'ByTha Advance Publishing Company " .o in-Tf Yen. I . 'LET AL". THE ENd THOU !M ST AT. BE THY COUNTRY'S. THY GOD'S. AND TRUTH'S." Josephul Dante!, Marnier. - - . ,,, . , r ,., , i i ji The Wilson Advance. POETRY. .A nli-?Pro?iibition. She1, however, did not relent. This morning, as she was attend irlg T!ic Repufoiicau State Executive JEFF DAT IS OfSlIERTIA. "It JtliJst havej been" A Southern prisoner oif war at Camp Chase, after pining of sickness in tbe hospital of that station fur Home time, ;ml confiding to hiA friohd and ft-llow-raptive, Colonel W'i Tl lllawkins, of Tennessee that he w:is hdavy of heart ide inXash- 1, (lied just er in winch engage! ?Kmt . requested by l any epistle n thereafter, because, his allianced brii yille did not write to ldj before the arrival of a 1H the Iadv curtlv broke! the Col. Hawkins had been dying comrade tooije which should come to hii and upon reading the lvtjtcr in ques tion, penned the following answer: Your letter came but caniie too late, For Heaven bad claimed its own; Ah! sudden change from prison bars Into the great white throne! And yet I think he would have stay'd To live mi lus oisoaih Could he have read their ;reless words Which V"u .have sent iij vain. So full of patience did ho wait Throuirh many a weiiry hour, That o'er his simple soldier faith Not even' death had pdwer. And you! did others whisper low Their homage in your jar, As thoti'ih amongst their shallow throng ' j His spirit had a peer 1 would that yu Were by now, To draw the sheet aside, And see how pure the look he wore .. The moment vlien hetlied. " I The sorrow ib:d you! gave to him Had left its weary trace . As 'twere the shadow d.f jthe Cross Upon his pallid face, h "Iler love," he said, 'could change for me -j The; winter's cohl to spring." Ah, trust "f tickle maiden's love," Thou art i bitter thing", . For when these valloysj.tjright in May, Once nove with blospdms wave, The Northern violets shall grow 1 to -some duties at( the spring house, Coyle followed her from the houe and again tried to persuade her to give permission to their marriage She told him1 in reply that she would neither marry him nor any other man. He gave her the choice of hlarfying him at once, or being shot, and, draw ing herself up to full height and plac ing her hand on her breast, she said, half play fully : "Shoot Ibe right here John Coyle." Coyle, enraged at being thrawed and defied, drew a sevenKhamber revolver from his pocket, anil placing the muz zle almost against her breast dis charged the weapon, and the bullet passed ! directly through her body, producing instantaneous death. Sur veying his victim with a smile of, sat isfaction aid revenge for a moment, he placed the pistol over his breast and tired,, the bullet glancing harm-les.-ly from his body. lie again raised the weapon to the back part of his head and fired again, but the bullet produced only a slight salp wound. I le was however . staggered, and with the? idcia that he was mortally wound ed went to the house md informed his mother that he had ;-hot Emma and .had then shot himself. lie then went to bedi and awaited death from his wounds. The physicians came and pronounced his wounds slight and he was taken in charge by the constable and was landed, here in jail at noon Committee Commits that Party to t!ae Moveuicnt. e- The Italeigh A es the following tion concerning the action of the ! THE VAXUISIIKI I1EI5EL IS -VERY VEliE in HIS COMMENTS UTOX V THE UXIOX OEXEKAL. i irs Otorjr. publish-I The Indianapolis find.) Senthiel interesting informa-! that Jeff Day is passed through t,x mar ntv on inunua - muni, ium m JVC" i ' " - xecutive Committee " Uiu; 11UUI v i eiffh June Oth.. and a one of its reporters had a conversation j - For tbe ADYfxnt.. 1 .. Free SoIioaW Aoi llj and Soutii. The Diilereiirc and Why. , Tlie real history of any people is ob tained through tha records " that have been left by that people. By their own written words we may understanxl them. . ''; ; .-" ; ; I select Massachusetts and Virginia publican State II .reeato i.eVadlres,tothe pco-! ,ne ; Vd'0 SS' bv tLet I ' :MrV liavis was asked if he read I ago are observable to-day. At 4fS fnlS.h t tne tiS.! m .w.rd.V. mners the speech of the beginning ofthe seventeenth cen- -j 1.71U k M M. V- " ' ; - - v . . v A J- ure and sale of spiritous and malt h'l- Gen Sherman replving to certain uors, and'submitted to the pepla-for-j his military conduct ratification or rejection. . , . 1,11,1 Yesterdav this meeting ofthe com- contained in the recently publhed, mittee was held, and it was the most'ise and Fail of. the Southern Con inharmonious of all their assemblies, fe(ieraCy. 3ir. Davis1 eve glistened The sole object was tackle the anti-pro- iwith mething 0f, the old fire that niOlIlOIl lllO eilieuy w men nau - Uvc social organiztftiihs; snd !ia it mental, moral ani pliysical stffwU ranking next to slavery ; v t 1 . , ? In New 1:1121311(1 ncwi'fy was llie main eolisierariori lit flrst,'hhcl tverjv where villages, "Hot isnfcrted honii were to be foiuwl. It will at Once seen that in thi s com m unity .lMTf w!a absolutely eential; for ruamtainiug Hflwls rintt ciinrcliex,iMl Uie ;. inter change of books 'and. thought. 'The 'Xt-wii meeting,, which is the unit iof organization tothi. day, A-as called turv firhtin.r jr,hn Smith -Vfn,1 : . er, umi mi quesilOHS .' O r ...v.i uiv.iniivvt 1 . , . . plant a colony on ; the banks of the u" v vniuyi James river, and for twenty years there was no lack of intellectual activ- discussed in iii the latter part of May, was AVOnt to be seen in the Senate, as At that meeting speeches were made I he replied 'Yes; I have Teart tnat re by I.J. Young, T. B. Keouhf D. A. ! markablerignVr61e'cGen.hermaais Jenkins and W. A. Moore, in opposi tion to endorsing the anti-prohibition movement, and J. J.,Mott, T. N. Coo per and W. r. Canaday 011 the oppo site side. A sub-committee was appointed to be present at the meeting of the anti prohibition convention and see what was the best plan to be adopted. It was understood that this sub-corn mitee stood three to two against taking ac tion. . ..' . But there is so much dissimulation on the ptift of these Wire puUer.-? that it is ditlieult to tell what is up, and so it is tlfata few sprung, this niattp but I cannot see" thftf it in any respect breaks the force of my statements. Sherman, as the lawyers say, confesses and avoids. To use another legal phrase, his defense is is in the nature of a '.'negative' pregnant,", which Con tains 011 its face evidence of its falsity. In other word, it Is a negation of one thing while implying nn affirniation of another, ttistory has. already de cided that Sherman bumecl Columbia, ity anxmrf them. Then came a long silence, during which the principle in dications of intellectual existence con sisted of a few pamphlets, prior to the Bacon rebellion. Durinr' the next UO years intellectual activity appears td have died out; and over a quarter of a cent urj-after the founding of the Col lege of William ,and 3Iary, persons occupying respitible positions in; the State were charged by Gov. Spots wood with "not TMng able to pell English, or write common sense.1' 5 " This deplorable condition of things was chieliy due to the fierce temper that was Manifested onlM lutrt Of the :n,t . .' . . . Dody f masked Hlvfti.wiji to-day . Kwtiirrliv. and took a- snat iudment Above bis lonely grav -i le. Your dole of scanty wprjds- had been But one more pang to' bear,' For him'who KVed uptio tlie last Your tirss-cjf golden Jiair. I did-hot putiSjt vlievojhe said, For when the an gel 4 cjome 1 ii-nnlil not lijive fheb find tile' sh Of falsehooti hi the tomb. I've read yourjetter anjl T know, Tl c 'wiles tlrfat yu hii w; t g'ht, To wia ta it imlle heart! of his, And gain -d it tearcu "AVhat lavish Wealth uui give -- .- ! For a tri lb; light an l AVhat manly tonus are In follv's Himsy thra n-i.lli biten In 1. thought '. n sometimes Id Id stand with id, You hal not pity 1 l ivfbr nnv His sevrov has an e5n Yet wouhl that won cot 1111 - Beside mvl'fallen friev And L forgive you fcr his sake, As he if t be given-)- - . May e'en be pleading? pirace for you Before tb co"vt of .heaven. ' ' -'-' 1 "-' -To-night the cold winds whistle by, As 1 niv vigil keep:. . AVithin the prison deafl-house, where Fw mourners con so Ho weep. A rude plank coilin hklids his form, Hut deatii gives always grace And I would rather Set? him thus Than clasped in your embrace. ' . I fniiav shine with To-night your home ! lights .r' And ring with merry song, And you IhJ smiling juistas if You never did a wrong. ' Your hand so fair,- that. none, would think i I It penned these wordsof pam; Your skin so white ould God your heart- V i . AVhere half soiree from stain. . ' . 1' " -. I'd ratlier be my couiifade dead Tuan vou in life supreme. -For vours-the sinner'sj waking dread, And his the marfy rs dream : ' Whom serve we iii this lite, we serve In that which is to eome. ' . He chose his way; you yours; let God Pronounce the fitting jdoom!" A REFUSAL AND A MURDER Covle talksJ freely ofthe crime. says he would not have done it if Em ma had not refused to marry him and dared him to shoot her. He confesses everything connected with the terri ble affair and discusses tlte matter cool ly and with the air)f a bravado, seem ing in perfect" ignorance of the. magni tude of the "crime of which he is guilty. He regrets constantly that be escaped a late similar to that of his victim, and still expresses a hope that his woxmds will prove fatal. Dr. House a prominent physician, was called to dress bis injuries, and to him Coyle protesteuVthat he was insane anJ that his own physician knew it was so. A careful examination of the murderer (Joes not develop any symptoms pecu- ' liar to insanitv, nor is it known that be is subject to fits of aberration of the mind. He, however, has a very re. pulsive and brutish faee, looking like a nan competent to perform just such a bloody deed. Tie is large and brawny ami is regarded, by. all the neighbor hood as a daiigerous and desperate man. He is above the medium height with dark features and heavy dark moustache. He is just the opposite of his victim". Miss Myers was about eighteen Years old and the possessor of great '.personal beauty; and was, known by sight to every one crossing the river at that point. Her manner was attractive and fascinating, and gained her a large circle of friends. She, was formerly a resident of Cham bereburg but at the1 death of herparent? 'some time since she went to reside with the Coy les, where she assisted with the duties of the household. It is stated that she nevr encouraged the atten tions of any particular admirer. W I At the scene of the murder this af tcrnoonjhere. was a" genuine feeling of sorrow at the tragic fate of the beautiful young girF and an intense feeling against the Coyle family, who luv.T exposed her to the dangers of their reckhsson. The Coroner's jn iv viewed the remains, heard cons id orable testimony and returned a ver dict that Emma Myers was murdered deliberately and in cold blood by John; Coyle,- Jr. E. 1). Ziegler, Dis trict Attorney, has'suftieient facts and testimony already to send the case to the grand jury at the, opening of the next term of the Quarter . Session f 'onrt. on Monday Fiext, and he will use every, effort to have the criminal spee lily' punished. This is the first murder committed in York county for two years past and it is a theme that is everybody's mouth to-night. on other members of the committee. YVe learn that of the eleven members of the committee, four, all were oppos ed to taking part in the movement were absent. These four were W. A Moore, I). A. Jenkins, 3Iansfield Thornton and A. II. Hicks. The vote for party action and en dorsment was, it is whispered, as fol lows : For W. P. Canaday, J.J. Mott, T In. Cooper, and John B. lieaves ; against I. J. Young, T B. Keough and Clint Itogers It appears that Mott tlie new chairr man, is termed by some member of the committee, "a little too previous.' He issued a circular in advance of any action ofthe committee, calling for funds, and. announcing that the -lie-publican party was solid for anti-pro hibitioh, and that the committee en dorsed it This he did with a view of solidifying the negro vote, declared a number of prominent Bepublicrfns last evening. So iie of thejn expressed great anger Jat 'theiole proceeding, which they positively declared was in opposition tp the well kuown views of the executive committee of the anti- prohibition: party. The words tjiey tise:d " indignantly, to express their views of yesterday's! action of the committee, were, "snap judgment." Mott comes in for a liberal share of abuse..;. - - ftThere were gOiiic' big rows in the Committee yesterday, it is - said, and a continued sniMing. ! Tlie overslaughed members are said to be disgusted at the way they were beaten by one vote, when but a bare majority ol the committee was present. This is what the Republicans assert. How much truth there is in their dec larations, time and circumstance can akme reveal. S. C, in the uiere wantonness and to gratify a brutal spirit of re venge against what they callexl "the hot bed of secession." Sherman waged war with more ferocity than iany sol dier since Attilla, who received from his terrified and horrified contempora ries the title of "the scourge of God," and boasted that no blade of grass ever again grew where once his horse had planted bis foot. His cruel treatment of the helpless non-combatants of At lanta is without a ; parallel for barbar ity and unnecessary vindictiveiiess in all the annals of war. Sherman deserv es the glory whatever ' that glory may be worth of having revived and given renewed force to that most infa mous of ancient iriaxims, " Vcerkfts." He made "woe to the conquered" a net less popular cry in the nineteenth century than when first yelled by the barbarians as they pressed with drip-pih'swea-ds to tie sack' of ancient T?onie. The truth is, ' continued Mr. Davis, 'that Sherman is a vain man, who has been ruined by success ami flattery, and is possessed of a chronic hallucination that he is a great Gener al. Ho is really a man of very me diocre talents, either civil or. military, and owed his success eliti rely to supe rior numbers and the lack of enterprise ,',n the. part of his antagonist, who either could or would do notmng out retreat, seeming anxious to ba called the Fabius of tlie ; civil war. Had Stonewall Jackson confronted Sher man in 18G4, instead of Joe Johnson, a different tale would have been told in my book. That . incomparable body nfinfnntrv he IedJso ranid - of march of war j royal governor, in 1 repressing every as to have earned the title of - "foot ,4ii EiitelSsgeiit Kcytile. SHOT' BECAlK SHE WOULD - - - ' ' A Yoimpr Takes tli Life of the CSiH lie Loyetl mid XCieii AGcmpts Suicilo--A Cold Uiomled anl HcartleW Murder TSie Crime "Confessed. How a I -a d y ' s A 11 ye r Was peased. Ai- I want to tell vou how my child.- Ufe'was saved up in the mountains the other day,' said an old farmer who came into the apeat) office yester day. You don't mind an item with a, snake in it do you ? Hearing no re ply tlte old man continued : Last Tues dav I was coming down from the lake with mv little girl, when I stopped and got out to get drink at a spring, my bottle having ; given out. While I was drinking the horse got frighten ed and dashed down the road with the chikF in the wagon. I only have twelve girls, sir, and wonldii't spoil the set for worlds. Well. I gave up the horse and child for lost, but I followed them up, and presently found the horse right on the edge of a precipiece cavalrv," would Poon hate brought Sherman's marches to an inglorious end. 'His so-called march to the sea, "so muph lauded," was really the most absurd of military maiwrii ves ever undertaken in all the tide of time It was right in the teeth , of all the rules of war, and but for the fact that the CoTifederacv was then in its death agonies .must have recited in the ir retrievable ruin of Sherman's whole army. That his band of "bummers," which was. virtually an organized gang of plunderers, was not destroyed or captured was not due to any general ship of Sherman, but the folly of the hot headed Hood, who instead, of fall ing hack before Sherman, went reel ing off into Tennessee like a - mad-cap tendency towards free , thought .or free speech. That he succeeded , well , we may infer from the answer he.wasable to give the English Commissioners in 1070: "I t lankGod thtt there sri no free schools nor printing, and I hope we shall not have thc'nl these hundred years, for learning has brought diso bedience and heresy . and sects, into tii? world, and printing has divested them and libels against the "best govern ment. God keep us from both!" In KiSl the first j printing press was set up in Virginia but "not to' print anything thereafter until his majesty's pleasure shall be known," and soon after came. the order to. "allow no per son to use a printing press on any oc casion whatsoever," and for 40 years no printing was done, and up to 170G there was only one printing press in the State. ! j : . ;- ,. '. . ; .Precisely. what the Xew England colony wouhl have amounted to un der this style of government, it is not cl ifiicu jto j uilge, when we consider the character of the colonists. , From its very beginning it had a large fiumber of Cambrkge and 0x- ford graduates, one tbr every 200 in habitants. These were men .0 high moral courage, who at home even had dared, "not only to have ideas of their o wn, . but to put them together And face the logical results of them;" the results being to banish 21,000 to 'ev England between ; lt20 and 1040. Is it to be supposed that tmch men would have submitted tamely to any suppression of free ' speech or free thought? No. heir's vm a ; social structure with its corner-stone resting on a book," and to every one educa tion was a necessity. r ! ; 3 In 20 years while the few scholars that had cast their fortunes in Virgin ia, returned home disappointed and hopeless of any good fortune for their new colony given oyer to idleness and ignorance, in every colony in New En gland but one, education had becoine compulsory for the poorest as well as the richest. j ; Each town cf SO "jioueholders, required to establish a common school; and each one of 100 a grammar school, . The mental calibre of these meii i 1 . i . I me ctiouy were iiLscussea, ana tne whole wxial structure necerily be came more concentrated. In Virginia on the contrary, dLsprefvion was the order from, the- beginning. ,Xavigafrle streams afforded any land-ownen fU, igrens and ogres j for himself land friemls,'? witliout svuy j regvd trt Uie im ixirtanee of making - public xoculs, and the ambition, ; was to our large tracts of land, and imitate the style of the middle ages.; Those large .land grants ere easily obtained, - and the entire State was given up to nominal parishes, liven tliQ capitol possessed but ' 'a State house, one i church alnd eighteen private houses." ; ; I 1 l is easj-10 see xxuti in sucn a Mftto of things public romls and scliool houses were neglected, '. ami public tlirift unknown.. A In d019. the first slaves were loaded at Ifiimpton, what were tne laevitaoie cxnsttjuencer--- Virgiuia hi-toriacs l of unquPstknietl authority are loud in their bitter ? de nunciations of the laziness and tlirift lessness ofthe people, as a wholoj and with the absence of a proper regard for Sundays, they declare that ? 'I'ganLam, atheism and sectaries" took full serion. With no community ter&st, of course there could be no hShTT Tg 'ocfock'n'"fH!M bl ,Jf mcitinet at a TemUittaisarjriJit-o miles north of Greenslwro, nnd6'fi ter- ed (he cit jr rtl out 1 1 o cick and weut . W direct to the ttty pYfcon'- Awdl 'ixthikcm-- n ' deil the person of ' John Taylor; the' v mulatto, who, about a week ago, out? vu. niged Mrs Irwin, n hfjrKf" fwrtcctablo.! 4 lady of ReidsviHe, in nuch' H Ifocklrtj.di And horrible manner. Mr; AVItWlr c- 1 y refused ttt fcy and as . they v hail -j . 1 come prepared,' they produced sledge a at and chieb and cut their way mto tlid '.jt Sm'. prou, Thoy cut throngli three doofV ij o '; eiKjdoor having three heav"andt massive fiirW. Ta1or,tvTBil.'ohah'j. . e4 io tiia ttoon At IXWttiry ivtvOtkU.r ,c z ol : in getfm 1 into ithw ceilM aodi j sr o? he was "tied Jland- tud!foot, ftnl?iT3 9. at' llOthej emergedt f romi ht fctkassm bringiug htiff rttt thtarf? ,lli tf." 0j,ihT placx I iit bugjry that; rusn rvaittira fr. at the, gate. --He was tied to Uii backed 11 of th buggy, and the "crowd moved cclm offlu the directhm of Reiddville: tliov prepared to,v3lpSrrth-fhtlK order wus given by theJearter. w titf. in tw ana oe prepared for act ion in . , . - they wore tired iutoj They1 ntatctf .. S thev would hunirhlm in n'MtZ r" IW- of tln- differed. totally from that of. the ex- hfttl cear vision , eiumgh , to bee common sc1km1s. Hence ignorance became the rule, and intellectual barenness the rule with its natural :re sult intolerance. j . '.".' j In as much as intolerance Ifl'sup- posed to be a . purely f New England characteristic, let us appeal to histcjry. The historians of Virginia, Uurk, Campbell, and later ' .'effer5on, record the burning of witches, a penaltyjfor those refused to attend the estab lished church of 200 Tunds of tobaceo 6r tlie first offence 500 for the' second, and banishment for the third. Any ship-master covey ing non-conformists to .Virginia whs flned. : Quakeri'iifid Baptists were persecuted whipped and banished, and hi 1741 laws1. were pass ed against Presbyterians and" all dis senters. , At thbegtnTTlns1 of the- wrv olutioif' Virgii'tSa'j njnd5,-tliRil colooicsi formed by her ih t'ii"X,arpliua present-: ed a picture described byjthe' itotiari in the following lihinrstakal)I6 lan guage: "no schools, no literary insti tutions high or low, no' pubtic libraries, no printing prcss'l no ! Intellectual fretv dom, no religious ' frecitom; the' forces of society tQnuiugtocrejite two. great classes a class of - spai land owners, haughty, hospitable, insolent, passion ate, given to field sports ami ivlltic, and a clas': of im'poverishwl vhitc plebians and black 'serfs. And tforu this social condition were eti vol ved ' 'country eentlemen, ! m ilitia heroes. men of boundless, domestic heartiness and social grace, astute .and.' imperious politicians, and by and by some men of elegant literary culture, mostly .-acquired abroad but no literary class, and almost no literature. ) t . With the execution of tire admLx- ture of a Spanish and French clement the same language 'substantially I ap plies to ftll.the Southern 8tat. This has ix-en evment to any one wnu was Uie case that they ciulds arrrve-tritw-tfEfMraay--light. in case' theV were AelaTetli n would beliuig totficnrtltrie; after 1 ,H' ; they crowed1 tlie auflfordlrhltu a determined set of men iind lHe njjrfV ',,t secjt to known' h thnd' cAV'nW 1 and , fJd lie wanted to go to heareiu l8ome olie n tKe CTowd lolifWn A Ku& le" riSw liadW chaico' U- hts.lfKt Mords,rli'e""fepliT tfiaWlia5fI SV no state'nieit to mirkiar Is gfild thAi rJ thore wore over two' hi n rr'f nion In .fefiii thcbotly,.. It Mas bvidentiy V&rHhiretf affair, and iiit 'WvWStOTi" ni- were in party, but yrn (thlnjc tlieL general impresioin is 'hai-Vthey wert ' ; all citizens of IlocWiiurliaiicjnty-; Htu We regret the .iccurrencc, ahxt UiihF f " it lest, in eli cases, lbr;'th'viaV1 'T ri iaio? its course, oui pcrnaps uiesc nwii i-.l. will not be bit nature of tho provbtioH iif fpgjtio BttU couernuv.,.;i:jVt if .i crf M vic, -lls,l Man's jut : jvxi cxcmuix nivs mat. ... fftwixt-wbmen Aiidcyiii to smart XW wine makc ' Ins chc ami women hU lieart. u,,,, v..-:-. . . 1 m 1 . . . .i .. . , A'bcordlng' to " Jdsli miltn': J s4i iicncp - is a pood tiling tut P'4fO(hcNl lv ; hut m Hen- hefn W mufW oV jt tlial fi Itntrflsh Hit 'day iAk'titeWM clX ov aioat witnoirrcny txtii orrirw ntwnt u Stick a llgiited wick In a saxnpl0 tit iJl uiuier, mm ici it puru jur aouut uimu ; , . . .:-y .. . . '-.j i',i.,,-v - .f tes. AtirVeend"TthattihiVUherta ',j ' 'wicic is extinguished, an odorti tnAl aJ A of a talf w caiidle" M'lieli' M" fniti0'rr' fsbwnoutHrelvdiiy&rccl butter is artificial. ' 2J. . tr,- on the wildest of wild-goose chases.' Mr. Davis seemed full of talk, and would evidently have continue! his caustic remarks much.longer, but' the near departure of Jiis' train necesita: ted a close of the 1 interview. He re fused to express any opinion on cur rent political matters, saying he was 'suuersatuated with disgust' of the ! whole busiues The loVer section iof York county Pennsylvania is wiklSvith excitement to-nigbt over -he cold-blooded and heartless murder of 'Duma Myers, a young lady resident of Coyles Ferry, wjik'h is a .village,' containing a few witteri houses,' grtuateiF uiow the s'usrpiohanna riyerabout eleven miles from Philtf. Miss 1 Myers had been living in the family of John Coyle, the ferry maiifor some " time past. John , Coyle, Jr.itheson of her host, fell des,- pcrately 1 m ' love vitb her and has several times, niad overtures of mar riage, Aiilch she treiitecl boldly. A few duys ago in? grgw.mVre 'desperate and told her if she didliot marry him he ' would kill Her, and fit is said fired a hot over her head to frighten her, One day a betiutiful woman was driving in the Strand, London, in a verv low and a very elegant coupe. The street was blocked for a moment, and the noblo lady put her head out of the carriage window to urge her iii'hni'in tn drive on. Just at that instant a stalwart coabheftwr wn$ gO' ing mi the sidewalk, and finding him self dice to face with her, found no oth. er iijethtKl of expressing his aihnira tion than to stHze Iht fcice between his two hands and kiss Ixt. Tbe ctal-heav was wrested. He taken before a nnigLstrate, where as jwiy'be supposed, tbe lady demand ed tis condign punishment. "Well S what do I care for an tne . 1 rlr.wl it-inrl-itill. 1 It OOllldn't lllOVO ' , v,.,A t cr ,f lr t thnht afterward he left for St das rapl tJ the intention going dwn to Mem- lock and one end I had also caught a- 1 K , where, he will spend a roundatree. I wentto dull on the Wc two with old friends before strap, and I jumped- about ten feet, ! .mg borne. ;, j -or bust me clear opcm if it wa?n'ta T " rattlesnake that was holding the horse; nf th ! wwshor : "theae He had wound his tail around the hore- j fa j cnvy ft ho? -;forf es leg and his neck was turned three; SDCJ1Certon to the barber. He 1 UI . 4 ! ' " - times arouna a sappnug auu tc, . , ftxye to ghavetl- until after were, fast in tho wood. He was twe.ve ; n ho .and son? feet long, sir, fori nK3ured him right "ta 111 . then and there. A few pound nvorc doesn't, replietl fhe toiisorial artist, ciUnly beheading' a pimply, inerrs no use arguing'with a barber" while in cavaliers who formed a portion of the first Virginia colony. Great-hearted gentlemen indeed, ; many of them were, but their hope was . merely per sonal gain. Of course a spirit of ad venture, characteristic of the age, add ed not a few. A very few of them 'in deed looked forward to a new order of life, but as a general thing they wasted their time and opportunity in wrang lings and feuds. ! ; f , The Puritan colony, it is true, found of iolitics, ' Shortly j time ?io quarrei auu , uicxer j iu w tvi, Louis, w ith but ntlung out a verj' urgem. cause- could seriously interfere with loeir earnest thinking and working. , , . Plain old-Ca.pt, John Smith wrote of his colony in rather a forcible style calling them "broken men, adventu rers and criminals, they had rather starve and rot with . idleness than lie persuaded to do anything for their own relief without 01111" , - v : ; Year after year ship sailed up the James "freighted more r with igno- trutii, and moral courage enough to reiiresslt." This matter is aiiuaiM to here merely ta illustrate how every tlieorv of life with the great, man of the Southern iHiople Biut bo diametri cally opiKs3d to thosc of: the Sorth, it is merely a natural and m voidable conseiuence till within a few years; and the only compulsion Unit can ' be resorted to to effect a change is pow pubory education. There is no fenljng of partisan or sectiHiaI Cliantcter in these exprt?ssia-. Xew England has ; .Th'crt liiri k-crslotf ' fto irrrrjf1 outshfe of a'TieVs'papor 'oftcVwIirfe It1. Is very uscTui iff tni&jreadlfi4itf 1'"). dtsnoitsHbly necessary in getting forms - ''"' Ptopreis. It has been knownr nwo, tu materially assist the" wlftor flv1odIdmf ?T. ovc the"iarer aftcV it is'irfnteA Jwt ' otherwise It'Ia d'ycry fobfLi'il1i1rlc'"ial-,,K" ed habit J f her own disgraceful records of icrecti- them a 'tfie aforesahl gerttfenHJO'" 'f , bigotry :tni Kuoer-r . - - . ' ' ' " r . - ,i -o.anH fr!.1itiTied in the least. punishments m tne t ( Vmtp in the weekly sen c-ulont. ardently, I ve kisj-w ; .;oi. T want them for u...wi..xTv.fwf woman m tlrC King . k Pirson Xcwi 1 HilUHJUluvcJV - - I LI VTO '"V, " . strain would have snapped the snake dear in twov I might as well tell you the whole truth, . The snake wasn't over five feet long vben I . took the strain off he came right back to his natural size. You know how elastic. aTvifco-u - Tim child is 4 years old d rela- A Galveston fvliool . teacher aiked a new boy ; If a corpeuter' wants to eov era roof fifteen "feat wide by thirity feet long with shingles five feet broad by. twelve feet long, how many j shin tries will he need ? The boy. ,took , up iMttsboro Jcort?. Mr. Elias Cox,;M,w ondslid for the door. AVhere ai(1 j of Moore county, ovns a hen that is are yon going ? asked the teacher.. " lo ' vo oll anil that has rais- ,,rxLn&r- 1T miht. to kjlow coaxihgly: "Oh '.please let th man , u h - V, cWcke. . tt ihim of wef,lfe,: I .U - " . ltl.V v - -7 . 1 4 V- doms." . - 'iu. Thereupon the angerot the iair . i was appeased as if by a sped, and tur ning to the magistrate, she '?- w his powerj- go-'. He is insane you see tion. intflerance, f-tition. but wrstjcutiun by y shallow of law died out nearly 40. years be.hrc it ended in .Virginia. 1 To-day! r the children of env England hdve - the moral courage and maiiloKl"totKlmit the emjrs and short coalings of their ancestors, aml hojic and tnt tluit 'the children may be better than tftejriaui' ITS. " - ' - !' Tirsnite of the disa-Hro- fifHtion of alfairsrf that presented ia Virginia that noble old htatv tHfcty ieatu ,tru; Soathin j natter of eeiucali'n,, md this should lie counted all the, moro to her glory; and now wlien the last' dw- get out of vl dftityr'trWdlAW &'&tV pairish, whose hirtef It WrvM1 n" the first loyn't (imcaaxpH tirt M'in errn'Xhinict in which tHeinrn fehaP radii Msaaud ? Aljcdnc , KZar,Jm twolve times, and findiug it extreibefy difftcurt toprcinonnce thce liftmen -boT nt'tit thVomrh the chHTter reR'TTillir to . 1 id l.fi Excursion Ticfeatu ;?i tji r- AKKANUP Wr lvlA iili" 3). . V . f. ' f f - - - - - . , . i : . t : l : . n n.Uon anil I roTii tin ranee than with ny - ouier merynu 5ji abamlone(i andtlw newbouth eo- disev" Tiirlirr tlv nrrifl ,ff tbffivl war It ik-nv order of emigration begum cava- jjustly demand a ut,onJTSl Zr ;hp Kinjr'K p.,,, Ity in-all thhigw that jfamo-riwigHlne hers, dtepanng of . the King cause .ae have never anticipated. came over m considerable numbers,! -0rthcrn,lpetiiunded un- and soon after, on the restoration of UoubKvwbVw urpriiefi. that. the I Southern 01 doti6t tcndii'wtake new social umer yevu,; iza v- jtipn and abYC WiPQVVmi PUkl, iue nu-iviittu uuuiimi cation uy meiuat F9w.fvi dlgrejsioh.'butavcontlnuationvof En ; jjc-gpaper will .in due. time, baniah gTish society." " ; V. every yeige of jgw and InitUx Here , cumes m the ueepefcT most ancc. radical difference between the respcc-4j . ' . Jcri aan . FOB ,-THfc SEASON OJWak To vLe.hcaHb rworU jkd:trctite iexcirrfo poiutf-of weftern NoftCar. .a olioa tbe'Y'ux'wirSprirrzic, 9g wdt be on sle at wiirt itd Cfcjob? ,otji r. ' - trt r.. 5rr t.. -iSO'l'l pomu raChd Vlf yaxooro - or fc an ous weUori.4 qaire of Ticker, A",, AjV6m'f