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BY iUíRISOE, REESE &, CO. EDGEFIELD, S. C;*APEIL 17, 1867. VOLUME [XXIL-No. 16« p np. i mraense IR KENN 3 23S BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA., Address themselves to the public in very emphatic fenns. Every Gentleman in South Carolina and Georgia who will take the trouble to call "at our A UiWÍ Will be willing to endorse our assertion : That our House contains the MOST COMPLETE ASSORTMENT, and the most elegantly finished Stock oí' READY-MADE' CLOTHING ron SPRIGG AND SUMMER WEAR, That has ever vet been offered in Augusto. It is, therefore, i ¡ii portant that every gentleman who desires lo be well dressed, in garments that lire THOROUGHLY FINISHED, and, at the same time, at tho LEAST POSSIBLE EXPENSE, to call at once at KENNY & GRAY'S. OUR TAILORING DEPARTMENT Is supplied with thc CHOICEST CLOTHS, CASSI At ERES and VESTINGS, including the mast delicate shades of color to he found in the country ; and its ope¬ rations will bc prosecuted with I Jr. s KW KU CAKE AND ATTENTION oil thc part of the Proprietors, so that nothing ci* titi inferior character can possibly escape their vigilance. We have made special selections of choir-.' FURNISHING GOODS, which will receive more care than heretofore, and enable our patrons to supply themselves al our House with every article tl. \y may require. &5&*0ur /'rices arc immensely 'Reduced! "KBWSY & GHAT, | 238 Broad Street. .Ausrusta. '? 3m 14 Apr 1 O £> A "RT'O Í i Pit, EDUC Every Article in Our Stock Largely Bechiced ! 0 MANUFACTURERS OF na te, i y i ö kn ¥8 CLOTHIN P Offer the remainder of their WINTER CLOTHING and GENTS" FURNISHING GOODS Rt REDUCED PRICES in order to make ??.oom for the Spring Trade. Our well assorted Stock of Cassimeres, Broad Cloths, Doeskins, Tweeds, Jeans, Hats, and many other Goods, wc offer at the same Reduced Prices. ^/"Buyers will save money by calling and examining for themselves. l;jrTtemember we have ONLY ONE PRICE, always giving our Customers thc advantage of a fair Bargain. I. SIMON & BRO., FASHIONABLE CLOTHING EMPORIUM, 224 Broad Street, Four Dcors: Below Central ¡lote!, Augusta, Ga« Austina, -lan 7 tf G. <§£ A. Gr X ii s ii rance _A. g e ii t s. No. 221 Broad Street, çprçscïii thc following Insurance Companies : THE GEORGIA HOME. cf Columba, (Ja. MERCHANTS. .of Hartford, Conn. JEFFERSON.of Scottariliè, Vu. CT TY, FIKE.of Hartford, Conn. MERCHANTS' & MECHANICS'.of Balli mon*, Md. SIA R FIR K.of Now York. NATIONAL MARINE ANO FIRE,.of New Orleans, La. NrJW ENG LAND.of Hartford, Conn. ?ASSOCIATED FIREMAN'S,.of Baltimore, Md'. NORTH AMERICAN.,. or Hartford, Cona. VIRGINIA.of Staunton, Vu. TX ION.of Baltimore, Md. INSURANCE AND SAVING. of Richmond, Va. SOUTHERN MUTUAL LIFE.of SOUTKRRN ACCIDENTAL .of Columbia, S. C. Lynchburg, Va. £27* MR. I». R. DURISOE ig our authorized Agent for EdgcOcld and vicinity, nnd partie* wishing to insure will f n I it to their interest to cull on him. Incasta. Oct Cu 6m 43 Administrator's Notice. Administrator's Notice. A LL person? having demanda against tl c Ee- » u, pcr?0ní hnvin-r demands npninst tho Es- ±X t ito of JAMES Ai. LANHAM, deceased, »rc /3L t:if(. 0f JAMES H. WHITE, deceased, aro requested to ..resent thew, duly m toited. io ll»»earnestly requested to present them tit an cnrlv undersigned, or to W. W. Adan*, Esqr . ot -.ncc; j jHV t" ti,c undersigned : and thn.-o indebted to and those in anywise indebted 'io K&fcFi'ínto i:r<: y:i¡,¡ E-U'e arc requeued to make immédiate pny- oirne.^ly rcf.uest'MÎ to nwlce pnyjECEt withcut «lc- "j^nt. . E. W.-II(ÎRNE, lay lo tho uudurMgccij JAS. A. DEVORE, Ad'or. Jan. ts, ¿ra 4 Adin'or., in ri^ht of biß wife, on tho Estate of J. H. Whit«, dee'd. 3wi9 fm p ; --«aa-»»-«m-a-- »'« Who Took thc Brtby?" Onco in a happy homo, a sweet, brigl diod. At evening, after tho funeral, wi family wero titting sadly together, littll said, "Mamma who took the baby on th side?" " Or. the other sido of what, my " Of death, mamma. You always took car herc, and she was too little to go alone took her on tho other side ?" Wh.r: will tho baby do without you, moth« You used to watch and tend her all thc You never gave her up to any other, Until God carno aud took her life away You 'icld hor in your arms until sho died,- Who took the baby cn thu other side ? Who was there when sho woke to bend her, Watching hor waking as you used to do- To hold her in your arms, to soothe and lov WHI she not mourn, mamma, and look fo Herc, if you did not como she grieved and c Who took tho baby on tho other sido ? Mor* tender eyes, dear child, beheld that Y Than ever mother bent on her or theo ; And though my heart wi:h loneliness is bro My angel babe will never mourn for me; For her those blessed arms were open wide " The Savior tooit her ou the ethe- side." -Jwieríca» J/cf«fii Bluck Eyes. Oh çive rae the dark b!ack eye, Tuc eyo that sparkles and flashes For a thousand witcheries that Ho I i the shade of its raven lashes. The languishing eye of bluo I: all loo slow in its wooing, For an angel it moy do, Bat nit for a ruau's undoing. The glance of a dark, black eye. Like a sunbeam, w.irtn and glowing, From your head to jour heart will fly, Aad you're gone ero you think you are g Then hurrah for the dark, black cj'e! T lat carrie." thc heart by storming, The hlue ono may waken a sigh. Bat the he'rt gets tired whilo it's wan He h and Women at Salt Lak Mr. El EPWORTH DIXON*, editor of thc don AUicna-uni, tvho has but recently a visit to thc United States, has publish buck *allcd '. New America." His pict of we item life aro most admirably drawr. large portion of the bx*k is devoted to I and tho Mormons. Tho social effect of p gamy receives a practical illustration am the Mormons, which Mr. DIXON did not to notice. His remarks on this subject very i iteresting and instructive : WOMAN AT SALT LACE. And what, as regards the woman hen is tho visible issue of this strange cxperiui in social and family life? During our fifteen days' residence ann thc Saints, we have had as many opportt tics a Corded us for forming a judgment chis question as has ever been gwen to G tile-travelers. We have seen the Presid and SOU1C ot' the apostles daily ; wu have ht received into many Mormon bosses, and trodeced to nearly all thc leading Saints ; have dined at their tables: wc have chat! with their children. The feelings which have gained as to tho t fleet of Mormon 1 on the character and position of woman, Í the growth of catv, of study, and cxpericr:< and our friends at Salt Lake, we hope, wh they will differ from our views' will not. relu Lo credit us with candor and good faith. If you listen to the ciders only, you won fancy hat the idea of a plurality of wiv xcites in tuc female breast the wildest lana ism. Thi-y tell you that ti Monuan preach* ¡wcllii g on the examples of Sarai and Rachel linds bis most willing listeners on li female benches. They say that a ladies' cit was formed at Nauvoo to foster polygam and lu njsko it the fashion : that muthe preach it to their dal***liters ; that poetess prai.se if. They ask y. u to believe that tl first wife, being head of the harem, (ak up m herself io seek out and court ibo pre tieal ¡il "ls : 01.ly too proud and happy wht -he can bring a jjvw Hagar, a new Billah her husband's arin«. This male version of tho facts is certain suppoited by fcucb female writers as Beliuc Pratt. In my opinion, Mormonism is nota rcligiu for woman. I will not say that it degradt her, for the term degradation is o-icn to abust bu', it certainly lowers her, according to ot Gentile ideas, in th.1; social scale. lu fae «roman is not in society herc at all. Th long blank walls, the embowered cottage the empty windows, doorways ar.d veranda; all suggest to an English eye some!hing ( thc jea otity, the seclusion, the subordinatio of a Moslem harcir., rather than the gravit and freedom of a Christian hoi,)*, ifeij rar« Iv see each other at home, still more rare! in thc company of tbbir wives. SecliiMo oeetns to be a fashion wherever polygamy i thc law. Now, by itself, and apart from al doctrinos and moralities, the baoit of seclu «ling women from society must tend to din their sight and dull their hearing; for if con versation quickens igen, it still more quicken women; and weean round!:- sn--, aft-.-r expo Hence in many households at Salt Lake, t!;a these Mormou ladies have lost the practici and thc- power of laking part even in sucl light Ulk e; animates a dinner table and i drawing room. We hare met with only on< exception to this rule, that of a lady wht bad b?cn up< n the stage. In some houses the wives sf our ho?ts, with babies in theil arms, ran about the rooms, fetching in chum pugne, drawing corks, carrying cake ari fruit, lighting matches, iceing water, »hih the men were lolling in chairs, putting theil feet out of windows, smoking cigars, and tos sing off beaker" of vi ¡ne. (N\ B.-Abstinence from wilie an:] tobacco is recommended by Young and taught in the Mormon schools; but'we found cigars in ma¬ ny houses, and wine in ¡ill except in hotels!) flic ladies, as a rule, arc plainly, not to say poorly, dressed; with no bright colors, no gay Ûounaea and furbelows. They are verv quiet and Subdued u) incliner, with what ap¬ peared tous an unnatural caira, aa ff all dash, all sportiveness, all life, had been preach¬ ed out cf them. They seldom str¡led, except with a wan and wearied look ; and though they Kt-.-: all of English race, we have never heard them ia:j¿d) n ith the bright merriment of our English giris. They know very little, and feel uh ii.lerp3t in very f.<w things. I assume that they are all great at nursing, and I know ihat many of them arc clever ut drying and preserving fruit. Hut they arc habitually shy and re¬ served, as tkyfigh they were afraid lest their bold opinion on a iuiïaet, on a watercourse, or a mountain-range, should Oe fiOi'tjd.erpd by their lords as a dangerous intrusion on thc sanctities of domestic life. While you are in tho h mso, they are brought into the public room as children aro with us; they conic in for a moment, courtesy and shake hands ; then (hop oiiL again, as though they felt themselves in company rather out of place. I have never seen this sort of «hjne-« among grown women, except in a Syrian tent. Anything like the ease and bearing of an English lady is not to-be found in Salt Lake, even among thc households of the rich. Hero no woman reigns. Here, no woman hints by her manner that she is mistress of her own huiise. She docs not always sit at the table ; ajid] when sho occupies a place beside her Ilord; ii ia not at Ihb head, bul on one of thc lower seats. In fact, bar Hie does not seem to be in tho fikydor and tüp 4&¿Dg toora so I ! much as in thc nursery, the kitche: laundry, and the fruit-shed. .The grace, the play, the freedom of a English lady are quite unknown to her mon sister. Only when the subject plurality of wives has been under cons tiou between host and guest, have seen a Mormon lady's face grow bright then it was to look a sentiment, to hi opinion, the reverse of those maintain Belinda Pratt. I am convinced that the practice of rying a plurality of wives is not populai the female Saints. Besides what I have- and heard from Mormou wives, therm living in polygamous families, I have ti alone and freely, with eight or nine difi girls, all of whom have lived at Salt Lal two or threo years. They are undoi Mormons, who have made many sacrifia their religion ; but after seeing thc fi life of their fellow Saints, they have on« all become hostile to polygamy. Tw three of these girls are pretty, and n have been married in a month. They been courted very much, and one of has received no less than seven offers. í of her lovers are old and rich, some y and poor, with their fortunes still to The old fellows have already got their h< full of wives, and sho will not fall iat< train as either a fifty or a fifteenth spo the young men being true Saint«, will promise to confine themselves forever to earliest vows, and so she refuses to wed of them. All these girls prefer to rer single-to live a life of labor and depend -as servants, chambermaids, milliners, c women-to a life of comparative ease leisure in the harem of a Mormon Bishof It is a common belief, gatherednn a g measure from thc famous letter on plura by Belinda Pratt, that the Mormon San willing to seek out, and cager to bestow, number of Hagars on her lord. More t one Saint has told me that this is true, rule, though he admits there may be exi tiona in .so far as thc Mormon Sarai short of her high calling. My experic lies among the exceptions solely. ' S< wives may be good enough to undertake office. I have never fouucLone who wc own it, even in the presence of her busbs and wheu the occasion might have been 1 to warrant a little feminine fibbing. E\ lady to whom I have put this question flus into denial, though with that caged broken courage which seems to character every Mormon wife. " Court a new wife hi«) !" said one lady ; ,: no woman could that ; and no woman would submit tb courted by a woman." The process of laking either a second o sixteent h wile is the same in al! cases. will tell you" said a mormon elder, <; how do these things in our order. For exam] I have two wives living, and one wife de I am thinking of taking another, as I c well afford the expense, and a man is r much respected iu the church who has I than three wives. Well I fix my mind 01 young lady, and consider within myself whe er it is the will i-f God that I should se her. If I feel, in my own heart, that it wot bc right to try, I speak to my bishop, w advises and approves, as he shall tee ll: ; which I go to the President, who wiil con¿: "r ..i.ci.'úr T «ma good mau ana a wnri husband, capable of ruling my little hom hold, keeping peace Among my wive , brin ing up my children in the fear of God j and 1 am lound worthy, in his sight, of the bbs ing, I shall obtain permisión to go on wi the chase. Then I lay tho whole matter my desire, my permission and my choice, h fore my first wife, as head of my house, ai lake her counsel as to the young lady's ha its, character, and accomplishments. Pi haps 1 may speak with my second wife ; pe haps not ; since it is not so much her bat ne.-s as it is that of my first wife; besif which, my first wife is older in yeirs, lu seen more cf life, and is much more of frie id to me than tho second. An obje lion on the first wife's part would ha) great weight with mc ; I should not care muc ior what tho second either said or though Supposing all togo well, 1 should next ha\ a talk with the young lady's father : and If li consented lb my suit, I should then addie- the young lady herself*" (i Um before you take all these pains t get her,'* 1 asked, " would vou not have trie to be .»ure ol' your ground with the lady hoi self? Would you not have courted her an won her good will before taking all these pei sons into your trust. "No," answered the elder; "I sboul think that wrong. In our society we ar strict. 1 should have seen the girl, in th theatre, in the tabernacle, in the social hall I should haved talked with her, danced wit her, walked about willi her, and in thise way ascertained her merits and guessed her ¡Deli nations: but I should not have made love t her, in your sense ol the word, got up an un derí'atidinir with her, and entered into pri vate and personal engagement of the alfec- lions. These allai rs are not of earth, but o heaven, and with"us they must follow the or der ol' God's kingdom and church." This elder's two wives live in separate houser and seldom see each other. While we havt been at Salt Luke, a child of thc second wifi has fallen sick ; there has been much troubh in the bcuse; and wo have heard the firs wife, ai who^e cottage we were dining, sa; she would go aud pay the second wife a visit The elder would not hear of such a thing and he was certainly right, as the sicknesi was supposed to bo dyptheria, and she had £ brood of little folks nlayiug about her knees Still tho manner of her proposal told 149 thal she was uot in thc habit of daily intercourse with her sister wife. . lt is an open question in Utah whether il ia better for a plural household to be gather¬ ed under one roof or not. Young sets the ex ample of unity, so far at least as his actual wives and children are concerned. A few old ladies who have been scaled to him for heav¬ en, whether in his owunaineor jn that ol Joseph, dwelt in cottages apart j hut the do*, en women, who share his own couch, who ari the mothers of his children, live in one block close to another, dine at one table and juin in the family prayers. Taylor, the apostle, keeps hie families in separate cottages and orc'j&rds ; two of his wives only live in his principal house ¡ the rest have ieuemeuta of their own. Every man is ffeo to arrange his household as he likes; so long as ho avoids Contention, and promotes the public peace. ,: How will you arrange your visits when y OJ have won and scaled your new wife?" 1 asked my friendly and communicative el¬ der j P shall you adopt the Oriental custom of equal justice and attention to tho Indios laid down by Moses and by Mohammed V1 " By heaven sir," he answered, with a-flus'-: of scorn, "no mau shall tell me what to do except-" giving the initials ol bia name. "You mean y¿m will do as you like ?" ff Thad's just it." And such. I believe, ja l^hp universal habit of thought in thjs city and this church. Alan ii king, and woman has no rigb't.7. She lías, in faut, qo recognized place in creation, ot lier than that of a surmuit and companion of hot- lord. Man is master, woman is slave. J can¬ not wonder that girls who remember th'ir English homes should shrink from mart iago in this strange community, ovon though thov have accepted tho doctrino ol Young, that plurality is the law of heaven aud of God. '. I believe it's right," s dd to me a rosy E >g- liah damsel, who has been threo years in Ulah, " and I think it is good for those who like it: but it is not good for me. an. I will not have it." * " But if Young should command yu ?" I " üe.won't J" ¿aid ibo ¿'ari with th- tpssu^ ?' Cai her rolden curls ; " and if be were to do so, I wouljinot. A girl can please herself wheth¬ er she t.irri< s or not ; audi, lor one, will n¿ver go iuto a house where there is another wife." j " Da .the wives dislike it?" " Some don't', most do. They take it for theirteligion.; I can't say any wonjan likes it. Some women live very comfortably to¬ gether f not many ; most have their tuft's and quarreh, though their husbands may never know of them- No woman likes to seo a new wife come into the house." A Saint would tell you that such a damsel a3 my rosy friend-is only half a Mormon yet ; he would probably ask you to reject such ev¬ idence aslr um pery and temporr. y ; and plead that you can have no fair means of judging such an institution as polygamy, until you are ableioTstudy its effects in the fourth and üftb general ion. .Meanwhile, tho judgment which we have formed about it-from what we have seen and heardmay be expressed in a few words. It finds â new place for woman, which is not the place she occupies in the society of Çngland and the United States. It transfers her from the flrawing-room to the kitchen, and when it finds her in the nursery it locks her in it. We may call Buch a chango a degradation ; the "lormons call it a reformation. . We do not say that any of these Mormon ladies have been worse in their moralities and their spir¬ itualities by the change ; probably they have not j but in everything that concerns their grace,':order, rank and representation in sc- cieij, they are unquestionably lowered, ac¬ cording to our standards. Malo Saints dc- clar| that in this city women have become more domestic, wifely, motherly, than t'-iey are krrong the'Gentiles ; aud that what t'-ey La*'<j lost in show, in brilliancy, in accomplish¬ ment, they have gained in virtue and in ser¬ vice! To me, the very best wo.nen appear to be little more than domestic drudges, nev¬ er rjeing iuto the rank of real friends and companions of their lords. Taylor's daughters waifed on us at table ; two pretty, elegant, Engjish-lookiug girls. Wc should have pre¬ ferred standing behind their chairs and help ingthem to dainties of fowl and cake ; but theralormon, like the Moslem, keeps a heavy hand on his female folks. Women at Salt Lallé are made to keep their place. A girl mujt address her father as " Slr," and she woild hardly presume to sit down in. his presence until she had received his orders. fsWomerj," said Young to tuc, " will be more easily saved than men. They have not tbi sense to go far wrong. Men have more knowledge and more power ; therefore they can'go more quickly and more certainly to hell. Wit Mormon creed appears to be that wo- mau is not worth damnation. ¡Jh the Mormon heaven, men, on account of thar sins, may slop BUort in the stage of an¬ geló; but women, whatever their offences, are jail to become the wives of Gods. ^Wlat Newspapers Do l'or Nothing. The fc.Ho wing truthful and sensible article .ia;,*rjrthy of being seriously pondered by evwj newspaper reader. To a person not faitiiiar with itic internal workings of a news- -r^pçr establishment, there is a great deal of J mystery connected with " the art preservative I of irts," but to the familiar worker in the sanctum, there is nothing so mysterious as the morbid demand for editorial sorviciS as a ma.ter of course, or in the way of friendship. As "man cannot live by bread alone," so a iicvípaper cannot sustain itself solely on goid wishes. It must have substantial pabu¬ lum '' Mend, mark, learn and inwardly di- gtst;' the following :. My observation enable nie to state, as a fart, that publishers of newspapers are more porty rewarded than any oilier class of men imho United States, who invest an equal uiount of labor, capital and thought, 'limy an expected to do more service for less pay, Unland more sp juging and ''dead heading:" tor»)ff and defend more people without lee útíiopc nf reward than any oilier class. They credit, wider and .longer, get oftener cbatod, suiter more pecuniary loss, arc oftener tb victims of misplaced confidence than any o-icr calling in the community. People pay rtprintcr's bili with much more reluctance lim any other, lt goes burder with them to epeud a dollar on a valuable newspaper than toona needless gewgaw; yet everybody anils himself of the use of the editor's pen ad the printer's ink. How many professional mid political rcpu- ttions and fortunes have been mude and sus- lined by tho friendly, though unrequited pen f the editor? How many embryo towns nd cities have been brought into notice and ulf d into pto perity by the press? IIow lauy rajlroatis now in successful operations ould have foundered but for the " lever" jal movps the world? Tu short, what branch ? industry and activity has not been promo- d, stimulated : ni defended by the press? And who has tendered it more than a mis- .ab!e pittance for ils services? The bazaars :' fashion and the haunts of dissipation and .ipetite are thronged with an eager crowd, earing goid in their palms, and ihe conimodi- e3 there vended are cold at enormous profits, lough intrinsically worthless, and paid for i th ECrupul.us punctuality ; while the count- ig room of the newspaper is the seat of ¡wing, cheapening trade, orders and pennies. I is made a point of honor to liquidate a rog bid, but not of dishonor to repudiate a rinter's bill. Ayo, and more; the editors of a daily lurnal are expected to give their morning .aders the Intent items of intelligence. To o this they must do without the natural ecp of ordinär}' mortals. The Email boura ? the morning lind them away from their mies and families, reading proof sheets, ipping items from exchanges, preparing legrapbic dispatches for compositors to set, id endeavoring to coin a small pittance dcb many a narrow minded pub'ic begrudge em; and when, wo.-u out by incessant toil, ey " shake off this mortal coil,'' if they ve enough of this world's poods to pay sir funeral expens s, their brother editors \y well exe'aim, ff well done good and thful servant"-of an ungrateful public It ig generally bplieved that editors and inters can live on air, or that they have inexhaustible mino of wealth always at îir command. They tiped no money, and hence they can put off until a convenient season, while ; milliner's bill must be promptly liqudatcd. Ntwbtm Journal. ri it Si A' si tl tl Ol t! st th va th ai a Ci tb B br hi fa en sit th th ed ne an ed un mi lat th su tn« up tbi be mc ma W*< tar vyo CV.t do1 o'i rei: ¡ur he" the pul reg mil . Meanest Place in the World. It has been stated lhat the Chicago Board Trade rescinded the resolution to subscribe ,000 to the suffering poor of the South, ie amount raised-§225-was so small it jt was resolved to return it to tho it rs.. Ibis reminds the Hichmond Dispatch .. Baldwin's story about the stranger who, inp in Chicago nnd going to the gates arded by St. lVtcr, was refused admit tance, cai Peter saying there was no such place on Mr .th ns Chicago. A map was produced, the to ] ce p dnted outland the stranger admitted ; ! ger ut," said St. Peter, I'll be hanged if you tim n jt the first man that ever came here h^ m Chicago." -1 -_ the JÎ5*f* "John," asked a physician, "did Mrs. jj eon got tho medicino I ordered?" " I guess so','» \^¡¡¡¿ Hod John, for I saw crapo op the door next did* Terrible Colliery Explosion at Clover Hill Hines. The following paragraphs in relation to the terrible explosion which took place at the Clover Hill Mines, near Richmond, on Wednesday the 3d, are taken from me de¬ tailed reports, published in the Richmond Difpatch : Bright Hope Mine was opened in 1857 by the Clover Hill Railroad Company. It has two shafts, about SOO feet in depth, and ic extends north and south about 3 500 feet. In 1859 an explosion took place in this mine, which iesu.ted io the ceath of nine men. It has always been considered very safe, having as Line avenues and apparatus for ventilation as it was possible to have, and, therefore, accidents can only be attributable to neg¬ ligence. When we reached tho mouth of the pit we found the northern or downcast shaft entirely closed with sand, while the southern shaft was filled with a blue sulphurous smoke up to within Un feet of the top. Nothing could be seen beyond this : not a sound came from the dep:hs below ; and the thought that sixty- nine human beings lie dead at the bottom was sickening. We turned away and left the scene, finding it necessary to collect ourselves before proceeding to gat her the facts connec¬ ted with the calamity. Wo were enabled through the courtesy of Captain J. P. Cox, assistant superintendent of the mines, to gather the substance of what we give below : At about half-past 2 o'clock on Wednesday afternoon a tremendous explosion was heard, proceeding from the mouth of the northern shaft of Bright Hope mine, which-was follow-- ed by a rush of dust and smoko from both shafts. The explosion was supposed to have taken place on the upper or mining level. In a mioute or two afterward a secoad explosion took place, which was nearly as loud as the first, and in about ten minutes this was fol- lowed by a third explosion, which could scarcely be heard. Superintendent Owens and Captain Cox immediately went to work with what force could be gathered. They 1 fi:st commenced to fix the ropes, which were found to havebeen broken by tho force of tho explosion ; and without these it was im- 1 possible to descend. Thc rope was taken from the s mthern shaft and attached to that of the northern shaft. The telegraph wire 1 communication between the pits and the en- ' gi nc house was also found to be broken. This 1 had to be remedied, and it wa; fully 5 o'clock before everything was ia readiness for the descent. At this time, Thomas Marshall, Sr., chief gasman, John Strong and James Duggon, miners, descenc-cd the pit slowly in a .«mall rock bucket, to within about 100 feet of the bottom, or 750 feel from the top, when they could go no further, and were forced to j ascend inconsequence cit the'giving out of J the telegraph wire. They hallowed down in- 1 to the pit, but could hear no reply. ! After they had reached the top, more wire was obtained and attached, and in about an hour the same party again went down, and reached the bottom bftbe shaft. They found the water-sink there filled up with timbers, j blown into it by the explosion. Marshall ' went out into thc air passage about twenty j feet, and found the door or the regulation ol' 1 vaniiUtion so impeded that he could gono 1 further. Strong went out'ïutô the upper level 1 of thc miue about eighty fec-t, and »aw a fire 1 near o>io of the magoziiifcs. Ile also discov- crcd a dead mule about t.venty feet oft'. They J hallo ed repeatedly, but could not hear the 8 slightest sound iu reply. Fearing to go fur- 1 ltor on account of thc fire, the men returned fl o the top of thc pit. * This examination not proving satisfactory, * mother was made the next morning by Thom- ? u Marshall, Jr., Richard Berry and Lewis J* Jox, colored, with the same result. The tire 11 vas still found burning, and an attempt to a ret to the south shaft through the " stoppings" s or air proved futile on account of their being P docked up with the wreck of the explosion. 11 L'he party ascended, and upon making their Sl epoic, thc dreadful and only alternative of J los ug thc shafts was determined upon, so *? s to exclude the air, and thus smother thc 0 'he northern shaft was closed, but the south- P rn shaft was left open, for fear that the ex- a an.-ion of heated air would cause an air l' xplosion. This shnft wai stopped yest*r- 0 ay-a. slight aperture hoing left to prevent a xplosion. 'c Thc scene at the pit a'ter the explosion c' ras one terror and confusion. The report .as so loud as to bc heard for miles ; and such *( s to h ave no doubt as to its cause. In a c' loment the miners in the vicinity, the wives nd children of those who were within, hur¬ led toward the pit. Farmen who were plough« lg in thc fields unhitched their horses and allopcd thither, and in the course of an hour jveral hundred persons were gathered lhere, A: [en mn here and there in the wildest confu- hi on ; women and children gathered around jn icm, shrieking and imploring them to save b] vir husbands, their fathers, their brothers, (j ; their sjons, and it wai impossible to get a icm from tho sp it. Quiet could not be re- ta ottd until the first party descended. Then tit icy awaited in dreadful anxiety to bear what st ijrht be the result. A The fruitlessness ot the first attempt made tic o suspense during the second but the more vful ; an 1 when the worst was made kuown, at wail of despair arose that made the stern- an t and stoutest hearts quail. Who can tell be e deep, bitter anguish of those women ? «ri ut a few hours ago their husband', sons and ph others bad left them in thu full bloom of ¡altbj and now they lie duad, hundreds of wi st bolow them, io the very bowels ol the Cc rth, torn to piecer by the dreadful cxplo- nu rn, some of them perhaps stilt lingering in 0ff 0 agonies of suffocation. Night fell upon ge¡ e scone, but they moved not, and who dar- disturb them in their desolation? The ex xt sun rose upon it, and ;her.: were wives res d sisters still there, their countenances fill- By with dismay, aud their bands clenched in uoi ito despair, CD) Among the whites were several young uu ;n who had fought gallantly during the ari e war, and who were furced to work in the ; mines for want of employment. They fra] rvived the perils and hardships of war to ( ¡ct with a death far more terrible than any thi on the battle field. Thirty whites and tba Tty niue colored men have perished. gre l'ho eaiise qf the explosion can, of course, wo only a matter of conjecture. ] Ibero are employed in the pit three gas- l'ia sn ; Thomas Marshall. Sr., is the chief gas- t ie n, and Thomas Marshall, Jr., and John eir .-.ale, assistants. The duties of the assis- u n its arc to go down in thc pits be füre the "le plpnen, e^an^lne car-efullj', and see that Pn) n-yihing is all right. The first one goes ,yn in thc morning, and hi relieved at 12 ¡ lock by tho sacoud. Beth of them ar« ,i " luired to m»ke continual rounds, and if f gas iff found in any one of the " upset«," "u, warns tho hands not to go there, and if ,b_ re is any great danger, ho has them taken (jan « rob iome time since cue of the dnors for tho the ulatlon of air in " Upset'1 No. 8. north aooi :e level, had to be taken down for some chai iso or otbor. This fact was repotted to ptr' . Marshall. Sr., who ordered his assistants givi put it up, for whilst it might not be dan- treI OUR whilst the fan was running in the day hur c, gas might accumulate ai night. It seems, h<ir vevcr, that the door had nol. been replaced. *en rhoraas Marshall, Jr., went on duty on wftV morning bf the explosion, and neglected visit this ."Upset" in his rounds. .When nier evetí by G.'orgo Weale, he reporled to jP9 1 "all right.'; It is surmised that Vpeftle I va Íl not visit the Upset, ana that it had be-1 toei se choked np «n% ¿a*, tomo c( shich .bi* was driven ¡uto the main level, and was set fire to hy a mule driver in passing. The reader may judge of the terrific force of the explosion hythe following incident: The bucket, Bhoe and lantern of HL'am Mc- Gruder, a " hanger on" at the bottom of one of the shafts, were blown to the top of the mine, a distance of seven hundred and ninety* feet. Important Circular from Gen. Wagener. So. CA. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION, 1 Charleston, 5th April, 1867. J To the Land-otcners in South Carolina: GENTLEMEN :--I take the liberty tc- appeal to your patriotism in behalf of the loceiitly cn- acted measure of immigration, at least to the patriotism of those among you who entertain the opinion that an increase of population, industry and capital, will be beneficial to the State. It is well known that European immigra¬ tion is now mostly flowing into thc West, where cheap lands and 'many facilities and other inducements are offered. In the new States public lands are yet to be had at a nominal outlay, and a stranger going there need not for a moment be at a loss waere to locate, thousands of places being alw.jys for sale and registered for his selection. With u ; it is different. Although there may per haps be thousands of places for sale in South Carolina, no ono can know where to find them unless they are advertised and regis¬ tered in Rome well known and accessible lo cal i ty. For this the Bureau of Immigration has partly been established. Without any charge whatever to tho land-owner, hin lands that he can spare for sale, will be registered and advertised io the best markets of the world. But how can this be done, unless you forward thc information ? Have you no lands to spare ? If you have, put rrj a fair and reasonable price, make the nditions of payment as liberal as you cac 'escribe their location, capacities andadvant .¿es, and communicate with this Bureau- It may be said, we will sell a portion of our lands r.-aaonabiy aad on fair enough terms, if a pu: c'aaser come But it must be remembered .hat no one c tn koo w this, and besides, that fie t ng r w ll be ut a great expense, whilst in ineercdaty lookiog for lands, of which no one can inform him. Will be not rather gotos ¡ection of country where no suc'a delays and iifficulties need be encountered ? And then igain, the European immigrants thi.t arc ooking for employment, laborers, servants, ?nechanics, etc., of every kind,. where arc hey to fiod it? In your villages, on your plantations, do you want a blacksmith, wheelwright, millwright, carpenter, cabinet naker, saddler, shoemaker, tailor, etc., this Bureau will endeavor to supply you. But rou should say so, how else am I to know ? it would never do to send such people tramp, ng about the country without an object. Do rou have any good positions for factories, ivbich you are unwilling or unab.e to develop ^ourselves, why should you not inform this Fiureau thereof, slate their facilities and ad millages, their probable prospect of success, md your terms of lease or sale? Di you lave valuable mineral lands that you cannot .ealize for the want of capital, why nor. ena- jle mo to endeavor to do h for you ? If! wi I :ost you nothing. I may not succeed, but it ivlHTiotrfeciop-tbttrwant of trying. .1 -rould espcctfolly but earnestly urge that this mat cr receive a prompt consideration. If there ire a few men in every district willing to peud a few hours for the general gool, let hem meet nt a convenient place, let ¿hem rather such information as they can, and hon inform this Bureau what is wanted for heir neighborhood and what can be done herc to further the intentions of the '.aw ; I et them say what laborers, servants, meehan- t ta, etc., are wanted or could find employment, 1 od let them fix upon a current rate of rca- t onable wages for their district; let them on-- t eavor also to obtain informai ion. of such 1 racts of lands, as might be had for leawo or i ile, describe their quality and value, and r whatever eise they may deem of importance most respectfully, therefore, solicit the co pcration of all public spirited men, mon) es- ecially of the members of the Legislature nd tho editors of public journals. Under ic firm conviction that immigration ia one j1 f the most vital necessities of tho S^ate, and |c sure means by which a portion of our irroer prosperity may be soonest restored, I ren take the liberty respectfully to sc-licit J 5 e honorable the Judges, to bring this mat- . ? ir to the attention of the public in their larges to the Grand * ¡ries of their eire ails. | J Respectfully, JOHN A. WAGENER, Cominisssioner. ' t F si THE CONFERENCE BETWEEN TUE MILITARY ¡ ra CIVIL AUTHORITIES.-In compliance with s request, Major General Sickles, comm! nd- j. g this Military District, was met yesterday ^ r Governors Worth, of North Carolina, md rr, of this Slate, for the purpose of having free conference upon the preliminary de- ¡j ila of reorganization under the Reconstruc- j <j >n Bills. The interview was, we unc-er and, mutually agreeable and satisfactory. a naongst thc results attained we may men- b >n the following : w The details of registration will be immedi- w ely prepared by direction of Gen. Sickies, d put Into operation as soon as persons can found act in tho capacity of register! who j j| 3 qualified under the provisions of the Sup jmental Bill to do so. No elections for Municipal or State office* ll be held In either of the Sales until ihn inventions which are to bc called t-hall hr.vo ¡t and adopted now Constitution*. No civil M leer will bo removed who faithfully disclur- P.1 i his duties. ct Whenever vacancies occur by reason of tho w piration of tho tenure of office, by death. J? sgnation or otherwise, they will be filled appointments to be made by the Gover- ? rs of these States, if the officers are of t*ae " iracter elected by the General Assemblies, less special reasons to the contrary should se, or by the Commanding General, if y are of the class elected by popular suf- çe. jovcrnors Worth and Orr leave the eily s morning for their respective capitals, ard y will devote themselves assiduously to the at and difficult responsibilities of the I , rk of reconstruction. t is a matter of profound congratulation , t such cordial relations subsist between military and civil authorities ; and we , neatly hope that nothing may occur to uwr armony whioh will contribute so much to. progress and prosperity of these States.- irleston Courier, 9th. wi I MOT»1 OF THE BASICS.-Some time a«*o re was a dancing party given up North j it of the Ldies present had little babies, iso noisy perversity required too much at- \\on to p¿¡'mit. the mothers to enjoy tb) oe. A number of gallant young men inteered to watch the young ones while; parents indulged in a " break down." No uer had the women left the babies in rgo of the mischievous devils, thun they oped the infants, changed their Clothes, ng tho apparel of one to another. The dance r, it was lime to go home, and the mothers riedly took each a baby; in the dress or' own, aud sur ted, some to their home:, or fifteen miles off, and were far on their before daylight. But the day following .e was a tremendous row in tho. nettie- it; mother's discovered th»\t a single night changed tab se* of their bab'ea--obsar- bn disclosed the physical phenomèns, and wai i commenced some of tts tallest pedes* UM nismj living milt* apart, it repaired fcwc ¿g JUS wc cia i the inp Mr ore agi aui J the put the api 1 cen days to unmix the.babiw, apd as mny monUw to restore tho women to -heir naturel sweet dispositions. Td this day.it is unsafe foi* the. baby mixers to venture into the territory. -- Miss AUGUSTA J. EVANJI-This celebrated Southern novelist, whoso bestand latest wort, " St. Elmo," has been the -ubject of so rauch warm appréciation and carping criticism, left our city last week for her home in Mcbile. During her stay among us» ßlus Evans was the recipient of courteous attention from thc families of anny of our higbejt and most cmiaeat citizens, who were (dad to have an opportunity of showing their admiration for ono whose nobility of character throws her intellect into the shade, and whose chcrm of manner secures not only forgiveness for her eradition, but forgetfulness of itv This we consider the greatest triunpb the talented author has yet achieved. If nb one can read Miss Evans' writings Without wondering at her research, no one can enjoy her conversation without admiring the total absence tf pedantry, the lack of lite¬ rary assumption of any kind that marks it throughout, the complete subo-dination of the * authoress to the woman. The South- may well be proud of ita gifted daughter, of her talent, her learning, her principle^ her patri¬ otism, the purity of ber literary ambition, and the ever present sense of responsibility that guides and controls her pea. She will leave " no line that dying she would wish to blot/' May she soon see her own loved South free and happy, aud live to contribute to ita litera- tnre many a noble lesson hidden under tho pleasing guise of fiction. The respect and admiration of thc friends she mado in New York follow her to Alabama.-Metropolitan Record. MORALS or WALL STREET.-The recent quarrel among a coterie of Wall street specu¬ lators, has led to Tome strange disclosures of the method of doing business in the myste-1 rious realms of gold and stocks. It is very plain, in tho first place, that the system of speculating is in no wise different, except in magnitude, from ordinary gambling. A game in Erie stock is precisely the same, in a moral p j'iLt of view, as a game at keno or any opera tion in a faro bank. Theonty real differer c > is in the amount of monoy involved. Itisveiyo rious nod contradictory that thc culpability of a moral evil should be deemed les» because hat evil is committed on a grand scale ¡yet EG it is. Ordinary gambling is subject to nocturnal .. visitations of police, if it bc carried on in side streets, and the stakes aro small, but let a similar game be pin red in a brown stone man¬ sion, with thousands of dollars instead of tens,. and DO church could bc more safe from mo¬ lestation. Make the stakes larger still, and hazard hundreds of thousands,'or. millions, and the game becamcs highly respectable, and may be played in broad daylight, with doors and windows open,. and the players will be received into the best society. Yet all-thia speculation in stock, is neither more nor less than au exaggeration of the same offense which, on a .-mall scale, is so odious lo all :. honest, conscientious metnbeirs pf the commu* - : nity. It is worse than useless-it is unjust and cowardly-to single out the insignificant offender:, for punishment and let the great. ones go free and unnoticed. The laws on this subject are Badly defective. This wild and scheming class of rueu are really useless mem¬ bers of society; tboy do nothing to advance tho goneral good ; they produce pt thing, sup¬ ply nothing. On the contrary, they do soci- sty incalculable misc'jief; they kmp financial i ti ai rs in a constant state of agitation and un¬ certainty; and every now and thou throw .hu entire country into panic and confusion, [f the late development? are a fair sample of .ho dealings of speculators among, themselves,. ,he state of their morals must indeed be low, br they seem to have utterly disregarded even ;bat honor which is popularly supposed to re- ;ain a dwelling pince in thc bosoms of thieves. X is this infidelity to one another that has nade the public acquainted with their dis¬ graceful doings_N. Y. Sun. -? ? »-. i. A HOG IN Ilóors.-Tho Vergennes Ter- nontcr tells thc .ollowing ludi'rous story : A fe VT days since a lady residing in the lästern part of tho State, having just return- id from an evening's entertainment, hearing i noise on the baca stoop-a long and very larrow ono-she stepped out to ascertain the lause. At the further end she discovered the ut ruder io the shape of a gold sized hog. ¡he at once assumed a belligerent attitude, tad commence 1 screaming " Whee I wjfce i" ['he hog touk the alarm, and made for thc loor, and, discovering the largest space to »c between the lady's two feet, pitched for hat, and she instantly assumed 9 horizontal lositioa and movement for the door. But to ircveut a premature elopeuiei. t she caught old of a post and ber hoops caught thc hog. Iis swincship found himself at onco incarccr- ted in hoops. Then came th¿ struggle-a roman's determination agaiust; a hog's will -a contest uot unequal, but as persistent as was ludicrous. The noise b rought tho la¬ y's good mother to thu scene, jut what could ie do? although thc squealing of thc pig ad the positive assertion that she should e killed," was hard for a fond mother to hear ithout lending assistance. A compromise as unavoidable, and, to effect hi-, the hoopä ere unfastened, and away went h s pig-ship, ?rayed iu his new attire, lacking only one ting to make him respectably dressed, viz : waterfall, A Good Joke. Many year« ago, whan chut ult organs first uno in usc, a worthy old clorgymtn . was wtor of a church where they had just pur« tascd an organ. Not far from the church as a large town pasture, where * great many .tt e grazed and among them a large bulb ne hot Sabbath in tbe summer, Mr. bull .mc up near the church grazing, and just as e Rev. Mr. B- was in the midst of his ser* on- 'boo-woo-woo' went the bull. The parson paused, looked np at the sing' g scats, and with 3 grave farce said : 'I would thank the musicians not to tame* cir instruments during service ; it annoys 3 very much.' The people stared, and the minister went 'Boo-woo woo,' went the bull again as he ew a little nearer the church. The parson paused again and addressed 0 choir : 'I really wish the singers would not tune eil instruments while I am preaching.' The congregation tittered, for they knew int the real cause of the disturbance was. The old parson went on again md he had t about got started good when, 'Boo-woo- ?o' came from Mr. bul) The minister paused unce more and ex¬ ime d : 1 have twice requested the musicians in gallery not to tune their instrumenta dur- > the sermon. I now particularly request . L-that he will not tune hi- double basa ?an while I am preaching.' This was too much. L- got up, too much tated at the idea of speaking our, in church, 1 stammered out : It is-isn't me, parson B-, it-it is that -d town bull. J®* Tbs C&¡tteae*wome») who wül wait ea Chinese restaurant in tho Exhi Kins* wero tàf&hS1'*T'* l% oost apiece pick of Chinóse women cost only $120 eco. ©» In PinjQsylvania thoy have a new li- ise law^o-aeHiuc. giwngawayyorin any r supplying liquor,, lo persona under twea- tofcyiaSsof age.nor to dranlouäs/nor to i one oa Sunday.

Edgefield advertiser.(Edgefield, S.C.) 1867-04-17.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026897/1867-04-17/ed...BY iUíRISOE, REESE &, CO. EDGEFIELD, S. C;*APEIL 17, 1867. VOLUME [XXIL-No

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Page 1: Edgefield advertiser.(Edgefield, S.C.) 1867-04-17.chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026897/1867-04-17/ed...BY iUíRISOE, REESE &, CO. EDGEFIELD, S. C;*APEIL 17, 1867. VOLUME [XXIL-No

BY iUíRISOE, REESE &, CO. EDGEFIELD, S. C;*APEIL 17, 1867. VOLUME [XXIL-No. 16«

p np. i

mraense IR

KENN 323S BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA.,

Address themselves to the public in very emphatic fenns. EveryGentleman in South Carolina and Georgia who will

take the trouble to call "at our

A UiWÍ

Will be willing to endorse our assertion :

That our House contains the MOST COMPLETEASSORTMENT, and the most elegantly

finished Stock oí'

READY-MADE' CLOTHINGron

SPRIGG AND SUMMER WEAR,That has ever vet been offered in Augusto.

It is, therefore, i ¡ii portant that every gentleman who desires lo be well dressed, in

garments that lire THOROUGHLY FINISHED, and, at the same time, at thoLEAST POSSIBLE EXPENSE, to call at once at

KENNY & GRAY'S.

OUR TAILORING DEPARTMENTIs supplied with thc CHOICEST CLOTHS, CASSIAtERES and VESTINGS,including the mast delicate shades of color to he found in the country ; and its ope¬rations will bc prosecuted with I Jr.s KW KU CAKE AND ATTENTION oil thc part of the

Proprietors, so that nothing ci* titi inferior character can possibly escape their

vigilance.We have made special selections of choir-.' FURNISHING GOODS, which will

receive more care than heretofore, and enable our patrons to supply themselves al

our House with every article tl. \y may require.&5&*0ur /'rices arc immensely 'Reduced!

"KBWSY & GHAT, |238 Broad Street. .Ausrusta.

'? 3m 14Apr 1

O£> A "RT'O Í i Pit,

EDUCEvery Article in Our Stock Largely

Bechiced !

0MANUFACTURERS OF

na te, i y i ö kn ¥8

CLOTHIN P

Offer the remainder of their WINTER CLOTHING and GENTS"FURNISHING GOODS Rt REDUCED PRICES in order to make

??.oom for the Spring Trade.Our well assorted Stock of Cassimeres, Broad Cloths, Doeskins,

Tweeds, Jeans, Hats, and many other Goods, wc offer at the same

Reduced Prices.^/"Buyers will save money by calling and examining for

themselves.l;jrTtemember we have ONLY ONE PRICE, always giving

our Customers thc advantage of a fair Bargain.

I. SIMON & BRO.,FASHIONABLE CLOTHING EMPORIUM,

224 Broad Street, Four Dcors: Below Central ¡lote!, Augusta, Ga«Austina, -lan 7 tf

G. <§£ A. GrX ii s ii rance _A. g e ii t s.

No. 221 Broad Street,

çprçscïii thc following Insurance Companies :

THE GEORGIAHOME. cf Columba, (Ja.

MERCHANTS. .of Hartford, Conn.

JEFFERSON.of Scottariliè, Vu.

CT TY, FIKE.of Hartford, Conn.

MERCHANTS' & MECHANICS'.of Ballimon*, Md.

SIAR FIR K.of Now York.

NATIONAL MARINE ANO FIRE,.of New Orleans, La.

NrJW ENG LAND.of Hartford, Conn.

?ASSOCIATED FIREMAN'S,.of Baltimore, Md'.NORTH AMERICAN.,. or Hartford, Cona.

VIRGINIA.of Staunton, Vu.

TX ION.of Baltimore, Md.

INSURANCE AND SAVING. of Richmond, Va.

SOUTHERN MUTUAL LIFE.ofSOUTKRRN ACCIDENTAL .of

Columbia, S. C.Lynchburg, Va.

£27*MR. I». R. DURISOE ig our authorized Agent for EdgcOcld and vicinity, nnd partie*wishing to insure will f n I it to their interest to cull on him.

Incasta. Oct Cu 6m 43

Administrator's Notice. Administrator's Notice.A LL person? having demanda against tl c Ee- » u, pcr?0ní hnvin-r demands npninst tho Es-±X t ito of JAMES Ai. LANHAM, deceased, »rc /3L t:if(. 0f JAMES H. WHITE, deceased, aro

requested to ..resent thew, duly mtoited. io ll»»earnestly requested to present them tit an cnrlv

undersigned, or to W. W. Adan*, Esqr . ot -.ncc; j jHV t" ti,c undersigned : and thn.-o indebted to

and those in anywise indebted 'io K&fcFi'ínto i:r<: y:i¡,¡ E-U'e arc requeued to make immédiate pny-oirne.^ly rcf.uest'MÎ to nwlce pnyjECEt withcut «lc- "j^nt. . E. W.-II(ÎRNE,lay lo tho uudurMgccij

JAS. A. DEVORE, Ad'or.Jan. ts, ¿ra4

Adin'or., in ri^ht of biß wife, on thoEstate of J. H. Whit«, dee'd.

3wi9 fm p ;

--«aa-»»-«m-a--

»'« Who Took thc Brtby?"Onco in a happy homo, a sweet, brigl

diod. At evening, after tho funeral, wifamily wero titting sadly together, littllsaid, "Mamma who took the baby on thside?" " Or. the other sido of what, my" Of death, mamma. You always took car

herc, and she was too little to go alonetook her on tho other side ?"

Wh.r: will tho baby do without you, moth«You used to watch and tend her all thc

You never gave her up to any other,Until God carno aud took her life away

You 'icld hor in your arms until sho died,-Who took the baby cn thu other side ?

Who was there when sho woke to bendher,

Watching hor waking as you used to do-To hold her in your arms, to soothe and lovWHI she not mourn, mamma, and look fo

Herc, if you did not como she grieved and c

Who took tho baby on tho other sido ?

Mor* tender eyes, dear child, beheld that Y

Than ever mother bent on her or theo ;And though my heart wi:h loneliness is broMy angel babe will never mourn for me;

For her those blessed arms were open wide" The Savior tooit her ou the ethe- side."

-Jwieríca» J/cf«fii

Bluck Eyes.Oh çive rae the dark b!ack eye,Tuc eyo that sparkles and flashes

For a thousand witcheries that HoI i the shade of its raven lashes.

The languishing eye of bluoI: all loo slow in its wooing,

For an angel it moy do,Bat nit for a ruau's undoing.

The glance of a dark, black eye.Like a sunbeam, w.irtn and glowing,

From your head to jour heart will fly,Aad you're gone eroyou think you are g

Then hurrah for the dark, black cj'e!T lat carrie." thc heart by storming,

The hlue ono may waken a sigh.Bat the he'rt gets tired whilo it's wan

He h and Women at Salt Lak

Mr. ElEPWORTH DIXON*, editor of thcdon AUicna-uni, tvho has but recentlya visit to thc United States, has publishbuck *allcd '. New America." His pictof we item life aro most admirably drawr.

large portion of the bx*k is devoted to Iand tho Mormons. Tho social effect of p

gamy receives a practical illustration amthe Mormons, which Mr. DIXON did not

to notice. His remarks on this subjectvery i iteresting and instructive :

WOMAN AT SALT LACE.

And what, as regards the woman henis tho visible issue of this strange cxperiuiin social and family life?

During our fifteen days' residence ann

thc Saints, we have had as many opportttics aCorded us for forming a judgmentchis question as has ever been gwen to Gtile-travelers. We have seen the Presidand SOU1C ot' the apostles daily ; wu have htreceived into many Mormon bosses, andtrodeced to nearly all thc leading Saints ;have dined at their tables: wc have chat!

with their children. The feelings whichhave gained as to tho t fleet of Mormon 1on the character and position of woman, Í

the growth of catv, of study, and cxpericr:<and our friends at Salt Lake, we hope, whthey will differ from our views' will not. reluLo credit us with candor and good faith.

If you listen to the ciders only, you won

fancy hat the idea of a plurality of wivxcites in tuc female breast the wildest lanaism. Thi-y tell you that ti Monuan preach*¡wcllii g on the examples of Sarai andRachel linds bis most willing listeners on lifemale benches. They say that a ladies' citwas formed at Nauvoo to foster polygamand lu njsko it the fashion : that muthepreach it to their dal***liters ; that poetessprai.se if. They ask y. u to believe that tlfirst wife, being head of the harem, (akup m herself io seek out and court ibo pretieal ¡il "ls : 01.ly too proud and happy wht-he can bring a jjvw Hagar, a new Billahher husband's arin«.

This male version of tho facts is certainsuppoited by fcucb female writers as BeliucPratt.

In my opinion, Mormonism is nota rcligiufor woman. I will not say that it degradther, for the term degradation is o-icn to abustbu', it certainly lowers her, according to ot

Gentile ideas, in th.1; social scale. lu fae«roman is not in society herc at all. Thlong blank walls, the embowered cottagethe empty windows, doorways ar.d veranda;all suggest to an English eye some!hing (

thc jea otity, the seclusion, the subordinatioof a Moslem harcir., rather than the gravitand freedom of a Christian hoi,)*, ifeij rar«

Iv see each other at home, still more rare!in thc company of tbbir wives. SecliiMooeetns to be a fashion wherever polygamy ithc law. Now, by itself, and apart from aldoctrinos and moralities, the baoit of seclu«ling women from society must tend to dintheir sight and dull their hearing; for if con

versation quickens igen, it still more quickenwomen; and weean round!:- sn--, aft-.-r expoHence in many households at Salt Lake, t!;athese Mormou ladies have lost the practiciand thc- power of laking part even in sucllight Ulk e; animates a dinner table and i

drawing room. We hare met with only on<

exception to this rule, that of a lady whtbad b?cn up< n the stage. In some housesthe wives sf our ho?ts, with babies in theilarms, ran about the rooms, fetching in chumpugne, drawing corks, carrying cake arifruit, lighting matches, iceing water, »hihthe men were lolling in chairs, putting theilfeet out of windows, smoking cigars, and tos

sing off beaker" of vi ¡ne.

(N\ B.-Abstinence from wilie an:] tobaccois recommended by Young and taught in theMormon schools; but'we found cigars in ma¬

ny houses, and wine in ¡ill except in hotels!)flic ladies, as a rule, arc plainly, not to saypoorly, dressed; with no bright colors, no

gay Ûounaea and furbelows. They are verv

quiet and Subdued u) incliner, with what ap¬peared tous an unnatural caira, aa ff alldash, all sportiveness, all life, had been preach¬ed out cf them. They seldom str¡led, exceptwith a wan and wearied look ; and thoughthey Kt-.-: all of English race, we have never

heard them ia:j¿d) n ith the bright merrimentof our English giris.

They know very little, and feel uh ii.lerp3tin very f.<w things. I assume that they are

all great at nursing, and I know ihat manyof them arc clever ut drying and preservingfruit. Hut they arc habitually shy and re¬

served, as tkyfigh they were afraid lest theirbold opinion on a iuiïaet, on a watercourse,or a mountain-range, should Oe fiOi'tjd.erpdby their lords as a dangerous intrusion on

thc sanctities of domestic life. While youare in tho h mso, they are brought into thepublic room as children aro with us; theyconic in for a moment, courtesy and shakehands ; then (hop oiiL again, as though theyfelt themselves in company rather out ofplace. I have never seen this sort of «hjne-«among grown women, except in a Syrian tent.

Anything like the ease and bearing of an

English lady is not to-be found in Salt Lake,even among thc households of the rich. Herono woman reigns. Here, no woman hints byher manner that she is mistress of her own

huiise. She docs not always sit at the table ;ajid] when sho occupies a place beside her

Ilord; ii ia not at Ihb head, bul on one of thclower seats. In fact, bar Hie does not seem

to be in tho fikydor and tüp 4&¿Dg toora so I

! much as in thc nursery, the kitche:laundry, and the fruit-shed..The grace, the play, the freedom of a

English lady are quite unknown to hermon sister. Only when the subjectplurality of wives has been under cons

tiou between host and guest, haveseen a Mormon lady's face grow brightthen it was to look a sentiment, to hiopinion, the reverse of those maintainBelinda Pratt.

I am convinced that the practice ofrying a plurality of wives is not populaithe female Saints. Besides what I have-and heard from Mormou wives, thermliving in polygamous families, I have tialone and freely, with eight or nine difigirls, all of whom have lived at Salt Laltwo or threo years. They are undoiMormons, who have made many sacrifiatheir religion ; but after seeing thc filife of their fellow Saints, they have on«

all become hostile to polygamy. Twthree of these girls are pretty, and n

have been married in a month. Theybeen courted very much, and one ofhas received no less than seven offers. íof her lovers are old and rich, some yand poor, with their fortunes still toThe old fellows have already got their h<full of wives, and sho will not fall iat<train as either a fifty or a fifteenth spothe young men being true Saint«, willpromise to confine themselves forever toearliest vows, and so she refuses to wedof them. All these girls prefer to rer

single-to live a life of labor and depend-as servants, chambermaids, milliners, c

women-to a life of comparative ease

leisure in the harem of a Mormon BishofIt is a common belief, gatherednn a g

measure from thc famous letter on pluraby Belinda Pratt, that the Mormon Sanwilling to seek out, and cager to bestow,number of Hagars on her lord. More tone Saint has told me that this is true,rule, though he admits there may be exitiona in .so far as thc Mormon Saraishort of her high calling. My expericlies among the exceptions solely. ' S<wives may be good enough to undertakeoffice. I have never fouucLone who wc

own it, even in the presence of her busbsand wheu the occasion might have been 1to warrant a little feminine fibbing. E\lady to whom I have put this question flusinto denial, though with that cagedbroken courage which seems to characterevery Mormon wife. " Court a new wifehi«) !" said one lady ; ,: no woman couldthat ; and no woman would submit tbcourted by a woman."The process of laking either a second o

sixteent h wile is the same in al! cases.

will tell you" said a mormon elder, <; howdo these things in our order. For exam]I have two wives living, and one wife deI am thinking of taking another, as I c

well afford the expense, and a man is r

much respected iu the church who has Ithan three wives. Well I fix my mind 01

young lady, and consider within myselfwheer it is the will i-f God that I should se

her. If I feel, in my own heart, that it wot

bc right to try, I speak to my bishop, w

advises and approves, as he shall tee ll: ;which I go to the President, who wiil con¿:"r ..i.ci.'úr T «ma good mau ana a wnri

husband, capable of ruling my little homhold, keeping peace Among my wive , brining up my children in the fear of God j and1 am lound worthy, in his sight, of the bbsing, I shall obtain permisión to go on withe chase. Then I lay tho whole matter

my desire, my permission and my choice, hfore my first wife, as head of my house, ai

lake her counsel as to the young lady's haits, character, and accomplishments. Pihaps 1 may speak with my second wife ; pehaps not ; since it is not so much her batne.-s as it is that of my first wife; besifwhich, my first wife is older in yeirs, luseen more cf life, and is much more offrie id to me than tho second. An objelion on the first wife's part would ha)great weight with mc ; I should not care mucior what tho second either said or thoughSupposing all togo well, 1 should next ha\a talk with the young lady's father : and If liconsented lb my suit, I should then addie-the young lady herself*"

(i Um before you take all these pains t

get her,'* 1 asked, " would vou not have trieto be .»ure ol' your ground with the lady hoiself? Would you not have courted her an

won her good will before taking all these peisons into your trust."No," answered the elder; "I sboul

think that wrong. In our society we arstrict. 1 should have seen the girl, in th

theatre, in the tabernacle, in the social hallI should haved talked with her, danced wither, walked about willi her, and in thise wayascertained her merits and guessed her ¡Delinations: but I should not have made love t

her, in your sense ol the word, got up an un

derí'atidinir with her, and entered into private and personal engagement of the alfec-lions. These allai rs are not of earth, but o

heaven, and with"us they must follow the or

der ol' God's kingdom and church."This elder's two wives live in separate houser

and seldom see each other. While we havtbeen at Salt Luke, a child of thc second wifihas fallen sick ; there has been much troubhin the bcuse; and wo have heard the firswife, ai who^e cottage we were dining, sa;she would go aud pay the second wife a visitThe elder would not hear of such a thingand he was certainly right, as the sicknesiwas supposed to bo dyptheria, and she had £

brood of little folks nlayiug about her kneesStill tho manner of her proposal told 149 thalshe was uot in thc habit of daily intercoursewith her sister wife. .

lt is an open question in Utah whether ilia better for a plural household to be gather¬ed under one roof or not. Young sets the ex

ample of unity, so far at least as his actualwives and children are concerned. A few oldladies who have been scaled to him for heav¬en, whether in his owunaineor jn that olJoseph, dwelt in cottages apart j hut the do*,en women, who share his own couch, who arithe mothers of his children, live in one blockclose to another, dine at one table and juinin the family prayers. Taylor, the apostle,keeps hie families in separate cottages andorc'j&rds ; two of his wives only live in hisprincipal house ¡ the rest have ieuemeuta oftheir own. Every man is ffeo to arrange hishousehold as he likes; so long as ho avoidsContention, and promotes the public peace.

,: How will you arrange your visits wheny OJ have won and scaled your new wife?"1 asked my friendly and communicative el¬der j P shall you adopt the Oriental custom

of equal justice and attention to tho Indios laiddown by Moses and by Mohammed V1

" By heaven sir," he answered, with a-flus'-:of scorn, "no mau shall tell me what to

do except-" giving the initials ol bia name.

"You mean y¿m will do as you like ?"ff Thad's just it."And such. I believe, ja l^hp universal habit

of thought in thjs city and this church. Alanii king, and woman has no rigb't.7. She lías,in faut, qo recognized place in creation, ot lierthan that of a surmuit and companion of hot-lord. Man is master, woman is slave. J can¬

not wonder that girls who remember th'irEnglish homes should shrink from mart iagoin this strange community, ovon though thovhave accepted tho doctrino ol Young, thatplurality is the law of heaven aud of God.'. I believe it's right," s dd to me a rosy E >g-liah damsel, who has been threo years inUlah, " and I think it is good for those wholike it: but it is not good for me. an. I willnot have it." *

" But if Young should command yu ?" I" üe.won'tJ" ¿aid ibo ¿'ari with th- tpssu^ ?'

Cai

her rolden curls ; " and if be were to do so,I wouljinot. A girl can please herself wheth¬er she t.irri< s or not ; audi, lor one, willn¿ver go iuto a house where there is anotherwife." j

" Da .the wives dislike it?"" Some don't', most do. They take it for

theirteligion.; I can't say any wonjan likesit. Some women live very comfortably to¬gether f not many ; most have their tuft's andquarreh, though their husbands may neverknow of them- No woman likes to seo anew wife come into the house."A Saint would tell you that such a damsel

a3 my rosy friend-is only half a Mormon yet ;he would probably ask you to reject such ev¬idence aslrumpery and temporr. y ; and pleadthat you can have no fair means of judgingsuch an institution as polygamy, until you areableioTstudy its effects in the fourth and üftbgeneral ion..Meanwhile, tho judgment which we have

formed about it-from what we have seen andheardmay be expressed in a few words. Itfinds â new place for woman, which is not theplace she occupies in the society of Çnglandand the United States. It transfers her fromthe flrawing-room to the kitchen, and whenit finds her in the nursery it locks her in it.We may call Buch a chango a degradation ;the "lormons call it a reformation. . We donot say that any of these Mormon ladies havebeen worse in their moralities and their spir¬itualities by the change ; probably they havenot j but in everything that concerns theirgrace,':order, rank and representation in sc-cieij, they are unquestionably lowered, ac¬cording to our standards. Malo Saints dc-clar| that in this city women have becomemore domestic, wifely, motherly, than t'-ieyare krrong the'Gentiles ; aud that what t'-eyLa*'<j lost in show, in brilliancy, in accomplish¬ment, they have gained in virtue and in ser¬vice! To me, the very best wo.nen appearto be little more than domestic drudges, nev¬er rjeing iuto the rank of real friends andcompanions of their lords. Taylor's daughterswaifed on us at table ; two pretty, elegant,Engjish-lookiug girls. Wc should have pre¬ferred standing behind their chairs and helpingthem to dainties of fowl and cake ; buttheralormon, like the Moslem, keeps a heavyhand on his female folks. Women at SaltLallé are made to keep their place. A girlmujt address her father as " Slr," and shewoild hardly presume to sit down in. hispresence until she had received his orders.

fsWomerj," said Young to tuc, " will bemore easily saved than men. They have nottbi sense to go far wrong. Men have more

knowledge and more power ; therefore theycan'go more quickly and more certainly tohell.Wit Mormon creed appears to be that wo-

mau is not worth damnation.¡Jh the Mormon heaven, men, on account of

thar sins, may slop BUort in the stage of an¬

geló; but women, whatever their offences,are jail to become the wives of Gods.

^Wlat Newspapers Do l'or Nothing.The fc.Howing truthful and sensible article

.ia;,*rjrthy of being seriously pondered byevwj newspaper reader. To a person not

faitiiiar with itic internal workings of a news-

-r^pçr establishment, there is a great deal of Jmystery connected with " the art preservative Iof irts," but to the familiar worker in thesanctum, there is nothing so mysterious as

the morbid demand for editorial sorviciS as a

ma.ter of course, or in the way of friendship.As "man cannot live by bread alone," so a

iicvípaper cannot sustain itself solely on

goid wishes. It must have substantial pabu¬lum '' Mend, mark, learn and inwardly di-gtst;' the following :.

My observation enable nie to state, as a

fart, that publishers of newspapers are more

porty rewarded than any oilier class of menimho United States, who invest an equaluiount of labor, capital and thought, 'limyan expected to do more service for less pay,Unland more sp juging and ''dead heading:"tor»)ff and defend more people without leeútíiopc nf reward than any oilier class.They credit, wider and .longer, get oftener

cbatod, suiter more pecuniary loss, arc oftenertb victims of misplaced confidence than anyo-icr calling in the community. People payrtprintcr's bili with much more reluctancelim any other, lt goes burder with them toepeud a dollar on a valuable newspaper thantoona needless gewgaw; yet everybodyanils himself of the use of the editor's penad the printer's ink.How many professional mid political rcpu-

ttions and fortunes have been mude and sus-lined by tho friendly, though unrequited penf the editor? How many embryo townsnd cities have been brought into notice andulf d into pto perity by the press? IIowlauy rajlroatis now in successful operationsould have foundered but for the " lever"jal movps the world? Tu short, what branch? industry and activity has not been promo-d, stimulated : ni defended by the press?And who has tendered it more than a mis-.ab!e pittance for ils services? The bazaars:' fashion and the haunts of dissipation and.ipetite are thronged with an eager crowd,earing goid in their palms, and ihe conimodi-e3 there vended are cold at enormous profits,lough intrinsically worthless, and paid fori th ECrupul.us punctuality ; while the count-ig room of the newspaper is the seat of¡wing, cheapening trade, orders and pennies.I is made a point of honor to liquidate a

rog bid, but not of dishonor to repudiate arinter's bill.Ayo, and more; the editors of a daily

lurnal are expected to give their morning.aders the Intent items of intelligence. Too this they must do without the naturalecp of ordinär}' mortals. The Email boura? the morning lind them away from theirmies and families, reading proof sheets,ipping items from exchanges, preparinglegrapbic dispatches for compositors to set,id endeavoring to coin a small pittancedcb many a narrow minded pub'ic begrudgeem; and when, wo.-u out by incessant toil,ey " shake off this mortal coil,'' if theyve enough of this world's poods to paysir funeral expens s, their brother editors\y well exe'aim, ff well done good andthful servant"-of an ungrateful publicIt ig generally bplieved that editors andinters can live on air, or that they haveinexhaustible mino of wealth always at

îir command.They tiped no money, and hence they can

put off until a convenient season, while; milliner's bill must be promptly liqudatcd.Ntwbtm Journal.

riit

SiA'sitltlOlt!stthva

thaiaCitbBbrhifaensitththedneanedun

milatthsutn«

uptbi

be

mcmaW*<tarvyoCV.tdo1o'irei:¡urhe"thepul

regmil

. Meanest Place in the World.It has been stated lhat the Chicago BoardTrade rescinded the resolution to subscribe,000 to the suffering poor of the South,ie amount raised-§225-was so smallit jt was resolved to return it to thoit rs..Ibis reminds the Hichmond Dispatch oí.. Baldwin's story about the stranger who,inp in Chicago nnd going to the gatesarded by St. lVtcr, was refused admit tance, caiPeter saying there was no such place on Mr

.th ns Chicago. A map was produced, the to ]ce p dnted outland the stranger admitted ; ! gerut," said St. Peter, I'll be hanged if you timn jt the first man that ever came here h^m Chicago." -1

-_ theJÎ5*f* "John," asked a physician, "did Mrs. jjeon got tho medicino I ordered?" " I guess so','» \^¡¡¡¿Hod John, for I saw crapo op the door next did*

Terrible Colliery Explosion at CloverHill Hines.

The following paragraphs in relation to theterrible explosion which took place at theClover Hill Mines, near Richmond, on

Wednesday the 3d, are taken from me de¬tailed reports, published in the RichmondDifpatch :

Bright Hope Mine was opened in 1857 bythe Clover Hill Railroad Company. It hastwo shafts, about SOO feet in depth, and icextends north and south about 3 500 feet.In 1859 an explosion took place in this mine,which iesu.ted io the ceath of nine men. Ithas always been considered very safe, havingas Line avenues and apparatus for ventilationas it was possible to have, and, therefore,accidents can only be attributable to neg¬ligence.When we reached tho mouth of the pit we

found the northern or downcast shaft entirelyclosed with sand, while the southern shaftwas filled with a blue sulphurous smoke upto within Un feet of the top. Nothing couldbe seen beyond this : not a sound came fromthe dep:hs below ; and the thought that sixty-nine human beings lie dead at the bottomwas sickening. We turned away and left thescene, finding it necessary to collect ourselvesbefore proceeding to gat her the facts connec¬ted with the calamity. Wo were enabledthrough the courtesy of Captain J. P. Cox,assistant superintendent of the mines, to

gather the substance of what we give below :

At about half-past 2 o'clock on Wednesdayafternoon a tremendous explosion was heard,proceeding from the mouth of the northernshaft of Bright Hope mine, which-was follow--ed by a rush of dust and smoko from bothshafts. The explosion was supposed to havetaken place on the upper or mining level. Ina mioute or two afterward a secoad explosiontook place, which was nearly as loud as thefirst, and in about ten minutes this was fol-lowed by a third explosion, which couldscarcely be heard. Superintendent Owensand Captain Cox immediately went to workwith what force could be gathered. They 1

fi:st commenced to fix the ropes, which werefound to havebeen broken by tho force oftho explosion ; and without these it was im- 1

possible to descend. Thc rope was takenfrom the s mthern shaft and attached to thatof the northern shaft. The telegraph wire 1

communication between the pits and the en- '

gi nc house was also found to be broken. This 1

had to be remedied, and it wa; fully 5 o'clockbefore everything was ia readiness for thedescent. At this time, Thomas Marshall,Sr., chief gasman, John Strong and JamesDuggon, miners, descenc-cd the pit slowly ina .«mall rock bucket, to within about 100 feetof the bottom, or 750 feel from the top, whenthey could go no further, and were forced to jascend inconsequence cit the'giving out of Jthe telegraph wire. They hallowed down in- 1

to the pit, but could hear no reply. !After they had reached the top, more wire

was obtained and attached, and in about anhour the same party again went down, andreached the bottom bftbe shaft. They foundthe water-sink there filled up with timbers, jblown into it by the explosion. Marshall '

went out into thc air passage about twenty jfeet, and found the door or the regulation ol' 1

vaniiUtion so impeded that he could gono 1

further. Strong went out'ïutô the upper level 1

of thc miue about eighty fec-t, and »aw a fire 1

near o>io of the magoziiifcs. Ile also discov-crcd a dead mule about t.venty feet oft'. They J

hallo ed repeatedly, but could not hear the 8

slightest sound iu reply. Fearing to go fur- 1

ltor on account of thc fire, the men returned flo the top of thc pit. *This examination not proving satisfactory, *

mother was made the next morning by Thom- ?

u Marshall, Jr., Richard Berry and Lewis J*Jox, colored, with the same result. The tire 11

vas still found burning, and an attempt to a

ret to the south shaft through the " stoppings" s

or air proved futile on account of their being Pdocked up with the wreck of the explosion. 11

L'he party ascended, and upon making their Sl

epoic, thc dreadful and only alternative of Jlos ug thc shafts was determined upon, so *?

s to exclude the air, and thus smother thc 0

'he northern shaft was closed, but the south- Prn shaft was left open, for fear that the ex- a

an.-ion of heated air would cause an air l'xplosion. This shnft wai stopped yest*r- 0

ay-a. slight aperture hoing left to prevent a

xplosion. 'cThc scene at the pit a'ter the explosion c'

ras one terror and confusion. The report.as so loud as to bc heard for miles ; and such *(s to h ave no doubt as to its cause. In a c'loment the miners in the vicinity, the wivesnd children of those who were within, hur¬led toward the pit. Farmen who were plough«lg in thc fields unhitched their horses andallopcd thither, and in the course of an hourjveral hundred persons were gathered lhere, A:[en mn here and there in the wildest confu- hion ; women and children gathered around jnicm, shrieking and imploring them to save b]vir husbands, their fathers, their brothers, (j; their sjons, and it wai impossible to get aicm from tho sp it. Quiet could not be re- taottd until the first party descended. Then titicy awaited in dreadful anxiety to bear what stijrht be the result. AThe fruitlessness ot the first attempt made tico suspense during the second but the morevful ; an 1 when the worst was made kuown, atwail of despair arose that made the stern- ant and stoutest hearts quail. Who can tell bee deep, bitter anguish of those women ? «riut a few hours ago their husband', sons and phothers bad left them in thu full bloom of¡altbj and now they lie duad, hundreds of wist bolow them, io the very bowels ol the Ccrth, torn to piecer by the dreadful cxplo- nurn, some of them perhaps stilt lingering in 0ff0 agonies of suffocation. Night fell upon ge¡e scone, but they moved not, and who dar-disturb them in their desolation? The exxt sun rose upon it, and ;her.: were wives resd sisters still there, their countenances fill- Bywith dismay, aud their bands clenched in uoiito despair, CD)Among the whites were several young uu;n who had fought gallantly during the arie war, and who were furced to work in the; mines for want of employment. They fra]rvived the perils and hardships of war to (¡ct with a death far more terrible than any thion the battle field. Thirty whites and tbaTty niue colored men have perished. grel'ho eaiise qf the explosion can, of course, woonly a matter of conjecture. ]Ibero are employed in the pit three gas- l'iasn ; Thomas Marshall. Sr., is the chief gas- t ien, and Thomas Marshall, Jr., and John eir

.-.ale, assistants. The duties of the assis- u nits arc to go down in thc pits befüre the "leplpnen, e^an^lne car-efullj', and see that Pn)n-yihing is all right. The first one goes,yn in thc morning, and hi relieved at 12 ¡

lock by tho sacoud. Beth of them ar« ,i "

luired to m»ke continual rounds, and iff gas iff found in any one of the " upset«," "u,warns tho hands not to go there, and if ,b_re is any great danger, ho has them taken (jan

« robiome time since cue of the dnors for tho theulatlon of air in " Upset'1 No. 8. north aooi:e level, had to be taken down for some chaiiso or otbor. This fact was repotted to ptr'. Marshall. Sr., who ordered his assistants giviput it up, for whilst it might not be dan- treIOUR whilst the fan was running in the day hurc, gas might accumulate ai night. It seems, h<irvevcr, that the door had nol. been replaced. *enrhoraas Marshall, Jr., went on duty on wftVmorning bf the explosion, and neglectedvisit this ."Upset" in his rounds. .When nierevetí by G.'orgo Weale, he reporled to jP91 "all right.'; It is surmised that Vpeftle I va Ílnot visit the Upset, ana that it had be-1 toeise choked np «n% ¿a*, tomo c( shich .bi*

was driven ¡uto the main level, and was setfire to hy a mule driver in passing.The reader may judge of the terrific force

of the explosion hythe following incident:The bucket, Bhoe and lantern of HL'am Mc-Gruder, a " hanger on" at the bottom of oneof the shafts, were blown to the top of themine, a distance of seven hundred and ninety*feet.

Important Circular from Gen. Wagener.So. CA. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION, 1

Charleston, 5th April, 1867. JTo the Land-otcners in South Carolina:GENTLEMEN :--I take the liberty tc- appeal

to your patriotism in behalf of the loceiitly cn-acted measure of immigration, at least to thepatriotism of those among you who entertainthe opinion that an increase of population,industry and capital, will be beneficial to theState.

It is well known that European immigra¬tion is now mostly flowing into thc West,where cheap lands and 'many facilities andother inducements are offered. In the newStates public lands are yet to be had at anominal outlay, and a stranger going thereneed not for a moment be at a loss waere tolocate, thousands of places being alw.jys forsale and registered for his selection. Withu ; it is different. Although there may perhaps be thousands of places for sale in SouthCarolina, no ono can know where to findthem unless they are advertised and regis¬tered in Rome well known and accessible local i ty. For this the Bureau of Immigrationhas partly been established. Without anycharge whatever to tho land-owner, hin landsthat he can spare for sale, will be registeredand advertised io the best markets of theworld. But how can this be done, unlessyou forward thc information ? Have you nolands to spare ? If you have, put rrj a fairand reasonable price, make the nditionsof payment as liberal as you cac 'escribetheir location, capacities andadvant .¿es, andcommunicate with this Bureau- It may besaid, we will sell a portion of our landsr.-aaonabiy aad on fair enough terms, if a

pu: c'aaser come But it must be remembered.hat no one c tn koow this, and besides, that fiet ng r w ll be ut a great expense, whilst inineercdaty lookiog for lands, of which noone can inform him. Will be not rather gotos¡ection of country where no suc'a delays andiifficulties need be encountered ? And thenigain, the European immigrants thi.t arcooking for employment, laborers, servants,?nechanics, etc., of every kind,. where arc

hey to fiod it? In your villages, on yourplantations, do you want a blacksmith,wheelwright, millwright, carpenter, cabinetnaker, saddler, shoemaker, tailor, etc., thisBureau will endeavor to supply you. Butrou should say so, how else am I to know ?it would never do to send such people tramp,ng about the country without an object. Dorou have any good positions for factories,ivbich you are unwilling or unab.e to develop^ourselves, why should you not inform thisFiureau thereof, slate their facilities and admillages, their probable prospect of success,md your terms of lease or sale? Di youlave valuable mineral lands that you cannot.ealize for the want of capital, why nor. ena-jle mo to endeavor to do h for you ? If! wi I:ost you nothing. I may not succeed, but itivlHTiotrfeciop-tbttrwant of trying. .1 -rouldespcctfolly but earnestly urge that this matcr receive a prompt consideration. If thereire a few men in every district willing topeud a few hours for the general gool, lethem meet nt a convenient place, let ¿hemrather such information as they can, andhon inform this Bureau what is wanted forheir neighborhood and what can be doneherc to further the intentions of the '.aw ; Iet them say what laborers, servants, meehan- tta, etc., are wanted or could find employment, 1od let them fix upon a current rate of rca- tonable wages for their district; let them on-- teavor also to obtain informai ion. of such 1racts of lands, as might be had for leawo or i

ile, describe their quality and value, and r

whatever eise they may deem of importancemost respectfully, therefore, solicit the copcration of all public spirited men, mon) es-

ecially of the members of the Legislaturend tho editors of public journals. Underic firm conviction that immigration ia one j1f the most vital necessities of tho S^ate, and |csure means by which a portion of ourirroer prosperity may be soonest restored, Iren take the liberty respectfully to sc-licit J 5e honorable the Judges, to bring this mat- . ?

ir to the attention of the public in theirlarges to the Grand * ¡ries of their eire ails. | J

Respectfully,JOHN A. WAGENER,

Cominisssioner. 'tF

si

THE CONFERENCE BETWEEN TUE MILITARY ¡ra CIVIL AUTHORITIES.-In compliance with \¡s request, Major General Sickles, comm! nd- j.g this Military District, was met yesterday ^r Governors Worth, of North Carolina, mdrr, of this Slate, for the purpose of havingfree conference upon the preliminary de- ¡jila of reorganization under the Reconstruc- j <j>n Bills. The interview was, we unc-erand, mutually agreeable and satisfactory. anaongst thc results attained we may men- b>n the following : wThe details of registration will be immedi- wely prepared by direction of Gen. Sickies,d put Into operation as soon as persons canfound act in tho capacity of register! who j j|

3 qualified under the provisions of the Supjmental Bill to do so.No elections for Municipal or State office*ll be held In either of the Sales until ihninventions which are to bc called t-hall hr.vo¡t and adopted now Constitution*. No civil M

leer will bo removed who faithfully disclur- P.1i his duties. ctWhenever vacancies occur by reason of tho w

piration of tho tenure of office, by death. J?sgnation or otherwise, they will be filledappointments to be made by the Gover- ?rs of these States, if the officers are of t*ae

"

iracter elected by the General Assemblies,less special reasons to the contrary shouldse, or by the Commanding General, ify are of the class elected by popular suf-çe.jovcrnors Worth and Orr leave the eilys morning for their respective capitals, ardy will devote themselves assiduously to theat and difficult responsibilities of the I ,

rk of reconstruction.t is a matter of profound congratulation ,

t such cordial relations subsist betweenmilitary and civil authorities ; and we ,

neatly hope that nothing may occur to uwrarmony whioh will contribute so much to.progress and prosperity of these States.-irleston Courier, 9th.

wi

I MOT»1 OF THE BASICS.-Some time a«*ore was a dancing party given up North jit of the Ldies present had little babies,iso noisy perversity required too much at-\\on to p¿¡'mit. the mothers to enjoy tb)oe. A number of gallant young meninteered to watch the young ones while;parents indulged in a " break down." Nouer had the women left the babies inrgo of the mischievous devils, thun theyoped the infants, changed their Clothes,ng tho apparel ofone to another. The dancer, it was lime to go home, and the mothersriedly took each a baby; in the dress or'own, aud sur ted, some to their home:,or fifteen miles off, and were far on theirbefore daylight. But the day following

.e was a tremendous row in tho. nettie-it; mother's discovered th»\t a single nightchanged tab se* of their bab'ea--obsar-bn disclosed the physical phenomèns, and waii commenced some of tts tallest pedes* UMnismj living milt* apart, itrepaired fcwc ¿g

JUSwc

ciai

theinpMrore

agiaui

Jtheputtheapi

1cen

days to unmix the.babiw, apd asmnymonUwto restore tho women to -heir naturel sweetdispositions. Td this day.it is unsafe foi* the.baby mixers to venture into the territory.

--

Miss AUGUSTA J. EVANJI-This celebratedSouthern novelist, whoso bestand latest wort," St. Elmo," has been the -ubject of so rauchwarm appréciation and carping criticism, leftour city last week for her home in Mcbile.During her stay among us» ßlus Evans wasthe recipient of courteous attention from thcfamilies of anny of our higbejt and mostcmiaeat citizens, who were (dad to have an

opportunity of showing their admiration forono whose nobility of character throws herintellect into the shade, and whose chcrm ofmanner secures not only forgiveness for hereradition, but forgetfulness of itv This weconsider the greatest triunpb the talentedauthor has yet achieved.

If nb one can read Miss Evans' writingsWithout wondering at her research, no onecan enjoy her conversation without admiringthe total absence tf pedantry, the lack of lite¬rary assumption of any kind that marks itthroughout, the complete subo-dination of the *

authoress to the woman. The South- maywell be proud of ita gifted daughter, of hertalent, her learning, her principle^ her patri¬otism, the purity of ber literary ambition, andthe ever present sense of responsibility thatguides and controls her pea. She will leave" no line that dying she would wish to blot/'May she soon see her own loved South free

and happy, aud live to contribute to ita litera-tnre many a noble lesson hidden under thopleasing guise of fiction. The respect andadmiration of thc friends she mado in NewYork follow her to Alabama.-MetropolitanRecord.MORALS or WALL STREET.-The recent

quarrel among a coterie of Wall street specu¬lators, has led to Tome strange disclosures ofthe method of doing business in the myste-1rious realms of gold and stocks. It is veryplain, in tho first place, that the system ofspeculating is in no wise different, except inmagnitude, from ordinary gambling. Agame inErie stock is precisely the same, in a moralp j'iLt of view, as a game at keno or any operation in a faro bank. Theonty real differer c > isin theamount ofmonoy involved. Itisveiyorious nod contradictory that thc culpability ofa moral evil should be deemed les» becausehat evil is committed on a grand scale ¡yet EG itis. Ordinary gambling is subject to nocturnal ..

visitations of police, if it bc carried on in sidestreets, and the stakes aro small, but let asimilar game be pin red in a brown stone man¬sion, with thousands of dollars instead of tens,.and DO church could bc more safe from mo¬lestation. Make the stakes larger still, andhazard hundreds of thousands,'or. millions,and the game becamcs highly respectable, andmay be played in broad daylight, with doorsand windows open,. and the players will bereceived into the best society. Yet all-thiaspeculation in stock, is neither more nor lessthan au exaggeration of the same offensewhich, on a .-mall scale, is so odious lo all :.honest, conscientious metnbeirs pf the commu* - :nity. It is worse than useless-it is unjustand cowardly-to single out the insignificantoffender:, for punishment and let the great.ones go free and unnoticed. The laws on thissubject are Badly defective. This wild andscheming class of rueu are really useless mem¬bers of society; tboy do nothing to advancetho goneral good ; they produce pt thing, sup¬ply nothing. On the contrary, they do soci-sty incalculable misc'jief; they kmp financiali ti ai rs in a constant state of agitation and un¬certainty; and every now and thou throw.hu entire country into panic and confusion,[f the late development? are a fair sample of.ho dealings of speculators among, themselves,.,he state of their morals must indeed be low,br they seem to have utterly disregarded even;bat honor which is popularly supposed to re-;ain a dwelling pince in thc bosoms ofthieves.X is this infidelity to one another that hasnade the public acquainted with their dis¬graceful doings_N. Y. Sun.

-? ? »-. i.

A HOG IN Ilóors.-Tho Vergennes Ter-nontcr tells thc .ollowing ludi'rous story :

A fe VT days since a lady residing in thelästern part of tho State, having just return-id from an evening's entertainment, hearingi noise on the baca stoop-a long and verylarrow ono-she stepped out to ascertain thelause. At the further end she discovered theut ruder io the shape of a gold sized hog.¡he at once assumed a belligerent attitude,tad commence 1 screaming " Whee I wjfce i"['he hog touk the alarm, and made for thcloor, and, discovering the largest space to»c between the lady's two feet, pitched forhat, and she instantly assumed 9 horizontallositioa and movement for the door. But toircveut a premature elopeuiei. t she caughtold of a post and ber hoops caught thc hog.Iis swincship found himself at onco incarccr-ted in hoops. Then came th¿ struggle-aroman's determination agaiust; a hog's will-a contest uot unequal, but as persistent aswas ludicrous. The noise b rought tho la¬

y's good mother to thu scene, jut what couldie do? although thc squealing of thc pigad the positive assertion that she shoulde killed," was hard for a fond mother to hearithout lending assistance. A compromiseas unavoidable, and, to effect hi-, the hoopäere unfastened, and away went h s pig-ship,?rayed iu his new attire, lacking only oneting to make him respectably dressed, viz :waterfall,

A Good Joke.Many year« ago, whan chut ult organs firstuno in usc, a worthy old clorgymtn . waswtor of a church where they had just pur«tascd an organ. Not far from the churchas a large town pasture, where * great many.tt e grazed and among them a large bulbne hot Sabbath in tbe summer, Mr. bull.mc up near the church grazing, and just ase Rev. Mr. B- was in the midst of his ser*on- 'boo-woo-woo' went the bull.The parson paused, looked np at the sing'g scats, and with 3 grave farce said :'I would thank the musicians not to tame*cir instruments during service ; it annoys3 very much.'The people stared, and the minister went

'Boo-woo woo,' went the bull again as heew a little nearer the church.The parson paused again and addressed0 choir :'I really wish the singers would not tuneeil instruments while I am preaching.'The congregation tittered, for they knewint the real cause of the disturbance was.The old parson went on again md he hadt about got started good when, 'Boo-woo-?o' came from Mr. bul)The minister paused unce more and ex¬ime d :1 have twice requested the musicians ingallery not to tune their instrumenta dur-> the sermon. I now particularly request. L-that he will not tune hi- double basa?an while I am preaching.'This was too much. L- got up, too muchtated at the idea ofspeaking our, in church,1 stammered out :It is-isn't me, parson B-, it-it is that-d town bull.

J®* Tbs C&¡tteae*wome») who wül wait eaChinese restaurant in tho Exhi Kins* werotàf&hS1'*T'* l% oost apiecepick of Chinóse women cost only $120eco.

©» In PinjQsylvania thoy have a new li-ise law^o-aeHiuc. giwngawayyorin anyr supplying liquor,, lo persona under twea-tofcyiaSsof age.nor to dranlouäs/nor toi one oa Sunday.