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r"ofm OWN ~ --* * a .. ~ ~ D 1sportes, Williams & o., Proprietors.] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquiry, industry and Literat VOL. 11.1 WINNSBORO, S. C., WEDNESDAY MONIN, J 9 38g [NO. 49 Tj1 I I ,. PAIRFIELD HERALD IS rInMI.:19IF.) WKEL.Y nY DESPORTES. WILLIAMS & O. Te1rm.-Ti K II aALD is pUilislIr Week ly in I he Town of Winnsboro, at $3.00 n eareahly in advance. Ild" All transient advertisements to bo plil in aivance. Obit tuary Notices and Tributes $1.00 per Tiho Milden's Prayer. She roq e "p from her delicious sleep, And put away her soft brown hir, And ii a i tine as low and deep, As Itve's first whisper, breathed a pray. Her ,wnow.white hands together pressed, Ier blue eyes sheltered in the lid, The 1*,b l linen on her breast J u:t bwelling with the charms it hid. And from her long and flowing dress Esca pei a baro ani snowy foot, Who<C stop upon the earth did press Like i sweet snowflake soft and mute Atl then from slumbers soft ani warm, . il,( a yung spirit fresh from fleaven, Shie h..do that young and tender foru, AnI hiinbly prayed to be forgivoij, Oh, Gml ! if souls as puro as those Nee-l <aily merey from thy throne If she upon her ben<eli knees, Ou1r ho4,lie.st andl purest one Site, wit It a face so clear and bright, we <lec 1 her some stray child of light I she, wit It those sot- eyes and tears, Day after day in her young years, Mtist kneel ad pray for grace from Thee, how I ardly if she win not IleAven, Will our wild errors be forgiven. Our Saturday Night. OUR TitEASURES. Before the sun went home this Sat urday night to tell God who had striv en the harlest. for heaven the week p,tst, a millionaire rode by. ie lives in a palace--we in a cottage. lie has his coachman, outriders, ser vants, and waiters--we have not one. Hle hoards dollars as we do the hind words of our friend, while his bonds are many, its are the curses we could heap iput those who by legislation, made hini rich and our friends poor. Hie it milliouaire-wo arc not. H1e its at ese-we live by labor. Ile dines at six. Silver und gold ar'e upon his table. A profesbional (o11Pk tempts his wine.wet pal-ate with viands none but tho rioh canl bu y.. Survants with ehayr eS, to doect the slightest wish, Ita.:ten to hand himI this and that. I is wif spathles tho diamionds whieh roobbed laer eye- 4f love's wondrotus i ister Nheit she took them at the price of her heart ! Jew Clry, lace, bilk, satin, plush, velvet, daralsk, silverware, gas-light mllow ed by tinted shades ol gliass or porce lain, broadcloth, and echoes of dissi pation-gran d, costly, and envied in his home. le eats and he drinks. le dines and he wiines. IIe rides and he thrive. Servants open doors, brush the lint from lappol and body -the dust from hat and boot. le gives cheeks and lives high-does the millioniare. And his children are cared for by professional nurses. They call him governor. His wife by forms ceremonial empties the purse he fills, and is happy in her rouge-her dia monds-her carriage-her toilet-her establishment-her position in that society which is kept within proper "bonds." ."H appy ?" No-she is niot happy I Wives by marriage and. wives by brevet. HIe lives here-be revelts there where wine and dissipation pave the way for fur Sther chapters but nearer home. Hie rode by in his carriage, and a thous and turn to mention and envy him whose borne is rich, but far from warm-hearted. Yes, envy the mil lionaire. And you may, but the glit. tering of his coach, the style of his carriage, the prancing of his horses -tihe sparkling of his diamond-covered wife-the rich odor of his anticipated dinner, have no charms for u's, and we envy him not, WEALTH I Yes, we are rich. Ours is a cottage or a cabin, if you will. It is . up *stairs--on the ground floor-in .the eity-in the country--of wood-,of stone-of brick. Marble for tihe rich - .-brick for the poor I We have no arrage--no horses-no servants-,no wine-no haughty or petulant keep~er of the purse to purchase from with gifts when love hungers for the beau. tiful fulallment i .But we have a home. Tihe rooms are not large. The furniture is not rich, but in that home is a greater treasure . than the millionaire ever possessed. Our Trea sure. Our Darling. Sworn to love. Bond paying golden interest hourly. Dearer treasure-than money ever pur chased. Our Daringq. Pretty .soon we shall put the pen In its plade and go and mee6 her. Shall walk, for we have no carriage. And Ahall walk fast. And we shall -meet her at 'the door, and bless God for the jies of welcome. And 'as we walk side by side to the chair set for us, eag draw our treasure to otir head, "" sig'-'l love you darling. And she \reloomes us Saturday night, and every night, -- and her pure. true, trusting, and beautiful love keeps us from wander. ing. And we set by our little fire, hand in hand. Diamonds never throw light as do the eyes of our darling, for they light from soul to soul, making noonday of otherwise night. And she gives us, oh ! such tempting wel come. No servants are near to lis ten and tell. The rattle of playthings on the floor, disturb us not, for we knew it, and 'twas as Orod intended. And as no one hears, we sit, paln to palm, and thu. come the words of the heart: Darling - I love you. All the day have I toiled till hand and brain be weary, but I never forgot you-your love or your kisses. I went forth in 1 the morning to labor. Perhaps at is but little we have, but, thank God, I darling, it was honestly won-we love each other and are happy. I try to be good and honest, and guarded by your love succeed. And no tempta. tion yet met has won me from my vows and from you-no place has lur ed me from my home and the loved no wish have I had for something be. yond the confines of my happy domin- 1 ion. All the day, and all the week t I have toilcd there, as you have cared t herc, and see, darling, how our home t grows more and more beautiful as t your taste displays the little things I purchased with the earnings of my t hand and brain. t God bless you, darling, and make t me always go>d, and kind, and true, I and earnest, and deserving of the t love you give me. Here is my home t -here is my heart-here is my treasure r -here I live as there I labor, and t every hour not given to toil is to thee, and happiness. And as I go I will think of thee; of the time when you a said "yes" to my wooing, and never t will I do that which would pain your t heart, and then I shall ever be happy, t and love you alone, my darling- t queen of my heart-warmed home. a And her hand presses mine-her eyes are like rays from the eternal-as s she looks the words cannot speak. Her c lips are are so sweet and warm, so full of that wondrous electricity which all L knew not of-her cheek rests on my a shoulder, and from her heart, from r her loved lips come these words: a God bless you, darling, for your t manhood and unsullied bringing. The e day has not been long, for I knew P- - would hasten. And 'I was haplly as C here and there my hands I found em- c ployment. And see how nice I have lixed this, and that-for thus you like e thnm, ns thus I fixed them. And, dar linw. I at so qlat you lavz beenl good t :!I trile to us both. I am11 gl d it my inv i the :hield tha keeps Iyou from I tIlling When teipqted, ti we all are. Yu t have toiled all the d.-y--now rest' with me--on this breast,by these lips, t in this licar, of mine, for all are yours. I CoI, daling, to the fete, and none t so sweet as by love alone invited ! You are home, where all is yours, with never a regret, or a wish for another. I love you, darling, and I pray Him I above to give us hearts to know our treasures-to know who are the truly rich ; and I pray him to spare us to enjoy all there is that is truly beauti ful in life till we rest again united where there is no Saturday nibht.- I "Brick" Pomeroy. AN AeRF, IN GERIANY.-One of these gardeners in the neighborhood of New York--a South Bergen (New Jersey) man--wrote a book on the de tails of his work,' in which he makes the following show, pronouncing it an average for the past teln years from grounds that have been brought up to the standard of fertility necessary to market garden: OUTLAY TO THE. ACRE. Labor, $300 Jlorse labor, 35 Manturo, seventy-five tons, 100 Rent, 50 Seeds, 10 Wear and tear of tools, oe.e 10 Cost of selling, 100 *Total, $605 nlECE.IPTs PRo31 THE ACRE,. 12,000 early' cabbages, five . cents per ac0d, marketed about the 4th of July, $600 14,000 lettuce, ,one cent per head, set between the cab bage, and sold in May and Juno, 140 30,000 celery, at two cents per .he ad,.set in tuly and August, . ad marketed during 'the winter, 00 Total, $1,340 Deduct the outlay, 605 Profit in clear money, $735 Dn. 1,AirIs MoUratfll,-Dr. Jaines Moultr(e, nays the Charleston News, the last scion.,of a,t ijlingtijous race, breathed his last ,otn,..$g1~d,y. nern ing, the 20th instant. hIe was the son of. .Dr. Alexander Moultrie, and grandson of Goneoral Moultrie, of R(ev olution ary renowu. ,,Io, was born .in Charleston, and at the timo of his death was inhis.7thyeair. A Nova dapaper re orts thie psa shge by its officesof a 'Midv. of Chi nose labot'ers." Eaoh earried his own baggage, oonshtlng of an exrn hat. The End of the Failroad War. It is with great pleasure that we earn from the Augusta papers, of Sa. ,urday, that the differences between he South CaroLuna Railroad Company Lud Columbia and Augusta Railroad nompany have been brought to an end. Jhese differences involved, as is known i disagreement between the first nam )d company and the City of Augus a, and we hail the satisfactory ad ustmnent of a difficulty which threat med to become serious, as a sign that here is to be a lasting commercial eaco between Georgia and South Ca. olina. The terms of the treaty which has )eon concluded are, according to the ,haronicle and SUatind, Eubotantiall LB follows: "The Columbia and Augusta Rail. load agree to pay to the South Caroli ka Rai road the sum of seventy-five housand dollars in the bonds of the ormer corporation, to be taken by the atter at par value ; and in eonsidera. ion for this amount the South Caroli ia Railroad agree to allow the Colum >ia and Augusta Road to intersect he track of the former at the "turn able," one mile on the other side of he Savannah river, and the use of the rack across the bridge over the Sa annah and along Washington-street, o'Ahe Union Depot in this city, until he sixth of January, 1870, by which ime the bridge of the Columbia toad will, it is thought be finished he time and manner in which the rack is to be thus used to be deter Ained in case of a disagreement be ween the other parties, by the Presi cut of the Georgia Railroad. "The City Council of Augusta gree to grant to these two Railroad he free use of the Washington street rack in perpetuity. The track to be sed by them on equal terms, and it, ogether with the street, to be arranged nd kept in thorough repair at the ex ense of the two roads ; and all other treets which they will have to use in onnecting their tracks with a com ion depot to he kept in the same man er, under the direction of the streets ud drains committee. If any other Oad shall hereafter desire to use these treets connecting these roads with he common depot, for the purpose of nitering the city, it .hall te allowed '. .-~ 'il en terulns e tu IVIly-m r of Augusta and tho superintenden ts f the Georgia aid the Macon and Lugusta Railroad,constitul ing a board f refere'es, may deterne. '-The t wo r1ilrond companie!s agree o indelm.ify the City f6or all dalmags bt-ainled from11 it inl conelqueice of the u1ning of their trainls through tihe treet-. "The City Council agree to release he South Carolina Rlailroatl from thtir irevious contracts wihid the city rela ive to discriminations against Augus a in freights and passenger fares, ex opt on the line between Charleston nd this place, and also release them romi the piohibition against their ein ;inci and cars running through the treets. "The City Council, the Columbia nd Augusta Railroad and the South Jarolina Railroad promise to stop all itigat ion."- Charleslon Nels. THE COLORED STAT CONVENTION. -Richmond, May 28.-The colored State Convention adjourned to..day, Lfter adopting a series of resolutions requestijng General Ca.nby to give solored mon representation upon the benches of the courts ; urging repub Lican voters to vote for the constitui bion fra.med by thme late Convention ; pledging the Convention to support blhe WVells ticket; thanking the peo.. ple of the North for their benevoler ie in furnismhing means for the the edu mation of colored children in the South, and hailing the appointment of [ieneral Canby with joy. Dr. Harris the colored candidate for Lieutenant-Governor, addressed thme body, and expressed his sus picion that some of tihe white republican voteri.intended striking his na me from the ticked on account of his color. A Chicago reporter who- attended a spring opening of fashionable mnilline r,y, says of it: "A cabbage leaf trim with three red peppers and e dried sherry sells for $35. It is called a }ockey ; has one advantage---an be saten as a sallad when the season mhanges. One eomposed of tbree igh and a bit of pink colored fog was Bonsidered cheap at $55." We auppose thle fashiQn for the next season will be a postage stamp with a long ribbon and tassels attached' to each corner. A gentleman of RLohester~NEW Hampshire, saw an advertisement that a receipt for the cure.of dyspep sia might be had by sending a poa. tange stamp to the idvertiser. He'*as a viotim, -and sent his stamp, 'The answer was, Dig in your garden sud let whishkey aloge." SUCC EPUL, R ET URN OP T H E BI,I,I 4UusuE.-B ret. May 28.-The new iron-el*d steamer Bellqueusebai re turnd: to this port, after havilig edr oumnavig6ted' the . globe.. She metd wi4h:no acoidept whatqver. been organiso I at Riohmonde The Efficiency of Chineso Labor. Are the Chinese immigrants ser- ) viceable, reliable and killfull work men ? Such is the really important point to be settled. The Overland Monthly -the most sparkling and pleasantly written eri odioal in the Union, but devoted al most exclusively to California inter- a ets, gives the elements of a reply to this inquiry, in its March number. From it article, "Ilow are our China. men E-ijaployed," and from other t sources that, irrespective of partisan feeling, furnish similar information, we deduce the most favorable conolu sions possible. The first regular employment that f ile Orientals found on the Eastern r slope was in the woolen factories. The unanimous report of tbe former a was that "with no other operatives c had they ever been so well pleased." c They are promptly at their stations a at the proper time; they have no gos. sip which involves the breaking of the c threads, and they work without lag- 1 ging. Next came the Pacifio Railroad, a which made, the next great bid for b Chinese labor, and employed nearly d 10,000 of the strangers. The latter f, are reported by the CoWpany a d "promptly on .the ground, ready to t begin work the moment they bear the I signal, and laboring steadily and hon- ti catly on, till admonished that the working hours are ended." "Over- f seers declare that they can drill more tj rock, and move more dirt with China- Y men, than with an equal number of v the men who claim this kind of occu- p pation as their speciality." t Chinamen have helped to make f, nearly all the roads, and like im- f, provements, near San Francisco; they p gather in the harvest; they tend on '0, the grnzing farms ; they cook in the I a kitchens, and make housekeeping' i eauy; paper mills, powder mills, rope walks, and tanneries could not get 0 along without them; hop plantations, m vineyards, orchards, and berry grounds n are tended by them ; silk manufacture, a cutting cord-wood, salt and borax e works, cigar making and a hundred tj similar occupations draw great help a, from the Chinese. They hae at )Nw) taken to the smelting and., Manufac- fe ture of in l "t ngn branches. In fine, turn whither we j may, we see the Chinamen up early, ,h and stay ing late ; sober, industrious, it iitAlignCt, devoted, and capable for a all tings. Such is the universal L testin.ony of all but tho"e Who, deal- ia ing themselves, in all thing which are v the curse of hu11manity, meet with fal len and dograded mon only, and judge r< of races by their own lives. N The verdict, in favor of the uncor- I rupted Ciin-jese workman is favorable in the highest degree, and one ef the 0 most striking proofs recently given is the voluntary establishment, by Chi- ti nese in New York,of an evening school, u for mutual instruction in the E0,nglish ti language, and improvement in science %, and art. The most gratifying results ti are already recorded. ti What the country wants now, and h quickly, is a sufficient mass of willing, b able, steady and sober hands, to open m our vast interior, and we can find f< such only where rum and party poli- C ties are diacarded.. Says the C5alifor- v nia writer, most justly: a "In a country where there are mnil- t< lions of acres of arabie land yet un- c improved, the desideratum is of hands I to till the soil, and thus put this land n under contribution to furnish food a and'olothing for those who need it, t and, as far as possible, to make every ai acre d<f its part toward supplying the v~ Government, and buildiDg up public institutions, Where there are faciii- f ties for erecting mills, with material I to be raanufactured, and capital wait-- r lng to be emiiloyed, the next necessi- t ty is, the operatives ; and, just so longi as the operatives are wanting, so long t will the manufacturing -facilities re main unimproved, the material will; be left to waste, the capital will bet idle, and the talent and skill whichi was waiting for employment in eon-1 ducting and overseeing such enter prises is deprived of the opportunity< to exert itself for the beneflt of theI world." If our' own unemployed laborers and artisans will persist in dragging out a wrotched ez:atence in the midst of crowded coinpetition Instead of carrying thecit- energy and skill to the1 points that need it, where a, Dew and '1 comparatively independent life Is of fered to them they must be preparedi to see the pig-tails of Chung K woh wriggle in triumph over the grained hills and blossoming valleys of the Far West. Hero is a concise, but hopeful love letter written by a Colorado mirrer: "Loven y erea ls rather 1.mg to koart a gal, but i lo,have you jki, Cate/' A sensatiob in a London thesire ia. a wonderful hors. which.ride. through fiawes'ftoni,the stage to the file, with a youmg womad on.hi. ba6kc. One Norville nomninae himself for. GQovernor of Mississippi. dhe,pspers of thqat Saeare,In.doibt whethexor not he-is fropt the GramPpjipAAIg. " BIia'robnt,'mh beT.1 ptr dead at thabbrur.O =n ' a - tFroin the New York Herald.) Ifrriage of Prince Louis rerdinand of Bourbon. Marriage of Prince Louiis Ferdinand le Bourbon, son of Count dI'Aquila and iephew of ex-Ferdinand, of Naples, of sab-l.a, er Queen of Spain, and of )om Pedro, of Brazil, to Senorita Lmeia Hamel, of havana, dau%hter of he "Queen of the Antilles," Enriguetta "erot de Hamel, by Justice Dodge, at lie Jefferson Market Police Cour:, on he 20th day of March last, was duly iublished in the Horald. The appear tice of the distinguished oonple in a olice court for such a purpose created Ome astonishment and furnished food :r the gossips and quidouncs. The ex. lanion of the case is that the Prince, rho is only twenty-four years of age td quite bovish in appearance, Wtas Durageous enough to trample on the Id dynastic prerogative which forbade ny scion of the blood royal to marry a lebeian. He applied to the Catholic lergy of every country of Europe, but is application in every instance met ith i peremptory denial. "Rome lis Dokon" was the truth that flashed on is mind as he found himself doomed to isappointment. Ferdinand and hi.i imily reside in Rome, within a short istance of the Vatican, and this tells ie %% hole story in a single sentence. lut the Prince loved Amolia with all ie ardor of which a young heart is ca able, and it is little to be wondered at, ,r she is bvautiful in the full sense of io word, being now in her twentieth ear. They repaired now to Paris, here the young laly soon became the et of the Empress Eugenie. Strange > say, the Prince had always been a vorite with Napoleon, despite his Imily connectionls, and the youth in. roved the acqiintance with the object r having the doarest wish of his heart last accomplished. Some time in 'ocember last he unfolded his purpose > the Emperor, and prayed th. consent F the latter to the union. N&c'nl-on, ith his characteristic shrewdness, in edipitly turned the conversation on jothe-'ssubject, but the Prince was too irnest to be thus foiled. At length e E-peror replied that lie would give . answer the following day. The rince nppeared next day, and was in. irmed the Emperor had left a letter for tolaonic '~ine':on'i'flecissez.*ii rasion worthy of' the Little Corsican mself. The Prince had been "reflect ig" ever since, but. the Catholic hier -chy did iot relent. lie came to the rited States, Iut he found Rome here 4o. He appealed, but appealed in am to Ihe clergy. Fortune smild at. last upon him as a ,%vard for his p,,rseverane. Maiterf >ok an atispicioti turn on Thursday. i the afternoon of that day a gentle 'in and lady appeared at, the residence F thI pastor of St. Peter's church, Jer .y Ciwl, told hin they were travelling irough this country and desired to be iited in marriage forthwith, before ley would go to Long Branch for th mnimer. The pastor iniiqiired as to cir names. ages and family cnnec ons, and put other queries to satisfy maelf that no law of the Church would B violated in the case. A messenger ,as sent, to Bishop B,ayley, at Newark, >r a dispensation ; but no reply was re lived up to the time when the carrier is expected to return, Yesterday uorning the Prince and his lady went confession, att.ended mass, which Was alebrated at nine o'clock by the Rev. ar, Wiseman, received t,he holy com munion with the most ePemp)ary piety. nid at half past elniven o'clock the~ union yok place between Louis Ferdinand e Bourbon and the fair Amelia H-amel, rhich the Catholic Church holds to he 'revocable. The ceremony was pr >rmetd by Father Wiseman, who mere i blessed the ring, all that was necessa. y to stamp the seal of the church on bie civil marriage which was contracted i New York. The witnesses were lenor iL. A. Gunst, the father an moth r of the brnde and a lady belonging to rersey City, T1huese, wi'th the represen. ative of the lierald, were the only in. lividnnis, among the laity at least, to, rhonm the matter was confided. AtL the oncluision of the ceremony the happv oiple seemed overjoyed, 'now that their ong anxiety and suspense had termina ed, and the bride gave expression to eelings by embracing the lady a ho toad by her side, but who had been op o that hour a stranger to her, Thus hy one stroke the diplomacy of hat decaying atock which-Ils known by he name of the Bourbon dynssty andl he intrigues of their sympathisers hive een frustrated ; and in t,he interests of norahty, not to mention the high pre ~ogativn of man in taking to himself a afe and cleaving to her according to livine injuntcion, no one will regret the ~onoluision of this case beyond those re, erred to. The knot Is -tied at last, and ~he Bourbon dynasty, whether on the bhrone or in exile, Banst .oo.pt the situ. ition. The flrat annlonneet of the event was Bashed soroes the cable to the Em press Eugenie,. and the* news will no loubt osaWea litt,le sfesaeo .'is he I'ailens*. - irs. Stanton s t)o Wlfteenth Amend:npett ">'annoW with'jt b peti:*t uti thi waam.n ofte intrv their pohitrca devadation?" ' ' [Front the New York Sun.) Secret Marriages---Au Old Gentleman Tolls a True Story. Sin:-Whilo riding up town yester day I was an unwilling listener to a co;versation between two students, who, as they expressed themselves were bent on fun, consisting in a mock niarriago of the younger of the two to a nurse girl. I am an old man, nearly seventy years of age, and I knew I could with safety speak to them. I told them I was then on my way home from the deathbed of one who was the envy of all who knew him. He was a Southeiner by birth and ed.cation; his victim is also a native of Georgia, but brought up at the North in her father's family. Somo 8 years ago lie met her in Ten. nessee, where the family were staying, and she was theu a beautiful girl just budding into womanhood; he followed them North, and soon won the love of the girl, who had promised to be his bride; but her parents would not con sent, as he was a Colonel in t'ie rebel army. He soon after joined his regi ment but time and distance only served to make her love deeper; when, one day, he suddenly appeared and claimed the fulfillment of her pronise. She consented to a private marriage. He left the next day, promising soon to olaim her before the world. He oeil!d for England, and betore his return she learned lie had a wife when he married her. He returned with what lie had gone ror-a divorce fron his wife-and now wanted G. to be publicly united to him. She refused ; lie had deceived her once, and 3he could not trust him again. He took rooms in the neigh borhood, hoping to win her to his views but, stricken down with fever, with 110 kind hand to hold the cup of' cold wa ter to his lipo, he sent for her, but it was not util I took word to her ilat he was dying that, site cane. I nover ihall forget that deathbed while I live - ,hen I know what that poor girl had mif'ered. It, is plainly to be seen that ihe is daily, yes, hourly, passing away -actunall dying of it broken heart. rlhe world may laugh, but few girls 3ver loved as she has loved this man. 3ho will have her reward above for hose wardi of for.iv.ess iid comfort ipoke to thal dying one, and that pray. tripp!. "MPWat, ImYti5illi for thy 3on's sake I" May God comifort her in icr affliction. sho who can but, mourn 'or him in her elnst. ('1rl1 l.t this >rove a lesson I i . . i o at in your iier, evet ! o1 etp.n. liwr. IHad .reorgio truted in hers, this inight havo teen spared her. Young men, hewnre 0o yon trifle wit I, a young g6il's pnr !at af6ons: remembiilwr tha.-t, the dav .4 comlin w VhoIngf and old. lich 1anl )oor, alike will he judged. ThI.rose' stu - lents were greatly moved, and promi. -d to givo tip their wild wiys: and cnowing tliat your pape1r is daily reNd )y thousands of young people, I trust you will publish thisl, is it may provo n wvarnimg to nany. LA .IANiM AND J US'.-The Rev. Mr. Frothinghani delivered a discourse in gTew York on the (lay of ihe decoration >f the graves of tIhe Union ahead, which ,oneluded as follows: I mean all who divd in the war were qually victims. The southerner and the northerner- those who fell with us anid those who fell against us--ll were viccdms laid on the same altar. I would wish that we do all this as oem nation. ,'ct us stretw these flowers not on north 'rn graces alone, but on southern graves ilso. They were egually brive, they were all eqanmlly faithfnl to their ideal; heir valor was common, their feeling was commorn their endeavor was coim Inon, and thlie name devotion to their Danise was cammon to each;i and each iidei was devoted to its ideal-one side no less entirely than the other. North orner' and southerner each cherished his put poss, each had hope, each was full of confidence of the ability of his God ; sach opened his Bible ; e'ach made his prayers to the same Deity who directed the battle; they were common victime, laid on a common altar, in a common cause. Oh, we otight by this time to ho able to do justice to the purposes as well as to the spirit oi onr foes. They bore more than we did : they sacriniced more than we did. Their hiomes wore barnied over their heads by fiery shells, ours were left umtonebed .They are obliged to bow their heads as conquered, we are privileged to raise ours as con qiuerors. 1 would drop a tear on one of their graves as quickly as one of our own; and I am willing to affirm that tIhe goihi was 'not their's alone. We were all sinnerq together. * * * These men filled their place, not shrink ing, not swerving. They only ktnow that they were under orders, and in their place, Whoever they were. let us re member that they did their anty ; they were good soldiers. It was a great word s weet, lovely, it Is to die for one's cotntry!. A greater word is this: sweeter, lovelier, is it, so to live that orte's'cowuatry shall be sweet and love ly. Th. sol tery efstem .has been partially dispehseud with )fn the Pittsburg, Pas., state 1'is:n, Convict, have been al. towed to ncomrie into the coirridorg and hav4 tho:Chaplain. preach to them, In stead of:being Joocked -in .their cellp,. Iean that be sallea witigatin or punis. The rirst Divorce Oase in South Caro lina. The Greenville Entiprise says: Three petitions for divorce came ip .or hearing before Judge Orr on Friday last. Two of the applications were from the wives of wicked husbands, one from the husband against his wife. The first case was from a lady, Mrs. Mary E. Cameron, residing in 'Charleston, for a divorce from her husband, Robert Cameron, in Philadelphia, from whom she was, by his cruelty, compelk-a to separate several years ago ; he having, also, since the eeparation, unlawfully married another woman in Pennsvlva nia, with whom lie is now living. 'The unlawful wife, on application, furnished an ifildavit, stating that the husband represer.ted himself as a widower; and so she married him in ignorance of the existence of the lawful wife. Judge Orr, after hearing the petition and evi. dence, readily granted the order for di, vorce in this case, on motion of Perry & Perry, solicitors for the petitioner. The other parties all q-side in this county. The applicantiY.Were repre sented by Messrs. Sulhvan & Stokes. Judge Orr granted the order for divorce in the case of Mrs. Amatida C. Lender man from the husband, Francis M Len derman, who, it was proved, had cruel ly treated her and had married or taken up with another woman. In ihe case of the petition of John \V. Walker for divorce from his wife, Mary J. Walker, on the allegation of her desertion some six or eig.t years ago, and her violent temper and abuse which occasioned it, and the hopelessness of a r,,anin, t.he jiiudge was not. satisfied that lie ought to grant i lhe hitsbanti a divorce, but inti. mnted to the counsel that lie would fur. ther conider the case. It seems to is that our judges oulht to restrict the granting o. divorces to the one Scriptural justificittion indicat ed by the Judge of all th earth, in Mattlew'5: 32. Thus far the cases ac tiallv decidod by Judge Orr appear to come within that rule. CuRIoUS .PRANKS OP A RADIA, MACIST-RAT.-Mr. J. B. Poyap, of Pimlico, Cooper River, informs tie that, Ristig, one of the now magistrates, is causimg a gront deal of trouble in his nolghborhlood. fin com1)iiY,wjJi Atwf st .bles, he visits the plantatio.w, stirring op discontent andt( trying. it. would seem, lo mike ie freedmen dissatisfied with their einloyers. Ristig has got 111) a qIuarrel between two brothers nbont t dischnrgvd man. One of the brothers Le Ined $3, aid said lie must pay or go to j sig's dep ties are George ase and Idthe Imant I iitehitison Who was mixl up witli th lte Calling out of the Militia at. Monek's Corner. The follow, ing I tter has bevi sent by Ristig to Mr, Poylis : PSA TVIU or Ti canor.INA-CIR.Rfla. TON COUVNTY. Complaint. ha ving been made unto me by Jnbrael Gibls that. on having tnrnt of contrackt on neolimt lie R.(fiiset to gau in the Drean, and wiTe he is not in the way of Ifelt find complaining of a wrions sickniss it is uipossible vor him to din so ther.vore Io is willing to do anything elg so long lie ia sick. Now you bA. me verry much by di recting me of it so by so diing yo'u bl, yours & Et. RISTro, Magie. TiEnn,nu,a CON! 'rron or AFFAWas r11 TlE COUNTY 01. J NS.-Last, hight the city was filled with rumors regard ing the conditioni of afihira irr Jones county. The house of Mr. Shade Loftin and that of another gentleman were reported to have been burned, and, a young man nan.ed Bragg and a neg'ro mihitiaman were pairs to have been kifkd. The houses w.ere burned and Dragg was killed by the millkin, while the negrm was killed in the act of applymng a torch to a dwelling, by one of the inmates. All this occurred yesterday. What truth there is in these rumors will he determined to daiy ; but we can not. disguise the fact that they are hi1gh ly probable. That a terrible state of aflfairs exist in Jones3 no one doubt,, and anthentie intelligence will be looked for anxiously to-day.-owborn Journal of CJommrerce, Jfunc 1st. R A I; HTA NnK ERC~uIav.-Mr. fain. well, of DelBow's R~eview, savs the Macon (Ga.) Journal and Mesanger, exhibited in this city yesterday a hand kerchief madeo of the R~amie plant, which, the gentleman who saw it tel4, us, was not suirpassed in eortness ard fineness of textture by hnaerl of the best quality. They are quite common in Ne w Orleane, and are kept constantil fo,r sale in the ehops. [t she we what cen he done with this ne w plant, We believe its eultivat ion has been entered uipon in various parts of Lotuisiana on a large. soale atnd wit.h ve.y gratifying prospects for sucecess. 'The came1a which werA recent'y in--~ trodinced inSontin Anstralis atipear to have been a great suecesa.. avfd the camel will probaly soon take the pha, of the ox as the riught. animal of th colonies. Sixty-five camels andi six. teen Arabs were imp~orre.d, and the.. have paid the owiier af the~m ahad some profit already on the ontlay. The camels carry packs of ahonit BOb #etgg each, and get fst in a country whr otrn would startie. h r~