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4** (yo I Ci: )ir.ws.) SSigh Ar t,he hs Rublime it is from the mountais ukdo. On Go0.d's earth to gaze, spread far had wide, Io look on:the villngo roofs below Cleaming wart and bright, in 8unlighkt's glow, While above,.the tow'ring heighits in air Their burde of snow forever bear, And a breath' f'rom-ether.pure comc- )y ro kiss th-e cheek with a gentlo sigh. 'Tis plets:mit, inidst green and iossy dell, In grastsy cool nooks. secure to dwell, Where no sound fron -city's strife break: * in, With discordnt. note cf care 6r sin; W-ibro-'ie brook whilt s9ftly .tAbiang nea-, Lulil the soul to rest, with-: madence clen*r, A nd noonday with calm and nellow'd light; Jirings hiding violets sweet, to sight. Eut Ocean has greater oliarin for me, With vigorous breath and dashing sea, $r rippling blue, a the-shore it haves, ir lashing foam ot' its angry waves! A.dearly love the w-hite sails to trace, Skiminig the waters'with matclius,s gra.ce, While evot. the sea gull's pii.cingcry, -eenis part of the deep's great mystery. Then nMako my home on some sunny sfore, Where hillows break with eternal rear, Let me quaff the fresh. rievinhig air, Up-springing from lips.of Pea nympbs f%ir. it alw.Ays wafts on Its breetes pure, Courage for hearts that ca'n long endure, .And iethinks I hearin "wild wavesl-sing, iver the chorus-"Be SIrong-Be Strong!" . - -C. A Conspiracy to- Depose the President. -Many who6 have no ncess fo6tsr corn. rntmllication with-Ihe political 111aiaagrs at. Washingto-i hIAve wondered at tle great importaince attached to al nppar oktily insignifisant resolutidn that was driveii th'ough the limse' of4lepresen. tatives last week, by Tlhnd Stpven with railroad speed. Th "A'adsonafd in. tell'gencer" of the 2Gth explamt% as fol low-% : "A project exists for the rel vvl of A ndrew .lohInon from the office of Presi deit of thet U:iited States. \ve sat y' it 4"ists. Wo (1U n.ot,say that it las been' "Iitit-ly compas.edN by d had men. B vi;t that.it oxists in te b 0o1ia ,.If tm O (f's'mlinld, of W li, -of 1ten nd of higi offiCia stti, there is no donht.. "The fir.t tp tow"Ad such a result 111ust, he, of coirse, to promote a pr'lext. Tiii; would bo filtimg.' i11:i;wed by the n aiensur pissed -a r'ad b v the JIonv.. virtnially declaring by resolutim of (Ion. gr'sc, a secesson of lie North and ' ('st. from the South. We ituert, I.ro the t-esgltion :. 'R'tsolved by tO Iow-so of Repre sentatives (thu Senate concurring), That ii order to clwo tha agitation upon a -kiLltio-n w hiec seems li kely to- d ist urb I ho actiou of the gove1rtilt-t, Ias well as t1 qu.et the -uncertainty which exisIs in 'In- minds of the pople ot the 'le n' AiRtes which have been dechfred in in. sttrrection, no Setantor or 'Representa tive. shall be ndnitted Into either brapcl of Congress frem ay of thit said Sateq till Congress shall hnve dechered suc6 State entitled to represenitattui.' "Now, let consider * The Presidelit, im his 'recentOnnuiI mes-age, gae vgress, nsreqfiradl hv the Co'nsttuutuon, nomto fti staeo ' heUnmon, andi now stands awaiting, as the,e'xed.nuve of the latva, the. nenon-otf i he Legislature.'. The N,a tiottml Legislature is to declare:n part of' the Union out of' Constitutional re'lat ions with the remainder, and pioceed to leg. islate for it as an. alien territory.' Tle President may. shortly issue a proclams. t ion d'eclaring that, the Constittionnf relations are restored. be'twsen the States and the. Genei-al Govemnient. *The President. myust execei,o the laws of the Unlion; and - preserve. protect, and Jtefend.(the, Consittutioni of the United States, But lhoas the Euc'dtive isne eessarily the judge of obstihtct ions to the~ execution of . the laws, its measure, quality and tendeltey ; and the question is whether, if he meets''no resistanee to the laws oh thme Union, th-eru is any other power to declare a state of insur gency, conmacy, oi- abnor.mal re'labton between peop1e and gove'rnmewnt Z Anad if laws be put on the~ statute book dlecliang the fact of a ate of p.optular cotnumnacy, how are they to be c'arried jnto execuztrive effect by a magistrate who makenu.thia competent decision illat' f.he're"1s no sutlieet rukatter for them ? Upon such a conflict an impeachment, would be essayed, and the matter tried. amid.'unspeakable calaniities." 'Mrs. Davis, wife oft Jefferson Daviq. reacsh' ed.Atlast,a Satur4ay'rtight, and lheft on Saturday moerningr's t rain for Maco; whijh ee she@ goes la the guest o' Gleneral U Cobb for a short time. ihme was aceoam ie'd by one chIld, the other tiro being at "a WflTNSBORO. Tustly .iMoriing, Iaruh ok 186. TP. P. SunE, q., is the solc age'II for. this paper in Charlesion S. C We haye received a new and larg supply or pnoer suitable to job p,ntinV of all descripti,ons. I 1lve a slpply.of evenuo tanel:m* vtrimus domlk"inaions, whiol. can bq,.,bad bV applying -ithier at this ofico or aithe olie o' the Clerk of the Court. - IT. A. GAILLARD. Ne Advlirtxeen. Bae,ot & ' River,t, advert.ife Chau. pagie,.Maccaroni, French Mustard, &c. FiAher & f,o.wrafce, Columbia, S. C., ndvertise Hoes, Iron, &c. Edward Sil, Columbia, S. C., a'd'ver ,istis Landreth's Garden Seeda. * Notice, Wrn rep ithorized to state that a meet ing of uhe lalies interested in the FIair to be given for the benefit of the Episcopa Church of lhis town, will be held at Mrs. Ladd's residimce, at 10i o'ock on Thursday morning. This notificntion, we are informed, is aesign. e,l to embrace Al the ladies of the town who inmy be disposed (o lend their co. breAion in the matter ledemptoa of MIutIlated National Bank Note. The subj6iried circular from the Comp. troller of the Treasury is important;and interesting.: TiAsU-ity D.RPARTMENT, OricE CONItI. OF TUX CURI.NCY .' Wua hiligtoif)iRD. C., Feb.I1.5. - An impres.siot seeina to prevail in the puilic mind that the samne rigit'l rules awnI regulations prescribed by the Treasurer of the United SinteS for the redenptimiof mutilated Treasury and Unlited States notes ar4 r.pplicuble to the rudemption of mutilated bank notes. Ths i- a nii.sake. Although a circa. har is.ued tv.national banks from.this subject, vcognized tho propaty, in some installces,.of redeeming mutilated no!tIs'at Iess. than thevir.falce vahlite, dhv ilto'.tion was to leave the matter nain ly to the discretion of,the officers of the b.anks. - al. In order, ho%evcr, to make the mat. ter pvIrectly clear, and ' to obviate for the Tuiturepadl necessity for explanatory lettors, I now , proposo briefly to state that experien.ee. .,as demonstrated the iniexpediency, if not the illegaliy, or al lowitig frnetional valnations of nitilated slot.,'- beside whicly it oifuses and omplicates oulr Alcounts to *such a de: gree as to render the plani impractiehble. A bank*,bond t redeem it's. notes on demand.' The. fact thitt a portion of one of its promissory aotes is torni off or missing does no" cancel this obligation, so long as ther.is'no reason to believe that the missing portions 'of the tie zqn or will be used to dtfraiid. Section fifty eight. of the curren0y act will al. ways justify an.ingtdirv as to the cause or manner of mutilation.* If the explaudation is satisractory, the note should be r.*ddetnevd in full ;' but if -the inquiry shmoulil le'ad to the belipf that, fraud was intended, the banligvond be 'justified 'in refusing to redsem it. -Nothing will justify a deduction''fromi the race vahte'of a note, except a-fradu. lenmt intent, and eviderice of' a fraudulent int.ent wnuld justify the bank in refnsing to tu;deent the note; t.herefogi, thle nome should be.redieemed in fnll, or nontt all. The~ full face value will be allowved for all nmutiYaute.d notes retuirned to this offit.'. whmen.such vaule stas allowed by the bannk which redeemed them. The ofileer's of thes banks.are thie-only. competenst .jnmdges as- to the propriet-ies or necessities of the case, and all qu'es lions arising upon umutilated o4es.pre. sented - for redemption are left4o. their juadgment and discretion. -FREEMtAN CLAURK., . 'Comptroller of the Currency. TH TEici8sLPON wHtcHi THE PRIES! nlBNT WILL. MAKE PEACE. WITH THE R?.DICLS.-The ,NewV York lYrmed 'make. the 'following p loposition to. the Radicals,. which we take to be Presi, dent Johnson's ultimatum: ,"The exclusion of loyal men, . fromi Congress, in violatiort alike of then rigists ansi of the Constitution, is the main, hol1it 'te sole, 3ause of the pre sen~t EPrVnco of sentiment betweeri them. I( the Union majority in Con gresa hiyd been ini..itz actiotn trite to then priniciples of the Ujnioni party, .ana hat nlot all- wed itse-lf to be swerved fron tho'r priniciple1s by thu airoit and reek-| le3ss mainaIlttionis of me~n whon. hava with them iso symp~athiy whaever, this con. flictwyould no07er have a-isen. When. eveur ta e.,voriy can tharow off th influsence.s by wvhichi it has beeni thus mia-led; and como back to its original1 andqu tnite position, that enfict will end, and all the dangers whi5h now seemn to lko impending over the Unaion party and ,the don'ntry, will be fo4ever "in the deep lbosom of the ocean buried.' " REnEI,LrToN IN MB8U.-o Feceof' Missouri (Recdical of' costee IS mf const.ructive rebellion againlst Pre'i" dent Jothnson'a authority. le' sends the following tgly iniflamm tory dia-' patch tt5 a fissouri Senator at.Wash ingto4t: .. . c.7EFFnsoN CITY, Feb. 22. &nakr fenderson, of .Afissour, 'W: IIA f, Say to Senator Blrown and,ouir radi. cal .tmentbera, that the Leguisl,iture has to diay decided by a vote uf'three to one !nt the House, andmore Than fout to one in the Senate, to.Stanid by the majority, of the Nationnl Congress 'on the great issues of th'e day, "ridtwishstanding the Presiden't veto on the Freed,ansBni. reau hill. This reflects the feelings of the loyal 'people in this Stde and of the loyal men in all the South. Out4itter expe'rienIce~ make us recognize hut two parties-the loyal and disloyal.. We are, not willbng to divide the control of the Government with the latter, much less'to tuirn over the loyal people wholly to their mercies. Stand firm. Trust, God and the people. . THOMAs C. Fr,ECTCHIER, Governor of Missouri. Dead, .Col. James Cheusn, aged nincty. three years, died at his hionto, in Kirk wood, near Camden, on thio 17th ultimno He was thie father of Gen. Jime Chs nut, and.w"as highly respected hy - he people of Camden, among whom hi re sided so long.: We clip the following two paragraphts from an editorjal in the Camden Journal Ccl. Chesnnat was a remarkable man by nature, while his'position and advan tages gave him' proiihinence for the ex sessed an independence of'judgment and stiength. of will which enaledc him al ways to snect his owni ~ourse atnd to. carry out Iss purposes.- Frequently hon ore-1 by the people of his native Distrir-t wit h nublic office, hisfuaties Were always well and faithfully' rqaformed., isa po. hitical cnitcyat itteugrity, were us pure and tnsullied a -his purivate char. net'er. .Blssed with robust conistitn tion and active taste his' 'egular mode of life. and egcelle'4 habits preserved him in great vigor- te Ztr.em'e old age; and at uinety he sat 5 horse with cas and grape. - As was reasonabi f,-om his antece dents, having seen t Uinion establish--. ed ; haaviidg watched to birth and pro. gress ; its early vigu nd mnature gran- I denr; haavmg been owe in contact early in lhfe with the eai Washings.n, and having bean de ly stam'ped with love .and asdm,iratio,r, r him, he continta. ed to be stannch. u inching, devote'. fnrnd of the union., tihe States; and" -when at length in hi Id age, he mourn- a fully and sadly acqu .d in. lhe courRe h adopted hy his flats tate, he thonght ' lie forc'taw the wrec iich he lived to wizVeas. DI:AviI OF A Dis UtiStrvn MAN. Rev. Alexander Ca elI, the leader in ii the reform in the U st Churect popw.-a larly known as "C bellisaf," died in ti Kentsucky.lately. Campbell was a debat er, and his con etsieswith Bish op Purcell,.of Cinci i; Robiert Dale*F Owen, Nev. Mr. e, Presbyterhan F clergy man, and ort, on:thieolo'gical co pomnt, have lgeen p hed ahdl widely. tq read.-New* York . tot G.nvA, "Sonri~ LfPFI"i BAI.truoats..-*Tn 'erit oth great amiotr.t of de o n ufeign in the South, the n fBlioe withlout regard to . pno,hv def&rmined to ftcfi nthori o hall of' 'the Mar Isiue oi menc.ing April aclld"h Southern Relief h aiso i Baltimore have er it hspas.w worthy movement thiacuom ed seal. and-they tec.prtinP and asuistance of t rosctny.h men in all section *Uin Turn VuAx. Tat ULN....h 8peonel Come,lssion raofheF.lo nians he. comipier sI nDobjo Of forty-one prisos nfyl eecn iicted One of the Mdta h a suit of the trials y httet..o ing of the reapect h nte'onr a wa arr.engly op e eincep.N . -- -.Yeis Y.. . o he~ws Items, The p,rospects of a cotton c'op in Florida are bad. ' General Joseph Wheeler, late Confederate army, was iatmied to Miss Ellen Jones, of Lawrence county, Alabama, on February 8. Extensive discoveries of gold have recomt. ly been mijde near the Missouri river. in the neighborhood of Fo-t Bentoni This'infor. mation has something about it o mQre In. teost, in the mining way, thun that gene rally receiving; as it is about the first in stance where the gt.icl'es are so located that they can be reached by steamboats. The Post-ofiije department. lately adver tised the letti.dgof over 700 routes in 'Mis sissippi, Le.esiana, Arkansas, Alabama and Gec,rgi% ; butonly 184 were let. and on 613 rqutes tae people are still destitute of pol tal.fac,ities because the test oath is in the way/ T iTe Denocrato members of the Ohio Le gislature, in caucus, on Tuesday last, en doracd tie Presiden.s's veto. Last week at ,lobi%k ine cold was very se vere, thn thermometer on the 1Mth being as low as 22 degrees. lee was formed. Bill Arp's fathew as a native of Boston. --his mother of ieston, South Carolina, Maria Pia, th ung Queen of rortugal, and second daugther orictor Emanuel, Is Isweet, graceful; blonde, delicate, looking, well proportioned almd nineteen. 'IShorge, why is the James river like a kEg of lager beer?" "Becanso they both flow into 9 e Dutch Gap Canal." It has Men bettgmifully said that-the veil whiel covers the face of futurity is woven by tihe hand of mercy." Ilesolutions have been introduced in the New York Senate, in favor of the Freed. mex's,Bureati bill and against the Pre.i den.s reto,'and requesting the Congress. men not to vote for-tbo admission of mem bers froiu anyo tthe late rebellious States. '1.hurl6w Weed telegraphed from New York on Thursday afternoon, ratifying Ih a President's tourse as follows:.O-nTh &nator. Morgan : All right hero in Washington, and in the country. The work is done. General Gran"was accidentally shot in the hand in New Ark. ol the 21st, by the explusition of. sk new rifle which he wai ex., asbining.. The worind was.not seilo1s. . It Is raid that Secretary Stavlon- has nn npunced his intention to order the distribu. tiona, next week, of tihe rewards to the np prehension of the assissinalivi -conspira. turs. It is repprted that fillorRA11118' in Can gress oust Mr. Brooks, of New York, fr(m his sent, tihe Pre3ident will appoint'him Cbl lector of the port of New York. let In.~ .ert a% fas ur ifflprr and w6.e destroyed by fire on Sunday ni"ht, with six other buildings. A bill to charter a new railro'ad between Newark and New York, lIeS passed the low. er branch of the Now Jeney Legislature. Governor Perry 1turned' to his hom6 front Washingtonl on Saturday evening last. He brings nu news further than that pub. liched previously. Tile Preident and his Tolley, he Nationll-Rep4ican newspaper goes with the Preident and advocates the re. :onstrulction policy. Tloht paptr in its is. ine of Tito-day hats the following: Some*of tle,ailik party who survive po. itloally, the "D. D.." and whose faint L lunoks are continued every rcning, ma ke gratified in reading the foIowl#, dis- P >atches received in this city by tile Presi. lent .n the day of4heir date in endorse ient of bier speech made on the 22d inst One Qf tie drakes of the duck party, who r ie to treak up the Cooper Institute meet. 1 hg by sending from this city to certain dis. ingulshedjgentlemen of $ew York on the din.,tecanardI that the Pr'esident, in 1te 'peech, had sold out the Union party ad gone body and soul over to the Copper.. eads, will be especially pleased with the istC6es alluded to, and which are as fol weg Ninw Yonx, Feb. 23, 1860. !is Rirellenty Andrete Jphson : 0 Daant Pagataxyv-r...t is all right and alI ire. IThe Utilen Is restored and country afe- Your sp'ech is-triumphant and con-. y will behappy. I comeback.on Oionday.. . * W. II. 8Kwann Another dispatch from Mir. Seward 'to an a hicer of the Government says, under date tbruary- 23d. "All righr.--the work is done, The untry is safe, The administration is es- j blished. Iii enemies aro nowhtA'e. Look rme on AMonday, unless you hear that I me sooner." . New \'onx Cr, Feb. 28, 1866..p sExcoilency Andrew Johnson, President " rftthoUnited Ssates: I thank you from mty whole gratefull heart te youir speech of yesterday. Th,. Union e now 4 fxed fact, laI .-Tucasow WaanD. M5 fhe followig dispatoh frot Mir Ray. s s written after the lying teatgrams fronm mbers of the Duek paty, about the N *sidSnt'a speech, had ben Gying ever, wires at. the rate of about twenty an . New YoRx, Feb. 22. hi4 tanstosix? yonNeq#:-'ieeting is mni- al. cent success, :Imtmediate and enthusi. i 0 popullar aentimeht here is o1erwhelm- W ly with you- * II- J. Rayrs'osm . .~e above are only speimens of the kind slyftg Erleading members fthe rest st( lonailto part in all parts tt the a c ntry severdj sysp XE L Gt A. PI C CongressIoal. WASnINOTON, March 2.-In the Sen. ate the Concurront repolution relative to the admispion of the members of the South'aw..States was passed by a vote' of 29 to 18.. [Thh,resolution shuts oti the reptsetiU from the Southerd? StatesiY The louse W"gagd on tle Civil Righ-ts' 11111 all day. -. It was finally.postponed nil i fi-st day. Froni I1O%0 Nxw Yo1K, Malch 1=fj Beamer Eagle, from iHavin, reports defeat 9C the Libetl ntmy by,the Imperialists, Favorabie lndicfttIons, WAsHNIToN, Feb. za.-InTdications aro that the Commilittee on Reconstruc. tion .will 4toon mpko a ieprt in favor ot the admission of the Tennessee sepre. sentatioo. A Letter from Gene-iralorrest. M. C. Gallaway,Editor Memp4is-Aves. lancAC: '. 0n' nr arrival ii Memphis, a feir days since, froin 'my -plantation, 4 copy of the Avalanche was shown tile in which I %eas representei as haviqg Bed, she country. I thank you for the kind man ner in which you vindicated my-nam.. from misrepresenl6tio*h (wing to the relations you occupied towards. me during thelastthree years..1 know of n, one better 'calculated to do me justice than yourself. Your representation or certain in&idents in y'miilitary career are true, and will be corroborated by every man In my command and b. most the colored tr , sopie of .hem -a:o men in ny em . But in defend ing me, I regret that you shoild supposb for a moment that I could be inAuced to, leave te country. Certainly no aqt or expression of mine could have -furnished, ground for ench a supposition. In sur, rerdering my comnand in A prifiast,.in it public address to my troops, Yurgec them te) rturn home-to'be true to, thAr obligatibns and as they had made 9 -, 14.--Y. u---Ot make. good law.abi'ingp #izona. N'o soldier of my command has been a1'e -to hi, pledges. I have certainly been.trne to. mine, for ainee the surrendjr, I .have been silent and unobttusive, quietly h . bori pon my farm. and I regret my <ecid. is so often disturbuted by re ,trts in the Jlewspapers, which are as. 1jist to ie Government a-they Are. o my, ow character. I'-have ae i. ommitted. an act, uttered a word, or en.. ertained *0sentiment nut in trict accor. lance withr tile most humanizing milit&. y usages, and fear no investiglitiou'into ny ccnduct, I certainly do not intend to. .Iave the .country, for my destiny is now Vit.h the gret A merican Union, and T hall contribute all my infhtenca toward trei)gtheniig the Government, sustain g its credit, uniting th le once lore in the indissolubl ce nd affection. . As'ever: TrNAuy.yourfrie N.B. NeMr YORK, ' March 2.-The cotton murket has 'an advantcing thndency. ales 3,0Q0 bates at 44 cents ; alho-, 3,, 30O bales Governujnent Cotton at . 39} a it centa for low ordinar to middlhng in. Gold is quote.d at 5}. BALT IMORn, I,-bruary 28.- Flout ill. Wheat steady. Corn dull, at 71 72c. Provistons and coffee firm. thiskey advancing. CH Anm,or, .March 8.-4#othing do K in the Cotton market to-day., se Empress Eugente has. n*hde another isation in the fashionabie world. A-1 trm correspondent of the Noarde writes: L. terrible ruimor was circt*atmng yea rday im.the saloons. (tinoline rmi nger. Neither the Etm ras nor het lies of hionouer wore it at hea d inner on mnday at the Tuaileries. You here the consequence of' that reform at court which, if it be continued, will laltely .destroy unhapjny crinoline.," Mrs. Jane Swiss,hem, puubliahero the econstructiI)eit.newpqper in Wsit ~ton, has been 'nmoved from her rkship in the Quarternfaater'i Depart at, -by order of the Secretary of er, it is a.leged, for, ani artisle in b'sr er charginag that the President wa sh ut, toel im the hands of Bouthem CSiomsit. Mju. 8wisgbel. his besh lerk ir. .the D epertmem.s su4