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Desportes, Williams & Co., Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquiry, Industry and Literatu [Terms---$300 per Annum In Advance, VOL.11.] WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY IG JUNE 3,1868. [NO.50 TI-IN *FAIRFIELD HERALD 18 PthUDLSHKD WEEKLY lBY DESPORTES. WILLIAMS & CO. 1t'-im.-Teus hHnAt.n Is published Week ly. In the Town of Winnsboro, at $3.00 in vareably in advance. )&" All transient advertisements to be paid in advance. Obituary Notices and Tributes $1.00 per squite. Selected Poetry. VOICES GALLING. "t)h, hush 1" she whispered, "I hear them speaking, Voices calling upon the air;" And while she listened, the pale light glis tened, And lay, and floated upon her hair. "Oh, not" they answered, "we hear no speaking, We hear no voices upon the breeze; It must be only the night wind lonely That sighs and whispers among the trees." "Oh, hush 1" she murmured, "I hear them singing Singing the songs I used to know ;" And while ee listened, the tear-drop glis. tened, And through long lashes began to flow. "Oh, no!" they answered, "we hear nosing ing, We hear no voices singing so; 'Tie but the waking of sea waves breaking Upon the shingle far below." "Oh, hush 1" she whispered, "I hear them I crlling. sweet -voices of the long ago :" And while ee listened, the long light glis tened, And lay on her sweet face, white as snow. "Oh no '" hew murmured, "she wanders wildly, We hear no voices en the breezo; She's listening only to night winds lonely That sigh and whisper among the trees." 'Hush 1 iush;" they aaswer, while dews s were failing, While dead leave rustled through the air, And while they shimmered, the pate light glimmered, On a face and form like angels fair. "Oh,ipray !" they whispered, our love is dy ing, t 1Hcr voice is fainting across the sea;" And while they listened, the far dawn glis. tenei. Oh, lorl! her morning breaks with Thee. LFrom the Washington Chronicle.) e The Ohase Uonspiraoy. His Plan to Break up the Republican Party- IVho His Confederates Are He Expects to Secure the Presidcn- t cy. We find ihe following special dispatch from Wasiiington in the Chicago Re publican of Saturday. What, gives it special significance is thu fct that it was telegraphed from here on Friday night, and published before the meeting ] of the court on Saturday. Yet the d.' feat of impeachment is foretold, and the names of -five out of the seven Republi can Senators who voted for acquittal are given as Mr. Chase's confederates. Mr. d Bundy who is natued as the autharity forghe mair. statement, is a gentleman whose statements are entitled to the credit: THE PLOT TO DEFEAT THI IMPNAOHIMENT . --STAnTLING DEVELOPMENTS. t There have been startling develop ments here to day, which show conclu. 1 eively that there has been a regular conspiracy on the part of Chief Justice t Chase and renegade Rteptublican Sena. I tors to defeat the ampeachmrent and ele vate the former to the Presidency, at the I cost of breaking up the Republican party. STA&TJCMENT BY CHIEF JUSTICE CHABIC. Nightihefore last Chief Justice Chase invited Hion. IH. S. Buudy, member of the Thirty Ninth Congress from Ohio, to call upon him, and stated that he had some important matters to talk about. Mr. Bundy having long shared the confidence of the Cief Justice, and being heretofore his firmi eupporter and personal friend, accepted the invita tion. During the interview Mr. Chase told Mr. Buindy dhat it was his in'er.tion to become a candidate for the Presidency, on the Democratic ticket, and not suc ceeding in this, hie should enter the1 .mena as an independent candidate ii nGen. Grant. Of his own sue cess lie said there could be no doubt. The imipeachiment wouild fail, and thus faili'ng wounld divide th~e Republican party, and Senators like Trumbull. Fee seyulen, Henderson, Grimes and Fowler would be recognized as head of' one di vision of the Republican party ; and these. five men, lhe said, had pledged themiselves, ten days ago, that te wvould stand by and suippor. him in this tuovement. Thes Chisi Justice g1ve Mr. Bundly his views in full on tis movement, speaking very confidently as eto its success, and prediciing the down (ai1 of Ra~diqalivnm, as represented by the advocates of imipeachment. - 110w TitEitnEVKIAT10N OAME AnIOUT. * h~istgeason on the part of thse Chief .Jistide e ast'onishd iMr. Bundy that lie at once communicated what had been ~said1ato leading Radicais here. The whole miatter lins been kept very quiet, atnd the conspiracy was so apparent that leadingSenators to-day nlged upon th~e members of the buard' of' managers to take immediate eope in the matter. The managers, howev.r, sai-l that they had no power to do sQ. They had been cornmissioned with a 'diuty to perform, and that ditty had been done, and their case was in the hanida of the canen. If he latter failed to perform theirs, the eople must give a verdict as to the urity of their action. Thus far, but ew have been informed as to this ex raordinary languago of the Chief Jus ice, but it having been communicated o the managers, your correspondent is iow at liberty to make it public. ?URTH[E.R PROOF OF TU CONSPIRA CY. Stitt another proof is given to show ,hat, there has been a conspiracy to de. 'eat the impeachment. Senator Hen. lerson last night told Mr. McClurg, nember of Congress from Missouri, that to and those other Republicans who roted to sustain the President had as urances from Mr. Johnson that if the mpeachment was defeated, he would eorganize his Cabinet by making Wm. 4. Evarts, .Secretary of State ; Samuel looper, of Massachusetts, Secretary of he Treasury ; Reverdy Johnson, At orney-General, and Gen. Schofield, Secretarvof War. That this may not be considered as a nero invention on the part of Mr. Hen lerson, gotten up for this occasion, fur her testimony was elicited in support of t today, by the Missouri delegation, rom two St. Louis gentlemen now hero, vho say that Lhis was communicated to hem eight days ago, by Mr. Hender. on. in confidtce. Wit'i these facts in the possession of he Radicals, it occasioned the greatest xcitement here among those informed f them. Mr, 8tanberry. s If the President is acquitted on the mpeachnment articles this week, one of f is first acts thereafter will be to reap. oint Mr. Stanberry as AttornevGene al.-Cor. New York HIerald, 25th in tant. 'i[ RADICAL JKADIERIS OF 1860 AND 1868 CONTnASTED. z A moment's glance at the present ituation of the Radical party will serve o show the contrast between its condi- v ion in 1860 and 1868. Among the onspicutous members of the Republican )on ventioln 6l 1860 we.re such men as rancis P. Blair, Wm. M. Evarts and host of others embodying the talent nd respectability of the Convention ; a 2ajority of whom are now ranked t mong the most decided opponent) of a ha Radicals. In the Chicago Conven. v ion of that year there were four promi- C ent-condidates for the Presidential nom. c nation--Lincoln, Seward, Chase and t lates. Tie last act of Lincoln's life t was to originate and adopt the policy of oohnson. Bates abandoned the pres. lit Radical organfzation before Lincoln ied ; Seward is an active enemy of' tadic'ilism, and if there is one man in . he United States wkom the Radicals of o.day hate more bitterly than' Andrew ohnson, that man is Salmon P. Chrse. 'hen Chase, and Trumbull. and Fessen en, and Grimes, and Doolittle and Dix-t n, and Stauberry and a host of other c reat names were in the ranks of the t tepublicans. Now, they are either J eting openly with the Demouracv, or re read out of the Radical party by the a ot heads who control it. Nor is this 1I that is nottceable, While the states. nen of the Republican unrty have aban-' lotted radicalism, the vicious and reacherous elements of the Democratic arty have entered its fold. T1hie partyC vhichi became too corrupt for Chase an'd C )oolittle, Bates and Evarts, has dlemon. trated, its affinity for Butler and Logan, tanton and Dan Sickles. The leaders f the Radical party to day--the mna who have Grant in their keeping-w~ere lamorous for secession in 1860, and r ustifled the Southern States in resortinlg o arms to repel tihe exercise of Federal ' ower. Now. Butler, Logan, Stanton ad Dan Sickies are blatant Radical lemagogues, and are accorded the high. I at positions of honour in tihe party that o recently desnIsed them. Thiey take! , ake the places once occulpied by Sew- I *rd, Chase, Trumbull, Stanberry and' thers like them. ( Albany Argus. MUsrc IN PoLI Tres.-It is noticca-. >le that the singing in the political amnpaigns of the last sixteen years las all ooen on the side of the party aboring for the extension of human reedom and the equality of human ights.- Chicago Post. Yes, those Radicals are a tuneful et of singlng birds. There souls are 'full of music " They murder in netrical mleasure, and steal to the une of Old Hlundred. They sang 'Rally Round the Flag" and "Tramp, ['ramp,'' during the war, until the rery air was sick with melody; butt boey took precious good care to lott thers do the rallying, and tramp, ~ramping, while they staid at home md wore "loil,'' Now they sing as sweetly asturkey buzzards around the ~areas of a aeea A ule.-New 1Era. Trwo VraioN.--TWo vions are passing away before us. Study well the grouping and note which is the more pleasIng picture of the two. Lee, the con quered, oloistere4l in calmi. dignity at Lexington,. mouilding the youth of our land for exalted 'useful.. ne In the worldA I Grant, tA( con guieror, ohagiIng wtl eierf shift of the popular breese, the slae of party, the scodohy of gtynmear the IRadIo nominee for 'Iresiderit.--Pterskurg [From the Louisvillo Courier.] A Burial of General Morgan. In all the land of the captive there is o spot more sacred than the cemetery vhich the Virginians call Hollywood pr t looks upon the James, which runs to. vo yards the sea to mingle its waters and on ts glories with those of the Potomac. th )n the banks of these two rivers there na rved the noblest of their race. By their ox ;urgling waters there now sleep better of non than those who live. In that hal. qu owed ground heroes rest, who saw the set plendor of the Wilderness. and who t.i scaped the honorable misfortune of the thl \ppomatox. The trees were assuming str heir new livery ; the grass was grow ing, pt, few flowers were struggling to add sec heir beauty to the holy scene, and, thi vhile Spring was leaping from the lap Ie f Winter, all that remained of the most wit ttractivo tenant of Hollywood was ser aken from its noble society to be re- int urned to the State that bore him. If thi Tirginians regret to see such a su >erb me Monument removed from the Holy City, th< ,t them receive consolation from the Co eflection that there are still sleeping on here, in silent graves, heroes ouflicient fat o fill the history of twenty nations with tio xamples which ere long may urge the pic aptivo to break the chains that hind hem and strike once more for free- seg om. Sti As the solemn cortege moves to-day nol eneath the shadow of Clay's monu- ten sent, and by the grave where Hanson No leeps, bearing the dead body of the wo nightliest horseman who ever draw abl word to guard his own and his coun- aw ry's honor, braver than all men-more enerous than brave-more merciful han generous-followed by men who Mi ad often before followed him where anger was-curions thoughts will arise , the minds of Kentuckians there. Vhy is this man dead ? Flattered by Foi attire with every grace to adorn his per. uni on, with the power to charm alike len anhood and beauty-no rank too high nar -no society too refined-no place in the thich he would not have been an orna. say rent--why was this man killed ? Were here Kentuckians who guided foreign uni fgiments across the State to pillage Go Tirginia, and to murder Hanson, Sid. 'in ey Johnston and Morgan ? Perhaps tre is well they are dead ; but remember cov ,at there was no price upon their er word. High rank did not allure their Sot irtue, nor did bribos wim their arms to are nslave their State. Army commissions, son overing a foreign seheni to pillage err, ieir own people, were spurned as gen. pot eman spurts dishonor. Better that. icy have not lived to see the disgrace hor f the country they loved and served rat ., well. By the aid of Kentuckians a Ise \Virginman now domineers over once ed -ee Kentucky. The voice of eloquence the t softened into a whine of complaint. des 'ones of defiance are hushed into a cal rhisper of cowardice. Timid men sit car high places with too much selfishness for abdicate and too little courage to exe. pre Lite. With Joab's friendship these sti amid men counsel those who obeyed Th ohnston, Breckinridge, Hanson, Buck- tha er and Morgan, to confess . that they Gr re ashamed of the flag they followed, hot tshamed of what? The fact of defeat an< nd of humiliating conquest is admitted. "le ut ashamed of what ? Ashamed that te refused to act with dishonor? Re ised to aid foreigners to conquer our Fr wn people ? Ashamed, because bribes - ould not allure nor danger intimidate ? mo, lever I never I never I Never, by der bie glories of Stonewvall Jackson and of fro iee; never, by the grand and pictur. 001 sque death of Sidney Johnston ; never, OV( y the ashes of H-anson and of Morgan ; whl ever, by the tmtarnished sword of the Ireckinridge, will we confess that wvh 'e are ashamed of the flag we follow- to I Lect the cortege move on with its i uist. The body was killed in war, bitt eve defy the conquieror to suppress the too ame that r:scs from the grave. Tra- nie ition will tell it, history will perpetuate ble ~, and song in sweetest music will p our rthi its glory from the lips of child ren, ad in the feeble utterances of age. The run nightly horsemaan will be the first pice-t i tire the father wvill paint for .his boy, sit mid the strongest example to urge manu- on Load to honorable action. .bre F1arewell, friend of may youth, com- cal alaion in life, brave, generons, merciful to omrade, farewell. .Upon the tumf that ler overs yon, fair hands will strew immor. co alles. Be'.utiful words, for it accords we. o wvell with Morgan's name. -I will go ant ften to your grave, and I may feel your pirit there, and many more will go with wi ne. Farewell. Let the cortege move is in. The tears that flowv down the bly heek from eyes not used to weeping, 1fng ome from men who never wept in bat- Be he. Let the brave soldiers weep over ke heir dead chieftain, * t The Columbus (Ga.) &A~wsays that Sl ~he farmers are already harvesting .~ heir wheat in that Statet On Mon. an lay of last weelki reporter went' out to o saea rca per at work. Tho sam~e paper says-tmat whilet the Southern P0 wheat is good, tho 'Northern wheat at( towed in Georgia "is not Worth a bent." td General 1tancnxok anxot a men. he ber; of.the military .commission that trIed Mrs. Surratt. Hie at that time txommaidd' the ynif fttry distries of whloh 'WashirigtondiMty foine a part, and as such formerly signed (l ei proceedingrs of the anmmatan. Kr Lotter from Tudge Aldrich on Demoora oy i a South Carolina. AUOUSTA, GA., May 25, 1808. My DEAR Sln : When I road the )ceOdings of the Deinocratic Con. ition, in Columbia, I remarked to 9 of the delegates from Barnwoll it I thought it particularly unfortu to for us that the convention had pressed any opinion pn the subject negro suffrage. It is on this very estion that the Democracy and Con vatives of the North will do battle h the Radical, revolutionary party it has seized the Government. To ike now from the platform the last nk upon which the party can stand, ms to me the most impolitic thing it the convention could have done. annot conceive of political e-quality hout social equality, the one is a uence of the other. We must go o this fight with the party banner ti this is "The White Man's Govern. et," it is more important to us in South than to the friends of the natitution in the North, and we not y weaken our own cause but give a al blow to the cause of constitu- I nal liberty by yielding the prinei. t suppose no delegate will feel him f bound by this declaration of the' Lte Convention. I certainly would I do not expect to be able to at d the Democratic Convention in w York next July, although it aid give me great pleasure to be e to do, but I am too poor to get ay from home. Yours, truly and respectfully, A. P. ALDRICH. RIETT. Treason in the Camp. rho Charleston correspondent of *mey's Washington Chronicle is very sappy about the "disloyalty" preva t in Charleston, which he indig itly tells us has even contaminated army officers stationed there. He S: Xll are not loyal men that wear the form of American soldiers even. >d dinners, chaIpagne suppers oak turtle soup," frequent whiskey its, are all that ;s ' necessary to or up the allcgianee'ftho should itrapped pensioners of the republic. ithorn air, hospitality, and women too frequently disastrous to the timents of devotion which the liv 3d servants of the nation are sup ed to bear. Phis is shoking ; but still more rible is the discovery which he nar es as follows : rhe Ku Klux Klan have establish, their "dens," and are meeting on '85th" hour to conjure up their ilish work and issue forth their alistic cards of blood. What they not accomplish on the field, in the um, by argument or sense, they pose to achieve by dark deeds of itegy, stealth and assassination. Air midnight eabals cloom the man t dares defend his country. The and Tycoon summons the .hellish de to the knife, torch and bludgeon, I I death is the verdict of their w-twelve" utterings. uHE GREAT TURN OUT YESTERDAY. >m twelve o'clock, yesterday, to two M.. there was a great stir in al st every par't of time city. An or 'ly,mnounted on a swift steed, rode in Ward to Ward, anld carried ies of General Canby's order to ry one of the thirteen aldermen, had been decapitated. Also, to' thlirteen distinguished indivuals a were to take thecir places ; also, he Mayor, and to the three news or offices. Soon the bulletin rds were crowded, surprise 01n ry countenance. Many persons k copies of the interesting docu at, to discuss it over the dinner ta -Charleston Mercury. MPEAoHIMEN'r RUMoRs-Among time ora last night, it was reported that special friends of Gen. Grant are de nat to huave impeachlment done with, tile theory that to k'eep it alive only ods trouble and division in the td, camp. Tis view of the' case does suit the vainglorious -Stevens,- But. and WVilliams. Mr. Stevens has cocted several new articles, and so, hlear, ha. Mr. Manager Walhiamn*,I I on this new hne they propose to, it it ont all the surtr.mar. Mr. Butler ment lightly relinquish thle honors of' investigation, and will ailirm, proba. ,.that the key to stwccess ini tbio comn catlpaign lies not so mitch in Mr. utwel's " hole in the sky" as in theI hole on earth. But ii the friends of n. Grant shall determine that -bru tee requtires this troublesomo btssiness be disposed, of' thley 'will be.-able to >pre~s the ultra inmechlerB in both fuses of' Oongress, anld Mtessra. Butler I Stevens will cry "Never say die"' an unbelieving generation. fu the Senate 'a livelg tihie'-I i s. itedg anidit'lad ari lImpeachinhg ~y. r will take occasion to thiati Gehmibat tier(or unearthing a legeor which oght Iiinv bleb 'bured' *rdl ai 'tt~ ms up. Thede p i sao e . to thebl o ninptelian ei. blio, headed by Logan, or th aii lux Klnheaded by nobody ? A NcwLy MAIIxD Wirs SuInb.N LY Divontoita II nIt.F.-T1here hap-1 pented here recently, between a newly married couple from Kentuckv, a rather c startling episode, tol I orielly as folows: A young gentleman from the county of Madison, Kentucky, wooed and won the heart of-a most estimable and landsome young lady of Payette county. After.:; several months' courtship, the ceremony was duly performed at the First Presby. terman church in Lexington, and the I happy pair, with buoyant hopes, took the afternoon train for this city to spend t the honeymoon. The hours. on rosy wings, flew swiftly by. The brideg ont congratulated himself upen the prize lie had won, and, in blissful ignorance ot F "breakers ahead," arrived at thu. Met- i chants Hotel, where it suite of rooms a had been engaged for the happy couple, < and awaited their reception A fter their s arrival in the Queen City, and enjoying t supper, the bride retired to her chainber, - and the groom, a spirited voung fellow, thought lie would have at i, with the r boys and see the elephant a little while V before retiring to this arms of Morpheus C and hits fair bride. The result of this f little raid around town can better be C imagined than explained ; and we are i surprised to say, instead of the groom I who is a zealous '"'nod Ternplar," re turning "right, side up," he was, to use s a mild expression, 'jolly tight," an his t newly-made wife refused to admit him, o and pert istently avowed that she .would e return home on the morrow ; and, ring. o ing the bell, alarmed the clerk, who r provided an extra bridal caihr Iqr t one, and the groom was soon sleeping d profoundly. On the morrow, after having passed o the night in profound slumber, all un- t conscious of having any wife, lie was as- p tonished to learn that she had deserted s him. But such was the fact.. She had fi returned to her parents, in Fayette t county, where she still remains, refis r ing thus far, to become reconciled to the 11 mnan who could desert her on their first g night of wedded life for the society of t male friends. [Cincinnat i CommerciAl. C WnHAr -u'H it.ocnara wt.. DO it" v SU.CoKSSF Uf..-Colonel John Forsyth, the talented editor of the Mobile Regis. , ter, who is now at Washington, writes to his paper concerning the policy of the Democrats towards the South, in the event that they get possession of the 3 Federal Government : e "1 have taken a good deal of pains to F learn what are the sentiments of leading a Democrats, as to the action of the party, ti should it win the administration in tho d November contest, in reference to Fed- i oral policy towards the South. It was ti a question of the largest practical inter. b est, whether, should the Democracy h come into power, it would leave tho t whites of the South to struggle as best c they could out of the mire of radical re- t construction, or whether it would at 9 once lift them out, by the strong hand ot Federal power. I get but one an swer to the itiimrv, and that is, the it Democracy will be swift to sweep from a the statute book the whole system of E African reconstruction, as utterly null ' and void, and of no effect. and at once f to reorganize the existing white Consti- a tutions of the Southern States, and re- t admit the latter to their full egrality in t the Union. I must confess that I did v not, personally, need such assurances, a for, when policy and good faith both ' point to one course, the result is seldom doubtful. Butt some Southern friends '' did deem them necessary. I think, that U before Congress adjournis, the Democrats P in that, body will makea a further decla. fl ration and pledge to that effect.t Tux~ Bio INDIAN IN IIIC CiCtA GO '1 CONvE'NTroN.-An "electrifying effect." hi says the New York Hecrald, was prodn- p cod in the Chiicago Convention, wve are a told, when Gen Sickles etered on his ti crutcohes, headitig the New York dele- e gation, The Crosby Opera Ihouse wals crowded, and the delegationms were wmtt ing in breathless silenice and anticipia. ~ Lion for some grand denonetnent and theatrical effect--as an audience waits c for the riaing of the curtain when a star actor ia expected-when the Big Indian . 'with all the other chiefs eutered. The i American flag was carried proudly over the head of the mighty chief amidst hiur. raha that sho'ok the building to its fotn. ~ dations. We are not informed whetrher' this was the identical flag which Gen I Sickles, Gesler-like, made the people of' Charleston bow'down before when he ~ was in command of that military dis trict ; but, judlgmg from the enthusiasmn it. awakened, in probably was. Great indignation existed ini Philadel. phina on Thursday with the Radicals ini reference t6 the overslaughing of t he va rious canidlates for the Vice Presiden-.1 cy this sifi e of the Alleganies. A prom. inont Rad ical in the presene~e of the wvriter prudfce4 th'at Ponnsylvania would gI'vo thitrty thmousatjd majority for .Hanoock-it he was. nominated' -at the b' l19w York Con!vantion on .July4th,andi 34.6 th~ ity of.Philadelphia would gve Byve thiusantd rmajority for any one nom mhted by thd Deniodrate. 'Ao.h.--The Radical organs of this ,p e ~ ci~y foam; at the moth, and t rfr a pa'iver dicto anige out "thc do' catehrd,MA ladepdc4 ~Ve~6~dt~ n~ Austris urge tt general dIsarming in Europe. A Toucar Cusvomi;t roR BUTLER. Butler asked Mr. Newton if ho had not written a certain letter to Mr. Smythe, ollector of New York, and went on to ndicate the contents of the letter refer ed to. The witness replied he had ; hat he happened to leave it on the ta. 1o in his room unfolded, and that it was tolen from there. "Who stole it?" inquired Butler. "I expect you did," responded New. on. The witness was put under arrest four times, but as often liberated, the whole >roceedngs being condactcd with a nock -corumn that was quite refreshing o w ess. The witness resolutely per isiled in refusing to disclose his private (fairs, though he very good hunoredly nswered all the questions he possibly oud1 without quite turning himself in ide out. Butler. for instance, road a elegramn -tdressed to Collector Snythe - 'Gomo on here at once"-signed ewton, and asked witnaess what nefa ious scheme lie had in contemplation hen he penned such an atrocious re nest as that. Newton replied that lie Lit lonesome, and wanted Smnythe to ome along and take a drink ; where ponl Butler gut indignant, and said the 3oard of Managers was not to be trifled ith in that faslhion,. A great deal of itch silly , ter made up the fruits of F-day .-estigation. Near the close f Mr. Newton's testimony lie was ask d if he had ever known an of'er f money made to the President. iHe eplied, with much grave deliberation, tat lie had; and uinmediately all the tanagers bectame attenitve, and prepar d iheinselves, in imagination, for an tiher article of impeachment. ie sta :d that Mr. William 11. Appleton, the ublisher, had come to Washingto >me four or livo weeks ago. and signi ed to the President, through Newton, sat in case of his being convicted seve a! gen'lemen in New York initended to resent him with a purse of $100,000 in old, and that the house o; Mr. Apple Ni would be at his service after to nitted the Executive mansion.. In nse lie should be ncguitted, the sum to o prtreonted would be $50,000. There *as nothing un peachanle in this, and the Ianagers git. disconsolate, and told the itntcss lho might go. [Uerad. A Baa.tca OF Pti LANTnnloa'srs IACKEY AND RnnatnTSON.-Almost very day we find some startling ieco of news about persons and things t home. The following extract from 1o Washington correspondence of the ldvocate, a Chicago paper, will be very ew to our readers. It would be par cularly interesting to know what has ecome of those slaves "Mackey freed efore the rebellion ;" to say nothing of tat distinguished humanitarian, who illed his negroes together and told iem they were free. Here as the elo ant "extract:" "There is great rejoicing among Re. tablicans over the result of the election i South Carolina ; Cardoza mentioned s a candidate for the United States enate, declined on the ground that it ras better for his race, not to be put >rward in ollice too rapidly. He will ecept the office of Secretary of State, which he has been elected. The Sena rs will probably be Dr. A. G. Mackey, 'ho was President of the Convention, nd T. J. Robertson, of Columbia, who 'as a stauinch Union man t.harouaghout ae wvar, They are both~ natives of ouath Carolina, and were noted for giv. g sympathy and material aid to Union risoners. Mackey freed his slaves be. ire the rebellion ; Robertson called ha >gether on learning of Lincoln's procla5 ation and told them they were free 'heo most of them remained with him. e now employs two hunatdred on his; lant ation ntear Coluimbii, and has given ho'mestead of from five to ten acres each head of family, who remain ANoTuain IPrnovEMP.NT IN THfF. LiRT OF~ KILLINo.--The Prussian mill ir~y chaemistshavo succeeded ini pro ipitating the explosive liquid known a nitro-glycerinec, and in reducing It a solid. The advantage of this ranasformation is, that its cotmbusti ility is considerably diaminishod, rhil its explosive force remains theo sane, and it is thus renaerod more aanngeable1 and fitted for mailitary ur poss Shells filled with it -fired roim guns of moederate calibre, are aid to have smashed the strongest uairass that ever .7et protected the ides of an iron eased slup, and if hanlf what is stated by the Prussian papers n the subjoctbo true the art of do Once in war is still in its infancy, and will be a tremendously costly banta ing to rear.-Wew York Comniercial. - Tua Vo-rs.--Gn. Canby makes thme ullowing report for North and Sth In North Carolina-there are 100,. !21 'hite and 712 932 dolored voters, tarly all. of whaoin voted. It is esti tdthat 10,477. .whito and 3,289 >laOhts failed to, giseor,. ,and of those 1,686 whiteil are disfranchied. In South Carolina, there are 46,882 hi~te'ahil g0,550 black: yoter: registe id 10,999 whites and 4,167 .blacks fail. dsh to ,egist h. , A bout neventy -flve per eant. . o 7 wjites. ,re i(rgnchis ;jh.p8vetee0t year 11oouag ajve maetheir' appearatteo in Georgia and have a lar;. W on ach win;. A Letter from Gen. Forrest. NAsivLrr.x, May 15, 1808. Editors Aulaanch'e : GNTs: An influence is at work in this State, as F have discovered since my recent departure from Memnhia, to preclude any participation by the late Confederate soldiers in the coning con. vent ion of the Democracy of Tennessee, to be held at Nashville on the 9th of June, and in the National Democratio Convention, to be held at New York on the 4th of July. It does not amount to a purpose to arbitrarily do this thing ; but is felt in efforts to induce in every one who took atny part in the recent struggle of the Confederacy for independence to de cline attending at these assemblies upon pretended grounds of expediency, and to submit the representation of Tennessee at New York to men who were known to be for the Union. Upon consultation with many of my late associates in the war, I have con cluded to advise against any further po litical emasculation of ourselves in the party movements of the State. We are already sufficiently proscrib ed in the constitution and statues which now govern the State, against our con. sent, the proscription of which have, through the mendacious hostility of our legislative enemies, been added to time and again, until now we barely live uni. der the accumulated weight of disfran chisement and oppression. Shall we superad, by our own action, to those proscriptions and. exorcisms of ourselves from all participation in the assemblies of the State and National Democracy, and publish to the world a confession that we are too unworthy to intrude ourselves into the counsels of the party I? The National Democratic party, through its commlittoe, have invited us to take part in the convention which is to as semble inl New York on the 4th of July. It proscribes no test oaths, no qualifica tions dependent upon the part we have taken in the late war. but, like a true constitutional party, it opens its doors and invites all who may choose to come without refere'ice to the past. To sug gest then an answer to, so catholic an invitation, that we who are the true representatives of the greater portion of the constitutional men of the State feel ourselves unworthy to soil the delibera tions of that Convention with our pres ence, would exhibit us in attitude of servile degradation, that I trust we have not reached as yet. In this view of the case, then, it is my advice (given from a sense of duty, and against a reluctance which is adverse to any personal display of myself in a matter of this kind) to all my comrades to participate in the coun ty meetings, and to send up full delega tions to Nashville, on the 9th of June, composed of good and true men, without retorence to the divisions which were made by the war. The only hope of a restoration of a good government in this coutry is in the success 'of the National; Democracy in the next Presidential campaign. I trust my late comrades will not, from expe diency or other motives, absent them. selves from a participation in the politi cal exercises which are to result in the choice of standard bearers, made with a view to so patriotic and desirable an end. So far as I am personally con. cerned, I have no desire to take any pait in polities, nor to occnpy any political position wihastever; bult 1(1 do ot wish to see my State represented by men whose only claim to public favor is thle dexter ity with) which they took either side of' tile question in tile late war, as interest dictated, and who bank unon it as their only caipital for popular snipport. N. BI. F1ORREST. BiLLuNOSCATI-KANSAS 13 L A c K' GIUARiDs APTER SENATOR Ross.--The Kansas Radical papers are aher Senator R~oss with red hot pincers. The vote of tihe Senator, "nlot guilty," was atrocious enough, but iln replying to a dispatch from Leavenworth, demianding his ac quiiescenicein the wvill of the party, Mr. Ross neglected to pay tihe telegraph tarifn, Appended to his blunt rejoiner was the legend, "sixty .words, $15 55, collect," If every plrotert that went to W~ashington had been answered in that fashion, thle presure would have been. suddenly condensed. The telegram of Senator Rose, and the ertiel 0. O. D)., itispired thle following chaste responses: LEAYENWORT1I, May 10, 1888. lon. E. 0. Ross, United States &enaor', Washington,.. .. "Your telegram received. Yoqr vote was dictated by Tom Ewing, and hot by your oath. Your motives are Indian contracts and kreenbaeks. Kan. sas repildiates you as she will all pet uf., e and skunks. D. R. A4TUOxqy." "LAWRENCE, J(A., May l16 1808, &natfor Roes, Washington, D. D. The rope with whiohu Judas hurng himself is undoubtedly Josi.'sBut the pistol with which~ Jim L~a.ne bhkw .og hs bra ins can1 possibly, be fpd To MAKE A- OAIID~ ,Bt.'&N 'ArL NiouT.--,-Its SB a,4, th~ $he9,- qe in 0a8esof sieknoss, a&~ I Hg IS lewie0i gdorwe aoe area ii it es th laks t . small $iee of oandle.