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Northern rs. Southern Slnrrn/.-*-It is n notorious fact that the slaves of the South are in n better condition, physically and mentally, < than the poor of the northern Stales: they are ? better fed and dothed, and have more leisure i for enjoyment Instead, however, of taking i better care of their paupers, tV.ey seek to take i ? care of our negroes; and in doing so, they med- i die with matters which do not concern them at i all. They are perfectly nervous at the idea of compelling human beings to lahor without recompense, while if they would consult their 1 Statute laws they would find that in many of, i their States thev force poor white men into a j, Btate of slavery which is quite as odious as black j silvery. As an instance in point, we make an s extract from an article in the February No. of the Democratic Review, which contains a re* j ply to a letter of the editor addressed to an ' eminent citizen of Connecticut, asking informa- j tion as to the law 111 reiauuu iu 0 off of paupers." The following is the reply: "It is the custom in many towns in Connec- | ticut, no set up the paupers at auction every year, and knock them off to the lowest bidder1 ?that is, tojthe man who will take them for the year, at the lowest price. This was the case to my knowledge in several counties. I have always understood it to be a general thing in Connecticut. When we were in H. they ; were sold to the number of sixty for the year to i our next door neighbor for 15 dollars a head, , and he got all the work ont of them that lie . could, though most of them were infirm and not able to do much. They hoed his corn and sawed his wood, and weeded his garden; and . being an extensive fisherman, they assisted in ! dressing his fish, and "did chores" generally, i They are made to work all that they are able. In H. the contractor,'as I said, was a fisherman, and during the fishing season, a principal article of food for the paupers was the heads and tails of shad, which were cut off when dressed , for salting. They were all lodged in a little ! one-story house, with an attic 1101 to exceed 25 Ly 80 feet, and were all stored in logeuiur, male and female, with, as appeared to me, very little regard to decency. In case of the death . of-any of them, the contractor got a specified sum for their burial, and also, I think, secured , the whole amount contracted for, for the year; j indeed I believe the probable death of some of tfiem, was a contingency calculated on in making the bid; so that the contractor bad a direct interest in starving them to death, or in j neglecting them when sick." This is white slavery with a vengeance, and a running comment upon the sincerity of these dear friends of freedom.?Nashville American. . u"r. - ~~ "?' . -v ,*paogbess op Abolition.?Abolitionism has catiquered the North and almost conquered the ; Sbutb. Nothing can prevent the complete con- I quest of the South, but timely, manly, united , resistance, and resistance a V oulrance. We . believe that the South is fatally apathetic in the midst of appalling and threatning dangers.? We believe the peril demauds that every Southem State should now be armed to tjie teeth, and hang out its Mpqer on the outer wall and ! proclaim to abolitiou Philanthropy in Europe j as well as America, that the Institutions mid j property of the South will be defended to the 1 death. A mock Philanthropy has raised the standard of war of extermination againsi us? Governments the most powerful on earth:? churches of nil denominations, but two; the press and the forum are enlisted, in hot cry, under its banner. Our own Federal Government has joined the league?and what are we doing { A powerful press in our midst, cries ! "peace and union"?our Representatives and Senators hack in the fight, blanch in the storm, and compromise, where they should "diejn the last ditch;" and the true men who sound the note of real danger aud tell the people the honest truth are overwhelmed with vituperation and obloquy. And do not our enemies 6ec ; these fatal signs of division and weakness < among us ? Have the Argus eyes of a furious religious fanaticism ever been known to sleep when a feeble point for attack has presented itself? Our dangers are fearfullv augmented by our own false security, wickedly induced and fostered by ambitious puhiic men and a partyMind or venal press. The attempt to raise a National Union party at the South, is at once the evidence and the acme of Southern infatuation. We are making a great outcry over the danger* of the Union, when perils a hundred fold more appalling, are knocking at our own door-stones. For what is the Union to us, in comparison with our property, our lives, and the rights of supremacy of the white race?? When the South becomes a Jamaica or a St. Domingo, in the name of God, what halm will there be in calling the people of the North brothers, what consolation in reading WashingurMrucs nr what music ill the rus bvug miv nv?? v? ? tie of the stirs and stripes??'Columbus Times. We command the following comments of the Montgomery Gazette to the consideration of our readers: Does it not strike every Southern man as something remarkable, that those suspected of | having been engaged in violation of the laws j of the United States, in this case, should be pursued and hunted down with so much ferocity by the General Government, while those who plainly and openly violated the law in Boston, Massachusetts, by preventing the arrest of the fugitive slaves from Georgia, should have no notice whatever taken ol them by the very same government? Why is it, we ask, that Southerners (and for this purpose even the sovereignty of a State has been invaded and its executive attempted to be seized and carried out of |ta limits,) should be arrested and tried for a bare suspicion of participation in a violation of the laws of the United States, while Northerners,, who, without disguise boldly violated the plainest provisions of the law, as in the case of William and Ellen Crafts?go unwhipped of 'PkAUft am nlnin nriij oimiJa nfnnnoi. V JUDMW* * UVOO UIV pifiiu (iliu Ollil|UV J/I I tions that can be understood by all, and we I desire that every man should consider and an- { wer them for himself. For our humble selves, j we cannot regard it as that justice and equality attempted toHBe established by our forefathers | in the Constitution nt the United States. Do , our readers agree with us? ( [Montgomery GazeUe. 'BISHOP CAPERS. As conductors of the Public Press, we are in duty hound to keepoitr readers informed of every important measure iti whatever quarter it may originate, which is calculated to exert a material influence, whether for weal or wo, upon the current of events which is sweeping on to the yet untried future. In this point of view we lay before the public the address of Bishop Capers, to the citizens of South Carolina. In a contest for our rights, the views presented by the address are to our minds strongly inconclusive, and we venture the assertion that such arguments have never led a brave and outraged people to victory and freedom. But of these things others are as capable of judging as ourselves. There is one point, however, upon which we are not satisfied, and we hope that Bishop Capers, should this article ever meet his eye, will set the matter right, if it is capable ol any satisc.-t. -?I...Tt will rpnwmhpred i.'iKiury uAjjiuiinii'iii. *?. .... that the feature in the present controversy, winch agitates this country, and which gives it most of its importance, is the ceaseless war which is waged upon the institution of Slavery as a physical anil moral veil. The point which we wish settled is this, how can Bishop Capers, as a citizen, counsel submission to a course of conduct on the part of the Northern people, for which as a Minister of the Gospel, he ventured to sever one of the noblest ecclesiastical organizations which has ever been formed for the advancement of the religion of the Bible. The decrees of the General Conference, whenever they interfered with the rights of individuals, were simply ineffectual, for a refusal to obey would have desolved that connection, from which alone originated any obligation to obedience. But the decrees of a consolidated ***- t on.* Anltf kn ocao rifirl \\\r reuerai uuvcrmucm uau v/uij mv vovuj'VM ..j seeking slielter in the only asylum which fanaticism lias left us, and whoso security it becomes us to test, before the evil days shall come upon us. State sovereignty is our only hope, and when breach after breach is being made in the ramparts which surround us, and we are called on to make an unconditional surrender, because a "blight may full on Charleston'' and "all the State," and our taxes may be increased, we may well adopt the language of the Bishop h'inselfj and exclaim: "Can patriotism demand the sacrifice? Patriotism demand the sacrifice of the State! No, never." We are contending for principles, and patriotism may call upon u3 to sacrifice our interests, but never our principles ! No, never." Black Riccr Watchman. From the Charleston Mercury. PRAISE WHICH IS NOT PRAISE. The letter of Bishop Capers, published in our paper just before the election for the Convention, has been the subject of comment in and out of the State. At home the writer is recognised as a South Carolinian, identified with his native State, in all' his feelings, and the comments on his advice are altogether respectful in tone, though the advice itself is considered bad. It i3 asked why, on an issue of principle, a high minded man should address hims&Jt exclusively to the fears of the people ? It is also asked why, after Bishop Capers had advised and aided a dissolution of the Union in the Methodist Church, on this very ground of encroachment and unjust interference with the rights ol shareholders, he feels impelled to oppose the assertion of the same principles? in politics which lie had asserted in the church. These questions are asked in South Carolina, hut in a tone that indicates no distrust of the good faith of the venerable clergyman. We cannot say as much for his reception out of the State. His letter is copied and praised by that portion only of the Southern press which seeks all occasions for accusing and deridingSouth Carolina. As it goes North it gathers the same discriminating 'I'Iia Vott/Mwil T n till I i ir/?nPi>r Ul'lllUIV-llll'llMMI. I IIC iltUIWMIU II.IVIII^VMVW. cannot refuse itself "the pleasure of laying it before its readers." The New ^ ork Evening Post, Van Buren's organ, concludes its praises with the following paragraph. " We copy his address below, which can hardly fail of having great effect. His demand for a Convention of sober and wise men instead of boys, and men half-made, is significant enough. If the convention should he composed of the materials against which he remonstrates we may naturally look for a counter-organization of the more rational portion of the citizens of South Carolina." Mechanics and Lawyers.? The New York Mirror has the following, which shows that enlightened construetiveness is rising to its true place in public esteem: "The Bar is no longer the resort of the ambilious youths of our country. The mechanical departments are being preferred; there are now thirty young gentlemen in this city, that have received liberal educations, who are serving their 'times' as shipwrights, architects, carpenters, Ac. In a few years the United States will have the most accomplished mechanics in the world. A new class is springing up, who will put the present race of mechanics in the shade. The union of a substantia! education with mechanical skill, will effect this. Indeed, already could we name some mechanics who are excellent mathematicians, and acquainted with French and (Jerman, able to study the hooks in those languages connected with their vocations. Heretolore fond fathers were wont to educate their sons as doctors or lawyers, to ensure their respectability and success. The day is past. Mechanics now take the lead, and in a few years will supply the larger portion of tie State and Federal Legislature.'' Sad and Fatal Occuhubnck.? It is with unfeigned regret we announce the death of John Simpson Peden, of Greenville District, who was shot by Enoch Massey, on Thursday, the utli inst., while attempting to locate a small tract of land, supposed to he vacant, which Massey claimed. He died on Monday last. Massey has been arrested; and is now in Jail at Greenville C. H. We forbear to state the particulars from rumor, as the caso will undergo a legal investigation. Mr. Peden was a gentleman of high respectability, a member of the Presbyterian Church, ind much esteemed by his neighbors as pea:eable, quiet and orderly citizen. Lavrcusvilh Herald. A Crazy Editor.?The editor of the Daily Oi lcanian postpones the discussion of certain importaut questions which lie had commenced in his paper, because lie can't write when Jenny Lind is in New Orleans. The fellow is , cracked to a certainty. Hear liiin: | "But Jenny Lind has arrived! and our world, j onr New Orleans world, are now on their way | to Paradise, which they hope to reach in two I or three days at most?and who will stop on j such a journey to read anything, whether it he : of earth's glittering wealth, its glory, or its I grandeur? None, none! All earthly business ! i? shut out from the mind, and the hand is held I upon the beating heart to still its throbbings, j lest some pure note be marred as it falls, on earth born ears?sounds,surpassed only by the angel strains, as they first broke through the celestial vault of heaven, and saluted Adam, amidst the Paradise of a virgin creation, and , toid the power of music on man. Who would ! not stop ihe plow, the loom, and the anvil, to i hear for the first, and perhaps, to many, the inet o pa I n c rliuf t ?- ! I unoii the par. thov are i from heaven, by the ppell hound enhancement I with which they visit all hearers, and the ecstasy that thrills every nerve, as they bear to human hearts raptures, that Angel Harp alone can surpass. When the last song is sung, and : the last note, soft as the dying echo of angel lute, shall be fading ou our ear, we again re! sume our earthly themes, our earthly business! Till then, we well know, that no thought, no feeling, no study, can be given to the grosser i things of this life. We then say go?go and ! hear Jenny Lind; many of you may never hear, : either in time or eternity, strains so like those ! that fill heaven with beauteous harmony. Go 1 and hear, it may make you reflect that Heaven is worth living for." WELL DONE, GREENVILLE. An enormous waggon-load of Brooms pas sed through our village, the first of his week , from a manufactory near Greenville C. H. Up^ on seeinir this broom-omnibus drawn up in oui plaza, we were off to our office to offer an oj) i hand congratulation to our house-keepers upot i the present prospect of a "clean sweep;" bin | happening to look back, we preceived that the ,; wagon was off alpot? Upon inquiry, we discov i ered that the entire load, ($500 worth) was en 7 gaged to some dealer in the city of Augusta Hearing tiiis state of the case, one of our wag gish villagios |ierpetrated the following: , Sisier Georgia, Carolina Sends ycu greeting?and pome brooms, And she hi pes that you will find a Full supply for all your rooms. Sweep your chambers morns and evens? Sweep with Carolina brooms? i And fiom join councils sweep out Stevens Howell Cobb and Bobby Toombs Starvation Wages.-The shirt sewers (females , had quite a large meeting in New York or j Tuesday evening, at Convention Hall. Thei i rwAAoneoD fn iiulnno tkoi I UlJJftl W'ilb HI b<ll\C llicanui CO w aimuvv iuvi ' employers to give tliem better wages, or, as the; ( : themselves more graphically express it, "wage a little higher than the starvation murk." J New York letter says; "One lady, a shirt sewer, stated that she hai been making, for the California trade, shirts fo ; two firms in Maiden Lane and William street (which she named,) at 6d. and 9d. a piece pe dozen. They were to be well stitched in ever; way, and all that she could make was two doz en weekly, and to work day and night. Sir further stated that she had not eaten any kim of meat in three weeks hut onee, when sh was asked to dine by ? friend, of whom she go a good dinner." Snulh Carolina College.?It will be gratify t' ing to the friends of this cherished iustitutioi i of our State to be informed that the health o I the President, Col. Preston, is gradually bu | steadily improving, even under the pressure o i duties univlaxed and uninterrupted. Aware o ! the great interest felt throughout the State 01 ' I | this subject, the information is imparted at tin I present time, and we doubt not it will be re I ceivcd witli gratification. ? Carolinian. Si Ire red Gl.usware.?The Boston Trans 1 ..uti.b nino *liof \1neeea ^nnimni* nf flint nfv ITIIJJL flUIU O 111(11* .MVO.1l o I | VI V....V v.? r| have recently received from London a new style of silvered glassware, which promises tr lake precedence of the Iloheinian and othei fancy glasses. The silvering is indestructible being coated over with glass, and is of a vivii brilliancy that can never be tarnished or impair ed. Dishes, vases, and pitchers of this ware make a more brilliant display than the same articles of pure silver, however highly polished. The advantage, in the greater facility of keeping the former clean, must bo obvious. The metallic radiance of the new ware is beyond all that art lias yet attained. New Kind of Ware.?A Mr. Fenton has tnkeu out a patent for the manufacture of a species of stone ware, made at Remington, Vermont-, from flint, feldspar and quartz, which is ground fine, made into a paste, and then moulded into tl)? desired forms. While baking it, a pure flint enamel is added, which is tinged with various delicate colors. It is said to be as cheap as common crockery, hard and tough, perfectly wholesome for any use of the kitchen or pantry, and without the enamel is : wlilta, very cioseiy resemunng mat eon 01 composition of which statue are now made in France. REMEDY FOR BURNS. Dr. Reese, physician of Belivue Hospital, New York, has been making experiments concerning the best mode of healing burns and scalds and checking the acute suffering. He has found that flour, thrown on with a common dredging box, is one of the best and most ellicient remedies yet discovered. The external air is one of suffering and the flour thus applied, both heals aud closes the rounds to the atmosphere. The edges of tho wounds which remained open he dressed with lime and oil, applied by a feather. Dr. Reese says the above application made to wounds by fire, not water gunpowder, dec. has been most happy in the practico at the Hospital. Those who are honest, as the best policy, are half way to being rogues. Death of a Distinguished Astronomer.? ' Peofeesor Shurnaeher, the astronomer in the Observatory at Altoua, died on the 28th of December, in his seventy-first year. For many years he lias been before the scientific world as the editor of the "Astrouomisehe NarhnchI ten." He was a man of great scientific ncI quirements, and many important scientific miI dertakings were completed by him, such as j measuring by the government the degreess of I longitude from Copenhagen to the western ! coast ot Jutland, and uie degree oi i.iuuuie from Skagen to tlie frontiers of tlie kingdom | of Hanover?also for tlie English government j the measure of the difference of longitude existing between th<> observations of (jreenwieli and of Altona. He was a diligent and accurate observer, oi e of his latest labors being connected with Enche's planet Astrea;. The Albany Register publishes a plan for carrying railroad trains across the l iver at that place, without a bridge, tunnel, or a ferry. A railroad track is to he laid on the bottom of the river, and for this are to be constructed trucks with wheels, having sufficient diameter to bring the platform to the surface of the water. The oars are to be run on these trucks, and thus carried over. Wild Cattle and Horses in the. Sierra And. ? We learn from the Texan Hunger. Captain i t ~ ~ u w 1 McKinly, now of San Jose, who, it ia presum' ed, has traversed the whole region l'roiu this city to Monterey, and from the coast of the > Pacific to the plains of the San Joaquin, more > thoroughly for fifteen months past than was 1 ever done hy any other American, that large 1 numbers of cattle and horses that are entirely wild are to be met with in the retired valleys and deepcanyans with which the Blue Mountains of the coast abound. These animals are as wild as the elk and deer. They mostly feed > at night, and lie hidden in the thickets by day; and have rarely, if ever, seen the face of man : Some of the bulls are peculiarly leiocious, and r Capt. K. considers them, in fact, more danger i i ous than the grizzleys themselves, which are tc t be found m large numbers in these mountains [I'acific Next. Tub Three Best Doctors.?A judicial officer of some distinction, in the interior of the State, gives the following results of his expertenee withjthe three host doctors he coald pro cure for his wile. She had been sick lie said for, two years, and was daily getting wore.', though he had an alopathio physician to call daily; he then procured a homuepathic doctor and for sixmonthshis wife improved percej t'bly hut at the end of that time the doctor broke hi: leg and could no longer continue his attendan t whereupon the lady speedily and entirely re ^ covered.?N. Y. Evening Post. 1 ''Humble as I am," said a bullying spontei _ to a mass meeting of the unterrified, "I still re r m . v member that 1 am a fraction of this magnificent 8 republic." "You are indeed," said a by-stair ^ der, and a vulgar one at that" [ In the 10th chapter of 2d Chronicles, may In r , found the following severe allusion to a piofes I sional failing, which, very incorrectly, is sup ' | posed to have an existence at the present time . | "His disease was exceedingly great, yet ii _ J his disease he sought not the Lord, but the phy ' * * * ? -I...* LI. ?> L> | siciuns. aim .Asii siepi wim mis earners. i L, ' A littlr l?oy hearing his father say? t j "There is n time for all tilings," climbed up be I hind his mothers chair, and, whispering in he ! ear, asked ?"When was the proper time fo hooking sugar out of the sugar bowl i" j- Loxnox has 390,000 houses, which cover ar j j area of 14 miles long, and 7 miles wide. Be f tween the 1st of January 1839 and Januarj j- 1850, 04,058 new houses were built, forming j 1052 streets. In Franconia last summer, a hen having los all her chickens, adopted a small puppy ahou four weeks old, and treated him in all respects a: she have treated one of her brood. .She zeal j ously defended him against the attack of tlx ' j other denizens of the yard, gave him choice } ! morsels of meat protected him from cold ami r rain under her wings, and in every way comported herself in mothedy style. ! I I or nrlnidorl liL'rt/l tlu? i rrnnnrnmont mnnli and in general conducted well and "lie must , have been an ungrateful puppy' if he had'nl. As time passed and her charge waxed larger, however, some few drawbacks to dame Pallet's, happiness arose. For instance, he raani, festc-d decided contempt for pieces of bread, I worms, and seeds, which she unremitiugly sought and scratched out for him; then too he would frighten hor nearly out of her senses by , his precociously loud harking. But her gi eatest annoyance was in fact that she could never induce hea unfeuthered favorite to roost. Portland Neics. A man engrossed by one subject while talking another, often says one thing when he means another. Perhaps some contradictory testimony may be accounted for in this way; for a man who has said, what he did not mean to say, and is not conscious of having said, will, of course, bo likelv to dpnv that he did sav 80. * J ? J ^ A friend to ladies' rights suggest that the militia laws be so amended as to make ladies, over eighteen years of age, liable to military duty. What a figure they would cut, with old muskets and corn stalks on their shoulders! An old creed is often like an old house, decayed and forsakened, while it still appears imposing at a distance. Or it is like an old hollow tree; the shell makes a show when the substance is gone. At length a strong push makes it totter and crumble to the dust The Indian Convention has adjourned, after passing provisions prohibitiug the future immigration of blacks under penalty of confiscation of their property, and imprisonment. To the question, "Whatig the object of studying history?" we once he^d this answer given: "It iB to learn the providence of God." : ' THE CAMDEN JOURNAL. J ^ THO. J. WA&REN & a A. PRICE, Editor*. FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 31, 1851. Our BJarket i No particular change in our Cotton Market * ' since our last, quotations pretty much the same? ! say from 9 1-2 to 12 cts. Produce of all kinds ' command high prices. M* *1 RETURN DAYS For Darlington, Saturday, March 1. " Fairfield, v- -ta u #. , % " Kershawv^*-* " "15. j " Sumter, u tt 22. " Lancaster, " " 29. j ? , 25f We regret to learn that the freshet in our river has overflowed the low grounds to such an extent as to cover the trestle work on the Rail Road over the Wateree Kwanip, preventing the i Cars from crossing. I irtfOur thanks are due the Hon. J. I* Orr for a copy of his speech on the public printing Also to Rev. T. B. Russell, President of Oak. Bowery (Ala.) Female College for a copy ofhis inaugurak Backer's Oar Factory. We took occasion, when in Charleston recently, to visit this establishment, and were kindly ehowu J over the premises by Mr. Thomas F. Puree, who explained the different parts attached to the Factory, very much to our satisfaction. A fiill de1 scription of this Factory has recently been given by the Charleston Courier, which we copied into our paper. We will not, therefore, attempt a perfect description, or enter into very minute details. We were shown, among other things, a felloe-cutting machinp, for cutting wheels of any size or description?it is very simple, and the operation ( shows that they can be furnished to wheelwrights . cheaper than they can cut them by hand?it is really a time and labor-saving machine. There is a large foundry attached to this Factory for cast' ing iron and brass ol all kinds and descriptions. ' Also, morticing and tenanting is done on the lar. gest scale, and in the quickest time. Also, plasI tering laths may he sawed in any quantity, and at the cheapest rates. The Passenger Cais made [ at this Factory, as well as Freight Cars of every description, are superior in point of durability, ^<1 r than those imported from the North. In short, i every thing in this department of Southern en? terprise may be obtained at rates quite as reason able, and in quality far superior to those of Northern origin. We go for the South, the whole South and nothing but the South, and it must be r a source of satisfaction to every true hearted ^ Southerner to see the growing interest manifested by the right kind of men in Southern Eaterprise, and their confidence in the integrity and perpetuity of our own institutions. . t. . i 5 Alter leaving the Car Factory, we visited Mr. Alts' Castor Oil Factory,-a ud regret that he jpas ^ absent. We were nevertheless shown tli&ma: chinery in part, for the manufacture of thbyiseful ' article, ami also specimens of the oil txmccted ' from the ground nut, said to be superior to table or olive, oil. Mr. A. is very anxtolts to introduce the culture of the castor oil plant in this Slate, and will furnish seed to persons free of charga, and r buy them back alter they are raised and gathered t r at a price of some two dollars per bushel The Oil made at this factory is represented by the Courier as being superior to any imported. We > need not add that we wish Mr. Alts success in * his new enterprise. The simple fact is enough ' for us that he is endeavoring to promote the spirit ' of useful enterprise at home. . ?. ^ Kershaw Court. ^ The Spring Term of the Court of General Ses5 sions and Common Pleas for this District, wilj . commence on Monday, the 31st of March next? > The following is a list of the Jurors: | UK.V.MJ J1 'KUN9, 1. John McCun. 13. S. Donnelly, 2. Ililton Robinson, 14. J no. Bell, Jr. i 3. R. C. Drnkefnrd, 15. J. S. Thompson, 4. Jas Clyburn, 16. Thos. English 5. VV. R. Catoe, 17. John Albert, , 6. Levi Pate, 18. Jevi Pate, J*. 7. Henry Truesdel, 19. John Toluiie, ^ 8. Robert Mickle, 20. Jas. Suinmcrville, V 9. W. E. English, 21. John Croft, 10. Angus McLeod, 122. Willis Jossey, 11. A. A. 1*1 CUOweu, IXd. lUMKIiew Treat, 12. W. R. Young, |24. Jas. R. Dye. PKTIT JURORS. 1. W. Clyburn, 25. W. F. DeBrahl, 2. JameflCampbell, 28. W. A. Ancrutu, 3 D. C. Quinlin, 27. Wylie Albert, 4. Win. Catoe, 28. John Bowea Sr.* 5. Eli Adkins, 29. J. C. Dobv, (5. Joab Cotton, 30. Fred. Bowen, / 7. Herman Arrants, 31. Daniel Wooten, . 8. G. Stratford, 32. Win. McKain, 9. E. M. Boykin, 433. John Brown, * 10. W. J. Duncan, 34. W. D. McDowell, ^ 11. Edwin Bapies, 35. John Blvther, | 12. Daniel Bethune, 36. ErvinfflRaley, ! 13. Jas. Addison 38. Richard Sanders, ' 14. Jas. M. IngramT 38. Thos. Smith, 15. Jas. Bran nam, 39. Jas. B. Bell, 16. C.H.Davis, 40. John D.Young, 17. Jas. Chesnut, Jr. 41. Sam'l. H. Youog, 18. Jos. Albert, ,42. A. A. Watkins, j 19. Charles Bird, 43. W. B. Watkins, 1 20. John Brannam, 44. John Young, 21. John Bowen, Jr. 45. Alex. Young, 22. Henry Berry, 46. Levi West, 23. J. E. Rodgers, 47. Daniel McDonald, '24. Anderson Bowers, 48. Hugh Young, ? , ? Kindness. How much of life's sorrows might be ofan^ted by kindness; a gentle word, a kind act, or-happy j look, often dissipates the clouds of grief which have gathered over our sky. and throws a joyous light along life's pathway. He- who is kind, is I wealthy in the happiness of others. J y/ii.