1 bbbbbbbu The Carolina Watchman. SALISBURY N. C JANUARY, 28, 1875 NO. 67.WHOLE NO. 71 UBT.I8HKD WEEKLY: J.J. BRUNER, Proprietor tad Bdltoi . J. J. STEWART Associate Editor. St AT US OV SUBCBIFTION WEEKLY WATCHMAN. w . V 1 i . i ti ..1 t7-a na. m,' I I I Six Months, S Copies to any address. 125 10.0 ADVERT IS I RATES i OKI Sqtjaee (1 inch) One insertion $100 Rats for a greater number of Insertions irte Special notices 25 per cent, more . r i .? u j: jn regular anverwaenienw. uwiuig nuu per line lor eacn anu every insertion i i Ll IWHiii U aw .mm 'HE FAVORITE HOME REMEDY l. emineartlv a Family Medicine ; and by be ng kept ready for immediate report will save jany an liour oMiiiiering anu niuiiy a u i time ana doctor nihr. After oyer Forty Years trial it is still re- living; ine moss nnntiaiuieu iwuuiwmain no irlues from persons of the highest character, ind respoasibility. Eminent physicians com- lend it as the most EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC For all diseases of the Liver, Stomach and iplcen. The SYMTOMS of Liver Complaint are a bitter or bad taste in the month ; Tain in the Back, Sides or Joints, often mistaken for Rheumatism ; 8ou Stomach ; Loss of Appe- tito; I towels alternately costive ana iax ; Headache ; Loss of memory, with a pajniui sstisatibn of having railed to do something which ought to have been done ; Debility. Low r-- ' - . . - ana .yen. a ury vougn on en wisinKeu iui .un- aiimnl wm UMIIMiwii. - a . . . Sometime manyol these ftymtomsaltena ine NORTHER SENTIMENT. Bock tbe Cradle of Liberty. Springfield (Mass.) Rep. April 20, 175a, Oliver Cromwell drove the representatives of the English people out of their chamber at the point of the bayonet. January 4, 1875. Ulysses S. Grant repeats the experiment -upon a smaller scale, to be sore by sending a Gle of soldiers into the State-House of an American commonwealth on a like illegal, revolutionary, treasonable errand. We shall see what comes of it. It is impos sible that the old love of chartered liberty,- the old jealousy of arbitrary power, which blazed up so fervidly a hundred years ago, a beacon-light throwing jta glare across two worlds, has quite smoul dered out. It may be that the Americans of this generation have quite lost the secret of thai generous, yet wholty rea sonable and intelligent emotion, which' fired the shot at Concord and kindled the bivouac fires at Valley Forge. If so, the complete subversion of onr present in st i unions is merely a question of years. If not, there will be such a sonorous res spouse to thb manly protest and appeal of the outraged State as will convince Capi tol and White House that the patience of the people is at last exhausted, and that any further experiments in this line will be attended with serious risks alike for institutors, agents, and abettors Let us bring the matter home to ourselves. Louisiana is a long way off, and besides, the fact of its participation in the seces sion movement is still fresh in the North- h a i a ern memory, a good many people in this part of the country read about the events occurring there very much as they would read about similar events occurring in Mexico or Nicaragua. But it is a State of the American Union for all that- a State standing upon the same footing in every respect, so far as the Constitution and the laws are concerned, as Massachu setts snd New York, and Illinois. So m a Jb . . m tar as the Constitution and tue laws are V i -w .a a concerned, nettner President lirant nor Lu-utenaiitjGeneral Sheridan has any right or exercised any legitimate authority at New Oileans which he does not equally have or in ay not equally exercise at Boston CONGRESS PROCEEDINGS. The North Carolina wish, to be Heard on the Lou isiana Question. x fin the Senate Saturday . Mr. Merrimon I hope the Senator from Maine will withdraw his motion. I should like to say something on the Lou isiana question. I have not been able to join in the debates of the last week or ten days, but the people of the South have been so maligned that really I think as a matter of courtesy the Senate ought to allow every Southern Senator who de sires to speak an opportunity to be heard. They know more about this matter than anybody else. I hope the Senator from Maine will not press this motion. Mr. Ransom 1 desire to say to the Senate that I trust the request of the Sen ator from Virginia will be acceded to, that after the appropriation bill of the Sen ate from Maine has been passed by the Senate, this debate will be resumed. It is already manifest that a number of gen tlemen on both sides of the chamber desire to be heard further upon this question. As tor myselt 1 must say to tue Senate that I feel it to be my duty to speak on the Louisiana question. I have sat here m silence for nearly three years and not trespassed on the Senate. It is late this evening ; other gentlemen have the floor; numbers have expressed their very great desire to be heard ; and 1 say to the Sen, ate shat I feel it to be my duty to ack to be heard upon it I feel that I should be wanting in all that is due from me to the people whom I undertake to represent on this floor if I did not ask to be heard . I trust the Senate will accede to the re quest of the honorable Senator from Virginia. disenne. at others very few ; Inn the Livkr, the Whatever either of these persons can law largest organ in the body, is generally the seat fuliy ao tliere, they can lawfully do here. FJS! Suppose Mr. B. t Bniler, for Instance, I EUVUIU KJ I lliij ASVIIUUIIV'III IIVIUIIIVW I'll Tor DYSPEPSIA, CCNSTIPATiaN, Jann- .. i ut fir ii m n i 'IT tt..i-. lice, unions ihisck, niv-rv. iifiAw ivilkuih. itpresfion of Spirits, oULixl diumaui, (art llnrn. Aa.. At.. ' I I 'I. . I.ifwt l.fititllv niA.iiin in k WMll ' Manufactured only by J. H ZBILIN & a . . a It B 1 1 1 B Mncon ua., anu riiiiant-ipiua. f , 1 I 11 1 V . rico ei.vu. oiini uv mi iiuKgitio, A Military Despotism. From the Boston Advertiser, Rep. Military despotism is the proper term to describe the government now existing in Louisiana. Certainly, of all govern ments that ever existed called republican, that which for two years has stood ouly as propped by the bayonets of a soldiery ed and wm no rean0nse. ...! la. 1 1 .. I i L . a. K. 1 J - OVER AND OVER AGAIN. rv-r and over and oyer again. No matter which wy I turn, alurava Ami In fliu Hinitf i if I. it'.' . mm J mm mmmmmm mmm . .. mr " -' - - - - - a . w l . i . . . nuiiio iessMi i nave w learu. I mast take my turn at the mill. I must grind out the golden grain, I mast work at my task, with a resolute will. Over and over again. I We can uot measure the need, I ' Of even the tiniest flower. Nor check the flow of the golden sands That run through a single hour. I But the morning dews must fall. And the sun and the summer rain I Must do their part ; and perform it all ! 1 Over and over again. I Over and over agaiu The brook through the meadow flows I And over aud over again The ponderous mill-wheel goes, I Once doing will not suffice, Though doing be not in vain ; And a blessing failing us once or twice, May come if we try again. The path that hath once been trod, Is never so rough to the feet ; ft 1.1 1 - U .. 1 ......... .1 Is n'sver so hard to repeat. ,iii .m unrr.iM'fil 1 t uo r J lil'l V f I 1 And the heart to its depth be driven IV 1th Sturm :im .nines:. Vt !- T it'll! .1 Jo render us meet lor Heaven. publi Governor next year, and should be sound ly beaten at the polls as he undoubtedly would bci Suppose President Grant should then avail himself of a strained constrcution or doubtful enactments to in stall this defeated candidate with force and arms in the office to which the people of Massachusetts had elected another man. Suppose he should follow up this perfor mance by placing the army of the United States at the dUposal of Mr. Butler, aud by sending Sheridan to Boston, with the remark that in the event of a distur bance somebody would get hurt. Sup pose, finally, he should undertake to de cide a question of contested seats in the General Court by sending a file of soldiers into the State-Uouse while that body was in session, with others to forcibly elect the sitting Democratic members. What would the people of Maseacbsetts think of such an interferance in their home affairs of such a use of the United States army 1 How would they feel about il? What would tbey say about it ? Whit wonld they do about it 1 Yet, we repeat if this sort of thing is lawful and right in Louisiana, is it lawful and right in Masachusetts. What is sauce for New Orleans is sauce for Boston. To our thinking, there has been no such oc casion in the last hundred years for rock" ing the cradle of liberty, and rocking it to owing it no allegiance is the most help less. It is a usurpation initiated by a coup d'etat, and immediately fortified iu place by the army of the United States. Nothing else sustains it or has sustained it from that day to this. The Congress of the United Stales, more than two thirds of all of the members of which belong to the Republican party, in spite of the no torious facts; in spite, too, of the addition al circumstance of iu own members, after a careful investigation, bad confirmed the general conviction that the Kvllogg Gov ernment was a usurpation, persistently neglected to. undo the wrong. There are men who yet feel a shock of indignation when they recall the time when tlx ir court-house was put in chains, and a fu gitive slave was taken through State street, on his way to re-cuslavement, be tweeu files of soldiers wearing the national uniform. But that was a small affair A Strange Story. Thirteen ago, a young man wooed and won a young lady in a village not tar from Uaveoport, Iowa, The parents of the girl objected, and there was a deal of trouble, but final ly the couple were married at the home of the bride. Three months after the bride groom desired to move to California, but the family of his wife opposed her emi gration, and the result was that the hus band started for the Pacific coast without her. After the first six months, no tidings from the husband were received ; and in less than a year, news eame that be was dead. In 1863, the widow married a young man who had recently arrived from Germany ; and her second husband was entiiely ignorant of the fact that his bride was a widow.. But "where ignor ance is bliss 'tis folly to be wise. Short ly after tbe marriage, the husband pur chased a farm in Scott county, and on that farm the con pie have lived ever since, and several children have blessed their on ion. Some weeks ago, the husband of this woman arrived in Davenport, and on mak ing inquiries, learned tbe history of his wife's marriage. Then he rode out to see her. It was fortunate for her that her liege lord was away from home, for she was very much affected. She told him that she supposed him dead, and so mar ried another, and chided him for neglecting her as he did. Ho had a long story to tell, the real gist of it being that he had determined never to return until be became rich- Aud here he was rich But his wife was miserable in his presence and be was miserable too. The end of the conference was, that the first husband returned to Davenport to consult a lawyer and the end of the con sultation was, that tbe husband went to the wife and had another long talk with her, and then the two seperated, never to mee. again, for the man determined to cross the ocean and spend the balance of his days iu Germany. The day that he left the wife entered her suit for divorce on the grounds of de sertion ; the notice was forthwith served on the defendant, and be accepted ser vice. At the next term of the Circuit Court, the defendant's name will be call- There CONVENTION. The action of the Executive Committee at its recent session in Raleigh, was truly gratifying, and will we trust, have Ha due weight with the members of the Legislature. With this official endorse ment by tbe party of the proposition to call a Convention, there can scarcely be any further opposition to it within onr own lines ; tor unless gentlemen deny tbe authority of the committee, the voice of the party has been heard, and that voice is for Con ventiok. Those gentle men who have so long been so solicitous for the advocates of Convention to close their mouths for the sake of harmony, if they desire to preserve the appearance of consistency, must no longer be heard in opposition. And is the opinion of the Eveentive Committee, composed as it was of mem bers from all parts of the State, aided by the advice of rcnllemen of tbe press and other representative men trom all parts t "trmjM : v' - i L a No Better Off. A man snd his wife had been mairiad ten years disagreed and determined to T b sTi" " fc-d-H-BA- Oon. it. diseemeat iu which thev lived. The delegate from Utah, is a polvramist ami I L . . . . V ' w The Committee on Elections of tk- House of IT i niaammiiii k.M - a the matter long and well, and arrived at were Parisians. "Have yon any jdfe. Yes, "Hon children P said the oas no ngnt to a seat in Congress. He - is therefore to be expelled. The deesaism J not a fleet the Bishop greatly, for ben tbe sentence shall have monsieur.'. any I' "Three two boys and a girl -and it nouiled hi will be witn mem is onr diffien tv Manama end. a a A m - wisnes io nave two oi them ; so do I. "Have yon agreed to abide by my de cision r "We have," said both of them. "Very well, my friends ; I condemn yon to have another child, ao. that yon may have two. When yon have obtained that yon may return to me." The matter waa then adjourned for the lime befog. Two years afterward the worthy magistrate, who in the meanwhile pro- its netotm)UA e eft of the State, worth nothing in forming an I had beard nothing of tbe husband or wife, opinion as to tbe will of the party 1 And met the former. They tell a stranre stonr af P-j- wetehmaker for true, and St irm it ;. . striking instance of the power of the imagination over the human frame. rredenck Suebmann had watch twenty years. It mt, new works, and him An tie perfected and oat it a rob a. 'mm ed tU hi. son! had pmed tram bUbidy into that watch, and said : "When the ill be default, and a decree of divorce granted- And maybe the wife will be married to the father of her children, and so remain con tented in the delightful home in which abc now lives iu elegance and comfort. some purpo se, as this. Bead Heads. Nashville (Tenn) Correspondence Louis ville Courier-Journal. J The free pass system is receiving the attention of the House, and movements are on foot to kill it as dead by statutory action here as it has been killed by gen eral consent in Kentucky. The House resolution was a pretty kettle of fish, however, which may be understood as meaning a great many things. It charg ed that it was a species of bribery for a railroad t- offer a legislator is the will of tbe party binding on its members f After an expression of its will, what ought to control the action of a gen tleman if there should happen to be a variance between the whole party and his particular locality? Is his political allegi ance due to the whole party, or is it due to the fragment? This is a question for certain men who have earnestly and con scientiously opposed the call of a Conven tion, now to consider. Opposition up to this point, and difference of opinion, was pertectiy iigitimate; Out will it be so any longer? Has not the party spoken, and has it not spoken in favor of a Convention This is the question. And can gentlemen who look to the future, and whose friends look fondly to the future for them, afford to pnt them selves in opposition to the deliberately expressed will of the party upon so vital an issue as the one now presented T If they are notboond now by every tie of party fealty and by every necessity of party discipline to yield their private con victions, when and nnder what circum stances will they be bound f It must be remembered that this deci sion of the Executive Committee is not tbe result of any mere sudden ebulition of feeling, for five long months the discus sion has been going on. At first public sentiments, so far as it was expreseed, was against tbe Convention movement. The press was overwheltniuglv against it. And still the discussion went on and still Convention grew. All sections of the State were heard from, and still the discussion went on, and still Convention grew. At last, in course of time, the press became largely in favor of Conven tion, and all presence that tbe people, save in certain localities, were opposed to it fell to the ground. Meanwhile the Legis lature met, and, unwilling to act at once, postponed the question until after recess, and at the same time tbe Executive Com mittee was summoned to meet in Raleigh. At a day more than five months subse- Declasid CoxsnTtmoyiL Tb "Ah," said he, "how about the separa. Supreme Court on Thursday, the 7th ,onJ".lt , ... . int-. delivered a decision in the eaae tn- H?1I I mm rv..;kl T av. J I t f .1 ... . - voiviug me eonatitntiouaJity of the 5 we lion 'Still impossible, monsieur. Inaffead of four children, we now have five. t ll. , ? . . . . . . . , .I . rvs inviie attention to ine following Order issued by Judge Dick, directed to U. 8. Commissioners and other Govern ment Officials. There is reason to believe that, within the past mouth or so. much illicit distilling hss been put iu operation, defrauding not only tbe Government, but licensed distillers. Ciliaens to whose knowledge anything of this kind shall ease chants license tax law. Tbe up on appeal from the judgment of Judge Goigon, of tbe Hustings Court of Rich mond, who had decided the law lutional. Tbe 8upreme Court in its cis ion reverses tbe decision of thm below, and pronounces the law tional and sets forth that, however, un just and oppressive the law might be, tbe remedy was not with them, but with the Legislature. The opinion was deJhr 7 oi tvai wT rder Mow directing , ,i come, should not hesitate to impart their I ered by Judge Christian, all the Judges iiiioriuauuu auu preieui tue wrung : I coucumug. U. . Ul TJUfJT COURT. VTT j W-W . . mSl aW I XSTXRN UIST. OK WORTH CAROLINA, URAKT DlD IT HlKSXLV.-It hi UO Urkkssboro, . u, jjec 31, 1874. known that tbe Piesident made the e To the U. S. Commissioners of this Dis with his own hand, and seat it to trict : Treasury and other departments. At the request of the Commissioners of I that the public advertising should he with in tcrnsl Kevenue, concurring in by the drawn from tbe ice publican newspapers Department of Justices. It is ordered That the Rules of Court made at Ashe- ville.Term be modified as follows : United State Commissioner are author ized and directed to issue warrants for the arrest of persons ebarged with violations of the Internal Revenue Laws, upon tbe cy a personal possession, to I affidavits of officers of the United States, I ttred for his own interest and but that the affiant is such officer, and that his in- S? a i t a iormation was derived imrn credible per sons, and is fully believed by him. ROBT. P. DICK, U. S. Disk Judge. - Asbevilte Citiscn : Capt. H. O. Rob ertson, of the Central Hotel has received which had condemned his conduct in Lou isiana ; and that be himself named others to be substituted in their stead which had approved of military interven tion. As Gen. Grant considers the President be at hi made upon information and belief : such affidavits must distinctly state caprice, this act was consistent with theory, it also nsrnmmm eeHhar traiion of bis bcujiar devesiou to civil service reform, which figured so III gas J in tbe anneal mens are. and has been ex emplified with ao many striking proofs af ins fidelity. a. i. fun. a tree pass : compared with this. Nobody responsibly il acknowledged the receipt, by members connected with these proceedings will of the house, of free passes, for which it re escape the eansurc of the nation. It is turned lhauks ; it exonerated the officials impossible to believe the American people donating these passes fiom all suspicion of will sanction them. However sincere the oriuery, anu n ueciareu inai tnc meraoers motives of their action, they will find they have assumed a monstrous burden. There is no danger to the Republic likely to re sult from leaving States to manage their own affairs that begins to be so threaten ing to our peace and to the security of onr institutions as such a precedent of resort to military foree to control the organiza tion of legislative bodies. of the House were under no obligations whatever for said passes. This might have been very properly termed aa "om nibus resolution, embracing all tbiugs under the sun except the one iu order. The House, with a quiet smile, tabled the whole affair, and I have failed to learn that any free passes have been re turned by tbe holders. A Mother of Criminals. We find in the New York Times the following record of a family of criminals j that lived in one of the counties on the v -w re h wv -r i .at U pper Hudson in jn ew x ora. Bays tue Times : l Some seventy years ago a young girl named "Margaret" was left adrift in one of these; villages it does not appear whether through the crime or misfortune of others. There was no alms-house jn the place ; but she was a subject of out door relief, probably receiving occasional ly food and clothing irom tbe officials, but never educated, and never kindly shelter ed in a home. She became the mother of a long race of criminals and paupers, and her progency has cursed tbe country ever since. The county records show two hundred of her descendants who have Loudon Bridge crossing the Thames the a ... . . . ... .1 " .. .1 4 It'lllll. Uril 1.I1V1IMIM III. Mll.ll.ll.4r IIIILIJll. trulirua huVA Kauri ..nl irir,.i at. nnrjlllnl . a. . . - f a . . . 1 M 1 IT. ue travel over ine iDorouguiarea leaaiug S t m J a.1 acts as a compress on a vital artery . ilximw vnrw tli 4 traffit tusAsainK nvr thift . ii,- i a uffYfiU nad f ii aa i -. aa tlm n tho saaa smwlm sea a . . . a - - uiiu. r our Vttnicies eau cross it Roreat, a a ...a m TWl ffj kt f hie iawrk.m if aa A , A . ,A inf., f.mr . . ... .a WV,aSs 111 M( I -i. 1111 i U I hM (IH 'H IM' 1H llniAJ A- it 1 11 in i nil lira m no anil rn.i ,r ni r .au r ri h Uaht or trottiutx horses and earrriaires. Q both classes there is au elmott continual an. Tor ttna hnrinrn hm tit nriviilA transit the entire easteru half of the great city. wag j0f ( ,n the villsge streets after dark there u constant turmoil. The old story of the sad fate of Aaron Burr's daughter (Theodosia Alston,) io brought to miud in the narrative of Jean Baptists Cat lis t re, one of Lafitte's men, residing in Calcasieu, Louisiana, who writes to the Galveston News that after Lifitte abondoued his adventurous career, Chauvet, his first lieutenant, took com mand of the Vengeance and sailed into the Gulf for a cruise. lie captured the American privateer schooner Patriot, bound from Georgetown, South Carolina, to New York. Every person on board was put to the sword or made food for sharkes. After disposing of the dead, Chauvet de scended into tbe cabin and soon called out In an angry tone for Gallistre and the mute to go to him. They found him in the cabin confronted by a beautiful wo- a til it a niau, wlio Held an empty bottle in tier The Human Relics of Pompeii A writer says : Iu the museum of Pompeii are preserved the most horrible and pathetic witnesses of the last days of the ill-fated city. When the workman were digging in 1873, they struck into a small cavity, the nature of which was, of course, a mystery to them. Without breaking further into it, they poured plaster of Paris down the crevices that were already opened, and as soon as tbe plaster had hardened, the crust of lava was carefully removed, and lo ! the form of a human being in his death struggle perfectly pre served 1 Buried in the lava that harden ed about him, his body had crumbled to dust and left this wonderful mould. Several bodies have thus beep re-producs ed one of them with the features per fectly preserved, so that there is still some expression in the face. Some parts of the skeleton are imbedded in the plas ters ; and two female bodies found lying near each other are called mother and dauthgter. There is uotbing at Pompeii information of the singular disappearance from Warm Springs, of Mr L 8 Ayers. a m fa . . a younjr man whom be tad traveling lor bim selling sewfng machines. Saturday night 9th instant, Ayers left Wsrm Springs Hotel, and crossed the nver to a Mr I ur- ner s with whom be sat until about 9 o Hy. of clock. lie then rot un and started buck quent to the beginning of the discussion, to the hotel, and proceeded about two the Legislsture re assembled and the Com- thirds across the bridge, when two pistol miwee assemoieo, wun us inviiea guest. iUoU were heard. As uo one suspected Legislators were there from every part of the state; members of the Committee were there from every part of the State; gen tlemen of the press were there from every part of the state, and other invited guest were there from evrry pai t of the State. And after two days solemn, earnest, de- wrong, it did not occur to Mr Turner to enquire abont it, but as Ayers was strange ly missing up to monday, enquiry was made, snd these circumstances were brought out. There are other very sin gular aud strong circumstances pointing to one Sunderland, who worked with Mr liberation, the Committee declared in favor Turner, as having done away with Mr. ot the call of a Convention ! Ayers. Sunderland unexpectedly left the in .i s .a I . r . a a oouiu anything oe more intelligently Warm Springs on tbe Wednesday follow done, more deliberately doue t Have we I jng, passed through Asheville going South not the right then to say we think it is His conduct just prior to leaving Warm now the duty of every true member of the Springs, aud while hero at the Central ... .. .. r i a .w party to cease opposition to tbe call Convention T - Journal. of a in a hand, with which he had struck Chauvet, who had attempted to make too free with her. He ordered them to tie her. hand been criminals. In one single generation ; mud foot, convey her ou board of the Yen of her unhappy lino there were twenty seance and nlace her in his cabin. She children ; of these, three died in infancy, ! fought the men and did all she could to more touching than the despair depicted and seventeen survivca to maturity, ui jump overboard. Callistre says she died " tue auiiuae or tuis group. the seventeen, nine served in the Slate j a f .w days after their arrival in Galveston. Prison for high crimes an aggregate term gue wa8 a very handsome woman and tbe of fifty years, while the others were fre- daughter of a distinguished American. quent inmates of jails and penitentiaries ' uer dothing, which was of the finest ma and alms-houses I j terial, was marked "T. A." and she had a Of the 900 descendants, through six ! locket containing the portrait of a beauti- generaiions. Irom tuis unnappy gin wuo ftti boy. On the locket were tbe words and abau-: T0 mv wife Theodosia." She was bur- doned in her childhood, a great number jed on the island, a few hundred yards to have been idiots, imbeciles, drnukardsathe east of old fort on ihe point. It was lunatics, paupers, prostitutes ; but 200 of whisnerod anions the men that Chauvet The Vicksbukg Usurp ation. Grant has removed the Sheriff of Vicks burg. Capt. Head, of the Third Infantry, did it. On this the Herald remarks : "Only in the case of tbe militia of Mis sissippi failing to carry out the law of the State should the Federal authority be exerted ; but Governor Ames did nothing The London "Times" on the Peace qj Europe. toDOS. Januarv 18 The 'limes, in editorial, savs: "In the doom aar- a ' SB 1 U ' " " an me men tuat are aim- k iwprvna... . . a o ."uy. ore arm nir in AM mw aurruuoaiQg nilmni inrliiHintr t in heat irt of ihe world, rmnnt ,ik..u;.. . a m e . : ra omen t art . i ;r.rt.w.n un irimfl t ci ill wurviiro nr nnarii vh i ri'ii ia i iiiii . i v iui ai vv - - away, (iermany recoirniiea the stern child has thus transmitted; "V "n sne won hv arms ahA only hold bv a . . f f it n iiiiv aiuio re in her hsnda. TK t; e. - - "V. A IIir J CU II ARKS rr-"'J vnnoi raisu a third od her hopes arc iu her navy. aud the courts did nothing. 1 he intcr- the more vigorous are on record as crimi-; i,ad killed her because she would not yield ferenee h poetically but tbe continuation ,,! This nee ccted little child has thus kia wi-l.. Oil iatre is erv old now. OI in uouibwimi uh.c, uu w... 0u,c.t He was the best gunner and oarsman Lafi'te and Chauvet ever had. He was nicknamed L'Ecolier. cost the County authorities, in the effect she has transmitted, hundreds of thousands of dollars iu the expense and care of crim inals and paupers, besides the untold j damages she baa inflicted on properly U When we think of the multitude of wretched beings she has ton father thought he heard his daughter n.m,, ihr, p.aim.1 of the sutterinff. de.r. exclaim ine oiuer evening b uu w icau -r . - . "0, your nose is ss cold as ice," a Bos- that army, she has caused to thousands families and tbe loss to the wa can all feeblv appreciate tauce to the public ot the eare and educe tion of a single pauper ctuia. oue of the evil of innocent community, the impor he condemned bv the country. It tends rather to destroy than to uphold the sov ereignty of the State, and will throw new discredit upon the National Administra tion. In his message the President said, in reference to Louisiana. 'I can conceive of no ease not involving rebellion or in surrection where such interference by authority of the geueral government ought Was ine? iu the next room. He walked in for an explanation, but the young fellow was to be permitted or can be iuslfied.' at one end of the sofa and the girl there rebellion or insurrection in Vicks- at the other, while both looked so inno- burg yesterday f We know of none, un- eent and unconscious that tbe old gentle- less it was rebellion against tbe Consti- man concluded his ears deceived him, and tution by tbe President oi the United so retired from the scene without a word. States himself. An extraordinary account has appeared r rench aci icultural journal to the effect that straw forma au admirable light ning Conductor. It bas been observed that straw bad the property of dischar ging Ley den jars without spark or ex, lo-. sion, and some one in tbe neighborhood of Tarbes had the idea of constructing straw lightning conductors, which were formed by fastening a wist or rope of straw to a dead stick by means of brass wire, and capping the conductor with a brass point. It is asserted that the expe riment has been tried ou a large scale around Tarbes, eighteen communes havs iog been provided with such straw con ductors, only one being erected tor every six arped ts, or 750 acres, and that the whole neighborhood had been preserved from the effects, not only of lightning , hut of hsil also. Tbe statement comes from a respectable source. Whose Boy is That? He may be seen any day, in any part of tbe village ; be never makes room for you on the sidewalk, looks at yon saucily, and swears smartly if asked anything ; he is very impudent, and often vulgar to ladies who pass; he delights in frightening aud sometimes does serious in jury to little boys and girls; be lounges at the street corners, and is the first arrival at a dog fight or any other sport or scrape; be crowds into tbe post-ufBee in the evening. ! and multiplies himself and bis antics at such a rate that people having legitimate business are crowded out ; be thinks himself very sharp; he is certainly very noisy; be can smoke and chew tobacco now and then, and rip out an oath most any time. We ask whose boy he is. Mother, is he yours ? We think he is, for there are many good qualities in tbe lad, and we do not think that 1 you know what be does on tbe street. Look ' after him, mother; keep him more at home. Train him, and you will have a son to be proud of. . Hotel ; was very mysterious, and taking all together provokes strong suspicions Ayers was a young man, of good habits, from Wythevillc, Va. Had Captain Robertson's herse, which is still left at Warm Springs. The Way He Grew to Be Fa- mouB. U. P. Lewis is the wag of the Detroit Free Press. During the past three years be bas writteu some of the finest touches of sentiment and human nature in his police court proceedings that have rer appeared in the United State. Unlike Bailey, he did not inherit his wit ; Unlike Mark Twain it did not eons to bim through associations The truth ia it was blown into him. He waa au ordinary topid country printer, a bout Ann Arbor and Lansing, Mich, until he took it into his head to sro on "a tramp." After footing it to Louisville, he engaged to work his passage on a steamer to New Or leans. Tbe first day out the steamer ble op. Lewis, one of the .victims, waa sadly searred aud crippled, but as soon as be got able to write be sent ao account of his ex perienee aud sensation ip being blown op to the Detroit Free Press, whieh at once estab lished his reputation as a versatile genius On bis return home the Free Press took him on its columns as items man. Tbe leading editor said the other day that he had to watch him like a hawk, for about half tb time, like old Milton, he clings lovingly to the flattest emanations of his brain. Lewis writes a good deal for tbe Eastern weeklies. over the signature of "M. .Quad" ' a burgeofs em quad," he says, "aa it is worth less in a pnotiug "the-, except in its own line it won't justify with any other type Lewis will last some time. greemd that Posa that b service rt t Dismissed thb Snavioa. P General Jewell a law days ago with the services of 21 Special Nail and among tbe number U. Clay Be Fauquier, and R. D. Beck ley. of dria. It is reported on the streets of V that a strong effort was made by tbe cats to have Beck lev reinstated on the that be was the only colored man ia branch of the public eerviee, and that master lienors! naweJl answered had "no more use for a negro in that thsn tbe devil has for gunpowder in n arrenum Index. Aa exchange thus speaks ia the constitutional liberty: Phil. Sheridan Is - the only man in Christendom we would be delighted to skin. Not that we would have any special ase for his greasy hide, bet only for fun ; just out of idle cariosity to see hear he would enjoy the thing as a Isretaetc of what inevitably awaits him with hoagry faun as his final dooca. J A Theological Stcuext Expelled. Charles Eastman has been ausJUd from the Bangor Me., Theological Semi nary for purchasing boohs at Boston on eredir. and then sellinr ibem to bis students snd pocketing the after making about $J00. Since bis ex pulsion it ban turned out that be has ser ved a term in the penitentiary, snd was for a time notorious at Lewiston as a wife beater, his wife being forced by his creel-. ty to leave bias, lie has often displayed his extraordinary cheek by visiting the jail to pray with tbe prisoners and urge tnem to taaa mm tor an example. watch stops I shall die." It had running a long time, and Stiebmsm very particular abont wind ing it ly. The idea that his life bad a mtm M St a subordinated to tbe walen grew st One day lately the watch showed of irregularity. It ran first too fast: then too slow, Suebmann become ill. He did not send for a doctor, hot for a watchmaker to see what eonld he done for the watch. The watchmaker knew nothing about that particular watch, and could not preacribo for it. The watched stopped, and sure enough SUeb- a a maun waa a eau. General Sheridan appears to pay little regard to truth as he does to the Constitution, and to know no more of the aae than he does of tbe other, or of civil government. It now appears that it was true that he told people in New Orleans, on his snivel there, that he was on his way to Havana, and that he merely took New Orleans oo his route, without inten ding to stop. And all the while, he had his instructions in bis pocket ! It Is se much of a marvel that the brutal and bar barous dispatches of such an officer should be contradicted by the united tesimouy of all the people of New Orleans, including nil the clergy ! Hartford 1 rate. Paradoxes. Govs. Tildea and Lee lie, of New York and Kentucky, are catching it from tbe critics. The sorsaer, in his message, spoke of "the serial bar barism of an uninhabited wilderness," and the latter, in bis his State paper, gravely alludes to a "female colored girl." These I solecism are compared to "Gen. Taylavs ' I famous sentence : "We are at peace with av I , , . m )--.. 4 K , tw. Irt mmw Ar I H n I mil f 1 kS Vaaatl ft a W9m mm 1 itvj w uvit, nviiu mi va savaa vuv wa sjassssBBsa kind." hr the war, speaking of Gen. Taykrr reminds us of perhaps the beet amssnsssK retort oa record. It seesae that Gee. Wise and a friend were eaavaaesag Vir ginia, the friend for and the Govarwar against Taylor. The Governor cooteaapt ously alluded to old Zach, end frequently called him "Old Irneeanee," wtssee speeches were written by his soo-ia law. Bliss. When tbe Gov's, opponent caato to his turn, be simply retorted : "When lenoraoce is bliss, 'tis follf to be r a - Wise." 1 a - - ... 1 r - -