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t L t r r New York and the War. P " Manhattan," the scccsh correspondent of the Liverpool iW, writes from rNew York : New York will have to end the war if it is ever cuded. She possesses the elements of war. "Without her the war could not go on a week. Unfortunately, [ she has no great statesmen or wise I lucn. She has no guide, cmic is cnain| ed to the the war car of President Lincoln. The weakness of such a triflcr as Governor Seymour has prostrated the Empire City at the feet of the Federal authorities. It is awful to contemplate. Now people ask, " Will New Yor submit to the draft'! Will there not be another riot ?" No, certainly not. Lincoln will order 50,000 troops to the city of New York, and that will make us all as quiet as lambs. Wc will then submit to the *draft. That is the only way N. York City can be held during March if the draft is ordered here. Will General Lee permit Lincoln to send 50,000 United States troops to garrishui New Voik City .Alas ! we are hopeless in this City. We have a wax Governor, atnl very soft <wax at that. I do not. know any white niau who is so generally cursed as is .Seymour, although it is rpiitu evident that he is not worth a curse. The Cincinnati Gunmen-tut, commenting on this, says : Gov. Seymour has been vigorously pressed to resit the draft, and drift into 11 war with the national authorities. Deputations of copperheads from the West have visited Governor Seymour at Albany, and brought a pressure upon him to take the lead in a northern insurrection. It. is proper to say that Mr. Daniel W. Yroohces, <?f Indiana, member of Congress from the Torre Haute District, called to sec Governor Seymour ' on this business, atnl was exceedingly disgusted because he did not find the Governor rine fur rebellion." A Grand Reception. Richmond opened wide her arms on yesterday. Fur hours the hills at lioek ctt's bloomed with beauty, and the j streets about tlie Navy Yard were alive with throngs of pleased, expectant, joyous-hearted people. The glittering muskets of a battalion shone in their midst, and tlie music uf a baud added to the attraction of the scene. At half-past 1 o'clock, two steamer's, loaded with (Ion- ' federate soldiers, just released from : Northern prisons, after ten months of oruel captivity, appeared, coming slowly toward the wharf. Cheers from tlie shore and cheers from the boats arose, i As the boats touched the wharf, the prison-worn f! heroes of many a fight"' were seized upon by a thousand ladies I or more, and welcomed with Virginia warmth and womanly enthusiasm. The , military presented arms ; the band did its best; the people cheered. Everybody did something, or said or shouted something that evinced overflowing, irrcpre-siblc, indefinable gladnes-. The prisoners were then escorted up town. The march was a triumph. They stop - * 11 i pctl in l_":ipital JNpnre, ana were juiwrc.v-uu from the monument by the President, the Governor, by the gallant J. Lucius J)avis, wli? was "one of them," and by Capt. II itch, of too Fxchange ijurcau. Five thousand persons were present. More cheering, music and welcome, ivliLies and drinkables w.-rc eireulated. The Marseillaise by the band, and the " prisoners" were escorted, amidst showers of smiles and hurras, to camp, in the western suburbs.?I'a h mow? Kixjuinr 1 $th Recruiting Business in New York The New York Tribnn^ says : The system of recruiting which has recently been followed in this city is one of the greatest scandals of the war. It has been one of organized pillage, resort being had to hocusing with narcotic poisons, threats, violence, false representations and kidnapping, in order to fur ni.-h victims to tlic bounty brokers and fill up the army with discontented and unfit men. Cripples, old men, nmre boys, ineu laboring under incurable diseases, and soldiers previously discharged for physical disability, form a great part of the recruits recently enlisted in this city. ? o Army Amusements. A correspondent of the Mobile .!<// '/ titrr has recently been to Johnston's Army. He writes back : The enemy having prudently retired upon my approach, i continued to advance steadily in pursuit. Passed several regiments of soldiers going on the same pilgrimage. One of them yelled, "kum outer that bilcd shirt, you (.Juottomastcr's clurk, you !" llespcctfully declined the invitation, and was derisively apostrophized in the name of Longhoinc. "Hey-oli, Longbome !" Therupon I assumed expression of court martial, and gazed sternly upon the interlocutors. This provoked a laugh, the laugh set tn a climit. nntl lirnlro nilt infn fi vfll two or three regiments in lcugth. lie's chawed," suggested oue creature with no seat to his pantaloons ?lie's chawed ?his face's red." If a modest man could run such a gauntlet of merciless criticism without a red face, he must he a niau of muscle or brass. Refugees. What a world of thought docs this : word suggest! In every town and vilI lagc, on every railroad train, in every : vacant cottage, you meet these homeless wanderers. There is something very j touching in their condition. Their j i homes were once as sweet, their circle as i ' cheerful as ours. The green lawns of ; Tennessee, the noble mountains of Vir! triuia, the vineclad porch of Louisiana, HMI9 I III# IL'IU^VV MUVfl 11* ' v ............ If not gay, lie is not sad. His liomc is his country?his heart is her cause ?his prayer is her deliverance?his home is lu-r future ! Never did poetry or song find a nobler tlicme than the refugee?this banished man, this exile from a scene where ali the refinements of life clustered aroun ! him, in the endearments of family and friends. j Our hearts yearn to thee, noble patriot. We are lifted up in wonder and admiration when we sec thy cheerful endurance, thy unconi plaining?spirit. We respect, we iionor thee. Comfort, wealth, occupation, all have departed, but love of ; country never will desert thee. The green hills of their country are not more dear to the Tyrol esc than thy beloved South to thee. You have sealed yenslove by the cheerful sacriiT'C ->P all material comforts?a br droit circle?a dc-o. la ted ln?uie. And Volt have crowned all these by tlie gift to your country of ti e bone of your Lotto ami flesh of )our flesh. Keep up your liearr, thou eheciful uncomplaining sufl'ercr. For you again will the green lawns be bright?the orange tn.es will blossom ? the jessamine will again perfume , the air ? and though the circle will still want its number?the arch of your ...nil i i : i CO III! I I'V s jrrc:u wiii Iiavu uc a 111 -1 " . i in the MooJ of liim you love so well, and th: " flower which Ins fad. ! tip n earth will bloom again ia Heaven." lllfllll (l /'*' I'lflil II , A Good Joke. The following is an extract, fr ana privatc letter. It is too good to keep jnivatc: lIwrsroN, February 11, !Se>l. " * 1 must tell a good thing that occurred here approves of Geu. Smith. On his arrival here sonic j days since he made his way to Gi n .Ma! grudcr's oiliee. lint otie stall' oillcer 1 happened to he in, aud as young men ' sometimes will d >, lie was occupying a i position more comfortable than e'egant, j with his hack to the door, singing Dixie, j (ion. Smith interrupted him with, "Is, tiiis General Magrttder's office ?" The young olHccr broke off his song only j enough tu reply, " Yes sir." Gen. 8?" Is (he General in?" Officer ?" No sir." j Gi-n. S.?" Will he be in soon ?" ! Officer.?" Don't know sir." Gen. 8.? How long has he been gone?" Officer.?" Don't know sir." Gen. S.?" Where is he ?" Officer.?" Don't know sir. It is not my week to keep him." Gen. S.?" Ahem ! My name is I Smith." Officer.?" Yes. Good many Smith's about?several been to sec the General." Gen. S.?"They sometimes call inc \ Lieutenant-General Smith." Officer.?" The h?11 you say !" I The officer turned a very rapid summerset, and disappeared in a twinkling. It is said that lie sings his wishes about Dixie with a spirit, since the occurrence, lie never felt before.?Jfof/i/c Jiryi.slcr. A monument is to be erected by the Jews to the memory of Ezra. the Scribe, the great restorer of their sacred writings. His tomb, in which his body has now rested for nearly two thousand years, stands in the desert near the confluence of the Tigris and the Euphrates. The memorial scheme is under the charge of the Jews (>f Jiagdad, and the monument proposed is the only one befitting the memory of a man venerated alike by Christians and Jews. It is to take the form of a College for the study of the writings preserved through Ezra's care, \ for the be Lie lit ot the civilized w??rld. the broail oak avenues and the jessamine : hedge of Carolina, these are the spots on which their memory turns, and the euii! grani sighs to think of the once happy hours of his now deserted home. Where i arc the loved ones who once assembled in these cheerful halls? The grey haired sire, the care-worn mother, the blooming maiden, unconscious childhood only are iu our inidst. The stalwart youth has gone f >rth at his country's bidding, and never again return to cheer by their presence those who loved him so well. Some languish in a distant prison?some sleep beneath the sod of a far away land; and the blue violet springs on their graves?alas! never to be watered by the tear of affection? never to be tended by the hand of love, hut with all his sorrows and his trials? with all the sweet memory of home and happier days?with all a father's sorrow for his martyred boy?and all a mother's i tender love for him she has nursed on her lap?whose infant brow has so often been bedewed with her kisses and her j. %./. P.* iliwic tiinvmnr An English Opinion of G011. Hood. The following handsome tribute to Ocu. Hood we clip from the London Times' Richmond correspondent: The sight this day 'iu the street.-? of Richmond of (leu. Hood's tall and stately form, seen for the first time on horseback -ince he lost his icg at Chiekaman. ga, has occasioned gcueral gratification. There arc few officers dearer to the pco. pie of Stccssia than Gcu. Hood. -Modest as a child, fearless as his intimate friend, (Jen. Longstrcet, unselfish and unsullied as a Havard, he has already given his right leg and four inches of the hone of his left arm to the cause which is so dear to his heart. And again in a few weeks he will be found foremost among the foremost, offering up perhaps another limb, perhaps life itself, on that altar for which 110 sacrifice is too costly. A singular commentary upon the old text that "necessity is the mother of invention'' may be observed in the artili. cial leg which supplies Gen Hood's lost limb. When this war commenced, there was throughout the length and breadth of the South no artificer cunning in the construction of artificial limbs, but such was the demand occasioned by the fierce battles of the bloodiest war of the century, that llichmond is now teeming with every variety of wooden leg and crutch, and there has arisen in C'harlottsviile (a little town in the interior of Virginia) an artist who has attained no inconsiderable skili in patching up and supplementing >--? 1 J..." ..>..1 I l? ill til O tili'4 II p.'j UIIU VIIMVIIIIq VIIU maimed again to take ike field. Is this :i people to be subjugated by the sweep, lugs of (lermany and Ireland?a people whose sens are no! satisfied with giving an arm or a leg to their country, but ini-i-t, again ami again, on carrying their inn*ilat?>*l forms into the deadliest hail of the battle front, ami whose appetite for danger and suffering does but increase with the urgency of their country's need 1 A I{<11;sin11 1'aisy.?Petersburg has a womlerful sensation in the exhibition, at the old market, of a child, aged fifteen mouths, and weighing one hundred and eleven pounds, . mi of Francis and Adeline 15i>hop, of I'rincc ti'eorge county.? The parents came to the market with produce to sell, and brought llmir infant with them, in order that he might have the In ticlit of their constant care, lint his appearance at Market was signal for trtneral remark Mid a-toni-lsment.? The reports of his presence .-pr- id abroad, and the people rushed atound to s~t vh ir t,r Persons from the In,...... mI' tin. cite tlnctrrl rn t!?fi ' 1 " J Mnrk> t Square to sec tlie prodigy, and ? i:? !s w is the pressure upon the parents an 1 the baity, that they wer cotupt lied to remove him t > a house near by, where twentv-livo cents admission was charged to see him. Poole willingly paid the sum, and a hand onto aintiuut wa.- realized. At the age of liftcni month the child is posses.-;-1 of the weight and flo.-h almost, of a full g'own man. His age is Vouched Ibr by parties who hliow the family. lie is intelligent but has n t yet learned to talk, and Irs otiiy Ineom thai is the crawling process. His arms and 1< gs are as large r mud as tin- iiml? of a man of two hundred pounds weight, while his face and neck are specimens of j accumulated fat The father of this infant is about fifty years of age, and the mother about thirty five. -< ? -V A Beautiful Sentiment. I saw a im urner staudiog at even ti lo near the grave ? {' <?:ic dearest to him on earth. The memory of joys that were p:?-t cr??vv?liiitf t??i his soul. "Ah is this,"' said he, "all that r mains of one so loved and so lovely ' I ask, hut no one answers. ()h, my loved one will not lmar ! Oh, death ! inexorable death ! what hast thou done '{ J,ri ine bow my sorrows in the slumbers of the grave." While thus in agony the g title form of Christianity came by. She hade him look upward and to the eye of taith tin* heavens weredis.-lnsed lie heard thus n;r and transport ?>f t!ie great, multitude which no man can number around tin* throne. There were the spirit* of just men made perfect?the spirit, of Iter lie mourned. There happiness was puie, permanent and perfect. The mourner then wiped away the tears from his eyes, took courage and thanked (Soil. "All tlm the days of my appointed time," said lie, "will I wait till my change come," and ; he returned to the duties of life no longer sorrowing as tlo-se w ho have no hope. ? ?o?c? The country has been suffering with a , disease called "Inflated Currency."? When it recovers from that by withdraw; al of the "old issue," we suppose it will take the 7'//eH-moriiea! Ff.m.w.k Ait my Si tut wins.?The following extraordinary notice op pears in a Yankee pap' r : Miss Mary C. Walker, M. IV. who ar lived lien: last week with orders to report to Dr. IVrrin for duty, has hcen ordered to report to Col. Dan. McCook, commanding a brigade iu .Jell" C. Davis' I . Division. She left yesterday for Cordon's Mills, where the brigade is now stationed. The young lady is very prct1 ty, and it is said thoroughly understands I her profession. PBMWBOBPMBBWWW. ^ .U3M*2 ! The Next Yunkco Presidency, j The Herald has an article in which is given "a bird's rye view" ?f the battle J of tiie next i'residency. The Herald I says that it promises to be ''one " the | prettiest political <|uarrcls over known ! in history." 'Hie iu-pubiican part}* .no : to have at least four fictions in the iicicl ! ?the Rod .Republican-, who go for 3'Vomont; sccoiji!, the deep black Republicans, who go for Chase; third, the mulatto Republicans, who go for Wendell Phillips; fourth, the smutty Republicans, who go for Lincoln. The Herald ! says that McClollan will also he a candidate for the .nomination. The New York Legislature has 'also O pas.-, d resolutions recommending the rcuomination of Lincoln. JlAKi'Kjroou.?The two army corps in our front arc commanded, the one by Lieutenant-General Harder, the other j | by Lieutenant-General Hood, and the j | two named are combined by the troops , j as an illustration of the virtue of the i army, that of Hardeeliood ! There is more than a pun involved in thir. coincidence. Where is the body of | men who have exemplified a greater ; ! amount of ilardehood tl::in the bravo ! i , f i t i i men of the army of i\ :i::' .-see ? They | , went ragged into Kentucky and they 1 ' came out starving, yet they never mur- j ; mured. Was not this Ilardehood?! Tiiey fought a live days' fight in the snow 1 ' and iec- of ^Iurfree.sboro', won it and ' then had to tail back, yet remained game j to the h me. AV as not thi ; ! Ir ivcl.o id \ Thev were dragucd fr mi j-il!ar ( j ?{, ! # * * ? lost all ' f Middle Tenuc-sce, r treat-. ! to Chattanooga, were pursued and driven 1 thence, they turned and fought, won and lost the fniits of Cliiekaniauga, and still bore their heads cuet. And this was 1 lardeehood. Finally, after the most acute suffering, in the llc.-h and in the | spirit, t'.t v iiave reaped the reward of j lli ir I larded.oral, in the gr at man who iio\v C'lnniauds them, and whose watchwold and right and left 1 overs are Hardee lined ! All h ?"! , tin re fore, to these men, to Hardee and to H ?o l, at.d j t i .foe John- bus . l/e.g in.'!y (in v !' 1 ir- j where :i free I'.ig waves and (lie cry fit' battle is "('>rw;ir!."?.1 .-'' nit" C'"/;* ! i hi'iWij. The following extract from a private leller fnns: a l:i<ly in -S w > he ; ? mtirl.l ! . r i .1 . be df advantage, nys an Junta. paper, > tn iiur iadv frieii'l- in Allanta and ci-e- ' \v 11 re. I'litmiias it dm.: ii-'iin a c:!y where the churches are closed : i painwi !' " the p-iti i'.risiii i the huh- these: I went to vi-it the graves of the ! Confederate prisoners 1 week. The ia li s keep I kens { over. d wills eh j ll-'Wer.:, and a man to attcis ! ( ? thctis. | Kacdi one has a head boar.! with tii i:a!iio of the pri> tier, when he died, at j what h spitttl and to what com; -uy it'1 n. - | bulged. <):i All Saints I>;iy their irruusi were usost beautifully (b< rsti i with 1 ' . . VI ' (towers, also tho.-e i?l (ten. M .:? y Johnston and IVI. i'reanx. The l '-ii intend having these gravis always at-j t nded to. As so(ii: as a prisoner dies j they see that he i: properly buried an I his ve attended t o. ^ ^ I A Dirtier Do.g than Duller'i lie i halts : >??, ^.liiss._) i! -punlicasi ,,vh: Sherman put up at tI.l* h-use >.f II. 11. Lombard, Iv <| , ?luiis::r his stay in JJrm- ! Inn, ami ?,iiie\cry occasion t?> insuit the ladies <>f tht* louse. In speak . iiii: to oho of the v< 11 ? I ;r ladies lie re' marked that lie expected to see the day i when she woiil.l l?o married to an inlelli- i retit Contraband. I h<* vi-'iii;' Indies i". ! fused to o ' to the lalle with him an-! his staff, when ho peremptorily ordered them ! to ho brought in and seated beside liiiu. lie also compelled them to play and sin;.' ! for :iiin. ?<^ta- ? ('.M*! uisr.ii Towns.?1 am well con viiice 1 that the encni}, 1 11ere this, arc perfeidy well sati-!ie 1 that the p s.-?-si"ii 1 of our towns, while we hay an army in , the Held, will avail them little, it. in- | vulves us iu dilViculty, hut it dots not by :my means ensure comjiicst to ; them. '!'iit*y will know that it is our [ arms, not defenceless towns, which thoy have t" subdue, Ik*lore they can arrive at the haw n of tin ir wishes; and that, until this is accomplished, the superstructure they have been endcavoriug, to raise will, Mike the Listless fabric o! a vision,' fall to nothing."?Gewje j Witf/iiiiyton, 177'd. Font;kst's WoltK.?A private letter (from Oxford, .Mi. i -i j?j>i, says : "If is impossihle to give an adiiptale dcKcription of the damage inflicted hy For rest up n the coinniaud of Smith and tirier.-oti. For sixty miles the line ol their retreat was marked hy dead Yankees and horses. They rode their lior.-es so hard that nearly all died alter reaching Mi mphis. Smith returned aloiieto Memphis; and when asked where his men were, replied that 4 one half hud ' straggled and the other halt had gone to h?1,' which was nearly the truth. " Tutu; or XK\vsi'.\m:u<.?The Augusta ('Jiroiiii fi; un>/ Si iiIi'ihI has raised its ; subscription price to forty dollars a year. The Atlanta journals are from fotiy to | fifty : " JUmXM .rrjij J? 'j> f .N*r *p ix^ayi-y ? "r*^ Removal of A Tonguei*l. Alair-oiim live, Surg .->n ?>f tiio li t' ! Dion. (] f-riboa it-:'.v roiuovcJ, frorsi a I Kltil'li. UlC wliolc of !i t11! 1 l! -J !'. filial' :1 with cancer by means <f vh.-f. lie t^rma cniikrisatha en i'- ! ;. !!i: perforated ihe tongue with eight d his cs-ii..ri ii / arrows (Jlo * ), so as to cau?c *nll the :u7c:."t."(! portions to orb oft' in one j tin.--. J lis iii, nfl? r the removal of | the tongue, could neither swallow nor peril:, but perfumed !?:*?!i tbj functions i?n being suppled with a gutta pcrcha tongue of the natural >iw. Tifi; Vv'.w ro flnr.w jlicir.?Nothing is more easy than to grew rich. It is to trust nobody, to befriend none; to heap interests upon interests, cent upon cent ; t > destroy all the finer feelings of nature, and be rendered mean, miserable and despised, for some twenty or thirty ymirs, and riches will come as sure as disease, disappointment and a miserable death. Never take a lenap in railroad (".rri::?',s. Why? linearise the train runs over sleepers ?Na&wipinn. tro do " bugaboo;," in most of the cars. Tin: (>r.y. ;t>:st * 1 ?i;..-i?ii.; nsi?c?l who was the greatest hero, Thomi.stnclcropii. Ci : " Not he who conquer?, but he who r arcs: not the man who ruins, but he '.vho erects; who of ;i village can make a city, or ' ;rn a despicable people info a great nation. A Motto.?A soldier in one of tb? Kentucky camp* says the with them is w Culted WO s-leep, <li\we freeze. How Many' Men rr Take?.? The military department of Western Virginia r? ijuites tio Ut*0 men, scattered at dial-run: p i111 -, to hoi-1 if, and yet the Vjinlree t- are complaining of the .-u . -f-.il .-p-ration < {' the r-. beds in tinvery mi 1st of thi ul.juga! d tirritery. At :hi.s rat -, it wmld rake ?f soldiers t"> occupy" the Confederate .States 1 -;jg a-, there is any organ zed Vi Si-fan 'e to the \ alike-:'. (>k.nKttA!. i*i;l?t:. ? it is s.fated that i.ic-r.tenant fli-n- ral Il-dmcs has lu-t-n order d to report at Ki-hmond, and that. Miij r t June ml Sterling [Vice will a-unm active, comma. 1 iu the lie! I west ' ftlie ;.:i?i?in?'i ANNO UNC23MENTS. : a: < v. of riii: cor nr. ?.la. Kwtoi:: i'lc.-tsc announce W'f. j!. !. >:! ;t i i.iij I't-i* tin- !!'i >;' '"lurk ili>- ' *ii< i l' l'iv-'ii :i>: ! (i-.-tionl M.'ir..::: i ' e ;t 1. ' V.'M, :ii of ('lei-!; !>." ilm t'oui't of Common ! ; ami : moral S!-i>. for Kereliaw l?:.~ :il tl: ? ;! eili'lltllg? I ! ..1 :v X j. i-.lij A. ; . J ri.v, 1. !,; im- \r. t ( M M. M.iiv!: !!. ! .}. , Tin: n:NTi;.\i. ,\' '.Ti!,\. i ph.." mature " !. :.!i- :i. tloc;'t:c ri. Agency i- i::iy 1 :i !. : t I ! -. i! . ;?iv = :;:y !" : . ' r.i ;i - j ir:S;:.-; !ii - to r;o ' <; !t Carolina SoMictv. W v. ill . mtimie to I'orto ill! ; 1 :i r. 11.-.]. pr:I ' I'li.i 1:1. L'AhS 'oKJo .o/l.t ;J It'.'e ill A '..NO {iltN'lIKAf.S <)! I!r;:, 1 i;' !u;.. 1IV' i n:iy , 1; f::/:: ...v.* .v>. 11: rrs^iii: I"0!.m Vi\?; is _<_ !i ';! ! i ! ilto ii::.. ..'i i ?f all c??acc.;:v=i: 0. S. ' \. w:. i:xr. 1 ii:a !. I*o"?r i.! y !. i 1. ! im ' IV.-c !.* !! '?/ I .;i ntiiiiorii! . w V. itiTU'i::: . -u! II-."-.-. c" i i - -. receive! :i! t':ly I'mu . Iiel'i . > T:;! ; !' -Ir.i*vT I '!. ? hereby ill*. ! I c-.tvi:: .M! fit---. :::! ! liiOll capture, irlio ivjwr'C'l for duty ut Kmc;rp? i ,\ 51 - -.. nt any iiiuo |i!'ior t > 1 !ih of No! . :r: i v.V*-e a.iij*u 1 ltirw:ir*l(-1 i i in'.' !>y M ii. <Jc!i. I!. ''.niiey. arc IcclnfC'l pxcliii .yc'l. 't. ,\!I "'liii'i. iii*1 !nc i **f li:c Y iei;-'>tir: c:ij.:in*o. K-'on to lii.* .. Tc:?:?? lioavy arliilhcry. report cil : iluty a: '!; ! M. :l: l \vl.n-c v.. t'.<t" wa. I * l: ? '::c l?y Col. A. .! u!.- *t!, are *lu i t .. , ..! !LO. (>1 i i?. t ill" l.srli in; 11 v in-Icr : j S'jflicl j ( inMiol", A!j !. iltnl Tlisp'r. iit'.icr:;!. April '? CHARLESTON COURIER, v. WIl.UNCToN ,4c ?'(?.?I'uli\u *J lisin.il I'.tilv .-iii'l "ri-W\ kly. T! i: ."l"? I ! M 11 -Ci:! 1'TlllN. 1' ii'v j oi* annum, payable lial!' yearly in mlv.nre. Tri-Weekly 0 for six >n< nths. payable in ri'Iv.-i'ice. April "> ?.X ii WW AM" IM'i S \ !,K I'-V ' '{ >J m. ?; wf.i-:. BO.UESFJJS EVTRBABTER. Pi f ((Ji KSI't i ' ' ! IN M i 1N T. T(' "1 j liaivi r I': .' t'u ' l. Ha'-'!i ' :i I !. ml. Tj i-u .i, M. t;.\\ u:. Vi'li! ; TO HIKE. i rrntto w a?:$?:*s \v> ti: \ \isi'i:i:s, 1 Z1 . i.- u .. ,i. ii? U limiitli nr v I"" ! .iriii-iil.il- :i ,1 I,. .In\ IS, l.il<ti v i!.!!. i?i>ti-i? ?. \|>ril '? NOiM. a \n suL>.\. 'Isi' i;;.i\ i:n i;\ M.tiVU.i:. ON CONSIGNMENT. ,5 ,<S r.ROWN KO'lfv-jri'.V. FOR SALE * '&' ;,v !*'c l"?r-'lr. .\ |-.r:i <*" " 3. M. GAYLK. 0ST??m?jENT7 ^"K7ir/?l!\'f;TON WOJIKS .-ALT, i?Y {lie Hack, ?c i April J. M. GAVI.E'S. iVL\fimTPKFt7 7f?5 ;ii at a ,ui\v fifii;ne, nv jjap \;,riU j. m. gaylk. "notICE. <;??sn;i?? :rati: statfs of America. W.m-. i'a'i'., Brnr.vf of Coxscbiptiox, ilit i,:noM'l. Vu., Fchruurv, 2S. "ft?) M: VOtAl'lt X OF or.SllAL ORDERS Nn. "2 \djnt.anl "and inspector Genem' < nr.ee. of!si',2. rcfjtiircs that application .'or < vi, ;i tunst ia all cases lie made lo the Enrolling O'iiccr. If the local Enrolling 'Nlieer lias net the power to act, or is in ii.otlit, lie v.ill, afer investigation, under Cireti!.,,r y. '. 3, current series, refer such applies! i >>:. through the proper ollicial channels, (.> this lluroau. Ail Mieit applications addressed to tin's I't.v.w will nee sarily and invariably he rc>! ito-l for h>cal inv titration, and the applii-a'its will thus have uselessly lost, time and i.i-.lotige I suspense. \! { < ti- li nn ndvevso dcti-ions of tlie local re. -, of the Cnioinaudnnt of Conscripts for :i. . .. ill he forwarded l?y thorn for heari'!;r. v. re:i any plausible ground of appeal is et !' irt It. Hv t't'dei of cor* JOHN'S. PRESTON. Sup't. I f' Pi l !EI.!;. A. \. fielt. Alirii 0 ~miT?nclRousm ob^IDT ; .Biographical Roll of Honor. jf :TAV!.M. i:r; 1:1 vi:L? ?ui:XT IDLi -J, front the friem.ls of lecease'l iliiii is ]>1ac-! in a jicnnanunt form ami make i> nree.-sible to nil who might ilcsire a ? >] y. tit.- KoLI.OF ! I! > N:.?11" on which 1 mm ;-:;;.ra.ft i'i r the .Slate. I |?ro|?ose t jiiib1 h \vi-'!. i. -re cstcii'lcil in it* -cojie ami i! -:;;ti tl:a:i the State Uoll, embracing 1'. ...raoliic:.' Skeichcs of the officers tili'l titea f tiiis S t'e v. Iio have fallen or <lie?l i t .-civic" 'httii:.' !lie [nt^onl war, ami wiiov iri -ti-'.s may furnish ti.c with the nccesirv i ll-' f-.r such sketches. Tin j l.tti is tin : '!'!ie frtcinl- of the tie0" ise-1>1 liers tlc-'riinr a jilace in litis work .viii I'-ifit itl the necessary inforniarion to i -:\c irt> Ibr J i.Mi -itio;: the hiogranhieal sk - "i- , or set: I mo ill'.' notices they wish in.-'-r: !. when liny will 1>e reviscil ami cic.ijH. i ;'-r j-uh'.icuion. I'.a It hiograjiltieal id : est he necuiiiranir'l hy the name o!" !? ;: I ? :? -n'-criher ami Ten Dollars to t-i -'.i fray lit" sj-i-tfes ami lahor involve! in :lie | i < jiaraiioit amicom;-Hat ion of the skcfche . it h a rcecij.t will he given ciitij lin '!:e i:i>M to a cojiy oi' the work ;it the s!ih-:..ration re. ! r.tn j ei ha ting arrangements with a lemlj ing jmhii king house for the j.n! licatiott of ' the Work. It will he |athlishe*l in monthly numbers. nii'l I in the best style ot let: ! pre>- j iaiing. < n tine white l.nglish l ??.?lc ] .?] ('! and printed with tin- l??*-r Kng!i~!: I i:v. II:.-'. number contain portraits <>1" ol'mrs :rii'i t.ieti v. I: !i:ivc distinguislicd thetns during the v.ar. Tin- twelve numbers v. i ! !: ?! :e four ?::i;> volumes. :'ir:.- ami' j ral lium, or for twelve liuniI'e" . : ivnlile on ihe j :;1.!! - it'nii of the first | number. of which due it .;ie will he given. ; Tiii" work v:ill be couti .iied until the Hull is 'i n >e intending to subscribe or | furnish biographical sketches .should do so : without d-.*!:.y. as tlie first edition will lie limi i?ed to tlio number of subscribers. Address WM. H. JwIINSMN, April ti t'oinmbia. S. C. CiXClUR. I '\ ' S ihhir* /tons' - # <;/ R> ,'tj ill I hit Still.-. ( <MiTii;i'1.1.Mil on-mi,> t oi.rMniA. S. March h,vh Is'.l. > I Tyr iiiiiNii i:v!i>i:.\t, fiiom unrttiirs jj -..I.- do to :hl- t.'ilice by tiie several Hoards (.; ':! f. n? tin- Tax in Kind, levied by | Act 17tii I'ecetnher last, ' to make provision f?r the up; oi l if the families of soldiers t .... :::n e in tnc t'.uifederatc and ( -e . e lee. tli.'.t sai l boards canto.t. ; I'- id; ha- . Inharm's, &c.f for the ;m.; -e i tran-,. -i tit; ; ,-uy excess over the 1 a; e . r- - :] fruni any --minti of the State ] :o .-ueli Id'ir.eis or I'eri.-i-e' a- may he eti1 till: I t .rreto under liic !:.i -eti 'U of said i Art. .a 1 in of-1 r t . prevent any loss or waste | of: rain. - It. ,ve.. and to earry into etl'eet ' lite |. ov; ions of sat! a a. the following ll- aj itliitioiis are adopted and published, under i t|<o in -trttcii ns :.nd wii'i theappvov.tl o! lii.s j ii lieio-y the tiovernor: I 1. Ti.ai .id -t.i !i c .ec - of grain, sal: and tminnia.-tureii artii 1-. as, upon tiie general j apt o-i ioniiiei-', to lie ma le as -m ii as the ' !! t ii'ii-' of tin I! >rd of r-.!: 'are eo -leted.) , shall he f.i; iideil l>y tlte Hoards in i'ol. Ilicliard t'aid weii. t 'ontmis-a' y (I. si era! of tiie u i o ut i! i.t. who will I'.cceipt for the - line. a' 1 >viie aiibags. 1- barrel, fie., iie< e- iry tor ti e pur; use afor*?aid. and -!i wi'mte il. tax in Kind according to said niiio ruenf in j>ro] rib-ii t.? tiie nutuher of in lividuals to be relieved" within this State. J. d'hat .llu sahl 11 irds liert^'.irid tnforv - : ! Ilailnrid iieeeipts for tiie fax in Kind. ; iuuitt liately upon siiij went tSiavcuf, t the ('oi.'iini.-sary tieiicrni. who will pay all expieij >es and Keep an aeoiini thereof, charging I each lloard in whose favor any excess of Tax J iii K::s 1 -hall I ? a.-oovlained to be due, J I w:<it'ii :t:i i: 11f .-li.i'! lie il it:.-ici from the I 1- ! ill v.:' !' I . i : ' i' 1. an a; ; of I which v.i'l !' M.iilc Avlii'ii the lletnrn- arc coiiiii'.civ"!. .'1. Tiic " i arc hereby i-ci|nire*I t?> ; ay i.i'.t !' !' Trra-nry ??l" the Division to whim Il.cy .'civilly lu'li"?:ijf. nil *iims of i:i?m?*y | iv rivt-i J y llicia hy way ??t" ciinnsiiintion, j which. it: lift'inity v.iih I lie ??|?ini??ii of ihc i Anoi ncy <ioiicral. run only 1?? allowed in ' On- as i.i which till* Sjn'oit'.C article.' I !Xcl cail| no; now be jtvocuivil or nstal for liic bcuclil j of soldier-' lainiii>"i. i 1. i'lic 0'iicci> of llio s.'vi'val Hoard'' of !%? I r r ? : ,...i i.. attention to these il<\utll.-i:i"?i ;i*i<I i< cmnniit? siii*:ii c with I In? t'i>iunii*>:;ry (I ener:il in ivhii lion therein. :i> well as to for war I <h : 1 folhre vc'|ti- .tc.l fort!i\vitli to this O.lice their Cull lietttrns. - > licit tin* :ipj???rii mmer.ts ah.ire referral to may bo m-rle at an early <1 ay. I'lult'i'ilio lore ci'in;- lit j:ulst:ions, ami ill iiii< wav .one, ii is ami 1> *!i?-v?* 1 iliat _ 1 i In* i lit out ions ol'ilie l.i*.iri<l:it itrc to alVoul ai<l , I' ilie families of >111* m?hlo eiMiorv. will '?c j . ;i:| :'y ami equally extemle 1 to every 'l'"5" trtet a el Parish in the Stale. J A MIX \. P. LACK, I'ntnpf roller (ieneral. : .\j'|iivvo.i. M. I.. ISOMI \ M. ; \!! Iih' ]>.-ii?cr< in llio Stale j uMisli once. April i? 1 GLVGEit. A SMA 1,1. I.i>T ON 1IAM>. AN1? l'oli , I.y .). M.liAH.K. i April >i