The Carolina Spartan. (Spartanburg, S.C.) 1852-1896, June 14, 1866, Image 4
Reply to tke Conquered Banner
BT AM BSOUSB WOMAB.
Gallant nation foiled by numbers,
Bey not thet your hopes ere fled; '
Keep that glorious flag lb at alnmbers, <
One day to avenge your dead.
Keep it, widowed, sonless mothers,
Keep it, sisters, mourning brothers : i
Furl it with an iron will,
Furl it now, but keep it still. 1
Think not that it's work is done,
Kept it till your children take it,
Onoe again to hail and make it
All jour aona hare bled and fought for,
All their noble hearts hare sought for,
Bled and fought for all alone.
All alone! aye, shame the story,
Millions here deplore the stain.
Shame, alas 1 for England's glory
Freedom called and called in rain.
Furl that banner sadly, slowly,
Furl it gently for 'tis holy,
fiH that day, yes, furl it sadly,
Then onoe more unfold it gladlyConquered
Banner I keep It still.
WF? S3
WIT AND HUMOR.
If seme men's bodies were not straightcr
then their minds, they wonid be crooked
moagh to ride vpon their own backs. *
Slander not others because they bare
slandered you. Bite not a reptile because
yon hare been bitten by him.
Why cannot a deai man be legally conrioted
of crime T Beoauso it ia not lawful
te condemn a man without a hearing.
Some men's honesty and decorum are
phantoms that feed on the air of opinion,
and, like the ohameleon, change aa often
it * 1
mm io?r iooa. I
Nearly all the poet offices in Texas are '
in oharge of females. It works so well 1
that the males now arriro and depart cvo- <
ty hour in the day. i
"Poor old General Debility !" exclaimod 1
^ Mm. Partington; "it is surprising how long 1
he lives and what exoitement he creates. 1
The papers are fall of remedies for him." '
They say that Thad. Stevens is getting *
very old. We hope that he won't "go to
seed." There's onough ot the brood already.
"How does that look ?" said Mr. Cramp,
holding ont bis brawny hand. "That," in (
terposed Amos, "looks as if you wcro out of
soap."
Henry Ward Beecher says that he
would aa soon go a courting with his fath |
er's old love-letters as to go to Church and
earry a book to pray out of.
On the lawfulness of using rouge.
"Why," replied the holy bishop, "some
pious men opjeet to it; others see no barm
in it. I will hold a middle course, and allow
yon to put it on one oheek."
"Thank (iod that 1 hare got my hat *
back from thia congregation !" said a die* '
appointed clergyman, turning it upeide
down, when it waa returned empty to him
at the oloae of a contribution.
"Why do you continue to retail spirituoua
liquora ?" "if I did not sell, these
drinking fellows would not oome to my
shop, and I should hare no ohance to give
them good advice."
Why is a horse like the letter 0 ? Because
G makes it go. And what is the
differenoe between tnis conundrum and my
aunt who squints P One is a query with
an answer; the other is an aunt with a
queer eye. %
He that gives good advioe, builds with
one hand; he that gives good advice, conn
oil and example, bnilds with both; but he
that gives good admonition and bad example,
builds with one hand and pulls down
with the other.
od similar terms.
Ruined.?"Pa," said an interesting juYenile,
the other day to his indulgent sire,
"Pa, haeen't I got a Tote as well as the <
President 7" <
"No, xny child." i
"Yes, I have, pa; my fifth toe is a V-toe, <
I reoon."
"Take the child to his mother?he's
ruined." <
Lord Roekrille used to deolare that no <
nan was really drunk so long as he could
hold on by (be grass. "Why so f" asked I
a friend. "Why so?' exclaimed his lord- '
ship with high disdain, "you fool, to prorant
his tumbling up, of course."
"Julius, how do yer fetch der latitude ?" 1
"How do L fetch der latitude?why, you
bring de parrolix of der horrison opposite 1
to der node of de hemisphere, and from do 1
right angle struck by de converse proportions,
yon find de qnotiont in do lunar ouus- '
tie, subduoed from tho orbit of do arf."
A young widow, who had married an
old nan, was forever speaking ot "my first
husband." The second husband at last
gently remonstrated. "I expect," said the
young wife pouting, "you will want me to '
remember you when you are dead and
gone."
A barber remarked to a customer in his I
hands that he thought the cholera was in 1
the hair. "Then you ought to be very
careful what brashes you use," was tho re
ply. "Oh air, said tho barber laughing,
"I didn't mean the 'air of the 'cd, but the
hair of the hatiuosphcre."
A drunken lawyor, going into church,
waa observed by the minister, who said to '
him : "Sir I will bear witness against you !
at the day of judgment." The lawyer, '
shaking his head with drunken gravity,
replied, "I have practiced law twenty-fivo j
years at the bar, and always found the
greatest raseals the first to turn State's evidence."
An editor in California lately received (
a long dooument which he was requested
to insert gratis under his editorial head.
He placed it under his pillow that night,
and expressed his willingness to insert similar
communications in the samo way, and ]
Th? Ult Battle Field.
Rev. Dr. Craven, ou his way to the
General Conforeoce of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, South, recently hold in New
Drleans, stopped at Lynohburg, Virginia,
tnd, in writing to the Raleigh Enterprise,
makes the following touching allusions to
Appomattox Court House, in Virgiuia :
"Wo have passed to day, through a locality
of undying momories. Appomattox
Court House will bo remembered when
Petersburg and Raleigh ure forgotten. ?
rhe whole country shows uioat impressively,
that the storm of wur has passed over
it The debris of a ruined army of heroic
men brings sadness to the soul. Over all
mis neia 01 tno aeatn struggio, tue tanners
ire ploughing, new fences hare been erect*
ad, and the budding vegetation is just now
tw&kening to the wooing ot spring, bat
these signs of life, generally so welcome,
teem discordant here. It accins to the
lad soul and the tearful eye that these old
ihoes, these broken guns, these fragments
of wagons, wreoks of cars, pieces of old
hats, bleaching bones of horses, and nameless
graves of many Southern boys, ought
to be in a desert.*
"As wo look upon the forsaken battlofields
and immenso hospitals of Furiuvillo,
or tho stricken fields ot Appomattox, wc
feel that tho plough ought not to turn the
soil, that the trees ought not to die, and
that no bird ought ever to sing here again
Mo Union man, howevir true and loyal to
tho United States, ij he it a man, eould
walk over this desperate held unmoved and
LI ? . I
liuiuuuiiuu. uliu u uruvu uruij surrcn*
lercd, gave up its arms, and laid its banaers
in the dust, llero ho tho remains of
i son and brother for whom a mother
aaoarns and a sister weeps, and there is
aono to comfort them. Ilerc lio the halfuncoverod
bones of a father, whose little
children still ask, 'when will father come
home?' it is now night, it is raining gently,
all is still, and I feel a lonely sadness
bat makes tho heart ache.
A New Destroyer or Wheat.?Our
lid friend, Hiram H. Erabry, of Carroll
sounty, in this State, one of the oldest and
lest farmers in that county, informed us
in yesterday that a new destroyer of wheat
has made its appesrunco in the wheat fields
:hore in the shape of a small insect which
iRpcars on tho blado, varying from one to
[our in number, and which is producing
?d havoo. Tho atteution of Mr. Embry
was first called to tho appearance of the
insect and its destructive powers by anothir
old farmer of the same county, Mr
Eleary Summerlin. Tho two together
havo watched the progress of this insect,
ma wan wuu mo present appearance ot
>he wheat crop in this vicinity, and the
Instructive powers of the insect itself, have
some to the conclusion that great damage
will be done to the whoat crop in Carroll,
it it be not totally destroyed. The insect,
Mr. ?. states, has never beforo made its
tppear&nco in that county Farmers would
io well to look after their wheat, and note
:he appearanoo of the troublesome insect,
its habits, and so forth, and discover if pos
lible, the source of its origin.?Atlanta In}*lligcncer.
Baton Rocqe Anecdote.?We tako
the following from the Advocate. "Pomp"
must be the same darky who said that be
had known the Mississippi river ever since
it was a small creek :
i,r\ .11 _.! ii ?t . ? -
--uur oia rename sayt mat no supported
in old darkey onco (it is not polite to nay
owned,) who had lied about it so often that
he actually began to believe that ho had
been a body servant of Gin'ral Washington.
"Were you at the surrender of Cornwallis?'
we inquired one day. 'Yes, Massa George
he rode up ou top a big black boss, wid do
tail bobbed and wid ono red eye. Massa
Cornwallis, he corn'ed up on a little buck
pony, wid a wall eye, an' he looked mighty
shecpy when he hold out his gold sword to
Massa George.' 'What did your master
say, Pomp?' ?ay ? 'Why, he curl up his
lip and he wave his band from Massa
Corn will lit toward me, and he say, hand
it to my servant, sar.'
'Old Pomp and another old darkey were
one day disputing over their respective
ages. 'I corned here when the Massassip
was so narrow you could jump across it,'
asserted old Dick. 'Oh, ehaw,' repliod
Pomp, 'when I fuss conicd from old Virpinny
I had to tote water for do hands as
war digging it out!
IIow long will Seed remain good ?
Carrots, parsnip, peas and rhubarb are good
but for odo year.
Bean, basil, balm, camomile, corn sallad,
orecs, hop, lavender, leek, onion, radish,
salsify, thyme, tomato and wormwood ?two
years.
Artiohoko, seak'e, cives, corn, coriander,
garlic, Jerusalem artichoke, lcttuoe, potato
and tansy?three years.
Asparagus, borage, brocoli, cabbage, kale
oaraway, cauliflower, endive, horse radish,
mint, mustard, ruta baga, sbalot, spinach
and turnip?four years.
Fennel, five years.
(jheuril, hyssop and parsley?six years
Sorrel ?seven.
Beet, oclory, oucumbcr, mangel, wurzel,
melon, pumpkin and squash?ten years.
J'lantert Banner.
Cheap Fruit Cake.?One cup su;rar;
dpc cup butter; ono half eup buttermilk ,
ane teaspoon soda; threooggs; one cup
raisins; ono cup common currents. Chop
the raisins and currents very fine.
Whatever you dislike in another, take
rare to correct in yourselves.
Revenue Stamps.?We publish the
following from the New York Herald of
the 26th instant, which settles the question
whether or not it is necessary to affix a
stamp on all receipts of money over twenty
dollars. The case was tri*l before the
United States District Court, New York,
Judgo Benedict presiding.
ISSUING MONEY RECEIPTS WITHOUT THE
PROPER STAMPS.
The United States vs. Daniel P. Peters.
?This was an action under the Internal
Revenue law of 30th June, 18G4. The
defendant proprietor of a hotel on Broadway,
corner of Tv nty first street, was charged
with having at :>cveral limes issued
seven separato receipts for the payment of
money, without affixing the necessary revenue
stamp. A witness testified that the
receipts were accepted by him under protest,
but that Mr. Peters said ho would be
damned if he would put on any stamp or
pay any money to support tho Lincoln go
vernmcnt.
Tho defence was that defendant hnd no
intent to evade tho law, and it was put on
testimony that Mr. Peters was in the hab
it ot keeping stamps on hand, but it was
not shown that he ever made use of them.
The jury rendered a verdict for the Government
in 81,400, the full amount of
penalties in seven case,s in which the de
fendant was charged with having evaded
the law.
TAXES
HAVING gono round sir weeks on
my circuit, assessing and taking Tax returns
and collecting soino taxes, and Gliding
a great number of tax payers who fail
ed to meet mo at iny appointments, I
tako this method to inform ..hero of my
appointments at SPAR T A N 13 U R G
COURT HOUSE,
WHICH WILL UK
Monday, Thursday,
Tuosday, Friday,
Wednesday, Saturday.
tho 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th and
30th DAYS OF JUNE.
ALSO, SALEDAY IN
JUXE and JULY
at which timo tho books must bo closed.
All persons who have failed to make
their returns and pay their TAXES, wi I
bo doublo taxed, and EXECUTIONS
issued against them.
All those who have mado tlioir returns,
and fail to pay thoir Taxes hy that time,
will have SINGLE TAX EXECUTIONS
issued against them.
If there should be any who believe that
they cannot pay their Taxes, I think they
would do well for themselves to inako their
RETURNS, and have a SINGLE TAX
EXECUTION issued against them, rather
than a doublo tax Execution.
1 do hereby earnestly request tho Tax
payers, generally, and rnoro especially those
who have eithor whito men or treodmen in
their employment, who are only liable to a
POLE TAX, DOG TAX, or both, to
sond me up their names, and the number
of their dogs, so that I can enter their
names, and tak.' an account of th ;n. 1
is duo to all, both whito men and freed
men, that ail should pay their Taxes, and
all be on an i>nml fftAiino?nfO enmn
-- --- ? -'1 ? ? ?" ""'"l
to pay and others escape. Thi9 is all the
chance that I have to asoertain their names,
as they havo never been on my Tax Hook,
which lu&kcs it inipossiblo fur ruo to know
tho names from my old books
Taxes to bo paid in gold or silver coin.
United States ie^al tender note*, the new
South Carolina issue, Juror Tickets. Ao
The articles tuxed are fully set out in
my former advertisement.
K C. POOLE.
Assessor and Collector.
May 31, 1S66. 18 lm
ROBINSON cfe NELSON^
Wholesale and
lit*(as11 uruiers in
?iTir.r^ S2?23, tfEDiSES,
TRAVELLING BAGS. Ac.
?0? KING STREET,
Atarty opposite Victoria 11 itel,
Charleston, South Carolina.
J. B. ROBINSON, A. NELSON.
Mitrch 1 6 ly
HART & CO.,
(Successors to S. N HART & CO.)
South Last. Corner King A Market Streets,
CHARLESTON, S. C.,
IMPORTERS OP
Foreign & Domestic Hardware,
CUTLERY, GUNS,
BAR IRON, TIN AND PLATED WARES,
Will receive orders for U. HOE A CO'S Circular
Saws, and GEO. PAGE A CO'S Tortahle
Saw Machines.
D. I>. Ooiien D. S. Habt. P. Moroan.
March 1 6 ly
< looUinjar Htoveb,
(~i RINDST0NE8, Sythe Blades, Cutting
JT Knives, and a general assortment of
HARDWARE. Just received by
CLEVELAND, WALKER ft CO
May 3 14 If
A Fresh Lot of Calicos
just received from New York by
CLEVELAND. WALKER ft CO.
I_>r. L. C- Kennedy
/"VFFKRS HIS TROFESSIONL SERVICES
\/ to the Citiiens of Spartanburg
Feb 1 1 lv
CHARLES BELLOISE & CO.,
McsiroILsiartn,
ASD UKALKIU IN g
Oam*, Sides, Shoulders, Smoked
Beef, Tongue*, r
FLOUR, BUTTER, CHEESE, P
LAUD, EGOS, SOA1', STARCH, CAN- {
DLLS, Ac., Ac. 1
120 Jk 1C2 EAST BAY STEET, j
Conngnnunt* Solicited. g
U. BLLL0I3, } CUAELESTOK, 3. C. 1
I)
_ . . .. .. .... . . . . S
ne woukj . especuuiiy uomy :?erciinnts tliat I q
re fvre strictly in the Provision Hiumets, and j,
are enabled to supply tho trade at lowest prices.
Mch 1 6 ly
W. I>. M ilster" I
RESPECT FULLY announces to the public,
that ho has again commenced tho
'X'inniiiK' Business,
and feels himself well prepared and qualif.ed
to do alt kinds of work in his line, with neatness
and dispatch. He ha* a large stock on
hand, of every thing usually found in an es- p
tablishtneot of thiskiud All articles of TIN ^
WARE, will be kept 011 hand, thereby rendering
himself able to supply the wants of any who
may call on him.
lie is prepared to do such work as ROOFING.
GUTTERING AND REPAIRING. He
will work and sell, wholesale or retail, LOW V
FOR CASH. All work warranted. t<
SHOP NEAR THE SPARTAN OFFICE. L
Feb 1 1 tf
SPARTANBURG E
FEMALE COLLEGE.
Tlir. TRUSTEES are happy to annonnce
that they have secured the services of
REV A W CUMMIN GS, D D ,
lonj; and favorably known to the citisens of
South Carolina as the President of the Fetuale
College at Aaheaille, N. C. His great success
tti?rc is a aulbcu-nt gu.rauicc for his skilful
management at Spartanburg.
TUB NEXT SESSION a
will open MAY y.h. nml continue
80 weeks. The President will be
aided by an able Corps of Experi- j>
enced Teachers.
Alt bills payable in advance, in specie or its
equivalent in currency.
BOARD and TUITION per Session, 5150.00
TUITION to L> iy Scholars 40.00 ~
M l*8lC, including use of Instrument. 45.00 3
Tiie other Ornamental Branches at the usual
rates. Contingent Fee, $2.00, and Washing 75
oents per dozen.
E tch Boarder will furnish a Tea-spoon,
Drinking Cup. a l)l?nkti. a p.vr of Sbcele, a j
pair of Pillow-casca, her Toilet Soap anil ,
iowols. SIMPSON BOBO,
President Board of Trustees.
March 22 8 tf
~efie!d Advertiser. Darlington South- j I
c nn. Columbia Phoenix and Charleston Weekly
Keloid will p'loane insert to amount of the
S 1.00 and torirar I bill* to thin office.
J. A. HENNEMAN
'T7A3 Jill
AJNT> JEWELLER. C
Sparfanbttrg C. II., So. Ca. (
HAS JUST RECEIVED t
A SELECT ASSORTMENT OF s
WATCHES, JEWELRY,
FfcAtYfiB WARE
AND
Fancy Goods.
ALSO J
A NEW LOT OF EIGHT-DAY AND TWENTYFOUL.
HOUR CLOCKS. A FIRST-RATE
ARTICLE.
W AII RENTED
TWO YRARS.
Spectacles for all E\e.s and Ages.
i\\r AT'MIES. CLOCKS AND JEWELRY
\\ neatly rcpatred, and warranted. ,
J. A. HBNNBMAN, I
At the Old PLioe on Mam-Street.
Fob 22 4 tf
371^.23, ?iiA723>
I RANGES, FIRE BRICKS Ac.
ADAMS, DAMOV A Co ,
IIIYK RI'OPKHD BLSHESS AT TOLIR
OLDSTAND, <
16, Broad Street, Charleston, S C.. j '
And keep Constantly on Hand ,
COOKIXG STOVES l
or 111 e
Latest Improved Patterns,
Range's Giate?. Marble Mantles, Tinners'
Machine* and Tools. Plumbers' Materials,
Iron and lira*. deep well Force and
LigM Pumps. Sheet Lead, Lead
aud Iron Piping, Railroad 1
Force Pnmps. Also the I
Great Labor-Saving Washing
Machine and Wringer.
IAll Order* attended to uilh Dispatch.
\t r h 1 A 1?
D. R. DUNCAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW AND SOLICITOR
IN EQUITY.
OFFICE ON PUBLIC SQUARE, four doors
East from the Court House. ?
I April 12 11 tf
JOIIN KING & C'O.
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
Wines and Spirits Dealers,
88 MEETING STREET.
CHARLESTON, O.
JUST received a consignment of HOLLOW
WARE. TRACE CHAINS, and a full aa
ortmcnt otCROCKERY and QUEEN'S WARE j
March 16 ? 3m I
???????? ^
HACK LINE
FKOH
iPARTANBURG TO GREENVILLE
:o:? ?
rnE Subscriber will nu a LINB OP
HACK8 to and from the above named
uces, leering Greenville C. H. every MONDAY,
WEDNESDAY nod FRIDAY, at 8 a. m.
.save Spartanburg. TUESDAYS, THURS>AY8*end
SATURDAYS, at 8 a. m., end arive
at Greenville end Spartanburg, at 4 p. m.
his Line will form a connection with the
pnrtauburg and Union Railroad both ways,
will have good teams and careful drivers.
Persons wishing to secure seats ean do so
y applying to iny Agents, JAB. A. ALLEY,
partanburg, who will be found at It* 2,
.rick Range on Church-8trcet, opposite the
ill melt o House, eud SAMUEL DONTIt iStv
t Qreenville.
Person* wishing to tak* seats st Spsrt&n- 1
urg, wil\ apply to my Agent there the aiglA 1
efore. I
C. C. MONTOOMERY. V]
Feb 1 1 tt
WILLIS <& CHISOLM,
OM MISSION MERCHANTS
AND
smuppmjyg
'ill attend to the purchase, sale and shipment
> Foreign and Domestic Ports, of Cotton, Rica,
umber and Naval Stores.
Atlantic Wharf, Charleston, S. C.
1. WILLIS, ALEX. R, CHISOLM. I
Mch 16 tf |
PHILIP FOG ARTY ?fe CO. I
Wholesale Grocers J
AND "
1
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
Corner of Atlantic Wharf & East Bay.
r. poo arty, > _ . . _ _
?. fooarty, / Charleston, 8- C.
\yenlt for BOYD BROS. $ CO S Cream Ale.
Mch 1 6 1 j
HUNT Ac BRO.,
ihipping, Commission & Forwarding
Merchants, 4
Accommodation \Yh?rf,
. II. HUNT, J*. } lesion, - C.
( Formerly of XE WBERR Y, 8. C.)
:0
'romptlj forward all Merchandise consigned
In lia fcrri? * *
?? ? w.?g U VMC VJIJ 11UU1
NORTHERN OR FOREIGN PORTS
H't tcj/i yirr itricl attention to Sals and Purekate.
o f Cotton, Rice, Flow, ?c. ,
Liberal Advances on Consignments. ^
RcrccF.xrca.?O. W. Williams & Co., Char salon,
S. C.; Russel & Ellis, Wilmington, N.
Biglow & Sargent, Baltimore,; Laihbury,
V'ickersham & Co., Philadelphia,, N. L. Mo'ready
Jk Co., New York ; Ray ^ Walter, Bo*?
nn ; G. W. G.-irniany, Savannah, Ga., G. R
Vilson, esq-, Norfolk, Va.
Mch 1 5 6m
>'e>v Enterprise !
soutiieunTmporting
AND
HANUFACTi RING DRUG HOUSE,
PRATT, WILSON & BROS.,
IVo. King Sroet,
CHARLESTON, S. C.
o
The ProDriotors are Native
SouthernersVo
tueh enterprise South of Philadelphia. Will
Southern Houses give ut their Patronagt t
kVK OFFER AT IlATES THAT COM- *
PARE FAVORABLY WITH NEW
YORK PRICES. ALL DRUGS,
CHEMICALS, MEDICINES,
SPICES,4c., THAT LEGITIMATELY
BELONG TO
OUR LINE OF BUSINESS,
AND
KEEP ON
HAND
ONLY TUID BEST
i*ar Packages put up to suit
Country Trade. ??
i. A.I'HATT. Chemist to late C. 8.. Niter and
Mining Bureau, L. W. WILSON,
\ B. WILSON, Chemist to late C. S., Or
Department.
April 11 6 1 j
3Ierchant? Hotel.
CLaurEaofcon, C?
Cheapest and best Hotel in the State.
rransient Board $8.00 U day. *
Veekly ' 14.00vrack
March 1 6 if
A. ILLING^
Millinery and Fancy Goods.
AT NEW YORK PRICES.
262 KING STREET,
Opposite Bufain Street,
CHARLESTON, SO. CA.
March 1 6 if
TAILORING!
o
HAVING furnished myself with eU the fWciliiies
for speed sad neatness, I announce
to my Pstrons thlt I an prepared to
511 orders for8PRING sad SUMM1R Clothing
u short notice, sad ia the best style. A Are*
class TAILOR wanted.
I alee have fat tny reel denes) a lady fares,
conducted by an esperleeoed Tailor, where I
can hare gotten np Coats, Pants, Vests, Shirts,
ho., for prises to correspond with material.
April 19 19 tf M. R. BEECO