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iT^oVT pitet 1?, t\ ?;?? ???' . ? > ?? * r f# \ -i ?tgfciriO ??<? l^A ??'UrB>r. ' ?..'' i ' r ? -:?? vtl .. . .-. ...... .. {in -i.;. n*f>u6J ti'i t ? ? ? I i -- GOD" AND. OTTTt C ftt AT? ?.VV SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 30. 1869.' NUMBER 5ft *ej*W 7? l.Vl THE QRANGEB?RG NEWS. ^BLISSfe^^ s. u. I ^rrmtnr*.y Morning/ x AXDRfiWs .<* HALL, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS.' TERMS ?F SUBSCRIPTION t?a* Coiiy 'for one vcar. $2.00 " . ?*T 1" '8lxv Months.? 1.00 Aay ono sending TEN DOLLARS, -for ? Clnb or New Subscribers, will receive an EXTRA COPY f?r ONR YEAR, tree or charge. Any eo*-sending FIVE DOI?AR8, far a Club or New Subscribers, win receive an EXTRA COPY ror SIX MONTHS, free of shwrgft ? t v?d l Square 1st Insertion. $1.60 j " " 2d .?.,...v.1.0? A Square consist* of 10/lines Brevier or one inch Of Advertising ppr.ee. Administrator's Notices.S6 00 CeatrsCt Advertisements inserted upon the most liberal t?st>fe I **Si \ .r fc??f? . ?;n:? MARRIAOE ?ud FUNERAL NOTICES, not ex ?veiling one Squire, inserted without charge. *?r TorinH Cash in Advance. ft* 28 :t ; o ly M3TET. Sooner or Later. Sooner or later the Stenns shall Utcr-my slumbers rroin head to (set; Sooner or later the winds shall ravo In the Voug grass above my grave. I shall not heed t hem where I lie, Nothing fkcireouada shall signier, Nothing ihc headstone's fret of rain* NoihltHfte ese the dark da/'s psMC^ dinner er later the sun shall shine With trailer warmth on that wound of mine ; Bosprur or .Uter in summer air, f Cr**?*- aa.l violet blossom there. . l.?katl not reel, In that deep laid rest, Toe sheeted light rail over mj breast, Nor ever note in those hidden hours fflhs?wiaUAriowa breath of t ossiag flowers. ^oenrr or Writhe staiiilesa aae.wa~.^?ugf. - ri ?hall add thi*Nmsh to my mut? repose ; ? Hwitnjtr/njjjfmty shall slant and shin, And heap ray bod with dazzliag drift. -?s ;*}???? <?ttv' . <'hUl though the frozen pall shall seem. It's t?uch uu colder can make the dream That racks not the sweet ?ad sacred dread Shrouding the city of thm dead. Sooner or later the bee s'hall come And fill the noon with its golden bum; ? Soeauer mr later, on half-poised wiag,. The blue bird's warble about the ring? Hing und chirrup und whistle with glee; Nothing hia music ?hall seem to me; None of these beautiful things shall know Hew souudly t heir lover sleeps below. Soonaror later, far out in the uigbt, The stars above me shall wing their flight. Sooner or later by darkling dews Catch the white spark iulhe silver ooze. Never a ray shall part the gloom Tl^t wfaps rae round in the kindly tomb; Peace shall be perfect lor lip and brow Sooner or later?Ol why ant now ? v a a i o u s. IVOR TUK O&ANGKBURO NKW8.] Hollidny Pleasures in the Country. If?'; 3)o the ladies and . gentlemen of the town %YeT wVtaess country enjoyments?the rude ^andrivuple pleasures of the masses ? They do toot, and to them is this dedicated. If the en joyment of the "Lower Ten" is not so re ?feerehe is it ?es? satisfactory to them than jgtitoeruig ba?Vroonis with their accomplish finexrts, ans to the "Upper." Their cup is (filled to the trim, nor should the exclusive, Ahe oue who sips nectar, ?ind fault with ihomcapun whe ?aaacks his lips over Sa igons of. btnall beer ? heaven forefond. A .quilting is arsort of a preface or introductory ?chapter to a frolic at tiight. Frolic ! who would have guessed frolic f not Old Hay, as he dropped to at the house of a friend after e1 day's labor, weary and worn, at seeiug a quilt with a few rosy young damsels working away with the nimble needle, for dear life, a? demure as sleepy pussy cuts. Nor even when one or two of the boyt dropped in about sundown, like stray stars coming out before, daylight is gone. 'The said stars dressed and pomatumed to the extent Of their financial abilities, look ing extremely uneasy and sheepish in stiff homespun and rigid colar. But presently more" nfiivk, singly, in couple* or in little groups of both. sexes. Now O. H, smells a rat, h?rr?df*fVolic on every face. Lively go the needles, and lively chatter the tongues of rustic belles as ever and anon tho owners are pestered by bashful homespun for the evening evolves the starlike sparkles of his rustic wit, and everything goes merry as a marriage bell, Old Hoy is. irf the way, he cutrcnohes him self ou a table behind ft pile of shawls . aad and goes off into a enooee. Meanwhile the quilfgoes up to the ceiling, it is merely an ex cuse* and a sort of blind to the old folks. Thry doh'ffscc into such things of course. Among the girls there is some demure talk of going homo, but some half dosen hats belonging to the prettiest ore thrown up to the coiling on the overhanging quilt?and how can they leave wiiuuuL ihm) huts, iuuiuu ? Finally thoy conclude to stay a few minutes. For a certain period O. B. is oblivious, but ib at- last awak ened by ?' Dancing feet Keeping time to music sweet. Far ahead of all fiddling (for a fiddle can't ?in*)" Ob hew I lore my 8usy gal, I dearly love niy sue, But the road's too long and the horse too poor. To court my Su-oo-iic gal. Oh I love mj Susie gal, i Oh how I love ?y Sue, But the road's too long and the horse too poor, Good bye my Susie ga-a-11. Hereupon one of the asteroids takes upon himself the role of the pour knocked-kueed horse, and antics oAor and around until some compassionate file meets him half-way*, when ' an infinitcasimal amofcut of Masousic courtiug is performed, and Susie gal and pardncr back out and give plane to the next couple. This goes on until each and every S--*mc has been sound(ly) smacked and danced out of breath. As it may be supposed, O. B. was very interested about this time, a od resolved to snooae with oue eye aud both earn open. The name of the poet who was delivered of the next jig, O. B. never could ascertain. Quick time Jay bird nit tin' on a bick'ry limb, a hick'ry limb, Jay bird nit tin' on a hickory limb, bio, hio, hio, I picked up a rock and hit 'im on tho shin, hit *lm on the shin, I picked up a rock and hit ??* on the shim, hio, hio, bio. k . j,. 4i V The brukcu leg jig is evidently the name for it, as only a company of brukcu shinn'd jay triht cui;Jd keep time to it. There was, how-. ??itn,A-WiVnnji<Mti> am ?tvor of ??-*-??? 1 pairs ot homespun breeches that could toe and heel to anything, except perhaps, ''old hundred." The next refrain took O. B. back to the time when he was a ten year old, that the larger girls kissed to tantalize the '-grown ups." Every body has heard? There's a flower in the garden for you young man, Ac. It seems there arc variations There's a possum in the garden for you young maid. There's a possum in the pardon for you young maid. There's a possum in the garden to kiss, be not afraid. There's, 4c. O. B. was kissed when he was little?when he was big?some. Is it disagreeable now he is old boy ? I am afraid not, would he like to sweep his appreciative lips ovei that peachy cheek of sixteen ? perhaps! well, he might cajole, palaver, negotiate, or flank, (military) and arrive at such a consumation. But would it be a pleasure to sixteen?uot a bit, so O. B. will refrain from mixing old wine iu new bot tles. Gentle reader, is there.any thing astonish ing in emigration, when a niniden holding to the arm of a true larger and keeping step to a march Westward, is sang to in this wiso i Where coffee grow? on white oak trees, And rivers run with i,vainly, Where the rocks are overlaid with gold. And the girls are sweeter than candy. Nice country to live in. Furtherm ,ro hear tho answer to the follow ing plaintive interrogatory from a smitten in quireu, and imagine all hands, or feet, patting off tu t id den in. (Insinuating.) Oh where arc yoti going my darling, Oh where are you going / tay ; Oh where are you going my darling, This loug summer's day. (Brisk.) I'm a going to my tiddlcum, my tiddlcum, my tid dleum, I'm a going to my tiddleum this long suramur's day. And as nil parties kept at tu tiddlcum, de ponent went to sleep, und secth not what took place next, or nflcr ; us the end wan a blank to his tired senses. OLD BOY. Doublc-llcfcded Colored Girls. Tho New Orleans Picayune thus describes a wonderful natural curiosity, to be seen in that city : We paid a visit on Friday to that most won derful of Nature's freaks, the double-headed colored girl, or perhaps it would be more cor rect to say, the two girls in ono. For conven ience, we nhnll speak of them In the plural. They art; entirely distinct, ns far as mind is concerned, laughing and chatting with each other, and being apparently upon the most in timate terms, and one may have a headache or ? celd without the other being effected, but any fever, or other serious disease affects both equally. Their bodies are soparate from the small of the back up ; each haying a perfectly formed bust.and head, two arms, &c., and each has two legs, but thero is only one trunk. Both aro remarkably intelligent, reading and writing with ease, while their manners are re fined. In quite a lengthy did, not make a single grammatical error, and their language was uuusually select. JL'pou questioning them as to their education, they replied thai they hud beeu carefully taught by their former mistress, Mrs. Smith, in Colum bus, North Carolina, in which village they were born. They arc now fifteen years old, aod more than ordinary bright for girls of their age, having had the advantage of foreign travel. They both sing very sweetly, one having a so prano, and the other a contralto voice, and we have rarely heard two voices that blended so perfoct in a duet. Among their other accom plishments is that of dancing, and the manner in which they manage to execute a waltz is truly wonderful. When standing at ease the left foot of one and tho right foot of the other do not lie fiat upon the floor, but rest upon the toes. In walking, however, they step with all their feet and walk with perfect case with the other two. In speaking of them as one, they arc called Millc-Chrissie, but in addressing them separately, one applies tho distinctive ap pellation, she on the left being called Millie, and she on the right Chrissie ; though Chris sie, in addressing her other hnlf, call her ?'Sis ter.'* There is a striking resemblance between their faces, and conformation o! their heads, is much the sanie?Chrissio being perhaps a shade brighter than her sister, and rather more talkative. Before seeing these strange girls wo had fancied that wo would experience a reeling of repulsion, but the first glance at their bright, cheerful faces dispelled that idea effectually. Tkukiju.v. Tragedy at MpWoE, Wiscon 8ik?A. Oiri. Kills iikr S?dlver.?A dis patch- dated Mrfdison, Wiscousiiijdatiuorvl^ says : ' ? Intelligence hns just been received here of a tragedy in Monroe, Green count}', of which the following are the particulars obtained front entirely reliable authority : Patrick Crotty, nn Irishman, somewhat noted for his exploits among the fair sex, seduced a young serving Woman mimed Angeline Shroyer, sonic two years since, and a long suit followed about tho maintenance of tho child. The girl's father proposed- on her behalf, to settle the matter for an indemnity of $300 and the costs of the suit. Crotty had come to tho Monroe House where nngeline was working, to make payment and taking a* receipt in full. Hero a dispute occurred, Crotty claiming that the amount should be only $300 in all. CroLty was quite boisterous in his language, frequently going out to stimulate himself with liquor. The girl also slipping out, procured a pistol, and on his approaching her with insulting language, and some say, with violent gestures, she fired, the ball entering the abdomen and passing en tirely through him. lodging near the skin at the back. He uttered an exclamation, hasten ed to his sleigh, and attempted to drive homo, but soon sunk down and died. Crotty had married only a few weeks since, and tho con troversy has been more fierce since that time. ??? ? ? ? ? - A Tale op Lovk.?One quiet night in leafy .June, when the bees and birds were all in tune, two lovers walked beneath the moon. The night was fair?so was the maid ; they walkedjnnd talked beneath the shade; with none to harm or inako afraid ?her name was Sue and his name was dim, and she was fat ami be was slim; he took to her and she to hint. Says Jim to Sue?"By all the snakes th it squirm among the brush and brakes. I like yon bctter'n buckwheat cakes." Says Sue to Jim ?-'Since you've begun it, and been and Come and done it, I like you next to a new bonnet." Says Jim to Sue?"My heart you've busted ; but 1 have ulways gals mistrusted." Say* Sue to Jim?4*I will be true ; if you love me ! as I love you no knife can cut our love in two." Says Jim to Stu?"Through thick and thin for your true lovcyer count me in ; I'll court no Other gal agin." Jim leaned to Sue, Suo leaned to him ; his nwse just touched her jockey brim, four lips went?went?ahem ! ahem ! and then?tintl then?nnd then?and then?and then ! Oh ! gals, beware of men in June, when crickets arc in tune, lest your names gets in the papers soon ! The Ur&nd Lodge of tho Independent Order of Odd Fellows, of this State, holds it,s annual session in Charleston on the 20th instant. During the last year this order has reoeived, in tho United States, an accession of over 40,000 members, and has expended over $600,000 in aid of the sick and lor th<? rutp i?ort of tho widow nud orphan. Th* ftaperr?lfl Tragedy. ? ??-}&? ;?!C'iiiiifcMej ? '? t ] .-, We have chronicled the fact of the killing of a uiau named Jomee A. Laird at Naperville, DuPage county, Illinois, by Chauuccy Bailey, with whose gvrife the docensed had been critn iually intimate. A coroner's Inquest has sine* beun hold 'Upon: the remains, and a verdict rendered in accordance with the fact8. From tho testimony given at the iuquest it] uppenrs that Mr. Chauncey Bailey,tho injured husband,, resided in the western suburbs of I Nupoiville; ttiat sotfio three months ago one JumcB A. Ijaird a young and not a bad-looking man. and .formerly a resident of tho village, returned Atom the somewhat fast town of ChcyennCjMpherc he hnd hold the position of sheriff ofwic county in which Cheyenne is located, as also tho position of deputy ?nited States marshal of the district. During the three months since his return, an improper intimacy grow up between the ex-sheriff and the wifo ?f Mr. Bailey?an intimacy which although perfectly evident to the community nt large, Was not known to Mr. Bailey until quite recently. At last a friend of the injured husband told him of the disgraceful rumors. Mr. Bailey very properly commenced to in vestigate as to the facts tu the case. So, accordingly, he immediately started off to Elgin, tha? .is, to speak more accurately, he told his wife that ho so intended. This de parture f?r .Klgin, Mrs. Bailey was informed, would take place Wednesday morning But this part^of the programme w as not carried out. Dudng the day the ex-sheriff received a note written in a feminine hand conveying the information that Mr. Builcy had left town for that day. Accordingly Mr. Laird pro ceeded tv tho house of the womnu about 9 o'clock ijgt the evening. A gentle tap at the door, ami Mrs? Bailey admitted him'. Soon aller thr entrauce of Laird, Bailey appeared oh the ,round?gazing at the guilty pair through ? hole which he had cut out in the window certain the previous evening. His wife nuc^Latrd at the time were Hitting to gether (jpa lounge in the s'uiiiiLr room, bin soon |WeJHutn an adjoining bedroom. Wait ^li^mmM Rt?w minutes, Buftoy burst in the ?^^^tn??V dashing into the bedroom, caught his wifo and her paramour flagrante delicto. Laird attempted to escape, but the outraged husband drew a revolver, .and before the liber tine reached the door shot-him in the breast immediately over the heart. Five shots were fired in all, only one of which took effect. Laird succeeded ii> reaching the open air, ran a few rods, and fell a corpse. Builcy immedi ately gavv? himself up, but the authorities did not incarcerate hi in, allowing him to sleep where he desired to in the village. The cause of the above tragedy, or one of its causes ( Mrs. Bailey), is a tolerably hand some woman, about twenty-eight years of age. She commenced her career of I'rec-lovo by eloping with a i 'nivcrsulist clergyman. This first departure from virtuous womanhood was, however, hushed up, the erri"" woman ap parently becoming a repentant. Chicago Re mtblican^ January lf>. CoMiMKUCIAb.?Trade has has been lively during the ,u?acut week, says the Wilmington Slur, especially "on the wharf." Turpentine ami Cotton have been on a grand rampage, creating more than usual excitement among dealers. Even the croakers have been forced to gratify uj with some of their horrid grins, and reluctantly admit that all is not yet lost. Spirits Turpentine at ">U cents and Cotton at 28 (the quotations of yesterday) isn't so bad after all ; and we hope to see a general improvement in business at an early day. We have heard much recently concerning tho prosperity of the Gottou States. May wo not hope that the "tidal wuvu" of rejuveaa ttOU has reached the Turpentine State? We doubt not we arc as well off ns our friend* furthci South. Their receipts, being chiefly from Cotton, come almost in a body ; while the productions of North Carolina, be ing more varied, keep trade near the standard of uniformity, and supply our people with greenbacks, though in smaller quantities, throughout, tht' entire year. In summer, when Savannah and Mobile arc without trade enough to keep a third of their business population occupied, Wilmington is doing her heaviest business in naval stores. No city af the South offers greater induce ments to capitalists than Wilmington. Wc hope they will give us a call b- fore they do* cide where they think they can make the most money. Con. Ho ard, in an address on Friday hlght nt the emancipation celebration in Washington, said that the coiorod man had not vet got out ol tho woods, and that ho must have the right of suffrage extended to him in Now York nnd Ohio, for he was as much entitled to voto thore as he was in this Dis trict, or any of the Southern States. Ho lifgcs Congress lq complete the work in that direction. Some Sunnier Paj>8< Day by day the South gains a better tone. The people are growing more 'hopeful, and cor respondingly strong. Through all these States; so lately furrowed with cannon balls and sowed with dragons' teeth there are springing up, and even budding and blooming, the beautiful flowers of peace. Our material interests are advancing. With pride and gratitude we make ffie record. Southern produce is going to market in un told quantities, aud millions and millions of dollars are coming from the North and from Europe in payment therefor. Here and there the crops may have proved a failure, but a close examination seems to show that the fail ures are exceptional, not tho rule, and that throughout all tho broad South the larger number of tilled acres have given grateful yields. There has been more heart in the "hurvest-home" home songs thau for several years, j There is even now a greater abundance of money in the South than has been for many a long year. Wo have boon gaining wealth, and whut is better, the btern experience of lui tor years has taught us to be economical, pru dent, thrifty. The great business centres of the North have been saying, in view of pro posed enterprises here, "There is no money in the South. On the 28th ult., oue New York bank uloue forwarded one and a half millions of dollars to the South. That bank is only one of many now called-on to pour into our coffers. The glad evidences are that a portion of this wealth will be used, not in dissipation, but in building up the waste places of tho South. We have as we have said, grown more thrifty. In this general comparative prosperity the city of Charleston and the entire State of South Caroline are, we trust, making a true advance '1 he improvement may, to some, seem slo\., but it is none the less sure. With more money-making, come other and great improvements. In Government matters we are becoming more stable, and in tho mat ter of general education wc are certainly reach - I ing u higher plane. We have it is true, some drawbacks, some difficulties. Clouds drift up now and then. I Hut all the South is fast finding the sources of true wealth. Kvcry true patriot should be glad thereat, for added good to the South j means an added good to the nation. A H kkmAi'URODiTE.?lu Vienna, Cathe rine Hohunnun, a native of Havana, is exhib iting herself at the present time to the physi cians and naturalists of the Austrian capital. She is neither a man nor woman, a rusii* na* tursc a enso of hermaphrotlitia vera htterali?. A journalist who saw her, writes to the Vien na Fret*: "I pitied the poor creature. Al though iu good health, and of robust, even beautifully shaped form she sat before me in deep distress and wept. Aud she has wept already a great deal in her joyless life. She loved a roau for twelve years: be loved her too, and even proposed to her to go with him to America, where nobody would know of her misfortune ; he would live with her there and be happy with her. But she refused to ac cept his generous offer, saying she would not make him unhappy. Then she loved, dread ful to say, for seven months?a young girl. Both of them were greatly attached to each Other, until the young girl finally turned from her tint! married "from this timo forward." says tho poor hermaphrodite, "I could no lon ger look at the girl; 1 hated her." Tho most conflicting f-elings always surge in her breast and torment her heart. She feels love for both sexes, and does not belong to either. "What shall I do here on earth?" she exclaimed; what am 1? In my life nn object uf scientific experiment, and after my death, an anatomical curiosity !" Proportions or the Human Body.? The proportion of tho human figure arc stric tly mathematical. The whole figure is six times the length of the foot. Whether the form be ?londer or plump, the rule holds good; any deviation from it is a departure from the highest benuty in proportion. The Creeks mado all their statures according to thi.-t rule. Tho face, from the highest point of tho fore head, where tho hair begins, to the chin, is one tenth of tho whole stature ; tho hand, from the wrist to tho middle fingers is the same From the top of the chest to the highest point in the forehead is a seventh, if the length of the face, from tho roots of the hair to the chin he divided into throe equal parts, the first division determines the plaee where the eyebrows meet, and the seoond tho place of nostrils. '1 he heigth, from the feet to the top of the head is the same as the extremity of the fingers when the amis are extended. A young man at Berlin lately lost 29 pounds of flesh and won a wager by keeping awake for a whole wcok. A Wonderful Volcano.?The Londoii News flays: "It in not merely that Mom* Etna has again broken forth Into drtiption, but that the --new outburst i* ehatwrtaviaed |0nh i violence and intensity indicative of the wi?Uf. , extent of the region of disturbance beneath the* crater, For nine hours on the night of December . 8-9, the mountai u Iras vomiting flames and lava to a prodigious height. Stones and burning matter were projected from the) erster, ?ad so high didWJSfll of these projee* tiles reach that the sand- 'and smaller stones fell Over Ari Reale and even., over Mamma) or to a distance of upwards of forty miles from the cone. The lava is now flowing in every direction from tho crater, and devastating the surrounding country. Aller tho second great outburst, tho eruption became somewhat leas active; hut that the mountain is far from being likely soon to sink to rest, is evidenced by the fact that deafening denomations Still continue to bo heard. If any further evidence were wanting of the magnraconco of the scale on ? which Etna is now e\ opting; it would be found in the fact that the news we have received comes from Valetta, which is upwards of o*?: > hundred and twenty miles from Etna. We are told that crowds assembled at Valetta, to witness the grand spectacle afforded by tho ' 1 burning mountain." Sharp Transaction in a HottetTrade. . ?Quite recently a business man who could talk horse very learnedly, and thought he wan pretty well informed oc *he subject ot horse flesh, swapped a small white for a ertam-oolorod horse by paying such "boot" as he thought gave him "'a real bargaiu." shortly afterwards he meto muu with a beautiful glossy, coal-black horse, who was willing to swap for the cream for an amount of boot named. Our business man accepted the offer very readily, paid the required boot, uud took possession of the coal black. Very soon, however, the coal-black . began to grow rusty in spite of great care in the way of carrying and washing, the rusty tiut increased in rust in ess, when upon making "a scientific examination," the glossy eosuV black was found to have been simply ailathe* manifestation of the remarkable progress of the country is making in the fine art hair<dye< ing, and especially horse hair dyeing. Ouf businces man's dew ee**bv?eii - how out to be his original white one, which he! swapped for the cream color.?Providence Journal. A Remarkable Escape.?As Mr. ?yl? ' vester Seribner, of Salisbury, N. H., was on his w]ty home with his hone and team, On the 31st ultimo, he observed a dog standing ever* few seconds on his hind legs, looking Intend/ toward the forest, and uttering occasionally a low cry. The behavior of the animal was so singular that Mr. Seribner stopped his teas, and npon listening heard a faint sound, but whether animal or human he could not talk Proceeding in the direction of the ?oUud?to the manifest delight of his dog, who ran on before him, ever and anon looking to sec If his master was following. Mr. Seribner soon discovered one of his nearest neighbor* (Mr. Robert I. Ratchelder) crushed under a large ash tree which he had been felling. Mr. Batcheldur's thigh was broken, and he was otherwise so much injured that it is believed he could not live another hour had not succor arrived ; and for this he was directly Indebted to his neighbor's sagacious dog. Mr. Serib ner rescued the injured man from his perilous situation( took him home, and he Is now re Ear Ache.?So painful is this malady, that we are sure every ono will be glad to read a recipe, said to bo infalible in its cure. We oopy from an exchange the simple remedy)? "Take a bit of cotton batting, put upon It a pinch of black pepper, gather It Up and tie, and dip into sweet oil, and insert in the ear. Put a flannel bandage over the head to keep it warm. It will give immediate relief." The New York Tribune soys: "Reports come from New Orleans that the Thugs who have broken up one constitutional convention and prevented one Presidential election in that city, aro now threatening to murder the ?s n members of the Legislature, if that body shall have tho audacity to attempt holding it* regular session. Lot us tell these rioters and murderers an open secret: On the fith day of March next, Philip H. Sheridan will resume command in New Orleans. The fact may be of service to them." A noted Chinese bandit and blackmailer, Linsian-man, has bcon captured in Shanghac. Ho will bo punished by boing put into a bos of such shape that he can neither lie down, sit, nor stand; his head and hands will pro 11 rudo, and he will be left exposed to sun, wand and rain, until he dies of exhaustion or starva* tion. The word "hats" occurs but once in the hiblo. See Daniel 3d chapter, 2!*fc rorse>.