying his olium
cum ilignitatc, when up furiously drove Mr.
Niles G., with his spanking racking roan
Putting Tlic Bayonet to Xcw York.
Ah 1 ha 1 it is coming is it? Threats of a
reconstruction of the ballot boxes of New
York City, by the Washington despots, come
over the wires, in consequence of the late
rebnke which the people of the city and
State have given the political knaves thieves
and scoundrels holding power by a title of
Jlrw. Bevel* at <»'ruiit*M i'ltltle.
A SCENE AT THE WHITE ItorsB.
Mrs. Senator Revels, the wife ofthe dis
tinguished ‘•inan and brother,” arrived at
Washington on the 17th ult., and was enter
tained the next day at a dinner party by
Gen. Grant, Gen. Rutk-r, Gen. Fchcnck,
mUt. etc., between the people to be governed, j r ; tory T , 1C „ overuroult wil | 8 end Mr. Dm-
no, (whose p'esenes at the council was indi-
; neglect this, would be a foolish as a mason
who should build a tower without lapping
the slues.
j This ia precisely what has been done in
I the South. Thu whites are segregating, as
j already shown, and til-- -harpest natural line
cated to the Indians.) this sunimer to sec
them, and to .-ce that they get the rations
which will he sent th:m. When he goes he
will auk which is the host tiling we can do
for them. lie will ask if anybody has dune
them any w rong, and they can tell him when
is drawn between them. No artificial separa- | he comes buck’ We will try to do what he
lion has been made; but on the contrary, an j. Myg t , )oy nce j t0 have done. The great
thing we want to say to them is, that if they
dren, too; my people have children whom j and bis golden mounted buggy, and with a
snap of the finger to attract his attention,
accosted Christopher with a “Heigh, boy!
hold this horse here!” Doubtlese some idea
about a certain 690,000 must have crossed
the mind of the dignified barber, for, with nn
air expressive of the most utter contempt,
he retorted : “I would thank yon, sir, to
understand that I am no boy, to come to
your snap or whistle. I, sir, am a respect
able man; known and recognised to be such
by the best people of this place; and further
more, sir, I presume to call myself ail honest
man, and have the satisfaction of knowing
that other people so consider me.” Uttering
those expressions with the force of an angry
man, Chris coolly turned upon his hael, and
went into his shop to atend a customer.
The Hon. State Treasurer seemed dumb
founded at first at the row he had raised, hut
after reflecting upon the matter, very nobly
determined to do proper things and apologise
to the gentlemen. Rut Chris was not so soon
in a placable mood, and expressed his desire
that Mr. Parker would keep his apologies
till they were wauted. Fomc folks sny Chris
said something about his not having anything
to do with a thief, but we think Chris too
polite use such a term to the Treasurer of
our noble Palmetto State.
- th?r. The enfran-
iifibctcd ia tho most injudicious manner.
are
greater has the supremacy. There
Cfeid.iftW-, rfW»i.»^j«ufcK ; a**»w.-aa»« i ! can b) DO diecusion on the merits of any
feet •y*uiB or cure i* ezh bated fulWw* :
will keep peace we will try to do everythin
they ask lint is right.
After the Secretary cf the interior (Gen.
Cox) had concluded, there was a long pause,
then Red Cloud, who, during the Secrcta-
ry s speech, had her n sitting in the corner of
La”. 1 . \a.!i'-i! ‘\ , ' s ' : ’ !n - ThegJ-srst part' i.-m prevails, and | # by tiie side-uf his people, ros
fr-i t . J uwrt' an-f: * 10 ,11 * ,,or ' , Y '* subataiiiialy disfranchised. ! denly, and quickly stode across the rc
rose sud-
uuf.l- * * | ucuiVj aiju «|«aiv*iji ©v-tjut; uciuno me fOOIll to
»H tl,e dircctl J <™travcucs the | the tab!e , t which the Secretary and the
S&Vtth-«• 1 P h ‘ fc *°P ,, - v of '•cpuhlicanistu The csscnc of j Commfcaicner of Indian Affairs. He shook
'his formofgoverament isre).-eBentation; and.! bands, saying, “How,” as he did so, with
.Uj. v.r^a A.-aic in proportion as the representation embraces j ( ; eucr j t 'o* and Parker and the other white
!«*«* <*** ®f people, SO diMtho republic I meu who wcr * p^ut, and then, seating
;<>pp>>*i—to to perfection, liukrthe present j hi , nw ., fttpoB th<! fl90r delivered his speech f
jrS. , '?tiS r !:; .^ ea * it. theSouUicm states, I Thc j-hief is apparently about forty years o
i ,ho "' 1,ltcs 0U ‘ iwJ > - ™™****to*< i age, fully six feet in height with * presence
«si' 1 '"t*™** ignored, their priMerlty and safety | dignified and commanding. His head is wall
t»irou-l> th** tiloD |, Sw. it, Uiin . n ; oiiicr ilm Is, so- ! jeoifLirdlzcd. The lii(j?it tcriLlo evils haiUT
iiLiuiner.t. A despotifim oi tke pcojil
euro* th /•.>ns:i?ii. rr. -:'j-1ctwos of c«wb io.-jn cti\v or^m,
MU'bijslaa^ tu-c'i-TD tl L.uvinouy liirot u tiie ay»«etB ;
tl»io*.jrA .1s a-.fioii ai- I pu Yer over lio? f> •- r.-tiunu, liit»
lairwke-ict.w its u.«*in • or pr. per atlutii-.oat at ht e;
t e •‘^;in s-reit; ilic IkidaryH urea; :tii«i t;.-* I.uo^u
car .u; MO ti. It thb wtinlerlul tn dioii:: not ^'1y t.sf i'>-
akliv. lie ii!h in lui kick body, 1-ut nix^-crves thc fys'Liu
in .cultb. * , . ,
/* 'u-iYe‘■bown t je p.-iru lple or ^hich a:-o..se i»
fo'A0«l, as well ub tho o:iiy fci ’-i.T '• * ti.eory '*t cure,
*rc laim tk-.t tV._* “I ,u: ■ of ti-'' vii-
.lla. Kcsolveui i.- u'.lim t»sl, o !,, i * yrty <fi c-t»o
that - f AUd.-.at-.S ; .'*..■+* or (Jija.i:., Vi+UioJli. .s,
■prepr.y witisio •' '» ‘* 11 rnT, -' e *
ilJF. GKKAX SJxi Ki-;r OF CURE
<tl thi* M<Ui;i:o‘ consists in the selection of iti'TO'liputp
iOontiAi..i'i< civ \*e m ( nouri.-liin/ tim tu.it sup- I
ply tko -d - i * i l sy-.f-.-u- wi:h ~.i .i c.'iisliiuejit< ■
•winla, in a u i' f --.:i of d:seiso and if..ity.it is deS- '
cient of, togctiivu wuh th coini’in-'t:-n < { '.lie s.-wu il j
iajtielicuts form i. - SA-USAi*.^ I.!lLl.iAN
Ah'.M.
"a ! developed, forehead high an-1 prominent, his
Ift j eye dark and piercing, his nose straigl.t, not
they love. We ask our great Father to let
us alone upon the island where he has dri
ven us Leave us that where wc can raise
our children our own way.
The white man comes to our country snd
there is blood spilt upon the grass. That
blood is tho blood of thc red man. The rod
man lias come from the-West to the land of
of the white man. He has came here into
hi? Great Father's house- He will go back
again Pi his people. lie will leave no blood
of the white man behind him. The Great
Father says ho wants peace. The red man
wants peace, too, but the white man makes
war upon us; the white mnn^goes thro’ our
country ; he kills our game; he shoots at the
rod man. It is the fault of the Great Fa
ther. You are the people who should keep
peace. I was born at the forks of Platte
River; my father and my mother told me the
land was mine, I don't like the land you
have give us; thc country does not suit my
people; my children die there like sheep, but
we will remain and be peaceable if the Great
Father will remove the fort (Fort Fcttcrman)
from our borders and keep tbc white man
away from nur country.
The men who tho Great Father sends to
us. soldiers and all, have no heart and no
sense. His agents are liars; I say here to
day. They make us promises which are bro
ken. We are the last of the Ogallalas; we
come to know of the Great Father why his
promises have not been kept. The goods
which he sends my people arc stolen on thc
way; only a handful ever reaches us. His
agents are liars; I sey here to day. At the
mouth of Horse Crock, in 1851, there was a
treaty made, and the white man who made
that treaty (General Mitchell) is the only-
one who has ever told the truth. The Great
Spirit hag taught you to read and write; he
has put papers before you. lie raised me
naked; you think -lie a fool, i want no roads
in my country: your people have come there
by the Black Hills and tbc Rig Horn; they
have driven stakes for a road. I don’t be
lieve the Great Father knows of it. I want
them removed. You say you pay us for thc
[and. YouTinve already built roads through I c j a j ra .
, I. i , ” ^ „ v .' . Gen. Garfield, and other military imbeciles
what is called “government.” None of your , 1
• nT vw.fiv »»r»r»r\m rv»i ii im/l lixr flint*- xi'iitau -iti.i
threats, Grant & Cp- Send your troops into
the State of New Y r oi-k, as you hate into
of note, accompauied by their wives and
daughters, were among ihe company. Mrs.
aii; ua xAvvr us >uu ii.inu aww l . . .
Georgia, if you dare! The people ofthe South i * tvcls f ‘ tm the ru T 10 " ,e
arc under your hcef; but thc people ofthe ! dlDl °S room 0n Uie arn * ofbe,,ator Satt,Bcr *
North are not, and do not intend to be. You
and your “Grand Army of the Republic”
will play a very damaging game when at
tempting the “reconstruction of the North
ern ballot-boxes.” You will be crushed like
egg shells by thc mighty grapple of a million
freemen who have too long put up with your
infamous, unconstitutional encroachments
upon their most sacred rights. Do not at-
empt force, Messrs. Grant & Uo. Row to
public opinion; thc will of thc people; and
1872 give way gracefully to another set of
men, with auoiher set of measures. The
hand-writing iu on the wall. Thc voice of
the ballot-box in the State of New York bath
spoken its meaning. Relieve it, and prepare
to retire. We are henceforth to have a
White Man's Government.—A* 1’. Day
Book.
An Abolition War.
KOeclw of Sin.
Penalties arc often so long delayed that
men think they shall escape them; bnt at
some time they are certain to follow. When
thc whirlwind sweeps through the forest, at.
its first breath that giant tree, with all its
boughs, falls crushing to the ground. Rut
it had been preparing to fall twenty years.
Twenty years before it bad received a gash.
Twenty years before the water began to set
tle in at some notch, and from thence decay
began to reach in with silent fingers toward
the heart of the tree. Every year the work
of death progressed, till at length it stood,
all rottenness, and the first gale felled it to
the ground. Now there are men who for
twenty years have shamed the day and wea
ried the night with their debaucheries, but
who yet seem strong and vigorous; and cx-
The radical craters continue to assert that
the late war was waged to free the negroes.
At the Federal decoration ceremonies iu
Charleston, Monday last, General Win. |
Gurney, referriogto the Union soldiers, said
they “had died that right might triumph
over injustice, and that freedom might be
given to those in bondage.” This may do in
a stump speech, made avowedly for the pur
pose of getting negro votes, but it is hardly
lawful to Ke, standing uncovered before high
Heaven and in thc solemn presence of the
dead. History falsifies the statement, Thc
frequent declaratii-us of Mr. Linclou. and
the repeated resolutions of Congress during
the war, that there was no desire to interfere
with slavery in the States, and the declara
tion of Grant, when the opposite was irr.ima-
ted, that if it was an abolition war, he would
resign and go borne, all give tho lie to the
assertion that the war was f night to free tkr
negro. That result was but an incident and
and after-thought, and the aegro never
and occupied a scat at tho table between that
gentleman and thc President. Her conver
sation charmed the con pany even more than
her appearance, although the refined and in
stinctive taste in dress iu which the ladies of
Guinea are distinguished, was sweetly appa
rent in the decoration of her person-, A
turban of mild scarlet with yellow border—
a crimson moir antique with blue and green
flounces, and buttons of dainty brass—rod
slippers with white rosettes—with a massive
necklace of Rarbary pearls, and half a dosen
breast pins of curious workmanship—a few
neat rings and a guilt belt united to form a
tdiet:e in which purity and simplicity were
exquisitely united.
Mrs. Revels partook freely of the Execu
tive nourishment, and avowed her satisfac
tion overy the cookery at alt'-ost every bile
with a frankness quite refreshing in the sa
loons ofthe State. “Sceheah,” site remark
ed, as she passed her plate for another cut
of ham, “of all dem dishes guv me dc hog
and du hominy—golly, but dat's a sweet
| piece of bacon. Dcscyah 1 it reminds me of
possoui fat. Drae is good cook ins, Uirnm.”
This last observation was, of course, address
ed to the partner of her bosom. There was
a general leeling at the table that thc “Court
Circles” bad received in this estimable mat
ron a remarkable addition. On hot- depart
ure, at the close of thc entertainment. Gen.
Grant, with his wonted urbanity, remarked
that he would like to sec more of bes, to
which Mrs. Revels, with ui.commou tact, re
plied : “Yah ! yah ! can't see no more of me
dis time, but I'se gittin low neck dresses.
DU heah high one was miido down tfouf.”
Ost.iblMted; and this ts the ui.-t terrible of all , u ;|j lic ^t), the high cheek boces of his ; , r
. !>i-.vi-F«ir flu. nftVTFP of *flfrs i* a niOl’itl i . . . I t'CaOPO.
our country, and I have never received so
much as a brass ring for the land you occupy.
Thc white man makes al! thc ammunition.
Why don’t you give us some to kill game ?
Are yon afraid wc will make war upon you?
Look at me: I am poor and naked; l have no
arms; my people are only a handful. Is tho
Great Father afraid we are going to make
war upon him ? We don't want them to
make war with on the white man.
I have told all these things three times
belief that he would be valuable as a radical
voter. —Savanajt JIrj>M!can
I - — Tr-
A Heho of Eleven Divobces.—The
Akron (Ohio) Times,.gives the following:
On the 11th of -\j>rif, 1866. Samuel Leslie
was married at Wooster, to a young lady
“You need not tnix of penalties. j ((venty-four years of age, Samuel having
A Louisville man was killed, leaving his
vile in a destitute circumstances, when a re
ligious nieghbor circulated a subscriptiou
pwfler .and raised f1,600, proposed to the
widow, ’was accepted, m#rri«u her, and put
the money in bis trewsevw. Uo is said to
would have been freed at all, but. for ** beloogng to bis
L.iur.u-, i i.i *-•»:-« gotorn-a deacon w 'hont do-
piy. Thftjy cailwim “Old Benevolence.'’
leetr.tisui*. for il.e power of ':ncs is a moral j 1 , - - - - - '' — I before. I now come fram thc West into
power, and. who n ufs, ova ^.wi, forever; j ,A / “ i tHe Great Father’s house to tell them a fourth
hut , t , f the p*oji!e y&- (.pul power, and! : * s light and sinewy.and fie «idkcd across the
’..•hen once recognized,-»a0 urvoi- be taken ! floor of the council chamber wth a cat-like
away.
[Cknsob. | sicp, displaying all the muscular motion of a
Tl:«' Fir r'e't
ives of II:p Coni, ilcracy.
The Theta Delta Chi f-aternity, which
met at the Aster Hose, Net* York, in Feb-
e .vacn r ” ;ir :' 1 • ft > listened to an oi-;io U by Wm. L.
Htonc, who ir. the cour-e of&xne interesting
iti sconces ..f the rebel'.: spoke of David
«imoy;»herlc air, iife woul become extinct
blaod bco tracc cxlpiintei of ita vit.tl constituents, it
•dopoMts its tubcidt* and dirpised hum r in the lo.ly,
•n4Uwcioa-an.ofd-.Ayw4 dreotnjvci.-n su no... T j 5 as ,J, C ..ffieer seleoed by the Con-
ItudwA}'s Sar.4H|»nrillian Xiesolvratl is to j f * ( J
tho bio< d and gcnor-ai s’ stcm whut oxyokn i- to tim louciatc CrO\ eminent to tibkccharge of* the
stiuosphcric ai; *, u tha hfc prim e, find , treasure and archives.
enable* the- bio -d to hoi J m solution all its mr.nrul con
stituents.
1>AILV err \:;or.s
•*r
plt '^, for is the
and purity of t.«e h;
where tner: u*v ti
lui ther ti ’ -Ar il • tt. I
ildhed or i-j: nn r
portion *?:*• d
tiro, M-Tota ju.'
AtniahL.
iin incroa-cs fh stronath
■'I, i f yo-Us .ire diuuu^lt’e-l, in 1
Jii'.un •: - J .irir.oj in tiie lun/s, ihe
e uit' -toi. .’tu l those thut arc c«tub-
■i ’ . : - • CXi'cU..’:!, ex t si-ti d, r tho
i in r ’i-aa’i/..-I .v* *i e-n. 'iiiii,*-
..-je t ao civos it ujt Sjuai,
’? rc;i*iii iititl Vrch- r ract " lcc ^ “'bleto. His hands and feet arc
remark.’bly small; his complexion is not cop
per-colored. as is tkat of many ofthe North
ern Indians, but rather Asiatic in color, with
a decidedly reddish tint, actually realising
the name of red man. He was dressed par
tially in indtan costume, wore buckskin leg
gings and moccasins, a blue striped cotton
shirt, with a dark woolen blanket bound
around his waist. On his breast was a large
silver medal; and in bis ears hung ear rings
of the same meial. His language is soft,
sounding at times like Spanish, lie spoke
quickly and fluently, with emphasis and ani.
bo I. VI .
orrtr*. »t
IV-
■ rd.
LI SI) l.AIK
cur.r.D.
L s.
fr "im I ho
I On tho. morning of Mr.,l>.ivis’ capture,
s.tys Mr. Ston , Tilghman ' .ited upon him
at his bedside and s;:ah “M llavis, by this
, map you may see thir th-i; .emy are heir;
.-•i-*h and such is the fituuti u of the roads.
If you come with tie, you will bo able to
leave the country in stfetyy If you do not,
; y. u will be ctpture-1 ii fit * ..urs,'’ To Mr.
Davis repiying. curtly tb he knew his nwu
b sincss best." Tii-ab'.iiA > mtinued. “Very
•v 11. sir. I b t-’e been « •-’-.rtNl with the
time. I came to talk with the Groat Fathsr.
I came to say what I thought. Some of
these days we go to farming, bat we cannot
go right away.
Each sentence of thc speech was received
with loud grunts, denoting hearty applause
from tho Indians present. After Red Cloud
concluded. Little Bear made a short speech,
ctiiuplatuiag ofbad treatment by soldiersand
and nthc while he
Look at me! T am as hale and hearty to-day , rc achcd the mature age of fifty-seven. lie
as ever,’ Rut, in reality, they are Cud of i ] lnf i possessed ten wives before this, each of
weakness and decay. They have been p»re- ‘
paring to fall for twenty years, and the first
disease strikes them down in a moment.
What the Heart Feels.
Our worst annoyances and disquietudes
nearly al! come from a want of kindness and
sympathy whore it properly belongs. Harsh
judgment, rough words, small hut frequent
acts of selfishness and injustice, sometime-
quite poison the heart that promised to be
healthy, and curse thc heart that promised
to be blessed. There are families which
posses every earthly comfort, health, money
and occupation, but are miserable from thc
jealousy and qusareling that prevail within
them. There are marr’ed couples who live
iu daily sorrow, not because they are in want,
or because of the great domestic affliction,
, . . | but because each thinks thc other unkind,
as engagad in farming .. , . • . . ,
. _ , i arbitrary nnd inconsiderate. luting people
operations. Several o! his young meu. he i . . ■ ., • . ; ,
, . i , , , ! sometimes marry with their eyes shut; and
said, were shot while hunting, and that ended ; . . , ^ ,
his corn raising- He reitreated the main 1 ,llus ln¥t ‘ j:ul of beln K n,atcd w,th an - c,s as
features and complains of Red Cloud’s 'hey foolishly imagined they might be, they
find out afterward that they are only men i
and women with tho common workadav
whom had obtained divorces from hira.
She had known him but from thc 8th of
March to the 11th of April, but he had mo
ney; and she laid all the blame upon his for
mer wives, and gave him her young and vir
gin heart. Rut a short time after marriage,
she discovered that he was a common drunk
ard, and he commenced to display his affec j
lion for her by hitting her over the head ;
j with a shovel, throwing boiling water her. I
driving her out of doors at tho dead of
night, and other such pot acts as were not i
very pleasant, to say the least. She applied '
for a divorce, but ho pleaded so warmly that
she withdrew the application, but he soon
afterward renewed his former course, and :
she again mudc'appHcntion. This time fl>e
suit was prosecuted, and on Saturday Judge
Boynton gave the divorce, and $ 1.200 alimo
ny. This was the eleventh divorce suit that
lias been brought against him.
Thc Now York TcUtauc regrets the re-elc-
tion of Whittemorc, ami trusts Congress
will not admit the shameless adventurer, if
they can p ssibiy find ju-tificatiuo fur such
a course.”
Curing the heavy storm which prevailed
last Thursday, a cotton house near Adams'
Ruu was struck by lightning and consumed
Seven or eight persons, who wore in tho
building at the time, were stunned, but none
injured.
The Supreme Council of Masons of the
United States have established an office in
Washington, j). 0., of which Dr. A.. G.
Mackey lias been selected to take charge.
The doctor left for Whshington on Saturday
Inst, to make preparations for the removal of
has family thither.
A violentourtbqUBkehas visitedlha State
ofO-txaecs. in Mexico, killing IOU people and
wounding many others. TUj earthquake
extended to the mines, where people were
also killed.
Three inou were killed and another wound’d
by lightning, while reparing a barn in Chi
cago, Saturday.
Thc Richmond artist, Elder, has received
from England an order for a buttle piece,
Mark Twain, having been elected an j wh!ch will ^ j* > ooo. Hi- fame h*. crossed
-pcech.
Secretary Cox promised to report all that
hud been saiikto the Present, and arranged
a time for meeting with him. The present
honorary member ofthe poultry Society, veco-j lhfl w;i , er . t e id is bringing back profit to
mends hi mac It’ in ihe following style:
“Even as a schoolboy, poultry raising Was
! a study with me. and I may say, without >
him
Jn a Sen Franebco
mrt mm there was
»rc::t
s
p:i
lit
.a i. It
i c L r.
brought mo safe to the
treasure ut.d archive and jr po.se to secure ! land of thu white man. I am now in my
them, even at th-: p<.IF-Oy t..<i loss 0 f your (Jrc.it Fat'ner's house. Look at me. My
luation, gesticulating much. His sentences i conference practically ends the business of
were very short. [I- --.aid as follows, paus
ing after two or throe sentences to allow thc
interpreter time to translate :
1 have come from where the sun sets to
see my Great l-’athrr. He sent for me. 1
left my people. I offered my prayer to the
totisin.
weakness and faults of their respective sex. i
This sham love, easily gets soured, and then
healing complaints and determining action ‘ each reproaches thc other fm not fulfilling * 'iaa.-t -d wi a n i
on them, ns was evidenced by the speech of | the promises an exaggerated prospects with | luct ' , ' 0< ‘ ra-.s.eg o.t.cKins,
the secretary. ! ...t,:..t. ,i ... ^.i -i,i thorn off a roost by burning lucifer matches
that as early as the age of seventeen
iuteJ with n'l tbe speediest
from mi-dng
A Tort HlNn ScF.Nt: —A touching scene
. . I wo should find that thc far greater part of all
if- rclntwl by a penrleman as having occurr- j ^ rroxT r0T!lCH f roln the fame cr.nsc.
ctl during the decoration ceremonies vester- = i •-
day. A little pr! entered the cemetery ear- ; Thk Will’. —Uo\t sweet to tne soul
ryinp: wreaths of’ beautiful flowers, and has- j roan, says 1! ierode is the .‘■ 'Cirty of bc-
which they entered into the niarrinire stat^v |
T«.ko a wav any of thc relationships ol life, nnd i uuder tueir noses, down to to Ltfmg them ofl
a fence on a frosty n'ght by insinuating thc
| u ’.d of a warm board under their heels, lij
rhe t’ici.e l Was twenty )ears u!d I really
Mil
PI
use i ii
tened to the side where the Confederate dead
••it --
+ r{ ,r?'l .!»
tor
yn.n Ii ii L
3*A r. 1:
Mr. il*>
Ihit -
t« *l »
sun rises; I j lay. and proceeded to place
When you 1 each grave
a wreath u;
ih.
- si
Vv "C**
'J h - -
•• Ir.
• no s \ ’
of 1 i III
ft *
n v
»o‘ 1
nr.i \
W* i
rarest,
he alono ? and
treasuro ami
.al
H ARIL EE &. D ARC AN,
afl--r, in tit ice sx-ak cf t'j
man learned tb it all \t is ft
with his t v i hands, b irux
areh-vc -; aad unless. durtWy the four days
lhat elap-.-d hetweon partin' w-t i me and
I.i . r.n'.utvaiJ death, Ue revo.lud ihosj-ot. tiie
secret as in thv whereabouts -f the areliit c-
■ f u- -'er buried; i.ud os Ion- as they shall
he kept from the pen of in.'i, bo long shah
I ho. -a,try he •• monument o our brother’s
q 1 .U-y -ritjs i ‘.he true history
i ‘ ■ ■ "i : iiioeeracy aitiioogli l unir-r
ar • frr . ‘iuiv. 1 • ■ i ■ -ot tilla-t of their being
i. ■ a!.. ■ . j b’ ai.d n »
uakvd.
loved wife, when wearied and broken down ;
with the labors ofthe day, her eudiarincots I
to s-jutl.e and licr t-.ndcr cmc restores him ! i ,u “
lieitud) and the anxieties, and th
, — } . ....
The Great ! graves
aised me in this way ; he raised u.e ^ my pa wax a soldier and died in Libby J l'is- ; borne by him who liar, ihe weight of bus;ness
The red man, who ustts the bow and | on, and is buried down Smith; l hope so and domestic cares at the same time to e<-n
raised more "p-nlitry tln.n any
! one individual in all the soctrm round about
I such a stench on Monday that thc c iur» or
dered disinfectants to ho distributed. This
comes of your colored juries.
Senator Am. is going to Lowell on a visit,
ostensibly to p -.k Tllam he Butler, but it is
rumored that he is a detective employed by
New Orleans pe-q !c to find out uhcre thu
Beasts hides the spoons he -i-.lo from that
piaee. combining l-usinee: with pleasure.
Rev Mr. Curley, of M tntla. New York -
t ivor aniaitd of my iii'ei’I.-^all.xtart atonce I jtcoplo once lived where the
by tho r it 1 have ciarlffdsyut." j come from where thc sun sets. When you | each grave A friend of hers approaer.c
TlierrM.li Dwell kobw 1u less thsu peak you sit upon chairs; when I talk l , her saying: "Rut Susie, ilioso are tho rebels’| I'be aalioitudj
live hours M •. IhivL was a .risonsr; but the ! talk I s'.t upon tho ground. Thc Great graves.” She replied: ‘ Ye«, 1 know i;: but - heaviest n: if riunis of life, arc hardly to he J
archives wm t-aie. W’ha. a few weeks Spirit
Tilgh
nt
'ihe very thiekins came t-; know my 1 who, last winter, eouldcn’tacc how a Domo-
v and bv. Tiie youth of both sexes ; oi.it could he - Christian, was. eiie night
ec:.seJ i ’ pay tlio c.itth for worms, am
roi sters t’nat. crow remained to pray when l
pass.-d by.’ ”
old Iasi week cttogl’t l/egg'-n/
! widow boiongiug to b
has absconded.
r/r/iitu with a
congregation Ho
arrow.
and the white
man,
live t<
igcthcr in
in noli tL
it some littia
gill*
this ia
ui. but w
liosu
vuico
was first heard
flowers
i n his grave,
I th
Imro ?
It was
the
voict*
of tho
red man.
bring ti
use and put
them
Wc w
:re then ^
•oat a
l\J pu
iverful;
you were
gravns.
Maybe some
of tl
’■ill strew
I would
few nnd weak. Y"U came among ns us sl.an-
gurs ; y-.ur faces were whit.: wc were red
How did wo treat you? W’o ict you live
with uo ; wc chtree our la id with yon; we
undo n:> war ujmri the white man. we were
s'long; wccouid have driven you back into
•..io r.-at .v::U:rs
tend w ith.
The
Rut how much ha liter do thev !
. , . . - • ' ; stars—-sine in
ii in when, his nttnsBaiy avocations ne.ng I
invar he returns to his Imme. and fads there
kill rv.»yl_lt>, j ^ (
them have lift! - * partner of his grief and troubles, who takes i
j girls at homo, you know
There was mere homaniiy in tl.a few -on- j upon her. and soothes thc anguish ot bis
tclives cf tb,.'. little girl than in ail the reso ’ uutieij’atieu. A wite is not, us she is false-y
Intions and orations of a thousand decora- reproacotid and esteemed by some, a burden
Gcrmnii ar-ronomer:- nay that
he constellation of the
mi,” and thc ulhcr the “.Etna Argo.
two 1
i hunting up. There is no need of the inhab- |
ituuts of this Jilaoet getting excited over the
i matter however ; as these wondrous fires will
not effect them in the slightest degree. It
i i-somethin:' m >i vcllous and awful tn re.n-
w.
1:
<•
:M :
r:t
you ean
-aa the
iadoa o
white
lions. Let the visiters to Hollywood Come
tary never
'.'l ives of some
the r.-tin:; i ia-o ot la;=
ora sorrow to man. No! she
Wi:i s.r; •q.:L'
scares i.:s tur-
fail to scatter flowers over the ! dens and alleviates his sorre vs , !or tner ■ L
Union aoidieni, for in so doing uo difficaltie* so bowvy or insupportable in
■..of this li-th- girl's t.-lur .ifo bat il may he jn-mour.tcd by the tsutal
l.- dc-'irati d — "i 1 labor ani the P~e. A -u.‘e
t. mplatu, toonga*--
j wot ids, no duiiot
1 we inhabit.
do.-irn • tiou
Since th. rtory was puhlislied ..bout a la*
P ■ dy a finding some iineo in her ehiguou, uidhv
' of the fair onus set a trap in llic.ii at nights,
1 biiited with toasted cheese If this don't
exterminate them wc should ad’ia thc pre-
• caution of wearing a Thomas cat in there all
■ thc time. •
! Mississippi pip-rs are glad Senator Amos
f two ! is fteu.g to got .Antic puni.-hmcct for his m-
of li"
Ting
U
a, important as the world | in ,ll ’ ! D’he can’t be hung
. or imprisoned they ire glad he is to have
! ftenst Hutier fora&rhcr tn-luw.
H-? m#»n, most oi thorn «*ont;cted of ptiiy j „ ,
. i.i *»no hundred women are now nrenarino
we.• • dupe, a iu xul pal liiui, . ■ . w preparing
, - ' , •' i th.'n.scIVfs Jhr 3.::l:,-.eg to the bar iu th-
k
p- ■
gt
;
— — . a: .. ■■ ..... ....