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Volume 3. Number 9.
V, „
16 PUBt-lSHEO WEEKLY
. « -A T—
Office on ifloutour M. opp^sii* Cothwu * Wutki**.
WILLIAM H. ROYAL,
EDITOR <fr PROPRIETOH,
C. 8, Da BOSE, Aftraeiate E8ft«r.“
RATES Of 8W8CRIPTt«M.
Om oopf 19 mouth* #9 00—8 month* #9 00
On* copy 6 mootlt*, 1 60—4 moutho, 1 00
ID TERRS CASH.Jl
RATE8 Of ADVERTISING.
Tr«uai«ut AdvertiaeuMUUi «hU «h*rjp«0 «» tSr>
rate • / one duller p«r m]uui« fo. the fiwt and >-e*eaiy
fit* «•*!• for ««»h BoW^Hcnt i*nt-rti<’a, fur due
month or l*m
11 *qanrF .1 idadUm $10—6 monih»'816 ,
* •• 3 16 --------- .fl 9 ■
9 “ 3 25-6 : 45
4 44 3 35 -- ft : 55
i c-duiim 3 45—-6 - 75
1-3 50-6 I,on
Alt *<tv*rtia*monU from * dwtaucn, must ba paid
fur quarterly In’ B(i»*n«JC - Or wUb hat**iK<nory re5*r
•noc, muy be paid m the eod of nich qd-irf *■ r, ay the
nddition of 6 peroral for itKlnl((«nco
Ten lines «*f thin type IN) one eqn>r«.
CHAS. 8. DuBOSE.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
•W ARRBJSTTOlsr, O A.
WRf prootia* Iu *U the Cotiali«A of the
NORTUEUN CIRCUIT.
FRANK L. LITTLE, *
ATOSMOT ATT
BP ART A, OA
tTRoonw in Law building Went of Ooh Hoiim.
OAMAK HOTEL
Ilate» 76 cm* a Meal—Lodging 60 ant*
PAStiKNUEltS nu ilnr Mftuuu aud AngOi«(a RjiI.
ad will find UlM huu*e tlm pUcn li,r a Ouod Bre ib
•A He. SEAY, Pmprietor.
NBWbALOON
AMD
flStourj-itta I
J A MBS A. SCUOr»AY take* «ht.i method of iu
formtuK the puMio that hi* imw
SALOON & GBOCKRY STORK
i» now i**. (m)I Wuei Jl*. cutCoiiu r* «itlwl that hl«
TBinta, JSrauliita, J’int IVJjiskita,
TOBAGO Se OA.JPT1") V
*laN oftntiOR hs «*«dM for q«*lity and
for siCT 4 ?? tffr!ui»yoJ£»nf Om. os hand, and
FLOUR. MEAL, BVCoN &c.
sod *11 kind* of Orooeri** wiN h* *«id on ran hob
•hi* aim,. GsM *n«i (f** * l)*r «iu, • •
atom in ckrodtUy’s nVw kurfdinf, %KTA
June 0 tf 81 * GEO -
,
I€E Ueectved Every Day.
^ E are offering Great JBargaiu* to lho«* in was!
y®®® mssmi ®®@®asa
left which we will **H very low to cluwj oat the lot
bfo*. C. .nd .»-« l, ’' c m 0 V^“;T A iwd H '‘
Mu roll 3441
POLLARD, GOX & GO.,
GENBlfAL OtOGfrilY AND
Commission ‘ Mr reha ills,
»»• BROAD 8TREET,
(A few Joew below tho Floaters’ Hotel.)
ATJGHJSTA, Gb A.
IY 1/ KBP MMUBily i«w heud « large *i’d w**ll onaoM
lOoek of Utoo*rlce Whi»kfo*, «»f *very Brandwe, deocripliori, WImw focludiug
e'flu^ Mwwtmewt of Ac
T ho mtoruOt of the Hrm will be ropit*ent«l hy
IwOSe Henry H. ru«|«wtricli of Werro u oemity.
May 9 6nt
H. H. SASNKTT & BRO ■i
ltd BROUGHTON ST,
SAVANNAH, GIA.
Will krrp ooM*)*j»tly bond * S*l**«t t'toch ui
BOOTS aril SHOES
m ITIUimiE US EETA 1 L
The pwtnang * *f *»V fnrnifo mod th « p « b » M 5 * * 0 T *
neatly •wOwtoO. . * -sTT*
W# will ill *H ordut*
H- H SASNETT BRO*
loly -t ly
<
/<
a#^ s v MW m
' "
IBRD; -'■' y IS ’■IHR W* 'NC.
. 4 fijonl of Bread.
An August afternoon, still and sultry,
with the air (all of laoguid heats, and
the very butterflies drooping their vel¬
vety, purple wings as they hovered over
the beds of scarlet geranium ou the
lawn—such an afternoon as one dreams
of in the tropics, where great banana
hiHvee sway idlv to and fro, and the
crimson bti.ls of the paasion-vinc .glow
like stars through the tlusk of tangloct
forests, W e do, once in n way, have
such days in island—days the Calefldur of oilr, teiup
crate-Tioiied when nature
lies relaxed, ns it were, ami we think
pityingly of th me who dwell the year
round in the vicinage of the equator.
Through the green, translucent awn¬
ing of vine-leaves the sunshine wove its
level network over the cream-tinted
China matting which covered the big,
cool room, whose white muslin draperies
and fuaiiture of light bamboo conveyed
such an airy impression through all the
glow of the subtle August heats ; and
a slcuder-uecked vase, full of wbiCecor¬
onations intermingled with mignonette;
stood just where the faint, delicious
scents blended pleasantly with Hugh
Arden’s day dreams as he lay ou a chintz
covered sofa with an open book under
his hand.
He was tall and rather slender, with
dear hazel eyes ringed around the iris
with gray, and reddish-brown hair—
neither noticeabjy handsome nor par¬
ticularly plain-looking. The world i»
not than peopled Calibans, with Appollos any more
with aud our hero be¬
longed to the gr* at average column of
humanity. Yet that was a something
in his masculine individuality that had
won the heart, of the prefiiest girl in the
county—Charlotte Kyfe*
As he glanced up from his book, the
lotus-eating strain of whose sentences
was pleasantly in harmony with tho day
and the hour, he saw a fair picture
framed in the door way—Charley Kyle
horselb in a white -muslin dress that
fluttered round her like a suow-wreuth,
aud a braided coronal of golden hair
circling her head, while in her hand aim
carried a 4ppvl! Japanned tray ladeo with
dark crimson jelly-glasses. blonde—one of
Charley Kyle was a
those decided types that there is no
possibility of mistaking—her lair fore¬
head covered with floating rings ot misty
golden hair, after the style so much af¬
fected by the Oirl of the l J «riod, aud
her transparent temples outlined with
faint blue veins. As lor her long, sleepy
eyes, what shall we suy about them ?
Purple eyes are certainly not tho color
that poets rave about, and Charley
Kjle*B eyes wore neither more nor less
than, shadowed purple, full of doop, golden limpid lashes. lights,
and with
As she stood there, ftnstoed and smil¬
ing, with n knot of fern-leaves rwined
in h M -r braids, Mi. withdul Arden thought—and
not allogother reasolv—that impromp¬ he
had never seen so exquisite an
tu tableau in his life.
• Ttiere,’ said Charley, with »
nod of her pretty head ; * whav do you
thfrik of thm ?’
‘ It’s jelly, isn’t it?’ said Hugh, trying
to speak with judicial gravity.
• Yes, it kind?* is jelly.’
What
‘ Orape, of course !’ Charley answer
ed ; i and I made it myself.’
Hugh Arden too the tray out of her
hands ami deposited it the table.
• You soe,’ said Charly, sinking into a
law basket chair, wut.h a soft, willow¬
like rippfe of draperies arouud her, * I
HIU getting to be quite a domestic ebar
aoter i’ , .
‘You mean a jelly-productive char
HCter ;* *
• Well, isn't U tl^ same thing?’
» 1 Not exactly.’ said f
• Hugh * Charley, with a
contraction *of her brows, ‘you’re a
tuouomamac ou the u^hject ti bouse
keeping.’ not,’ said Ard* ,n stoutly,
* No, 1 am
* 1 only insist upon wmu 1 Gave always
asserted_ilmt rto wo' ,lHn * 8 , * t * or the
care of » bouseholu u“td she understands
rltM irr*nd urt il»*t Boyer and M. Bier re
BioUiave ms'** sohhme.’
Ho niioled. but there was uo auswer
m« 1 >8 Moarklu in Charley’s violet eyes.
rerabJitrouhlart^lmw. hut that's all nonsOuse.’ ’Yo.TidMW, shes^ld. af
,t carried sv.wmetic.lly mit, would
make mere drudges ut women.’
m, * Household urduatry need not be
"drudgery Kan that I know of *
* n.»ke ]«Ilv.’ said Charley, t? j* de
‘^nTvery jw
oxcellem qiitlifictlittn 1 but
,.|jy You see Char-
Sjwrta, Ga., June 28 , 1870 .
tomdkaalo.fafbrea.l.’
with a little grimace, how they would
look manipulating dough.
naked, ^^urenl'v with somewhat think-o.H.^-ehe o, .indedsinu in
her u.".»
n ■- xs;
least sfAaitzszstz underatand how,
in cane of emer
'
I am not , a housekeeper, , , , said . , soe, ,
with But a slight elcvaiion of her eyebrows.
you expect to be one some day?
laughed Hugh.
Charley rose with a toss of the fnngy .
golden ringlets, as if she would throw
off the subject.
‘ Let us go out and look at the new
croquet-!; round, she said, ‘while the
sun is still above the horizon. Audi
rfU l Vv h?, < Sbcu^3cMo a u b th'<2'u,S
at u the e house. ,s '
Arden obeyed, like a dutiful chevalier
hut he could not help feeling withlu
hnuselfa slight pang ul dimppointmeut
at the light way in which Miss Kyle
rr l l i :r 0Verh,,W,8he " e0 ^ n -
ly expressed.
the Ah! how little workings can men of comprehend the feminine
mysterious,
heart ! All the time that Charley Kyle
was talking flower-beJs idly about croquet-grounds
and she was resolving, m
her inmost volition, that the very next
day she would conquer her disiclination
" nd * odow *| int ? the kachcn, chore to
cooooct euoh a loaf of bread aeehoald
etfectuafjy convince Mr. Arden that she
was mistress of the situation.
■ a israw ssft
ss,TL*;r;;:; z&&
‘ Dear heart ahve, unss !’ saidJo.ua,
‘I"" t 00k ’ wh, ' ,, Ch “ rle y duseended into
, XT tv T* htb
D f r 8 s r iV a a,ll | » bib-apion auron
pinned j around her trim waist; • is there
er?’"^ Wr ''" g " ‘ ‘ M> orders for
but ’Nothing I that I know of, Joanna;
am going to make bread.’
‘To make bread, miss* And what
for should you be Maki n’ brea d,
here’s my two big ci*- hatTf^ at your
service ?’ cried Joanna. . J. ^
‘ Ob* for fun Charley auiwercd,
ooloriug a little. ‘Just bring me U»e
flour, Joanna, and the milk »nd all the
other things, and HI be through in uo
time at all. 1 wondericgly obeyed, ? Vv and, •
Joanna
stood by, marveling, while, her young
mtetros 8 dipjKKJ and stirred and mixed
3l) d knbadfetl wijh an enthusiasm worthy
of a uioro romantic, if notu more sensi¬
cause. '■*'
* There,’ said Chailey, presently, flour as
she stopped to breathe aud rub the
off her bauds ; * don’t you think that
will be nice bread, Joauna, when ' it is J
baked?’
‘Well, and indeed, miss, I dunno,’
said Joanna, oracularly. ‘ Bread is queer,
Borne folks has got the knack of makin’
it, and some hasu’t.’
4 Oh 1 but that is nonsense, Joanna,’
said eer young mistress, patronizingly
1 It ail depends on theehemicai element*
you know, and the proper state of fer¬
mentation. There’s no such thing as
chance about it. Ami—why, what’s
the matter V
For Joanna had seized her elbow
w ii,h a smothered shriek.
* You ain’t a-putteng it in the oveu,
inis*?’ •
‘ Yes, I am—why not V
‘It ain’t riz f gasped Joanna,
‘Joanna, what do you mean ?
‘It’s got to stand two hours and
miss, with a clean napkin over u,’
enuuciuteu toe cook, with agrnvc lace.
‘Oh ! yes, to be sure—I luruot, aairl
Charley guiltily. ‘ Nu don’t touch it,
Juatma; I wuut to do everything my- *
self.’ >
c^o Miss Charley sat down before the
i lire to barn her l«oe ami to torment
Joanna with questions, until that faith
' fni «ivit«l’« life temporarily reu
dereO a burdeu to her.
] Nor did her tribulations end after tie
' t »un was safely ueposited i.« the
| ! Half a dozen times at least, Cnuriej^
fluttered up-stairs and down before
rtima, steru mistress u* the lower
ment, WQubl allow her to open the cast
.run doors to View the result of her la-
Mkflf b^fef w a,?0>rftr tura
—a mass of dough dried into uesication
—a mummied parody of what might
have been!
Charley burst iutu teare.
■ Aa.11 had so set :ny heart on having
israisws^s:
.Ioanna/’ '
.
‘ Won’t I cut it, mm, ?
No, throw it the chickens. „
‘ to
* Oh, miss, but that would be a pity!
cried thrifty Joanna. ‘ There‘s a basket
of fruit and early vegetables to be sent
to the widow Hepsy Barnard under the
hill. She‘s poor and friendless, und we
often put up something for her. . Will
X pnck th ; 8 louf of breiul in ? Iam
sure it is sweet, anyhow.
«Do what you like with it. said miss
Cb r ] 7 ’ 81 ’ irit 'r' y OU ,' y Tl l ak ?, U
T.u f r ,r > , ' ,,Sh T T ° 1 »>at . ufter
all I thosn 1 lectures ou practical chemistry of bread
can't so u*uch as make a 'oaf !
. j, ain . t worth while ruling uboyt
uilas, said Joauna, soothingly. You
can try ajpiin to-morrow, and we’ll be
tTi * b ^
But Charley was in no mood to listen ,
to the cook’s words of encouragement,
She* had tried to make bread, und hud
fttiled . ^ uot that enough T down
At tj Je same moment Dita came
-the pretty young girl who dusted the
bedroom, did up fancy laces and tended
( j oor . w] t h a card in her hand for lVn=s
Ryle. . , E
It was Dubarry kiuo m card.
Charley looked at half cr esitatiugly.
[ ss^a«2ja!B3 n ^ «Jayb of old—before she passed
fWltS l JSSL ^Ch«
| ey had respected 4 his prejudices. f““ Now,
0 y l °
escape f the Neinesis of culinary mishaps, »‘dd
. e p hia , j wiU see him, Dita,
gh,^ a ud ran away to get rid oi the bib
“^ U j 0(1 , t 4 P ^ .nZ^ so be ffn^hip is
. .... ......„ y^o h .. "TffraT!
—"^oithaiipened U c . ttijX litflvg just aow.
that when i..r. Hugh
Ap(jen entered iu that afternoon he
found his fair-haired lover with Dubarry
Erskine.
Btiog a man, ha wa* tmreaaoitubfe;
being a mortal, he was exacting; and a
dark frown corrugated hia brows, which
Charley oouW nst hut see. 8he half
rose from her ehstr. ->
•I am intervQptmg yod I see, he said,
eo! ilv, ‘ Excuse me, I will not detain
* Hugh, don’t go ! cried Charley.
Bnt he tnrnNd inexorably away. And
in the same instmt that he turned Iris
eye fell on the forefinger ot her loft
hand and saw that the engagement ring
was Invofnntarily gone- Charley’s glance toi
lowed the direction of his, and for the
first timesbe heaame aware of her leas,
‘ You have lost something 7 courte
ously questioned Mr. Erskine, obeervtng
her look of perturbation. Mr. Erskine will
* Yes —n ring. O,
you excuse me. I must look for it at
once.
‘ Canuot I help you ? he asked, os she
rose and stood clusping'her hanffs.
‘O/rio, no; pray uo/
And thus Mr. Erskine was summarily
dhmi«spd, whife Charley flew up stairs
to Me if, by »nv ohaece, tho
ritia inlaht be lying on her
table or among the folds cf her laces or
ribbons. But her search was in vain,
* It must have, slipped off my
she said to herself; • tor I never,
removed it voluntarily. Oh ! whall I
do ? What will Hugh say ?
And for the twentieth time
sought through oil the oooks anfi cor
uera of Iter little white-draped
room, only to cry anew: What will
Hugh say? And he was so vexed, too,
at see, ,.g Dubarry Erskine. How could
I be fuvlish enough to admit him, when
I kuew so well Hugh’., fauefed ieeliugs.
And Chai ley little Kyle herself girl the
miserable country in ex
^Tlut sue was not a whit more misera
ttian Hugh Arden as tie stalked
down the woodland path, which made
a short-cut’from the Kvle homestead
w % t ' If / % W 1 u } >! Iy k U r
l frw f \
a
,\ *>
Arden muttered to hlmsbH', -tobelieve
Erskine and lead him into a flirtation,
for which he is .uiMaloubJd in no way disinclined.
But ehe hw in this iu
stance; tool though 1 tuav be, there ie
alnuit to my fotuitv, oodl wjD batrided
this world/ .o Ji M»«i
ii ls n.outl, and chin seemed to bo
carved in granite as - he stood in the
shadow of toe leafy chesnut trees look
ingout into the blue distance of the
Autumn laudscape, with eyes that saw
only a dead post and a shattered dream,
For Hugh Arden had loved Charlotte
Kyie very dearly, aud the faintest doubt
that had crept into his heart was sharp
er in its sting thae tmy serpent’s tooth,
. * • •
TU,! wid °J' Hu P s y Ua '““ rd peered
8 ly «t hiu. through the
c lets of her spectacle-glasses as she la-'
boriouslv drew ud the sweeo of hpr nld !
twhieued well, and uoUed the dripping “
bucket Splash on the curb. i
*»%»*>»*** went the bucket B**%4 over the edge '
ot leaoed a I
little ber curiosity too far forward tlJ in the fervor of! !
shrieJin • and B hLk .
irden little rS suite undt^e of herself
turned
tion through sep^ated the leafy screen of foliage
which him from the widow
U e p 8 y Barnard’s door-vard
Widow ueusv was old and ell *1 ,p wa- o“
a womau-tiro dUulficieut stmZdfo" i. u»
Mr. Arden’s courteay. * He P
ward in an instant
“You have anilled vnur wnt*r '*» *» h*
aest ^ssastesafs - -
.
th ® " e "
you ’’‘ITd’Mre^an^ Sft “ £ ^kh.sfdow^
[„ raagmont he!hkdo ‘Wou’tye mot dt»vvi‘ *
t r the beadt^d
. bcot6wJ^p|^ljp4i ing
rout his
buen waikhig last, and the day was sul
try; the widow Hopay having filled her
iron tea-kettle from t^e bucket drawn
for her by Mr. Arden, weut back to her
work, which was unpacking tfro idouti
cal basket sent down a few minutes be
tore by the cook at the great house.
It wm a little one story cottage, with
asters blossoming under otherwise—the tho windows-*
rather ideal cottage pictorestpw of than with stone
romance, a
doorstep and a litUe wicket gate half
hidden io feathery soutimru wood aud
sweet hriar bqshea ; but the wulow
Hepsy was by no imjaua tlie uiodel bid
woman of novel loro. She was old and
she was rheumatic; but there the pa
rallel ended. 8ha woe neither grateful
nor pious, aud she did not quote the
Psalins of David, nor count up her
blessings when widow she Hepsy was alone. Ou the
contrary, Barnard wis
ungrateful and discontented, friends. and decid*
odly trying to all her
‘You seem to have a basketful of good
things polite, there,’said he sat fanning Hugh, himself trying to with b«
as
brim of his straw hat.
‘Humph /’ sniffed the widow Hepsy ;
as people It’s may the chuose heat fi>U» to think
about it. not aeuds to
me—but there. I suppose they think
anything’s good enough for a poor old
body lifce me. she
‘I declare to gracious, weut on to
say, ’Jl want to know whether this
what they call bread ? l should think
rich folA* wonld be ashamed to send
’such stuff out of the house.
The. widow elevated poor Charley
Kyle’s failure in the air with a contem
ptuous sniff, designed to w’or£ ujmiu Mr.
Arden’s sympathetic feelings, ami then
»be broAre the collapsed little loaf in
two.
wacious, ^ here ... is nng.
a -
‘A ring,and Hugh glanced up quicl
widow an ? s C»itc»»ing hand, saw tke imbedded in the t [* e
S r “'» f lire bread the very ^ JW«r
he I, a d given Charley Kyle eecredy
month before.
It was not long before be made binr
self iu owner. Ho would Uto bacAr the
rescued ring to Charley, and give her
one more chance; for. somehow,
himself couid scarcely have t<dd why,
a new hope seemed to rise up within
Terms Thr##4)oiiars
_____ <»
sajzxs&s he held Hi. »!,,,,!. * th ® ^ r-i
a* ..... *:<*-*•«*• 4> * 8> * t
HeUiSh ‘.Where? 1. *?fr^ ,...
her^UptT -Befied CL* 1“ hoK £&"?„'Z ,i
n s KernsUb Innf of ' rrart ' ' ,i
widew He t «.»
..sissss: ........ r
me*, t g«>d. but it w*M &U down *
m
little * '''' “ “
‘Navp»' ,,m,,i stirTintf , ,. .
fcho tiny rings ^ of hair ^ beneath
bis breach.
*Buf I dn minH 8 1 i 8ha un
’
certainly try again
Miss Kyle breid W her word • mid
next loaf of kZperZ was white’ hire liM.t i »„d
sweet as Uouw ? ° U ^
wish ‘ ' • ■
a do * ChLle^ . tl . . ,. A .
fmm they the le.t, umde said ™re
were e*„ctiy j„ the sa ne
manner. /,
‘Nnf ^Io nr<mluol P «.?, ■, W-‘th« v, a
ly. flrr * Ve :
riu ^ K wss left Zr rfi diamond ^
________ .
Mark Train thus discourses of the ofdebe
man hi Buffalo: ,He T is one hundred J and d
i / y "*f ao1 u ^ awl recei,t, , y W »1M
a
a half In two weeks. He is as
cheerful ami bright as any of those other
old men tlmfccharged around so in thd
newspaper, and is in every way as re-»
markable- Last November he walked
five blocks in a rain storm, with out
any shelter but an umbrela, and cast bit
vote for Grant, remarking that he had
voted for forty-seven Presidents. His
‘second crop of rich brown hair’ arrived
from New York yesterday, ami be ha a a
new set of teeth coming—from Phil* 1
dofphia. He is to bo tnarri*»l "'’ A£ week
to a girl 1 cr ^ > windmill takes
iu j fy have been engaged
etgtlTy years, but their parents persist¬
ently refused their consent until! three
days ago;
__
5 A ' 8 Mass Masonry.—T
olid op he
New Yoi/r Express t> f the 9th lust., says
there must have boun 200,000 strangers
who were either apons, or friends of
Masons, in tlm city ou that day,attend
ant upon the Masouic ceremonies. The
tela, Express says and that ferryboats the streets, cars, ho
tbeii. parfe are filled with
insignia They are distinguished by tho
of their Order, and room In
every direction. At noon, the stages
and can* on Broadway, 6th and t*h
avenues, were blbc^ut led by the pr.ees
aloft dh route to thh corner of (Uhavcn
ue ami AM street, where w»ik tbtxftftfd
corner stoup new Masonic
Temple. ‘Forty-throe Broad -a ay cars
were stopped in the vicinity of Madi
son Square, making « string nearly a
mife jti length. The men in tho pro
cession marched twelve abreast. In
the neighborhood of 0th oyenuo and
23d street, the crowd was the greatest,
and the display Of flags, flowers, and
pretty ladies was great. *Th#%xereisc»
of laying the oorner t;toue consisted of
an GftCih anthem, sung by ihe bretiiren-of Bt.
Lodge, addresses, invocation by
the Grand Chaplain, end the placing pf
the stone in position by M. VV. Brut,Iter
John W. 8imoo*. r ^aa
Live to be useful. Live to give light.
Live to accomplish the end for which
you W ero made, and quief ly and steadily
thjn(< t to d( , dut Vot
'
. who . are enabled through , grace to
sbines as lights here, shall shine as sutrs
and stars f* rever and ever.
If we would have powerful minds, we
must think; if we would have faithful
hearts, we must labor. These conclude
all that is valuable in life.
j. The best thing to give your enemy
» 8 f torg*ven*«, ora ivene8s; to to yo your opponent opponent, tutor toior
once; to » frond, your heart; to your
child, u good example; to yourself; re
apeot; to all men charity.
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The Macon (Mo.) Time*, referring to
the reeent New Yor^ election, in which
Radicals were beaten by 90,000
majority, says, the negroes voted, and
&o did white men-