The Newberry herald. (Newberry, S.C.) 1865-1884, January 31, 1866, Image 1

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------- -- - - - r i - V -~ 2 -( . - = - - - } - - d1 - , ----- . * - --- -4 - -- - - - - - * * S I I - ; - -- - - W)NES,*IADVANCER)4O~ O~t~-E1os~ NEWBERRYU. S. C., WVEDNESDAY, J7ANULARY3,16 .3 r - - - -. R Y .9 a___ NEWBER uZ.~& IRDE] EERWE D At Newberry 0. MTOITRS. AND FROPTIEORSr S MONTHS, EITER CY OR ING OVSIONS. teth'd invariably in adrane.) ~etgkieiitsinserted at $1,50 per square, for 1 for esch subsequent insertion. M4 f-rFeralfny'tatins, Obituaries, a iiations of personal iikke4t o.arged tisements. -0e IN Bachelors New Year. ft-C UML REXCAM. Ussuse. %g iat less of brightnesg ~ nory year - ndgr i a-ghasdy whitenes -blss6omnicken, a RT -the sesspps icen -~~ eny.ea togco and1colder .ibergy. year, ' d tht I am olde ' 47~ .)~ejyear.; AnAi Ima-ae iem elastic, -Ad0 Wfft o tpA sopistic - Er my>abiia grow -ronastiq - 'io eback-a.ndhlacker E4eq Year; Upea-are waxiag weaker, ry yyeat - 40ie .yes wi; pasWlot giaing -' vek A .s-leManes ee ntranemig i& d1a I ave squandered fioendsps rudely sundered - .x-aCesAt might have twined me, d itti et.reigged me, M-in4auties remind me o'er us To beohi ach blossom nfiled, * o~aui mjgh*hve nade - e"7 11*e0a so long I er e*r y ear; ryt4y comi-ade sleeping e sur4ekard, wither(weept Slon* aa - creeeng ae rariey i eejRp en;ountered a more ~phtal-ciantog bairleg~ue tlipin the follow. ddee Worten' u yyhe Washing - . t~ et-jpndenit 9r he Ciicnrnati Comme * .A&4 spsed ta'be the report of Thiad. Ste v~?z ?ts~t$tu~im omattee, after ?~n~&iirloed itsiti to in-' * -- Ys - rsieo, Jan.1866. 7. t~oonrae Senan arfnd &puso Rer I4~K~~ii) appoiited'4 .visit the dtatt r Tie' re onanmd Jnvesmtigate anid irepwrl porrth eddiin to joyalty jr"d farea sgni ha fInioni, bate th df assitto thetu, an~d * lo0e th4flg sheeew ig -epdft * comlhnttee was Ri4dnishd, ' iTir the emapi OnOfi8rzCr:-nghad hnewan rithe ~ epot on w'aI ma ybe taker a in son e ,degree, despopia tien n that aJ~rn~e.Atse of- citizetis r ~descennednd as we dis SHoue, Haere. your buss for e ~ounEcab.for'any part-of S he!lrotel,gents -etc. Itst th ieyts .vaI~men to * 4 rblillowie at the same fe1ldnirid heady 'hat raee, Weeqould 'net,,eclirie the ~iw'.. soged lly tendergl iis, and ac .rIJy we s1ee'te two carriages from the 1ae eauber placed at opur disp&'al. We r are 'dii't:rthe Spottswood by our hospit able fidter hgliebarged us two 'dollars apiece ead half a dollar extra for baggage. After so uch kindness from the colored, race, we were Jpprearod..for thobharsh treatment'which we ~subseqaently received from the white oh ~garchs of Richmond. The proprietor of the S~pottswood gave us rooms in the tifth story, back, aWj'g to his clerk as we have been in ,formediby a,fgitb(al frican who ha,d blacked ~opr bogts for a quar4er a pair, tfiat 'they were oenouigkfor Yankee radicals. The sdme ~stfof ajisloyal:hate was manifested to us in 6 4Hlningroo.i, where, in response to our ,ep?sated'callfor codish and pumpkin-pie, w~ ~were served with,.nothing but bacon and 'hiot cakes. We asked why this was' done, and weke told by asloyal waiter, to whom we had *uptgien a- postal half dollargthat Mr. .Spotts wood sai4 be didn't keep a hotel for the ac con:odaian odnkees, and, therefore, per skte3terdi;&. codfish and .ppampkin pies ~fro'm :he till of fare. Your committee do not let 'it deeessary to dwell upon this evidepde ofmiulde'rig disloyolty, noY-to compare it wihthe hastily formed opinion of Gen. Gratt gespectin.graouthern ,senttipenht. ,4ui- 9eject was to get ifeath -the surface of things in Alb South, to- And the true character of -tibo eaib-stratumn. We. remained in 'Riohmond a !ew dayst (study the character of'tbe people. :4n all barids we found' eignees of distinct in on account of color, except in a freedman's ,colony, where the blacks received the whites on.an equal footing with the nselves. 'Ve :alone -noticed a disioyal isposiojn to speak~ ofStonowall Jacksn .and Gen. Lee in -term o: * raise and cotamendation, while 'ien. But 4 ler's nime was only mentioned in contemptti ous connect6n with silver spoons, and occa sionally a little plated ware, and he himself see-ned to be better known as the Bottle Imp of Bermuda Hundred, than in -a.)y other way. .. "Our next visit was to Atlanta, Georgia. Here we had a long const;ltation with a Trea sury Agent, wb.o bad had ample means of in frma4op 4n the subject of Georgia loyalty. He gave his opinion that to admit the south ern States to representation at this time would be highly injudicious. He did not believe there was a white native in the State - loyal enough to take his place, and asserted that to remove him and others similarly situated, would be not only dangerous to the welfare of the country, but would be also the height of ingratitude to men ibo had risked character and reputation for the patriotic cause of cot ton and ten or twelve thousand a year. Your committee concurred entirely in his opinion. "While in Atlanta your committee beard many expressions of sentiments which go to show bow far Gen. Gran t is mistaken in what he says in his report. On one occasion es pocially we heard what conv,nced us that the lava of secession still burned in the southern bosom. The case was that of a young gentle man from Massachusetts, of poor but honest parents, who bad cone to 'the South in the tapacity of a freedman's school-teacher. He had casually made the acquaintance of a south ern lady of two score and ten, whose husband had fallen under the southern flag, leaving her a widow of handsQme estate. The young gen ileman, desirous of matrimony, and planta tions, pressed his suit, and was progressing, as he thought, most favor bly, when on6*eve ning the widow told him at a tea-party,.in the presence of a large number of pedple, .''that she'd rather be buried alive than marry a Yapkee." The patriot school-teacher no lon ger plied the rod of chastisemeni Qver refrac tory reeduen. The star of -is ji.pe has gone down, and he has gone back to Volton, a'wreck of his former self. Your committee went to Montg&nery, Ala bama, where, as at Richind, the colored citi zens flocked to meet us, and yied with each other for the carrying of our baggage. We paid them fifty cents a carpet sack from 'he depot, and they were enthusiastic in their de m9ntrations of loyalty, in receiving the cur I rency fron us. !n this city evidences of dis loyaity ipeet pspn every hand. A Vermont mis.ionary had been insulted a feT,das. be fre our arrival for attempting to introdnce ljohn Brown's Body,' and 'We'll bang Jeff Davis on a Sour Apple. Tree,' as Sabbath school hymns. A hop had just taken place at the leading botel, to which whites only were invted, and from which the freedawn *ere excluded or account of color. The conse quence was an indignation -ieeting of the freedmen, at which equal rights were deman 'I aed. A 'repedition of balls and hopeg .eoiu sively white in their character, w-Mli lead to Jamaica insurrections and Haytien rebellions magni6ed a thousand times in their dreadful results. At Montgomei-y, as at Atlanta we mct a Treasury Agent, *ho was opposed to immediate re-umon,- and warmly in favor of a territokial conlition. for the Sonthern States. He mentioned incidentally that he had a son in-law in New Hampshire who would make I an excellent Provisional Governor, and a cou smn who' would do for'a territorial delegate to Congress. A bove all things, he hoped Conr gressi would nqt isten to the hypocritical eties of Alabania layilty. He assured us that tbere wasp no loyalty in the State, except in his'ffce, and s'aid it would be base ijusgie to supersede.hinm-till be had fluished the ma king of $10(0,000. IWe .oge~t proceeded to Charleston, Snuth Carolina. .Here we had a long mntervilew with a northern.gentlemfan whom we know to be in every way reliable. He had responded to hiss country's call, in the: early: days of the war, with a-suttler wagon full of Yankee no tions, and .been unvarying in his devotion t:thecuse ever smhce, ..ecept- at Lntervals wvhen Gee. Grant had order-ed suffers to the rear. SiLde thie cessation of armed hostility he had been down Soutli to see what couid be don~e in4hbe wr.y of' buying soutitern lan'ds. Hehaifound the people of South Carolina so rebellious at the heart as to refuse to sell their Iplantations for twenty cents an acre in Fed erar curren . W1e convinced us that an armed foreeoug4'o be gelt in hretn#tiin years to:come, anad hat he ouight 46 he apg pired sutler, a's he had much experience ,n tle buisiness He found ~in this. hots-bed of dieession andl cradle of rebellion a decided iprefrence~for griy over blue, 'which extend edtseleven to;thegldies" petyioatg iiany -of wehyojyr camitteecarefully exanniDen. It is. propert4 statethat the artielesthus scru Itinized were hanging on a line to dry and had we' ladies in them. "Your Com1itee next visited. Savannah, whre thef founa~ disloyaltf' ma'nifesting it elf unmistakably on all sides. We met an agent of the.Freednmen's Bureau, who gave it as his opinion that, the war was only half over, and that unless the powers of the .Bureau were enlarged so as to give him controll of all the cotton exportedt from Savannah, the glorious emblem of our national liberty would nolatnolested very long. He had not been invited to a single tea party, thouigh lie had lived in Savannah for a year, while rc turned Confederates .were cordially greeted Sby brothers, sisters, mothers and swreethearts. le himself had been on.intimate terms with a young lada represented many thous and bales of cotton, but of late a one-armed rebel had come home,. and he of the F. B. had been discarded in favor of him who had raised his parricidal hand'against 'the old flag. -Here was preferment for services rendered to the rebel cause, and there are many such cases which your committee regret to find Gen. Grant has onmitte,d en.tirely. !Your committee do not deem it necessary to -gointo further.particulars to show tbattthe spirit which animated the. rebellion still ex ists in the South, and that the time /has .not yetcome for the readmission of the Southern tge-to4the Ur.ion;, *."Ty4nnDus & Co" A simple invention was exhibited at the lateirm ngham cattleshow for makimg but ter by atmospheric action, the air being forced :by a plunger into tbe midst of the unik or cream, which is contained in a cylinder, the result being that in a few mhinutes butter is made, leaving the milk pecrfectly sweet .for The Two Andrews. "I say, I say, General Jackson, for fear you should think I have some axe to grind, be cause I try so hard to keep you at my poor house all night, I will agree to keep you free of expense!" expostulated the landlord of the only inn in the village of Jefferson, Ashe Co., North Carolina, to General Jackson, late one evening in the autumn of 18-, as he entered his carriage to pursue his journey toward Tennessee. "The Blue Ridge is infested with banditti, and! you will certainly be robbed, and possibly murdered before morning. I beseech you stay I" "You are very kind sir, and I thank you, replied the General, "but I shall proceed, and try d; r'ech the Tennessee lineat all events. I have no fears of being molested. Drive on, Ned, briskly. Adieu, gentlemen, all I" and the old hero drov'e'dfWat a rapid pace. "lilloa, there, y'oungster !" cried the land lord, to a slim, weary, flaxen-headed strip ling, standing in the motley crowd in front of the tavern, "if you are going to Tennessee, you had better jump up behind and go alo&?g with be General; it's as che'ap as walk.ng. "Sure enough, I reckon I'd better, and thank you," replied the young man, jumping up behind the coach as it drove off.. - They rode on quietly for s'OMe hours, until they began to ascend the mountain, when the General hearing a slight dough behind, called out sterinly : "Who's that ?" "It's me; sir,- Andrew Johnson. I am a traveller on my way to Tennessee, and I though.t I might get a lift on your carriage, sir. I beg your pardon; sii' "You are quite. welcome, sir, to my car riage. Come forward, and take a seat with me." '.Thank, you, sir; bit. as the mountain is very sedP 4e.re, I'll jump off and walk up." He walked forikrd 4 the mountai' side, in advance of the carriage, but had not gone far.before he saw a man ahead of him,'as cending the mountain ; he appeared to be in toxicated.' He lurched this and that way, staggering backward and forward; now his knees would double up, and be would miss a step, as if the eartti .had .uddenly'va'thed before him , then he Wbuld cross his legs, and a l'urbe'WoPld snd him diagonally across the road. He'stop'ed and l raced himself up, so as nearly to fall backward, and then drifted helplessly along. Piesently he turned an angle in the road'and was out of sight. .''That fellow is beastly drunk," remarked the'Geeal' "Drunk! Not much, sir," laughed the young man. "He's no more drunk than I am. He's playing 'possum. and means mis chief. Look there! he"i lying in the road." As they drove up, he raised himself l.,ae krid: ailed them.: "Hic. eh-I say,geile men, .an't you give a man a lift.? 1-1-hic! can't walk; I'm loaded too heavily .with d-d mean whiskey." "Then 'st*y'Oer.e y.n dre a.nd gqt.r.id of it," sternly repled the General." "The devil 1" exclaiuedtlie man, springing to his feet with the agility of a cat. He gave a keen whistle, and planted himself in front of the coach. Tbree men sprung out. from the bushes and made a rush for the carri4ge. Quick .s thought the General sprang upon one of thei, aii thy rolled der in the road together. A - dull, crashing sound was next heard over the road, and a second one rolled over in the du.st, propeHed - by- the loaded whip in the powerful - hands of the driver. The yo-tng.man, by a timely shot fired and brought down a- third, and then sprang to the assistance of the General, who still fought maufully.wjth the herculean, antagonist,while the driver engaged the remaining robber. - "Stand back ! stand ,back !" cried the Gen eral -to the-young man ; "we are man to man, FIll give the villain fair play.. By the Eternal, I have you now E' and he threw his.antago niet over, apparently lifeless: "Are you burt, my:boy?" asked thie Gene ral. "And you, too, ned ? Where is ned?" ''jere, massa,' replied the boy, puffing-up the road. "My tolber girr, As r-un. I golly- - He!, he ! he'! I save one, massa save one, and de young gentliinan save one. HetI KAll this occurred in. Jess tinie hgn it akes to recod it.'' ."But you, General, are you hurt ?" .3'No;- no-thin.g but a. few bruises, ~.hank God'! But looJ&here.; see of,tbWrui 'stirring. Yon,fr, .and Ned, p.ibin his- hands, while L 'exalmn6 the otbrzys. - .None of them were found to be dead. Two were only stunned, and the third had -received a pistol shot through the shoulder, and 3vas rouching-in affright. W!hey -were all -soo determined to disarja '-hein and let them go, ratbe than be-detained on the I-oad. No fur ther inic'idents~ be'fell :our b.ravilers lu~ring theirjadi. On their separaiti6n in Tennessee, theGeneral gave the young man,murch good advice, -ie recounted to him his own history, and bade him aspire to be good and useful, The General continued en route for his home in middle Tennessee, and the young rman stopped and settled-'in the Town 'of :Green ville, Tennessee, as a journeyman tailor. Of his subsequent career it is needless to speak; it is a part of the history of our country. M. p. D. * Jonesboro, Tenn., Nov., 1865. A TRIBUTE TO SToNgwAL JAcKSON FRO3M A FEnERAL GFFcE.-Matjdr George McKnight, o''few Berne,'N. C., having, oth behalf of the citizens, applied to th.e codumnndant of that district for perminssion to hdld a' benefit for Mrs. Jackson, received the following -reply, whidh does honor to the head and heart of itS writer: - ,. - HEADQ'RS, DISTRIQT NEW BERNE, NEW BERNE, N. 0., Jan. 13, 1860: Mr. George McKnight-Sma: ~ The colonel edumanding.the district directs me to inform you, in reyly'to ob cpnigunication of this daterespecting your.proposition for the ben efit of the widow of 'Stonewall' Jackson, that the .Uniited States military authorities can never object to a aharitable action. All sol diers owe a tribute togallantry and honor. -It-is presumed 'that every officer of this comn 'mand will este-em it a privilege to'bo permit ted to engage with Syou..in the assistance of a lady whose husband was so respected and so renowned. "I have the honor to be, very respectfully-, your obedient servant, H. R. ELLIS, Act.iner Asst Adi't Gen' Waterloo the day ater Battle. On the surface of two square miles, It was ascertained that firty thousand men and hor ses were lying!, The luxurious crop of ripe grain which had covered the field of battle. was reduced to litter and beaten into the earth, and the surface, trodden down by the cavalry, and furrowed deeply by the cannon wheels, strewed with many a relic of the fight. Helmets and cuirasses,- shattered firearnis and broken swords ; all the variety of millita ry ornaments, lance, caps and 'Highland bon nets'; uniforms of every color, piumes and penonfr; musical instruments, the aparatus of artillery, drums, bugles ; but why dwell on the harrowing picture of a foughten field ? each and every ruinous display bore tnute testimony to the misery of 'sah a battle. Could the melancholy appearance of this scene of death be heightened, it would be b. witnessing the researches of the living, amidst its delolation, for f6 objects of their love. Motbers, and wives, and children, for days were occupied in th'ap mourrfull duty ; and the coifusibri df corpse4'frend'aidfoe 'inter 'mingled, as they were, often rendered the at tempt -at recognizing individuals difficult, and sometimes -impossible. - In many places the dead lay four deep upon each other, taking ,the spot' some British square had occupied, exposed foi hours to the murderous fire of a French battery. Outside, latice duriassiers w6re scattered thickly on the earth. Madly attemping'to force-the serried bayonets,of the Britisb, they 7bid fallen In bootless essay 'by the muskets of the inner files. Further on you trace the spot where ,Ie'cavalry of France and England had en countered*; chassbur and hussar were inter intermingled'and thehieavy Nbrman-Aorses of the Imperial: Guardere interspersed with the gray chargers which had carried Albion's chivalfy. Here the Highlanders.-and tirral leur lay, side bi side, together; ad the heavy dragoon, with green Erin's badge -upon his helmet, was grappling in death-with the polish lancer. * * * * * * 'On the summit of the ridge, where the ground wascumbered with tbe dead, and'trod den fetlock deep in thithad and gofe by the frequent rush of rival cavalry,the thick strewn corpses of the imperial Guard pointed out the spot where Napoleon had been defeated. Here, in column, that favored corps, on whom his last chances rested, bad been ainihilated; and the advance and repulse of the .Guard was traceable in masses of fallen Frenchmen. In t'he holldw 'below, the last struggle of France had been vainly made; for the Old Guard at tempted to meet the British and afford time to their disorg aize(rompanion torally. LOaS To SOUTHERN VLANTr-Rs.-This is matter of such greatirnportance to the wholt country that we advert to it again in conec tion with the pres nce iu' this city of. Dr. Eaime'iard, late SperintendaRt of Publ4 Education in the 'State of -Louisiana, and long connected with the South-western press ; and who is now here as the 'representative ol many planters whom the war has left without the means necessary to .the successful plant ing of cotton., The Southern lands are as rich as ever ;-a borer. gay. be obtained, and in- many in stances agricultuiral implements are not want inig.; But the-money, 'wherewith tEo' pay 't,e laborer, -to feed and clothe him, to stock the pLan tation, and to meet its. other current ex penses; is wanting. It is this want which Northern capital -should seek to supply, sg that the' whole energies 'of the Southern planters may be successfully directed to the production of cotton and other Soutbern crops. This will cause our shipping to whiten ?yery .sea.; sLtiudate 'uryj 'branch :oftbe nationil~industry ; "establish the "fdre'ign'ex changes in 'our favor ;.-enable the country to sustain, uniijured, the. burden' of the inational debt, and avert all dar'ger'of a national eirisis. A full 'crop 'of cotton will do more to restore the prosperity of- the -country than.all the po litical speeches that can be- eni lin a decade. talists of. the7 Norh no effect theke'good re; suits, and 'thej' should 2o0'tat 6n.es.. We are glad to learn'from Dr. Bard~that he is succeee ing in the object of 'his 'visit.:' iPf 'm6'rYe a fesig'afs longer, an4tmaf b&seen B1RcKwHEAT CAiEs.-.,he. spaSon for buCk rheat'cakes having arrived, we re-pr'int, from tbeTAidianr A griculturist the following ra ceipt for. making them 'after an improvell.me thod: '": The (heet, tenderest cakew an be mnade by adding2' ~ ttle' ?riboitecd *fient or Graham flour to the buckwheitt. Less than a quarter wiil do. Mir witIdo~ld; sour milk orfresb (nots*eet) butte nittf,hieb1is-bs 'Th soda (ernptyinigs arelsedwit.h) *hn put 'f cold batter *firlt act satisfag ohly. Bake at'once. The heat. will stait the eff'er vesence, and, as the paste raises, it will bake, thus preventing it from falling. Hence the c ulmiiin ating point of lightness is attained. .The:batter rises snowy'and beautiful, and the pancake will swell to almost' undue dimen sions, absolutely the lightest 'and tenderest cake that can be baked with not a touch of acid. More salt, however, must be added, than usual, to counteract the too fresh taste win' soda alone is us d. Thus the bother of emptyinigs is dikpent d with. Pancakes, in this way, e?sn 1>s baked at any time, and- on the shortes?t notice. "We deep our' flour rig bd, the Graham with the buckwheat, ready for use.- - THE EDITOnrAL TREAD-MILL-The Home Journal thus describes the editor's burdens : "It is oneC of the hardships of our profes sion athat 'its workin"g wheels-brains aind heart-are not alldwed to lag for sickness, or fo'stop for calamity or sorrow. The judge myadjdurn his court, the school and the workshop may close shutters, the mourner may veil his features, and turn friend and stranger from the door ; but the journa.list must forget before to-morrow the soihows of to-day, most write gaily and freshly .a newmonger on 'the trifle of the hour, what ever 'burden' has'-bein laid upon 'the'ire hourby Providence, or his brains as a man. It sometimes tries and mocks as the world that reads what is thus written would never dream of. The public looks upon the editor's labors as the Indian did upoti the man that was-cutting hay. He finally gave as his opinion 4,at i a e ey to see 'the white man mow.' ,TaE DEAD- BoDT OF SLAVERY.-Tere e some simple-minded people, and -soma dem gogues,.,and perhaps some very honest peo pie, in Kentucky; who are dispsed to. look *ith suspicion- upon the man or -the paper advocating the policy of rewoving what way be called the dead body of slavery, and giving it a decent but ial. It is a little singular, too, that such opinions should be ascertained when it is seen that the people of the South ern States, who had a much greater interest in the institution than w4 *bad, are now, as they have for some time been, engaged in re moving skl! races of slavery. They can see no good result-to come from cinging to the de bris of the defunct institution, arid are re moving it with commendable despatch. As atevidence of-the spirit which actuated them, we quote from the Memphis Avalanche. Ilways one of the most extreme and uncom promising of a pro-"lavery'journals, the edi tor of whic&r wDre a swoid and rode by Bed ford Forrest's side during the greater part ot the war. He fought to keep the life, if pos sible, in the institution, but, now"hat it is dead Yie droys his sword, and with his pen pus'hes-te dAdbody from his path,.and pro: ceeds to othir duties. "For Heven's sake," says the Avalanche, "let the South tale inespres. to -terminate the controversy, and bury the torpse ofslave ry out of sight, with aHl- its odious.appenda-, ges. Until this be dofie,, the country will have no peace, and the Southern peopte no sgcnrity. ' We shal have the negro'agam in Congies, a'new'raHy bf. the - worshippers of the ebony idol; a new cohesion of Nrther fanaticism ; a new cominAtidi igaj0t- the peace and intereists of th'b Sfth. -' Uoialy way to avoid a controyersyg whichA 'Muiti the end prove unprofitable .to us,:Isto give to the negro the rights'and privileges attach. ing to -his new condition; to' thus put the abolition of slavery beyond any ine of dis pute ; to leave nothing for the Norther,ri4ai 'cl to'se I'etieal cpsWd, vk texU_ofd clamation ; and then .calmljap0eal;mtba. e Cer servative portion of the country. for;the resto ration of our rights, and claim the *erdict-f the coqntry against the lagk . Ablitan party as an organization without-principles, asserting no new facts; and conastrated- Only for clamor. When thefBlack RpQblicanparty shall be put in this position, its power for eil is gone, and the days 6f a o"bid and hideons-fa naticism, which has clearly outlived its ob jects, are finally nuiSed. - CEASE FlaNG AT TEAT .FI'ICE.-The MoxD gomery (Alabama) Mail, dwelling uon the- ict that &uethernem generally preter-thet so1erg to represent diem in Congress an4 etwer saysr - "To voce -forsuh .mias inet taii'r ice at the conqueror,' buti rather to 6xerciseihe priv, ilege of complimenting gallant me4 wUhout a thought whether it may or- not please"be con queror. The true conqueror is. not only devoid ofjealousy, but is willing to share his,6eal-and couch with the vanquished. He has learned to honor his prisoner. from .the eetne syiipathy which is always ginerated by bullets ind-bayo nets. - "At Rich Mountain, a gallant South CarolimNn, in comand of a,gection of artilery, ad fought his guns well, unirhi haa not mei left to~work them. Our-lines were broken arid, the. enemy was dashing upon him. A shell-dismounted one of his pieces, killed his horse 'gn4e bim rn 'hattered his right.arini. qiinzthis feekt 'h gallantfell6w mranned his remaining guzn, and standing ei-ect t ilt ashid.a'*y grylr gogwer of bullets, shook' his -sword 2. -te riEtry wntb his left band. -Just at this. maoment, an oprier cam sharip and clear from the Federal .lne, "(0ease firing at, that officer,!'' . Such a spectacle of ardent valor drew a spontaneous-shout of apa plause even from his:mortal foe.. As it was then, so i.ill be hereafter. Wherr the fanatica .of. the !Kortl abuis ife uten'rf 'consieregW .their duty to ibey the inanda'te of their 6t ean unzis versal shout will come from tlie true iNnion men of the North, 'Cea' iirg atthaoSicey.' A MoTHEa's Loi -e ave stood. besida the matber when thinebec and she bent over i.tsilifeless for- nd id away the col&death darbp from its broW. have noticed the deep intensteof her holf affection as she gazed updn.its nt~i on .ess 6y4-sunk benieath its lidf-c aid its graceful limbs livied ad astft gdbyhe tonjch.of.~de- Welave listeadd to .her..4g Aftd:she -and seen her :t(rn aj#Ay fin'mtls Ie;yremnant iOf1nertaity, a long, desoiteand heartstricken--being. Froin thets&stimoman of that infanVa ersen eer7harketriugaJiba4 been twininjgaround it,:until evpry holy1del ing thdha motfher's: love :ever, Anowe 'ev.rv fon&hope that'a nither's- love -ever frins; every cherished idea of 'parit ad etaf' I innocence-W?re eeteredu$z4t o that in its-death she heard:t ltkF hoper, of ehr'bright fisibuis Irof ~ The'hojetWBt he was to so~eh so after years'by his Illialliowediaf .W Eherrsshed eipetation that be.would watchii her bedsill at4he hour- of departure,tt:plose her aching eyes, to. whisper her- farewell;'Z To breath a deep sigh to winds that murmnur lo And think en all her love and all her woe, was wept away, and she was left, bereft of so lace, and sadly convinced :tb- t her hopes were "as the baseless fabric of a 1 -.>n."-Ob, who can measure the 4xtent of awother'sdeep and sacred love for her offs'pr ing? It cannot know chng'e! It gushes forth in its holy power as she~ watchesthe co.uch of slumbering inno cence ; it live's in its 'fi-eshness an,d -beauty when her child had assumed the stitions' andl duties of manhood; and when time wrinkles the features and palsies the.apd it ebbs not ; her 1ast prayer is that her hiPdily be blessed -her lost look of tenderness is for.him aloner! TnE,fTELEGRAPH S.UPERsED,E.-A report of a inost remarkabe discovery comes to us from it3Yy A n Italian jaran.t is sakT fo'ide' is. covervd a process by which souils may be transmitted-by an electrical procese any dis tance, y :that tw'o 'p'esons-one in Rome and the other in Paris-may converse together, recognizing the sound of each others voice. A.yirginia,clergymanl writes to the Post Office Department atsking-for a mail contract. ie states that he does not know-that he can take the oath. ot allegiance, for he has prayed in the pulpit during the war for the success of the Southern cause; but, as the prayers were never answered, he is of opinion that no aid and comfort were given, and therefore he r.min 1 n1yal ciin. * nEzL 'a- A .m ..a a liwngittle ipee6bhiOfih. * - d genius of Aleainder 8044 W ed phia, rcety by a br-Ne o g sopper tabler: Toiht, I shak s ndt iW- - live henceforth' in; fiatorg Jo&s.A doof'Is opened wide adA kl* AOOe perfect beautitude. TA two; pesons lives have been- wel -- t;<ha trained, in love and kindnes;the sharer fut-rejoyand woem.. If my_ life will owe them mucht, in that- they lve-mbue - the mind and beit-ofztber aapted 1-d'.w lessons of purky, 5dod'!,%nbda - -4 I amn cofidetof the fer present shall fall upok t - atnd.have grown old -a giories T =eman w, - - !tearm Wtg-l ~sm 9sw. - . PIhultFfo baI *Z ing, yetit dkeni .etest idhoes n iiad, and to agei, ripeate of .iopes, :ass ns air1 love. I:- na- - the good iev wono s - mives audil no &I beutyliae ot- w,i HeaienTi rich ep" -it P thee, my bride, pmiy -bi mories 'i6i tie : sea4hell - IN But away- wit itrebid wa W Love's mutic steals i like v which bver illid*eat(ns - the world wth be it& anO A leads on thig alknW t - lV and dreary, buta celestial sped up the 'oom, an h fdar - -i Eird RwrA owi ao ;Q Pef aoir ese Pr --S T f jr aV *% 4 , W. Tue JoE~s-o mrIo-e tion J one b~eliaih-e he d.ch, -ae09 -O ex asuai bct iomae Ab~ MWQQ-w ac o.JAI willdispute thi&- *RbW od most hae" knoWi.them t.. on. the dstaut. and - Whco haW Wb-et[pqri porbaps *4th ' tOagedf mgen pe - - genous S allige tht &eZce - .~ featidess beasoaV-66a6; a'hh t'pron,ateW e -- the'1 al t dM6e0b so p ale thT.mar. gewto tn i Co Andesrn a 4bMut tbwed heweriad f 4- - Perryprop4 T - - %g% Aftr -Vdtmnmes het 4e s ecaio4s 0fe ce str *tn feneeerabig qW, - * - pnes obsrver - torthern ientimen thatthe ho h1ue. restringthe-o'utern tate to he dWtig'h ppe of'let:: ctin i idronte vindictve a h. sabe - psed heirlvs o~r .otiue thirsr . th caus et theUin They cnoybe1- . kene totha wrthe cl h rota wa goings on u iscn1ln o wecth tea lte of aor. hsarrd angd?~ 1atmbe-bu ee ht 4 htriddle with bukshot but the owe'a noher toehond . Thze gn elevafed oa hih ;an inch leower oa&n then robbe/. s'tern- etnt, hat riddled wh 'h - 'ier