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Desportes & Williams, Prodterw] A Family Paper, Devoted to Science, Art, Inquiry, Industry and LiteraW1. [Terms---$3.00 per Antara, in Adance. VOL. VII.] WINNSBORO, S. CG, WEDtSDAY MOIRNING JULY 12,1871. [O4 FAIRFIELD HERALD 18 i 11 B1, M1 I ) NYEVA L Y Or~ DESP'Ot'l'ES & W ILLIAMS, T'rimne.-Tnir HE RALD is publIihed Weeks in the Town o' Wiinnsboro, at 63.00 in. VareayI i, advanet. hiry- Al Irisient advertisements to bo id in advance. Obituary Notices and Tributes $1.00 per square. Fortune1o Telling. -: 0 : 'A sil ver penny, pretty, to cross m y palm and I'll read your fortune past, present and future.' Kitty Eldon could not repress a little hys teric.Al scream as the tall, ungainly figure of the swarthy gipsy suddenly darkened the cottage door with a shadow that fell like a blight. The liquid gold of sunset was melt ing into the warm purple that be. longs to tropical climes, the linden trees were lottly swaying in the eve ning breeze, and the evening star rode high above the tinted horizon like a beacon ship far out at sea. 'My fortune is told, good woman,' she said, gently, as she recovered something like self-porsession. 'The past is sad enough, and I have no wish to know the future !' 'Lt e tell it agaio,' replied the dark sighly, drawing her ied cloak closer round her brown visage. 'ID) you see the silver writing of the star., up in heaven ? I can read them as if they were the leaves olan open book. I tan trace your desiny in the lines upon tht palm of your lintd. Stil I litty shook her head. 'Let her tell it, Kit'y, please,' coaxed wilful little Emily Sherman, who was sitting on the low door-step beside her friend, with a tangie of ivory knitting'nee'lles and fancy wools in her lap. 'D,' It is such a romtan. tic thing ty have your fortune told by a real wanidring gipsy. Will you tell -miie, old votnan ' But the fortune -toller shook her head. "My destiny poits only to one,' she nayseriouly-'to one with yellow hair, antd etyes as blue as yonder sky.' Emily gave her jetty curls a .outih little toss. 'Why eouldn't I have been a blonde I Dear Kitty, please let her tell you somnething delightfully misty and inp-o.,sible !' Kitty's smile died way into a sigb. 'Emily, is it possible that you lhave an atom of faith in this jtrgon of as. trology and palmistry ?' The gipsy bent lov o\ei- 1itty's fair curls, and said, in low measured to:)es. 'Two years ago, the gleam of a golden engagement ring, and part(eg words at this very cottage door-one year ago, hair as black as a raven's wing, lying anor.g the sea sand where the shells shine like gold upon tie floor of the great deep ! Alh I Have I proved the 'jirgon' at last t Kitty Eldon's cheek had grown whiter than the snowy inuslia of her dress. 'What do you mean I [low did you know 1' she gasped% almost una wvare of the words that the-e t.emn blinig upon her lips. 'IKitty !Kitty !' whispered FSmily Sherman, clinging to her frienid, "ahe means [larry St. Maui.? 'L st at sea, wont on the swarthy disciple of Eg'yptian lore, in woids that sounded like the dreanmy aitter anees of one talking in slumubers, 'Loet at sea-better so. Ite did nlot live to kuow that the woman he had loved and trusted beyond all humnani.. ty beside proved false at last: Two years ago the yellow gleami of an engagement ring--one year ago the music of the great waves sweeping over a dead sailor-now a hew lower and a new happiness." 'It is false !' said Kitty, suddenly recovering herself\ anid unconsciously pushing the heavy golden oturIs awa~y from her ashenpalo forehiead. 'h4ailse as fulsehood's self t' Emily aprung up with sparkling eyes, and exolaimed: 'It you know so much, old gl)psy \voman, you ought to know a little more ! You out to know that when my brother IHarvey laid his heart at kitty's feet, scarcely ten days ago dion't check me, Kitty ; I miust and will-she told mie that' her love was bhuried under the sands of the soa, long ago.' Thln gipsy stood, tall and immova ble, like a pillar of dat knet-s, again.t thbe warm put-ple glow of the accid en tal sky. 'Anmd,' went on IEmily, with her 'voice trembling, anid her color chang ing with the vohemenee with whioi: she pleaded her friend's cause, "she is the sweetest, beat, noblest, most nonstant of created beings. And If the stars tell anything else, the stars are false I' 8lhe was silent an instant, and then with a sudden brilliancy flashing over her rosy, impulsive, she continued in the samte eager tones. 'Constanit t hrough good and ill, true through joy or sorrow ; tbat is our Kitty's nature arnd if if [Harry St.Maur should ever come bacok alive to claim her heart he will find that .he ba. treasured it for him, pure and inspot ted I Kitty ! oh, Kitty ! are you blind ' Kitty Eldon stood garing fiom Euily's face, all fihshed in the evening light, to the tail figure out lined against the sky '[Ia;'ry 1' le threw -if the Aisguise with one swift, passionate movement, and caught her 'hand in hi4 a-a be knelt on the grass at her Yeet. 'Kitty ! my little meek-eyed dove! Can you ever pardon me for having 'doubted ?' - Kitty Eldon'" blue eyes we're dila-. ted with vague wild wonder. 'Stay a minute, Harry I Let me be sure that this is no cruel drearn ! 'Oh, I have passed through it so often-my dreamn-and then waked to find it all a delusion.' And theti the tears biouglt a bles <ed tide of relief-to the overnharged heart, and Kitty know that it was reality at last. 'I bore it all, Kitty-my weary captivity on the shyres of desert islands, ny creeping progress toward honie when my heart would have lown on electric wings-but when I camne here and heard that Harvey Sherman was to endow yo.'u with his wealth and rank, the. Kitty, miy courage all gave way I I resolvod that, conie what mig i , t would knoiw mny fate. So I picked lip this dis guise among a band of gip3ies down in the hollows of Ivershan hills, and peasonated some sage old silbyl to learn whether or not my life had oeen blighted ! Kitty, what if I had followed the first impulse of my heart and left the country forever ' Ile shuddered at the possi-ility that had risen up before theta, and held Kitty's hand tighter still in his, as if he half feared that she might get away from him. And so two fortunes were told in the lovely June evening at the outtage door. A California Montc Cristo. Alvinza laywird is the her. of a story equal to "Monte Cristo." lie is a Ver mnter, who operated iith a timait named Chainberlaine in a gold lead which was full i of indica ti-l, lbut y ielded nothinig tangible. Chamisberlaine at last wetnt away dis cotn'olite, giving lHay ward a!l his in terest. The latter worked at tle thin g for maonths, antd was buried deeper and deeper it, the ground, but at lrst his fa mily weroe aext to starv ing ; all his laborers left hit, and he knew no friend in the world except Cham tbera- ine. "My God !"' he said to this man, who hadl meantime becn engaged im stack raising, "I am on the verge of thiU great atrike. I know ! Uan't you give me a little money " Chiamberlaine had been on the verge himkelfseveral times, aid he shook his head sadly But ho had $3,000, his all, buried under a hay stack ti'nar b.y, and he went and dug it up. "Takt it, old follow," he said, with California heartiness ; "do your best 1" With this moley Hayward r-eon mtieneed, ani he had worked until it was all spent, and his men were re duced to a bag of beans for nourish iuent when to tihe gloom of hope the preciou~s ov-e blazed suddenly up ; the Atmador mine was the richest int the world. WVhen this tin o as paying $40,000 a month, Ilatyward made over to his friend one perfect third of it. dihemberlaine retired upoti *1,500,000, andi movedi Ihast to ednm cntu~ his childh'ens Ihayward buying back the whole. FIinally even Ilay wark grew tired and he sold out the the mine t'o i stock company1 of which Oeneral Jultoh is President. 'The nmine will make $450,000, het this year, nnd dot ton said lnst week "Tfhe Amador tinet will hold Out longer than we will I" ilemfh ota Mnn-Wemhii Mr. Samnuel Buck, an eceeitrib charauter well known in the vicinity of (onweamuts died Pcoently near that village at ani advanedl age. lIe is repre~ented to have been a man of good family, and wit~h a fair education and natural abilities, butt posisesised of a strotng puassion to apre the mnanners of the opposite sex. tNor nhahy years he had lived alone and, wvith surpris ing facility, he performed) all the duties of a housewife and a farmer it te. In the miorning he would dlon wornhn's attire, -which become his daelicamte person well, prepared break fast, eat ; and, having puit the house in order, *ould unpin his ohignon, exchange lils hoopskirts for trowsers, and go out t o pilough or chop wood, as thme ease alight be, till noon, when he would appear again in the role of a lady cook. IIe Was very fastidious in his tastes, and, when attiredl as a fashionable woman1 wIth his long, well kept hair done up a-la mode, hto would receive and entertai? compidny so gra sefully and naturally as to do ceive all except thoso who knew him, and always sowed qn ito unconsoious that he was playing a horrowdd part, Gen. John A. Wagner has boen nominated by the Conservatives for The New York Tragedy. New York hans be-en excitod over a unost te'rible event, bht ono that has Vecome of Very comYVIon c%'urrence in this rum-drinking country. A Dr. Connolly, while under the innuence 'of nam'u a 1/Ot, sbIthim ll' in his room with his two Jaughters, 'And af. ter killing them lie cut his o~w'i throat. In referring to this foarful incident, 'An9 th6 'acts its developed by the in questt, the lerald indulges in the fol lowinig rvdiectionn "the inque't upon 'the bodies of r. Connolly and his two children has ended with a verdict of murder and suicide while insane. The testi mony shows b6ond quostion that Dr. Connully had been a drinker, and that the insanily that caused him to take the life of his two children and of bilbseif was the resiult of drink. ''he devil of ruw, in all its long list of atrocities, and horrors, bs no more terrible deed to answer for. Vet it des n'etboem that Dr. donnolly was one of those steady rui drinkers who befog their brains contiooously with liquor. It would appear rather that h-e was I h)nn lwho lilug his aseial glass aTd 'ronviviar Y;'6imnany, could still keep his eye at the brain clear and, if the resolutipn seized him, re. frain for long periods from the touch Or taste o' the deVil thatdvermatched him at last. Ihe could, in short, tri Oe and toy with the dangerous cup. Ie Was ni:physiciani of no mean emi noei -, in a well..to-do portion of the city, and no ibesott'ad dnukAr'A could be that for the length of time he was. It would -nppear, then, that lie was one of those drinkers who, touching liquor moderately a't ai timuds, ventured at intervals upon a 'spree'-the of those maddening whirls of dissipation that last sonictinies a few days and some times a week or two-in which the soul that has Leen -eritraiding ito pas sions for so long a time gives up every. thing to the craving for drink, and ends with the aching body, uniana geable nerves and beWildttfed bra, that a ttend the iN excitable, fever ish days of 'tapering off.' 1t is in these days that the levil of madness seizes the 'nodehate' drinker, and from all appearuadea it was under these cireuintances that th6 devil of madness seized Dr. Connolly. Is there no remedy for theme terrible deeds ? Is there nothing upon our statute books that requires e the police to lock up voluntary mAdmen t Is there no law to restrain these 'spreeba that lead to madness and mnurder ? There are lawh enoUgh, aid they should be enfoedd. We cannot concur with Mr. Adanis that if the democrats are united upon their platform one man or one ti-ket will do as well as another Ndr the part ty in 1872. We hold that this bat tle will be fought mainly upon the tickets in the field, and secondarily upol the platform., as, on the great question, rbconstruction, the blat forms will, republican and democrat, be substantially the same. A power. ful ticket, therefere- Is the great es^ sential for the denmocrady; ahd the ticket of Chase and Uancock will meet this demand, for it will be a very powerful ti cket. Let the denoetats adopt it, anid cause it to be uinderatood that, in the evelit of its election, Mr. John Quincy Adams will be the Secretary of State of the new administration, and much addi tional strength will be givesn iin thb campaign to the detnocratile cause. Le the demiourncy put en their Presi dential ticket a good ttrohg populaf Cabinet out and out, headbti by Mr. Adams, and they will find it im.~ mensoly to their advantage.--N. Y. flerald. a profitable business of Aueing fdr breach of p romhise in. IMnglan'd,. A recent numtibet of the Londdti 'fimes reported thrco eases on onO page, irn whiith the average ngo of the ladies Olaiming ootpenatdion 11dr the in *juries to their affeetions was fort.y three, and of the maid defendanta sixty seven. One of the three ladies was undo r thirty years or age ahti ob. tained danmages frotn ati ulwilling loVtfl of neveI1Ly-six. Uee "blighted being'" of fty-aix got $2.500 fromt a villainous lover of sixty. An "oracle" at New Orleans, d ie coursing on the wondera of the Misa, sissippi, mentioned the iron colin of De Soto, containg the golden trumpet given him by Queen Victoria. "WVhat I" exclaimed one, "not Queen Victoria ?" "Yes, sir, Queen Victo ia.'' "Why ahe wasn't born then by two hundred years or more.'" I don I, care if she wasit." was the bold re ply "1 reckon site could leave it ini hor will." A t'russian cavalry oflicer who was badly wounded at the battle of Grave. lotte, was gt'eatly aninoyed- by the cries of' somhe wounded lying near him. H~e stood' thie aknoyanoo as long an hma touldi, atd then' teatily called out 8 top your howling o'v*i there I Do yout think you are the only persons killed in this figh6 1" General flobert 1N. Imee'd . rell known gray war-horse did in tex. inagton. V.. on Mahday last Ihlrt quenched Without Prinking. It ma>. not be goierally knovn 'to '610 read era ia t water, even salt wa ter, imbibed through the skin, ap. peases thirst alinost as well as Neah Wattr tak ,. ihViardly. a klusM~trh. tionl o'f this uhject, a corr'6.n6n' has seint 6s the followht u ridged luotantonA r6m 'W "Narrati\e of Ca tain Kennedy1s losing his vtssel, thd his distress afterward,)' whi6h wab no ticod in ';Dodsle.ys Annual -Nogister for Oi." I caihno't conclude with LAt nr.\ki.ng niention of the great ad,. vahtage I received fro\ dbtaking my clothes twico a day in salt wae'r, and uttiing thei on without wringling. It was considerable time before I 0ould make the people comply with this measure, although flotm seeing the good effect produced, they arter wards practiced it twice a day of their own aocord. To this discovery [ may with justice attribute the preser vation of my own life and six other pesom, who must havo perimhed if it had not been put in use. The hint was first conmmuiated to me from the perusal of a treatise written by Or-. .ind. The water absorbed through the ydeb of i'd Ain red'6 ed in every respect, the sime e'eft as would have resulted from the ) odt crate drinlking of any lHqdid. the saline particles, however, which re mained in our clothes, becaume in. crusted by the heat of the sun and that of our bodies, laoYrating our skins an'd bveing othbirVis inconve nient, but we found that by washing out these particles, and frecquently wetting our 1lot.hes Without W. lging', twice in the course of a day, the skin became well in a short time. After these operations we uniformly found that the Viulent #-rohth went off and the patched tboat oured in a few minutes after bathing and washing our clothe., and at the same tne we found ourselves as much refreshed as if we had receivod some actual nourishment. Four persons in t e boat wlib Mank'lalt WateV *eot del - rious and died, but those who %voided this and followed the above yeactice, experienced no such symptomt. Important Arrest- Southern Coluert Can Ord and Sent to thc BPry Tor: gas. Several seoret service offiers have just retuined from Florida, where they arrested an extensive gang of contbrfeiters of gold coin-. Those oihoers alto secukrel thift'een luaglo eases, dantaining heavy machinery, German i-il'ver, ligets of composition netal, Ringlish alloy copper, used principally in the manufacture of the Bye dollar coin, gold and g'ld dust, it galvanik battery uomplbte, eVentyl five crucibles, first-class engraving tools and other articles-all in tha very btt onditidn-. An attdnipt was thade by a mdb, to reAtle the rts. oier's from jail. Their atteution was turned from the jail, however, by news that the sect ot service mon, who had arrested the gang, would arrive by a train just theb t1%. The thob proceeded to the iepot, bohkded the traih passibg tbrough eabh cars ahd sorutiniiing eVery facb-using d ark lanterns-nnd when necessary awaking those who *ere asleep. In the meautime the Ebitument oiMeera who hadl 'ented-d the tu3wn by anoth br ocdveyahue; took the plrisonerb frotin the jaIl, and safe! y ntibarked with them on board t e lited Statiis revehua cutter, tI e hiotumander of which-.in udmpliahce with a special telegran:-onveypd the prisoners to Fort Jefferson; Wiry Tortugas. A doldred Ilci liihChurth. IThe "now .depaltujda wase realised and ekealplifi4d at T1irity, for the congregation there lissemtblhd looked with surprtise it a bhilored bi-dthor neenrihji riestly i-ob'4e add asaisting the surpliuod band aroulid the altari Thei sbrvitue plrogressed; still the the ooinilninments had buit reispond. ed to, Aven to the last, which is a literal rendering of the great compen diumi of the sedond half of the deoa logue, the tiev. J. R,. Love a~ deacon of the dioeuso of Floifida, deadadndd thestes ad soodbefore the sracrtd ds.1loi htei to find aid for his missionary work among the colored race in his own land, and preached yery sensibly in reference to that sub. -jeet. During the communiop adrvyises following his discourse; Mr. Love officiatedl nild was afterwaf'4s don; krattilated by many upon his very effective sermon.-New York Cor. Washington Patriot. A iseful Centellt, There is a first-rate home-made coment for flillin . up cracks in an old stave or range. '4he ingtfoulenta are wood-sahes mand salt, equal p roport ion in brilk~ot eachi little lesalt ; reduce to a ,ot piste with cold vici, and 1l11 tlio oradks when the ratige or stove Is cool. The comeonL illi edon become perfecclj hard. SilAe blay (obtained at the stove dealeg4)~ will sometImes anawer, but Abh bohe tnado cement is always at, comimard where wood is th. fuel used. Fe~ed Douglass ha.s teelgmuethi seat in the'I'otrItorial Connoil at Wabbing. ton, and will be ibade ptmbli ptister of tha dinlt The Vengance of an Indina Gil. A fingils'r 3ae o' Ten.%t0 which recently occurred iR \%bAern Texnas, is given in the El Paso Herald. It seens that a man named CIA*s'nro, a n'tivo of Roohesters it lflnd, had efAhe lo\-o'to W beautiful halftt'od, -Sitteenl yet&-s o'f age. The 0ir_ Was halb Aptob anA half Or-6 -. n additiou to hbr gr%at beauty Fho Xrab ilte'ligent, vivacious and as active and alert as an antelope. She was u'tle -And A'eoctionate, anA no one Kbpe't-ed ouer of pozesein the 'torti ble p asai-ch which -Jealousy subae. quenll \'%rouicd in he'r bosom. The Nig ilah lover Wnterluna'ely be. came acquiinted with a white girl named Wilson, who was en a \'ait from a Southern State to her friends ir Westorn Texas. Mi"s Wilson was banutiful and accor plidhod. and her civilized graces provud more than a match fe' tho barbarious attractions of the Ap'aole girl. The result was that Chaudos deserted the half breed and becaino engaged to Mirs Wilson. The wgdding day was set-. On hear ing of the faithles"ness o her ioVer-, the hitherto undo V61oped iustincts of her Apaohe blood WVre roused to all th'cit b&vagke fury in the breast of tb untutored belle of the forest. Arm. lig herself with a revolvers sh went to the reaidence of htr lVibr, ebret softly to his tom, and shot hi% through te ht as he WAs wkiting Y b6te to hil b6trothed. She was ar rested a few hours afterwards, and conflued fur the night in an old jog cabin, in defAult qf ' pribon.' But her fliendt retted kdi, As he Aed to the Wilderness, there to take her abode with her mothet's wild kindred. Cost of Radietnla-i. Phu aanual a 'pre6iation of Oon gress for the eurlent ekpenses of gov ernment range from $300,000,000 to $320,000,000. But it would be a fallacy to regard this as the limit of our preseit aniual expenses. It bas been statedi by" the. Ho-. itvimes 1. Beck, of Kentucky, in the 1Iou6se of Representatives, as well as on the hustings in his own State-and never authoritatively denied-that since the war vast quantities of military material, horseh, mules,'Wagons, armbe, tiothing, slips and supplica of il kinds, have been sold, and are still unaceounted for. Neither Congress nor Secretary of the Tiensury can give any idea of the proceeds, ot to t hat purpose they have been dlvoted. We only know that these materials are now prettj nuth all sold- id tbuat have nettbd hudreds of mil lionsl all of Whibh has "gone where the woodbine twineth." Of all these moneys, the publif happens to know of only one diall Itbm throui tMl 1 tttt apartapeuit, Uf' $5,R06,hh0 vorth sold to France last year. No living man can guess within fifty millions of the amount that haA beon stolen in this manner during the last. five yeara. How thuch dbes itadioal ihmll clost i Who can tell ? Ahother In 11lii Outragi. Aib-ob?+, July .0 On Saturday last, twenty-Mr arthud negfius Milt to the plantatioh o4 Angus 14d in tlarnwall County, S. U., about twelve mnilen belo#' Augusta on the Savan nah iver. Art-iying at Red's reepa dbnbe-, hEb piiity hlreti anu striously *ounded) ilod and his wifeo and moth er. After disarming Red, the ne groes returned to Paul B. Hamm enc platttation, whmere the U64put.) shbHl tried tB ihreet them, but witbhunt se - ces as they refubi# to diagmW' the Bhgroesi however, prolhill to go to Aiken3 and Bal l n nsiatijn. tDue of the paltti~s implicated was arreated herc this evening. IhiS version is that R~ed and Lowe at.. temnpte3d to IShastise a ntu to ftr steal ing tin the prtih V1 he forint'r that thle negro escaped from thbih alid returned witht the armed babd, who did the shooting, by way of ret ribution. Trho affair caused ubeaui ness and alar iI. Theb negio arr-ested in this city repraeents himself as a teach 6r and satys ho was on his way to Aiken tu delivel- himiself tip ed the authiofr. ties. Condemned as far as Adj edged. In one of hisi recent editorials, 1i9. Stephens caills attention to the fact that "the validity of the 'reotlnstruot brought to the that bfof6" the Su' pr.eme Court of the United-- litete On all the points under thoe. A~ts yet brought before that eualt., the decision has beent against thele va lidiry. Such *tirb tke rulings of that coorr, in the'Missaippi ease, the Texas cases amit thes nab that went up fromi Virginia and authb *Wre qthe rulings upon all thn eases Involving the validity of o the test oath, Tlie eottrt, ha4 het'tofote~dvelded ?ny d.1. diosti pota thdIale quIestIon nf the thewnse ves.t ,b t? ph~I~l sudked the flloW tn It e 'oture i w*' sayf pabs' hbe fdbt4 or 'sboili along' tI e hasht' wei o~lioted hpardeni alwys aygwil yo beso kidd ae it ecosthe lebovse hitherwtrd." fteessful Business len. 'l'he -hhrnal of Commerce replic. 'o the question of a correspondent 14What proptrtioh of those who sue fed in acquiiAg a competency ii, businesss pursnits kilimately retain I f ' ie editor says that of those wo engage in business on their own tecount only th'e ' of. a hundred Vbeape failure, and oinly Avb out of a hundred bucceed in a'voding an entire collapse of their first effort. Of thbse wh'o at some time 0r 6'th'dr have in ibd . W reason able bompetence, and may be said to have succeeded in business, ninety her dent. are still the subjects Of fter M49erses of some sort, so that only to pbr cent,. of the sucessful ehes keep their fortune unshaken. No two things, the 4ournal thinks, should e m'\-e It'robgly impressed upon the Yoing men of our coantry tlan the insecurity of riches, even when acquired, and their unsatisfying charseter. There is no fallacy so uni versally cherished as the notion that wealth issurely a means of happiness. Th' ear'e of a largO property is one of the mobt burdensome of earthly trusts. The only material good which comes of any estate, the writer re marks, is to be made out of a mode.. rat'6 inethe far more easily than Nth a largt one, and *ith fewer. at tendidt disadvantages. The enjoy% ment in 66 dispensation of bounty is sadly marred by the judicious care required in the selection of the recip ionts. The man who is earning a god liVing, *ith sombthing to. spare afihually fov the sweet uses of cbarity I is fAr Is tried in this respect. k Confcdcrate heroine. Tb6 touisvillo Courier Journal hbAt the follo*ing Paragraph : "Gen. Gor don, or eprgia, and his wife, are at the Galt ilouse. den GQrdan rose rapidly and high in Confederate con fidence, but his wife is as reuIafkkble F it nilitar.y annals.an many a heroine oien story. She, With h r tw-d boys )in a baroucho folloiwed the ar. my of her husband, and she never was hindrance or an embarrassmant to his movements. At Winchester, in the h valley of Virginia, when, for the first tiuve his troops fell back before vaotly supefior nuinbers, she, who was sup. E pos.ed by her husband to be many miles in the rear, happened to be in thb toWn, and saw the critical condi. P tion of the Confederatb dause. She t 4 descended from her dariage, and, . amid the rush df retreating men, the burbting shells and the whiz of bullets, she seized hold of the very persons of soldiers and turned them back to the fight. Her resoiution, cooltiess and hurbie piirit rallied handrids und re tUrnti them to her huban'd in the front. The iheident was kho*n all over Virginia iAt the tiie and i the army. At this season many persons suffer e t'erribly h-rom the eruption called t prickly heat. So familiar is it, that i all persons know it. It is caused by the solid perspirable matter not pass lug off in a disspil#ed stath, l's shpuld be the case. It is ulsily chIeld in e one day by using the waL-i bath for ten minutes then rubbing the affect ed part with lemon .juite. T1he warm a water dissolves the salhta that arb t lodged under the skin ; so does the lemon juice. When the eruption I stings ilad bu .ns, lemon juice rubbedi on the jArt, afdected pill give t'ellef in a few moments. Possibly, stronig apple vinegar might act in the samd Way. P'ersons who cannot get lemon juice liighit Iusb nitrio acid dissolved, twenty grains to an ounce of waitel. Destructive flail Storm. We kbgret to 1.earn that a destrue. tive storm bf hail, Wind and rai tt,.visi ted the neighborhood of Croks Keys, on Friday evening last, which did great damage to the crops on the lan& tations of Bolomon ab d Muerphy ilobo. 'The hali litbrlly stripped the leavbs from the cotton plant and the blades on the corn stalks into ribbons. Ihail stones fell as IygO as the first joint of the thluihib. Muc daiena d the rain andl wind. It is reported as being the most destructive storm that eve4 Visitedl that neighbbrhood, bult tittunftbly Its ral'gies did not ei , hptid any great distance.- Union Tim.. "flow is Thbs or liighItN A tiountg Oommissioner of Ker sha~dttws all ordur on the County TheAsuroi, for one dollar to relieve a transient pauper, and charges the County three dollars for his set vides in the promises. A brother Uoulnty Cornmi slotiets obhjdeting to the charg'e is bullit d and detlounoed as a desert er to the themoorats.-Camden Jour MIr& Meoo-e is of thle stuff boroos are made of: Rtecelntly,at Nashville, *heta hut- son fell down a well ttwenty four feet dieepj she neithet- fainted or deamed, but Itigtatitly swung her. slf dowo, "hanid over hand," caught the ehild with her feot, drew herself ~nd, sorall .the .way up again, and 'hin, Womnan like; spanked the boy for fallin= irn. Dispatches from Admiral Rogers to tho Secretary of the Treasury show that he has taUght the Corean mal rauders a wholesom'd lesson, onc which will to a great extent remove some A the dificulties attending 'our China commerce, as these imonglian Iovers have been a curse to the waters froni Hon Kong to Corea. Desperate band to hand fighting took place when th6it stronghold was stormed and one of the officers of our navy was the firat to fall. Bothe idea of the extent of their operatiobs inay be formed front the fact that ouir foroes took five forts 481 pi'etes 1f '6'rdinau'c', and many small arms, bosi'des hlfty sthal1 flags. Two hundred and thirty-fou' of the Coreans were killed. It has been the custom of these p rates to slip out from the inlets and among the Islands, and seize on everf merohaht shio they could ; and when 3ve' a vess61 wab untuckity stranded, ;hey in like manner ap'p'prifted averything. They carried on their business thoroughly, and none of th ,rews of the captured or stranded merchantmen were left to tell the tale )f subfering, for those of the sailors wvho were not killed, were sold inte slavery at remote haunts of the pi. rates' inland. The few inklings of his slavery that have from time to ime been made known to the worlds tre of the iost distressing nature, nd it is well, ptrhaps, that the riends of mnAnya boa capthin, of his vife and faihilyj an'd crew, bavd :nown as little of their kniseries as hey heve. Adniral Rogera *ill undoubtedlg eueive the thanks of the civilized rorld for this great polio' duty in he cause of humanity and oominercee One Itenm. it hab bein estimated by a gentle-4 jan of much experience that the rheat that will passover the Chessa; eake and Ohio 1railroad will in q hort timid Vonth tho noighborliood of 0/bnty ffiillion or bushels. 'hat is 3mething to considdr wi'th wonder. 41 Vhat shall be done with it ? will b6 be inquiry.. Well our own mills ave a capacity of some six milliod ushels per qnnuni an'd with an in ruas6 of milling poWer su'lh' Us this rent enlargement of our trade would iduce, we can see that the bottei art of this large aggregate will bd irndd into four in this. city. W6 ught bortainly to grind up three mill ons df barrels of nour pei annum in ve or six years from now. That ould dispose of fifteen thillions of ushels of wheat.-Richmond DiO; atchi. A Good Sign. One of the most encouragi g signa f the times for CuiaHettin an' South )arolina. is the gfdial bUt steady mplication of our banking faoilties. 'he People's National 1anly having nter'ed the financial held with a Capi al of $250,006, had by good manage ment and suacessive enlargements of ts operations, increased its capital to f7lOo,000. On Monday labt, $250,.4 00 more was hdded, niaking the apital of the Bank reach the round gure of One Million Dollars. With uch practical evidences of vigor and uccess in our llew banks, and witlh lhe old institutions reviving one after nother, our comthunity lhas a fait' rospect of abundant banking capital u the futldre.- Charleston Nei~ws. A mother, son and daughter, all~ina !alids, went on an excursioa to Ens ope. During their absened the' fath rovisions in his wilt i 'If Ibf wife bud son returns thb formei- shall re. teive onet third and latter two-thirds >1 illy astate, copnsisting of ten thouss tud dollars If my son should did ibroad, antd onlyt thy wife and daugh. ser return, tho forflidi' shall be enti bledi tt tWo-thirtis tlrIn the latter to mne.thmird of' the pio'prty.'1 All re turned. What *tas the equitable dis bribution of tho eatmite t A story is told of an editor Who died, went to Heaven, but wais denied ada mittance, lest he Would meet some delinqiuent substi-ibere; and bad feel. ings be engond tred in that peaceful clime. Having to go somewhere, the editor neit appeat-ed ini the region of' datrkness, but wvas positisely tiefumsod allmittance, as the place wats futl of delihiqueriabseribers. Wearily the editor tulrried back to thle coidstial city, aiid was met by the watobian at the portals with a smite; Who Raid "I was mistaken, yon eth ena there it net delilitiquent subsdt-ibet- ii At oile oft the 1'labot cohventions held in Wiahing ton during the strikes Mr. Oreun isado aspeechm exhortlh4 his hearturs to 'work iia the intbreab of hahhiony and peace." Where tipon an able-bodied striker sprang to lia feet with the exclatuation, "YeA sh I dat's what we want ; hominf and peas bat d--n i6 we can't git it wid a dollar an' a half a day 1-' Indianapolhs youth unite sentimet t witheconmyand sere, a-le theil ladv~ove wthhand orsans.