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The Greorgia, 'W'eekly Telegraph.
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THE TELEGRAPH.
HA0QN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER, 12, 1869.
TtasBnaui of the Telbgbaph will ask the in-
dnlfpnee of leaders till the mind can resume, to
• some extent, a normal condition. When the
a {factions'have been deeply woanded,it requires,
for a considerable time, great effort to torn the
attention to ordinary duties and channels of
thought, to intense and morbid disgust of the
• concerns of bonnes! affects no, which it requires
a coo stant effort of reason to combat.
It is true that the death of young children,
lightly considered, is not an event to be mourned
over. They have known and will know little
more of existence than its unallowed delights.
They have not lived long enough in this world
to realise that St is a scene of ■death and decay—
of sorrow. conflict and trial, ae well as of enjoy
ment.
Almost all of na can look ■ back upon the pre
cise time when this gloomy and depressing con
viction first dampened our young spirits, and we
learned that existence itself was to some extent
an evil. Bat when oar children escape from
■ the clay before such thoughts begin to engrave
■ the lines of care upon their beautifnl faces, we
ought to persuade oarselves firmly that they
have been favored of Heaven and have escaped
the trials and dangers of a probation which
might have been fatal to their virtue and hap-
. piness.
Bnt the loss of their society and the scenes
• of their suffering and death harrow our sonls
with a poignant grief, which time alone can
. deaden. And as we descend the valley of life
and approach the setting sun, every man expe
riences an increasing sympathy, pity and affec-
■ tion—a growing reluctanoe to -inflict or to wit
ness pain—a more earnest desire for the happi-
• ness and welfare of all about him and a greater
indisposition to controversy and-contention.
This is all natural and right: the fruits should
mellow in autumn. It is pleasant and natural
that the light should soften as sunset approaches
—and the sternness and rigor of meridian man
hood shonld gradually abate, just as the snm-
. mer winds subside in the evening. Neverthe
less, these very facts make our bereavements
. more painfnl at snch a period of life and jar ns
all the more as we stagger onward in the weary
' track-of existence.
Conductor O. Rencan.
The Senior editor of the Telegraph desires,
• in this public manner, to express his profound
gratitude for the extraordinary sympathy and
kindness displayed by Condnctor O. Teneau, to
Mrs. C„ on the train from Angnsta to Macon
- last Saturday night, dnriDg the distressing and
subsequently mortal illness of her little boy.
Mr.- Benean assnmed extraordinary responsibil-
ties to afford relief to the suffering child—stop
ping his train for that purpose and going him-
- tell in quest of medical advice and remedies;
And daring every possible moment all night long
acting as a sympathetic, comforting and en-
• cooraging nerse, and watching the child with
the anxiety- of a father,* even while his own
' heart was bnrdened with solicitude for a sick
child at home, whom be had been forced to
leave in a dangerous condition. And I am as
sured that Mr.. Reneau, wherever known, bears
the generous, sympathetic, manly and chivalrous
.Character displayed iu these extraordinary acts
■of kindness to mere strangers under his care as
. condnctor.' I hope this pnbiic acknowledgment,
if of no service to him in his fntnre career, will
at least bo gratefnl to the feelings of his family
and friends. J. C.
Fire and dnupowder.
The extraordinary .'spectacles now -exhibited
in the Carolines of -men claiming to be whites
and men of sense and intelligence, summoning
military forces of negroes under pretence of
keeping the peace, exhibit either a folly or a
depravity equally unaccountable.
The United States authorities, just at the close
of the war—in the flush of triumph over their
enemies—careless of-what ills befell them, and
inflamed with a vindictive purpose to “ punish
treason” and harrow the sonls of its enemies—
to “rub sand in their eyes" after they were down
as is said to be the custom of piney woods pugil
ists—we say even the’United States—or rather,
triumphant abolitionism—soon saw that negro
soldiering in the Sonth-wonid notdo, unless they
were willing to go into a war of extermination
against the Southern whires. That, even if the
whites were ever so mneh disposed to bear and
snffer rather than provoke a conflict which
would end in their own massacre, yet the igno
rant and brutal license of the negro soldiery
would have aroused a conflict, on such terms.
Consequently, in a few weeks, all these sable
guardians -of a pnbiic-order which must be
founded on uninterrupted and unresisted license
of the basest sort, were withdrawn in time to
prevent universal anarchy and slaughter all over
the South.
How the revival of tho scattered experiments
in Arkansas, Tennessee, and North and South
Carolina, although attended in the two former
States with frightful disorders, failed to evoke a
general deluge of war and ruin, we are hardly
able now to see. Probably becanse they were
on too small a scale. A horn of gun-powder
will produce an explosion, but still it may not
shatter the whole fabric. ; But wherever iyou
bring negro soldiers to dominate over white
men in any capacity, or in any spot in North
America, there yon will bring fire and gun
powder together. An extremity of caution on
the part of the whites against a conflict which
must be attended with such disastrous results,
may, for a time, keep the fuse wet, bnt the ex
plosion is only a-question of time and chance.
It is impossible that the brand of public indig
nation should be too deeply burnt into the reck
less white men, calling themselves Governors,
civil or military, who will deliberately plunge
society into such awful peril. There can be no
Southern community in which justice, peace
and order will not readily be enforced by the
whites. Here or there, there may be cases in
which a turbulent sprit may appear to be up
permost ; but, when inquired into, there is not
one wherein the great body of the white people
will not be fnnnd ready to do justice and to es
tablish tranqnility.
How can it bo otherwise? The whites are
The Blodgett Perjury Case.—The Chronicle
-and Sentinel has information that the United
•States Government, through its District Attor
ney, will move a nolle prosequi on the indict
ment against Foster iBlodgett for perjury com
mitted in taking the iron-clad oath in the face
-of the fact that-Blodgett had sought and held a
military commission in the service of the Con
federacy daring the war.
FROM TALBOT COUNTY.
Key art or th<- Cotton Crop-The True Poli
cy—Wheat Sowing, etc.—A new Plow—The
Macon Fair, etc.
Talbottosj, November 22, 18G9.
iEditors Telegraph:—The ootton -crop will
cOrae fully np to previous estimates, one-half to
two-thirds, and the nicest staple we have ever
made in Talbot county. Nearly all cottons will
clasrify middlings. I still advocate the policy
Of every planter, that possibly can, of holding
his ootton. It is not possible that three -millions
can bo reached, and with all the favorable re
ports from East India, Brazil and Egypt, it still
appears that, notwithstanding receipts from
foreign countries, cotton most still maintain
good prioes, and the consumptive demand fall
short of a full supply. India is slow to go into
a heavy crop since her disastrous failure several
years ago, and the Southern States could-Eve on
low-prices while British India would starve to
death. Let us take hope, then, for the fatnre
of the Southern States, encouraging her agri
cultural pursuits, developing tiio mineral wealth
of her mountains and opening up new commu
nications for commerce and trade. What we
want are more factories to manufacture more
of the-raw material at home, thereby increasing
the . population of Georgia, adding wealth and
power to her name. Next to ootton mills we
shonld have direct steam communication with
European ports and cities. These two ideas
properly developed will make Georgia wealthy
and independent. Here in Talbot county we
have a number of eligible sites for erecting oot
ton factories. There are no better places Gian
Chandler and Smith’s waterpower and Gorman
& Co.’s-mill. We need enterprising men to
move in-this matter.
As com is bound to maintain very high prioes,
the country should plant largely of wheat, oats
and rye. Now is the time to sow wheat. The
best varieties should be secured, and the ground
well prepared and fertilized.
A new plow has been invented by Messrs.
Bailey,'Fort & Co., of this county, which com
bines great merit of easy carriage, economy-of
labor and. adaptation to work. It tarns over and
subsoils at the same time, one plow followed by
the other, masking the most complete taming
and -subsoil plow I have ever seen. I hope H
will prove.au entire success. The Macon Fair
will-be largely attended. Occasional.
From Pulaski County.
if a glean iiie following from the Hawkinsville
Dispatch of the 4th:
Gin-house Burned.—We regret to learn that
the gin-house .of Mr. James Bohannon, who lives
in this connty, somo six miles from town, was
entirely consumed on the 23d ult
The fire occurred in the day-time, and is sup-
posed to have beon caused by the carelessness
t» p^» bra. * n <m j 7. b ,. o :rl??..2^ 0 r
‘ , ! , J ' , - . ; — i smoking a pipe, aa a few minntae afterward the
property of the country, and established families j a t arm was Riven.
whose peace and comfort are paramount consid-1
erations. They may be too slow sometimes in
checking the acts of vagabonds among-them who
are under no such overpowering -motives to
maintain the peace. If they are slow or indif
ferent, surely they are awfully foolish and cul
pable. Bnt they can be neither when the im
portance of action is properly presented to them.
Bnt a soldiery of black vagabonds, without a
single suggestion of sense or interest to restrain
them, quartering upon the whites and living by
plunder, insolence and outrage is a thing which
will madden a white population to a blind fury
wherein all suggestions of prudence are lost in
the stem necessities of self-protection. If Hol
den, in North Carolina, succeeds in precipitating
a conflict with his black legions, we hope there
are whites enough to make a ease of him and
relieve the necessity of any more such telegrams
as were sent to us on the 2nd instant.
A -Mas. Nobton, one of the strong-minded
women, loves her husband She bad been in-
-dnlging in a tirade against the horrible he's in
general; bnt after she had got through abusing
them, she added: “ Bnt, Mrs. President, I wish
yon to understand that 'I am abasing men as a
race. There is one of the vermin whom 1 re
spect to a certain extent, and sometimes I al
most persuade myself that I lore him: He is
my husband.’’ Here the company hissed her
outright.
Black Bonnets.—We are informed, says the
Montgomery M*ii, upon the most fashionable
authority, that black velvet bonnets are to be
the style this winter. A tasteful black bonnet
called tho Medicis, has a high puff crossing from
ear to ear, with a shirred frill faced with satin
on the ba?k and front. An ostrich feather curls
low behind, a malmaison rose with brown foli
age is on the left, and a dotted knot crosses be
neath the chin. Price, $10 only.
It is reported that the Postmaster-General
will recommend the abolition of the franking
privilege, or, if that cannot be effected, then a
large abatement of its privileges. He will not
find the members of Congress ready to sanction
this proposition.
Emory and Henry College has now one hun
dred nud thirty-five students in attendance.
There are no vacant stores in Angnsta, and a
number that are unfinished are occupied.
Mss. Susan Prescott, widow of the late Wil
liam H. Prescott, the historian, died in Boston
on the lSihnlt.
There never existed but one Mormon Irish
man, and a Mormon Irishwoman is something
totally unknown to naturalists.
Another new Southern Methodist Church has
been dedicated in Baltimore.
There is a Sunday School numbering sixty-
four children on Monnt Zion, in Jerusalem.
Belle Boyd, late of Virginia, and well known
during the war from her connection with the
•Confederate secret service, has been sent to the
.-California Insane Asylum.
A •Californian exhibits a gun that fires
three’hundred shots a minute.
-. It is .stated that an air-line railroad from St,
Louis to Louisville will be bnilt at once.
Six inches of snow fell in Augusta, Mains, on
•Saturday, w-. • - ' •
Quails are now seeking winter quarters in
the West. This is said to indicate a hard win
ter.
Nilsson, it is now rumored, will come to this
country in 1872, under the management of
Niblo’s.
During the last fiscal year, 7C0 millions of let
ters passed through the United States mails,
forty millions more than during any previous
year, and an average of twenty for every man,
woman and child in the land.
A fireman of the Central Pacific Railroad fell
off the looomotive when traveling at a high rate
of speed. After going ten miles the engineer
missed him, backed np the train and found him
asleep against the bank.
Governor Peter T. Washburn, of Vermont,
sets the example of short inaugurals, and de
nounces usury laws and private legislation.
Jamestown Island, the site of the first English
Settlement in Virginia, has been recently sold
lo ft Northern purchaser, for $11,000.
Am immense balance-wheel, weighing forty-ftev-
en thousand pounds, for a new rolling mitt, bf a
Ja* been cast at a Louisville foundry.
Henry Ward Bxsann has been making a wo
man rights’ speech at the Hartford Female Con-
A man in Oourtland oonnty raised • porker of
■neb unusual sice tfeti strangers wept opt of
jlttWtoweit *
Twelve bales of cotton wore also destroyed.
Mr. B. says that - $3000 will hardly cover his
loss.
We understand that Mr. B., with indomitable
zeal, haB already began tbe erection of a new
structure upon the rnins of the old.
What Was It?—Mr. D. C. Mann, the polite
Ordinary of Wilcox connty, called on us last
Tuesday, and told ns of a remarkable sight he
saw the night before, r.bont seven o'clock, near
the old McDuffie place, some twenty miles from
here, while coming to this town. He says that
a fiery body, resembling a meteor, suddenly
shot ont from tbe northeast, and, after travel
ing a northwest eonrse for about a minute, ex
ploded, sending forth sparks in every direction.
Mr. Mfmn states that he did not hear the explo
sion till three minntes afterwards. It sounded
like the firing of a cannon, and reveTbrated
similar to the rambling of distant tbnnder. The
light given oat by it is represented by Mr. Mann
to have beon so brilliant that a pin conld have
been picked np in $ie road.
The Cold.—We never remember to have ex-
BY TELEG-BAPH.
from WASHINGTON.
'Washington, November 4.—The Cuban Commo
dore, Higgins, is here.
Mre.-Games leaves for Now Orleans on the first
Of theanontb.
• Revenue to-day $714,000.
V Robeson has returned.
•'The’President baa appointed D. B. White ae-
seesor;for the fourth Virginia, and George Bobs for
the second Tennesse district. '
DeUno. persists that pork packers are taxable as
manufacturers, as much eo as cigar makers.
The ship Golconda, belonging to tbe American
Colonization Society, sailed yesterday from Balti
more -for Liberia. She will stop at Savannah, to
take aboard four hundred colored emigrants for Af
rica.
One hundred and twenty men of the Cuban
steamer Lillian arrived at Key West yesterday, from
Nassau, where tho Lillian was seized by the English
authorises.
The Herald says, editorially: “ She beats Bimttm,
Mrs. Stowe is possessed of the genius for advertis
ing in oneminent degree. Her vampire assault on
Byrotk’8-ei8ter. is comprehensible now, that she ex
plains that she has a book in press relating to By
ron. .'She wanted to make a grand preliminary ex-
citement to attract attention to her book, and did
not care-what woman’s good name might stand in
the way. •'What must the world think of a moralist
who thus deliberately sacrifices the reputation of
another ..woman, simply to pnt money in her own
purge ?"
: FROM NEW ORLEANS.
New OiLEANS, November 4.—A report having
been cirsnlated that Governor Warmouth had issned
twe^nd a. half millions of bonds, of which there is
nobffilfclrecoid, the Governor publishes a state
ment that all bonds issued have been duly recorded
bythe.Treasurer,and concludes: “One thing is
certain, and that is, that not a single bond of tbe
State has been issued without authority of law, dur
ing -my administration, and the interest has been
and will bo .promptly paid.”
GENERAL NEWS.
New York,’November 4.—Late returns show Nel
son’s majority to be between ten and fifteen thon-
sard. Senatorial retains are not all in. Giving the
Republicans -three doubtful Districts, the Senate
will be a tie; the Assembly is doubtful—the chan
ces favor two Democratic majority.
The steamer Euterpe has arrived from Havana.
Her first mate died of yellow fever. The second
mate, waiter, and-one passenger are down. The
steamer is detained at quarantine.
San Francisco, -November 4.—The emigrant trav
el over the PacificRailroad is rapidly increasing.
They are having heavy rains throughout Oregon. :
Boston, November^.—Three hundred mechanics'
and laborers havo been discharged from tbe navy
yard.
Auousta, November 4 Agricultural fairs are in
progress at Eatonton and. Rome.
Ex-President Johnson, who was announced to de
liver an address at Rome, will not be present.
Savannah, Novemberrd.—The steamer Zoe, which
sailed from this port on August 14th, foundered in
Cow Bay yesterday. The.vessel is a total loss. The
cargo will probably be saved.
OCR GREAT. STAPLE.
Cotton Considered »s n Sonree of National
'Wealth—The Present and Fatnre or the
Cotton Slates.
FROM CUBA.
Havana, November 4.—tDoBodaa has departed on
an inspection tour and wffl be absent ten days.
The Spanish bank has reduced its rate of interest
to 4 per cent.
Lands In West Georgia.
We note the following reports of sales in -the
Columbus Sun and Times of the 3d instant:
The improved plantation of Perry Wimberly,
containing 469 acres, twelve miles from Colum
bus, $5,650.
450 acres of land on Hamilton road, eight
miles from Columbus, $1,725 ; 424 adjoining
$1400—all belonging to the estate of B. W.
Clark, deceased. • -t
2081 acres of wood land, near Box Springs,
$60.
303} acres of land on Lumpkin road, five
miles from Columbus, $1000; 96} acres of land,
four miles from Columbus, on same road, $260;
82} acres adjoining, $350; 6} acres adjoining.
$10; plantation on Cusseta road, seven miles
from city, known as Perry place, well improved,
containing 227 acres, $2,380. S *
The Pope plantation, on the Muscogee Bail-
road, near Box Springs, 23 miles of Columbus,
making a settlement of 900 acres, 400 of which
are bottom lands, dwellings and out houses com
plete, $10,050.
The plantation of John T. Lokey, deceased,
consisting of 6S0 acres of land situated six miles
of Columbus and handsomely improved, was
divided into three lots: 301} acres brought $3,-
390; 150 acres $1,700; 202} acres $3,700—total,
$8,790.
This foots np, errors excepted, 3,710 acres
for $31,675—say about eight dollars and fifty-
four cents an aero all round—probably all or the
major part for cash. Snch a sale of miscella
neous lots of land as this conld not, we think,
have been approached a year ago, as cheap as it
seems to be. Wo think a very rapid increase in
the valne of Georgia lands lies just before ns,
and believe in ten years from this time this en
hanced valuation will pretty nearly or quite in
demnify the loss by negro emancipation.
perienced colder weather at this season, in this
latitude, than that of the past few days. Ice has
been formed on two or three occasions already ;
whereas, a general thing, ,we have none till
about Christinas. The heavy fnost have stopped
all further growth of cotton, -potatoes, and vege
tation generally.
The River.—The river is as low, now, as it
usually is in the summer. On a still night, the
noise of the water rushing over the shoals can
be plainly beard a mile distant.
The i’ulaski Manufacturing.Company com-
mcnce operations on the 10th. Thaengine, which
is of 66 horse power, and capable of driving
3,000 spindles and 100 looms, is sheltered by a
brick engine room, which will be covered with
tin by our enterprising townsmen,.the Bram-
bletts.
AU the main shafting and driving wheels have
arrived and been pnt up. The wool machinery
has all arrived and is being rapidly put in its
place. Tbe cotton machinery is nearly all here
and.is also going up speedily.
The wool cards, spindles and machinery are
capable of working up l. r >0 pounds of wool per
day. The cotton spindles'will work up 400
pounds of cotton per day.
The. building has ample room for 3000 spin
dles and 100 looms.
The main belt is of double leather 20 inches
wide.
The buildings are all ready for the accommo
dation of the operatives, of whom there will be
15 or 20 to sturt with.
The company design manufacturing nothing
bnt cotton.and wool yarns, and carding wool for
customers, until next spring, when they will
make all kinds of cotton and woollen goods.
FOREIGN NEWS.
Madrid, November 4 Topete insists upon re
signing.
London, November 4.—Francis Joseph and Victor
Emanuel meet at Brindisi.
Paris, November 4 Eugenio -lias arrived at the
terminus of tbe canal.
Something
Death of an Aged Citizen—One Who
had Seen Gen. Washington.
We have to record the death of another patri
arch of our city—one who connected tho slow
past with tbe rapid present—one who moved
quietly among ns, seen often upon our thor
oughfares tottering along life's way with the
feebleness and kindness of age, revered and re
spected by all. We refer to Mr. Willis O’Ban-
non. At tbe residence of bis son-in-law, Dr.
Tuggle, on Saturday night, he stepped out upon
the back piazza, waa seized with a vertigo and
fell upon a brick pLvement, breaking his skull.
He lingered until Saturday 8 p. is., when he
died. He was buried last afternoon.
Mr. O'B. has resided in this vicinity a long
time, mostly at Dover, Ala. He was in his
ninetieth year, hence he was born about 1780,
nearly the close of the Revolutionary war. He
could read the finest print withont glasi
which he never used. He never took but one
dose of medicine, and that was oil, and ob
served to his friends that he was never bnt once
nnder the influence of liquor. He was bora in
Jefferson county, Virginia, in the vicinity of
Charlestown, near Harper’s Ferry. He remem
bered distinctly, when a boy, seeing General
Washington. The General had come to his
father’s house to see a horse, and took the boy
in his onus. To his friends, Mr. O'Bannon has
often remarked that the General was the hand
somest, most imposing man he had ever seen.
Mr. O'Bannon married ft sister of CoL B. L.
Mott. One of hfedaughtera is the wife of Dr.
Tuggle; the other the widow of the lamented
and gifted Dr. Wingfield, and now the accom
plished principal of the Female Department of
the Public Schools of Columbus.
It ever seems to os that in the death of every
aged person a link with the past is broken.
The long ago appears more like a dream when
its reminders have returned to their native dost
Their thongbts are merged with the shadowy,
alow-moving aold lang ayne, and cling bnt feebly
to the awiftly gliding now. Their gray hairs
and halting steps cause instinctively the hand of
the most careless to be raised to the hat in token
of reverence.—OoL Bun.
Cotton Manufactures In the South.
The Augusta Factory has declared a quarterly
dividend erf -five per cent., and the Graniteville
Manufacturing Company a dividend of ten dol
lars a share. These facts show what cotton
manufacturing will do in tho Sonth. It is the
most profitable .branch of industry in which cap
italists can embark. Tbe manufacturing of
cotton in the South is bound to become large
and extensive. The surplus profits arising from
the production of-the raw material will nccessa-
sarily be invested-to a large extent in manufac
tories. First, because no other investment will
pay so handsome a profit; and second, because
there will be nothing else to invest their surplus
in. If laborers could fee multiplied by the mere
force of capital, as was the case in the days of
slavery, large amounts of each year’s profits
would be invested in .labor and lands for in
creased production. But this is not tbe case
now. We have a limited supply of labor. No
amount of production, no extent of price
will enable planters now to increase the
area of their crops. The surplus profits
cannot lie idle. Cotton manufacturing
the nearest approach to their life-long voca
tions, and to this new branch of industry the
mater portion of their money will be directed.
In less than ten yean all the eotton grown in
the Sonth will be required to keep the looms
and spindles of the American miHers in opera
tion. The Sonth will in that time require for
her own mills a million bales, and perhaps
mnch more. We are in onr infancy now in
this branch of industry, and yet we find that the
consumption of cotton the past year in the Sonth.
era States reached 163,203 bales, while that of
the North was 821,924 bales. The increased
consumption of the North era mills last year over
that of the previous year was only 22,107 bales,
notwithstanding the demand for ootton fabrics is
increasing in a greater ratio than the production
of the raw material. The indications are that
the Sowth will show a mnch larger inorease in
consumption than the North, and bnt a few
years hence this section will not be dependent
upon the North for its ootton fabrics.— Nashville
Union and American.
About Executions in
Japan.
Correspondence Philadelphia Advertiser.]
Off Yokohama, Japan, September 28.
As a correspondent from this very interesting
and strange land, it is my province, sometimes,
to record customs that to the Anglo-Saxon may
seem inhuman and barbarous. Such a scene I
have witnessed within the past few days—a
publio execution of criminals. The offenders
were six' in number. The crime -of one was
murder; the other five, petit larceny. The
crime of nrarder was punished by crucifixion.
A large wooden cross is erected, to which tbe
offender is tied with wisps of straw, arms ex
tended. The cross is placed in the centre and a
little to the re&r of the group to be executed,
the other five in stooping posture in front. The
executionerapproached and pierces the side of
the one to be cracified with a lance in the re
gion of the heart. This is done several times;
and his sufferings are at last ended by a dexter
ous cut of a sword that severs the head from the
body. The 'other five were decapitated one
after the other, and evinced perfect indifference
and apathy.
The unfortunate belonged to the lowest cast
of society. Their bodies remained three days
exposed to the pnblio and elements before in
terment.
The public executioner seldom practices his
skill upon the better grades of society, unless in
cases of treason. The Government allows of
fenders of higher rank the privilege of com
mitting “hari-kari," or suicide. It must, how
ever, be performed in pnbiic, and consists of
making two deep cuts np and down and across
tbe abdomen. The patient dies immediately.
A person committing “ hari-kari” clears his
character and that of his family from all stains
and disgrace, no matter how heinous the offence
committed. The “hari-kari” spectacles are
very popular and common. As the Japaneso,
like the Roman Emperor, ponish small offenses
with death, human integrity has not, as yet, dis
covered any batter or more effective punish
ment for great crimes. The sole indifference
with which they meet death is truly surprising.
Prince Arthur does not have a very good ex
ample set him by the officers of the Dominion,
who now have the special duty of lionizing him,
Some of the Canadian papers speak very plainly
as to the condition in whioh the premier of the
Dominion has several times found himself da
ring the royal visit, whioh has rendered him un
able to make use of the ordinary mesne of looo-
motion. • ' i... -
A options scene was witnessed the other day
at St Petersburg, in Russia. The First Regi
ment of the Imperial Horse-guards was drawn
up in line, when a young officer, dressed in full
regimentals, was led np to the Colonel of the
regiment, who strati him in the face, took his
sword from him, ordered him to kneel down,
broke his sword over his head, told two other
officers to tear off his uniform, and then had
him dad in the ooarse uniform of a private of
tbe line. The officer thus degraded had stolen
money from one of his comrades, and commit
ted a number of forgeries.
A suit against a circus in Ohio dovelops the
fact that the bad jokes of the down ore paid for
at tiie rate of $75 a week.
A max named Brock was reoently found dead
on the grave of his wife, in Vandexbexg county,
Another large party of female emigrants left
Liverpool,Thursday, for QaebecU • • j-TH*reportthat Napoleon has suffereda re-
Th* Duke of Genoa’s prospects in connection lapse ia denied- Rumors of changes in (he
with the flpagtah throne continue to improve. French Cabinet are revived-
Cholera Ravages-Four Hundred
Deaths a Day.
Calcutta, August 29.—Although at Umritsir,
Agra, and several other places which have been
attacked, cholera has sensibly abated, it is still
raging in many districts in various parts of the
country with fearful violenoe, and the total
death rate is, at the very lowest estimate, 400 a
day. Since 1858 there has been no hot season
so fatal as the present to Europeans. All through
the Northwest provinces the pestilence is mak
ing sad ravages. At Gwalior the deaths are
from 69 to 100 a day, and Sepree, Bhopar and
Scboro are suffering heavily. The soonrge
seems, indeed, to be steadily inarching along
the Agra road to Bombay. At Indore the native
Rajah has made the people offer sacrifices out
side the city walls, with bare heads and dry
chvpatties, but without any marked success, as
upwards of 1,000 men have perished during the
past three weeks. All through Malwa the hor
rors of pestilence are aggravated by the priva
tions of famine, especially among the thousands
of pilgrims who have been visiting the shrine
of Omcar. and are now obliged to remain in
that district until the rains are over. From
Southern India we hear almost equally gloomy
ttdfaaa At Hyderabad the cholera has made
terrible inroads, and at Madras and all the other
main centres of population, it has had more or
less victims.
In the report of Mr. B. F. Nonrse, United
States Commissioner at the Paris Exposition, we
find the following:
During ten years—1851 to 1860—the crops
produced in the cotton-growing States, (cotton,
sugar, tobacco, rice,, etc.,) not consumed at
home, left a surplus of proceeds from sales
amounting to about $1,200 000,000, an average
of $ 120,000.000 per year, which, less the amount
required to be expended beyond the borders for
the oomforts and luxuries of life, shonld have
been so mnch added to tho reproductive capital
within tlio-e States. If one-half only was thus
required, the other half, or $60,000,000 per
year, shonld have been put to profitable use.
Throughout the Southern States some inter
nal improvement was in progress, chiefly in the
form of railroads. In some States, as in Geor
gia. these works had been largely extended.
Cheaply bnilt and economically operated, they
generally proved to be profitable investments,
capable of rapidly repaying the loans incurred
for their construction, which in many cases cov
ered a great part of the cost.
A large amount of banking capital was well
employed, but this, when not owned abroad,
was chiefly the product of the commission and
other charges upon the produce of the country,
and not to any considerable extent drawn from
the accumulating capital of planters.
The capital which had built the few cotton and
other factories and the machine shops had also
accrued chiefly from charges upon the produc
tions of the country. What, then, was done
with the $60,000,000, or whatever sum repre
sented the true annual gains of agriculture in
these States ? The statistics of population show
pretty^ clearly that a great part of it was expend
ed in importing slaves from other States.
PRESENT AND FUTURE INCREASE IN SHE WEALTH
OF THE COTTON STATES.
When considering this subject in its economi
cal aspectonly, special effects bearing upon in
dividuals and classes are to be disregarded for
the general results affecting the whole commu
nity. ::
Population is wealth. Money sent from Ala
bama to Virginia, to increase the laboring power
of Alabama, even by importing slaves at $2000
each, added in some degree to the wealth of
that State. Bnt if laborers of equal productive
power conld have been introduced, without ex
pending anything for them, the capital ex
pended in the other case would have been
saved, and the community wonld have gained
its use in some other form of productive power,
as .in tools, machinery or animal labor, with
which to supplement and increase the value of
mannal labor. To the whole people of the
State, that is just the difference in the invest
ment, between importing a slave and importing
a free laborer of equal capacity. There are
other differences to the State, scarcely lesB im
portant in an economical view, all in favor of
the free laborer. Whatever the cotton produc
ing States expended for slaves above the cost of
importing an equal amount of free labor power
was twice lost to the community.
Reckoning the slaves in the cotton States prior
to 18C1 at 3,000,000 in nturiber, of the average
nominal value of $500, equal to 1,000,000 full
hands, at $1500 each, we had an investment of
$1,500,000,000; and to replenish this force a
large snm, much needed for other uses, was an-
nually drawn from the gains of those States.
If, in 1860, the people, by unanimous con
sent, had declared the emancipation of all those
slaves, whether with or without compensation to
those who had owned their service, there wonld
hnve been neither loss nor gain to the commu
nity, except as the change might inorease or di
minish the efficiency of labor or the cost of its
maintenance. There would have been no “an
nihilation of property,” for the whole labor
power wonld have remained as before, only it
wonld have changed owners.
While it is undoubtedly true that free labor is
always cheaper than slave labor, when each is
nnder its most favorable conditions, the demon
stration of that truth needs more favorable cir
cumstances than were found in the years 1866-
1867. It was not until 1863, the third season of
tbe free-labor experiment, that it became gene
rally successful in its operations and results.
Then improvement appeared, and the harvest,
abundantly supplying the people with cheap
food, leaves a surplus stored up. for the fatnre.
The profit arising from the sale of exportable
productions of the same season will amount to
‘ 50,000; and a reasonable forecast of the fa
tnre seems a promise of equal gain in some of
the succeeding years, the increase of quantity
compensating for any redaction of price.
The annual gain, be it fifty millions or two
hundred and fifty million, is no longer to be
wasted in the purchase of labor, when as good,
or better will be obtained without purchase; yet
the capital must be employed and will seek in
vestment For some years very little will be
needed in opening fresh lands, of which there
is already too mnen open for the labor applica
ble to it After meeting the demands of agri
culture it will seek other profitable uses, as in
banking, railroads, manufactures, machine
shops, and the other active employments which
capital finds for itself. Prominent among the
improvements, that of reconstructing the levees
and reclaiming the most fertile of cotton and
cane lands should be one of the first, and right
ly conducted, one of the most profitable for tbe
employment of money. ‘ :
WANT OF LABORERS.
Now that capital is returning into the cotton
States, the great want there wiU be labor, a bet
ter use of what, they have and more of it, to ex
tend their profitable agricultural business, yet
carry forward the other works which will be re
quired. So far; the prevailing conditions in the
Sonth have not been attractive to immigrants.
Poor crops, dear food, destitution of the com
mon laborer, and these evils too often aggrava
ted by disorder and violence, were reported dar
ing the years 1866 and 1867.
The prosperity of 186S stands in marked con
trast to the adversities of the two years preced
ing. A similar prosperity repeated in succeed
ing years, until it shall be regarded as the rale
and not the exception, supported by assurance
of peace and safety, will turn tbe tide of emi
gration freely from the Northern States and from
Europe to the cotton growing States. During
the present year the Pacific Railroad will be
completed and opened, a highway by which
the Chiuese .and other coolies or Asiatic laborers
may reach the cotton fields of the United States.
They are industrious, frugal, quiet and nn-
merous.
Exit Blonde*—Brunette* the Fashion*
able Rage. )( ;
From the New York World.] f, MB
It is intimated that the blondes are not to
have it all their own way this winter, as they
have had for several years past. The brunettes,
instead of dyeing their hair a dingy yellow, and
daubing their «Bm until their complexions
looked like new starch, have wisely determined
to stidc to their own brilliant and natural attrac
tions, and fight it out upon that line. They
have discovered that their utmoet efforta only
succeeded in producing a hideous sort of gen
eral resemblance to the blondes, who were thus
left masters of-the field, superior to competition
or rivalry, .--.rij • cf «::.•.>/ si.
This supremacy received a great blow, how
ever, a few weeks ago, at a grand wedding
which was considered as inaugurating Ihei fash
ionable season. The beautifnl bride, though
not strictly a brunette, was not at all a blonde,
bnt the four bridesmaids, all exceedingly loveiy,
were all decided brunettes, and wore in their
dark tresses only the scarlet flowers of the
sweet-eoented geranium. Their dresses were
triumphs of art and taste. They consisted of
white tulle, bouillonne, trimmed with white sat
in paniers. The boqnets of scarlet flowers were
placed on the left side at the bodiee.
Idolatry is reported to be on. the wane in
India. The people in the Southern provinces
have lately discarded the sained monkeys.
LETTER FROM TEXAS.
Courts — A Judicial Muddle-Polities-Tbe
( bailees Best for Davls-A neiuoeratic
Faux Pits—Jodjre Love—Weather—Sn^ar
Making.
Richmond, Texas, November 1st, 1869.
Editors Telegraph: A long interval has elapsed
since I wrote—longer than onghi to occur in
correspondence making any pretension to regu
larity. • ■ .
With the close of last week, we closed a term
of two weeks of onr District Court,'bnt without
getting folly through with either docket. Three
or four freedmen, tried by jurymen of their
own color, go to the Hnntsville institute, some
times called the penitentiary, for terms varying
from two to six years. The darkies are down
on their own color for jnrors. They say a ne
gro does not know how to give an accused party
“ the benefit of a doubt.” There may be some
truth in this. I know they are pretty generally
convicted. No whites were tried before colored
jnrors. , , •
As yon and yonr readers know, all or. nearly
all the civil officers in the State have been re
moved within a short period of time, throwing
the business of the country connected in any
way with oonrtBof law, including Reconstruction
Acts “and any,” into the nicest sort of a mud
dle for Pliladelphia lawyers, so famons for their
legal acumen, to take hold of and straighten out,
if they can. Bat I apprehend that - even these
famons functionaries wonld meet with their
match in the tangled mazes they would encoun
ter in the new order of things. -
Since the nomination of Hamilton Stnart for
Governor, the political situation is not so easy
of solution as it was. Davis, backed by the ad
ministration, General Reynolds’ bayonets, and
piles of money, lavishly need, ought to feel some
what seenre. If defeated, it will be a memora
ble triumph of mind and right, over force, fraud
and might. o > * eedoria-cri ton
Although there is no man in the State I.wonld
sooner see elected, or make, a better Governor
than Stnart, if there was any hope he conld only
be elected, his nomination at the time it was
made was a political faux pas, and the sequel
will show the correctness of the assertion. We
had onr enemies divided. The breach might
have been widened, and should have. been. The
Democracy had everything to gain, and nothing
to lose by letting the election go nominally by
default. But there are self-willed “impracti-
cables ” everywhere and in all parties. -Per
haps we are not worse off than others.
The city of Galveston contains a most re
markable gentleman in the person of Judge
Love. He fought at the battle of New Orleans,
a scrimmage of some importance. At theclose
of that business, he returned to his native
oonnty in Kentucky, where he studied law, and
served several years in the Legislature.
He served four years in the United States
Congress. Bnt tho Texas revolution breaking
ont, he came here at once, and reached here ;
just in time to take part in the battle of San Ja
cinto. He has served Texas in various civil ca
pacities, chiefly on the bench. When the Con
federate war broke ont, he joined Terry’s
famons Texas Rangers, went with them to Vir
ginia. participating in all their toilsome marches
and glorions achievements. He is considerably
over seventy years of age, perfectly erect,
walking with a steady, firm, elastio tread. The
passer-by in the street wonld take him for abont
forty-five yet re of age. What State can beat
that? . .ijv'i.tfw -
The first of last week we had four days of cold
weather, for the latitude and season, bat no
frost. • • , .bid- .ii ; *
Sugar-making is progressing in good earnest,
and the ponderous rollers, driven by the giant
steam, are crushing the saccharine juice of the
cane with a force and speed gratifying to the
lovers of sweet things. Par Fois.
AFRICA.
D . r *'w*a^~3irs*i
■«!
London, November I i
A special news letter, marked l» I. “i
private,” addressed to the London N
Herald, and dated at Zanzibar on the q! 51
tember, states that the writer had ^ 0,4
conveying ^information that on tU?
vions letters had been received bvtJl
Consul at that place from Dr. Litm!*
explorer.. The communications
tbe 8th day of August last. 16
Dr. Livingstone was in good health. 3
He spent the year previous exnlor^-..
tion of country lying south ot Tan^f
which he found to contain
tion 1
which he found to contain many
or inner lake fountains, which he 1
the true sources of the river Nile ** IBl
Dr. Livingstone states that he had h
Bioji from Zanzibar for his nse >1,
been received at a time pterions’ to m
there, so as to have them early and ii
them beneficial. In these letters J
thejj
that further supplies of necessaries be d ^
to him, including nautical insh-Ji!?" 1
copies of English almanacs for the „
and 1870. This fact indicates. t V 4 ** H
that the Doctor purposed renuiJ^f**
country for a lengthy period of Zt* 14 1
ticularly as he has given no idea
tions for the future, and has not - 018
whnt place or point of the
posed to come out on his jonrnev hZ *
The lettets are written in small
per which Dr. Livingstone bego^Tw
Arabs, who conveyed the written dornT® 4
the coast for transmission to EnglMi ttatl 1
The communications are exceedinelv
so far as regards general news. 6 3
Th* Empress Eugenie <„
liople—A Native VroeeLi
Mosque-How He* rtnjestj D„ t91
A telegraph report from Constantin,
the 16th of October, supplies the f<3S
tails of the visit of the Empress of tho'"*
to the Ottoman Conrt;
Yesterday the Empress Eugenie
from a window of the Dolmabachtsche"1H
the imperial procession to mid-day rmxJh
Mosque of Beshiktach. The itaiuj ‘
horseback, attended by a brilliant escort
sequently her Majesty received the menu!
the diplomatic body and their wives at theB*
lerbey Palace, and then steamed np th* Jj B
ms in the Saltan’s yacht to witness the
nade to. the sweet waters of the Asia. Tfce ,
er waa splendid and the scene very intern
There were innumerable caiques and vachtsl
the water, all gaily decorated, and thousands J
persons assembled on the shore, indndito j
cream of the female Tnrkish aristocracr
Turkish women of the middle classes in bn
costumes, on foot and in carriages, besides!.
Arabs and Europeans. The Empress ands.
suite landed from state calqnes at the Snlt«d
kiosk, mid there a mtilitary reception toot p
music being played by tho band.
Her Majesty, who was dressed in a yellowu
lilac dress, and wore a yellow plume andfcsta
a black lace mantilla, appeared on the halm
of the kiosk, and afterwards passed sen
times round the sward and up the valleriij
open carriage, preceded by high Turkish’dd
tones on horseback. She afterwards v?ui]
foot among tbe Tnrkish ladies, and after ren.
lag several minntes in conversation with t
embarked with her suite in a state caique, r
by fonrteen men. On tbe return to the Bi
bey palace, the grounds were lighted up. u
the iron-clads and men-of-war up the:
were illuminated.
A lady was recommending to a gentlemsi
medicine for the gout. “I know rim •
praise it to the skies,” said she.- “Ko do:
madam,” he replied, “for it has sentwtti
the skies to praise it.”
The Church of the Madeleine, in Paris.*
of the finest and richest in Europe, cost $3.10
000 to build.
Tax ghost of King Solomon, if the spin
could raise it, would admit that there is som
“new under the sun.” PHAL0JTS VTTAUifl
SALVATION FOR THE HAIR, is thorough s
inal. There has been nothing like it since tal
gan. It is tbe only transparent and harmies*
in existence that will restore the natonlttai
gray hair, without discoloring the akin.
nov7-eodlw
Who WiisSIm*?—A Sleeping Car Story.
Correspondence of the Evening Post. ]
Washington, October 21.—It is true, as well
as funny and instructive. I allude to the sub
joined, statement. A common friend of outb
on a recent occasion found it necessary to take
a night train from New York to Washington.—
He secured and paid for a private apartment in
one of the sleeping care. After spending the
first, part of the evening with some friends in
the smoking car he became drowsy and sought
his sleeping place. On arriving there he found
a stalwart person in female attire, who had
thrown off her shawl and was making herself at
home. The gentleman was astonished, and
soon entered upon an explanation. After talk
ing fifteen minutes according to the ordinary
rales of politeness, he found that the intruder
had no idea of migrating. . He then remarked
that he was sleepy, and wonld retire. “As
you please,” said the stranger. “Bnt this is my
room,” added the gentleman, “and I intended
to go to bed right here.” “All right,” returned
the stranger; “I looked everywhere, and this is
tbe only room I found unoccupied. I cannot
walk to Washington, and to sleep in this room I
am not .afraid.” Remonstrances were of no
avail. In his desperation, the gentleman order
ed his bed made, in due time he threw off his
coat, and retired to compose his feelings and his
litnbe; and just as he was about falling into a
doze, lie looked up, and lo! the stranger was
carefully making ready to do likewise, and she
did, “lie down in her loveliness.” And that
person was one of the strong-minded women of
the age, whose name is perpetually appearing in
papers. This is true, and is one of those facts
which put fiction to the blush, albeit the heroine
of this story has probably not been honored with
a blush since her childhood. The conduct of
that woman strikes me as a greater marvel than
the telegraph. .• 7’flH
Sales iu Troup County.
A great deal of property was sold at this
place on Tnesday last. A large number of peo
ple were in town. Indeed, it was the biggest
sale day we have had since the war, and real
estate sold at better prices than since Sherman’s
grand march through Georgia. Troup connty'
is certainly looking up. Our people are im
proving financially, if we may judge by tbe
prices paid for lands.
The biggest operation, however, was a private
sale. The well-known, plantation, formerly
owned by Hr. M. Ferrell, deceased, containing
about 1100 acres, and located on ornot far from
the Chattahoochee river, in this connty. was
sold by Col. J. H. Fannin to CapL F. A.’ Frost
for $11,000.
The following sales were publicly made by
administrators and executors:
Estate of George H. Traylor.—The home
stead, 303 acres, sold to L. B. Lovelace at $810
per acre—or $2454 80. The second place, 350
acres, sold to the same person at $12 per acre—
or $4200. The third place to same at $7 per
acre—$2400. The whole possessions of 1003 acres
were sold for $9104 SO.
Estate of Benjamin Shepherd.—The- home
stead of 692 acri s, with a two-story dwelling of
ten rooms and six fire places, was sold to Dr.
John S. Hill at $11 60 per acre—or $7626 20.
Estate of Giorge \V. Humphrey.—Lands be
yond the river, Antioch district. The Bond place
of 91 acres sold to G. 5V. Humphrey, Jr., for
$1G20 cash. Another place of 115 acres, known
as the Jack Young Place, poor improvements,
was knocked to Jesse Bennett for $1224 cash.
Still another place of 120 acres, common im
provements, was sold to J. W. Freeman for
$726. " i ajt
Estate of L. H. Hearne.—Near the river,
Pool’s district, containing 250 acres, sold J. T.
Hearue for $5005—half cash, balance one year’s
time—$20 05 per acre !
Estate aj William Hammett, Sr.—Upperpart
of the connty. One parcel of ISO acres sold to
D. A. Philpott at $11 per acre—or $1980. An
other piece of I !2 acres to R. W. Brown at $5
per acre—or $560 A woodland peice of 50 acres
to same at $19 75 per acre—or $987 50. A frac
tion of lot, 34} acres, to same, $206.
Estate of Thomas Bradford.—A lot of 162
acres to S. H. Dunson at $5 30 per aere-r-ot
$858 60.
Estate J. T. Boykin, Sr.—Only a tract of 150
acres was offered, which was sold to J. T. Boy
kin. Jr., at $1030 per acre—or $1545.
Estate of hr. N. jV. Smith.—The homestead
in LaGrange, located but a short distance from
the Rquare, a large two-atory building, and
»bout 100 acres of land, was bid off by Dr. J..F.
Moreland for $6,800—half cash and balance
twelve montes credit. Office bnilding on the
square, containing two rooms, at present occu
pied by the purchaser as a banking offioe, was
knocked down to F. A. Frost for $2000. A
fraction of 3 1 -5 acres of land was sold for $75 50
per acre, or $341 60.
Beta eofJ.J. Walker.—Homestead, six miles
Northeast of LaGrange, 506} roree, with good
single story dwelling and other improvements,
was sold to Col. B. M. Young at $9 25 per acre
—or $4,675 12}.
Estate of'1 homos Jennings.—Eight or ten
miles Northeast of town. The homestead place,
580 acres, was sold to A. B. 'Williams at $11
per acre—or $6,380. Another settlement of
343 acres was sold to the same at $9 50 per acre
$3,258 50.—LaGrange Reporter.
PratTLEa on the face and blueness around ths
removed by the use of Milk of Violets. Tbe jee
tnl and pleasing whiteness which it giTes to the s
truly marvelous—delighful beyond expreesioni
so cooling in hot weather. Sold by all droggietn
foncy gooda dealers.
What is the beet and safest preparation to:
gray hair to its natural color, but not dye it.- i
Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer.
oct7-eod<twlw c '*' o
MALARIOUS FOGS.
Countless millions of cubic feet of miiiriooi
por reek from the motet earth every
hours daring the month of November. TbU r
rated moisture is tbe active principle vhich t
fever and ague, billions remittents, ind^geetien. >
entery, bilious cholic, rheumatism and msn; ■’
ailments which prevail more generally in
than at other seasons, and some of which, a
swampy regions and new clearings, take the ■’
of virulent epidemics. The best eafegnirch
these complaints, as evidenced by the eipcri#
a long series of years, is HOSTETLER'S ST®
BITTERS, tbe most pleasant and at the
the most efficient of all vegetable tonic*, "j
vigoration of the system is m&DifeeUy
means of defending it against the cause* o!»
whether constitutional or casual. Nature,« "
pathologist knows, is the most determined
of disease, and the paroxysms of an tcuiea
are in most instances the consequences is *
forts site makes to conquer the foe. The
Ject, .therefore, of preventive treatment b*
foree’the system, and it ia accomplished t'
rapidly and safely by the use of K0S
BITTERS. This powerful tonic contain* n*
apartment and corrective principle. It »**,
valuable as a regulator and purifier thw**]
vigorant, and there is- no danger of
brain or ovor-stimnlating the circulation 6;“*
ing it as an antidote.
Be Beautiful. If yon desire beauty, 1
use Hagan’s Magnolia Balm.
It gives a soft, 1 refined, satin-like teitcre
Complexion, removes Rooghnees, Bedi
Sanborn, Tan, etc., and a tinge of P*
tbe plainest features. It brmg*
Youth to the fading cheek, and chm* 6 *
Country Girl into a Fashionable City Beiw-
In the nee of the Magnolia Biim Be* tM (
cret of beauty. No lady need coopin' 10
plexion who will invest 75 eanta in t**
article. to to'
Icon’s Jtatbairon is the hart
nee. 0011
Stir 1
: A Western paper says that one of its neigh
bors “deals on the cash principle. It gives no
credit.”
A storehouse recently fell into Cayuga Lake,
New York, and spilled 15,000 bushels of grain
into the water. .u '£<»wVi««C )&■'** 'miM
A young man from Ohio has succeeded in
making a canoe trip from one end of Lake Su
perior to the other. 1
An Eastern wit wants.Miss Dickinson to name
her Sait Lake lecture “Across the Inoontinent.”
Bugham Young has five thousand pounds qt
wives and ohildren.
Paupa travel* with three hundred .and ntiie
pieqos qf baggage.
On* of the Saved.—When the Stonewall
took fire Anna Gurney rose np from her bed,
and shortly after went overboard. She held to
a spar, and floated nnder the boat, where she
was comparatively secure. There was a man
with her on the spar. After a long time they
were taken off by a boat, which came from a
landing a mile and a half distant. The man
died as soon us he reached land. When Anna
landed she fonnd her husband there bale and-
hearty and dry. He and ten others cut the yawl
loose—a yawl which would have oarried forty
persons, and Went ashore. Onoe on land they
made no offer to go back and assist tbs strag
gling passengers, bnt stayed there and saw them
die. Anna Was justly very severe upon her hus
band, who ran off. with the boat, and Ae de
clares she will live no longer with him.- Any
Court in Missouri would give her a divorce on l fi^MauL Olax*A
the ground of this cruel abandonment , T_ ~
The ease of the 8tonewall brings to Mabi seve
ral inatsnoea of the most heartless maid selfish
inhumanity. One steamboat passed the Stone
wall while she waa burning, bnt made no effort
to render assistance. The people Of tbe neigh
borhood ore waiting foT the retaipofthe' ^
order to
the
■ Jenmalif
REDIVIVUS!
The 8.8. S. of 1*
Or Dr. JEU80NB Original South***
flxnur for Children Trammo, is *0*
tsted! It is a Corrlgent of the Bee*
contingent upon this period; s
tines a nutritious Syrup ; end s 3 tntu J J
iruWjng calm and refreshing report,
pernicious and distreesiiig wsotioD* r T®T'
of the nervoas system that resalt*
tion of moat preparations—«¥ r
drtn. its use in the Southern
ae 1869. ratoblteheditswpotstien-
etitntien, and, aa a medkana uanj
ing the best- and safest prepare**
teething, ensuring bw* to norais* — n
relief *nd strength to their rnfanW- ^
no new medieini, and needs no
is beet known. jEFwy precaution
to preserve end protests from ft**®
fettft JAinmtne^uturedomlyet»s
efOcara, TwrajmA Peso,
ceesomto the old estafctishedSoi^^Tg
of HauhaTi, Bout A Sxkbx*\ Aj,
street, New York, to whom sU
Dragghta
be**’
UXFSKCHIXFTIW ffC flora*
fifty thousand boxesoi Dr.
PiUa have been sold, and netsw
If yen
want* safer '