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CHAP.XlV.t nv
JEPTHA’d DAUGHTER.
The days that followed were to-Emma'
days of weariness, a leaden load weighed
upon her heart, and her life was a listless
dreary blank. Her spirit was dead to eV-
ery hope and her mind indifferent to every
'••re. ” K*s*p >'■•! ,»:M3cw:- na <>.:*
Mr. Angustns Frarees’ conning instincts
fereted oat the cause, and ha bent his ami
ability to its utmost tension to conciliate
her grace and to stimulate her interest.—”
His brass was laid aside, and a veneering of
silver laid on, a thin coat blotched here and
there by the little springs of iacidions sel-.
fishness that would in spite of himself ex
ude from its overcharged fountain, but it.
shown much softer than the rudv brass and
was far more grtteful to Emma’s refined
sensibilities. Every little delicate service
*hat he could possibly render was as deli
cately offered. Ho was an excellent read-
d:r, and Emma’s favorite authors wore se
lected, and almost every evening was devo
ted by him to reading to her half listless
ear. He even overcame his sense of un
fitness for the office, so far as to offer to
cliaperon her upon her horseback rides,
and though he cut rather a ludicrous fig
Ure upon horseback, Hanna could only the
moreappreciate his service, because they
subjeoted him to such an unfavorable posi
tion. A tender regard was paid to her hu
or, when she seemed by .her silenco to pre
fer silence, the sympathetic lips of Mr.
Augustus Frazec were dumb as a post.—
When she essayed a remark the attentive
ear of Mr. Augustus Frazee was ready to
catch its every sylable, and to acquiesce iu
its every conclusion. The subject of Ma
jor Thompson’s gossip was never alluded
to; the namo of H'ram Lavender was nev
er mentioned; that name was buried too
deep beneath the leaden weight that crash
ed her heart to be resurrected In the
same sepulchre wherein was seated the
brightest joy of her life, that name was
sealed too, and until that seal could be bro
ken; until that joy could bo called forth
again to gladden her life, that name must
be hushed. Eveu the society of Mrs. Lav
ender was avoided. The yellow autumn
leaves that bestrewed the path that led to
the widow’s cottage—now sadly desolate—
were never rustled by her tread.
Mrs. Lavender woudered at the strange
alienation, and with a mother's anxious
heart had called, upon Mrs. Eustace to
learn tho cause; but Mrs. Eustace happen ■
ed not to be in the house, and Mr. Eu
stace received and dismissed her with such
a rudeness that she could not summon the
heart to venturo again—she could only
cling to Viola as one clings to the sunlight
of the heart.
Bat though tho sepulchre was scaled and
the name was not uttered, yet in her si
lent chamber Emma mourned over it, as a
heart-stricken mourner moaniDg over the
grave of its last and dearest friend; aod in
those moments of secret grief would the
heart of the wretched girl reproach her for
her desertion of tho widow, and would
promise over and over again that with the
morrow she would seek her presence once
more—promises that site could never com
mand the courage to perform.
Mrs. Eustace watched Emma with a pa
rent’s fond solicitude, and as, after a while
the bloom began to come to her cheek, and
the smile to her eye, sho rejoiced that the
struggle was ended, and the victory won.
Mr. Eustace had been apprized of Em
ma’s letter to Hiram, and his brntal nature
chuokled with its selfish delight—a delight
only tinged with the uneasiness that Hiram
might have the presumption to prosecute
his suit, aud to overcome her decision.
‘•If I could only get her married before
the hound gets back, it would all bo well,”
he said to himself one day. “If Mr. Fra
zee would take it in his head to take her
off my hands before the Ecoundrel comes
back, it wpuld all be right; but whether he
comes back or not, 1 could kill her before
she should marry him. 1 will speak to Mr
Frazee about it,’ and the beastly father
sought at once tho presence of Mr. Au
gustus Frazee. He found that gentleman
in the parlor. With a bruskness belonging
to his nature he said, ‘Mr. Frazes, I won
der that you do not marry.’
Really, my dear sir, you somewhat star
tle me,’ magnificently answered the elegant
Mr. Frazee, laying off the silver and letting
the natnral brass shine out in its most rc-
splcndant rudiness. ‘I really, sir, do not
know a yonng lady of sufficient a —a—
charms, you know, to induce me to have
her,’ and Mr. Augustus Frazee looked as
if the proudest qncen of all tho earth
would have been unworthy his most con-
temptuous smile.
‘Oh I am sorry to hear yon say so,’ an
swered Mr. Eustace, somewhat diseoacert-
ted at tho exalted perch of the elegant Mr.
Augustus Frazee, ‘In fact Mr. 1* razee, I
hope that you will pardon me, but I have
had some little designs upon you for my
daughter.’
Mr. Augustus Frazee looked if possihlo
still more grandly.
‘Beally, Mr. Eustace, you astonish me,
he affected to gasp in amazement, but the
effort wasja very labored one, and likeed to
bavo choked him—we only wish it had,
dead.
‘l am in earnest, Mr. Frazee,’ continued
Mr. Eustace, ‘Yon know o f this Laven
der matter—it is all dead now—Emma is
ashamed of herself, and is a good girl—
she will make a capital wife, and as for
property this is all ; hers—over three hun
dred negroes and land enough to work ’em,
besides a few thousand of the yellow boys
in bank. So yon see, Mr. Frazee, the bait
is not to be grinned at.’
‘Really, sir, replied the elegint Mr. Au
gustus Frazee, condescending a little, just
a little from his exaltation, ‘the honor you
propose is not a mean one, I never thought
of such a thing before, and of course your
proposition surprised mo; but since I re
flect, the alliance might not be altogether
inappropriate. I have a very high respect
for Miss Emma, and your kindness to me,
sir has not been ungratefully received. If
yon will allow me sir, a few days-till to
morrow, say—to think about it, I will be
better prepared to answer yon satisfactori
ly. , ni .
‘Very well, say to-fnorrow then,’ and Mr.
Eustace shook the hand of the elegantMr.
Augustus Frazee with the air of a man that
expected to he greatly obliged tMnorrow.
The brass glimmered resplendendly—
bright as the glimmer of the morning sun,
in die presence of Mr. Eustace but aa
soon as that gentlenun withdrew the brass
sheen fainter at every ehapge, until at last
the brass had entirely disappesred, and
with it disappeared the assumed, flbaracter!
of the elegant Mr. Augustus Frasec, and
we saw in his stead the true man—Nodiah
Scruggs, with a dull, ashen, " lsfiden hue
resting upon his osuntenance, and the geu-
qipa sneak delineated in every featare.
zee was put off and Mr. Nodiah Scruggs
was put on, the metamorphosis was con
firmed by the true voice of Nodiah, as he
chuckled his delight: ‘Ha, ha. ha, if this
aint fine- -who’d a thought it, and wont I
stobish the old lady, and wont Solly snort:
The throe handled niggers, and all thia
house and land and the yaller boys in
bank, rich, rich, and wont I spend the old
foot’s money for him, and wont I cat a
swell, and then the gal; a rale Southern
beauty, jewhillikens wont I swim, and wont
I.tame her too, ah ha, I’le let her know
who deserves kicking, wont I show her who
is a gentleman, oh but wont I kc-ow her
proud spirit—wont I though; hnt oh the
fortin, thats the thing,'just think of it, why
my eyes—dont it beat fingins, well well,
mammy alters did say that I’d make a rise
and share enough I am a gentleman. Yes
the fortin—the niggers and the land and
the yaller bovs. these is the things at jingles,
yes these is tho thin ‘
Having resumed and communed with
himself Nodiah Scruggs again shrank down
into the secret breast of the elegant Mr. Au
gustus Frazec, the leaden hue disappear
ing and tho brass shining oat as rudyas ev
er. The elegant Mr. Augustus Frazee
could hardly restrain his impatience until
the morrow, but would occasionally sink
down into tho leaden hued Nodiah, and
indulge in dcprcciativc expletives because
his assumed self, tho elegant Mr. Augus
tus Frazee had not at ouco clinched the
old fools bargain.
But a: length the morrow cauic, and as
soon ns Mr. Enstacc had performed his
matin maledictions, and enrsed every over
seer) on the place, Mr. Augustus Frazee
harried to him.
Mr. Eustace,” he said with his grandest
air, “I have thought carefully over the
matter you proposed yesterday evening and
considering the kindly obligations that yon
have placed me under, and the high regard
I have for Miss Etn ua, and the sympathy
I feel for her, and the desire I have to
avenge the outrage that scoundrel Laven
der has inflicted upon her, I say all these
feelings induce me to acqniese in your
views, and I will marry your daughter.”
Mr.[Eustace could hardly res'rain his
delight. He seized the hand of the ele
gant Mr. Augustus Frazee, and had it ia
deed been the soft looking hand of ihe ele
gant Mr. Angnstns Frazee instead of the
cold, hard, flinty hand of Nodiah Scrnggs,
ho would have wrung it until it writhed in
pain, bat as it was it only sent a thrill of
selfish delight to the heart of Mr. Augus
tus Frazee.
.‘Then yonr decision gives yon credit for
a man of sense, Mr. Frazee, and I am de
lighted with it, and with yon,’ said Mr.
Eustace, after he had completed his
squeeze.
‘And I am sir, that I am, obliged to you
for yonr good opinion, aud I hope that the
ladies. Mrs. Eustace and Miss Emma, will
be so kind as to approve it also,’ magnifi
cently answered the clegnnt Mr. Augustus
Frazee.
‘Oh I will manage them—I am the cock
of this walk. They will do as I say,’ proud
ly answered Mr. Eustace.
‘It would be unpleasant to me for you
to ask'them to do that which they would
not be willing to do,’ graciously whined tho
elegant Mr. Augustus Frazee.
'Oh never mind that, I will manage all
that—Emma will do anything that I ask
her to do,’ canfidently answered Mr. Eu
stace.
(Then I will leave it to you sir—only
begging yon by no means to distress her on
my account.
‘Very well, Mr. Frazec, you just take a
turn in the library, and I will send for Em
ma, and have the matter settled at once—
business is business with me.
The elegant Mr. Augustus Frazee retir
ed to tho library, where he was signally
overcome by the presence of Nodiah
Scruggs, and the complacent chuckle was
heartily indulged in. We shrink with dis
gust from the leaden presence, and return
to the parlor, where this modern Jeptha
was preparing to immolate his innocent
danghtcr.
Emma had jnst entered tho room in obe
dience to her father’s snmmons. Her face
was not so palo, bat there was not a single
gleam of joy to light up its bcanty. Mr.
Enstacc rcceivod her with a tender smile,
and kissed her cheek in a manner fiat sof
tened her heart at oucc.
‘Emma,’ he said in tho pleasantest tone
that be could command, ‘1 have sent for
you abont a matter that is very dear to me
—a matter that I have set my heart npon,
and one that would greatly mortify me if I
were to be disappointed in.’
Emma looked np with an uneasy flutter.
‘What is it ?’ she asked,‘is it anything that
I can do for you, father V
‘Yes Emma, it all depends npon yon,” he
said, and then he added, ‘but before I go
further let me ask yon if yon havo given
up your ill-advised attachment to Laven
der V
Emma’s breath trembled, and her heart
shrank within her as she answered;
‘Yes, father, he is nothing to me now.’
‘Then I am glad to hear it. Did you
give him np for my sake, Emma.”
This was a cruel question, and cruelly
did it cut into Emma’s heart, but she an
swered with her noble truth.
‘No, father, I gave him np because I had
been deceived.’
‘Then you did wisely,’ he replied, ‘and
now, my child, having given him up, would
yon allow me to choose a husband for yon,
one that I could love and honor, and one
that would not deceive you.’
Emma’s beautiful head sank into her
hands, her heart throbbed painfully, and
her eyes became strangely dim.
‘Do not be excited, my child, I ask it of
you only for yonr own good,’ plead her
father.
‘I do not wish to marry—I can never
love another—my heart is broken—is dead
and strengthless—it would he wieked in me
to marry,’ stammered the poor girl.
‘No Emma, it would not; it is wieked in
yon to indulge a selfish remombcrance of an
unworthy love; the post is dead; let it b6
buried, hnt yon are yet alive; yon have a
duty to perform; a place in society to fill,
and yon must not cling to the dead past—
only s iy Emma that yon will do as I wish
in this matter, and yon know not how hap
py you will make mo—Mr. Frazee.
. ‘Mr. Frazee,’ interrupted Emma, with a
start.
ma could urge more the leaden hued j'odi-
ah Scruggs had again subsided, and the el
egant Mr. Angnstns Frazee; brass on one
cheek and silver' on tho other, appeared.
fMr. Fraree, I told you that Emma was
a dutiful, loving daughter, and wonld ac
cede to my earnest desire.
‘Then I most offer Miss Emma my life
Ions devotion,’ said the elegant Mr. Augus
tus Frazee, turning hi* silver oheek to
wards her.
Emma spoke not, bat again plunged her
head in'her hands; this time deeper than
ever.
‘Will Miss Emma make me supremely
happy by confirming with her own sweet
voi<!e the blissful assurance that her father
has given me,’, again pleaded. the elegant
Mr. Angnstns Frazee, with silver in his
voice as well as upon his cheek.
With a sudden firmness Emma raised
her head.
‘If,’ she said, ‘Mr. Frpzee can accept my
hand without my love; can take the wreck
of a blighted life; then I will marry him.
bat never to love him, for my love is bu
ried.’
Mr. Angnstns Frazce’s first impulse was to
tarn his brazen cheek, bnt the leaden hoed
Nodiah Scrnggs thought of ‘niggers and
the lands, and the yellow boys’ and bo gave
the cars of the elegant Mr, Augustus Fra
zee such a twitch that the sUvcr cheek
drew nearer to the gin, and the silver
voice warbled its sweetest tones.
I am only toff happy to take you at all,
Miss Emma—my love ia not so selfish as
that; I am content to love you without be
ing loved; to natch over yon, to protect
yon, to love you as my own wife,” and the
elegant Mr. Augustus Frazec went down
npon his knees, and canght the hand, the
cold, almost pulseless, bnt boantifnl hand
in his and carried it to his lips.
Emma shrank back from the touch with
a shudder.
•There now, Mr. Frazee, smilingly said
Mr. Eustance, ‘we will dispense with the
‘Yes my darling, Mr. Frazee; be is a gen
tleman; he is accomplished, rich' and ele
gant;! he loves you devotedly, und. he will,
make you happy.’ „ '
•Father, I can never love Mr. Frazee aa
a wife ought to lovp a .husband.’
’• .‘Oh yea you can;.he can win your love;
hffis not unreasonable; only marry him and.
the good husbapd will soon win the love of
the sensible wife. There now, my child,
you have made mo so happy, let me send cent air.
for Mr. Fra?co, and let us settle the matter
at once.’ - . T . x .l
‘No father, please wait, I had zatber
think about it; I «m unfiUo^cta JSRSW Nwg. .
:pleaded the girl, bnt Mr, Eustace hum^ljbut‘I oould not Icaw yW.’
lover’s gallantry; that will do when you are
alone; we will now finish the business by
naming the day.’
‘That I will leave for Miss Emma to do,'
gallantly said the elegant Mr. Augustus
Frazee, as he released her hand and arose
to his feet.
‘Then Emma, my girl, when shall it be?’
said Mr. Eustace.
Emma was hardly conscious of anything
that was transpiring; a strange fatality
seemed to move her; not two blushes of
consecntive thought enlightened her mind,
bnt a strange dizziness seemed drifting her
along. At the question of her father she
looked np in surprise.
‘When shall what be V she asked.
‘The wedding day,’ replied her father,
with a slight shade of annoyance.
‘Oh not now; not so soon; next year; say
next July; my birth day,' she answered,
with a vague definiteness of what sho was
saying.
The brows of Mr. Angnstns Frazee low
ered, and he looked an appeal to Mr. Eu
stace. •
‘A year is a long time, Emma,’ her fath-
cranswerei, ‘many things may happen in
that time, and it is always best to conclude
such matters as soon as possible.’
■I know father, bnt only indulge me in
this. Mr. Frazee can afford to wait, and
may be—may be I can learn to love him
better by that time,’ she replied, with a
tone so soft, so earnest that her father was
touched.
‘Thcu be it as you say; I only hope that
Mr. Frazee will be satisfied,' he answered,
turning an nneasy glance npon that gentle
man.
Mr. Augustus Frazee was not satisfied
and he ventured to remonstrate.
‘No, Miss Emma, yonr father is right; a
year is too long; we do not know what is to
happen in that time.’
‘I can trnst yoa for that time, Mr. Fra
zee, and if your lovtfis so unselfish as yon
plead, yon can snrely indulge me.’
This Emma said in a more natnral voice,
and her eyes beamed their wonted intelli
gence.
‘Emma must have her way.’ said Mr.
Eustace, ‘and now, darling, yon may go,’
and Mr. Eustace tenderly kissed her as he
lifted her from her scat.
Emma tottcrei, rather than walked to
her room, and sinking on her conch she
said;
‘Lost, lost, lost!’
And when Mrs. Eustace came to her an
hour after, she was still wringing her hands
and crying, ‘lost, lost, lost!’
The anxious mother bent tenderly over
her.
Emma, my child, this excitement will
never do—yon must calm yonr feelings—
please be calm, my darling.’
‘Oh mother, it is killing me, I cannot
bear it,’ sobbed the poor child.
‘Yon most bear it, Emma, nerve yonr
strength with a pare and a true purpose.’
■Oh I cannot,’ sho interrupted with a
hopeloss despair. ‘Yon know not what I
have done—what I intend to do.’
‘What have yon done my child?’
‘Father wishes me to marry Mr.-Frazee
and I h- ve promised him to do it,’ she bit
terly answered.
•Emma, my poor child, this most not be.
Yon most not sacrifice yonr life and yonr
soal thus. Mr. Frazee is all unworthy of
you.’ And Mrs. Eustace spread out her
arms as if Bhe would shelter her stricken
child from her great danger. .
* ‘It is his nnworthiness that made me
promise. 'I could not marry a man that I
respected, for I could not give him my love;
and Mr. Frazee does not want that. I only
want to bury in a new life all that 1 know
of the old. I cannot live as I am; and to
marry him would be to cat loose from all
that I ever have been, ever hoped—ah,
foolishly, fondly hoped to he; and may-be in
the fntnre I may be something bettor.’
Thus reasoned the _ hajf distracted girl,
while the mother^ lore could only answer
with a groan.'
‘Oh, Hiram Lavender, I wonder if you
have ever drcamel of the cruel work of
your hands? suddenly cried Emma; and
this was the first time in all her sorrdw lhat
the girl had reproached her destroyer. ■
‘May God forgive him!’ bitterly answered
the mother.
‘Yes, may God forgive him; and may He
forgive and strengthen me—poor crushed
and sinful me,’ and- the.prayer was hushed
in a burst of weeping.
: A long and serious illness-foUowod, The
mind wandered unconsciously ont from, the
body, and fever parched the yonng blood
in her veins.' When sho waa snmciently.
recovered, Mr. Angnstns Frazee waited
wtoon hier to bid her good bye for a few
months. Business, he said, demanded his’
presence in Charleston, and from there he
wonld have to go to New York, ‘and per
haps to Europe,’ he hmte9~wilh a magnifi-
tried to .thank him for his solicitude.
•I amsorry that I- detained you.' I wish
you may.find your affiura,unharmed byyour
devotion to me,’ she answered, turning hey
eyes upon the wall.
‘I hope so too, and that I may soon be
able to retain to whatis-more than ellelse
in. the world to-me,* ho said, duping her
hand and raising- it to his fipa. Again the
same icey thrill shot through her brain, and
she shndderingly drew it away.. 47 ,
‘Good-bye,’ ho said, trying to be
hnt the serpent hiss of Nodiah Sernggs
sounded plainer than the silver voice of the
elegant Mr. Augustas Frazee.
‘Good-bye,’ she marmnred with a tone
of joyous relict.
‘Is he gone, Nettie?’ she asked, looking
up with a tremulous glance,
‘Yes, tank God, he is gone, and bay
de.debble catch 'am before he ebber.get
back,’ said Nettie, with a negro mud’s oat;
spoken and generous sympathy.
‘Hash, Nettie, you mast not talk so; only
remember bow Jund he hu been to me,’
;ently reproved the mistress.
Hash, Miss Emma, it was he as liked
to killed you. - Iif you. had er died dis chile
would er pizend ’nm for bigemy. I wonld
for shua and sartiu. He’s a nasty, stinken
bippcrcrit—dot’s what he is. I wouldn’t
gin de little toe-nail of massa Hiram for a
cornfiel full ob such Fnzec’s as 'urn is/
and Nettie grew furiously indignant:,
. ‘Nettie, I command yon to hush. You
distress me,’ bitterly.eried Emma.:
Dar, Miss Emma, I’s sorry for dat. 1’s
only talken to mysef. Massa Hiram is
such a open-face genfmen, and d«t Fnzee is
nuttin but a hang-dog, Yankee cheat—dat’s
my ’pinion ob ’urn.’
‘Nettie will you not mind me!—please
hush,’ and Emma appealed to the’indulged
and spoiled maid, with tears quivering npon
her long silken lashes.
‘Yes, Miss Emma, Fll hash. Let meget
de comb and straiten yon hair/said Nettie,
who, with all her impertinence, had a good
kind heart and dearly loved her mistress.
With Mr. Frazee’s departure a heavy
jloom seemed lifted from the Eustace ho.cse-
iold. Even the little negroes in the quar
ters seemed impressed with the change, and
sang a new and a merrier song.
Bnt no one felt the relief more gratefolly
than Mrs. Eustace. It seemed to her as if
demon had been exorcised, and her
breath was freer than it lad been in long
and dreary weeks l<efi)re. Emma’s heart,
so far u her heart could he lightened, felt
a sweet relief, and her spirits rested in a
qnict repose.
After a while a letter came from Mr.
Angustns Frazee to Emma. It wu dated
»It will.be Christmas, or^P ,.
before I see you again, my precious, and I
could not. leave_withant seeing you conra-
I ought to have gone weeks ago,
7c i -oiltM
Charleston, bnt post-marked Charlotte,
N. C. It wu fall of protestations of ar
dent and undying devotion, and oonelnded
by urging her to write to him in New
York.
Emma answered the letter as gratefully
u she could. She even assumed a pleas
ant tone; spoke of her recovered health,
and hoped that- at some day she might be
able to repay him for his devotion.
Then, after a while, there came another
stating that his business wu as he feared,
and that he wonld have to go to Europe.
This wonlu prevent his return until Spring;
hot wherever he went his heart, true u the
needle to the pole, wonld ever point to her.
And then his letters ceased and Emma re
lapsed into her old life.
Her dreary life wu uncheered by any
outward pleasantnesses; for tne high social
exclusiveness of her position shot ont the
more genial familiarity that permeated a
lower order. 1 Tho. aristocratic wealth of
her father, her own retiring hanteur, and
the radient pride of her bouity lifted her
high above her social surroundings, and iso
lated her in dreary solitude.
But if it shut her out from the sympa
thy of soeiety^it also spared her the out
weighing curse of its gossip. If she pined
for some friendly ear in which to pour her
hearts distress, she Wu free from the spite
ful tongue to whisper in her ear the tale of
scandal; and so Emma Eustace straggled
on, bravely ennerving her heart for its du
ties, and praying for grace to bear her bur-
deo.
will be made from the fruit in this
tho present year. - A Urge quantity of
winc* t ti>o. etc., will be pat up.
We learn ihe iron lor the railroad be
tween this point and Altai la will he at At
tain by the 10th or August, when the
track lryiag will immediately commence.
There was another stoppage of tho A. *
C. Railroad on Friday—some say on ac
count of a crippling of theengines at Chat
tanooga—others on account of a new strike
of the employees, who finally went to work
down, than Tuskaloosa. q
crop is nearly all threshed
tahlish an'erftSf. To deprive them of'this of the Brooklyn city and Coney Island rail-1 out—this scelintican only report a. little
tisebdrse and prevent' the'^roof of presence -—a Mmim* I more then half-a crop, and that of inferior
it home iriieu an:sieged crime wu commit ^ 9,a ^ 1 “ F - Tijffa
UUIUII au UHV4. JLU wpilfB SUCIW VS mmMMO
__ 1 t-i,--- a tiVACAn/iA
recourse sou prevent toe proof or presence — ^ j Mmn . nV .■
at home wben Wallege^ crime wes coctefit ^
ted, the whole male population oftbe yiein- The funeral of Clinton Gilbert, a victim
iifWjfrarresfed/ind'aS/were lodietod.^St of tbo BrpokTjiL whisk,
happened that one single farnser of -tlls
neighborhood wis not taken away to Ox
ford. ; He closed hia doors, left hjs plow; in
The oat crop is
wheat.
little better
furrow, .and went, to the scene
_ He there made his purpose Emm
to share the fate ef the rest, and requested
the officers of the Court to have his name
imlndad ia-tto/Mistiwito He feared
that hia exemption Cram prosecution would
lead people to believe that he was not
gentleman and good eit zen.
. That do possible good can come of all
this perjury, with accounts of which news
papers at Oxford teem, of which lawyers
tell U onpanllleled Uni the annals of eriaU,
palpable enough. Eahorned *
ire exposed before tne eonhi They 000-
1 that they had huir'tampered: with.
One swore in open court that he-had - been
offered bribes to swsar felaely by
of the grand jury: • Another wu kept in a
felons cell two 1 weeks, so a lawyer tells me,
because he would not swear to 1 statements
that, substantiated,'wrinld have been worth
85,000 nnder Alcorn’s proclamation: L A
ndgress was J ought by the accomplices; in
this nelarions conspiracy. She swore poti-
lively in open coart.that she knew well and
had reeognized among -a hand of masked
prowlers one Robert Smith, . She knew his
voice, and when the wind blew aside the
weiLho wore she recognized his well known
feyturea. Tom Johnson was q4dreiged <: m
. „ . , ' We see that tho special train to carry
to-day,andiwaaJkagely attended.,..Thereis j yiritors to the 10th Alabama re-umon, 6*
mue)> : excitement among the-revenue-offi-1 the 27th inst.,-is to leave Jacksonville 4t
cere of that district,'sud many rumors are 16.40 a. m. .The train wiH afford tranapoiS
afloat to the effect that exti-euie repressive I f or 4°<> !*»“*«*.. ^ f W
tilleriesinthatregion.
It vitiated'that the Brunswick and AL
Hems from the Selma Times :
A negro was killed here yesterday by the
bany railroad will' be completed to Albany | accidental discharge of his pistol. We
and the ears running to that city ly the I E*vo not heard his name.
10th of August. ■ | Ago*! many of the citizens of Selma
James A! Oates, the well known theatri- *»,wo-meting it. We hope that they
and popular, actress, Mrs. J. A. Oates, well | immensely.
known to one theatreigaiag people, died :
New York on Friday last of consumption.
Hfs age wt} about 29 yeare.
.Granger, one qf the”parties who were ar-1
immensely.
If they will only give the cool, fresh air
of oar mountain city a. trial, we feel assur
ed that they will rctnrn ia fine health.
The foundations of the ]
rested in Macon a few.week. ago, charged I are being laid. This ehurch, when fioisL
with conspiracy to 'rob t v e Southern Ex-1 ed, will be very beautiful and an ornament
jr, was'taken to North Carol!-1 *° th e city.
na Tuesday .under a requisition from’ the I - We understand that the purchasers of
Governor of that State, to answer to the I * h .® ® ,d S * ,ina aod Meridian Road ban
SSjfeSStSk r |BSS?S55ESW3S^
'v3*S$et£iwtf 1 da 0Br rrlr* **“ w^" of
Bloxbamhad given Gov. Reed the ’power vlni
to draw the Agricultural College scrim and
at once fell into the trap. She exclaimed,
“That’shim; I nose him; liccze um." . The
oourt smiled.complacently thinking ‘we
shall sorely get this 45,000.”
e sweet scented mo
Agricultural College
to dispose of the same at pleasure
not true, and we ventnre to say that the
its duties and increased business, in six
weeks.
We heard on yesterday-a rnmor that A.
The sweet scented marshals stood grin
ning delightedly abont the bar, when the
defendants lawyer remarked,' ‘‘May it pleas 0
yonr honor, the peijury of the black-wench
is how established beyond -the possibility of
donbt. The man I. addressed-as.^mvt
Smith is Tom Johnson, and vice versa. ’
This peijured negro women's soul is . not
half as black sis that.of the viliian who hir
ed her swear, the palpable lie. . The proee-
p»rir-
views, and are hot members of the “ring;’’
regardless of facts, are in perfect keeping I From the Talladega Watehtower
with the poKey of the Union and the ohe- Oar entire commnniiy was shocked Isst
neo—Osborn ring—alias the Republican I Friday about noon by receiving inteUigenee
'.—Jacksonville Fla. Owner. I of the accidental shooting and probable
pendenco county, Arkansas, on the 4th in. I Andrew Cunningham.
cation broke towT'Sie twenty’thoSsand 8 “ nt : Ymm » no£ * , T ] ie ? unor P?» Ted «P». “ *»*
dollars promised the two good .lawyers of ed desperadoes, at Sulphur Roek, interfer- *« j“ the evening farther intelligence was
Holly 8prihgs'Will never be paid. One of ed daring the celebration, fired into a crowd I ] receiTed he had breathed hia last. We
- - — • ' . .s' . . learn that early Friday morning, with gun
of about one thousand persons and senona-1 i n hand, he started fora creek near his
ly injured the deputy sheriff, creating great Other's residence for the purpose of fishing
consternation. Two of the party were ar-1 and banting. Abont ten o’clock, whOe seat-
tested. All three are Radical desperadoes, I ed alone in a skiff, with his gun lying in
the
1 of .tne* villainous
THEKU'KLUX TROUBLES IN MISS1S-
BeUnd the Scenes.
A correspondent of the Memphis Appeal
sends to.that paper an account of the re-
cent Ku-Klux trials wt Oxford Mum . His
letter S graphically written.. We make the
following extracts: '‘J-sVTva
Some months ago Governor Alcorn, con
demning, as do all good citizens, many
deeds alleged to have been done by an
armed secret organization, issued a procla
mation, offerinn a reward of five thousand
dollars fbf the apprehension and oonviction
of any member of tho Ku-Klnx organiza
tion. A plot was conceived and slowly jrer-
fected, by which it was proposed ‘ to enrich
a ring of office holders through the inter
vention of the ^Federal court. With this
end in view a sort of •’joint stock company
was created. Its leading spirit is a carpet
bagger from' Ohio. Aether* member of
the ring is Baid to be an e-xrebel sheriff of
Lowndes or Noxnbee county; the United
Stqtes Marshal is the head center of the
combination, and the inaction of Aloorn
and complaisance of the United States
Judge at Oxford, indnee many to believe
that the bench'is as corrupt vs. ito. ghastly
crew of'executive officers.mgrifoO
The plan was to effect the arrest and eon-,
vietion of at least one hundred members of
the Eu Klux organization. The consum
mation of tho scheme involved a draft upon
Alcorn’s treasury of 8500, 000. The whole
male population of neighborhoods were ar
reted and borne beneath glittering bayo
nets to Oxford, the seat’ of Federal justice.
There grand and petit juries sat in Majes
ty;’. There two; lawyers of eminence a ud*o-
ciol worth were hired J>J the
ring, each to receive ton ~
to aid the stupid district
ducting the villainous, _
turns. The'juries were models of intelli
gence and purity. Stupidity or’leering
villainy and- aAriutii' cunning -was written
on the face of every knave that kissed the
book and swore to execute honestly the
country’s laws.' Two s tepid negroes from
this country and two of the same sort from
Lowndes, constituted the membsrsaF'tfiesd
Federal juries. * No white man/fit for foul
tasks imposed by the ring of knaves who
planned the cxhanstioa'or Alcorns treasury
could be found in theaeltwoteouatiee... The
Ohio express agent, invested with tho pow
ers of a Deputy United States Maishal, di
rects the movements of Federal soldiers at
trill. / ..1-'- -
His first drioeht Iras made npon tho an-
suspecting peaii]ai|L DP-npIAtrae, now al»
most desolate, in the vicinity,of Aberdeen.
Tho learned Federal Judge declared that
an indictment, round by his immaonlate
grand jury, constituted prima facie evi
dence of guilt, and therefore each suspect-
despairing from drawing money, from Al-
eorn, came enuring southward, and the peo-
ile and papers say hereplenished his purse
>y cooking a poor fellow, rwho was first rob
bed, in coal oil at Corinth./ I have heard
that,-in tramping op these Kn-Klnx trials,
the Ohio fellow of whom I spoke was sent
here to promote, in the manner defined, the
success of the Radical potty in his State.
The failure of the prosecutions is the failure
of the shamefol scheme, aod I wonld feip
hope those unprincipled politicians North,
who sacrifice States, communities, the ne
gro race and country’s reppse and proeperty
to selfish knavery here and to P«P“?» ° E
selfish ambition in Ohio.
who have kept the neighborhood in a con
tinued furore.
front of him, he endeavored to
j gun up, and in drawing it towards
the
im,one
was discharged, lodging its entire
Baltimou Poisoning Case.—Intelli-1 contents in his bowels. He reached the
gence of the presentment by the grand ju
ry was communicated to Mrs. Wharton by
shore, and walked a distance of nearly a
mile to his father’s gate, where he fell ut-
counsel shortly after two o’clock. Soon I terly exhausted. Abont 4 o’clock he
thereafter Sheriff Albert, accompanied by I breathed his last.
Marshal Gray and Deputy Marshal Frey,
~ carriages, the carriages stopping in (he
ir of the reeidenoe of Mrs Wharton,
At twenty mmutes to four o’clock Mrs.
ion and daughter,
Mr. O. P. Hill, an old resident of Gads
den, Ala., died on Wednesday, the 12th
inst.
GENEBAL NEWS
W. A. Booth has been elected Premden
of the'Grocer’s Board of Trade in New
York, Cbas. E. Hills, W. O. Dana, B.
H. Sherman and Thos. C . Arnold, were
elected Vice Presidents.
Gov. Palmer, of Illinois, swears ven
geance against the ku Unx that hung
Meard for killing. his sou, and says the
whole power of tbe State will be given to
securing their arrest.
A freshet in Horace Creek, Barnwell Dis
trict, South Carolina, broke the dam of the
Langly cotton factory, and the Bath paper
mills, thereby suspending operation?, throw
ing' hundreds of persons out of employ^
ment. The loss is estimated at $50,000.
Part pa Rosa is oomiog again. She sails
fro nr Liverpool to-djy.
.. The white was hensre busy in' 'Washing
ton. ‘ vTfee SqwuMRhj Cq«to@; House defri-
cation was overhauled yesterday, sud a lit
tle deficit of only 88,000 wis found, which
Deputy Collector Willmaa, under a sworn
statement confesses was appropriated by
himself. The confession concludes, his
(Robb’s) only fault has been in reposing a
degree of confidence and triist in me, which
I have abased, ts beforo stated.' Bontwell
exonorates ..Eohb^ apj , there will bo no
ebange in the eolleetorahip. run*' i i> t
i Gov. Reed, of Florida, is slap in Wash
ington looking after a defalcation of about
eight thousand' dollars in the Jacksonville
Wharton and daughter, with Mrs Crawford
Nelson and Sheriff Albert took Sue car
riage and the Marshals the other and were
driven to the city jaft. Mother and daugh
ter were deeply veiled,
then handed to
of the jaiL She sell
Mr. R. D, Ross, an old citizen of Gads
den, Ala., died iu that place on Monday,
the 3d inst.
Our town w»» o$*
hue otomtay evening. The eland north
of the Warden I and eait of town seemed to be heavily
an empty cell, I charged with run, and we hope to hear of
w* -v.n-ww— —— X I tllUUgOU WlllU IMUj UUU TV G uui/u SU U64M Wt
which she is permitted to furnish in the I planters in those sections having been bless
and her daughter was al-
of remaining'with her
ed with fine seasons.
The crop prospects in the county gener-
Wbile the ease has ally are by no means discouraging. An
plainest
owed the _
daring the _ . ~ ,
shoeked the entire community, the deepest I abundance of corn will be raised; and even
Sympathy is manifested for the unfortunate I cotton is looking np smartly,
lady. ~ , '
An Erie Canal Steamboat—Last
Sunday the New York State Commission
Tbe New Departure,
Judge Craddock, of Kentucky, in a cam-
want up the Hudson for the purpose of I paign speech recently delivered in that
steamers adapted to havigito
without creating swell enough I
The pre"'
: the bank.
.. . I with the amendments. I have already said
more if in 1873 it shall have | aa ^ atnendmenss motet stand or fall
proved of practical value. Sbange to say,: the question whether they have been
p^p® 9 ®* “ d ratified - r ^ d
H. Dawson, of Georgia, u there «th«n fouTarticle 0 f the Constitution. Ti -
State, sud:
But I am asked what I propose to do
canal navigation.
ler in the bow of his
ttZ l— 1 nave Iiowteu 00 propuaea
boat and claims M l
of the article itself, “they are not l
people, or any one of the people. They
are void, not voidable, bnt void. But if
revolutionize eanal navigation and
expected to see le Andv the.Palmurus of ^he^uJbtotog,^ “JSTJS
an improved steam renal navigation, abdi- ^ 0 f ti^Constitation.
retmghis throne as king of parts of speech. \ ^ ai f" fco believes that they were
Chixtgp. Julj 16—The Coroner’s jury, I not proposed nor ratified pursuuit to the re-
who have been , sitting npon the ease of I qoirementa of the fifth article, and in this
Meara, who tortured his child to death at 11 have the concurrence of the whole Dem-
Wataeka, HL, and was hung by a mob af-1 oeretie party—the New Departure men
lerwarda, have rendered a Terdict that he I and all—as well asa large portion of the
. „ . . , „ came to his death, in accordance with the I Radical party; and so believing, I am not
postoffice money,, taken by the money order gj Ten the time, and charging eer-1 willing to stultify myself by admiting that
clerk. The postmaster made the amount 1 tain persona therein named as being respon-1 they are binding as parts of the eonstitu-
good to the government*
Aa earthquake rang the church hells in
New Hampshire, and shook Boston, Salem
and Biddleford, ont of att propriety; on the
20th!
The State eonyention of school teachers
and Superintendents of Alabama, have re
solved, by a unanimous vote, that the edn-
eafion of the colored nee -was a duty and
a high privilegenf the. white race, and that
the convention concur many measure releor
lated to aoeorophsh such result ,
It iseurreutly ^jjorfed 1 that &»*t<ir
Sctiurz will roon sever his connection with
the Wcrtlicho Post. ,
A serious' shooting affair occurred in
a saloon in HaJs ’Ciiy," Kansas, Monday
night, between some soldiers of the Sixth
Cavalry, land a.,partypf *citisepft ln .which
Cbas. Harrison was killed. Sheriff Tam
per appeared on the sseno and oommanded
pecce, when he was. fired upob l ’'rehtivibj£
two BWin tiie breast, mortally wounding
him. f T vo sold i e rs, .a man* n am ed M ay and
a Mexican teamster, were alao wounded. -
A storm occurred ‘ in Mem^is, on tiie
I9th wWeh surpassed a iything for years.
Telegraph poles were prostrated, and trees
Unrooted, and 4asb damage done to eropt—
tyestjp washed,away by the flood. The en
gineer was killed and twebw of fifteen o£
the ipasaengsrirwike tionnded.
sible forhis taking off. They have sent the 1 tion. I am not willing to forestall an ex
testimony to Gov. Palmer, with the recom-1 amination of the question, even if it could
mendrtion that the persons therein named I be done, by resolntiona or platforms. Iam
be arrested and tried for the offerer. It is] for leaving it open freely to be investigat-
rnmored that tbe eitixens of Orange and ] ed by any tribnnal having competent joris-
other places whence came the mob which I diction of the subject. I do not propose to
did the work will resist any attempt to ar-1 set on foot any lawless or revolutionary
rest the men named. f modes of rwriatanoo to the enforcement of
the amendments.
m-imM&amm *|3ssgr^.!ris&
lands 21} sales 308 bales; money eaty at I ^onhred. It seems to me that this is
2a3; prime] discounts 4a6; sterling lOito I the'tone position for the Democracy to oe-
iS an illegitimate con Of old Sir Jss Tieh-
bornc, by ids cook, Mtly Eilda, aailitkri
the real Sir Roger' perished as has been
! .-j j- uma J M !«*diK
reporteo, in 1000.
The committee of the
SS““wa7oX® t ^ t mo d e W “f reports 1,35-1 smallpox eases in Brooklyn,
proving such a negative proposition, -- 1> OJtiXs .tm,
lOi; gold 12} to 12L
New Orleans, July 20.—Flour quiet;
' 84 75 to 5 00; XX 5 25 to
5 ‘
enpy.
The Memphis Appeal says :
Dead Duck Forney deelares that “As
« ■«, XXX 6 00 to 6 25; corn quiet; I the Democracy do not accept the ku klnx
mixed 71 to 72; yedow 73 to75; white 771 bill, their new departure, so far m they have
to 78; oats 68 to 70; pork dull, mess- held I accepted it, ia valueless. Amendments to
16 00; bacon Ti. 9I and 10; sugar cured I the Constitution are dead letters udkss en-
hams, ordinary, 14 to 15; ehoiee 15} to I forced. To accept the amendment; and at
6}; fair 10^ ehoiee 1
ferior rcboHed 22}; w
rectified 90 to 91; c "
13} to
bottom 6 to I the same time to reject the law that makes
quiet; in-1 it effective, is for a party to stultify them-
/ Western selves." That seems pretty good logic. The
and'-firm at lfith amendment authorizes tile passage of
oi quitartcc 1
| ail laws neeessaiy for enforcing itself, and
Louisville, Jdy 20.—Flour imd grain l the same power that made the amendment
lehamred: nrovisions quiet and weak; | made the ku klnx bill also. Such half way
„ . provisions
J^ baeon unchanged; wmssyss
lower.order lots 15 Q0;to 16 25, should-1 hranim. Hemnrtaign the Iibdthat he is
»«.-*« -h: rs
I
it
4
;
to acoompliched 'feets cin i
win anything. Hera only a had half a
Radical who anil not swallow the whole hog
Liverpool, July 20.—Cotton, uplands,
9; Orleans 9}; sales 15,000.
it&W* ■ • - * - ■*- : ■
tie girl was lately lost in the tall weeds of
a principal street, and was only found af
ter an hour's search by the neighbors,
A Delaware Demoerae, who doesn’t like
, , . , to swallow Radicalism under the guise of
iUemocratio poKey, has this to sa r
‘Had thess latter-day new-departure ne
gro-equality Democrats held meetings in
^ , . . .. 1861, as they are now doing, and told the
Tide; Emma Alban!, a Canadian by Southern men, that, if they rebelled, they
birth, bnt a riaident of this country, has (these Now Dcpartnrists) would sanction
and has been engaged by Mr. Gye for: f B
years, the terms being £250 per month for
the(first three years, and £300 pounds per
encry hellish act of the
join in with them to rivet the
gro franchise and negro
the South wonld havo
wonld have been no