The Fairfield herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1849-1876, May 01, 1867, Image 4
Sclocted Poetry,
TH(YOUT'H AND TIIE PHILOSO
PHER.
A (l recian youth, (,f (alent rare,
1hioII P:l 0's philoohiclio cao
Ilwat lfwwm'.I forI virt-410's nob~ler view,
Py IIeOPt1 net Cxample (00,
W oulH o fiep en ,t h is na his kil
'To iuh the Set ce, anid guid I he wheel
All vl hie lie gaizing throng,
Siih gi.iccul ie "ne and snulick'd tle thong
Tlii lio! weiue I they vxpm-vSts'd,
Wits lwtisk anud tv:ttusli-t I-) his lbreast.
AI lnlcm i, tite vain, Ie eieds would
:how
11i I.-aSliter what, his rk t could do ;
Atd h:olv hiq lavcs tie lutriot, leal
To Acen inus' sacr-ed slulo.
T,11t 1 rembl lig gtove coui'ecs'd i t fright,
The wovoe:1.ny 1i phs siniit'l it Ite sight.
The tan'es dropt ihe lealrned lyro,
A nd to OLeir inmo11IF : 1broleS retireV.
llowc'er, Ihe youth. with forwardt air,
.1ows to the .tgo, anud io unts tho car.
Thl 1iwh reinanlds. the c-'rser. spring,
The chittiot inaitki the rolling ing;
Awil galh'ing.i' crIi' , with e:4gar eyes,
Ani shle. I isae hini s he Ilies.
Trii lihai Int ile guo'.l retiri'd.
With noblcer it hirst, liis b<,opun bin-n'd;
AntI now ialonitg IIl iteletitct plain
The * 'sl -saie aeck lie iark again,
l'tii 'uiis wil- i care file 0ice design,
Not ver dev ii es i.iifr im I tl: line,
A ti m - el seiz a .'d li' eircling crowl
'JTe yout h'( w1110 With cilti io gluw'
PWen btlfeltsa h-61'41 I th Loy;
And till bunt lho :.:dwith Joy.
Fo li-e, dep-uo l gtinug sage, behehill
Wit 11:1in Itie tr1ium1phs ol' the field.
Antt whtit ihii cli -ioier die w nigh,
Atu . Ilh'il vith Ioe, anti caught li is eye,
''Alat ! ttiipi.ppy yoi hi," he cvy'd,
l"lupot nto pnutse t'rom ome,'' (anti sigli'd,)
"Wih indigo:II it'n I su-ey
14ch1 skli :01 judgineilo irown away
The I lute l i-roftsely soumittIler'l I here,
On i vulg3ir nesi lieneih Itiy cie,
it well i'irtoploy'd ?i tles tXpuIesc',
,Xi tl nig h et ! 1101011t i o , vit e i, n ; 0
And ais'dte f'ran at h ni A -
ITO j;),er I o-, -Ild g i he slaic."
t '1.12i-'.rTINt. t'oi;FtI;N :;tws-- -tu -
c -1'. nTIN I v A vIlwt ( I s2l NI. O 'i, I I I
N %v Yo1, .\ pril 2 t.--.The steam
or Pcvr.ice, I'vmllthrwe onl th1c lIth
:'nd th ht o tue :i, llai arrived.
The on u 1,:1.1 t iaintained ahl
f"I'oo l ene tre -iiu t report
Ihit anl lima l heen adLdressed
it) PrlI-;ia by Vralmec.
Th piility of, war with P"russia
i : :)d :it11 edl by It e most pac.ifie, of tho
PI o-is pies. Tleo Itost iimoder':uio of,
i, .1a Frnve, dectlal res that, the go -
ernitit'lt 1u:; l1thelo Slown a
:1h0it of prndlen whicht has, With
d i t ll y, hept, dowit otii nils and as
liions excitedl by It amutbitioln of
L:1 Frtann says, we Iitvo reasoni lo
helOVO t iniembourg estiton will
1.1 lie coioidterel Iy the digi'utturios
oI - at cofie'reiico, but : irt dly by
dtiplomi ati tnote(s.
Two f the propodtion to be dis
il:1. 141 art saidl to bo : "llas the
Ki fli lo lin the ih t ht to code
1J'.% I i),1 itt, 1i' .1t(1 1.t 1. tied it .1 aseti
ri c , t t.1 \iior! I ".v (I I ' r I -:It IIi -.It IlwIill
i' Ciux i~ii' bone I' i'i "~ lie wl'ui ut i '( e..
o ll di in 1ii alit o t cvcpy Idixellholig;
T'imnntd a addirsos to the Knyg of
Soh ai k in4lti e tbeannexd to
Tiilyeirli joIrnals sy hait i case
Ow w X, o rih b rman armyv w'ill
'ihe completiely iornitbid woith needle-.
Thev fort i~titions itl ofti By tl
onto pro' ision om lt. it cl
lits th p -iie ilnc f h
)'Clliebu 5dleeI n'l on ill ea t;icXat
hwi ,' I i'',2 a lins trtiduced iintre un
ten 'et d ti:.itit aou (el~lrtvat ing td s
e1) nr e (cent iitthas bet epern
ei tltc it .ayue sbigmd
hetiPly - i-nd ar has niario
wheh ioiuliete l that Pusi emut
evac.utoi4:y Lxtabdcog otr the ill
1espondnt isaysI therpo tii great, tal ofc
wartherli, andl amont ot er tng iifrt.
c sahl the cam of Chdealon.-, is tole
fo rns m iMt i, an 1000 man
ire to bie ~cicetrate ~ci~there. il~
t0i hrait inar i ret prepara'uce i'licttCions,
and that iBlaye~ne io s o'beng mat
hiemitli to sial seotfigoa.utt ft~
Gazjet toiiys dei of ctheiiques-o
w ith [ihe Cabine or .ll rlinio the 'n
chara0 cit of nt: Fedora Stato i soly
Nan1 in is e Moustieru 'in is' an
nouncementi) on uthe Luxembourgatn ques
th, lto thi Fench eilat ive~ odyhi i
(a li t: I "oiTe goernmonu' t, guniedhby
lihe intle elt of b F ranc e hi o ieqr
ed thi'e preiuserton ofii~ pe'.~ ace hasi
tioughi t t ft'he c nset)on of th(is
Gro iti enmetm grhat, rised the ad Ius
cionsult th i aotion.~isuc T of undlied
atio neu offLueburg aind stLim-g
bm-g gae (lie (toes ditloinatcncommn-t
thi wat. btoweens Fan and 11v0,1-huc
land,' b'ut thee ' conmlinatin hadIi
Cabinetiiiisuteid ru sia, nd wheno
(1rettt0 i1' otd~tajay of 18li.
Froml the Charleston Mercury.
'rance and Prussia.
Prussia seems to ho repeating her
history under Frederick tho Groat,
before the seven years' war. Site
senzed Silesia then, as she has seized
the Glerman provinces wrosted from
Denmark. In cither case, sho has been
simply a robber. She defeated Austria
the in seizing Silesia, as slo lha11 do.
feated her again, for attempting to ap.
propriato her robbery of the Goran
provinces of Deiinark. .ler superior
preparation for war under Frederick,
hais been faithfully imitated by Bismark ;
and has leail to the sano re!sult,-of a
most trituilihiant success. But as the
suCCess of 'redericek, led to a terriblie
coinibinait tioni 01 Lthe naotni-s of EArope
agamst Prussia,-so it Seens, the saine
restult is about again to be prodetced
rgainst her, amnongst the difTorent na.
tiois of Europo. If the genius of Fred.
erick was again at the hoad of her ar
mies, she might not have much to fear,
as to her national existence ; but Bis
naik is to soldier, and his master the
King of l'ru;sia is even less of a soldier
tha Io is. Frederick ollenided mortal.
ly Madame Do Pompadour, when the
4hief ruh-r of irance, as Bismarck has
o!Yended Nadoleon IIf. But Napoleon
is not a woian ; and no woman now
rules- th destinies of the French.
L'ranico and Austria, are clearly prepar
ing, to contest the acendency of Prus
sia in Europe. War will not take place
now ; because it will take two years to
comtipleto the preparations. At the
opening of the seven years' war, Fredo.
rick (prepared himself,) anticipated the
attack of his enemies, beforo they wore
ready to mtarehi against him, by over
rnntning Saxony. Bismarck caimot.do
that now. Ito will not dare to invade
Prance. Siio will take her time to
prepare for ti contest ; and if by the
tilmce she is ready, and the 1"j iperor of
the French possesses itealth, and l'rts
sit shi not relimpIltish the power --he
has grahped,-we hold it, to be a mitoral
verlailoy, that there vill arise a war
coex teinsive with Europe. 1'ranee will
a:art her Napoleonie boundary of the
Ihine. Ahiiti. will have her pos !es.
:ionis to regmIa;in ; Ill ltumSia will be left
to dihposo e0 tho Turk. England, wNa
the y o1vf P1 'russia diring the seven
years' war ; ut Englatd in sueli a con.
test Vil ie the ally of no power. She i.i
turned over to Mammon ; and will imiake
mon011ey otil of the contest. With Prance
an11d Austria (and Denmiark enger to
regainit ier lost provinces), to meet in
the fiibl, we cant hardly doom the result,
doutihtfl. Prussia wats saved, in '.I,
froi being parlit-ioned out, by by the
other powers of Eutropo, by two itot
pielilat agni(os-.- get n -Yvllitus of Frede
ik, alnil t Ie iladnltess of Paul. TIhey
do not exist for her safety now ; and in
two years from this time, thto inp of
ul'ropn which she has undertaken' to
remodel for hor aggrandizoment, will
most. probably describe hr is limited to
the botntdiries, sho possessed beforo her
itivusion of the Geriatn provinces of
1nuniark. Napoleon, if alive and it
healdth, will not fail to extend 'Prance to
the W6line. Itlumbli wil1 have or
extension,--but whoro and how far, it
is not so easy to predict. Wo think
with RIussia, that it is time tho Turk
should bo drivein out of lurope.
FrA'r Srun.tei Fon Coux.-The old
fashiion oif lilling JIldian corn--o long
preva~'lentt amiong our fatrmer.'-ap~pears
still to have many advocalds. WVo arc
not at p tesenlt prepared to discuss thte
subject in all its bearings, hut shall
met~rely oll'er a few remarks in relation
to the advantages result ing from a flat
surface ont light soils, and from cult iva
tintg the crop with tho cultivator, in.
stead of cutit ztingi withh lohe
aund hiarrowv. o iti ioh
It will be evident, we * 'nk., to every
citndid mtindI, that tito przactico of cont
structinig large conical htills a round the
plants, on land wvhicht is lightt and dry,
must inevitabtly totnd1. tomcreaso the
efl'ects of drought, inasmuchi ats it ex.
poses mtore sutrfhco to the atmosphere,
andc consoeinetntly increases arerfactiotn at
times whlent all the motsturo contained
itt the soil is required for the suplport
and sutstenlance of the plants. W hon
rain falls, thie conicial hilul conduct., the
water fromt the root of~ the pliitt to the
centter of tho space between thu rows
and hills, very l ittle fluid beitng rotaitned
abot t he plants, or withmn range of thte
smnall roots, by whlich tlie pubulum is
taken up by theo growing plants, and
withnout whicht thy wvould inunttediatoly
langutish andl decay.
Oni light soils woe thitnk tinitg is
always a disadvantago to the crop.
Evory' fresh stratutm of earth .placed
ove, theo roots causes thoe protrusion of
a no v' set of laterals, to tihe dletrimenmt of
those p~reviouly formed. T1his exhausts
the enorigy of the plant, without inereas
lng in any degree, its powvers of appro.
pritmig food frott thte surrounding soil,
as thte first formed roots cease to grow
as sootn as those caused by the distposi
tioni of nowv soil are developed, andc itn a
shtort. tine will bo founid to hatvo lost
their vitality aind becomte mere wvorth-.
less appondatges, and whtich may be as
wvell remtoved front the~ systema ats
n1ot.
Besh~le, when theo corn is "hilled up,"'
the smalks are "bhlc.d" antd rendered
bnitle by the fresh soil, atnd tii, in
case ofstrong wintds, causes thmemt to
break, whiicht is an injury invol vitng a
diitut ion of product, and consequot
loss. It has alIso been .renmtrked that
corn1, whten cultivated wi tihout "hilling'
and withI a perfeotly levol or flait surface
wvili, whent prostrated by the wvind, rise
tmucht more readily than wvhen thte (op
posito method is pmursued. AnidI
know this -to be so.--Cor. Germnantown
illgralph,
DAvnr ol AN Exai.tsU E'Ant,.-.Th
death of the Earl of hirownlow is an
noniced in Engbitnd. Thme deceased was
worth Li130,000 a year, and used toask
thirty or forty poor pople who were
mnvalids like him iself to spend the winter
at Madoira-ho paying all the bille.
The Dutoh Diffioulty--A Higher Money
Bid,
In the Dutch Chambers, on the Lux
omburg ceusion question, M. Van Zuy.
len did not the less think it right to ex.
press an opinion that the cession was a
desirablo thing in the iiteret of lolland,
and gavo the Uhamber a piece of infor
mation very curious, or ra.cr very
afflicting for the dignity of tho sovereign
of the Grand Duchy, nanely that the
affair had comlo to a halt solely becauske
the prien olflered by France was3 not
found silicient. Thits th ma t ter turns
on a more biggling lor price, in which
the right of IL peope and the rspect of
a go11verinelit to itself are in nto wav
interested. Nothing, cotscvpiently, has
yet been done, and If we re 10t believe
the news brought from all (puarters by
telegraph, nothing will be done-either
because the Emiperor Napoloon nmy ro.
fuse to increasue his bidding, or bvmcauso
tho King of Holland may recoil before
tho reprobation which would he raised
all over Enrope )y the conclision of
such a reprehensible bargain ; or O stly,
becauso neither party may bo willing to
icounter the internat ional comlica.
Lions which the transuactons would Io
dL"cc.
We are the more inclined to this last
hypothesis from a telegram sent ts from
London, annotincing that the British
Government had been informed by its
Minister at the Hague that the King of
Holland had brokon off the negotiations
in order to prevont international difficul
ties. Minister M. do Znylcn, in fact,
declared that the interest of Hfland
calle.1 for tho cession of Luxembourg,
but that the prico offered was too small.
On the sulject, it was not preciselv i
gotiatioi thathad takcn place, but in
con versat ions. The Dutch GovernmInit.
in offlering its good ofilee., only ired
to know that it had no reczpons-i bi lity ill
the matter. ''L docrat ion.i of Conut
lbsm:iarck, that all tits between but vemit
lnr;:md aIN ui hai coel hl igCen
th g a t plea-.un- inl IlI' lanld. TheI
honorable Minister erminated by do
elating that tite Dutch Government
wo4ld not hiunceforwar. intrfere either
oliciilly or non-ollicially in ilie afair!;
of lanuxeimourg.
riIt osais ir.tno .orxpo:
i'iliS3:A A iVI'VALI OF NA POI.'u N
The mZoi -ofhoid *rt' (Trwan Ga
:.11'. of Blfiln, 0 edt A pd ilS, e~,,ment
ing on the disp. :.ing rmon i ciriAi ila.
tdion relative to the Grtul Duely of Ims.
emburg, states that the deiin of the
quiies1tion of .lo t rervation of V(.Wo
'lhms lnot rest with the Cabinet, of !Ierl ini
'for the claracter of a. federal State i.
solely delantivo.
The samne papr a Is: It i-s perhap
tihe greatest, t r t1mph of the Eperor
Napoleon's government that it has
brought, the French nation to admit that.
they cal serve their ownti and.t he gent
ral interests of civilization better bn
/jvint/ t/e humel to an. opponent, anit, in
)dtue of humi/'aeny /him, joining with
hillt ii ondeavo (intig to protnoie tho ie
coiplisliin t of the great. work in pro
TI I tnu A t I'l .V & UN IT A (. t T
CEssiON.
A large me'ting was ld in the Al.
hamibr, llerlin, on lhe Ith of A pril, at.
which the Iblowing resohitions wer...
p:ised by a large ntu1jorit.y:
That, this metiug declaros Iinxenm
bourg must never be .separa~cd fromi
Ge rmtany.
That it is thIt dutty of the Gerant
people to insist with all their stro-t.h~t
up~onl thtis pro'vin1co belonging to Ge'rma
ily.
T1hiat the uitmon of this province with
Gecrtainy must take place as sootn as
p~os!ibl e.
- That any proposal for the votes of
the inhiabittiants of Luxt'onbontag to be
t akeni is to be iunhiesit atinugly re'jected.
i~ll)E A .:vE.-A firiend, sa ys t he
Tnd ianapol is ./n'.rnu/, give's us th'e ae
counit oft a miost terrible caso of thie
burial alive of a'handsoimo young lady
at Jacksoniville, Illinois. Soum tinto
last summitier a yountg lady of seventeen
years of' age, sufferinig with the tooth
.ache, went to bed with a small phihal
of chblroforma for the purpose of' quiet
ing bier toeth. In t ho morn'in g shte
was found, to all appetarances, (lead,
which was ctnfirmed by the opinions
of several physicians who were called
andl examined her body'. Shoe was
thon buried. A fecw days since her
relatives were about. to remtove fr~omt
Jacksonville, havitng locaited in anothl
or State,atnd had thle retmians of t he
young lady oxhumed, for the pur11
the purpose of taking themi to their
new home. Curiosity promptedl theom
to open the coffmn, when they wvere hor
ror-stricken on finding the corpse
turned over, both hands full of hair,
and her clothing torn to shreds, re
vealing the horrible truth that the
young lady had boon buried alive.
The chlouoform had placed her in a
dead trancoe, the awakening from
whiceh was in her collin and grave.
T1hie lady was engaged to be martied
at the time of her suplposed dleath.
A more hoart-siekotinag ease we noy.
or reinmnmbcr to have read or' heard.
Smix:o A Cow..--TIt it sometimes
the case that lie best judges are deceiv.
ed. A cow of v'ery unpromising ap.
p~eartanie, coarse in the tnek, large boned
anid secotmi or third rate milk marks
genierally, will nowv and thon turn out
to be first.rnae, whilei another with these
marttks largely dleveloped, Iino in thle
head and neck and unipromnising every
way will prove usatisfactory. 1hut a
failure in this case is rare.' Let the
head be light, the forehead broad, tho
horn rather thin and clear and pronii.
nont, the neck thin, the foro-quarters
rather light, the back straight, the hind
quarters well developed, wide Over the
lomsw, the carcaso deep; the'udder coming~
foward and well shaped, the skin soft. to
the touch, the teals well set, not too
large noer .too small, the tail long and
thin, like a whiip-lash. Such a coiv
ougrht ton ho a ruod one.
Queon Vitoria.
''Bureighi writcs from London to tit
Boston a/vIurna/:
"Oi tho deati of the Prince Consort
tho Queen had Buckingham Palace dis
mantled, and so it re1atinns to this day,
:111 except the privato rooms. h'io
Queon will not drive through tho royal
gateway of the lace, nor has she
mco hir husbanldI did. S1he will not rX'e
tibrough the royal entraic to the
I louse of Iurdls, but, roes in throurgh Imhe
I'eers' enitrance. Slo will not, wear
the royal robes, Itid when sho open(1s
'arhi aninillt ill Irson t ho rob s lre
thrown over the . back of the tirone,
whiei a ;ibled chat ir surmunite.1 with
a1 it crwn, -mld sits onl themst. S e 1
Cole:3 to Ijn don wihen duty calls, si
dom ps 554a night, in her caplital, and
has pawel les- than a- dozen in four
years. She remains in (ptiet at \Vin.
sor or Osborne. She has no -compmny
bu.t what her oflicial position retpju res
of her. The State apctmnenlts at Win.
son are all dismantled and aero un
nsed-the. mlassive plate ih not ulse i
a plail silver service ia put on he Ne
-1 small (huiet, pony and a low--whed
carriage thIe( QueI Is'd for her he prirat'e
rides at Windsor, and ho seldo, un.
less duty calls her to ILondon, goes bo
yonid the pri:vate 'Park of tie Cat.l.
The one hundred fitie horses that, fill
the Windsor mews are seldom used, andl
the eight creans for state occasion are
not driven twice a year.
"Tho room in which the Ih inco Con.
sort breathed hi.s last, is kept with sern
pulous cam just. as the Prince left it.
The .ladies say that each night, t he
dressing gown and slippers aro nut in
their accuatomed place. The Queen's
confidentail notendanit is a Il iinnr
by the nime (.1 Ibuown. ile t;ao; all
Ithe ordevrs frmihe Qbanan l ar.
her~ ~ ~ a .\aeylll eevillk. Tis
Bh r o w n h :' v .e .n 1 , a ; . , o . 1 w o r b I
oI 1!1k. .1 i. :6 ! 1. v--tall and
spare--*wi'.h great .I co, and at
lend:; the QueOin to fir.m Lon
to dlislodge " h:im, in14. a11 v;. . Th
Q'venll hr a lwy:o I. I ron
W ill rul! the 14,V'L I .
"Re ring Ic 'ivy llOi- Qu'en, ''wr
.\Ine~s a l i It'' '.is Ic. finy 1o
She rit4IC ves h er own y arm'.. --
(ibLly she :, < hIr r) 0 ml withI ier ea ,
htfl n out il 54l,'V0' V 11)
r'g e M illed wt i h i for or I1,.
siue 1mf brm an4ei;1 tho poi. Tm.- she
ib ileswitx e w m . I
thei I er, ab, 'V Iw and wauoet he
tQunkee sN 01mi prayW hio tw ta
caein oAll. \Tton ion h
cofot ; andTI Ohe iA pelbyu.At tende,
liubcons ho are I.nin sormw io want.
:Ilr er fii vot e v,11. lllomC t \'iol O r o v er
01nce - '*. l iht le w. I w a0 1.' fui .
I or to1 thle ora .tiIywo w11o11 hhe
hut;ig ofuAll. WTot ig intIt ar
the semliovdtoln .Tet,
e1 111,01L t. Qu e t ae i i WO t el ' 10
w4dow mly who was il ,'r bouh br all
.:! fi i . 411 . ! )Ie i-It' oI t "'WOz \V1,1 "
sit with hr, and we all s over the
Quee sid: 'No honeow l iles timt
can1 ca1lli me i Icri.'i iu iiO(11
Tm.or Tr d'or, 0( tlue- t.it orv
yeartls, f1 agola horse s ut h
teth, ad .1 thks torcanineedt, beu
titweenosa the ui o olar am incisors ;:
buo nully wanClt~'t ing iu th mare
A bir 1l t nl tihe tw' or) nier or i
middl neot gr appe, ar. 11.1L
\tiallyer Jol the nsors ttae allt
0kr th oo yearol itse; theianen
nipp01) tbon oii o1e itt thro lilh. h
but tour yars0 ~ld,~ the pene
od thier ne:<to ipersf areiC wchu.
vAya firivtemu s p erec, thy
ten set of~ti teethand tbe om-.r
Aksix thf olow t dr h nipud--J.
pers, caed e,.iTmloak,' ha dipper..
ead fir ~ tho ind i iiti hed1 1 1Oin
the ivrsNn.''~el -~eysn
Ata' soven theI~ ark hast t d ospeae
coners, ani tth o horit; Ii 0 a1 d '.Ito be
hoities1 sa th ag of~~ a bon an s
ioly be to'-trd..tth et
radualy. -ano their form th ineud
scoopdu tm uilttimtat th mark ;tu
knut tis tan o nonV yth asoe
dwns 1urrn.1d the4i tiea maork by11
irt.il( Scoo, iionaifre yoeabt ed inan
M[I.moNAP..(beI---Very) 'Rb
ryb myi yt-wfrind, th -ifi can'do
.PooR M.N4Thub when ainder 1ms
ctan circntances ),11 mnat Itnu
at drowniu inIa')ond, the poor ane
cahnlyid raill 'ing irmthe shore.
Funorl of a Fenian.
The Frec mn's J('Irnalt ,ivo the fol.
lowing aeconut of the ineral of Crow
liy, from its Aichelstown Correspondent
who writes on the 2d: To-day ,1 had in
opportunity of seeing from tho w'ndows
of the hotel the Foneral of Crowley as it
pissed alolg the main Street of th1o
town. I, was certtily an extraordiia
ry ):pcta1cle, anl one! that V.*eatly sur.
pnsed the a;gist!ra; e3 and others who
camue' hero Withi the flVing cohnnn. irst
cane a procession of women fonr deep,
1h womaiin carrying a largO greenl
I'i ; t.hen follo-.ved a wcattered group
1A women; ne:; t the colln, borne nIpoIn
men's shoilder ,, itihoighi a iarSo had
beent engiaged, and'. v;as actul,10ly in the
proceosion. The plumtes were wite,
the deceased liaving been inmarried.
The collin wns Covered witlh b1l-ic cloth,
and ol the lid were stimll laurel branches.
I Iis sister, who had arrived in the course
oIf th morniiig atnd chimed the body,
walked after the coliN as einf 1107,r1n.
Nr. her head covered witi a black hood.
Sio wa; accompianied by relatives. Two
eIoerynt walked aloide, apparently
codifortigll iho a woman. The
proverson elowlt* by a body of men!),
who walkel silently aioln.. A most
every shop in tle town was partiallly
clos, 1 as a tribute to tie deceas
ed.
A shopkeeper in the town vith vhom
I was Coivers:NIg on thie siublioct, and
who had not put up any shmtuers, said
to mC, refering to the disliay imlado at
the funeral, "'Thant wokid not be done
for the eiarl of Kinsilon if he were
gini to be bnried." 'The familburial
place of the Crowvleys is nearly thirty
miles from tii tonVi, andh 1111 lh body I
was 'ol, wdll be brouight. ;Olng Ihe1 roald
t1.rm>:!h thel entire countr idr' h ell
of thia -tiMI'U 0 . -,f'rrin-. to the de
' aed.l i ai% p ti;ion in "ife, andil(, his
4-r lxkncaraclor, I askJed a1
:1, e :rw it. wazq sinieh a om came
wo bea l''nia". "I wi!! tell vonl," Sa61
bo, "what I hear t:h" w nspo state,
lie h:h an e.nleC a l*re't ill this townl.
who wv :l1.3gg in : yeir '1 The
ran31courl fill, r*OI hv hlis; ml10 .1-4e
Q1 ly dty I rebate whatI have Vhearde
oi the .tlbJret with 11m view of acCant
iln o1. the suange i.i iton.u ofli .' in
na to)-.h - -1t, the bmet alil." The samet
m hat there '~wolid hav
bei a m U1rlt r auhtndance ofen
w0 lm: nrtlo ha010 StLl'rice won011J
11na12.. a1 ti~o melvn w hae i theo
pro t'. l d th t it was 'in1 t ons
qwpIence of thi.l the womlenl whot(- did not.
ri f hwi e m.-mh d. The plh
spea'!. in hi h It, sOf the iiUlr of tHi-l
Luxcimburg.
Thre nust a 1 lways he a et In1O of
natioil hav1 molu ul their to go
t,, r with eoath otiher, they never
neb o11 i , at. a lo-' to finlid a cua((1.
. it lallri to be onnerailv con
'eld tat ,1'1rc anid n1:a will .>mu
to hL.1wa aboiut the [n::embrh' qu1estioni.
Th'Iere is really ini this no 'reason for
fbighting. Un. nthsrepct we Inive
a patallel in the SchlesIgm Jhoisei
questionl oif hast lear, which resu1 l ini
th le war betw~'en A\ lia anOd P russia.
Th'le real can iue of the dlitlenhty liesTl iichi
deteperi anid we' shall ha~ve miore to say
abont it at a not her' tie. lBut as [Lux.
emburgl''. hias acqi1red a great epihireeral
lInterti', we ill Igive a few leading~
populs ini its history. Originally a1 conn I
ty (/. e. gov'ernedo by ar(otint,) it wast
madetll a duichy in 185I, and ri'Onied
nnde i ho i dlomni on of its duikes til
[1ouis X IV. seized thi souitherni p'rt of
the dluchy aind annexed.0( it to lFrance,
the remiiaindeor being left under Austian
rii unil the IFroneh Reohlitioni, wh len
the wvhobo of Liuxemcbuig became a
F~rench province.
TJhe~ Congress of Vienna,~ again restor
ed its separate existenc~e, aw11li) he ing
of the Netherlands betcamoll its G3randl
iDuke. in 1830) it joined the Belgianis
in thiei r revoint ion, and tho Lond1(on
Coiifereneo div~ided it between Belgium
anld Ilollanid, thle por1tioni fulling to thme
laitter~ State being the torritory no0w
knmowni ast thle Orand Duchiy of I Luxem
buirg. T[ho right of n'11mimainillng a
garritton ini Luxemburg was concedled to
b~y the treaties of tile 31st of May', 181 5,
the 8th of November, f 216, and the
12th of March, 1817. Theii popnlation
of the Grand D~uchy in 1866 was 205,
5714.
The preson! King of Holland claims
the personal right of disposing of the
Duchiy. if ho so choose, with reference
to tho legislattivo holly. In this con
netion it is not premature to mention
clauises I and 37 of the constitutioni
unde11r which Luxemb'urg is is held by
Clauise 1. T[he G~rand Dunchy of Tu x
emblhiurg is an indlepenident,. indivisible,
and aliiih let Si ate.
Clau:'e :37. No portiOn of the Liux
eml'mrlg: terriitory canii be' exceededtni or x.
changed f'or and1( no portion of foreign
terr ily added10 to Liuxemiburg, exce'pt
by vi-tne of a law,
Hence10 it fol lowls tht thie cession of
the couintry to hFrantoe could not hbe
legallyV sanctioned byatutiriago um11ver
sal, lint requires the rat ificatiotn ot the
Chanmber.--ChYar/leston Ne~ws.
Mr. Iicury S. Footo lias b;'n heard
of again. Ile miado a speech recent..
ly in St. TLouis, in which ho urges tho
Southi to "acqluiesco in thin situaition ."
It is well most of us5 hind already do.
fied our position, beforo Sir Ornceo
hisa mouth did opo. Ifanythinug could
rendler "the situation" still mo ini
tolerale t han it is geneorall7 folt t o
be, Mr'. Foote's admonition to ac
puiuseen in it migbt have tunao.,.ct
Gouoral Grunt.
The Now -York Yribne, in a hit e ar
tielo uipon the-, resignlationl of Geneoral
LHosecrans, part of whici we copy
below, makes some rather damaging
allusions to Gceeral GUran1, imlpoach
ing iliko his vigor is a counander
and his geerosity al fairness as a
Man, and quietly but pretty cortituiily
indienting that the causo is to ho
further heard before the judgment of
history is to bie prollonllcd 11pon iii
merits, even as a commander.
t was less than sixty days after the
attack upon Fort Sumuter, wieli he did
us his first. great servioe in Western
Virgiuia by comipelling the surrender
of Pegram at Rich Mountain. Tho
planninug and tighhting wereo both (eX
clusively his-thel reward was i.e-iven
McClell'an. ALfte!r the Ureat Delayer
had been transferred to the .Potoimac,
Rosecians fought the battle of C(anii
fox Forry, diovo Wise, Floyd and
Leo0 acrvoss ti ulln. Itl ains, finuished tho
capllapign with br-illiant rapidity, and
wheli therte was harily i rebel icketI
left oin this side or the Allegilally
mollultills, was relieved, for i. fault
of his owll, that. a 11101111tainl depart
imnt ini-ght he created for (in. Pre
11on1t. Ife f'ough. andl wvon the battle
of fuka in Septemlmr, 1802, while
his Superior otheler, G on. (G.' raIt, was
lying n11activo with his troops four
miles from the field of confliet, and ill
though for t.his Olgagellillt ie wis
made a Major-General of voliunteers,
there -spra1g out of it a misunder
standing with Gen. G rant Vhill has
had miuoli to do with lithe marring of
ill iRosecral's subseqauent career. The
niext m11on1th, at. Corinth, ha hIeat Van
iorn rud Price, wi11 but litclo iloreC
tl:ui hale' ps Imany Iinen as his adver.1
rsga;nling the'nmt imimrtant Viat
vy of the war up to that ilte. Re.
eall1ed frvoml1 the purniuit, g rlatl-:
againt Is own judgmein, 1.y GSee:,l
tu ant, het, was Ielieved (o his vom.
mmniil nine days er the ha ' tlean
orderod to (Cinoilllaii.
TwO in th.uer phsniN .inmn
lii: ii 114-. tib *liI'lI i !. I
ri tble iito a m agnineent OIlla:,A
lf: . ay: I ha4 tj of I ri vec r wu
W ill ii m llomre i hlt intrI-e-pidity of tLhe
l.e 4than1 h'y Ow the rsnal. valor
wns a magnllent, pr lude o the i , bril
li4.iantl5 :mp.m iOf th 11 un' of
ont of 11id0 ' I n o:-e. The
wlotie of C hicaannuma in Sepemb er
wvas a bloowly enmdrto condnue21
the fray: b Lot it ecureld ts i Cho+
us it loiefthet campaign and theilr 4f
all the vount ry south oi, Owe un
in"l inmivins. NUehleRse..
Meinu waI agoin relievi of hi CWm"..
Iwed tlo rea tin in W:LtiThol1
ho was seet io Missri. vihle heales
doing e iiont ilitary ervviel, h1",
di:welv 1r t Ihe:e O ill pirac of.the
he w oince 1moe removed, and ia
neerhad I co1mand Sillc.
\N Pis - , l N of(0of tI..--e
bum put to) the 1) e of gs com..
pane ' andthiat.I iia hihte
islatre wold no do o iec. il
thavehave bee t ml~~ulado il t io male
siiu lht ; but aL41 bouf the~ ce ain-. i
hly it Jlt lne CCsfu oeaontas been
buly the ir hed,8l thelf e1lnomica iim-n
11n CItiei eounnecthon wiyth it he dnot,
wit is are mrelyna builtono tlulime,
but1k onea that' offith neacry prspotyof
rfe lituntly o this ih i-:elto
comh n brugh trom bmor f ore In
somiee ofxtranuaty distcori whifty
1 rved retl be rse mae in to and
fon the consrect fljtion of aage i
batty ito tall enonsto reta
bytheiman light tom otoreo itendo
ofu ctile s m n hi tho hio iiiliiro di
covageted lcan haproducedbatna marvel
11(1h a~ :ill 1 macin ; but ther liht
somethmga lxcitit anypetsoif ion n
flitrhd ou.ei omda mayh~l ie wille
boin 11e iteite ofrhliehrt ite
apitece ofs metl of alisltneo thf fit
nyards, (itueit.1101 com lty For~110
frhot oaphi purpoilse of ith hgon
pr~1jovd t~ hre noro no rcunlighto
forthe. pee illu.mitioofa ~i e,4ilargo
cit s a towfetall1 f: eogh) to': project
ofl' thePi poeful,. whell mach0:iorys i. el.
magnehtl'i ligt i hs neerbee dob.
reutfa xcoigan eniiptions
)lO ftha had een fod hat itg wjill
bring usos nndatrlief fom rithe
now mu opean aintour afiores, fand
fre a frm thetotionso th1a
mooprintes terik nd weart
ble so, perfe adtee it ? nmclf
ures hevo for 1)o Vfuly deo1 ta .
rdi ng iot. this l'l ullt i trl a---; st
abote tie toindandero to-ovry
Thigs Wise and Otici-wise.
Why are eats like unlskillful ur-.
geols ? 'Tloy muit ilate (mew-till
late) and kill their patient.
"My opinion is," said a pilosphio
old lady ot much experivnen :01 ub.
sorvation, "tha1t 1113' man,111 as dies Iuon
washing day, does it out o. puro
spite."
A dying planter is said to havo
groaned ot to lis favorite negr(
vanlt-"Ah, l o, Vl -'m goin on a,
ver'Iy long, long jo~ur'n'y !'' "Ne\Lver
mind1, mtassa," .:iid (tho nga cno.
in.ly, "lhim all do11 i ill."
"PIray excusei a.i1 faram"a
Sm1ith toJonesa; 1but1. yolm are anl int-.
nious scoundrel.' "Pray parido a
touch iof itonv," replieid Joles, and '
knocked himt down with a poker.
A man in EngulnI lately dlied of
oxcessivo alger. Won't our Ibulical
Ieaders have th kii iness toget a lit
tio imadder t han they ar.- Pen/ie.
An old batclelor, seeing the word
'*1'mnilie.s Supp'lied,)' over ihe door11 or
a shop, stnype(l inl maii.1 :aid ie would
take t wifev aml two childrenl.
AI lawyer oneo askedi a pious tavern
keeper, "'I a man giv.-- you a thou.
a111 dollanm to kevp, m2a1 lie dies, do
y,"u pray for himl, ?" "No, I pray for
another just like him.
A bon molt was lieard the other day
in an English court. Two barristerg
were using very armi word4 toward4
each other. "DoII't be afraid" 'aid a
looker ou, "they are liko a pair of
scissors, noither blade ets tI he of 1(hr,
but, it is a dangerous work for anly 110
that tI:2; b etweei.
20t~ ~~~ 11 c' :14 lh~~ I*
Anncur Johnt,).
Douglla s r a l. 11
'Jolii"IlO S M ! nil, ho 111 ro(14 1
wtlo deiiduct
wy t t he i r yll of , h.
003 tab, a cone nA,
~by
j in lop in) t4
Ahm2 h., Cti'.y a nr JWO it
mII a 1 l n oi m .
1onui mvis rimd Or Jvui-t ot
If'h n3rteiabl1hi l--" ufed mwe igt I
ti wurantaue int hrdwu' a stori.
wilY apl .e to yll . I or ri.e.
In herd(n dri.i .ne2 .22t lan..
h no~if! i the counter.
01 11111,*-I m y ttl i3an1, allf isor of2 11
It: !'itl lyI' ll i akeli a.f&tI' nV' m of130
(2li0W1 2'llv, Illi hatl willowdba
JcOOl jeker, is atriblikem "10,,0
sorts andya cortin.. ot n. i
agyou a myig~ imwil
Docorey3 Lringy frigis.;wn.o t
pie reasn why thue Hnt s o
senter taibd
.hgier :t, st c m loi--".liu
therbumreai dawthr. 3Te1 .-m Fr-nl
ailor:pl toL meu ootoo m
ll rerinking me sflkbrains.
anme n bo tthe.h
engage.2 (Thas; an figa. San .n
Ifke somei don' agireith yco,
chows~ othingthatwi,
_ Lotso caracrs)W. aro) lio), o
leadtJ peni-theIJy maklOa.ba
mrk. or tl Jde
Punht' giviere Ifro,"n subs tiut
sors andk conditoslof meO~ng n y I
diolJdger. npmysok
hit richvelr: l'ie bvetlredc o
Blldricklye' Laborer -fa Chm"bd
DrfI aatic Autor Steal myO 1,C8Fenc