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IscWecIij; Clarion; "pOW'Kli .& BAUKSLDALE, PROPRIETORS. t POWER. HARRIS BARKSPALK. VKAlt, IS ADVAM. ; bscricers, Served by the I I 1 Carrier, $2 50 per year. None others are authorized to solicit glorias CtAaios. ' ,MtITTKE New Orleans. L ti.M. ; ...i$0Oll. 1 It FeTflSU LL 01 CO., ...... Lie St Oil I', PFTTisoiLt oi Co., ...New Vurt. 1 Sh abfk ci Co.,. , V. KoWBLL & CO., New i vi'k Coy. Nt Vurk. New York. I'in Udclpaia Liiiio llle. I. uisville. . Wn cm nati. .New Haven, Conn. 7 " T, .V CO ,ru S nitllfc.i I -iitiuceS should be by re;:istered letter, 1 -orVr. .lrt't,r by express. When oiti f tiie cannot be responsible, j'y.' ,ue-.i cutiunications should be i tAj .1 io Power -X is.trksdale, Jacksor, Miss. n:H'iio.v roofof1'" " Ue" Indicl- jby a oruuu Jury .ifw lord l'r Sifstlins. ..m the Vk-ksl,ir,r.-r. r'ra ve-ar or two past it has been cur , ,jv r(.j,.,rttd il at 1'. W. Cardoza, piet '. ' jJiare ftupt-i inte-nde-nt of Education, . i lu -iiive lroni justice. We have k(,nie -ain toiuvestigate tite ruatttr, stiit tl'e rcsuk ot tlit- iuvesti- t if pre I lp t ,.tjrtf tiie I: idted Stales oj Ainer I f,.r the l.;i?U-in Dirtikrt ol Ntw ik. ,i stored t tin ot ne wmik i tourroi trie 'i ll Ma'es ii jiiuvrir iir ine jjasieni ' . v .. ft... in,-. .,,1 1..1.1 .. i, .... ! v i I til " 'h ' V ii ii in auu iui lilt" ! " - i ' . 1. .. .. . w. ,i ...... i.... '.inri ill' I ei-fiiu. mi iiic mat u i uiirmiiij . I K, MtiaO. in v r ol our Lord one ,iir:i!xi njihi litinoH'il and sixty teen, ,l,oidi I'.V ' jri ui nt io, aid . t) iiii ffni i.t Mir-!i. in tti- iitiir d our l.i'Ml. one tliousaiiu eint liun- iivdai.'l sixii- s. veil. i-iern Di.-tru-t d New Yoik, s. 9. r'e ur rs u ine united otates 01 . 1 1 A. - . 1 - 1 . iriici NMUiin auu ior me lisirici rf.-ai.l, ' their oath prtsent, that ,bi.'S W. Caiduza, late ot the city of K,klvn and totiuty of Kings, in the net" ulortsaid, veomau, heretofore, ,vit, on tne nvemy nun uay or uunua- in the e:ir ot our Lord one thousand it lmiiiirtd and sixiy-seven, at the fvo! Brookl n, 111 the Ji,asteru Utstnet Lew 101k, and wttlun the jurisdiction Court, did, knowingly, teloinously i !,v ii ami and deception, obtain u liii lutter and packet, the said letter 1 . .1 1 .1 1...: j 1 1 i :u'Kel inen auu mere wcnigmnm-weu ulirecud to and bearing upon the 1 1 .1 f . 1 jvHf, ti rapper and envelope inereor, ine ue of one bauiuel fe. Jiennett, and tiie l l letter and packet then and there I tuiiiinjx an article of value, to-wit 0 United States Treasury note of the .initiation of tive dollars, good and ful money ot the said United States, e one J. Howard Young: he, the eaid Howard Young, then aud there being rou in the employ of the United ;ps, in and for and in connection with I'ostoliice of the United States, at the of Brooklyn ajoresaid, and as such m in such employ then and there in"- chunre and custody ot the said r and packet, the said 1 honias V . . . - .... luza then and there lalsely and niulently representing liiruself to be said baniuel b. lieunett, ana by 1 1 ms ot such lalse and fraudulent rep utation, tJjen obtain lroni said 1 oung, tatter and packet aforesaid, against : ma of the said United States and dVJignity, and against the form of the ilutts ot the United States in such case le and provided. The second count r'es Cardoza with feloniously and by lad aud deception obtaining a certain er and packet addressed to Sain. Li. lunett. contaniincr nve dollars. ine Sr. J ccuiu is for twenty dollars obtained representing himself as Samuel L. aueit, and receiving a letter containing 1 amount, bearing the signature of Frank 13. Lewis, upon the Farmers' ttioual Bank ol New Jersey, at Mount v. Thomas Kinsella, 1'ost-master M unt Holly, made affidavit that the r was obtained by false and lraudu l representation on the part of Cardoza. e fourth count sets fortn that Cardoza, 11'ne name of Samuel L. Bennett, se !rd another letter containing twenty larsin the shape of a check on the I rniers' National Bank of New Jersey, leaned by Frank B. Lewis. We liinue from the record made by the tiict Attorney: "The said check and vr then and there representing and iiig the negotiable value of twenty .r-gwd and lawful money of the Uni- States, from a person whose name to ' jurors atbrtsaid is unknown, and from rns persons whose names to the jurors resaid are unknown, the said ptr 3 and the said divers persons a and t ere being in the eni J of the United States, in and lor I in connect ion with the post-office of rai.l United States, at the city ot f'oklvn aforesaid, and the said divers fiisthen and there having charge and t"ly of snid letter and packet, the Thomas V. Cardoza then and there fpuy representing himself to be the fi Samuel 8. Bennett, and by means such false and fraudulent representa- p, then and there obtaining from the " KiUIirf. the lelt.T nnH nnoket Hiore- M "samst the neace of the United fates und tlseir ili.rniiv nwt toT.iinst r h of the statutes of the said U nited pUs, in such case made and provided. F. Tracy, District Attorney. return shows that the indictment filed on the id f. li. I "to:u ou me minutes ot tne unueu fates District Comt Iran ,ft.rrml t.i the. entcf...! .1 j . 1 tt. j f term of said court. Bail was fixed n,ea hundred dollars, which was tD When thp niiil.jttr .M.olnol left f-klyn between tivIK.rh an.t rlann. lhas nt yet returned.0 He went first ; -'Win Carolina) tf South Carolina, where hi f;w has been engaged in highway f ry for several years. Cardoza wan- ptoMissiippi, "and his record 1 iwi well known to require any 1 rulnt 4 0. t ot witnts-s warrants. This is ;J aapter m t he history ot cardoza, ' tliers are i.iAmiacl nd in the f n j6 l'le curious or doubting are kr w call at our office and examine reran.. . . , . . i(at t0 wn 18 "PP61"1601 ims -MTFTl , A ..-X,T- A 1 - I I h . I IK n nm r.ruijA. W . - r V. ca - n 1 A VJ A -A w , t Sanniol T t m l. r tin Oir- "ourt of the United Suites of Amer- r the Eastern District of New YTork, t Je y c.ertu'y; nat the writings an to this certificate are true copies of respective nri;nui. r filo rA i-o. I .vwtu AAA 111 J OlIU VO. 111 testimnr, .l A T u .. fc JT1 ot tQe said Court to be hereunto B. at the city ot Brooklyn, in. the oth day of September, in the year Id uiousano. eigni nunureu r SeVfcntV-triroa on ,V,i T1 C?Lof the United Ktates, , the ninety- Clerk. VQL. XXXV 1 1. - - NO. 37. I'OLITICAL The KwntKias Independent. Cblef FlankH In ihe IM at fern. , First. That all political power ia inhe rent in the people; that no government ia worthy ot preservation or should be upheld, which does not derive ita powers from the consent of the governed; that by equal and just laws the righta of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness shall oe secured 10 ail men, without distinction of race, color or nationality, and that the maintenance of these principles is essen tial 10 tne perpetuity of our republican institutions, and to- this end the Federal Constitution, with all its amendments, the righta of States and the Union of States, must be preserved. necona. mat tne maintenance invio late of the right of States, and especially 01 ine rigni 01 eacn oiate, to order and control its own domestic institutions ac cording to its own judgment exclusively, ia muispeusaoie 10 me Oatance ot power upon wnicn the perfection ot our political fabric depends. Third. Uhat the conduct of the present administration in its bold defiance of uub- 11c seniinieut and tbe disregard of the public good, in its prodigaliiy and waste- iui extravagance, iu the innumeiable Irauds erpetrated under its authority, in its disgracef ul partiality for the reward of unworthy favorites, in its reckless and unstable financial policy, and its incapac iiy to meet the question of the day, and provide for the general welfare, stands without parallel iu our national history, and the highest consideration of duty re quires the American people, in the exer cise of their inherent sovereignty, to cor rect the accumulations of evil and bring the government back to its ancient land maiks of patriotism and economy. Fourth. That the faith of the nation must be retained inviolate; that the public debt, of whatever kind, should be paid in strict accordance with the law un Acr which it was contracted. Fifth. That we demand the repeal of the National Banking law, and that the Uovernment shall issue a legal tender currency direct to the Treasu. er, inter changeable for Government bonds bear ing the lowest possible rates of interest, which currency shall be receivable both for public and private dues. How Will lou Treat Them. From the Fa ruier's Vindicittor. The above question was asked by the editors of the American Patron, of Find- lay Ohio. He says he wants facts that will throw light upon this question: "How will Northern men who go South to farm and moke homes be treated?" I am glad, tbe editor adds, that he is "clear upon the subject, yet others wish to hear from us of the South. We are satisfied that every honest, well informed man of the West and North, who does not live, move and have his being in the political maelstrom is "clear upen the subject." They have now found out that the hair breadth escapes made by men and women of the West in getting from here and the horrible Ku Klux performances enacted here, originated in the soft brains and lying heart of those politicians who are dependent upon the offices they so disgracefully fill for the bread and butter which supported their beggarly stomachs. 1 will now answer the question of our brother of the American Patron. To any good, honest, hard-working man or woman from the West or North, who wishes to visit us, or settle among us, we extend to them a most cordial welcome. Now, to all such we say, come and visit us, and bring jour wives with you. We want the women to feel our salubrious and exhilarating climate, p nd see the flowers, and lruits and vegetables of Noxubee county, the richest, and one of the most desirable counties in the world. When we have gotten clear, of the remnant of the carpet-bag politicians who have ruled over us so mercilessly and ruthlessly (and the time is fast com ing but few of them now remain, ) then we "cap the last arch than spans the bridge of the unfortunate bloody chasm." Again, we say to all good people (politi- cians are not mviieu; 1 ne xrairons 01 Ilushandrv are to rule this country,; t - . -.1 come and see us. otay wun us long enough to become acquainted with our people, examine our beautiful country, acquaint yourselves with its productions, enjoy its genial prairie rreeze, accept the hospitality that eacn 01 us Know now to dispense, and if you are a Granger, we will clasp hands with a Patron's grip. . . . . . 1 1 1 31 V word lor it you win return nonie belter satisfied, and with the same opinion of the carpet-baggers that we have. . iHOMrsoa. The candiuaTian Iopulation. Mr. C. F. Peterson, editor of the iVyo Veriden. Swedish iournal in Chicago, writes to the Tribune that the Scandina vian population in the United States numbers at least half a million of souls. There are in Chicago alone no less than 40.000 oersoiASof Scandinavian birth, and in the State there must be over 100, 000. The Swedes, who are more numerous than the Norwegians and uanes m Illinois, used to hold the political bal ance of power" in the Fifth District. Tr. Minnesota, the Northmen are many enough to run the State if they would; in Wisconsin they constitute a large element; so also in Iowa and Nebraska; and, in and around New York and Boston, their numerical strength must approximate 75,- 000. Missouri has ot late acquired inou sands of Scandinavians to its population; Mississippi, Florida and Texas, have also hpen sought of late years by the same peo ple; and, wherever wego within the Unipn, we now nnd uiem Bcaiiereu wmcuuim inrmorl into ouite laree and flourishing colonies; and, as above stated, they can be no less than half a million, ana tney are constantly increasing by emigration from tbeir native country. Fnllnre of tbe Attemp Welera rar In.Im-- to late ItailroatdM. ot -the From the St. Louis Republican. It has not yet been proved" that the states can regulate railroads to any advan tage. The attempts to do so in the West fiifve ended in disorderand endless litiga tion. The states have showed that they can harass and cripple the roads, but they have not succeeded in demonstrating thnt they can compel them to carry way freight as cheaply as they carry through frieght, nor that "it is advisable to attempt to regulate too minutely the management of ft private citizen's or company's busi ness. Massachusetts has a longer and larger experience in railroad legislation than any other state in the Union, and her railway commissioners gave it as their opinion' that the less the state has to do with railroads beyond - promoting competition morj,g t hem and esUblishing a few general rtles for their conduct, .the better it hi fbf the; people rvi ; yell aa, the1 companies: ; Cheap net-cf tratjspor- "iTrj ' v 7r iwWwinW thatltosffreatnea as satires anq iuvkujoi uuoacan be setred,,only through . inessential part .of Raari .Mnthitm.kuill thinacheaD com-l were an essential P " agency that makes ail tilings cheap co petition . IT iT-77vl " T TTTTTTTl n"T7 TT TT Tv7"' ,SiTT- n Tr T, i rA0,, New OrlcMikw, Ht. I.alsui So From tbe X. Y. World. ; . The notification, which is given in anoth er column of this journal, that the August coupons of the second mortgage bonds ot the Mississippi Ctntral Kail it ad Company -It 1 t 1 .1 re 1 wm oe paid to-oay at tne cmce nere ot the Xew Orleans, St Luis and Chicago Railroad, invites the attention to the fact that by the consolidation just .effected of the Mississippi Cenfial with the New Orleans, Jackson and Great Northern Railway, a new railway company has been called into being which controls a clear longitudinal trunk line of railways 604 miles in length, and connects the Ohio and the Great Lakes lor the first time directly by railway with New Orleans and the Gulf. This company has taken the name of the New Oi leans, St. Louis and Chicago Railway, and this name sufS- j cicntly indicates the present and the) prospective importance of the" part it is j destined to play, not only in the commer cial and social development, bu: in the political recons ti tut ion of the great douth-west. It has been a little too much the tashion of late years to look for the great expansion of our empire and our interests Westward only and along the parallels of latitude. There can be no doubt, of course, of the gnat future which must attend the Westward movement of the American population. But the dif ferent zones of the world's temperature belt it not along the parallels, but along the meridians, anJ, as the lile of commerce consists mainly in the exchange of the productions of one of these zones against those of the others, it is clear that we should make a tremendous mistake if we under-estimated the forces which must inevitably aud steadily operate to deflect our progress Southward in exact propor tion as it is pushed westward. Great, therefore, as the lines ot communication which stretch from East to West across our continent may be destined to become, the lines which are to bind our Northern with our Southern realm will not be les. important. The road which has now taken its place among the leading corpo rations of the country, nav be fairly de scribed as the pioneer of a series of lines which must eventually link the great Northwest; and through the Northwest an tne rest 01 tne Mortn, not oiny wun the Gulf States of" our own Republic, but with Mexico, Central America and the West Indies, and contribute, with the help of the commercial marine of the Union, to convert our Western Mediter ranean truly and practically into an American lake. This is of the future, it is true, and its coming to pass will depend upon many contingencies into which we need not just now enter. But it is of the present that the opening must be taken to be of a direct through line of -railway from Chicago and St. Louis down the line of the great valley to the capital of the Gulf, traversing in its course the richest cotton lands of the Mississippi. From every point of view such an event is of real moment and of good augury to the best interests of all sections of the country. And it is but just, therefore, to say that the successful completion of this enterprise is due, more than to any other single cause, to the resolution and the executive capacity of the President of the newly consolidated road, Mr. H. S. Mc- Conib, lhe name ol this gentleman is not wholly new to the country at large. It is not held in much af fection, we fear, by the blandly smiling Colfax and his fellows of the Credit Mo bilier, for it was Mr. McConib, as our readers will remember, who made the daylight shine through that occult "ring." It is satisfactory to know that such a man is at the head of a new railway enterprise so intportant as that of which we now chronicle the organization. (en. Wet. Gen. A. M. West, one of the noblest meu we ever knew and a gentleman who stands high in Railroad circles, was elected Vice-Piesident of the N. O., St. L. & Chicago R. R. at the recent consoli dation. Gen. West has many friends in this city, w ho will be pleased to learn that the distinction has been so worthily be stowed. Jackson TTenn.) Courier-Herald. m m m' ' Our Seashore l,iiiiibef Trade. From the l'aseagoula Star. The lumber and timber trade of the South has not been exempt of course from the universal depression in trade and money mitters that has been felt all over the country. But there has not been so great a falling off in the business, comparatively speaking, as at the North west, and in Canada ; and among the lumber ports of the South, Pascagoula has "held its own" as well is fcny. The great lumber port of the Gulf, Pensa cola, complains of the falling off in her trade, and hints that Pascagoula is taking it away. In our next will appear an ar ticle from ; a Pensacola paper on this subject. - Our mills are obtaining a rep utation abroad for the material they fur nish, and as they become more snd more known, orders constantly increase. What tbe (iraagen Mill llring About. I From the New York Times. The sudden and brilliant fortunes made by Western speculation will cease. Wealth must be wou by slow and patient industry, and great caution and judg ment. We doubt if this year we have the usual autumn stringency or panic, because of the- accumulation of ac count of the dread of capital hre on of the granger movements. In time : ol course, this ease ol the market and accumulation of money here will lead to speculation again, but for many years, in our opinion, the Grangers will have brought a certain calm to the fevered speculations of our Eastern capitalists. The East will now show a more reg ular and measured, growth. NoNtn rtliNwittsippl Lumber From the Pascagoula Star. The Englih Bark Eva, Capt. Slater, arrived at Liverpool on tho 5th of June, after a pleasant passage of , 32 days. She was cleared by Mr. Durel, agent of Messrs. Bercter & DeSmet ot JNew Orleans, loaded with timber, and the Captain has written back to Mr. Durel expressing himself so much pleased with Pascagoula that he would have immedi ately returned had be been able to bring some cargo, to help out the low rates of the present freight 4 market at Liver pool. " ... Seaatarial. '. Wehnve heard the name of Dr. J. R. KoW," of Thomastown, suggested by a number of his friends, both m Leake and Attala counties, as a suitable person for our next "State Senator. The Doctor is a centleman of fine sense ; is true to the Conservative party k and would toakea faithful servant of the people. -Yntral Star. '' 1 . There is no? def ence ascainst ; reproach baVobscurim it is kind of concbmiUBt triumph. Adlisoa. JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI, IVriai iad the Soulb. Frem the X.Y. Herald. . Ex-Governor Hebert, of Louisiana, one of the most prominent and far-seeing on a beautiful Indian tradition of Missis men in tbe South, has written a letter oa sippi, is from lhe pen of an old friend, the third term question, in which he Bays lovs since dead. It appeared orie-inallr he is so convinced of General Grant's great influence and commanding popular- ay that he does not doubt, were the Pres- idential election to take place this fall. and both of the political parties to notni- nate, and his friends to run him inde- i -v. uuiuuj , nvuiuduii umv uoiu wm - bined. The Governor is not disposed to censure the President for the short-corn- iugs of reconstruction, for he believes that ue oas uiscovereu mas ne nas duties discharge to the Southern States, and any consideratian could induce him to a candidate for re election to a third term 11 wouiu oe-io inrow nis great name and fame in aid of their material construction, by which alone they can be restored to prosperity du nappmess. Governor iiebert is coDfadent that change ot heart has come to the President. "He has given," says the Governor, "repeated evidence of the feeling, and I know no measure proposed connected with the rehabilitation ot the shattered industries of the South that does not find in bim a warm advocate. I do not know that General Grant desires or would ac cept a third .terra, but he may be a neces sity to the country and especially to the Southern portn n ot it. His name is a magic srell with the black race. The negro population feel that he freed them, and at this minute will hearken fo his voice sooner than to all the carpet-bag gers combined. rierein lies his power to lift up the South. No other man liv ing posseses it. The negro feels that General Grant has been his beuefactor and protector, and any counsel that Gen eral Grant may' suggest to him will be followed to the letter. On this point of view his candidacy may become a matter of necessity to the whites of the South to protect them from a race conflict in which they would be out-voted. In conclusion, the position of the Southern people should be one of entire independence of party poli tics aud one of kindness and good feeling to General Grant, who, by a rare combina tion ot circumstances, is in a better con dition to serve and help them than all the politicians in the country." liitletottisnt. From ihe Galveston News. I it a "stupendous Democratic blun der," as alleged by the New Y ork Herald, or a shrewd stroke of political prophecy? The question relates to the financial policy avowed by the Indiana Democrats w hen they declared, iu their recent State Convention, that "we are in favor of the redemption of the five-twenty bonds in greenbacks;" that "we are in favor ofl me repeal oi the law of March, 1869, wiucn assumed to construe tne law so as i to make such bonds payable exclusively in gold; and that "we are in favor of the repeal of the national banking law, and the substitution of greenbacks for j the national bank currency. The Herald regards these declarations as reviving, indorsing and promulgating "the repudiation doctrines on which Pendleton made his unsuccessful and inglorious canvass for the Democratic nomination ior the Presidency in 18G8.' "How is it possible," asks the Herald, continuing its strictures on the financial declarations of the Indiana Democracy " how is it possible that they could so niis-couctive the public sentiment of the country?" But is it certain that the public sen- ...,.,.i ;.i-., ,.r ."Lw f..iT injacu ao i men oa a aaajaaoiaai Liccuoavft 1 . . . .u l ji . riirrmpv (irmitinor that thA 1'eniilplnn theory may not now command popular acceptance, may not such acceptance be ripening for it iu the not remote future? there are many reasons why politicians, . . 1 1 . i i .1 statesmen and journalists should pay to ., 1 lt J. 1 . ... 1 -, 'l X I eration. As far as the views and tendencies of the Grangers respecting national finan ces have taken shape and consistency, t.-ey point to a uniform and abundant currency, issued by the government with out the intervention of banks, and based directly on the national credit, but not on that credit couched in the form of an interest-bearing debt. xVnd Wendell Phillips, one of the boldest and yet most infallible pioneers of victorious' ideas, as if assured that the ascendency of this conception was not far off, not long since elaborated a plan for putting it into practice. Doubtless the Herald is correct in be lieving that Eastern Democrats will never cordially unite with Western Democrats in adhesion to Pendietonism. Doubt less the issue is rife with party distraction and division. But its disturbing power will not be confined to the Demoe-ratic party. The deliberations of Congress show that the Republicans are not in agreement upon any clearly defined finan cial theory. We are not discussing the abstract merits of the issue. But of this we are persuaded, that if it rives one of the old parties, it will shatter both. And we are further persuaded that an issue which is potent enough to produce such results will be likely to prove the centre of a political movement destined to sweep the country triumphantly in the next Presi dential campaign. An idea, once ex tant as a political force, is stronger than any mau or any party. Tbe Albany leuiteutlury. From the I independent South. We understand that Judge Hill SO generally selects the penitentiary at Al bany, New York, as the place of con finement for prisoners convicted in his court, tor the reason that this institution is, perhaps, the best of its kind in the worhl. ' Its history is rather remarkable. Many years ago s genteman of intel ligence and standing in New York, com mitted manslaughter in a moment of passion, and was sentenced td the State ( penitentiary. He bore his punishment paueituy, auu ni uic puiiuuu ut 1119 term, it was found that he had so wise an insight into the workings and require ments of such an institution, that the authorities turned his knowledge to the profit of the public, ard employed him first to plan and erect, and afterwards to superintend a model penitentiary. Thus originated the one at Albany, where, after a long life of usefulness, its 'original Superintendent was succeeded by a son who still practices in its manage ment the lessons of wisdom gained by the father in the hard school of exper-ence.- "'. :' " ' -: - A Republican Protet : A.mlmmt Race iMaea. From. the Starktville Whijt. -. ---f - ; f It seems that this was strictly a. race issue, and where both parties make it a race issue, we hare very little sympathy with either side. X7e do not believe ia race' iasiies, and; all -we can., say; in such cases, is let the best men be elected. THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1874. PAfit'AGOI LA HAY. p From the Seashore Republican. I The following beautiful poem, founded in the New Orleans Picavune. with whioh poor Mat. Field was for year editorially connected. It was written in 1842, while "Phazma." which was the 71 OTO, lip. Til I Iff LP of Mr. Field, was whiling away the hot. summer months on the beautiful bay he 1 ucsTiiit!), a ue mciueni on. wmcu ine poem is founded is thus related : An ancient tradition tells how a once stately and powerful tribe, many thousand to j moons ago, was gradually reduced by if confederated enemies, until the last fuc-i- be tive remnant came to the shore of this beautiful bay, and uniting in the death sons, naatt themselves en masse, in dco pair, into its waters. Their wail is still heard on calm summer evenings, softened into a tone as faint and low as a sigh a il.Kiniitrht u sWninvnn rh Yoa sandy bench shines in the rav. And silver are the panels that pave Fair 1'ascHjrnula Bay. Yon isles of (f reen eetu noirit bound, While spell-like silenee floats around. And yon mysterious object, mark! Far o'er the grassy surf ice, see The branching toot of some dead tree Peep out above the shallow sea. Like water spirit, dark. Like some lone spirit of the water Gazing upon the lair moonlight, Or sighing for some earthly daughter, In ail nee and in night. Does sorrow dwell beneath the wave? In coral grot and crystal cave ? And do ihe nymphs and nuiails know To weep? Does lome lair Undine, lieneath yon ray ot silver sheen, Hiding her taee in tresses green, Drop amber tears of woe? Ah ! sorrow ever o'er the earth With joy goes ulm-ist hand in hand, Changing and mingling joy and mirth. Thick aa.)ou silver sand. The songsters on their summer wings, The fairest au1 the best of things Find mirth brill mingled with alloy. All ! sadness dwelleth everywhere Upon the earth and in the. air, And 'neath the waves,ye, even there Gi ict mingles still with joy. Hark! listen! doth my music, lone And dismal, lift my lancy high ? Or whence tl. is sad aid sighing tone Of tiiu-ic tinating by? Now swells it over leaf and bough, Beneath, along the water now, And. ah ! how very sad it secuis, Mournful a solemn tollinsr belN. Echoes of by-gone funeral knells. l-ike spirit Msfhtrg their fxreivells, Or music heard in dreams. And 'tis notfar.ey, for they tell How long ago was heard the sound: How here brave men fought and lell, And in the bay were drowned. They say it. i a spirit band .Mourning in Paseagoulus sand: 1 he bones of man y tribes are thre : Their moans 1 tt echoes on the Waves That n 11 o'er their eternal graves, A'.-.a as tne neacii the water laves, bad music nils the air. AgMin! how strange! it cannot be The night wind, for thj night is stih And not a leat stirs on the tree, Or blade upon the hill ; Now. deep, now distant, now so near, You start and smile at your own tear. And all so moir nlul swells along The sound, it thrills your feeling tleep, You long to stcarttway and Weep, You sigh to listen and to sleep. Lulled by this spirit song. Nor. when the tempest whijs the wave, Not w hen the storm-fiend's stirred, But when 'tis silent a? the grave, Then is the music heard : V Then wildly, sweetly, from the lake, The spirit song is heard to break, And o'er the glassy wave to play ; The war-song of the ImUun brave Conies from his deep and watery grave, And floats upon the silver wave Or Pascagoula Bay. , The Educated Wom tx. The well- informed woman may generally be known, ; . i , - , . not so much by what she tells you, as by . . . what she does not tell you ; for she is the last to take pleasure in mere gossip, or to make vulgar allusion to the appearance dres, or personal habits of her friends O.IAIA Aieiii II UOA 3. AAC1 U1UU: II A.S CIAC XIOL 111 .u .1 t,, . . p, a these things. I he train of her reflections ,1 tr ii, Ui . : nrtp.Q not. rr nlnnrr with th fHttncr 0 drinking, visiting, or scandal of the circle in which she moves. She has a world of interest beyond her local associations. Cotton 31 unuiMCturerw 11 vidend. The South and West are becoming a little envious of the huge profits of some of the manufacturing companies in New England, and one of their wide-awake journals, to show ho v it is, has compiled a table of the dividends declared by some of the leading cotton and woolen mills in 1873. From this it appears that twenty-six companies out ot forty-seven divided from ten to thirty percent, each. The Chicopee declared thirty per cent., the chocheo twenty, the Lancaster twenty-two and a half, and the Pacific mills twety per cent. Results like theae are certainly calculated to excite the manu facturing ambition of other communities. And at some future day, when Southern capital will be a less intangible thing than it is at present, investments in enterprises of that kind will doubtless be more com mon than they are at present. New York Bulletin. Servant in the laMlVnturr. At the beginning of that century wages in Philadelphia were said to be three times w hat they were in England. Slaves, convicts, and apprentices from the moth er couutry supplied in a great measure the market for unskilled labor, and de graded it. In 1761 there were seventy thousand slaves in South Carolina, of an average value of 40 each. The annual value of a working slave was thought to be abut 10. Thirty slaves, super-, intended by an overseer, were a suitable number for a rich plantation, raising four and a half barrels apiece, besides their own provisions, consisting chiefly of In dian corn. Rice, which was introduced about 1700, was exported in 1747 to the amount of fifty-five thousand barrels, and in 1760 to the amount of a hundred thousand barrels. If indigo was raised, a slave could produce one hundred and sixty pounds, worth two or three shillings a pound, from two acres, in addition to his own food. His winters were availa ble for sawing lumber. It was regarded at that time "a very lucky circumstance" that an antipathy existed between In dians and negroes, as slaves, were "very dangerous domestics." In 1754 Mass chuetts had twenty-seven hundred slaves over fifteen years of age, about a thou sand of them living iit Boston. When emancipation took place there at the close of the Revolution, tbe number of slaves was 4,377. As early as 1769 a decision of the courts declared that a Grson born in Massachusetts could not kept in slavery. Crimes, committed by bondmen were severely punished. , About the middle of : the . century s ne gress was burned for murder and arson, near Boston, and a negro at Philadelphia for a simUax crinae. The,, whipping post and the stocks were common instruments oi, punishment for the freeman as well as the slave. Henry Wy Frost, in he Galaxy for August. ! r , u. vi;!:-,.p.yi ' .The giria pf an Illinois aeiainarj amuse themselves by spitting at a mark. Ilrtsbler . Tor lh Koaith. The subjoined article appeared in the New York Tribune on the 31st ult, : "But there is a sunnier side to this dark picture. In many respects the future of the South was never so promising as it is to-day. At the close of the wir her people accepted the situation with a frankness which required no small effort, for it is ihe beaten man who rinds it hardett to lorgive and forget; the victor can afford to be magnanimous. But long before the ex-Confederates ceased to leel tbe smart ot defeat, a few their late antagonists, led by Greeley and Chase, bad stretched out to them the T L. . 1 1 . r a' 11 1 . . iigui uanu 01 ieuowsmp. wnat was then considered an act of political suicide has now become one ot the lavorite postures of the politicans, and the number of people has surprhingly dimin ished who would lie willing to admit, as the war Governer of Peuusvvania did the other day, that they would not have been sorry to see a judicious u e of the rope when the conflict ended. So far has this feeling melted away that the Union veterans hailed with delight, at one of their recent meetings, a proposal that next year, the close of the first decade of peace, should be celebrated by are-union of the Blue and Gray, of a more friendly character than those to which they had been accustomed ; and this had been followed by stray proi- ositions that an effort should be made to gather as many as possible of both armies at the Centennial. So that the sun which rises on our hundredth birth day bids fair to behold a wholly united people. National reconciliation, however, has not been the only change in progress. The Southerner has been brought to see tne necessity of working 111 this world to make a living. 1 his one wholesome discovery has accomplished much iu sweeping away forever the feudal notions that filled the atmosphere of shivery, and taught every boy that the sweat ot honest toil would defile his hands. Commer cially the South could not ask a greater opportunity than the present. Capital, warned by the disastrous crash ot la,st year, fights shy of map railroads and bogus enterprises,. and seeksjust tuch openings for investment as the South, with its vase, undeveloped mineral aud productive re sourses, can offer. From lhe movement in this direction which has already be gun, and which is destined to be largely agumeuted, will result in the development of a great section, and a general increase in the number aud dimensions of letriti- mate enterprises, in the healthy cifoct of both of which the whole land will share. The remedy for her political evils lies in the hands of the South herself, for no one can help her. The common school means death to carpet-bag laivernnient ; and if the people will but bide their time the slow, steady work of education aud enlightenment will render black ami white equally fit for the duties of citi zenship, and divide between them the hon ors and responsibilities which the one now refuses to share with the other. The Woman's Journal of July 25 con tains a report, of the work performed by the Dress Committee of the New En gland Woman's Club from July, 1873, to January, 1874. This Committee was organized as a result of Miss Stuart Phelps' essay, "What to Wear," which was first read before the Club, then pub lished in the Independent, aud then re published in pamphlet form. The Com mittee quickly came to the conclusion that the present feminine garb is neither healthy, nor beautiful, nor economical. nor elecent. It is, above all, unhealtny. It compresses the vital organs; it hangs the whole weight of the clothing from the hips instead of the shoulders; and it causes a varying and uneven temperature in the different parts of the body. It was not considered advisable to recom mend sweeping changes, however. Re form, like a baby, must crawl before it can walk or run. The Committee therefore contented itself with preparing an elabo rate argument againat the present style of dress, and with taking pains to bring the subject before the public. Copies of the printeel argumeut were sent to all persons known to be interested in tne cause, and to the 450 registered dress makers of Boston, in the hope "that thereby some consciences may be a wakened among tins influential and important class of work-women by which the waists of their customers may hereafter lie spared a little of the torture to which they are so often induced to submit." We are not informed whether the hope was justified by the results. Lack of money prevented much tract-distribution. Arrangements were made for a course ot six lectures by prominent Boston doctors upon the health of women as affected by their dress. Charts and raanuikius were prepared as illustrations. Improved un derwear is also being devised. ihe Committee will not lay down any regula tion dress, but will suggest ideas lor thers to carry out, with such mollifica tions as individual tastes may dictate It is hoped that the garments may be so arranged that the chest and limbs may be more warmly clothed than now, that the number of skirts may be diminished, and r that every stitch of clothing may hang from the shoulders instead of the waist. The second installment of the Commit tee's report, covering the time up to date, will be published 111 a few days. Chi cago Tribune. To tbe Memory of" si klth!-, Uln- len Orphan From the Dundee (Scotland) Advertiser. It will be remembered that in Septem ber. 1872. a vounc American trirl. named Alice Blanche Oswald, who had come to England from her native land with a Scotch lady. who. it is said, turned her out of doors, committed suicide, when perfectly friendless and forsaken, by throwing herself into the Thames ofl Waterloo bridge. The history of the deceased was a very ad one, and many American ladies and gentlemen, as well as several English benevolent people, determined to give the girl respectable interment, which took place a few days after the event in the Necropolis Working. A committee, chiefly composed of Amer ican ladies, was formed to erect a simple monument over the grave of tbe deceased. It has now just been completed. . It con- sistsof a rustic cross in marble, resting on a duster of rocks, chiseled out of white marble. On sl slab placed on the rocks is the following inscription: "Alice Blanche Oswald-Kithless, - Kinless Or phan. Died of despair in the Thames, 5th September, 1872; aged 19. By Thy infinite goodness forgive me. : The monument will be placed over the grave in few days. , ! It is' a special trick of low cunning to squeeze oat knowledge from a modest man; wno is eminent in any science, ana I tV.on in 11 oa it an Ipcallv acnuired. and T ' .' - " . , -, pass tne source in tout suence. - Horace Walpola. 82 00 PER YEAR A 1UU,0 S IOMITIO I I oung; I,ly Hurled from ui J,wIB " ua tllilmlr of I Itlr. ! f j "-; uutl CaaKutlaibcLliulMi 1 r-e. Froni the Kea.lin ('..) Eagle. Ou Wednesday of the present week a lively and joyous party of ladies and gen - tlemeu started out lmui the neighborhood ot Guthrie ville, Cluster Coumv, for the purpose of spending a day on the summit ot the romantic Welsh Mountain, about 2i miles from Morgantown. The party ot j consisted of six ladies and five gentlemen, 1 wo 01 ine laoies were sisters lroni Balti more, Misses S. V. and Annie R. Johu son, daughters ot a pioiuineut salesman ot that city, lhe sisters were spending a few weeks with their friends who made up the excursion to the mountaiu for the benefit of the visiting ladies prior to their departure for home. They left the farm house ou the above morning at 5 o'clock in a large covered wagon, containing pro visions, ropes for swings, croquet sets, aud u parlor organ. I hey reached the summit oi the mountain at 7:.'i0 o'clock; and immediately commenced arranrin' for the day. In a lew minutes the blue smoke of their camp fire curled alwve the tree tops, and breakla.-t was duly prepard. The entire forenoon was very picas mil v passed with the various games and festivi ties incident to such occasions ; delightful songs were sung, accompanied on the organ, aud for a time the mountain rocks aud glens gave back beautiful echoes to the pleasant and enchanting music. It was 3 o'clock iu the afternoon w hen Miss Annie Johusou expressed a wish to en- gage in clinging, swing had been put up in the morning, suspended from a tree 60 feet high. About halfway up the solid oak a Jmge limb branched out to the left, upon wiiich both ends of the rope were fastened, thus making the swing 30 feet, rtquring a rope over 00 feet long one used for well digging. This sw ing had been used during the day without accident. Miss Johnson, who is a ladv of a daring diiMiiiou, insisted on being swung as high as could bo done by the aid ot the gentlemen, and, to gratify her wishes, they consented. The young lady is between 18 and 1! years old, a pretty brunette, d.uk eyes, and was dres.-cd in 11 gray linen suit. She sat 011 the heat board of the swing, and grasped the rope tightly and bade) thcin go ahead. The swing commenced its motion, and gradu ally rose higher and higher until an alti tude of about 20 feet had been reached. She still insisted ujkiii being pushed, and up went the swing higher and higher until fully 30 feet had U-cn reached. She had been cheerful and lively up to this point, but all of a sudden the became quiet, the rest of the ladies were awe-stricken, and when the swing with its precious burden made one swift Mvevp in the air her head was noticed to drop to 0110 tide, her muscles relaxed, her anus let go their hold and drop, and away the unfortunate girl was hurled through the air, and only saved lrom a frightful and terrible death I. one of the most miraculous intcrven- tions ever heard of. The momentum of the swing's motion carried the apparently lifeless form of Ihe girl up fully 3.3 feet from the ground and lodged her safely and securely between two branches at the point where they join the trunk of a tree, which stood about 38 feet from tho tree to which the repo was attached. Tho fright nnd terror of lhe party below can be bet ter imagined than described as lhe swing came reeling backwards, while its former occupant was lying apparently lifeless in the branches of the tre'e. It required only a lew minute's deliberation lor the gentlemen to realize tins situation and de termine what to do. It was fully '20 feet from the ground to the first limb above, and the trunk of the tree about 3 feet in diameter. They bucked the wagon with its canvas cover directly under the tree, so tliHt i'l case s'10 would drop her fall would be partially broken. The swing was hurriedly taken elown and in an in stant one end of the rope was thrown over the limbs of the either tr c and secured below. By this mean two gentlemen of the party hurriedly wen! up the rope nnd in a lew minutes were at the side of the unfortunate girl. She was just re turning to consiousness, and the force ot he r fall had so securely wedg'-d h'-r be tween the trunk and thi limbs as to re ejuire no little effort to extricate her. Miss Johnson at once realized her fearful situation. She wn pale and weak, but still had the good sense to do as the gentle men desired. The rope was pulb-d up, a slip knot was made, and then passed around her body, under her amis, tin other end pa-r-ed around tho limb, and in this manner she wn. lowered to the ground in safety. With the aid of the w.igon-cu.-hions and several shawls a couch was arranged umiii w hich the young lady was placed and soon regained h r si l ength and composure. .I-flVi-i l:i on 'I'rin. From the GaUe-ton News. The delegation of business men of Dal las, Shreveport and Jefferson, wiio have been visiting St. Louis and Memphis, at the latter place found the ex-Prcsitleut of the late Confederacy, at the reception given them by the citizens. In resixmse to a call from the met ling, Mr. Davis said : "Friends for Texan are friends of mine, at least I think they are, and I see j 111 your delegation one lought with iin on the field of Buena Vista I am glad to meet you all. I believe that all that has been foretold concerning your voung j State is yet to be realized. Long ago 1 think it was demonstrated that the only j practical through line, from the Atlantic to t the Pacific would have to lie on the thitry- sccoiid parallel, running through Texas. If a road is ever built that will lie a pay ing one it must be through there, and when it is built, this U but one of the ! many places where that great artery will ' branch when it reaches t.ie valiey ol the ; Mis issinni. Texas i destined to lie a ! great State. You have a climate that at - rr-. -. . --- - tracts all, and when you nave ships run- ning direct in uaiveston naroor wiui immigrants, then will your population increase rapidly. . There are ships now building which will carry 5000 tons, and float across the bar at its present i-tagc of water. Judge Crawford gpedte of the number of cattle you were sending away. That reminds me that when iu Euroje recently I found a friend from your State (Ex-Governor Lubbock) there engaged in making a contract to supply the entire 1 1 A I 1 . '.L British army with canned meat IromJei as. You have meat enough to feed the whole world, and your meat is sweeter and better than that of Australia and other meat producing countries. Your State is certain of success. It was but a few years ago when no one knew that there was coal or iron in your State, but as the occasion developed the necessity, both were found in abundance and in very good quality, too. It is an old say ing that what is one man's misfortune is another's fortune, and it is my misfortune to feel very unwell to-day, and it will be your fortune in that I can not inflict on ' . - -W A A s. vouanv more . remaras. -x trust mat I - . AJ I. ....,! V A i at no pisianv wj -tt mj my acwmuv to see you in your own homes." . I 1, r v The cuirass b:isque aud round dend trained hkirt, is a 1.. t niodl for the thin sumnur dr tended for afternoon, dininr, and carriage toilet, and mav l - any thin inateiitd, sudi us sook, Swiss muslin batiste, U.o 1 dine, or ChainU rv yau-e. Ii,. 1 - I unique, us its name mr -i, ; armor like smoothness, vm,i,i ' C . 1 I . . . . ut 1 1 : 1 1 1 I juwnes. llie lion; lime the two,; licCessaiy to shape- the but j-n j are bulloi,L-d up pimnU, ti,,- 1 .,, k"i the gracetul l iem.!i siuq.e, f . 1 ! two pieces, with a single ,.. m ,, middle instead of the si,!e l, iv -that are so unsiejiily in tr.u.-j ,1. , tirial-, as wi II us being apt to , ha.-quo, is sloped grudu.illy, in 1 i. make it fit as plainly over 11, e hip- . Corsetu U ileal h it. The apron is shorter than iu terns giwti of late, b-oauc the tWit too handsomely trimmed to be t. h. '1 hi Mprott eoiisists'ut tiiiee g..r. .1 ws that e xtend widely Ltuk to u.o s, i. -, dispell-.-s ith nil back breadths, a v rash of ribU n or the dies inal I , use I instead, The center ot il. n, i- not very Irttgi', but it i- n.l I . the proper sie by the ti in. m 11. 1 I 1 iniiei lion, rulih it or hu e. I in train skirt is too iHinilur t j i. j . i scriptioii. sHi.MI. sfMMKK MM . I . i A pretty white nau.sook dn - -. cuirass ha-qne, to be worn in .N. has a low waii lining i percale with Valenciennes. .uch Imin . wave fhnitik before being u cascs nil iinins arc oiiiitied I ; i, Ito";, dresses. Another I'C.UItlltll e., lor Saratoga has a turqu.u-i' b .1 skirt, with two bias elevt n inch 1! two rows of sdiii ring tj w o i rand in divide lhe flounces in a nil!!.-, a v.l and narrow standing rul!l the t l, . rolled I' l'i lich hems. A new black canvas grenadine dress has a b .v pleating, a side !. and a reverse pleated In a lnig :ir,.,i! skirl. Tin three limit wid,ni .11, on the silk t'oun, Lit ion to icon- I t i.t wrinkled lroni of iui ovei. strijicd with live row t,f j, I Al l. HO.VXI.P and All early importation of lionn, ( the best l'all.-iall nuliiucr Indicat. lhe fashions ot lit-x. t season will l e li- 1 I shapes are huge, with high, soil, I pleated crowns, and llaring biiin- luii iipdiierliy 111 lion!, and aie iv pact looking, wilhoul .lrwi,.;s or stna CIS. Al l I M N HI I s. The Winter Colois Will be of th possible hhades jii o bbx-k. 1 I .-t I Which 1' relicll milliners an- He are mouse-color, blue Met I, null, isulino.-t black, navy Line, v ..l, t, tlaik olive shade known as , I" i . . ii t ! .it oil V e. I i ihuiLC 1111 invisible en en. Sou, 1 tin,, - the same shinies ot two or three lnati 11.10. 1. seen in one hat ; in shades of one color, it hers me 1 1 r. n,,-th- lightest I.. 11 ' associated with tin' daik-n', 11- ' h 1. I- orctl with nui-hi'own. Thegn.ii, :i ber of bonnets, however, have d.ll i.id coloi s Ol forming dly blended, and it will novel and li.aiitilul lie ml, lions ol color, such a the pah -t p ,ni gros grain with cypres giecn n n. f, that milliners v ill xeici-e their la -tc an I ingenuity. MI.I K si I f ti., 1. 1 c. The novelties for trimming nn- ilo- r liaincnls ol blue steel thai Madame Ki IllOlld tlesCliiM's US IIOW iu Vogue ui I'.iii.. 1'hest; are leaves of black net, dotted m the middle with blue stct I spangles, vLie bead of the same outline th, 11 ( .' .. They are branched as vine, ga.l.unl- !i. I clusters, tube; u.-ed 111 lionlol tin" ti.iui.. t, also aigiclle on the outside. tiAMi; 1.A l'ilhl:H. Very f-w feathers nr.; seen in t!.N l i t installment of bonnets; indeed, not a single ostrich tip i to be louud ; but there are cluster of g tun; feathers, .-h.i 1 and pretty-shaped, aigrettes of uhi . heron feathers; iwo or three long d.uk cock's plumes, nodding in a bunt h, bf , t and wing of tropical birds, ami a vai u 1 y of blight scarlet and dark gl'een plum.i,- . Bird al-o upieitrugain. I INK I hOW FIi.M. Of flower there i an abundance. Vines of tinted leaves form a ui.a u around thr ''or t of lhe cniiie bom,, t ; a wreath of shaded seal lei geranium with black leave- trim tin- diadem ol a tripptc r liisit-r ol roi-s, sc. 11 1 and tea, aie just above lhe lou l, third. Th' ie i more carmine a no! . 1 1' , ad in 1 I. criinson in the new dark rose be put on bonnets with th'- tir-l K iileiiibt-r : lull blown and ncui li.U will d a 1 I I V b , . 1 is 1 1 buds, with veiy litih- foii.tg.-, supe,,, i. the rose-bud wreaths ol lint spimg. Pink and carmine roses on the bin.- st- 1 Velvet bonnets art; in I'.ir i-i.in ta -n-. Fine small fl iwers are also s-i 11 in ipian tilhS, also velvet lloweis, prettiest, among which are tiny forget-ine-iiois, i l'iml.-, ami je-amin; of while vi Ivet. '1 lo-ie 111 also a beautiful lilies of sha.b'd v lv t. in everything then; is a gn .it .lu p car mine or scarlet to be sfu.ii, nl.v ponce or poppy ret I. MOIiKI, FOR MII.LIM Ii. One of the most distinguished bnnmf is of (due velvet trimmed with loops m, i torsade of lighter blue. 'lhe tro.M, , covered with iilack net, dot led with bi n -st. -el spangles. The brim Hans upw.ud all around, i l'c"! with the daik- -t v, I vt t, and against it n-.-ts a vine of flu.- steel leaves. At th back of lhe homo! is a pink r-e cluster. A second ol ,! p e'tfce?i blue, velvet and gros grain Lis n it cap crown of velvet, with a high t'ol.. I coronet of gr grain ; ln-h-w the cro,,. t i a roll of velvet tied behind in a liny bow without end. A spray of blue -! . 1 leaves iu front i the only ornament 1:1 thi compact and tasteful bonnet. All olive brown bonnet of the d.i rk -t shade of velvet has around the ( 1 o a u it scarf of wide ribbon that is saimoti I r- i satin on one side and olive gtos grain on the other; thia laps behind, and luoh ' t. - - . . ! square erni raei-d ""'K'; A w rt 'tinted L'erauium leaves is in front, , tWo ! M. s be- -tnnt lotor rifuldmi' coek's plume (,n th " S5 ' anil a cluster of pink and scarlet ro-e hind. The prettiest bonnet is d rh--l.rotA-n velvet with brow n satitiff w u , and velvet brim turned straight up 1 front. Three pink aud yellow lo-.-sai directly in front, with some upturn--. sprays of white velvet lorg-t-m---n..t-Still alwve this are pink and white b t" feathers, while behind is a long l,,j bow of the ve lvet and eatin. A bbnk velvet bonnet i made, youtt ful-lookicg by a scarf of wide, doiib! faced ribbon ponce an satin on one si 1 and black gros grain one the otht r b. n tied around the crown; a red and Mat bird, with head down and spread wn , - is on the soft pleats of the crown in In Another black velve t has pink and 1 ! ribbon, with dangling oats of j t t. around the crown. I'leatiuc's. puffs, frill and Kh few bands, so much used at pre; nt, un on these new bonnets. A right loops forming irregular bow piaceel oa the leit fci la or be Li:;.!, bias bands, and carelely-f ' ' I !. 1 I are the fancy for next season. naau-Aulaina C I'luwtra 1Iaaju