University of South Carolina Libraries
The Orangeburg Democrat, A DEMOCRATIC JOURNAL DEVOTED TO f HE BEST INTERESTS OF ORANGEBURG COUNTY. "Vol. E ORANGEBURG, S. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, ?079. 2STo. 7. SHERIDAN & SIMS, Proprietors. StJUBORIFnON. One Year.v.$1.50 Six Months.1.00 Ministers of the Gospoi.1.00 Advertisement?. , First tnstertlori......''.$1.W) | Eacli Subsequent Insortiou.50 Libernl contracts nmdo for 3 months und over. Job office 18 PBEPABED TO DO ALL KINDS 0J;' &?t> i?x?in.tiiag AN INTERESTING OCCASION. annual . MEfcTiNG OF TltB STOCKHOLD ERS OF THE ?RANGEB?RG AGRICUL TURAL! AND MECHANICAL ASSOCIA TION. The Orangeb?rg Mechanical > und Agricultural Associaiion held their Annual Meeting in the tfair Building on Saturday the 8th instant. Oapt. Mortimer Glover was,elected chair' man, and Mr. John IL Heidtman, secretary. A committee of three on j proxies, consisting of Dr. W. F. Bar ton, Hugo G. Sheridan and L. K. Beekwith was appointed, and after a few minutes absence reported 113 shares represented. 'The chairman announced a quorum present and that the meeting was ready to proceed to business. The minuted of the last meeting were read and confirmed. The report of the president and di rectors was read, , also that of the sec retary and treasurer, and on motion, were received and adopted by the meeting. The reports are as follows: The Board of Directors respectful ly submit their report of the transac tions of the company for the year 1878, in a short and concise manner. Although the report is not finan cially as favorable as they could wish yet they feel that they have done their duty, and the fault does not lie with them. The general ludebtness of the Association remain without material change from 12.months ago. The scattering bonds that have been drawing heavy interest have been] united in one at a lower rate of inter est, and they present the property to day, in good condition) and in the opinion of the Directors, equal to any county association.in the State. report, John L. HeIdtman, Sec. & TrIsas. In ape. . with the O. A. & M. A. Dr. To cash received or.K. Rob inson, ex-treasurer..... $5 60 Cash received ipr rent ,r of buildings & grounds.... 125 65 " Cash received of Citizens,,. ^ SavlngsCBank:..:y.l.:::'l-..,..6' 25 " .Cash received of the Fair..703 51 Moorer, I^oan.......1195 96 M Cash advanced by Treas.2 06 Total...;...........,.82032 03 Cr. By Cosh paid Premium on In surance...$45 001 " Cash paid Town Taxes 1 on property..8 00 J " Cash paid on expenses of Fair....746 60 " Cash paid on State and County taxes.36 371 I *' Cash paid for incidental expenses.1 10 " Note and interest of Mrs. Dibble.184 08 II On Note and Interest of Mrs. Felder...728 00 " On Note and Interest of Mr. Keller.133 40 " On Note and Interest of Mr. Morse.86 48 " On Account and Interest of Mr. Lucas.,.64 001 Total.82032 031 . assets, Real Estate and Personally..6268 41 Bal. due by Oit. Sav. Bank......25 24 Balance due on 4 Shares....60 00 Premiums on hand......15 00 Total.86368 651 LIABILITIES. Amount of Capital Stock > Paid in.5565 00 Bills Payable.;...1195 96 Int., on Debt to Feb. 1, '79.48 64 Amount Due Treaa.......62 06 Total....;....Vi.86871 66 TOTAL INDEBTEDNESS. BillsPapable.1195 96 Interest on Debt... = 48 64 Amount Due Treas......62 06 Total.,01306 66 Building Insured In the Tex- h no Banking nnd Ins. Co..1500 00 " Insured in the Peters* burg Savings <J& Ins. C0..I6OO 001 Policy*.........83000 001 NcW gentlemen after hearing the report it is for you to say what shall Be done and how it shall be done, Wc have bad 4 successful exhibitions which fjhould be an honor to the County. The last one was the fifth) and under the trying crlrcumstances the Board feel that as the expenses were met that they did well. There is no use for me to repeat our obsta cles since 1878, but will simply re mind tho stockholders that their duty towards the Association has been care lens and discouraging) and would in voke you to unite your wisdom and I influence towards its interests in fu ture* and whoever is elected directors will have encouragement to work for the interest bf the Association, and the county. We believe and feel that the planting interests of our county demand it, and this society will ssek it, and wo farther believe that without some such attractions, or some such interest in home pro ductions and improvements that so cial industrial improvements will retrograde; therefore gentlemen, it is for you to say to-day what shall be dolic?nnd bow it shall he done, and if you elect directors to run the Fairs to Interest) you must do it with a will to encourage both by your means and influence; The report of. Committee on the Clement Attachment was read and received n8 information, and the committee discharged: Tho views of individual members on tho future policy of the Association were called for by President J, L. Moorer. Capt. Samuel Dibble thought the trUe poli cy to bo pursued was for tho Associa tion to follow the even ten tue of its way* The condition of the Associa tion was as encouraging as could be expected, and the debt resting upon it had been consolidated at ? per cent. He advised no new enter prise save to bold a Floral Fair in the Spring in addition to the Annual Fair in the Fall. If the property ad joining the Fair grounds could be sold at a fair valuation let it bo done, but not to sell it at a sacrifice. The property was not rusting and would increase in value as tbe town built up. He advised that the premium list be confined to articles on exhibition and not include crop's raised here and there. He saw no reason for dis couragement, and thought that the shares not paid for should be sold. Mr. Dibble moved that the same President and Board of Directors be clectedk The motion being put was carried unanimously, and the chair man announced that the same Presi dent and Board were elected to serve the ensuing year. ""?'Miv.T. H. Zimmerman thought Fairs, did not pay expenses and fa vored a sale of the propertyv Dr. W. F. Barton did not concur but thought Fairs would pay hand somely if each stockholder would take an interest in them. The four Fairs preceding the last, each paid from 8200 to $300 apiece. Orangeburg was a successful agricultural county-? full of energy and enterprise and if each man would get bis neighbor to attend and thus infuse an interest in the members of every community, in a short time the Association would be clear of debt. Mr. L. R. Beckwith said that the success of previous Fairs came from outsiders. Most of the stockholders neither exhibited or patronized tbe Fair. Last year was not a fair crite rion by which to judge tho success of any enterprise. Let every man do his duty and success was sure. Dr. J. C. Holman voted against the Directors because he was one and wanted to get out. - Mr. Harpin Rlggs did not wish to serve, because a few did all the work and he thought the Fair an up-hill business. If every member would do his duty it would not be so. Dr. Barton objected to Mr. Riggs declinig to serve and hoped for the good of the Association he would not decline. An effort was made to reconsider the vote by which tho President and Board of Directors were elected but failed. There being no further business the meeting adjourned. A Mysterious Hand. A curiosity which puzzles scientists in now on exhibition in Gould's cabi net at Mill City, Nov. It is a per fectly formed hand, which apparent ly belonged to a boy about fourteen years of age. Tho hand is open, the fingers being slightly bent towaid tho palm, on which tho thumb rests. Tho back of the hand seems to havo been crushed or decomposed before petrified 5 tho palm, thumb and fin gers are perfect. It was found at the sulphur beds near Rabbit Hole, by one of the men employed in shoveling crude sulphur into the refining retort, and is supposed to havo been cm bedded in the sulphur bank for ages. The fingers are comparatively short, a fact which indicates that it did not belong to an Indian, as tho rcdir.an's fingers aro generally longer than those of tho whites 5 but tho thumb is rather longer than the average* To what race tho owner of tho hand bo longed, and how and when it was em bedded in tho sulphur, will probably ever remain unknown. A PRINCE'S MARRIAGE IN OREGON. ?o? THE FORTUNES OF A LEADER IN THE AUSTRIAN REVOLUTION OF 1818i A few days ago tho Oregonian contained a list of marriages during the year, and among them appeared tho following notice I "December 13, Prince C. J. Nada&ky and Marie Von Reiche." Tho oddity of a titled Wedding in Oregon led our reporter to investigate, and here follows the true story t Prince Carl Johann Na dasky, sole heir of a wealthy aud influential Austrian family and a long line of illustrious ancestors* was dur ing the revolutionary war of 1848, a young officer in the Imperial Aus trian Guard. When sentence of death was passed on Robert Blum, the famous revolutionary leader and a favorite of the German people, the young officer was detailed to com mand the detachment of soldiers whose bullets were to terminate the life of the noblest and bravest man of his age. The fortitude Blum dis played at the execution and his part ing words so impressed tho young soldier that a few months' study of the liberal publications of those days sufficed to lead him into the revolu tionary party. But the feudal gov ernment triumphed) and Prince Na dasky, together with many other prominent leaders; was taken prison ers and condemned to death* But through the influence of his relatives I his sentence was commuted to im prisonment for life, and he was sent to the dark toils of an Austrian fort ress. Eight long years tho Prince lived the life of a convict, until at the birth of the Crown Prince of Austria he was liberated, but banished from his country for life. He came to San Francisco and devoted himself, under the assumed name of II. Meier, to the business of flower gardner, earning a livlihood and accumulating a small fortune. About five years ago he waain^arrjed to a (Sertnan lady of no ble birth, who was impressed with the cultured and gentlemanly de meanor of the gardner. Not moro than a year past ho removed to this State, and lived at Salem, where he bought a small property for his business. But the happy pair had been blessed with a lovely boy, and the father found no rest in the sdd thought that his dear ones were des tined to lead an obscure life, away from the luxury and honors due them, and took passage for Europe. He went to Vienna, and in an audi ence with Emperor Francis Joseph, succeeded la obtuining bis pardon and being reinstated into his ances tral inheritance. Post haste he eped back to his family, and under bis ieal name he was again married in this city to his faithful wife. The steam er Idaho* which left here December 20, took the happy couple and their young son back to the castles of the Prince in tho beautiful mountain re gions of Austin.?Oregon Zietting. Queer Name tor a Newspaper. Considerable curiosity having been manifested by our friends in regard to the significance of the name of this paper, we will inform them that Dona Ana County having heretofore been Republican by majorities rang ing from three to five hundred, and the Democratic party having in tho recent election carried it by a majori ty of thirty-four, a revolution which one of the editors of this paper con tributed towards b inging about, it was considered appropriate to adopt that majority for a name. Heralds, Democrats, Republicans. Suns, Stars, Gazettes, &c., these arc without number, and not one of them posses ses such an individuality as to bo in telligibly referred to by its simpie name without mentioning its locality. There ts but ono Thirty-Four* and whenever it shall bo mentioned there will bo no doubt as to what particu lar journal is alluded to. Tho name is brief and unique, has a local and historical significance and is just odd enough to attract attention. These arc considerations which aro loo of ten ignored in a profession which lives by advertising other people's business but neglects to advertise its own.?New Mexico Thirty Four. A man in New Orleans was agree ably surprised to find a plump turkey served up for dinner and inquired of tho servant how it was obtained. "Why," replied Sambo, "dat turkey has been roosting on our fence tree nights. So dis morning I suizo him for do rent of dc fence." Who Will be Crowned In Heaven. A five dollar note would be an ex travagant price to pay for her estab lishment and all it contains, but if heroic womanhood ever found em bodiment in human shape, it can be seen nightly upon St. Charles street, just below the Academy of Music. ,A week a^o Grandma Wilson was in Memphis, baftling pestilence by her tireless vigilance. Hailed by a ter ror-stricken community as their guar dian angel, Elizabeth In the zenith of her splendor could not have com manded the adulation which spontan eously went forth to that plain old woman. For thirty-eight days and bights during the frightful harvest of death at Grenada those withered hands were often the only oues to soothe the burning brow or close dy ing oyes. To her tender care were committed their children by dying parents. Appointed by the divine mandates of gratitude universal exe cutrix and administratrix, in that season of deadly peril and death the confidential friend of the higlieet, she cow seilt? peanuts oh St. Charles street. She did so before, and were another epidemic to carry desolation into a thousand homes, after'another heroic battle with discs:-e, would do so again ; but is Cincinnatus returned to his plough much more heroic than Mrs. Mary Ann Wilson returned from the devastating of Grenada, Grand Junction and Memphis to her peanut-stand f Mrs. Wilson was a faithful nurse here in 1887. During the epidemic of 1885 she Vfras on duty the entire summer. In 1855 she devoted her time to the sufferers of Norfolk. Another year oho visited Savannah ; and, in short, for forty one years this noble woman has flown to the aid of the sick and suffering the moment she heard of their needs. There is a Beat for her among the best of God's children.?New Orleans Times. v-'?-' 4 ? ?V? <>wfRoyalfrproporfng.-fF j Nicholas, the Emperor of Russia, won his bride in a singular way ; yet it had'a spice of gallantry in it. Du ring a visit to the King of Prussia, one day, while at dinner, tho Empe ror rolled up a ring in a piece of bread, and handing it to the Princess Royal, said to her in a subdued voice, "If you will accept my hand, put this ring on your finger." This is the im perial way of 'popping the question.' She took no time to deliberate, but suffered her heart to speak, the truth at once; and their happy nuptials were soon consummated. The royal way is illustratatcd by the instance of Queen Victoria's proposal to the man of her choice?and a right worthy one it was?Prince Albert. The prince had been out hunting early with his brother that day, but return ed at twelve, and half au hour after ward he obeyed the Queen's summons to her room, where he found her alone. After a fow minutes conver sation on other subjects, the Queen told him why she had squt for him ( and we can well understand any little hesitation and delicacy she may have felt in doing so, for the Queeu's posi tion, making it imperative that any proposal of marriage came first from her, must necessarily appear a pain ful one to those who, deriving the ideas on this subject from the prac tice of private life, aro wont to look upon it as tho privilege aqd happiness of a woman to have her .hand sought in marriage, instead of haying to offer it herself. They Knew He Meant It. When a newly married widower passed a crowd who were standing on the corner last week one of the party remarked i "He waited a long time before he hitched onto his second iwife, didn't he?" "How long ago did hia first wife die?" queried a subdued looking stranger, who was standing near. Tiie party figured that it had been about four jcars. "Too soon, too sodn?M mused the stranger, "if my wife tshoul dio I'd never get married again." The moisture that gathered in tho stranger's oyo engulphcd tho crowd in a sea of sympathy and when ho bowed his head, and they saw the marks of a rolling pin behind his ear, and observed Hint several tufts i ofhnirwas missing from his sculp, they knew that ho meant what he said* HORRIBLE TRAGEDY. ?o? ONE MAN SHOOTS ANOTHER DOWN IN bOIi ? BLOOD IN ATLANTA. The Constitution of a recent date, gives the sad and sickening detail? of a cold-blooded murder, with the causes which prompted the commis sion of the terrible deed. Mr. Sara Hill and Mr. John K. Simmons met in the bar-room of the National Hotel, and almost immediately after the meeting, Mr. Hill shot Mr. Simmons, inflicting a fatal wound in the head. General rumor stated that Mr. Hill's wife was cUmlectcd with tho affair, and that some wrong to her was the cause of his action in the premises. Mr. Hill gave himself up to a police man, was taken to the station house, where be made a statement to a re porter, corroborating the rumor. Said be: "I have been wronged, wronged deeper than I can tell you. I have been off and on in Atlanta sev eral years. I have few friends here and many people are down on me. I have been wronged. I married a girl here?a noble woman. Everybody who saw. her loved her. I know that she loved me devotedly. Last fall while I was away, I was wronged? wronged deeper than if a man had shot me, und left me to linger out my life in pain. Men who have not wives cannot tell how I was wronged, but a man with a mother and a sister ought to be able to appreciate it. While I was gone a man went to my wife and got into her confidence by representing himself as my dear friend. I came back to Atlanta and sold pools on the city election. One night just after this election I was up town, when a friend came to me and told me I had better go out home, us some one had gone there and told my wife that I was coming home to kill her. I hastened out to my home at 260 cast Hunter street, and found on the door a i.ote saying: 'My dear husband, good-bye. I call yoa by that name for the last time. I. am gone./ it was signed by my- wife, and 1 believe that a man came in a carriage and took her away.?' The prisoner, was then asked if the man he had shot was ? life man who had wronged him, to which he re plied : "I never saw him before in my life, but from the description I have heard, I think it was the same man." Mr. Simmons' friends give a ver* sion of the ailair very materially dif ferent. They say that after Simmons was shot, and was lying on the floor when he could hardly speak for blood in his mou h, his brother, Mr. Mote Simmons, of the firm of Simmons ?Sc Hunt, came to him, the wounded man said in gasps, "He shot me for noth ing." It is also denied that Mr. Simmons ever had anything to do with the wife of Mr. Hill. Says tho Constitution: "The case is one of the most un fortunate wo have ever chronicled. Mr. Simmons is a young man who has many warm friends here. He is about twenty-two years old, and is a member of the Atlanta Cadets. He is the proprietor of a drug store on Marietta street, neur the cotton fac tory." Hawk Eyetenls. All the winter months have ca-* tarrh in them. Same way with all the spring and fall and summer in or. the;. Dr. Foote says t "Ice water is a better drink for January than for Au* gust." We know it is ever so muoh cheaper. , "Every man is the architect of his own fortune," and sometimes he does not get aa much for the plans as he had to pay for tho paper he draws them on. An exchange says: "Alcohol will clean out the inside of an inkstand." It will also clean out the inside of a pocket book a little more thoroughly and quickly than anything else on record. Now that tho conntry has resumed specie payments, who is going to pay for our next suit of clothes. N? B.? This is a question that interests the stricken tailor a great deal more than it does us* I Tho microphone has recently been so improved than you can tell what a man thinks when you hand back his bill and tell him to call again with it. It is invariably, as reported by the microphone, somethiug that hud bet tet bo thought than said* His Fraudulenoy. The Springfirdd Republican rises in the majesty of New England virtue to retnaik that it is full time for the bogus President to retire J. Madison Wells into tho obscurity which he merits; This, from a paper Which j has been set down ?s friendly to Mr. Hayes and his fraudulent admii.ds 11 ration, is most Unkind. The Repub lican can certainly not be ignorant of the fact that Wells is one of ltlhe gang;" that Mr. Hayes can ho more go back on him thun he can claim to be an honest man after having pur loined (as he has up to date) $95,826 of President Tilden. Wells was one of the thieves who stole the Presi dency, and like all the other thieves* has been rewarded by the man v. ho received, and is iib'w' enjoying, tho stolen goods. Unless a Democratic Congress concludes to relieve the country of the disgrace by legislating these scoundrels out of office or Im peaching them, they will remain se cure in their places until the close of the fraudulent Presidential term. Hayes would not for a moment dare to dismiss any them. The honor said to exist am?ng thieves must iu this in stance be scrupulously observed. Suggestions such as the Republican's only tonds to embarrass Mr. Hayes* an affiiction which, from one of his reputed personal organs, he may rea sonably claim to be exempt.? Wash inaton Post. Decay. Turn withersoever we will on the proud face of creation, and we find the landmarks of decay. A continu ed autumn brings down the weak and aged to death. The strong oak that lifts its haughty head on . yonder hill, defying the hurricane, may have a tiny worm gnawing at Its heart that will sooner or later send its lifeless trunk to the earth, a broken, mass of decaying wood. ' The huge mountain, around*whose lofty turrets the lightnings of a thou sand agencies have played and flash ed, and whose devoted sides have breasted the storms of . snow aud rain, alike impervious to each other, may contain within its bosom a vol cano that will, ono. day, rend it in fragments, and level it . with the plain. . The haughty eagle that mounts the. sky, aud dries his plumage in the sunshine far ubve the clouds, has his allotted 100 years to live? Everywhere wo find indelibly static ped the word "decay." The Butt, moon and stars-?the earth) with the ashes of her myriad dead?must one day be rolled up as a scroll. The tooth of time is contibally gnawing the bones of departed millions. The si lence of tho tomb gives back but a single echo and that?decay. What We aPe to Expect. General Grant may be the next President, and then the good old days will come again?the good old days of Credit Mobilier, Pomery, Patter son) Colfax and Oakes Ames; the flue old days of Bclknap, Orvil Grant and Indian posts bought and sohl; of whiskey rings and Joyce, Avery, McKce and Babcock ; of Sen eca sandstone quarries and San Do mingo commissions; of disinterested I presents, bull-pups, fast horses, Long Brauch levees; of the1 gold room; black Friday and Brotkcr-lh-laWCor-, bin 5 of custom house enterprises and Jay no, Lcet. and Stocking 1 .of Chand ler, Datier, Orth and Logan \ of. re construction, Ku-Kluxlsm and ' rn army employed as special puliccmen'? of KeHogg, W( ells, War moth, Pack ard and Brother-in-law CaseyJ of Steams, Rood, Liitleflold ami Simp son ; of Moses, Patterson, Ktmptorii Parker, Scott, and Chamberlain { of Dick trusteed and Durell: of Sickles* Steinberger, George Butler, Emma Mine Schcnck and Parson Newman ; of, Taft, .Akermnn, Robeson and Ban ditti Sheridan: of the Freemen'* Savings Bank and its honest trustees ; of O. O. Howard, Boss Shepherd, Harrington Fisher and District rings i of Christian statesmen and golden opportunities. Dost thou like the pic ture ??Baltimore Gazette. "What makes dogs mad?" asks an exchange. Boys. It makes a dog mad as a wet hen the minute he sees a boy with a tin can in ono hand and a j string in the other, looking for some thing to tie them to. A LONELY WATCH. ?o? PASSING TUB N IUI IT IN A CEMETKftt VAULT WITH SIXC??P?ES; Not long since the widow of a gen: tlemdn who had recently died desired the vault wherein the remains had been temporarily pluiJed td be Watch ed So that body BhatcherS could havd nd opportunity to p"ly their nefarious* calling. Thinking that the vaujt) would bo wdtched better by the sex ton than any one, fiir. Radbone was" hired to keep a close lookout. At dark ho took it ldli'tern and blanke? and made a bed in front of the vaultj so that any one approaching it would have to step ovpr bi?.Hodj. But after1 lying there some time . it grew quits cold, and.he thought he could watch the corpse just as well if ho were,. in-, side the vault out of the cold: So be unlocked the vault ?nd went in, bat found that he could not look the vault ' from the inside. This would never do, and yet he wad determined noi> ?* . Hvn .1 v ? in.:. i thus y. to stay outside, ? . , Finally he went back to the li?Usli and aroused the hired man arid the two went back to ike'vault. ' Mr. Hi then took his lantern aiid blanket atfd went inside, made a bed oh; jjjjk $ud_f; and laid down1 for. the night, having for companions to while away tW tedious hours, six corpses.1 The-'-at1 lendant locked the door fr^.qi the* outside and went ba?k to the kbqso and his watm bed, leaving the" Sexton alone In the vault with Iiis silent companions. ' ( ^ ' *i.'/!;{!,;5 . There was nothing (to (listiir^;^'1 trauquiiity during liio er'i ly part of tlid night.; i Everything was.quiot and I still Until abdut due o'clock, and theri' there was a gentle noise as though' some one was' tampering w^ith'? UhT vault lock. Mr. It. took up hin lau-, Tern) and the noise slopped for a few mo men ts - tinly * to j bfcgb? agitr?f When' he laid down on his'blanket, ' thhV time i,t appeared to]be ig ?n;opposite corner . of, the yaiJ.it.v Uo could acdi nothing and ? could only hehr??-tUat steady 6crateh,?. which* bce.srae.'!ifiaA'' and mord disitnet eVery,'Instant.'Mn II. js a brave manvbut , hp confesses that when one is, locked.in-:a vault with six-'dead 'men* with -no living soul Within half !a mile, rind an un-> earthly hour to have such uriexplaiu able noise as1that,'ft was more than men with ordinary1 nerves c?ii stand? At' tiny* rate" hiif iiair'b'egari" t? rise* and just as he was thtn'Mliig of' thd best wiry 'to ''defend Dimseii against his spiritual foek',' a little chip-munk dashed from a dark dorripr. rail1 past him and dar led out between the bars in thd vauit uoo'fi From that time on nothing'occurred to mar his quiet watch, but in tue morning he was rather' glad to ' bV released' from his dhll quarters.' : ? 1 u;'u ' -The Farmers. 1 Agriculture-commerce and ffl?n'd? factures are the' thtfee' pursuits that unite a country, but the most impor tant is the firstj for without its pro ducts the spindle Cannot turn' and the ship will not sail. Agriculture furnishes the Conservative element in cneiety, and in the end is the guid ing, restraining, controlling force in governments. Against storms of pop ular fury, against fren?ied madndss that seeks collision with established order, against the spirit of anarchy I that would sweep away the landmarke and safeguards of Christian society and: ' Republican1 r- government* the furmers of thol country uetaSaaV as 3 a f&ield and bulwarks tlfeaistlves th? willing.- subj<}et8,'aud t hefoforo' forq* log aJl'olhersJtdiqulct submission*' n , MarfteVrteWi^.u< ,? ' cd and WJieWj .Will, bo .a failure. .. ' (:.^to^qsj-y^-None in the market, and wc arc.. cpmpelled to omit quotations' to'1 Prudence?AlUn the hands of old stockholders! and held close. . 3 . ModeatyvHStock badly managed j nonp fpr salp to street speculators* 1 ' Vice^Market overstocked, with an activn demami And ?ood prices. ? : Prlde^iarkel' glutted ? notw Ith-> stnndfdg'the hduvy demand. l*o,itencs3?Cheap holders unatjte to dispose of any at present ratea. &pnriat^N6ne at wholesale, dcalb in chiefly fty pcddlcra at retail. , Loyq?None pffdrfld except for tjid cash pr its equlval?nti Iceboats are used on the Hudson at Newburg to transport passengers' across th? liver, and they scud along at ihb rate of sixty miles an hour.