Ilhfalh. Sfcifcu. >+. JkL The following bwwtiM tribute to the memor^Hom'IrtiW ?teburna Oemee Aram the lMblfcr-llatieu^ "He wMoflktl peopftwboae nationality, ??! ! *L ?uu viworjr. nubia in? breasts of those who knew hiut and lorcd liim, Who stood by his side in the front of the bsttie?they will grouse deepor and stronger euto* tloos. 11 is generous soul, his dn.untle.iH meio, his great heart?womanly for tenderness and lion-uke for courage?rise up before them, and cjrw that had wept dry the fountain of tear*, fill again and again. CLEB URXE. How far and fast tho autumn blast Bears the dead leaves o'er the ground ! As fast and far has tho hand oi war Strewed our country's brave around ! And Uieir nameless graves aro the ocean caTCS, The forest and mountain glen, Where the vulture screams as the angry streams Are hiding the bones of men ! And what anguished cries From the South ariso For the brave ones fallen in vain t While tho victor North Kings pecans forth, And exults in her broad domain ! As ftr6 suppressed in Vesuvius' breast, The latent fires of crime In the hnmnn frame pulse on the same, Till fanned by tho storms of time; As the lava fold swept uncontrolled Where Pompeii's glory shone, 80 the wakened rage of a Vandal ago When freedom is overthrown ! And we'll look iu tears, Through long, loug years, For the brightness shrouded o'er, But the goldon rays Of her halcyon days Shall return to tho land no more ! Then fling to the horde their base award? Their ohief his triumphal cruwn ; Place vile deceit in the judgment scat, Where honor is trampled down ; Give a paltry bribe to the hired scribo, To the venal bard his fee ; But him who draws in a righteous cause, A freeman's sword wive me Though his bonus should blench On the sea-washed bench; Though his grave bo the lowly mound, His name shall chime Through thu halls of time, And swell through the deep profound ! Ye brave enmasse. who fall, and pass To the leaden halls of death. There arc palms for the few, bill, alas, for you, Not a leaf from the victor's wreath! But 1 sing for one whoso glory shone, Like a meteor, bright and grand, Who gave his name to the trump of fame, And his blood to a generous land ! The festive toast, The soldier's boast, The type of a martial ago 1 Th?-foe of wrong, The soul of song, And the light of a future page ! The base gTOw bold for power and gold, The vain through fear of scorn ; The brave wax strung in their linto of wrong; But he was a warrior born; From bis oagle glance and stern ''Advance!" And his action, swift as thought. The rank and tile from his own fair isle Their courage electric caught. As the whirlwind's path Shews its fiercest wrath Through the torest's lordliest piucs, So the deepest wave Of the fallen brave Told where Cleburne crossod the linos. On Richmond's plain his captive train Outnumbered the host he led; And he won his stars on the field of Mars, Where the glorious Johnston blod ! 'Twas his to cope whilo a ray of hope IUum'd his flag, and then 'Twas his to die while that "flew high" In the van of chivalrio men ! Nor a braver host can Erin boast, i Nor lhau he a more gallant knight, Since the peerless Hugh Crossed the Avon dim. And Bugr.nl's hosts a flight. There were eyes afar thai watched your tar As it rose with the "Southern Cross;" There were hearts that bled when its course was sped, And Old Ireland felt your loss! While her flowers shall blow, or her waters flow inrougn nnannon, Miir, anrt I-oe, The patriot'? song ttball roll allong Their winding wave* for thee! And they'll tell with pndo JIow Clohurne died In the land of the "free and bravo, How his sword of might ' Was a beam of light, Though it led to an exile's grave. m i?i Laruk seizure Ot cos fit re rate gfm>i>9 at ' New Oni.kane.?The Collector at New Orleans has recently made an important scizuro of goods on board the steamer Doubloon, which arrived at that place from Shrevcport, and the goods are now hold in the treasury warehouse in the former city. The cargo consisted of one hundred and fifty bales of Mexican blanketa, gray Confederate cloth, ckuhing, and a quantity of cotton goods, the whole worth from eighty to one hundred thousand dollars. The following arc the circuinstanoei attending the capture: About the time of the xiunrcmlor of Kirby Smith's forces, a man named Oil van smuggled the goods across the llio Gifcmle into Texas, via Eagle Pass, for the use of the Confederate Qovernmont. The property was seized by the United States military authorities, but by some means or other they were afterwards released and turned over to tialvun s agent, who transported them in wagons through several counties in Texas, unsuccessfully offering them for sale as he went, until ho arrived at Shrrvepori. ' At the latter place a party, whose name is not given, obtained possession of the facts in the case, and at once placed himself in communication with Collector Kellogg, who placed the matter in tho hands of Acting Surveyor Cassard, who, after much patient watching and waiting, got. hold of tlicin on hoard tl c steamer above mentioned, as she was about to discharge her cargo at New Orleans. i. waiw ? A Prussian fleet of seventeen ships of war, carrying two hundred and forty gun t, will be concentrated iu the Daltic this Spring. % ' " 9 WXT A!ND IlUMOB. no;uk02. . ?' i Women ere seldom Bailors, bat they sometimes command a siaaok. Duty itself fe supreme delight when lore is the incentive to labor. How to repel a worthy young man in geatah of a modest wife : Show him "a cold houldor," A cook's perquisites do not extend to tho ownership oi her master, when ho comes home in the wet, and is dripping. ; It ie complained of Shakspcare, thnt he unnecessarily murdered Hamlet. Hut he haa been paid lor it. A great many Hamlets have murdered Shakspcaro. "Faith and shure," said Patrick meeting an engine, "that's tlio divil." "Och no," said Mike, "it's only a steamboat hunt ing for water." A man went to a Judge to be qualified for an office. Said he, " Hold up your haud; I'll swear you, but all creation could not qualify you." An old Grecian philosopher advises all men to know themselves. That's advising a good many to form very low and disrc- j putable acquaintances. An honest blacksmith, when advised to bring a suit for slander, said he could go into his shop and hauima- out a b< ttcr character than all the courts in the State Could give him. A little girl was lately reproved for play ing out doors with boys, and informed that being seven years old, she was "too big for that now." Hut with all imaginable innocence she replied: "Why, grandma, the bigger we grow the better wc like 'cm." Grandma took time to think. The following dialogue took ulace on i the Ohio railroad, between a "native" and a "down Easter Down Easter?Ilallo stranger, you up pear to be traveling'( Native?I always travel when 1 am una journey. 1 think I've seen you somewhere ? Very like ! I've cfton been there. Mighn't your name be Smith? Well, it might?if it wasn't soiut thing else! Have you been long in these parts ? Never longer than at present?five feet nine! Do you calculate to remain here sotnc time ? Well, T guess I'll stay till I'm ready to leave 1 1 reckon you were born in these parts ? Well, my native place is here or somewhero else. You travel as if money was plenty with you ? Well, I might 1 nve more, and be richei. Have you anything new ? Yes, 1 bought a whetstone this morning. I thought so; you're the sharpest blade j I've met with in many a day. GE31S. Graves are but the prints of the footsteps of the Angel of Eternal Life. What the world calls avarice, is oftcutimes no more than compulsory economy. There is one thing that the most success ful man most rarely succeeds in?and that is in making others forgive him his success. 'Tis meet that noble minds keep ever with their likes : for who so firm that cannot be seduced ??[Shakespeare. When men grow virtuous in their old age they are merely making a sacrifice to God of the devil's leavings.?[Dean Swift. Age should walk thoughtfully on the solemn, silent shore of that vast ocean it must sail so soon ! [?Young. And, most of nil, in man that ministers and servos the altar, in my soul 1 loathe all affectation.?[Cowper. Deliberate with caution, but act with decisiou : und yield with graoiousncss or oppose with firmness.?[Colton. It is good discretion not to take too! much of any mao at the first: because one can not bold out that proportion.? Bacon. The estimated force of oinumwdpr wlu n ?? 1 " "v" j exploded, is at leat-t 14 ,7.jO lbs. on every .square iucli of surface which confines it. Neither men nor women become what they wero intended to be. by carpeting their way with velvet; real strength is test- ! cH by difficulties. There aro 992 rivers in the 1'iiitcd t States; their whole length, ud. 1271. Some men are like tea?their real strength and goodness aro not properly drawn out until they have been a shoit time in hot water. Sound travels 13 miles in a minute; light 200,0(.(9 miles a second, and tlm attraction of gravitation is 50,000 time* swifter than light. Murk Antony, at the ebb-tide of bis fortune, remarked with mournful pleasure :1 "J have lost all, except what I have given II away. There are on earth 1,000,000,000, of inhabitants < )f tb. so 3:5 333 333 .tin I year; 7,780 every hour, and GO every minute?or one every second. Hut there arc more births than dcuths, ami to population j increases. ; t i ii mm*mt A Mew Island. KBMARKAULU PMBKOMSMA. A corrcspoudcut of the London Tiuic.-, writing from Athens, Greece, announces that a new Island began to rise above the level of the sea in the Boy ot Thera (Bantorin,) in the Grecian Archipeligo, on the 4th of February, uud in live days it attained the height of ft.mi one hundred and thirty to one hundred and fifty feet, with a length of upwards of three hundred and Kn? r?,.f ?i .. t i?i- - e ? * uitji iwt) aiiu u ui caniii ui one nunureu feet. It continues to increase, and consists of a rusty black mctalic lava, very heavy, and resembling hull'smelted scoria which has boiled op from a furnace. It contains many small whitish, semi transparent particles, disseminated through the mass-like quartz or feldspar. The eruption began on the 31st of January. A noise like volleys of artillery was heard, but without any earthquake. On the following day flumes Usccd from the sea, in a part of the bay culled Vulkunos, where the water is diseolorcd and impregnated with sulphur l'roui abundant springs at the bottom. The flames rose at inter- | vals to the height of fifteen feet, and were seen at times to issue from the southwestern part ot Nea Kaimone. That island was soon rent by a deep fissure, and the ! southern part sank considerably. On the 4th ol February the eruptions , became more violent and the sea more dis j turbed. (Jas forced itself up from the | depths with terrific noise, resembling the bursting of a steam boiler; flames arose at intervals, and white smoke, rising steadily formed an immense column, crowned with a curled capital of dark, heavy clouds.? The new island was visible next morning, increasing sensibly to the eye as it rose out .!? ?L oi tne sea ui no great distant to thcbouih of Kea Kaimene. The ucw island lias been visited by l)r. Dekiga'la, a man of science and an able observer, who will record accurately all tho phenomena ol the eruption nt> it proceeds. ; The heat ol the sea rose from 02 Fahren- > licit to 122 as near the vicin;ty of volcanic action as it was safe to approach The bottom ot the sen all round Kea Kaimene appears to have risen greatly. In one place, where the depth is marked on the Admiralty chart one hundred fathoms, it was loutid to be now only thirty, and at another where it was seventeen it is now only three fathoms. The new island, as it 1 increases, will probably torui a junction with Nca Kaimene. It grows, as it were, out into the sea, the mass below pushing upward that which is already above water. The lower part is hot, its fi-urcs, where they are deep, bflitig 170 Fahrenheit, and the upper part, alter four day's exposure, was found to le s0. At present the centre of tho volcanic force lies evidently far below the bottom of the sea, and only gases and Muoke work their way through the incumbent earth to the water, and escape in noise, flames and smoke to the surlaee. Hut should a fissure at the bottom of tho sea allow the water to penetrate to the tires that throw up the melted metal of the new island to the sur face, an eruption may take place of a kind similar to that which destroyed l'ouipeii, hut far more terrible. The eruption that formed the present island of Nca Kaimene began in the year 1707, and the volcanic action continued, without doing any serious injury to the inhabitants ?.t Thera, until 1713. It is pcsstblo the present eruption may continue as loug, and be as mild in its operation. Hut as lute as HibO a terrible eruption laid waste a great part of the island, and raised an island on it> northeastern coast, which soon aguiu sank into the sou, leaving a shoal. Tho island of t >1J Kuimcno made its lirst appearance in the year 108 before the i * * * * v^iirisiiiiii era. us sue was increased hy several eruj tions mentioned in history. The last addition it received was iu 1407. Hie small Kaimeno, which is nearest to Thorn, was thrown up in 1573. All the eruptions in the bays have been attended with similar phenomena. J he llriti-di naval commander at Malta , has si nt two ships to the seuno of these phenomena. A letter dated February 7, containing the latest news, says : 'The same smoke ami fire in the cvo ning as yesterday, and the hillock continues its opt rations. The sea, too, hoils beyond the cove, n.uro than yesterday. The hillock, or laud, will probably by tomorrow increase as far as the entrance to the cove, and be joined by its sides." A hungry Irishman, not long since, iu Loudon, mistaking a bather shop for an eating house, bolted in ami begged to be served. The barber, supposing from the length of his beard that lie wanted to be shaved, knocked up a basin of suds, and placing it before him, with u wash ball in it, went to get the ruzor. l'at, without j waiting lor grace, supped lip the suds, and 1 swallowed the wash ball ; and, on the bar- j ber's returning with the razor, coolly oh- j sorved : ' 1 hero is no occasion for u knife, hooey; yoir soup is very good, but your j turnip is not ijuite boiled enough." So , paying r.H money, no uaue me asiotmncu barber adieu To obtain the tractive power of a locomotive, multiply the square u! the diameter i of the cylinder in inches by the pressure ) in lbs. per square inch Multiply the pro duct by the length ot the stroke in inches, and divide by the diaiuetcr of the wheel in inches. 'I he quotient is the tractive power in lbs. r THE SOUTHER? ' < ?? K ] N G & a WHOLESALE No. 151 Meeting Stree OPPOSITE CHAR E. D. KING, M. D., [ ?f N. JESSE J. CASSUMEY. ) Cuarlksto*, Feuruart 18, 18CG. TV. T>. MilNter RESPECTFULLY annmiDccs to the public, tli.it lie lias uguiu commeuced tlio Tinning UuwinoKW, and feels himself well prepared and qualified to do all kinds of work in his line, with neatness and dispatch. Ho lint a htnjr ttock on hand, of every thing usually found in an establishment of this kind All articles of TIN WAKE, will he kept on hand, thereby rendering himself able to supply the wants of any who may call on kiui. lie is prepared to do such work as ROOPINiS, GUTTERING AND REPAIRING. He will work und sell, wholesale or retail, LOW FUJI CASH. All work warranted. SHOP NEAR THE SPARTAN OFFICE. Feb 1 1 tf ""sTATJK (TpuSOuT fl CAROLINA. SPA KT A NHL'KG DISTRICT. S. X. Evins, Administrator, Applicant, Mary Dodd and others, Defendants. Petition for proceeds of sale of real eatate to be paid over to the Administrator to pay debts, settlement of estato, &c. IT appearing to my satisfaction hat MAIDEN GKEES. and the legal heirs and representatives of FI.OYD TANNER, deceased, names not remembered, Defendants in this ouee, reaide beyond the limits of this State : it is therefore ordered that they appear at the Court of Ordiunry to he holden ut Spartanburg Court House for Spartanburg District, on the 27th day of April next, to shew cause if any exists, why the proceeds of the sale of the real estate of W T. TANNER, deceased, should uot be paid over to S. N. Evins, Administrator, to be applied to the payment of the debts of said deceased ; and also to shew cause, if any, why a final settlement of the personal estate of , said \V. T. TANNER, deceased, should not j be made. Given under my hand this 27th day of January. A. D.. 18t?fl, J NO. EARLE BOMAR, O. S. D. Feb 1 1 Sm J. A. HENNEMAN 'jyA'-f Oil Jhg VUAIKIBIft vVIN 1> JKWKLLEB. ealaaaatcw C ^ < UI'KllUUUUBji V. ? U, J HAS JUST HECK IVHit A S E L K C T A 3 S O U T M E N T OF WATCHES, JEWELRY, plated w a re A N D I 'aiK'y < * ootls. A L S () A NEW LOT OF EIGHT-DAY AND TWENTYFOUR HOUR CLOCKS. A FIRST-RATE ARTICLE. WAIUlENTEl) TWO Y EAI18. Spectacles for all Eyes and Ages. \TTATl.'HKS, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY \\ neatly repaired, aud wirranted. J. A. HFNNEMAN, At the Old I'lace on Mum-Street. Fe?> 122 -1 tf RANGES, FIRE BRICKS &c. ADAMS, DAMOY K Co , IIWR " KKllPKWn RI:KI1RS? AT Time OLD STiVND, 16, Broad Street, Chorlestou, S. C.. And keep Constantly on I land COOKI\(i STOVES O! niK l,iifes( luipiin ? ?! rn(k'rni), llange's (irate*, Marble ManllrR, Tinners' Machines nnMMISSION MERCHANTS, -lnd Wholesale Dealers in Groceries, Wines, Liquors, &c, IVo. 11>7\ Knstllny? Oi l'. rilA/KHS WlIARr, C IIA R L XS T OX, 6'. C. IIUNRY BIPCIIOFF. | C. Wt'LBDHN*. Mcli 1 o dm JMHP ,rv f DRUG HOCHEb. 1 >,)% > n jjL lLH ,?lCM?Wtr> M) * %SSJiE?, I 1 DRUUOISTB, J jo?- J I, vuuneHion} oo? VJCL* &*. n LESTON HOTEL. " i*H if*rl 11 arth Carolina. j . **-**? j = Into i JACOB SMALL & CO., Bakery and ConJeettaary, CORNER KINO & PRINCESS 6T8.r CHARLESTON, 8. C, /CONSTANTLYonhand a large 1/ asHortmcnt of BISCUIT8 and CRACKERS. CANDIES and CONFECTIONARY. AU goods warranted and order, 4Uled with diapntak, and old at tha lowest marital rates. March 1 6 8a WILLIS & CHISQLM, COMMISSION MERCHANT*? " A*?" -V- ; &WM*WjtWill attend to the pur hue, sale and ship Meat to Foreign and Domestic Porta, Of Cotton, Rice, Lumber and Naval Stores. Atlantic Wharf, Charleston, 8. C. E. WILLIS, ALEX, tt, CHLSOLM. Mch 1 5 tt PHILIP FOGARTY