Newspaper Page Text
mIAl.
—
be JlailiJ (inquirer.
‘ 18 PUHLISIIKD
L y n*y—Sundays Excepted.
JJ.LARS PICK ANNUM IN ADVANCE,
irnt U drU\ctl »U moot
wawnatT* conspicuously Inserted,
dulceiiln c&nqntrer.
ED EVERY TUESDAY MORNING
ro IV.-I.LAIU4
rK ran-My <>
J in advance.
dll l»a discontinued while any arrearage
less at the option of the l*ut lUhers; and
Ian will, in all eases, be exacted where
]i not made before the expiration of the
A D V ERTI8EM EXTfl
ily innerted at Ox a bni.u* per aqnarr,
rt Insertion, and Firry Cbxth for crery
it continuance. A square in the Enquirer
:e of eleven line* In email type, contain-'
loa.one hundred word*.
ainsuiKXTn publfohed at the n*nal rates
itrict attention to Uie requisitions of the
nWW orer tight lintt charged at the reg-
if Corporation*, UnclAle*, get
I LIVER INVIGORATOR I
I pREPAtlKD BY I)R. SANFORD,
landed Entirely From QUMS,
Joy TDK DHST PUgGATIVK AND LIVLll
INKS now before the public.
Bt« ; *J*d°{s dow^oflcnre^eat-
Lvticm. supply-! 0HOLF.lt A MOKDL'8,
fir place n ileal- and a preventlv* of
Invlgo- Pj CIIOLKUA.
I - n d to 'digest Q Only 1 bottle is needed
Irtrytnft the V to throw out of the *y*.
■rjrtiig tone and tern the etTecU of niedl-
Ku.e whole ro*- P l ine after a long Aieknee*
1 rcMavtog tha .
■Uie iU»oa»e—cf-,Bj One bottle taken for
[radical cure. Y JAUNDICE removes all
<J enllownese or unnatural
• attack*, pj color from the akin.
rented by the A One doae taken a short
u.** of the Li v- V time before eating gives
tor. . l rigor to Uie appetite and
□ make* the food digest
after eating V well.
.. to relieve the U
Uml prevent the One doae. o Den repeal-
In riling and k ed, eurea CHRONIC DI-
r Y ARMKKA In It- wor»t
. form, while SUMMER A
.»e taken ^ EOWKI. COMPLAINTS
Thursday, October, 2018S9.
Merccllu* Uoy^ins*,
Th« Opposition forty ofthe *:l Uongrrs-
•iotial District have just cauao to be proud
of llieir standard-bearer in the late canvas*,
and of bis eff rla. It v.o* his drat political
campaign, nnd lie waged it against an expe
rienced and admit political leader, who had
twice beloro fought over the same ground
successfully—who was very extensively
acquainted with tho people of the District,
and who had for four y« ara industriously
applied himself to the lack cf strengthening
Ilia popularity with his constituent* by ull
thoao little attentions and favors which the
position of a member of CongTia enables
him to dispense. To have reduced the
majority of a candidate running with such
decided advantages over him, is highly cred
it able to our young leader, even though his
success did not come up to the full measure
if our hopes. He has borne our standard
proudly and honorably, and though it wave*
tint in triumph, ho has carried it unsullied
rom the field, bearing with him trophies
captured in several counties nf the District.
\* the minstrel reported to UoJerie Dhu
itier the defeat of his clan,
“Our stately pine Is Mill unbent.
Though many a gooilly bough Is
and we rejoice in the belief that under ruoro
favorable circumstances, in another contest,
our gallant ensign will raise it in triumph
over n field nobly won.
It is highly creditable to Mr. Douglass
that he closes the contest with the applause
of many and llio respect of all his political
opponents. They bear testimony that ho
has departed himself as a chivalric gentle
man and as a fair and ahlo debater. Thus
retiring fora season to the more agreeable
duties of Ilia profession, he will doubtless,
during tho prrplexing issues and embarrass
ing trial* of tlio ensuing Congressional
term, realize tho substituted quotation of the
Hlate Press:
Marcellos exiled fccti
Thu
t Ids heels.”
nr non- imoh.-i ny txciung me
our«i>jf4'Absorbent.,
We take plranure In
rn aflrr *U recommcn.lluK this rued
are n Irinen* a preventive for
> FKVKR,^\nd'an' Fevers
xo tea-T f.f'a MLloLH type, it
r»y» re- H operate* with certainty,
|'K HEADACHE. . and thousands nre wit-
imme- J ling to testify to ill won-
COLIC. n derful virtues.
CK OXK DOM. lit re* BOTTl-t.
ID, Proprietor, No. Mfi Broadway, IS
J by all Druyvi-u. f*• • 1.t al.t. in » vii
1‘KAIBEUTOX k OAI1TK1I
ACRE k IVERSON,
J A. WHITESIDE k CO.
^ M,1S50 dwl;
IA CARD
AYBleaMdour 8u*h and llllnd Work*
'setts. BREWER k PKHItINR. who will r
budneas at our Faetory. 11 g\xes u* pb
* that th.w* gniitleuien *re entltlnl to
9 Hack to the Old Mother.
Col. JcilN C. Fremont, the If lack. Repub
lican candidate iu. m.. P».;j.-. r iaisa
•nounced lllack Republicanism, nnd
declares that l.o will not again bo tho can
didate of that party—that ho did not fully
tgree with them in 1850, and only ran thru
is their candidate berauso he had assur-
incas that they could elect him to the
Presidency ! Of course he goes hack again
n the National Democracy, and, liko Martin
Van Ilitren, will hereafter bn found on
accepted leader of that party, notwithstand
ing he ond V'an headed I bo moat formidable
ibolition movement* ever made against the
rights of the South ! Thus it is that Na-
cracy furnishes ull the materials
of at-cticnal agitation and all tho Providen
ces of organized black Ropubii-
Douglas ia now the “tiling alar,"
hut hi* strength with tho Democratic masses
so great that he treks to reach tho Presi
dency by abulitionizing the party, not by
. CLEMONS, DROWN A CO. °PP°
Fren
*VA»° S AWZ) D
' °<9o
KAKCVAcrcaXD at *o
EWER & PERRINE,
J to CLEMONS, BROWN * CO.,
COI.UMIIU8, OA. •
i thorough re-nrK*n(*J»tlon In evsrv depart-
>nt, by th* sld of new machinery with mil the
nt«. vrsnowfurnlvliH.il, tb**bo*«
.»rt notice and tbs lollow ng price*:
■isd, 7 cent*, and gla* C WJ4 rt*.
Wc have
l can l>cal him
The Blnudcru
hope that
the Charleston
14
4&
and
i«h PRIMED in th* l-wt
wil|b*-*ll TtnunJ. 8uiw
b*Invariably us-d. LIP
ctnts p*r light, and Sld*
[ ^UlUn"WINDOW DUN
V to rt*. p*r foot p*r pair, rom
1 a pair of llllnd* A I—t
PANEL Dunlin.
aehvs thick, - panvl, without Moulding, $2 60
“ •» Moulding, 1 vid* 3 00
FRENCH
Ing th* length
I*ngth,j3.
•2 vid,-*
without Moulding
Mould!
pautl, without Moulding, 3 00
* Moulding, 1 aid* *
a Article,
the Jailicle of the
Phil»iiel|.hl. J*«« (Fbtn.»’» p«p«0 f«<
which. .ccrJing lo telegraphic report.,
[-resilient Buch.n.lt ho. determined to .00
J. W. Forney for libel. It distinclly chor-
ge. upon ihe l’rc.idelit tho orgonimion
ond control of 0 con.pirocy to hunt down,
e.en lit deolh. «uch enti-Lecompton Demo-
croc. u. Douglo. end Brodeticlt, end it
declere. that tho letter lo.t III. life in Rout
ing 1 hi. eyetometio olTiciel etlcmpt to hally
end imimidele or .ley him. Tho following
i. tho concluding pnregr.ph :
"David C. Broderick lie. yielded un hie
lie lor a sacred principle. II he hod sur-
endcred 10 ihc bl.itdultin.nl.ol the Ac min-
.uolicrn, ho might lo-doy ho living emong
ilia numerous Iriends. it wua only because
lie reluaud to compromise the truth, and to
abandon hie eolomn pledgee, Chet wo ere
now called upon to mourn his untimely
liuaiti. Thus has iallen the lirai grent niar-
lic political principles ol tho cam-
| 18' fi! IF* ask the ank traitor to
i tie ivies if, «« kit old age, and in the
sunset ot Ins life, he can feel that 1
nr* elear of the hr a
Broderick ?"
tyr to
paign •
(’ir blood of David C.
“Pyrrhus anil his Rlcplunts”— A train.
The Timet want* ip to re-puhliah one of
our Ptlitoriala about Pyrrhnv* third fight, in
which he was defeated on Roman soil, his
elephants contributing to the rout of his
troops. It thinks that the succev* of Hon.
M. J. Crawford, fur the third time, breaks
the continuity of our parallel between him
and Fyrrhua.
We discover • flight mistake which we
mads in relation to the effect or tho third
battle of Pyrrhus with the Romans. He
was not utterly routed or kilUd in that con
flict, but was only driven in a crippled
condition from (tin Romm dominions, just
as the Hon. Marlin J. Crawford lisa been
diiven, in hi* canvass with Mr. Douglass,
from his connection with the Administration
and his indiscriminate support of the
nominee of tho Charleston Convention.
Pyrrhus still maintained position and power,
and at ths head of hi* elephant* curried on
nggrosaivo war. But, alter his reverses in
Rome, he attempted to take Argos, and his
effort* to get his elephants in at the gates
so delayed his progress and slartned the
citizens that they guvo him s very warm
reception. In the street fight that ensued,
he saw tho fulfillment of the augury that
had long pteviously foretold hiu doom,
retreated in dismay, hut hia elephants
blocked up the narrow passage* and tram
pled down his own soldiers. One of the
huge boast* fell in the gateway and obstruc
ted the passage of the retreating troops.
Pyrrhus had to fight it out, and met an
inglorious death at the hands of au old
woman who broke hia neck with a tils.
The Hon. Martin J. Crawford ha* yet to
make hi* fight at Argoa, unless, profiling by
the fate of his prototype, and deeming dis
cretion (he hotter part of valor, he shouid
sooner retire from the field of battle. A
youthful leader haa already administered to
him partial reverses, has learned his lactica,
and brought oil some trophic* from the field.
In another encounter, the terrific eight ot
the woll and bull in conflict may present
itacit to the dismayed sight of Pyirhus jr.,
and his fate may be as inglorious as that ol
tl.A hero of many battles slain at Argos.
ty i ’he Xatinnul Intelligencer, alluding
to the certainly that a now phase ol the
“Kansas question" is to be presented lo the
next Congress, with the prospect si an
angry sectional struggle over the Free Hlato
Constitution just adopted, and to the fact
that Congress has engaged by the English
compromise not to admit Kansas with a.
population less than the ratio of Federal
representation, well aays : “The propriety
of this rule is admitted by all as u general
proposition, but its application to the cose
of Kansas alone, when it was expressly
repudiaUd in the admission of Ursgou at
tho last session, does not admit of such
easy explanation or justification on the part
of the Democracy.
“It remains to he seen whether they will
ignore the 'compromises’ of the English
bill, as framed by inetnselves less than two
years ago, or whether they will insist upon
a rigid adherence to tho terms of the
gracrtui i®..—* ..— --
versy. The question undoubtedly presents
a dilemma which leaves but little choice
between its two horns, and adds another
illustration to the accumulated teachings by
which history inculcates tho advotilsges ol
never departing from the atiaight line of
political justice to follow the tortuous paths
of a shifting and temporary policy.”
iy The Savannah Republican, in view
of the rivalship between the friends of
Iverson and Johnson, and of the great dis.
satisfaction with which the election of eitbe
would bo received by a majority of tlx
people of the State, suggests that Hon. E.
A. Niibkt is ■ «ian who would fill the
station more acceptably, and who is in every
way well qualified for it. We feer that the
very virtue which most recommends Judge
N label to the Republican—bis disconnection
from the intrigues and corruptions of party
cliques—is an insuperable barrier lo his
eleclion.
Prize Romance.
[iKIWKItKD nY XLKVK.V KOfT-RIOUTH.
MOHRS Til R SASSY ;
OR THE DISGUISED DUKE.
A Tale of Blood a id Things,
■ T AUTKULA WARD.
chapter!.—mosis.
My story opens in the classic freestinks of
Unsliiig. In tlio parlor of nn aristocratic
manshun on Usron strert sits a lovely young
Isdv w hose hair is covered ore with tho frusta
of 17 summers. 8he has just
the Pinny dt is singing tho poplar pesco culld
Smells of tho Notion, in which she telle
how with Pensiv Thort tho wondered by
C beet shore. The Son is setting in i
horizon and its gorju* lilc pores in a gold*
nteller fluid through the winders and mak<
tho bootiful young Indy twict n* bootiful t
she was he-i, which is unnecessary. She
magnifiauntly drevsaJ up in a Berani
basque with Poplin trimming*, More Ai
tique edges and 3 ply carpeting. Her dr*
contanea 12 flounders, brilliantly ornarnen
rd with horn button, and tier shoes are rr
tnorocker with gold spangles on to them.—J
Presently she presses her bonds to her buz-
ziiiii ami starts up iu a excited manner.—
“Methinks,” she whispers in rlairou tones.
“I see a voice !” A noble youth, of27 sum
mer*, erraj e» the mud from his butea in the
hall nnd outers. He is attired in n red shirt
and black irowsit, which last air turned up
over his hutes, nnd his hnl is bewitcliingly
cockt on one side of his classical bed. In
sooth he was a noble child. Grease, in it*
harrniest day*, near projuced a more gallent-
cr herow thou Moses. The young Indy ga
zes upon him for a fow periods, claps her
hand* together, vtrikes a position, and rollin
her I’s wildly liko a oxpirin infantile cow,
“Ha! do my I’s deceive my emsigbt!—
1’hat frame! them store clothe*-! I hose voice!
it i*—it is me own, mo only Moses !" and
ho folded Iter to hi* hart. ‘•Molhink* I shall
swoon.” i-ho said, and pretty soon she
swoondid.
CHAPTER II.—was musfb or nori-e birth!
Moses was foreman oflngino Kutnpany
Number 40. Tho 40’s had jest bin bavin n
pleasant fito with Ihe fiO’a on the day I in
troduce Moses lo my reader*. He hud hit
arms full of trolfees, to-wit s 4 sculps, fi IV,
3 fiage.s.7 enrs,which he had chawed off,etc.
etc. v> non untj v 1 *- •*-- •
young lady’s name) rckivcreU from her swoon
sho u»ked :
“How hnsl the battle gone! Tell tnc !”
“Eltzy,” said ihe brave young man,draw-
in hisielf up to his full bile, “wo chawed
’em up and smashed their old t
i ull
r pie.
I thunk tho gods," tho cride. “Thou
didst full well, nnd heucc4th I ware thee in
me hart of harts! Anil Moses," sho con
tinued, layin her bed confidingly agin hi*
weakit, “dost thow know I sumtimes think
that thow waatost of noble birth !”
No!" sez he, widly hatching hold of
ielf, “you don’t say so 1”
Indeed do I," she sed. “Your ded
grandfather's sperrit earnest lo mo tho other
Mosoa ia a disguised
Juke!”
“You me
“Dost no
od sternly.
'That settled tho matter.
“I hav thought of this thing afore,” said
lone*, abstractedly. "“If it ia no, then tliu*
must he ! 2 II or not 2 U—that air’s the
le tore out some ot nia pu ny .
lamped on the floor widly, and was gone.
CHAPTER III—th* pie
Sixteen long and weary yet
r* has elap.t
the last chap
ter took place. A noble ship, the Sury Jane,
is sail n from France to Ainertky throw tho
Wabash Cnnawl. A Pirut ship is in hot
pursoot of the Kory Jane. Tho cupttng of
of tho S. J. looks fateegod & just us tho ho
bad lost all of his parents. The Pirut i*
dost on to him tc he ia shout givin in, when
a fine looking feller in russit hutes and n
buffnlor overcut rushes lorrerd uml sez lo the
capt
i lie,
“Old i
Roli
2 Miles 4 M)
Moulding, 1 »M* 4 W
** Usldo* 4 7ft
r - .. all dM*rlpU0BS foe Doors and
ado* *.
n addition to th* *hovs. Blind* painted and far
bad »'th lUaje* and Cal'•he*, if dealred : al*o
A slated with Herman or Fr*nrb plate, palnte.l
tned, enamelled, eutWat-l and HohemUn pi***,
l colors, for *id**»d t
The State Fair.
Tho Atlanta Aincricun announce* that
the Grounds nre in tip-top condition for the
_ ( j[icoaching Stale Pair of Uoorgio. Tho
Slablca and llio Track for .aorcialng hor.ra
re in moat excellent order, and eahikitora
rill fmd crery con.enience in Ihia depart-
nenl aalialadory. Bui the American think#
that the buildins# for tho exhibition of
article, in tho I.idiea' and Mechanical
id thoso of Manufactures
capacious enough and nra
It is to be hoped that
fill b»< gi**n to these
deficiencies before the. opening of Ihe Fair,
emedy applied.
Departments,
tnJ Art, arc not ci
not in proper repair
proper attention
Th* proprietor* U
for Doors, i
•frit mad* of thoroughly i
rin tb„U.t manner and a*
An Ep
i Tin
A TOMBS story. I Indignant
Frenchmen.
There is n Jdacejn Maine *o rocky that I Tho oliicer* having charge of the Union
-hen the Down Eo.lore plant corn, they ! Street Slotion Houeo tve.o .tenled, ehnut
look for creticee in the rocke, nnd ebon* Ihe ill o clock on Sund.y night, by tho apparj.
* —ttbatnu.keli the,can tra,.o duck, Son ol two.Th. ,l,an«e,. «■„„
Hero no how, for the atone, etc .o thick that , Frenchmen, genteely diced, anj tip,,
(luck* C.nn I fTHl tliPir tut!- till* yarn on ikern i n I le I.. I.. I ■ * 1
got their hills between them
pick up the grasalioppers, ond the only way
Dial the sheep can get at tho sprig* ol grass
i* I»y grinding their noses on a grindstone.
Hut thut ain't a circumstance to n j luco
on the Eastern shore ; them the land is so
poor thut it take* two kildras to say “kil-
dea,” uml on n clear day you can sea the
grasshoppers climb up a million stalk, nml
look with tear* in lh«*ir eyes over a fifty acre
field ; and the humble bees have to go down
on their knees to get at thn giu*>t>; all the
mosquitoes died nf starvation, and (Ito lur-
key buzzards bad (n emigrate.
Dut (hero ia n county in Virginia which
can bent that—them thn Innd is so sterile
that when the wind is at tha northwest, they
have to tio tho children to keep them from
being blown away ; them it tskes six frogs
to see a mnn, nnd when the dog* hark they
have to Iran up against the fence ; the itor-
sen nro so thin that it lakes twelve of them
to mako n shadow, nnd when they kill a
beef they buvo to hold him up to knock him
down !
Rut oh !—them is n region in Jersey,
•aith'Mntc Draper, where they held a two
week's jubilee in the ehurhees, because it
wii* announced that n fresh hla*le of grass
had sprouted iu the southern part of the,
county , them tho natives onco murdered n
traveller Ittr tho sake of halt u gingerbread
cake, which ho win rumored to have in his
pockot, nnd there, too, they turned a man
“out of meeting,” because, after a visit to
Philadelphia, be reported that while iu that
city ho had had at one time as much as hr
could oat. tii'.ch t* life.
Arkansan Coti
g under n rush of g
cerebellum. They al*o appeared to he trav-
eler*, and carried carpet sa'chcl* in tlmir
hands, which told of clean linen iu store for
inm U furTl "" d tU " 1
The rlranger* saw n lamp ruisi.le .-f (lie
Ktution house and taking’ it forgrunte.l that
the place was n tavern, n quested I he lieu-
tenant to-hand out “two glasses of ijg.ijr
“lit! ni
French-
Lieutenant Ion
men, nnd wanted to know what they meunt.
Frenchmen l >ok«d puzzled and repeated,
»
Additional by the North Briton. »
Livttwpt. Wednosdny, P. M.—Cotton '
otcntljr; sales 8,000 bales, of which specula-
tom nnd expoiter took 1,600. Ilreadstuffs
nml provisions quiet.
Wednesday noon.—Console 85|
’moce 1 ls > Il»mi' l * , fri m ^* n * ori * | t '^^J' ier \ ran ,
Iron worker* ol Knglai
1 of s strike among the
On it little r
fmoil on
tVlIbntsk 1
■ If t-
» French Camp.
» Frenrti stormed Ratlibon:
■o away.
JJjk Napoleon^
Consoliflnflnii of Telegraph Companies.
Nkw York, Oct. 14.-The aevcral tclc-
urnph linos between New Orleans nnd the
Province of Now Rrtinswtck wero coiisoli-
dmed under tho nnuioof the New Jereoy
Tclogrnph Company, in this city to-day;
, r *and llio now company was temporarily or-
M—/..• bent lor- 1 " ,,n * ,,c d the election of Abram 8. Hewitt,
Tbi
printed at Uamdrin, iu tl.o !
nikniisas, speaking of (be 1
—Tho Herald,
llio 8ou'hern part of
, in that part
tlm State, saya j “Tho present crop, it is
id by those who know, will largely excred
ut of last year, nnd tho pospect is that
ires will ho equally an good, it not better.
> far, to tho heat of our information, until
ilhin llio last lew days, tho weather ha*
>cn pitinus for gathering, and if it should
niinuo fora couple of months, there is no
Iculolitig, with any certainly, the vuluc
Urn crop that will be thrown into market
during the winter nnd spring."
A letter in tho New York Journal of Coin-
flftt^ dated hiuje R.ick.Arkanaaa, He^it.
»w thut tho yield of cotton in the Ar-
* volley hao never exceeded tho prom-
the present season. Heavy pickings
>w made, and tho wentlmr is dry and
nely fuvornble. The upland crop is
alike promising.”
Forcing llio Nottfltern Dumocrncy*
The Doily Times, n [flack Republican po
et in Now York, which essays just now to
n the organ of .Senator Douglas, says :
“Mr. Dougins is a bold politician—mid be
1 it playing u hold nnd hazardous role. He
ortously and deliboratoly upon
iled the lieutenant, who, not relish
ing Hie Frenchmen’s mistake, ordered them
to leave th* premises. At thi* the French-
men got angry. A* every body knows, the
mom angry a Frenchman becomes the less
English ho remember*. Much being the
case, tlm only i\.»r!s the stranger* could ot
ter, in reply to tho lieutenant, were, “Uy
Gar, you nro ze biggest fool I evutr ze in zis
countrie !"
Lieutenant replied by taking Frenchmen
by the neckties, ami placing them in the
ells,
fore Alderman 1Ci
tho officer, was .1
ruing they w.
"u.riey, who, t
'bligo.l to fiia
taken be-
the oath of
then
1 the
sum of $3.00
lion. The Frenchmen paid die lino nnd
left tho station house, making up their minds
that despite the gend'atmea of I'uris, the
popular liberty of that city was two to one as
compared with I’biladelphin.
Their next move wos to the Recotder.—
They made their nppenronce hoforo this gen
tleman so wrtlhy that they were n* speech-
lesii ns * pair of sheep. Frenchman No. l
finally innde his complaint, while French-
mnn No. 3 swore \o his veracity. Tho Re
corder, of course, informed them that he
could furnish no rotnedy.
ilcsrcrnriiig of ze
President; /.onus Rurmim, Vico President;
Francis .Morris, Treasurer; ami R. VV.
Russell, Secretary. Tho oilier Directors
nro Amos Kendall, W . ,. M. Swain. Cyrus
W. Field, II. O. AIdc... nnd J. II. Purdy.
The annual elector- • tho choice of Di
rectors nnd oilier officers of the new compa
ny. "ill take plnco 111 January next, in ibis
hen the presold telegraph companies
controlling wires from Hnekvillc.Now Bruns
wick, to Philadelphia, the New England
Company, with wires from Boston to Now
York: tho Houeo Telegraph, w.th wires
from New York to Washington; and the
Magnetic Telegraph Company, with wires
from New York to Now Orleans.
Permanent hut-muss connections have
been mado between tho nowly consolidated
companies, and each ono ol the Western,
Southern, California, nnd Canadian lines;
so that lor nil practical or business purposes
' crest «.! tho cotin-
Tho movement
importance to the public, us
well ns llio stockholders ot the companies
concerned.
Mlimcuotn Rlcctlon.
Si. Lons, Oct. 14.—Tho St. Paul Time
tho # Republicans have undoubtedly
11” fxclnit
i-d Fit
ch-
zo tqm Icetle holu wii
bed bug crawl all oh
Freiir.hmnu No. 2.
••No, gentlemen,”
icated, arid the Magist
you according to luw.”
“And zis is law in 1
gar 1”
■cplied tho Recorder,
i free cotintrcc, by
Oppressive with Iu u,lud.
•hup* he nmvd, “J
r, to esilli may fs
i.v army leader La
Txt the batt
•air—
Full
A rider, h<
iU-ri'P
Until
reached the
Itj .lust hi* hon
You hardly cc
(8o lghtl.ek.-p
you H
'lint's In t
«g«ln
■etr, <1* Mu-
ally
A film the
W tion her bruised eaclet'hrealhr*:
' fltolHnjr tkebny f jV'd' ''j"
Episcopal Convention.
Riciimom), Va., Oct. 15.—It was rumor
ed, on the streets, to-day, that the House of
Bishops refused to restore Bishop Ondcr-
donk, by 11 vote of twenty-one to six, with
out discussion. There was nothing certain
known, by the public, in reference 10 the
subject.
1*1(0
ndliupthe South
0 lum for Ihe. Presidency.
Ohio uie the opening blow
"bold
wallow Dough
aid lo (>d n’fl'
ounty, Texn
ion Douglas will play hit
s role” wilh complete success.
11 Democracy arc very willing
led 10 '‘nominate bint lor tho
They see dipt 110 11.ember ol
1 is not a 8quatior-8ovoroignty
Hands the remotest chance ol
And hence they will readily
all liis dangerous
llio hypocrites ! —
1 “Zen 4 will no! slny in zis countrie,” rt*-
I piled tho excited Frenchman. “I go to ze
j eafn and a*k for zn beer luigsir. Zo what
ou-xo bar tend’—is von poli-email. Jle
ff.'rs my persong von terrible indignitie.—
lo Viol.do zs nivjestie el l.t belle France,
nd^put me in von baslile—vot you call prir-
Very much to he regie tied, gentlemen,’
rns the recorder’s reply, “but really I do not
uo that l can do any good.'
“Well, tare, zon wr will leave ze countrie,
arc, “said die Frenchman No. I, “and wo
'ill inform Z'i people 1 I ze glorious Franco
at ze cafes are uossing hut prisons, by
•do in tho world and
n* a most iuconeniva-
•jodico nguiiiHt Tonnusseo and Ten-
•ana, insoinucli thut ho will not entor-
, man front 1
aiiiing a Ten
tho pro-slavery me
Zankee, by tho
w ;” (ho Yankcocalling 11 - Know.
d iscnlico.i winch ho suya dm 'I >
loRsean is somotliing liko
1 of Kansas in dotorinin-
ironuncinlionol the word
uly |i
1 ranger
i'lio ol.l plulitor, l-oii
\likcr.’ 1 A
ml probably uuks the
ding tho night at Ills house,
repr
dl dis
ted Frenchman No. 3 as his
d around dm lop of the
lauding, “ond I will ulso have
venge. I will tell zo French znt zis enumrie
i* von immense tJiaholique, magtiifique ham-
of the last word wilh a mil liko that of a
watchman’s rattle, tho reader may imagine
tho filed produced upon Iho spectators m
the Recorder’s office, ns tlio parties took
their leave.
Whether our frog-caling friends will car-
ry out their threat, or looked upon it a* a
joke, remains to tie seen. As they both
sworo they v
mellow, Jhe
one.— Philu,
pulls out naingulor piece ol calico from his Proudly llouoraliic, If 4 rue.
vest pocket, and showing it to the slrangor, | T , in ell | 0# j 8 i of Mr. Broderick, Col. Bu
naks him what Im thinks of It. "Why, U er Han Franciaco, standing over h a
dint’s cahker,ain't it I he naturally rep.I grave, said ol him that “his love for Ins
Hum.’
"ymi'ni H
stop here,
you
old pli
,r:
-A. CARD.
b W I NOW bars on )»and a Urge a
COACHES, BERLINS, CALECHES,
mock calw his, rockaivavs,
TOP ADD NO-TOP BUGGIES!
ADo, a si-tcndid stock ot
Now York Trotting Bugles
Of EYKRY 8TTLE AND DMCR1PTION.
:li 1 offer oa l-ettcr term* than can be afforded
“*e*her*, lo.- ca»h nr approved credit.
wit winding up mj boslneas, and would be
all Indebted bf note or account, to eatl
»w« either by ea*)i or *ali*f*clory renewal.
omit this wilt And their c. Im* In Uie hand*
' attorney for coUcrUnn.
„ If- 0. McttKE.
AD those who do notlnteu-l paying without
are soUA«d “
r <l by calling at Mu
' T'-whh.
Bad Wat.—Th-
reporl. ik.l • mo«|ylio liil «"■ of Hi.
BJitotl of if'01 (»» •“fP"** il """ l
,„v« In'-it Colquill) til. nflior Jay, *" d ’
mado "dead iliunk" I'J Hlo oporalioo !
wonder if fhtro ia any of that Dimmer
c-imp-jiaigo liquor .fill on hand in
| Times sanctum f
A 8 iu i* Load cv Coo Lite Burst—Ihe
1 ship Shshjeehanporf, bound to the West
Indie* with coolies, was burnt at «*a July
I 1st. The crew, sixty-four in number, were
j rescued, but all the cool.es, to the number
| of three hundred and fifty souls, perished.
OT The
•Miffed 1,
ibM, February 1,1 OfiO
II. C. McKKR.
Robert E. Dixon,
attorney AT LAIV,
Columbus, Georgia.
Dffice directly opposite the Post Office.
April 4. 1854 m p
THE PILLAR of FIRE | Supreme Judge.
B f author sf the Prin<
For s«lc b
• IK-*
aces over the New Market
Pcter.hurg. V.., comm.need
on Iho 12ih toil. »n l 1 " •»* U-
Mt Daniel’, eh. f. by Uoiton Jr. be.t Bium-
J. f. Crinoline, Iwo-milo heal.. On
the 2d day, Iho renowned Pl.net be.t two
undi.lin.ui.hod tlfala, two-mil. he.lo. in
3:51-4, 2:62.
CV Fuller return, .bow ih.t th. 0| po-
■ilion h.vo .bout eighty member, ul the
Georgia I.egialature. which, though far
•hort of a moiety, ia a hand*om. gain orer
their number rn Ibo la.l L.jUUture. W.
b.ec strong hope, that they here th. power
to elect or defeat Ih. Democratic caucoa
nominee# for United Bute. Senator and
I.nmpktii Palladium for Bate.
Dr. J. c. O. Bkicxnoitx olt'crn lor aale hia
popular and |irofpernu# paper, being com
pelled to give it up on account of tho weak
condition of hia eyea. Tho olllco ie well
u,.plied, and the paper haa an exleiraieo
circulation and profitable advertieing pat
ronage. Term# caey and moderate.^
-■In, Miuiun et Eoxorto.—The return#
frem Iho Mi..ia«ippi election ehow Demo-
cratic gaine. John J. Putin, Dern., ia
elected Goeernor by a large majority. The
fallowing Congre.amen are probably elected:
let Dialriet, L. Q. U. Lamar. Dern.; 2d
Dialrtcl, Reuben Deeie, Dern. i 3J Dielricl,
Win. B.rk.dale, Dern.-, 4lh Di.trlct, O. It.
Singleton, Dern. No change politically
from last year.
Dbath or our MtatsTaaTO Fbakc»»—The
only item of general new. of importance by
Ihe eteam.bip North Briton, ie tho death,
from apoplexy, of Hon. John Y. Ma.on, the
American Mirrialer to France. He he. long
.creed hie country in that capacity, haerng
received Ihe appointment from Gen. Pierce.
iy Weel Florida gi.ea a majority ol
Giiy rote# again,t annexation to Alabama,
and Ibo balance of the State ia nearly
unanimous against il.
|Y Gov. Brown*Uas appointed Msj. H.
J. G. Williams, of Milledgeville, ss bis
Private Secretary, lo fill the place of Col.
M. D. MeComb, deceased.]
“Scaccly,” sez the nobla feller, ond ho
drew a diamond hilled sword and cut tho
capling’s bed off.
“O that I ehood live lo becum n ded bod-
dy !" srd the capting, ne he fell to the deck,
lie expired shortly afterwards, being fatally
killed.
“People !” sed tho nobler fuller, “Itno Ihc
Juke do Moses !" (|
“Old boss, metbink* ihnw art blowln I
sed u youth of 4U summer*, and the Juke
cut off hia bed likewise. “Don't print any
verses on my death in the nooeapapers,
screamed the unfortunit young mnn a* ho
fell ded on tho duck, “fur if yer do I haunt
yer!”
“People!" continued the Juke, “I alone
kin save you from yon bluddy and unprin
cipled pirut* ! What boo then-! A peck
of oat*!" The oats was immediately bra wl.
The Juke took them and bravely
the jibpoop ho threw them ont
A correspondent of the Hamilton (Cana-
,1,,) Spectator tells tho following anecdote
about Wroden, one of lUo All England
Eleven, now here :
“At the St. Lawrcneo Hotel, at supper,
Home corn was served along wilh other
dishca, and, being offered to Wisdcn, lie
took some. But, how to eat it 1 Wisden
looked round ibo table, but there waa none
pmtaking of
bought,
[y It is now officially denied that
President Uuchantn has resolved to bring
.oil agait-t Pointy for alamler. D.v.lop-
menu m.J. in O.lilomi. will p.rh.p. .how
whether Torney h.rl »ny jtl.liftc.tion tor
hi. bar.h nccutttlont.
cr Wo h.v. » Ict'Vr Uircetra lo our
car. for "Mr. E. C. Terrill," and not koow-
iog the gentlemen la, whom it it inUnJtd.
wt call hia atuotion lo it in thi. way.
match f”
old boy. /I here
■ho ia mixing up * 0 “* h ;’’ "P 01 "
1 Il.u.roltravM
crurrtN a jounsoS"
Hinton & Butts.
attorney* at law,
Boaoa Vl.tn, Georgia.
rvtu. praettr, hr the couutlw of Marion, W.baUr
att Talbot.
lie At tho auction of Mayor and Alder
men of Bavaunth, on Monday, Dr. U. D.
Arnold and tho '•P.opV. Democratic
ticket" ware elected by .n .ver.g. nr.jorrty
at 160 total ottr Tboa. M. Tornar, K.q.,
end th. "Dintocr.tic li.k.t-
"Mr. Jon.., h..o yoo got i
Yea, air, * march lor r- ~‘ J *"
.he ia mixing up dough. • ■
hi. wrlo .od 'her, aid Item Do**,
taai we saw 01 hnn be wa*
d f o«nroad, hotly prir.rrcd by a red ho.d-
ed lady with a cistern pole.
least one bloek away Irottt her
the lowpsth
... _ minit the leading hoes hicht lo the
Pirut Bole cum along, slop I, and commen
ced fur lo devour the ol* ! The driver swor
and hollered at him terrible, but he wouldn
budge a inch. Aleauwhilo the Sary Jane"
her bosees on the clean jump, wue lust leav-
itt the Pirut ship !
“Onct agin do I escape detli ! sod the
Juke between bis clcncht teeth, still on the
jibpoop.
CHAPTER 1V.—THZ waj-dsiiir’b zkturn.
The Juke wss Moses the »ae*y. He had
bin m Franco about sixtem years, and now
how., home .gin io Boating, llo had
some trouble in gettin liisaelf acknowledged
„ Duke in France, as the Orleans Dienasly
and Borebonea wore fernenst him, hut be
finally conkered, and now he hid cross
ed the deep blue C to git bis own Eitxy.—
She knew bim to onct, as on# of bis ears
snd a portion of hi# nose bed been chawid
off in his fights wilh opposition firemen du
rin boybosd's sunny hours. They win
mtrrid sod went to France, to reside in Ibcir
ducal Pallia which wss got jp regardln
• xpense. They had several children sno
lived to s green old age, beloved “by all
bath grate and small," #■ the Puic srz-
Thff Pirut Csptin was captured, trtde, j
convicted and sentenced to read all the let- 1
that Messrs. Giddings and Wise shall j
write fur the ensooin 4 years. His friends
are endevorin to gil his eentunce commuted
to imprisonment lur life, 1 hour in each day
to be devoted to roadiri tbs Canada papers.
He sez this eentunce is woraer nor tother
one was. Hull he don’t csro much as long
as he gits bis meals regular.
This is my 1st attempt at writin a Tail &
it is l$r from bain petfick. but if I hev en-
.loosed folks to see that in 9 cases out of 10
they can either make Life ss barren as the
the Dessert of Harsh or as joyu.ua as a flow
er gsrding, my objeck will hav bin accom
plished. Adoo.
-r ... .. After some meditation
uml a caulioua survey of the table to sue if
any wi re observing him, ho look it up bold
ly and stuck it between his teeth endwise.
Imagine his disappointment at finding a cob
in the middlo of tho luscious morsel.
Advertising Obituary.—The following
strange bit ol obituary wo clip from a Now
J “'iSiqiarmJ rlria life on tiro H'h inn., 01
hi» tdmn, No. 30 Greenwich street, Mr. T.u-
ward Junes, much rospectcd by all who
knew mid dealt with him. As a man he
wos errrrinlrto. on.) n. a Irotror, ho wrr. u|rri«ht
and. moderate,
price, and his li
habits and b
to the last hour ol n
filled wilh prido, nni
prido was in tlio
...other was his first nnd most distinctive
trait of character, nnd when his brother
di*id—an early and sudden death—iho shock
....... . oirriniii tmil reflective .oust to Ins
which nmrkml them
ilo. He was always
icrgy and ambition
nliiicsH nnd force c;
au bad more roasor
...-w..-. 0/ manilosted in the most res
oli|is struggles with poverty ond obscurity,
and his ambition impelled him to aec k -
foremost place in tho great race lor honors
power.” And lurlhort " l was Ins bo.
and amidst tho general licenso ol a n
country it wns a proud ono, that his m
scrutinising enemy could fix no single
of iminoraaty upon lum. I emperate,
corous, sell restraincdi ho hud passed
through nil llio i xcitoinoiue of Qalilorn'
unstained. No man could charge in
with broken faith or violated
Pacific Itullroad.
Nf"- Oxrjrra, Ocl. 15—Proaide'U Forvlkca.
tho l’ucifio Railway has arrived from
oxim. Them wos a mootingof'Stockhold-
s on the 2d inst., ni which the Company
un ro.organized nnd consolidated, and J.
Mga* Thomtwon, of l'hiladolpliia elected
res dont. 7 oxns hud stibscrihcil a half
illioii towards tlio euiploytnont of n thou-
lid laborers lor tho work, and a hundred
ousninl wns suhseribed at tlio town of
Marshall. The road is progressing nnd tho
stock ut par<—old houa-fide stockholders aro
fully protected by tho now arrangement.
Our Itullroad.
.Mr. Coylcr, President of ihoSouth-Wcst-
Tit Railrond, visited our place a fow dnya
inco in company with a corps of engineers,
o con*u11 with our citizens ns to the locu-
lou of the depot in Etilnuln. We learn
lint it in now definitely settled thnt tlio
bridge will be liuill across the river about half
ilo below tlio old brldgo and rtint tho
I will cotno up what i* known as ibo
i-Yard Branch, nnd the depot bo located
iu tho South-Eastern part of tlio city near
‘bn residence ol J. M. Buford, Esq.
Tlio only thing to prevent tho rond from
uw “y "*ll ho tho raising of
i proposition before the dlroClOrff at an
ly dav for llieir action. They should
by nil moans do so, ns Bulaula hns done her
full sliaro in getting the road, Ibis far, and
without her tho road would not hnvn reach
ed Cuthbert so soon us it did. Nor ih this
all, if tlio rond is brought across bcro.tt will
facilitate its extension U thi company should
at any time think proper to extend it through
Southern Alabama.—Kufaula J'axprrst.
Ait Ideal Orrery.
Conceive tlio Sun represented by a globe
Lo loot in diantotor; at oiglity-two feet dis*
nen, put down a groin of mustard seed,
ond you have tho size and the nlace ot the
planet Mercury, that bright eil *
habii
nplo
and inexpensive, he Imd
Hoot
which
ruys.
forty
lust of guin. . ■ ..
weakness in a bargain, nnd withhold no
man his just dues. Never in the history of
tho State hns there been a citiz-n who has
borne public relations more sisiulcsely in nil
respects than he.”
The Columbus Enquirer expresses our
Opinion precisely on the subject ol the re*
ducilon ol the members of both brnnoltos ot
our Htsto Legislature. Willi both these
bodies reduced to about iwo*thlrdi
bats were only three
dollar* each, lie hns left a widow todeplore
and a large slock In be sold cheap ha |f, nn d the people represculed1 by in.-
bo benefit ol his family. Ho was instead of tho numerous disqualified
snatched from the world iu the prime of life, rnBI , w [ llt nre aiuiiially sent to distract and
k lie lisd concleded an extensive pur- I ro i, r j legislation, we n ight expect " nm
of felt, which lit
widow cani supply hat _ in i n „„ ur
have a large ratio ol ordm-
disconsolate .family will carry
with punctuality.'
j'ur- I „
cheap that the j , hing |,ku wisdom and uominon decency
morn reasons- i ,hedeliberations of flur Legislature. Wlnlo
the city. The | our legislative body remains
oio bound to have a large i
men who ore absolutely unlit lot the du
ol ligiklation. Reduce llio numbers uni
generally enveloped in tlio solur
At the distance of one hundred und
wo feel lay down a pea ; it will ho the
Bimiliiudo ol Venus, the dazzling evening
and morning star. Two liumircd slid filteen
lect from the central globe, place another
pea only imperceptibly larger; tltnt i*
indii's wont.n, (once the centro of tho uni*
verso!) tlm tlioniro of r terrestrial don'i-
nies, the birth plnco of o. r thoughts! . Mars
in smaller still, a good / ins head being Ins
proper representative, nt tho distance ol
ilnxo hundred and twtmtyseven leot, Tho
four small planets, Vesta, Juno, Ceres nnd
Pallas, seep ns the least possible grains of
sand, about live hundred leot from ihs sun ;
Jupiter, as u middlo sized oruuge, distnnl
about a qunrier of n nulo ; Saturn, with bis
ring, a lesser orange, at the remoteness ol
two fifths ol a mile; and tlio fnr Uranus
dwindle*into a cAsrry, moving in a circle
iliree-qunrtorsof a nulo in radius.
Hitch is tlio system of wh.clt our puny
I earth was onco accounted tho chief qoustit'
uont; n system whoso real or absolute
diinenHions are stupendous, ns may bo galh-
I crod from tlm sixo of tlio Hun hunsell, the
globe nroui.d which thoao orbs obodintly
. ' 1 — - •' —rly four
Wm interval
which sopurtttes tho Moon from thn Earth.
Compare this mighty diamslor, or tlio apace
ol til lie hundred thousand miles, With the
assumed diameter ol luo Jett, and tho
proportion will tell by Imw many limes
llio suppositious orbit ot I'rsnas should he
enlarged ! Tho dimensions of tho system
all effort to conceive or embody
and yet a wider knowledge of i!"’
universe shows that they belong only to our
first or smallest order ot infinites.—Casket.
i hern will be less chs
) lor
l-’alt Trade. ^
Since fur l.nt i-.ric »'« Irnvri Ir.rl litre. TlrVpcopie
A,rival, nf Irmk. Anri b,i«. (wm New Y «.k, ' •
Irudril witil AMIII.''"»rs"cr f"t tip-. "'",try
rncrcLAntv, .ml on" N « w
let,in, will. Wi'.t.rn produce I bwc. wlllr
llio (Jlrntvula arid Slolnr. Irmn Lul.ul. irml
Golumbll., Willi col Ion, Live Biwn our lown
quilo . lively .ppi'ir.nco for tiro l».t for. j - ——’
diy«. Wi Would rc.peclfully «ugB e, ‘ Tcnncuco
our .L.cnt m rcb.nl. Ilr.l l'l« “iron Iror.ir" j Q„ trnm H.rri. dflivcrcrl hi. nre.M,. lo
and light dtingbl .reamer llivcr Bride Ir.v. ; | loa „., nflliA Tortnrt.ee Legi.I.lure
completely r. volulionixctl the li.vigatron of | <m (h< q'h„ fi.c.1
.‘“!8iaW I. M Ml"'
the carpel” lor legisluttvu li
) will see tlio absdsto nr,
f electing their ablnat and best men
^Though wc have never, horsiofo
pressed our opinion on this subjt
earnestly hope dint the subject will
that attention its importance demand
[La tirange Kept
i of the
■olulionized the navigation of
when our merchants ate
lcgrsph to Eufaule and Fort • JJJ"7rom RlV’eouieee from 1st October, 1857,
;iurchasers for cotton here, it | lo J |§| Uc , 0 b fr , lb58, $| .818,094 88. togelh-
L r a balance of $36,4W6 06 in tbe
| Treasury 1st Hclober, 1857. The Ui»l»ur* , e*
moots f«*r all purpasf# for the *emo l,me t
; w ,. rr $1,704,287 01. Tbe toisl lisbililtee
- ~ ***** ~ j of the Hints of every character ate $16,048,
Not Pubtkd.—The London Illuslrsted . (Jon
Time# is t vidunlll not “up ‘
Cotton Planters Convention.
At tlio regular sesiion in Juno loci, of tho
Cotton Plunicra Convention of thoHtateo*
Georgia, a resolution was passed, authurix,
ing the presiding oflicor, (after consullattoi
with llio Vice President) to call the Convon
lion together, should businosa roqulre it;
dooming it important (list tho Conver^"-
stiould us-emblo, and having tho col
rt-neft of thoso whom 1 wns to consult, I
hereby require the members of the Con von-
li n to melt in the cilt, of Nacon, on WED
NESDAY THE SIXTEENTH DAY OF
NOVEMBER NEXT, ss business of thi
most urgent importance requires the setior
ol 1 tie Convention.
It is very tlosirablo that each Cotton grow
sond delegates t
s giving daily additional energy and f.»
iB.mcill Lr lbo«» *l‘» »'• h,m! ■ lt " ,ork 1
'ITecl Hr. dc.liuclwu of our lown.
[Apalachicola Adv.
m ... Convention.
Individual Flamers (not county delegates)
may attend and Leconte members ul tho
Convention.
Nfcwnpapura friendly to Direct Trade, and
to (lie Convention and its objects, are very
respecllaily requested to publish this notice.
Duels Kipcnln^.
Any one who lake* up the Hnn I’rancis-
0 papers, and reads tho gross persons!
hu*e with which they treni on iho subject
1 the Terry-Broderick duel, will be cunvin-
- d that iu so far ns social order and ihn
iincomes ol I,to nre concerned, that city is
n a condition fully as disorganized and de
moralized as it was trii or twelve year* sgo,
when it was lillle more thsn a camp of law
less adventurers. The California press has
never burn dislinguished for good taste or
decency. 'J he stapln topic fur editorial com
ment has usually been tho abuse of rival
newspapers. Htill, Ultra wa# a limit lo scur
rility and blackguardism. But now til
bound* of decency nre utterly disregarded,
and Iho editors of the different journal#
appear, in the excitement produced by the
Terry-Broderick duel, loliuvu set iheirminda
upon so villifying each other us to leave no
hope of shunning persons] conflicts. Re-
gurdless of (lie consequences which Ihcir
acts tuny have in the wny of diminishing
mo stocKVi journalist*, they go on, day sf-.
ler day, to indulgo in thn most abominable
obuso of each other; so tlmt if one titho of
thoir assertions were true, it would follow
that a greater pack of rascals than tho rdi-
lors of California had never graced n gibbet
«»r commended themselves to the attention
of • Vigilance Committee*
Let u* give u faw specimens of the gem*
with which the loading columns of the Han
rranciscJ paper# nro profuse ly studded.
The Times, which is owned in part nnd ed-
Mod by a brother of the Washburn# who
form n fraternal trio in tho House of Repre
sentatives, is one of the most violent of theso
abusive journals. It espouses tho Broder-
ick cause, nnd denounces Terry ami his
Iriends us base conspirators and murderers.
It call* all democrat* who were opposed to
Broderick “false hounds, carrying the hod
lor .Southern taskmaster!'," “contemptible
dough faces from tho North, ashamed to
own their birthplaces,” “spewing* of lh«
Slates which nurture freemen," “whilo-liv-
il, thin-blooded, cringing wretches," and
“cowardly, mean and mangy Yankee curs."
lUsi&l-flLMJUBlimcnlntlr in the
the conspirators that whoever should kill
Broderick would be appointed to the vacan
cy by tho Governor," andexpressea the con
viction that “all the leading chivalry in the
State had counselled and caucused with
Teriy beforo the chsllengn was sent." It
speaks of Broderick’s political opponent* a*
,i “crowd of tho moat desperate, bloody-
minded men in California, who were regdy
to take hia life on tlio slighest pretext."
The Times then pays its respects special
ly to its contemporaries the Bulletin and
the Ratibnal. Ono of the editors of the Inst
named paper killed in a duel a year ago a
State Senator named Ferguson. This edi
tor the Times describes a* a “mere mouth
price and curving man of Gwin," aa one
who haa sinco that dud “spent hia misera
ble existence in giving utterance to the most
ribald falsehoods,” and as having been “put
forward as the jackal to find prey that he
could not himaclf encounter." It represents
Himonton, of ths BulLlin, as tho Jidus
Achates nfSenator Gwio, “dancing atten
dance upon him, and holding his handker
chief when ho (Gwiny wishes to blow his
noje.” In another issue the Timfs denoun
ce* a statement of the Bulletin as s “mis
erable, tricky, Simontoniau falsehood," snd
speaks of its writer as “the npscrable thing
that is attempting to conduct it."
On tho other hand, it may be taken for
granted (hst the Times gets its full share
of sbuse from ita cotcmpuraries. Indeed,
the Rational is, if possible, much more of
fensive in its language than ita opponent.
It-brands ths editor of the Daily Times as
ulignsnt, wtllul snd deliberate liar;"
“vile creature,’lavishing his store# of
filth on pure character;” a» a “low born
•ant, who cannot insult a gentleman;’’
moral lelon, belching bile and billings
gate from his tripod;" a# a “beast, of which
it would be difficult to (ell whether polecat
puppy moat predominated in its compo-
lition hut the Times man thinks that
puppy is a little ahead. And, to clap an
extinguisher upon the unfortunate Wash-
bum, the National winds up by calling him
a “cowardly calumniator, w hoae dastard soul
•links down into his ungainly boots at the
thought of danger to his hung-dog face
il ugly carcase."
We do not believe that anything in tha
history of journalism can furnish# pnrrsllel
to these disgraceful chapters of scurrility.—-
They are utterly degrading to the profession,
ml ths only explanation that can be made
of them is that the fellows who wrote them
•re mero vulgar politicians who, to further
their own petty schemes, have contrived to
get control of newspapers. If their courage
is equal lo their blackguardism, they ntar
do the Htate son.a service in shooting or
bowie-knifing each other, and ntsy thus
save figure Vigisnce Committees the trou
ble of exhibiting them as pendants to
the end of a rope, or banishing jhem from
the country. In the meantime it is evident
that much trouble is brewjng in California,
and that these foul-tongued editors srs res
ponsible for a groat part ot i». The next
mail will probably bring us news ol more
i politics. Think of such a
bundle ofrrror* ss is found in the following
extract from if budget of American news,
under dot* of Hep-ember I7lb t
i. pj, r Presidential nominations form the
chief topic «•! conversation in America—
There aro three candidates In the field—
Wire. Douglas tnd Bolts. At the last ac
count* Bolls was a lillle shoadv"
We are that Mr. Toombs of Georgia ia
Th. u.rr.1 .igniiio.nc. of bull in | pr.r.rn* Mr. CriU.rrd.n in
• chin, .hrrp" i. r.T.n-1 by th. That'»••* ■J 1 **'
.ff.ir .1 th. mouth of th. P.rbo. I h. hull Mr. ( nu-nden . frlond. will ■«««*•' «■ »
in thii CA.e ,ot dt.iti.rlly th. woral ol th. ' jun<-h«n .f.ln.t the trr.-e.tin,^ ^
visit.
i IU
Usa it i
r Htrm*.—Get a root Iron
y il in the shade,shape s
uigh.cn with a sharp lure
nny other strop, and one
side wit It a keen foreplanc, when U
**'fhe.« "r'prt.r root, «ro h-Blnnln, In h«
known among the barbers ol New Orleans
and other cic.cs as eupcrlcr to Jill other ra-
sor strops.
Somebody in ths Atlantic, in discoursing
upon the skeleton fashion of the day, say# :
“A woman in this rig hangs in her skirls
like a clapper in a bell; and I never met t
one without being tempted to lake her by
I the neck and ring bar,”
Wc have pa
in this section
and have had
judge of th
llio Crops.
sci through several counties
dur llg tho la.t low weeks,
i toiointilv lair opportunity to
crops. Tha ooiio'uamn -;e
o ia that the cotton crop ol Hooth
rgta will not be more than snc-
half it* annual yield. SffJjM !•* * '“} r
planter* will make an excellent crop. wli,|o
a largo majority will make a vary sorrjr one.
*'lho potatoes, wo think, are good ; (lie
pea*, also, in (he newly cleared ground, and
the corn crop may be considered an average
one. The sugar cans is cxealU nt.—Jfcrin-
bridge Argos. jj|t(
Grasshoppers sro degenerating in Virgin-
ia. They have begun to chaw ibo tobacco
I’.ul Pry c.pying ■ ni.it who »«. digylnrt
in a large pit. and being disposed to rally
him, asked him what he waa digging.
• A big bole," was the reply.
“And what arc you going to do with auch
a big hole f" said i’aul.
“Going t
tail them l
Tux O.k.T A.o’uTIU.UT l» MliiOUXI.
Vibui.ua AM) KrNTi-ixv.-Th. hr,ir prlco
of negroes turther Houilt. II thi* price con-
tinues, ell the border crainf rowing Hlatce
will bo abslitionitsd.-N. J . mpress.
act a watchman »o arrest hi* own—ths
drunken man’s-shadow. He complained
that a ragged looking scoundrel was con
stantly dragging alter hia footsteps.