Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, May 14, 1869, Image 4

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    The Democratic Watchman.
BY r. GRAY MEEK
Terme, $2 per Annum, In Advance
BELLEFOI , TTE, PA
Friday Morning, May 14, 1869
Effeot ef Ptoteetive Tariffs
New men in the great West and
gouth, who have not lived in the East,
or spent considerable time in exami
ning the condition of the people, polit
ically and socially, can form n. really
co ff ee nlea effer:',, which years
+or protective thrifts hard had upon the
laborer and capitalist. In fact, few
men out of the immediate neighborhood
of the greareotton, coal and iron man
ufacturing districts, even in the East,
who have not traveled much, have
forme a correct idea of the wrongs
which tariff's gen - e'rally have inflicted
upon labor. The crfhas long been
wrung that by protective tdrifTs the in
terests of labor would be wondrously
promoted. This was the old Whig
clap-trap to win votes to its standard,
and it has been left to the reflecting
and thoughtful economist of this day,
and under the rule of the successor of
Whiggery, in the Antic or the bond
holding' mid land grasping Jacobin
part, to study its efTects. What are
these? It would take volumes to du
the subject jasticet and we can find
room here for but a few brief but point
ed illustrations.
In the first place, after a long season
of protective tariffs, we find the poor,
ponreromil the rich, richer. From the
ownership of naturally i rich but cheap
coal and iron banks, n have advanc
ed in wealth in Pennsylvania in the
past two decades, notkonly to million
aires, but owning millions by the ten.
twenty and thirty. And what is die
evirresponn I rig good which labor has
derived? Let its illustrate here a sifr
Kle case. There is a city in this State
Called Pottsville. It may riot he known
out of the State, nor perhaps to all
parts of it, but it is a city nevertheless,
so far as !ntnation goes. Potti.,%ille
has a population. it is ackndedgen,
of somewhere between twelve lhousa nd
and twenty thousand sours. That, it
will be admitted, is a pretty lair show
tog for a place that is scarcely knciwn
within the State, out of the town—min
nut of the State, near about unknown.
lionmer, is the lucatata it
se% eral great iron companies, or, rath
er, the irort vompitioes are the authors
of Potts%lll e. There are immense iron
works at Potts% ille -there are a num
her of tine Pott,,,ille- -there
IN considerable IotINIIICI6I &MC at Potts
-blocks of line stolen pare the
central of Potts% dle -hut - -
arc all oviaol mu] run by IL
great. iron coniparllee.
For the great amount of husinerl
done at Pottm‘ die. there N 110 MOIWV
to be m•en. A tire dollar hill %%mild
astonish the inhabitants, a large ainj,,r
tty 4i h”Til are the emplo) (-a
, j,if the
great tr.. 11 CIIIIII4IIIIIY I r if'lw eau
161 N be? 4,11 nnk. 114 M ? to the
EilM
The bulk of the people in Poitt.‘ille
oork for the great iron conipanier.
The principal store 4 belong to the iron
.... conipatue--grocery, do goodn, cloth
ing. etc. The companies pay their
'rorkit t 110 money--greenbacke are
of no lime. They give their laborerx at
the end of each month, an order. Thin
being the laborer'g'circulatitig medium,
good Only, of course, at the companies'
counters for its egtiivalent, he takes it
Over to the company's block - of stores,
and lays in his supplies or the coining
month. es„When this Is done, lie has
nothing left; and he toils on, year at
ter year, like a man pumping down
water to keep from drowning, no better
off in ten years than when he became
the white, the coal-blackened white
slaie of the great iron corporations of
Pottsville. And so it happens that a
large bualuess may be done at Potts
ille, and a dollar never pass hands.—
Die companies have , simply to ship
iron fur supplies with which to meet
the mare of their white slaves, and the
thing is complete.
Wherein is labor benelittetil by this?
What Ids the protective tariff done
hot rob the poor man of his independ
t vice, his future and his aspirations?—
lt made princely the iron and coal
corporations of Pennsylvania, but what
has it done for the poor white man
s ho toile for them? It has given him
labor, you may say. to it has, but it
is an employment to escape front which
could be an achievement worthy of
greater notoriety than any black slave
ever received from hitt,eotition admi
rers on the issue'of a succgseful trip on
the underground railway, in times ante
hd/um. Where is his little cot and his
lands, where the school-houses for his
children, growing up in soot and igno
rance? Lands !--he might ae well think
of buying a territory in the West ne n
foot of land near his hut where he now
hopelessly sleeps and feult. The iron
company owns the soil, and it is too
high for him ; beside, at the low price
of labor in the coal anal iron mines and
wait-shops and furnaces, and the high
prices of the necessaries of life, his
darlings from eight and upward mast,
like him, toil; there is no time tbr
school or recreation for the child of
the white slave of Pennsylvania•!
And how is it on the other side?
The rich ;Ilan of a year or two ago,—
the speculator of a few years ago,—is
a millionaire to-day. He ;;ves in ft
Magnificent mansion in Boston, Phila
delphia, New York, London, Paris or
Roinc7 die travels abroad and enjoys
Himself like a Lord. agents at
tend to his. affairs. There is no risk—
they handle no money—they only keep
books, on which are audited the debit
and credit-account with labor and the
railroad . and other purchasers of iron,
erude , or manufactured. Beside being
a Manufacturer, lie does business for a
whole community of 20,041 or more,
by orders, as a banker! Whew
But, in describing affairs at Potts% Me,
we diimeribe the effects of that mon
strous robbery of the poor of Pennsyl
vania to hundreds of other parts of the
State How long will it he before the
masses tllll realue the truth and exam
ine lime queBtion of cause and effect in
its true light, with the evidences RII
about them of the practical operations
of this most infamous scheme of tar
iffs. 7
No wonder that the question of em
pire and an emperor looms up in the
distance. The inthrence of protectiie
tariffs alone will transform this coun
try from ennobling republicanism into
1111 empire. It is only a •piestion of
time. When the wealth and lands are
all absorbed hr a low monopolies 111 d
or ergrrwn corporations arid indmdu
als, the common-wealth Ni ill no longer
exist! That acrd conies the exact
meaning of a hat our fathers intended
this State and country to be--rt com
monwealth, and the whole, a e,unmmr
reealth or eon, monirealths.
Another Radical Victory !
A young girl, only thirteen yearn of
age, Nnn liolated by one of the buck
African pets 6rthe Murk 4trielblterko
mongrels. at a point only four miles
from the city of New Haven, Conn.,
the utherday.- The black fiend knock
ed the child senseless, and then dreg
Ting her hafttlead form into a at oodland
best& the road Reel am [dished Inn truly
"loll" cud and attn. Were these infer
mil black beasts from pagan land only
%%bite chruttlans, they a ould share a
hard fate in America: but being black
I • 4 010 r, 'arm erbial thei , es 1.3 prot r ei4
hlOll, beasts by nature, and dentin in
carnate ur procure, they assume Freat
importance in the CS e•-; of professing
be lownips in the Black Pepublican
church oi latter day saints, and at once
loecome the key that opens the locked
fount of Northern sympathies, lira , ere,
and Lunn) offices. What a h. ing
comment on the sure existence of bell,
is the fact of the existence of Mach Re
pi, I)! leans !
- ioi•asin snakes. in Smith Caro
l:nit are full or fun. The chase our
Inbly colored siutera there clear
town, making the %sildest attempts to
bite the colored sweetnesses of the Re
publican party on their heels. A large
number of snake, are found dead thee, •
as a consequence, for as soon as one
sticks his fangs into a nigger or carpet
bagger, he keels over. It scares the
Jankees, and it Is death to the snakes
-hit; kl.lllUffing to notice bow rend
ily old worn out politicians and Jacob, n
aristocrats can trim raffle to the In eeie,
and I eeQUIC all of a sudden wondrously
plebeian. In the Senate the other day,
Senator WILSON talked about the time
when he worked at a "mechanical em
ployment." lie must have been a botch
workman, to ma much a botch
"statei,man" an is. When his Icl
low-workmen would tolerate him 1.0
more, lie doubtless turned loafer and
politician.
Rev P. Coombe delivered two
sermons in this place on Sunday 'last, on
the Evils and Sinfulness of the License
Syntern, and a harangue on the beauties
of thieving, drunken, hypocritical radi
calism on Monday night in the Court
llouae. In his lecture he 'showed 'much
more sincerity in bolstering up the dirty
ologmax, and disgraceful prasticen of rad
icalism, than he did in his sermertio to
prove the beauties of chrintinnity, or the
evils of intemperance. If the tetnper
ance people about this place want to do
good, let them have sense enough to get
lecturers who are possessed of a little
more discretion, sense or honesty, than
the political brawl ' s they generally
bring here, of whom thin Combo, and a
very poor Combs it is too, Is a good spec
imen. .
—lt takes a clarkey to get into the
Freed ninn'H liiireatt. • '
0, To aypoerltes!
Nowhere in the history of any par
ty, organization, or political leaders, in
any age of the world, at any time or
under any circumstances, lit) there a
record of hypocrisy,—base, contenipti
lile hyporrisy,—that will compare with:
that of the lenders of the Radical par
ty towards the soldiers or the late
war.
From the day that the first pro ate
enrolled his name to battle, us lie was
told, for the preservation of the Union,
down to t:'re preseil! : 1 .7,', ',hi: condcct
(.. , f tliat party toward them has I3enn
0 ;
the most( ceptive, truckling, ungrate•
ful and h Tocritical that has ever de
based in or heaped obloquy and de
feat upon partyt
They were told by them that they
were fighting c_w the perpetuation of
the Union; ' Radicalism made them
fight for the freedom of the negro.
They were premised gold and glory
for risking their lives ; Radicalism gave
them almost worthless Srcenhaeka and
negro equality. • •
They were promised large bounties
and a speedy termination of the war;
Radicalism gave the bounties to the
negroes, and left +he white soldiers Jo
"tramp, tramp, tramp" idler the elle
my for Nu - mills and years after the WM'
01011111 hale been closed.
They were promised good fiaal and
eathttnntuti elothmg; Radiealimn gave
them rotten herring and spoiled ernck•
ers to eat, and shoddy clothes to wear.
thi their return home thcv were to
receive nll the honors, KII the offices, all
the ease and all the glory that could be
heaped upon them; Radicalism has
left them to grind orgrins'on street cor
hers, peddle packages through the
country, live on the charity of friends.
or starve in the alms houses.
When %otos are wanted, they are
then, rr Radical estimation, the "dear
soldiers," the "brace boys in blue," the
"preservers of the Oovernment," the
"defenders of the old flag," and the
good Lord only knows what all else,
hut, as soon ns the election is over, the
crippled veterans are nobody—are fit
for no ho -it ions—earl do nothing, and
deserve no encouragement nor help
Suldierti we ark you if these ace
not face'
We ask you to point to a single in
atanee in nbiell`this party, that now
claims your entire support, has ever
made good one of its pledges?
Can von 9 No!
Instead of giving places to your
womided comrades, it has turned out of
office those who were in Major It H.
FORSTER, as brave a soldier as ever
drew a sword,—shot to pieties and lir()
ken down in heat b from three years
men ice in the army,—is dismissed from
the RRPCRSOESII p of this (the 18th) du ,
tru•t, and one of these long-tongued
loyalists, who staid at home, bra% mg
about his love for the soldier, is ap
isiinted in his place.
douN WARD, another wounded sot
wl A y lett a true wife and a family
of little children to take care of them
selves, while lie risked his life, as he
believed, for the perpetuation of 'the
government of our fathers—a brave
man aho did his duty as a soldier, no
bly, until the loss of a leg sent him
home a cripple for life—is turned out
of a little post office at lialfmoon,
(which assisted him to some extent in
providing his wife and children with
food and clothing), in order to'give the
}dare IC an able bodied young Radical,
who is rich enough to own a store and
is part owner of one of the most valua
ble farms in that valley
Smyrn, apother rnppled
soldier, who will carry with him through
life a coat sleeve without an arm in it,
a lila, e boy, fearless in battle and faith
ful in the office to which he was 'ap
rmited shortly after returning home
the ;sad office nt Fleming—bus been
sent out to make a lif-ing as best he
can with his one arm, and ilia position
given to a brawling Radical who staid
at Ironic to denounce IWimicrats and
firge braver men than himself to go to
to the army.
And still, not satisfied with turning
out these three crippled soldiers, herein
our county, they are After the remain
ing one, who acts as mail agent ou the
Bald Eagle Valley road — .l PHU.
ukt • •
NEIL It is true, MR. PRVNER Was not
wounded in the army, but lie seri ed
his term anti returned home to have
Ins leg crushed off while attempting
to save the lives of a car load of fa
filers : lie, too, will have to go. had
icalism has some'pet, some poor, pitia
ble, petty politician, who has been ac
tive in cheating at the polls, is iii favor
of negro suffrage and wants the posi
tion; and he will get 'it. Wounded
soldiers stand no chance in the tight
for office with these gallant slay-at
homes.
It is not only in this county that the
crippled veterans of the war are being
put out of office; it is in esery section
or the country, and in no place are they
giving positions Io even wounded sol
diem of Radical proclivities. If they
are, will some one who believes in this
hypocrisy tell us 'where it is?
To you, soldiers, we point these in
stances of Radical hypocrisy right
here in our midst, and ask if this i
what was promised yout if this is the
treatMent your/comrades deserve?
If yon think it right; if you are wil
ling to be tickled with windy profee
alone and false promises ; to be satislics
with deception and be made tools o
designing politicians, go ahead will
Radicalism and the nigger.
But if not, if you want to be inde
pendent men,•—tOjite men,—apurn the
wreteVes who have lied to yon—cheat
ed you—dee;ived you—robbed yot4, and
410 W attempt to degrade you by making
you vote along aide of the negro.
Negro Suttrage the Issue
It iii really arousing to sec the vigor
with which Radicalism, through its
different leaders and v:16(11111 chancels,
is trying to get up issues for the corn
ing campaign, in order to avoid the
final settlement of the negro suffrage
que stion, tine set are clamoring loud
ly that a prohibitory liquor law must ,
be the main question; another that a
protective tariff must he thu-aiLieunLiug.4
issue; and still another set think they
can hide the nigger under the old howl
of"copperhead," "rebel, - "traitor," &e
Now, when the prohibitory lignin
law and an increase of tariffs be
come the questions of the day, the lie
inocraey will be ready to condemn ur
approve, just as they think right anti
the good of society and the country de
mhnd; but until negro suffrage is set.
tied, until the people have a chance to
say whether they shall be degraded, by
giying negroes the balance of power at
our elections, TM other questions can fir
consido ed.
Radicalism tan't cover up the %Molly
heads or stay the stench of their Afril
can proteges, under the horrors oh a
whisky barrel.
It can't stick the ballot into the
hands of its black barbarians, while it
howls about the necessity of protecting
"home industry." • `•
It can't evade the negro suffrage
question longer or lie out of it again,
for it is upon us in all lie ll!a,'l(rrece and
debauchery and disgrace.
'rho queetion next October will be
the election of members or the Legis
lature piedyrd to rescind the infamous
resolution mitik tug negroes rote; a in this
Stale without the consent of the people.
Tliui question can't be dodged , u can't
be drowned in whisky or coverepip by
tura, and Radicalism may as well
make up Ws mind to this now an at
nor liter tone
We, the Ifeinoerpey, do not intend
to he driven, coaxed or tooled into any
other issue until this one is settled
We believe negro suffrage to be wrong,
debasing, villainous and suicidal. We
behete the licorice—bile white voters of
PClllisylvania—mbould have a ()ice in
determining whether negroes shall vote
in this Commonwealth, and we intend,
by the help of (Sod, the support of white
inen, uniVtlites righteousness of our
cause, to (fleet a Legislature which till
rescind the resolution binding this
State to negro suffrage., arid put the
question for decision where it properly
belongs—in the Musk of the honest
white men of the State.
Governor earpet-bagger Bullock,
the white, black hearted nigger-boss
man of (":eorgia, has. it is reitorted, fled
from "rebeldont,' having ahsquatulat
edwitlt all the fends of that "rerun
structed" State %Mit an honext loy
abut won't steal, there's sontethtag
wrong. Show um (Inv n Int hasn't- tan
let t when the opportunity otrered
It is a good magi' for the effect Li'
the "Labor Movement - throughout the
land, alien bloated ramealii at Wamh
ington "einufl the battle afar off, - and
set thenuiclvem properly before the
country an " NVorkingmen.' ,. : They are
now toiled in the toils of party, where
as formerly they tined to toil for a
living.
Thp upheaval, hold-slide more
' ment of the "Land, I.alx)r and Money"
men is bringing a note of terror to po
liticians. We now begin to see how it
came about tIIOC a certain manufactur
ing Yankee in the Seniqc smelt some
thing afar ott. Sprague is putting his
house in order I lie is not ormlie
ly alittle smarter than some of his fel
low'.
Judge JAMES C. TAYLOR.. inde
pendent Radical candidate for Attor•
ney-General of Virginia, is a discreet
and cautious politician• When asked
to define his position, he rep lieli "I
am a supporter of the present atffinis
tration, of the National Government—
s° far as 1 am able to undersland-il !"
That's ivhat's bothering most of the
Jakeys, hut• they don't all Nem 1..
"understand it t '
Progress Southward of Northern Bar
barism.
'Elie latest !tens from Cuba La to the
etreet that the Spanish loyal don, who
commands the CastiliNti artny in Ole
Eastern division"Of use e lsland, has is
sued a proclamation requiring...that all
persons above the age of fifteen, under
pain of death by summary execution,
tt all remain at home. If any man,
withtait the best of reasotis, shall be
found absent from bitolottlieile, lie is
to be shot 'lowly and the question of
the value of the reason or ex4rise for
absence in the majority of rases, is, of
course, left to the derision of the squad
commander who Ethan nt4tke the dis
rovery of absence.
The Spaniard hears an unenviable
reputation for treachery and barbarity,
but the ear-marks of this, die chiefest
of his modern barbarisms, are purely
American, and entirely Yankee. They
resemble the ear-marks of numerous
similar barbarisms and outrages which
made the late "cmpleasantness" con
spicions on the `noes of the world's
hircory, as the ino4l hearth stly ‘andal,
the modern s world Ind beeteeompelled
to
,record against poor, cowardly.tim
matt nature. A parallel to this Gene
ral's order, we find in the bloody rule
or the notorious, blood dyed and dam
nable Ittraliatnok, of Ken
tucky, and the two are so near alike
that we spine they are peas from the
same elicit.
In ISn.S, we think 11 1%a., that this
monster Pit iiisktiitir. inaugurated that
reign medieval barbarity I%llll'll
made n rye Bence in Kentucky undesm•
able to cannibals much less so to chris
thins. lie it wa9 who issued an order
that no guerrillas should he taken prig
inners is the State of Kentucky—dint
eves y nuw found upon the highways
who could give. 110 satisfactory oceount
of hinaseli should he shot down on the
=I
And there were hundreds of the heat
men who litr e tired in Kentucky for
the past decade. attar consequence, fell
by that order into the hands of the
blood-dyed villians who had charge of
small roaming Federal squads, and
were butchered upon the highwas.tir
shot down through the doors find niti
dows of their homes, and their hearth'
blood poured out in the presence of
their agonized and heart and soul
stricken lamilies. iiiery ftergeant and
corporal, or thieving scoundrel, who
could get charge of a mond of men on
der Ri Raam,E, wreaked a terrible,
1111111Ierous and cowardly ‘engea.
upon his personal enemy, or those
whom for any reason he disliked. An
consequence, for every actual guerrilla
ever taken and shot-don n, half a dozen
peaceable and 'moire:Ming citizens paid
the Kline pel!alty Then the guerillas,
so called, retaliated, ❑rnl a ieign of hell
uitensitied'Lr the partielpatiou w it of
real devil", to the manner burn, e•us
the I e ull
All this uas the iiticessar) result id
the introduction of a barbarous spirit
of butchery by cowardly fiends raked
up from the pas of moral depravity in
the ge lorious North, and het the loal
party, alto are limning this country ,
iIOW as then, pretend to 1- y Illpatillic
with the rebels of Cuba against a cause
much like their own, and men to exe
cute its interests much like those aholll
it employed to cuter ate the rebels
of the South ! 0. .onsistency ! thou
art a jewel indeed ! hen the part
of barbarism in the late %vat- aho exer
ted its mightiest efforts tb establish
strung brutal gii‘ernment in this Mtn
lry, Kitten heart lu
enteitum the otravglmi
reel, II I. Ilnie t.. I“ , d,
WOMICIn
- We have hot seen n punted riTy oi
the order referred to by the news trout
Cuba, but when it is published, we
shall expect to find that it is but a
copy twig/fink et lileralins of the one
published by the crimson-souled vrl
Iron BURURIDGE. a few years ago. If
not, then we are sure it is a pretty fair
copy of some other infamous Yankee
proclamation issued during the late
war between the States. It is palpa
matter what may be said of the
Spanish character and qualitication, a
copy of something furnished by the
Yankees in the lateswar. :They went
to the bottom depths of infamy. No
Spaniard has over livcd who could gct
lower than a real sneaking, stinking,
theiving Black Republican Yankee.
EXTENSIVE ART - OALLERI.—Next. to
the Bible, no book is more useful than
Webster's Dictiouary. The Uaabridg•
ed is an eitensive art gallery, contain s
kg over three thousand engravings,
representing almost every animal, in
sect, reptile, implement, plant, etc„
which we know anything about. It is
a vast library, giving information on
almost every mentionable subject. It
indeed has been well remarked that it
is the most remarkable compendium of
humnu bynntedur in our language.—
/Anyfehoid Aokoratc.
Late Publications
"811EINE ANT) iris MEN."
e post, interesting books wlist i
late war line given rise to is that lel
ing to the exploits of tinshilv, tlio
federate gderrilla, inllissouri, ith
has been published, end is for hale
the Miatni Printing Coln pally, at
einnnti, Ohio.
Smni was the MARION of the Sou
or the liultTEß of the war of 1861,
adventures, at the head of a small In
of partisans, truthfully remarks
Cineinn'ati Enquirer, will form the
sic, for agesto come, of poetry and
mance, There were few, if any,
tics of Intelligente that he did not
sees, and, in consequence, he ens
of the most successful of all the r
federate leaders.
al' and MOnn IN being upon
larger theitter, perhaps attracted, in
greater degree, the attention 01 t
country ; hut, in brilliancy of—schi e
tnents,dite Missouri Confederate Al
certainly not inferior to either it
rivals, The hook, which records the
to-ftlarge Maga of the people {t ilt
entirely new, for during the tzar (uir
fortnatitin of Conlederate t alor and
plaits ttas exceedingly small and
perti•et
When, in after yearn, the hinitti;
the civil war of 18i11 to 186. - 1 is anti
these memorials of SDI. I or a I!! I/0 1
feTtly invaluable, as throwing light it
sonic of 118 1110e4 important ado(
merits. Those who desire to reittl
of the mast interesting hooks nit
period—a In :71c) full of ad;
of curious incident in ttn narrah;
will buy Shelby and His ..14.n. \V
not hesitate to predict for it a great
deserved popularity ; n popularity
exceeding most of the T,dogricfbillt.
the war period.
LIEF. OF irEI'IERSON Il ll'l4, NII
Secret History of the Southern Con
erncy, gathered "behind the seene
Richmond." tiontaining curious
extraordinary information of the p
cipal Southern characters IT the
War. in connection with l'resident
via, and in relation to the various
trigues of his Administration. , ISv
WARE, A. Pot.l.Attn, Atithoor
Lost Cause, - A:c ,
We have-heel] favored Iry thr
tional Publishing Company with a
of the advanee c aLects of this a o rb,
to be issued. Thai it will be of it
est --deep interest 16 MC Wall)
aril buy it, there can he no doubt •
that it will he an impartial work,
enmity between the writer and the
jest, precludes even the porisibilit
Mr. POLLARD has had Rd% wimp
gather facts about the late cooled,
arid its President, that no other n
perhaps, could hope or. Ile has
nLihty to put than iu shape to in
n exceed. nglv intere.ting and 'Tad
Look ; hut the coloring he wrll Jilt u
it, time prejudices that will he thr
into if, and the little peisonal
ences that lune grown tolre great
sound hatreds between him and
President Davis, Ica& 118 to lid
that the book will not be tar I nrpnr
collation of lasts, Ble4 It %%orb
hont a Southern gentleman n
imp:ll6a! hulorian should be.
near he uuewhcn 10 our surmise,
hope we are. Hut however
may be, it will detract none from
interest or actual worth of the win
That it will meet with a ready side,
flattering noticea it has already rec
ed from the newspaper preit,t of
country, guarantees, and the fail t
it cornea from one of the most
Southern men in the entire min
giving the "secret•' hist nry ut the
emifedernev --- a ‘lew "behind
rwetien - of 1h0..c ‘‘ ho in:fed It lo 11;4
part in the great vkar lor the
non
cotttoiciit, ‘t ill cittnic for 11, it Ii Hi
uneurpiused in thcluMtory of liook
linking
Little Matters for the Ladies
gauss veils aro coming into in'
—A New York groom (ultimates the ex!
of a 11111 t-class wedding at s'2,boo
—Mil , Storer, the daughter of ex Pr 0.41
John on, wee ifiarrlett at rireenville, Tenn
'
theih, to William Itromn, a merchant o
town.
—Mrs. (nit. Morhdre, elio nor iguird
husband's ship, during his Illness, Iron
(init.!' to New York, has boon pronented
$l,OOO by the tinder% riters
—lt In stated by acientille men that I
ring strike,, morn women than men,
year. Thin is in complimentary tact, for I
pilot that women are more • r attractlve •'
—A late Parisian fashion is a garland
lips worn upon the head, so arranged that
,Ingat of the room causes the tulips gradual
unfold, displaying diamonds, rubles, Ac
—A lady agiqualntanee has had five child
ail of whom had rod heads. As both ho
and husband am similarly palicted, she
wieely concluded that it le redheaditary (h ,
(Wary) In thp family.
—There is a practical advance towan
"woman's rights' coveted by the Dlcki
people, in the fact that a lady of Dee ?do
has gone to learn the tlnner's trade. Ano
not less suggestive case Is that of a young
at the PortAeld mill, near Thilottte Pent
rants, packs night thiPwan II i •
ei.I.IIK.I•H
dnY, c ind eafine one dollar .•aell
as Moot male h‘bOreo She l o ts kept thi
for the past two Months, a n d says
henceforth peek ten.
EMI