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Desportes, Wilhams& Co., Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquiry, Industry and Literature Terms-$3.00 per Annum, In Advance. VOL. 111.1 WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 26,1870. [NO.32 THE FAIRFIELD HERALD IS PUBLISHE0 WEEVKi.Y BY DESPORTES. WILLIAMS & C Terms.-Tus IHRALF Is published Wee ly in the Town of.Winnsboro, at 63.00 i wareably its advarce. r All transont. advertisements to 1 paid in advance. Obituary Notices and Tributes $1.00 p square ritiless Fate. Iiv ALICE ARY. I saw in my dream a wonderful stream. And over the stream was a bridge so it41 der, And Ovevthe white thete *as sohurt flih And over the scarlet a golden splendor. And beyond the hridgy was a gqod)y ridgi Wfiere bees' made honey sinli aora w1 growing, Ano1 CIQwn that way tlarough the gold at gray A gay young man In a boat was rowing I could .see from (he shore that a rose ?I wore StueOt In his button-hole, rare as ti rarest, And singitig a song and rowing along, I guess his face to be fair as the fairest And all by the corn where the bees at mo blade combs of lioney-wiih breatlait bated, I saw by the stream (it was only a dream A lovely lady that watched and waited There were fair green leaves in her silk< sleeves, Anil loose her looks in the winds wei blowing, And she kissed to land with hernilk-whi hand The gay young man In the boat a rowin; And all so light in her apron whhito She caught the little red rose he east he And "tiaste!" she cried, with her arms j wide, "Haste, sweetheart, haste !" but the boi was past her. And the gray so cold ran over the gold. And she sighed with only tii winds i hear her 4.He loves ne still, and he bowed with a wi But pitiless Fate, not he, was steerit'' And there till the morn blushed over ti corn And over the bees In their sweet ocal humming, Her looks with the dew drenched throui . and through, She watched and waited her false love coming I But, ite maid to-day who reads my lay May keep her heart light as a ceathlr-. It was only -a drean, , the bridge and tl stream, . And lady and lover and al% together. J10reia and 17.-M-6. A Case of True Love.' BY AMY RANDOLPH. Lillian Little was packing hi trunk. She was going out as gove1 ness. Her fabt friond Miss' Saya Honeyoroft, had oialled t' bid h( good-bye. 'So you're really going,, Lily 1' sig ed that elderly lady, vlowing the pt< parations for departure that strewe the floor around -h6r. 'Yes, Miss Sarah, I am really g ing 11 'To be a governess V 'Yes, t be a governess I lt's a har'd life,' sighed Dliss Sara again. 'No harder" than many othera,' at swored a Little LtIig (lding 4hometi white af~ 'And to' $hink you've alwaya Mie so easIly until now I' 'That-Is the very reason I should 13 WIlig to w#ork when the neIe i pally isyo'abuln '4have investe~ her money a little mol *arefullygiu mere justtee to $bis Au fool-6ota1&-hane ib6d'that th6la SBt Ameuleam sainlbg bha.es'jM'i d bbble,' - - ter as strig, purse. tw t .verv4 1 took snuff inia went On Muhoytnuoh dQe if 4,M afr 1isa Sarab,' tl e gir *nswere~ gainI M4Iss Sarah shook hoe' h'ead nd syid 'I think Charlqs, Aiis'tihougiit"I have ma rid you. ]v~rg o'e thotgl his intention meant something rier Little JA sddtil7 crw rs ir, lip nar piettag~t e pokor in her irtsnki 'M. Anitin -was very -kind to t ~'always,' sh sadd hgreledly, 'but-abt 'T he never gave .pne Any reason to suj poseil d~etand Yu'r a od irl ., Ily -goo.nIgh,C aniend kh4"l,*t , hrough thsabt j as t i1 'or way thgangh,4agg ~ Ill muttered' re aulyt hesek -'~ Sli may say what sh wel4 sal 4 'isain to my dyleda M L mnarrie'd herno U esomehingd 1U1. , -onth su. Fequently to the scone above sketched whou Mr. Charlos Austin sat in Her bert Villyot's library contentedly shar. ing 'with the last-named gentleman 0 thb luxuries of a cigar, a grate fire and a tete.a-tete. 'Woll,,Ilyot,' he saiu,.after one or two topic of conversation had been ,o exhausted, 'and how goes on your wife's new governess 1'. 'As good as gold and as true as steel !' answered the gentleman ad dressed. She's worth a score-of city belles, with all the stars of Newport and Saratoga thrown in, Austin and If you don t marry her, I'll call you] out-Lpistols at ten paoes, and no com pronise 1' 'You needn't give yourself that t, unnecessary trou e,' answered Aus tin, 'I am.gog to marry ber' 'And why the douee haven't yot s done it sooner 1' demanded Ellyot, peremptorily.. Id ' wanted to try her-to prove the solid worth and resources of her char tkoter.I e 'And are you sitistled now 1' 'I am satisfied. She has been 10 weighed in the balance and not found wanting. I mean to ak her to marry me to-morrow.!'. 'I am glad of it from the bottom of my heart. I know you, Charley Aus tin, but the world does not. Do you know what Mrs. Grundy has been saying about you l' n 'No-what ' 'That you deserted Little Lily be cause her aunt's fortutie was dissipat edl iu' those South Atnerican mining Austin colored a little. 'Let the world talk,' he said im petuously,. what *earp I for its idle 1 buzz IUpto this tine I have been unable to support a wife as one like kt Little Lily ought to be supported. To-day I received the appointaient to travel in..India for the firm of diel lington & Mel!lngton. If she will go withme-' i Ellyot leaned forward to shake hands with his friend. e 'You have my best wishes, Charley,' he said earnestly, 'and if you win her, ' you willwin a jewel, of the veryI bh brightest. wated '-. "A&Clharles' "AMth *allitl home s ltatd ithrdogh lthb - da-ness of the etormy Febroary night, musing on the newer and brighter life in store - for him, the Fate which lies ia wait for us all when. we' least BuspeOt it, j~4dd blidig its time; stern and inexo irable. Just as- his fancy was piotdr mg % Are.,li hearth. with:Litte Lily's develike, eye.s shining .boide it, hi foot slipped on an ice-gazea curb stohe and ho fell with his'whole might o'n -one unluoky- ankle bone. There was 'one instant of sharp'. intolerable ir paitisooethrill as if nerve was tele --'rphg erve through his whole ,r phem e u'. When , he returned ones mou'e to i something like consciousness, he was - lying on-tho sofa in his own bachelor a parlor at the 8. Breadalbon'e' 1"teI hie ankle .bandiged,'his bylows wrap - ped in icedr oloths 6nd a-eIckly smell of drugs permeating the whole room. 'What's the .watter' ho.cried out. Have I been sok t h 'And the reoledtloa' retned to ~- 'Is there much darbage don'e tt he if faltered. ' 'Nod they told hinr; ihe had groat d' reason to be thankfu htlf a 'spni'ed to bini' "11 .a lif wa e. Am Iti orljpple t' with a downward a5 glanue to whetes lhis 'throbbing ankle was suppor ed a 90g pill&ws, ai tJie, e Bfdf M f6' ill "oYtidbl reeb ver th 'pohibi deover, s an absolutuwer k 6hft us% jrohedl~~ g litt'riug"crastles itt the afr th'es his 4 fanoy bud so lately. built up..like~ a dire 4eppietedsWay.~and firsh F : hb g qip ng'pbytan e oe pu epaceful 4Wa~ all Vhe fl&*Ae Wtach hipasi' to forgo6 I . Thte bitteslsleon -to forgot!i. AnglJgo. ae efever'-.nd long 9 ap ieug s it ypg ,on 4 Alde-an * he i Ads wa ked - as weak as any babe! i bly wh en h6 1rIL1e i'W(l t it %/mpp491 a ,i )9 ,Won Sdiolnal Iraught. 'Wman's a41~ 9 Briggs haa just been to wash up'the Austin frowned feobi , ' etf S ,eak to are~o hedtessw~dy~ob dlio adthelts)$ 104 VttV foo. i ot #v6* 'This is splendid, Eillot,' lie said, without turning his head, as a foot. atop sounded on the threshold. 'But I am very weak still, old follow. What made you stay away so long ? E There was no answer. le looked E round-straight into the blue limpid t deops of Little Lily's eyes I 'Little Lily I' 'Yes, Mr. Austin-Charley-it is ( I,' she said, laughing, and coloring as pink as a sweet-pea. 'Now you mustn't take hold of my hands-how can I t talk!' 1 'You don't talk through your finger- I ends, Little Lily 1' (For the poor t invalid could jest still 1) 'No, but listen to me. I am not a governess now, Charley. I am. a rich t hiress. The South Amerloan mining e shares have proved a success. My aunt's investment has quadrupled I t Charley, why do you look so sorry ?' t Ilis countenance had fallen. He t had had many long hours for thought j duting his illness. He had made up his nind that with the money he had saved, not much, but still enough, he might still ask Little Lily to grace t the poor cripple's home. Surely it i might be better than the id paid a drudgery of a governess' life. : But I now 'Do I look sorry, Little Lily ? only because it widens the gulf between us still more hopelessly.' a His head dropped dejectedly on his E hand. Little Lily came to his side. t 'Charles,' she faltered. 'I know t not how to say it, but-but-while , you were ill, and I was here helping I to nurse you 'You here I Then it was your t face?' I 'Yos, it was my face,' she nodded. s 'At that time, when we thought that I the valley of death was already on- e compassing you, Mr. lilvot told me t of what happened the night of your I accident.' t 'Aye,' he said, moodily; 'but it is t all past now.' t 'But why pastI Have you ceased to love me ' 'I love you better than ever-but a you are a rich heiress now, I a mise rable cripple. Oh, Little Lily, if I I had been but a week-a day-a sin- r gle hour sooner In ploitding toy' duae s -but I cannot.ask you no* !' 'Then I shall come unasked,' said e Little Lily, with plow deliberateness. v 'Charles Austin, I am going to be v your wife, because we both love each a other. You will not send me away I from you P i His eyes filled with tears-the I strong, noble magnanimity of a'we ,man's love struck him with a sort of a awe, and in the saine instant his hand t olosed tightly over her's. 'Stay, Little Lily-stay always, e and be my little angel-my good go- t nius 1' ho entreated. C So ended Little Lily's governess t days, and Charles Austin has the t sweetest wife that ever made -home 6 t Paradise! The New York Times says: "If c there is 'ono pairagraph in thn State c Prisoti report mote - interesting than t another, it is that which aRlldeb to the I ability, or probabilitj, of tho prieoner d bedodifing K self suplibriol-g ono Ihiefly f My means of the; valuable quarries at a Sing Smng. The Qh! idlea thompeople in f pmfieons should take their pnmishment in a a sedenmdry inanhe , fa latterli gonte t onit of fashion a good deal, and' it is only n reasonable that soqiet should not br at the. ex'pense of maintamnig~ Them in idle- i fleh& Thai ild sh'onld'pay thieit own li expenses-would be a good th'ing ; Ibut it 'pl watildibbibEtter still if the indnstry :of 'tl th .i inm~at~e shov@ have a reclai 'nn 11t ifetd dioui them and lead them' to' 1iik n of doing better for the iuftoiref Orp prsiso sytems arej as yet toongedtfmm a of those payments for work an.rd other, t< ePnooi m en ,~p .~wumt,t rI1 ' 0 our .j'omkii d~ii'als to tlpl q rd ed Aehlda of Inditty to b".?dmund' i 'the opent:phlaces of the West, it *'ould1 . probably be .mnch. better to' #amapo't til thtan leave them among thejail an city heirliines of tihfteabbard.1 TVi'e telsgrapbhjhforms uis of the m - r ter.' d fentmlghts 'ago, nea,' Lughien, A Norib; Alabama, of Gramitville~ A. and i' Win.- 'illow,p xv.9s 9(9%9i Kiealoby P ai b'api pf masked men, i rode up to tI Wihon he apdafeil the btidd ishot hipi U Wilimn ran to his brother's assistainee b aid was shot and' killed''Ahso. "The h measktw 'escped, eav ng .no elite 'to traeothhM:. 'i,. . 1 Senator Snmner has a fine piece 'of.a work befote hial Ini Alake to Ereddte~ fi the. ' )~rsof oeinr7" zjexiir there. p VT.~ik oa plin he it at% tf bin~" I' t1e, 9 tb~s~il Wlf P 1aa tI3I5 Ni or bialalll m@ aadwI doljats wold to* tapobs " ' mast, Inti eadody Mass. of the Communitios inl which they live. Take from them those disabilI ties which lie uppn tlaoW, anD th,eu you can say to them "you are as respon sible ts I ama for the peace and good order of this community." But while toen who have high social position in the community, men who avo the natural and acquired capacity for administering the duties of the ofoes In their neighborhood are proscribed from holding them you cannot with any sort of reasonasbieness call upon them to assist you li doing rork from which 76u have by statute excluded TMnuRANcB-S'rAT9 o N DS.-Ad maany Inqdirics ate mnade about the effect of the bew law requiring insur ance companies to deposit State bonds as a condition precedent to. effecting or carrying on the business of insur anoe in this tate, we therefore give a synopsis of the law: 1. On or before February 20th, 1870, each life insurance company (foreign and domestio) must deposit $50,000 of the bonds of this State with the Comptrollbi--G!neral oi cease from doing business in this State. 2. Within the .same period eaoh fire insurance company (foreign and domestio) must doposit, $20,000 of South Carolina bonds with' the same officer, or al4o ceaso from doing butil ne.s in this State. S. Any company failing to comply with this law within the i iited tine cannot even receive prenmums 9n ol1 policies until it shall have made its deposit; neither can the 6ompuny so licit to insure or In any man ner contract to ineare, nor can it send any policy, to this State to take elgeot within this State. The State in the law itself agrees to issue new 'bonds to dopositors in case of loss froi any cause of the bonds depositqd. 4. Any party procuring insurance or beconaing insured in a cuspaby which hais not complied with this law could not recover the it surance' in ea-o of loss; because such company issuing such policj would do so o0 . trar1 to law, andl "all contraoW" (policies) made in violation of low "ag 1ol." Therefore it behooves all pattiesw ntmplating ntiig. to see that the compquy prUposing to iii sure can do 6o lawfully. It is fortunate, howeve', for all oon, cernel, that all of the leading: e6M panics and in fact nearly all of the responsible companios have expread ed their intention to. comply with the law, and are now preparlag to pur. chase the bonds necessary to be depo. sited. E1GHTVEEN IPnsei. Ku.tKp .1 A THATrS.-A fearful aopIdeni rooat. ly occurred at the New Thett , Roy al, Bristol, England. Beilg.bozine. night, a Christmias pantomniiae eqlied "Robinson Crusop" was anrounced& There was a tremendous crush at the pit and gallery entrance, whib le pq proached down a doelM t "fitom toe roadway, but which In fdiy twenty foot wide . A large nwibr .of per sons were throwh) dgwn and tram led upou. Seventeen, corpe have een taken oit, but 4o ehveheeh Idoni Bed. Excursion trains from the eoan. try brought many to-the aity,' 4 cry of "are" was !jaind,.,d theo polie. constablloq duty states tht he cried "fire"' after Womb people yeye down to indnce others to' retr6st, wlileh' they did. The perforniancep p~roceeded, the mangge4 lag fearful 9f Qgenting freek pp y upping mnT) cr0 a p jaljeg en Identlidd Tho*fiersoni ~I i k n bumble. plr'ouiuat.anokse 'There was mugh spaof~atement 4n viewing Seerpsi for'66 fdelmee49. I6 Is gfrbyoesed .fatbm Tptessao tlbu the clause of thwoonatituties 4spyrk, rides foghaogytpg J States ahall only bis Mt bpont~ Leg~~e c hosen tx, #h6;:p end. an spnen~ nent to teconstitn is not' tado in th'fif i6ntn"bil shat anuembtEnt ld< aot ens 'tId fo t~he canvassada which~ the Taegislgtoe w a obqsen,' A mend en t so .&eset' a ver ap ~~ veode poper it~. o thee o y Yortv ,erEktf. Bo*s.'4ib CenpbiaP~uen * ays, ( aw(Tn e*ddrsed the '#bdd '. l Bouth C7arolina Ra lu'bhdt Obhle to th* atmoilft f t 0 O a .hl# md be6-#1l'tit .id'.guara tcq 91 1Ie Sja ~ asp~ de~h .j *6 tndsuerfdi Muo '1is*iti Mornhmne. Tight Eacing 914t ,of NUhigoa. Tle Paris correspondent of the New York 11ierald say : The beautiful desghters of Cve have from time immemorial indulged in cor sets or some equivalent; latterly they have, in tany cases, engirely forsaken the ancient species of cuirass, or have ungulary modified that Instrument of .unuatural torture .;, and a statisti-has repently ,beerl published which .shows that the mortality of women- in Prance has decreased emql.teen atid a halt per cent., There is generally areverse side to every pic'ture. tf deaths fron tight lacing have become less freqtient, brain fevers,'in consfquenee of carrying on the head immense piles of false. hair, have increased seventy-three and three qtiarteis Oer eelt. It is .the costom with most of the-fairer, sex, to think It better to be oat of the woRld than-out the fashion ; and hence the eccentric ab. surdities of the day, conduoive to sick ness and premature death, will be en couraged adinfnitnum. What between fhlWie teeth, false hair, lily white and rouge, it is difficult nowadays to obtain a glimpse of human nature. Every thaing is false here. You can be dark or fair at will. I met a lady yesterday whom Dame liairehas every right to claim as a orunotte; she was so to 'ny kubwledge somwe few week since; ahe a now the possesor of golden. lQqke, which twist an(. twIrl and caper around her head in endles' p-tdmiston. Onie lady has had applied to that part of the hii. man form divine, in whioh brain are slup. posed to teside, a wash of extraordina ry power; btit unfortunately.for hpr. ,the result is in a revvrso seuse to the p ecoq promised, foy ofM chne her I.mr with a run, and she isibfld as a glacier. Her isband brought an action - against the* operator, asid . obtained damages. Another lad dsppted,th yriqe of a set of.teeth, wh ich, was prodIced, in proof of hIer iighit, ' iefs*e_ pay ' ment, and '00- f0VI truth donstrains Mie to af Aim that f all'the ittempts yet seen at dental imitation the teeth. in' question were the rudest sort. 9f tlipgs that could be imagined ; they might have been hacked by a' 'codhopper writh a blunt knif6, anl not at all 6alolnated 'to wip th-heart; of the biteuLgmrt4 i Personally heis in many: respects a second edition of Gon. Bear- rdi 1ound ,in "a larger volum . Tie lts a brome, spAAive forehoad, whio6 loses itself in;loeks of iron gray: hair ; a keen, pxpressive, trk,ayo, hat wuild become quiet, persoq or 4 Quaker in it5 usual light, but eemingly 'capaWe 'o penetra. 61n# a two tiihb board when stirred to anrIy xeltedient; and a' gravel 'kind face. The nose ris of the .nemi-lloman order, well.idged, broad, and as; an orgen, eftre sive,. -while the* mopthr. ?irUgh partin"11 hidddetb ahev S tdbe heay and caution. . 'I'h1'6manners of Gen. Le'o ar "It.eedingly alfble, and yetrestrain anything hkt. mta spproaclh to fpmiliari ty. ;ndeed thev combina so nigely the 3'on omnmte of the fue gentlemin; with the rigid dighltV of sh6esoldletthat you cn soarowly telI'wherb ,theZ bigina S4, the. Qthor en4s. ,. Ho dresst, in lair blae4 cigthes, west. at old felt mt with the iost dem.ocratic irregularii ty, abdiia the last inan h Wistendo, *. would be takn b e.t.n e as tie Comanerwidn+0hief oft .ther armv of Zn tridin conirast .wit~h qa et of iMdl tuf f Radeahkoibe~i 'o he *House exhibtedlirk this 'Virginian'diousi storswassthe seob 'of..bIri Fatch~ of rmeumb ti ty'nly of jliu~he usdp, an 44J 'ur -myself will enrt deny het % I no~t moe~r t~Ifrni etd khpami hobgir WIIMh#fW uijtrt of' rycunt rid * llntqahi4~r arrogang togsic~u, gmnta, weo px a Ihmidhv of arti'lld e o-t ains tot th~ *eai~*But for othe id Yirgir. ' whhmet'ges from t oq.flg 91batl. (or Vggitnus .,i ple , b a khtma"cottked IWftgM il and wIzththphidero1e~mbI . u pon her lipe, I an fnd no-.w$.. ed 09Q ytlcoe n4, go egp~ ad TPhe fatal ahootlhi. M edf*% Ww. ensistinge ttlat ch eb meI,~'pbt db ares oWn'Albosal Tb4I fraq.e.ntiy nada eipannaonat humotf eniator Sawyer dhu the Admis. a16n of Virginia. In the course of the debate on the idmission of Virginia in the United tatos Snato on the 10th Instant, Mr. lawyer delivered a speech in which e urged the adoption of the joint re olution "That the State of Virginia 3 entitled to represebtation in the longress of the United States." We ubjoin a few extracts from the speech : "If we should bot Insist upon the aiking of the test oMb by the mom. ierd of the VirgluiN4 tegisltture it vothld be exacting tie# conditions af' or they have complied with the con litions already laid down. "Unless it can be distinctly shown hgt the people of Virginia have not othplied with the ao idtions which rare laid down in the ot under which heir constitution was formed I believe be good faith of the Aepublidan par. y requires that we bhould pass the Dint resolution which has been re orted by the committee and without Islay. "If I understood the remarks of lie Senators rightly here this norn. og, the real objeotidh to her adnids Ion it not that she his'not complied a form and letter 'ith the acts of eoonstruction, but it is that life and ,roperty and person ar not as safe in tirghua as we might desire they hould be. And hOr lot me say t i lenators that acts of Uongress will ever make life and property safe in he Southern States tbat test oaths rill never make life 41d property safe a thoso States; that dolying on that :ind of legislation ,t losure peace in he States of the South will prove to >e relying on a broken reed, and the ooner we disposs ourselves of the dea and that this or. tat particular ath, this or that pasiqular qualifica Ion for public olffiea t'hose States rill conduce to the preservation of he rights of libery,, and property, lie better it will b r us and for, he people of those 04tes. "For thirty years i' the States re ently iu insurroetion there has been rule, not of law, M4't of violence. Fur thirty years pre't 'g the rebel ion there was but on .la of sonti onts that oould'beO'irsed, with afety in the Soui Let me atk enators if they suppose, after tho xoiteinent of the last eight years, rith all the passions aroused by the ar, with every incentive to violence nd outrage which has been presented 'y the war and the years which fol. )wed it, that society shall so sudden. change in those localities that we hall have in places where outrage nd violence have prevaile.4 for years lie peace and good order which pro all in Massachusetts? Those. who xpeot it may look in vain to statutes, o test,oaths, to exclusions under this r that amendment of the Constitu loth Sir, there are cortfiti evils in hoso States wL ,i can be otireA by [tns and by time only, and, the clvii ation which will be sut to come. pon those people now that the root f bitterness, the fountain of all the vils almost which affliot tbose socie lee has been taken from them. The iolene. the spirit of lawlessness and. isorder which prevailed in the South or years before the war Is the same pirt which prevails now. It arose rom the peculiar relations -of the. iabject race to the dominant race In boae States, anid our legislatiota will Otoure it. dAMr. President, from the bottom of y heart'I am a Republican.' I be' ove the, pritisiples of the'Republiosan at t are the principles oa'*hfeh ibne 6aministration of thiu G'dvern Mia o ohprosperously for thea Otfdn. Fbeliete that the duty of (he - atriot at thia Itn'e ad for the hst iven or eight ears is apd. has beens i be a ,Repub loan. I behleen that~ i14' he.I es .?the Repiubhlons. I. as rond that; we will not adms a tst to her practldal relations .wltht retentativeg'amid Bensfor who are ror~ssors of the f~ith of'the Repiib-I eti party, I submit that I know not! bI stand on this floor; 1 slsbmit> at ksoW pot thme nig~en, of the lp$iosn party. I believe tbat crgtbat our object, we shopld by a stpouornnant o( this resolutIon do gre to defest ,, he trat interests of pgbiote~ps, tl as we shou d be ad.I itttpga tate every one ofthe men. sirs of Congress ..from whlob had to avsaiis ,dsabhitiesremsoved, before *s was.- admitted, and every ow. of hom wouid vote Iwith our.Demnoerat. 0pponent. nteps bI~ate. seen something ateps iw syears cof. the - effect of'poltical rosorjptions andi I know that< there ce~at herstbomith .hundredi and sousands ok seen who bsti~e . stes ath would have been wilthuqo af, .4ing with the 1ptgbliosUj~A9and in t e heathwsof~ ~ esabefthe iorde n e the venmfig Vauvass, It is an old maxim says the Lau rensville Hleralf, in w hI thore is much of sound philosophy, "a time of peace prepare for war." The poli. tical eamb nig for 1870 it soon to open, and the destities of a common wealth are again to be put up as the prise. When we ontemplate the re sulits at stake, is it nob high tiase that the leaders of the bemoiaoy were planning for the battle, and prepar ing to marshal their forces wito ener gy and judgment I Lot the plans be road and unmistakable; let thet be free from mongrelisn for late effort, In othet States show 'that soch ean only end In division and defeat. There is no common ground upon which Do mocrats and- Eadisals can meet theie is nothing of sympathy between such opposing elements-their prinol pIes are as dissimilar as the featores and faces that compose their ranks. Let us then avoid anything like hy bridism; let us boldly proclaim the good old principles of our fathers that held sway in the early days of the Republic, and make a fair, square and manly sttuggle for the victory. In this county the victory is our own, if we really wish it. We have only to make a long pull, a strong p1ll, and a pull altogother and we will *in beyond a doubt. If, Lowever, we have any discord in our ranks, we are 'ust certain to meet with failure and 'dsgrace. We miht move forward shoulder to shoulder, and as one man strike for the mastery. The enemy same in oppoeition. The old idea as a solid p alanx, and we must be the hiatwe all formerly cherished, that. this or that friend must be nominated for office, or that the claims Qf 'this or that section of country must prevail,. must give way to the necessities of the times. We now struggle for prinoi plos, not for men ; and private prefer enoe must yield to the publio good. It is only by regular nomination that we ean hope for unanimity, and in combined action alone con we hope for victory. The Romans loarned some of titelr mest valuable arts of wat.from their enemies. Lot us do paps, T'h oneness of our politi ea 9eioqted by Ignoranoo, has bes e eerprise of the white man. Togqther Radiqals stand or fall-they allow no diviqion in their ranks, ani hero is the soerat of their snucess. Cawnot the Intelligence and interest of the white map form s strong a 0oeWent as the ignorance of the negro ? jjet,,then, priviate wishes.and local in fiuppees be forgotten in the common godt for there must not be any divi. slo if we would avoid defeat and conseq ueqt disgraco. As one man, then lPt.4soond uct the coming can vsa, who enemy are beginning to show sign. of animation-Radicalism I. Again preparing for the strife. Let. Remooraey carefully gatheL all it* energies, and crush the hydra. Con ert of action is all we need. HICK PRR5vADzaI.-Tb "Spring. field Apublican," in spoking of a hew invention for a hen's nest, where by the eggs drop through a trap-door, snd so dooilve the hen that she. keepe on laying, In responsible fpr the fol %owing S "Blobbe nmob witha loss, however, with one, o tho. pesua~lers B3lobbs asi lively yopag s aagha pullet of b'oundles. Amnbitioq. Blobbs bought i.peruuia~4r Au.d' his. boe abanghai Ii~dt. Slie went upon the ues4 in 9th morning., Aglbs sew her go, and bip em beamled whtis him. Alas I 1no perosaw :er again, At night he >iske4.Jh, pershao r. IX the upper o"P Onpke s~p4e *$ gifoth era, a ow toe-.naies and ab I1. 6 Zp~the 03 tht~ee dozen I de eu~~II~ saw it all i SIel 'flowte eoi ftu:o (dt been egual td the effoya;sbogad J'ala of her efi~fted W a pwfwrsays+ "I uai~ tIhat '~ foba iaspginnheb ak in. ed ee than tbg ner'd d QMtting of wie ' pinne~gife .u4h joy LtIt eatter thalet I'*4eef t1's e#solaImed StIgpne, eheeh JW bW a nfua~ t isi ora't a' patifat'op~at 6 'W o uAbsetr y*!thi whd desIred. to, eowhkdonte ulibh send eldar Asedia aw*areoes advetteaend dept wvmtss ysda and~w' ,~hi epsd el sel ha "half the lies told at