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*. r , . < .'- -&- ; -A p. . * * * iwiiMuiti ii 1111 ,n?Mitii n wn^-^aaeiM^^i^r^traMa^aat-^gt^ . i^i^-,..~--r>v--'.".:ir.3.-:^A - ' THE CAMDEN WEEKLY (XtNFfflMfP "KNOWLEDGE IS POWER,'AND THE PKESS IS THE EOYAi THSOUE UPON WHICH &IIE SITS, AN ESTHEONED KO>ASaH." V ' , '~STrt TTT1 CAMDEN, S. C.? WBDMESDAY MOANING, APRIL 37, 1864. ' V I 1 ~r~T?r*-.-rrm. ilu i. .. . ? .. f, _?i, ,,, , ' -, -T.'' Ctjf CogftMc i; IS PUBLISHED AT CAMDEN, v EVER? WEDNESDAY MORNING, < by j; J. T. HERSHMAN. Ex*?" Terms of subscription?Five Dol- ! lars per nnnum?-2?" Rates of Advertising'?Two Dol- 1 lars, per square of twelve lines, for first ; insertion, and One Dollar and Fifty ( Cents forjciich subsequent one. | * B^t'onnnunications calculated to advance > the interest of our District and State, published free of charge. , 1 SELECTED POETRY, h LETTER FOUND IN THE POCK- ' j ' ET OF A POOR REFUGEE. | If men*are sometimes sad, Children are nl- | 1 ways jovous ; and if it Were not for them, It |' seems to us men would be sad always. What 4 parent but would feel a thrill of joy at receiv- i ing from his darling girls far away such joy- . , ous effusion as the followingjiVtf <f etprif, re- . ceived by a geutlcinan of this city, with the likenesses of his daughters?two little girls ' of niwoli,. bcautv: , (ijlvher 1, 1 S<Wl. i l 0, stop p miiiuic. papa; i i l>c?tc11 me?can you say What 'lis that makes my letter So very fat to-day'' * (). how I laugh and caper. To thiuk how glaJ you'll he To lent the ugly wrapper, * Aml?see botli Kate and mc ! Whenever you are weary 4 .With study or with care, And feel right Jotie jind dr<*try, Without one luv'd one near. Take us?indeed, there's comfort. (You'll find to.your.surprise.) In seeing Katie's smiling face / And Maggie's loving eves. j We'll come and frolic round you. - " And with our might and main. Will bru?h .away the cobwebs 4 Thought*settles on your brain : 1 And you will whisper fondly, 4' How sweet the portion then, When (Sod. the (lod of pitv, . Civ.- its o//? hotnf agam. Your aJlcciionaic .laughter. M. i\ S. ; An Eniishlxian's impressions of Sir. and Mrs. Lincoln. " "George Augustus Sala, the sprightly .English maga/.iuist, and now acting as the American correspondent of tlio Lnndpn TiJryrajjli, writes to that paper the following account ofbis presentation at ( the Yankee Court, witlr his impressions of the Northern Sovereigns :* * * * The Uluc 1'arlor?if blue and a parlor it was?was somewhat, but not inconveniently crowded. Ladies and . ' gentlemen were flying in smoothly and ! * v- silently. I stood ou tiptoe to see .if 1 could catch a- glimpse of the lady ,to | whom I was to b^prvsentcd, but in lieu thereof.I became suddenly aware of a j gentleman, who had no need, so tall was 1 he, to stand ou tiptoe in order to look 1 down on me, and on the entire assemblage. And yet that assemblage, in its ' male portion, number some very tall' men. Mr. Sumner edged me between a i / couple of groups, took me into a corner I where the tallest man of all was, said : ./ - sonle few polite words, ancf the next mo- J inent my hand was in the cast iron grip ! of Abraham Lincoln. As to his grip? I talk to me of packing cotton bales or screwing ocean steamers off tbe stocks ' by hydraulic preaure; amuse me with tales of the big bear of Arkansas' hardest hugs ; feed them with stories of the boacoDStrictors crushing out the bones of a goat in a single convolution j tell uic ; about Professor Harrison, the strong j ' j. . - mfiO/rTtho-cnbshes pewter pots between! ,ry .s^bisfinger's, and the Kussian Count Orieff, ! ?1-~ i.i? ? i Will/ Ul ULUUILd up SUYU* oaticIO JUOW t*c Mr. Cobdcn said he would crumple up ! Russia?likefa sheet of paper. Narrate to me all these, fables, but they are nought in comparison; they are . Zephyr breaths, fairy footsteps, butterfly persiflage, when named in company with + ' - Abraham Lincoln's grip. He doesn't - smile when he takes your hand; he does not ring it like a bell, nor wave it like a flag. lie merely takes iC, and quietly and silently squeezes it into dough. Great results are said to follow the "put-- 1 % ting down his foot" by the President on any public matter. If he were to "put 1 down" hi<? hnnd nn mo. T thought ' utter 1 and irretrievable collapse must follow. [ The general cast of Mr, Lincoln's features must be familiar to you through the photographic portraits in the London shop J windows. His actuul appearance is even 1 nearer approached by the admirable carloon sketches of Mr. JoIid Tcnniel in ' Punch. With a curiously intuitive fideli- ' ty of appreciation, TennielhaB seized up- 1 on that lengthy face, those busy locks, 1 that shovel beard, that ungainly form, ? / ?. 0 * <r k *'' > &' ' ' ' ' ' those lung muscular, attenuated limbs, j diosc bony ami wide spreadiug extremities. Mr. Lincoln is so 'toll that, looking tip iu bis face, you might, did not respect forbid you ask "hpw cold tbc weather was up there." lie is so tall, that i friend wlifi lied an interview with him u liis private oiEcc made use of the expression that when he rose, there did not seem the slightest likehood of getting up jver coming to an end. He seemed to be drawing hiinsclf out like a tclescopci .There arc two, particulars, however, in which you must needs Iiavc seen Mr. Lincoln to gain au accurate idea of his appearance. He is excessively dark. Again, this dark face, strongly markel, livid and crow-footed, and fringed with :oarse and tangled hair, is so uncouth and so rugose that it narrowly escapes being jither terrible or grotesque A touch of the chisel one way "or the other and you would have cither a Quiasieudo or a liichard III- But the possible grotesque is obviated, the imminent terrible is smoothed away by a peculiar soft almost fcminiuc, expression of melanr-lmltr vvliir.h to mo at least seemed to I " "V ? -- pervade tbe countenance of this rcmarka-Lie limn. The melancholy look struck me most forcil^- when I remembered that I was in the presence of the great joker ofjcrkos?the Sancho J'au/.a made governor of this Trans-Atlantic Duratari;i) bui there the look was?the regard of a thoughtful, weary, saddened, overworked man ; of one who was desperately striving to do his best, but who woke j up every morning to find the wheat that lie had spwn growiug up as tares ; of one who was continually regretting that lie did not know more?that he had began his work too late, and must lay down his ccptre too early. My interview with him was of very brief duration, and mainly made up of commonplaces. Of course, he said that lie was gdat! to see me, that lie hoped 1 liked tny stay, that T li-i.l pomp in a vorv critical period, and """ " "*V " / 4 that the co an try presented :i very different aspect to that which it once had. .Mr. ?Sumuer informed liiin that I purposed "illustratiug" in public what I had seen in America. "Ah," said the President, "indeed ! with the pencil or pen ? There is a good deal to illustrate just know." 1 hinted that the pen was my vocation. Neither more or less took place. I saw that Mr. Lincoln had no wish to tell me any stories, or to talk polities; and, after another tremendous squeeze of the hand from him, I retired from his presence. My presentations were not, however, ai an end. I was taken to the centre of the apartment, where standing in a circle of ladies, was cue short, plump and well-favored, and attired in a velvet dress erf royal pcrple, profusely "trimmed with pearls and lace. This was Mrs. Lincoln. I had the honor to shake her hand ; but it was a little band, and my crushed digits were spared another painful ordeal. I tbiuk I can give almost a short hand writer's report of my conversation with Mrs. Liucoln. After the first salutation she said : "Do you keep your health, sir?" I replied that I was happy and thankful to say that I enjoyed tolerable health. "IIow loug have you been in this country, sir?" she asked. I said that I had been seven weeks ou the American continent. "IIow long do you conclude to remain, sir!" she went on. I replied that I hoped to remain *about sevcr( months longer. The President's wife was good* enough to ftsk "how I liked the country." T replied diplomatically, that it was large and very wouv r r acrini. Now ensued a deep, ami to mo, embarrassing silence. 1 didn't know what was to come next, and I didn't think Mrs. Lincoln did. At last she spoke again, and once more in the interrogatory form: "And you keep your health, sir ?" I answered this very kind inquiry as best I might, when, fortuitously, it occurred to me that some years ago, iu Russia having to go in much better society than I am in the habit of frcqueuting at home, I bad sought the assistance of a dancing O O mistress, and at tire outlay of about fifty rubies, learnt aperies of bows, - or "rcverjnccs/' for grand occasions. I gave Mrs. Lincoln the lowest of these reverences. [ moved slowly ftway, but could hear the Prcsidentcss afeking the next gentlemair ivho was presented tcf wlictlicr lie 'kept his health." "Do "you keep your aealth?" evidently serves Mrs. Lin;oln in the stead that "est it p<miUc?" used to serve Priuc George of Denmark.? Correspondent London Teh' /raph. / t * ? . V Complication likely to Arise. Among thcdifficultics width arc foresceti in the future arc the following :*? pi First?lu the event of an eloctlpn, re with General McCloliau onono>sidc ^and' Abraham Lincoln on the other, should c< the mass of the soldiers' votes be thrown, V through Adniinstration iullucnce, in faipor ci of Mr. Lincoln, the Nor Mi will at onccte c plunged into all the horrors of civil waij. n The Democrats would craim, and will, no a: doubt, be able to prove, that the vote ti was, to all intcots.anJ; purpose?, fraud- J ulenfc; that the soldiers, either tbrdtigh V disiplinc, fear, favoritism, or the doctoring b of tlie returns, were compelled to vdt'o j'tl rnmns*e for Mr. Lincoln. In that case, h the whole uation would flame op iiLi'cv- ti olution, and the streets of our cities n run blood. a Second'?If Abe Lincoln should be T elected by the votes of the- Western si States, under hi? own Amnesty 1'rocla- h mation, that also would undoubtedly a create au outbreak at the North. The e people of the State of New York (for 1 iiisfuuce) would never consent to be out- 'J voted in the Electoral College by bogus t electors representing the camp followers > and ercatucrs of. Mr.Lincoln in Arkan- t) sas, Louisiana, Texas, Tennessee, Flor- p ida, ere. in other words they woilld I never consent that the few pretended d loyal thousands in the Southern States e should outvote (he undoubted loyal mil- c ' ' XT-*' If! ^ JI oils ?n use ^xuiwiciu ouuw. I Thirdly.?On the other hand, it is believed that if, by charges of corurption j against the Administration and the pred- c judiots created by clamor against iniceg- d cnatiou and ucgro equality, the Demo- \ crats should succeed in electing General p Me. Clellan, it is not b-jlievcd that the t people who have eontnd of the Administration would consent to give up their poiver. The monetary interests invoked j are so cuorinous that every consideration which can appeal to the selfishness ofj^, ambitious men would tempt the party in power to ignore the election* It cannot be disguised that the passions j of lift; populace are at fever heat. That C I liaiiui money, the liic'li m'iccS. tllC fier<*?-.-' r '1 *' -o v / ^ \ | r excitement of tlio war, have so wrought j I upon tlic passions of the multitude that j i it needs hut a spark to blow the whole j ! framework of society into atoms. It is i I 8 the man on horseback who would then j ^ rule us, and our boasted liberties would j ^ j find their grave it: the tomb of military despotism. It will thus be seen why it, is seriously proposed to postpone the lTesi- ^ dential election.?X. Y. The festival of the Passover common* ( ecd'jcstcrday, that being the fourteenth j: day of Xisau,nud continues eight days. | c The two first and two Jast days are kept! sacred, but during the four iutcriucdi- j t ate days business may he attended to. ' r This festival, which ie called in the 1 c Hebrew Pay men, was institut^b to | \ commemorate the Providcntail escape i j of the Jews, when <Iod, smiting the first j horn of the Kgfptains, "passed over" ] the houses of the Israelites, the door c posts of which were sprinkled with 'the a blood of the paschal lamb. I Hiring this c festival, the Jews art no other kind of t bread but thin cake, baked cf unleavened t dough, which arc called "mazzos," (pro- v noutced "matzos.") The most interest.? f ing ceremonies of the Passover arc those ^ that take place on the first and second j evenings, in the house of every Jew, which are styled the ''giving of the say- v dor," meaning order or scries of cos- j tunics and- ceremonies, which arc as v follows: The table cloth being laid, the maz- j f 7.os .ire piacc a upou pimc, cuyuuu ?.?>u .1 spotless napkin, and with them a piece ^ of lamb, in memory of the paschal lamb, ^ an egg for the offering of honor, a cup Jy with .grated horse radish and bitter ( | herbs, and a cup of salt water, to denote ^ the liver of the ancestors of tho family, made bitter by their slavery iu K-'ypt; and lastly, a cup containing a mixture of apples, cinnamon, almonds, &c., in (1; allusion tc the bricks and morter which | ^ they were oblegid to male. \Tlie table j e being thus formed, cv-.t y participant lias j a ff'ass of wine ;-iactu befoic him, for' s C7 A on these nijhr> every Jew is; obliged to > 0 drhtk foui cups of wim. t*1 lo?l especially, | ^ "The Four Cups of ' m " \bich aro in memory of the 1 i.i .fcreo \prcss- 'J sions made use of in uAoo <>'' ir re- 11 demptiou: "And I* will hii<c forth;" ^ "And T will deliver;" "Am' I will re- b deem;" "And J will take li-uO hence." ^ - o <? < * The N. York Herald asserts that "an overwhelming iViajority of tiic llepubli- j C( can members of botL Houses of Congress ^ arc opposed to th- n1. 'ion of A bra- w bum Lincoln 1 l l . , ts ? * DotiMjPfeurdcr by A Boy. rs The Savannah News, of Thursday, rcsrts the followiug lamentable oecur:ncc : ... ' c Two Children Shot.?In tho mayor's b )urfc yesterday;. a . small boy named u nlliaui Craven, said to be * not than o r | ight years of age, was brought up b harmed with shooting a white' child j s arncd Alice Cullcn, aged three years, J ad a -negro girl, named Virginia, about; v ,vclve.years of age: the property of Mr." <1 . G. Watts. It appears, that Mr. j c I'm. It. Craven, the uncle of William, J c ad left a loaded gun hi his house, which ! 1 icr liKf'got posc&sion of, and with which | r o threatened to shoot some otic Be-1 [ iveen seven and eight o'clock on Wed- j f esday night, he aimed the gun at the j s bovc named children,and discharged it. j c 'he gun ttas loaded With large turkey j i hot,and the contents took effect in the j c cad of Alice, causing her death in i I bout ten minutes. Virginia the coLv- j f d girl, was shut in the side aud died on ' c 'hursday morning, about three o'clock. ( "lie'flavor remarked to tlie relatives of i he boy that this was another occurrence I f great criminal carelessness, and that > lie parent was nut free from fault who ; laced loaded weapons in sncli positions l hat they could easily be taken by chil- | i rcu. in this instance, through ihe i 1 arelcssness of those who had this boy in : l . J barge, tvw human lives* had been saeri- j teed. bunco thepbove was in type coroner's : ' - t v .1 L* Li ' I urv nave rciurncu vcruiuia m uouj j ascs, that the deceased catue ta their',1 . - 1 I oaths by gunshot wounds inflicted by j ' Villiatn Irwin Craven, and that lio is J 1 ruilty of murder. The boy is only be-! ween eight and nine years of age. ;1 The Old Btiil Bun Battlefield. j, A corrispondcnt of the Philadelphia rjnjuinr gives the following description j, f \visit to the old Bull lluu battle-j ield: A poet might fad here in the :-ug?\s- i ivc relies of the deadly -strife the theme j ?f nn epic ; or a painter might ilin Ira to j u canvas the horrors of war from the heinentoos ticre lel'c of its rurhhss wovlc. j Juliet j are picked up ami exhibit. 1 by j he handful), and soldiers who parlieip itci 111 tuc ray arc comparing at the ; ;a:ne time their gathered rr.euantocs ami .licir personal rccojleetions of t!ic bloody icld. Iu Luc long, luxuriant glass rno trikes his foot against skulls and bones, iiiimlod witJPtiic deadly missiles shit jrougbt tlicin to the earth, ilT.low skulls lie contiguous to hemispheres of ' :xplodcd shells. The shallow graves ; ise here and there above th.1 grass, ' / # i omctimcs in rcwr, som&tiim* alone or, cattcrcd'sit iiv^ular intervals. Through ! . I he thin layer of soil that hides the nameless hero who gave his life for his j 'ountry, one _ sees the protruding ribs ' vbcuce the rain has washed their cover- j ug/ft foot or an arm reached out beyond ts earthen bed ; once I saw one of there on it clnnnorc oftvoro.l crn*rrl tr tirv fr> flu? ^41^ Ui; 4 V bUV< :hin,but with the cutire face exposed mil turned up to the passer by; one louhl imagine him a soldier lying on he. Geld wrapped up in his blanket but hat the blauket was of clay and the face vas flesh less and eyeless. In. one ease a oot protruded, with the flesh still partly reserved ; in another an entire skeleton ay exposed upon the-surface, witlwut my covering whatever. The tatters of vliat had been his uniform showed that ic had been a cavalryman. The flesh ras,of course,decomposed,; but the tanicd and shrivelled skin still encased her bony framework of. the hod)*, ami : ven the liuger nails wore in their places 'lie ligament that fasten the joints nu.st have been prcserv? d, for ho was " if ted by the bolt which was still around 1 lie waist, and not a boac fell out of its ilacc. A Great Comet. PredictedThe following, says an English piper, . 5 an extract of. a -letter just received * j roni Melbourne: Professor Newma- J er, on a three ycrrs' scientific visit from . - M lavana, tell us that in lirGo a comet |, hall conic so close as to endanger this ur earth ; aud should it not attach itself ^ as one globule of quicksilver to another,) ^ or annihilate us, Hie sight will be most eautiful to behold. During three ^ i^lits we shall have no darkness, but c Iratlied iti the brilliant light of the laziug train. - - r -or. i<-?vnlit.Tr nnd Solf-Sacrificc. r Tlu nurses, ward masters and employ- n us at Llic hospital Charlottesville, Va; 2;reed in a body to do without meat for ;n day.f in order to furnish the whereithal.t teed tlie hungry soldiers of the v Dth Vii ,'inia Regiment, ia the licld. a m " . ?ho Old Currency an4 tlie Now] ?? Six Per Cents. It is net- generally known that the old (11 urrcncy may ho funded ii^six per cent. j ^ onds which the Secretary of the Trous- i 0 ry is authorized to issao to the amount e f five hundred iniJiiouB of dollar*). The fondsarc to bear interest at tlvo rate r.f I ^ ix cent, per annum, aiid thus six h:ia-1c Ired and sixty-six dollars, thus invested ,' 1 J 9 ' '? * -i i -f:- . ? . .. ! :i rut yieiu cue same naiouus 01 .*> ; no'thousand dollars iu 'the four per;* cut3?forty dollars per ae^om iu both ; ^ ascs., So the holder of the notes will !' qsc nothing in amount of interest, by i' leglocting to fund tbcu? at their ox-1 tressed value in four per cents, and uuding tlicr.i hereafter of the rate of ' ixty-siz cents on the dollar* in six per i icuts. The interest en tlio six per cent-\ ' a secured by the pledge of the revenues !1 )f the (Jon four racy dorived from its im- I! rorf. duties eon Otton, tobacco and'naval, -ores. No Fund or revenue is pbd; : ! | >r set apart for the payment of the Inter-' on the four p-..r cents. The hr: I :- .* )f the six per cent, bonds v.i'i ] \.r- |1 "errot creditors of the Govern: iur<u l?y tiu? niorf-'-jec of v ' ji.'Vi'iU luiount or iis revenucc. Ir. is I.A r\.- f v.) ] 11.1 ft lev, * i*.-'. , 4 J'.. Ill /ov " ?.? jiaAi of wli.it remains oi'r'n' ei:: Llc ani,ounfc uf one in.'o rlus ;,?iw {' sis per cciu'.v?li'nr.u.nr.d Eoti.' ' r. | Forrest Vi >: 1 o : i or. a Ac;.':)i Advices fr??Ri l\>i'h ^-.s } blio Meridian Clarion) report that l\-r' | rosl b:is?l:;:d siRct'.ftr :v.e.ig.-ircDf ..i'1 [Lc Yankees r.c;.r V/liiU's *f.-u miles from Memphis, :>n, iho Charleston Llailrocic], in whirh !:e ialLi w: ?da,Ur?C number of tiio enemy nnd i .-J. }.*??? 1 ?a,1 ri.i^.%rtniu *' Iir M?I?K lULL'Uil UUUUl<;u j number' of prisoner? taken uriy bo ? : rate-!, but <ji '.ho %ht and vie: r. ' thtro is no doubt* Therein a Gcrann^fkmilr in OMana, ' \>ho in daily convcrs.iliuii u?c fv,* . !i,h ?13v? tfce in '.elicr '*> ; ; I.or ebilini! the ?uaio (}.;;s..r, slic u{. wci'tiai in h?.r cbilh.ro*>, uvnv " . . . , ' ' back ?>n 1 lie river ilbinc. One m'^uV as iii i* haiT.i***t. ^ l'C1 -". . c-.jj i_"I > or .. iiuinc Jj v..;'- sjMjcUy _* u lbrot!? i i.s.-' evening dcjvotiyiis, do $u dilou- L ly "ice".i lil-.'l jij ! mi-(!' ; \n Lj' o.z.' : "Mi. r!iy do v.o a! v.'iy talk y .-ib' : ail'* German : I? G'.'d a Dutchman i" *~obn Kali fa", tCk'C*,7 s \ ii j v< blair! ct ..f! he .aivi. . ...J { , ' ('at::]'" to ?lte <i.!i.k\!) ' -j clc. ilc.c i: in: 0- otii M-v h to I w _ / J't'au you toll me. lit ?L*- .vhrts'io-j styb ?>f v;vi ' V/lton pic will 'J11 thiii- fill Of this !bij; jqb' of .1? ' Ql'.Oth LOO 10 ->;c "Why, yes, iudecJ ; * Til foil yon in a mhiukv l\"l:cn lopislfiit is i Ami .spiciiliitow Arc inii'Its to enter in U ' The tV)Uowi>" il..;-cnplio3 ? cot'Sur. tri toper if to the lite :? His name was a terrible name i.i l<. !. 'Turns Timothy Th.uly 0 Aluli t - Ai'-r-.vhencvcr he moptieila tumbler < t punch. lie always wank i it fuH a-jaln. Rebel Saru3 on Red River- J The rebels have three very fcrmidabh1 iron cl:?l ranis near Si:rc~epoit, .with which they expect to annihilate-tin. Van koc gunboats* The Missouri is a very =a-; perior boat, with lino, powerful ciacSiir.'.uy nud a sharp iron prow, running Liu:, io-. f beneath the surface of the water. She is said to he-the fastest Luat oa :he , Western or Southern waters, eighteen miles sn hour. Her ;:r:na-j:uM is reported to be exc-.? lie;:'.? \vwcrf.il-' ? .. 1 Art jf.l l,_. /} , ?two J.I/V i'.VU ^ i - ..n- , crcn, and, four pound rilled ti < < ! with one or two carronndcs. The rair | Webb is also a monster of (sm-ddsvaoU power, but is qot .*>0 fast as the Missou;:. I J She carries "ten guns; the calibre of ; 1 cvhich is known tooor forces. Tim Mrrv 1 L\ js likewise- an ugly customer to cor: :ond with, although not so large as the 1 ' :\vo former. With tin so three -rams j\ he enemy expect to repulse onr naval j 'orocs, and then assist Pk-l; Taylor an I . ['rice on land.?1\.X. U _ ic ^ ^ _ . : c ^cn. Whiting, commanding the Do-i^ mrtment of . Wilmington, has issued* a 1 loticfi to producers that mloss provisions J i re brought into that market at eurtora-" t ,rv hours, and ?o fell; chance given to i-t mycrs residing in t'ds city, flic stock j V rill be iinptvssi'"] for '..he *f rhc nrrr.y ] n<l navy at Government prices. L isaisiuis uiu . "av-w The euge of " y Jg^"1 .<*??. ron claJs i3 dofimUly' aj^iopne^ ' mvu'bccn raided. Tii? Coffering*! j-J c isfcrll>u#iou*of the Seet'r.^eatly Jnr^lqfd theccj* * " The ganboafs audjuorloi* xmstfr KK?n witlidi \yf\: UYJtl :*re ok. The Cowslip aud-??'ieMc^46cr;:ii dockadciog'iu. the Sotfnd. TiS; febcle.' irA bf.ilding dorks aronsii the Tetropsse? ; or the purpose of ii :hfiling her waul Dojr Riser I?ar. Tito N'asL vil!e is';>gJrV C.')D]jiltoid. Si" V. :ii Dofc-fW SUch : V'" Pepuicsee. , ^ Oli 31 ' b'tit' ' plnogii^r to the ttnruiy V.-H tucd'hy he J-icIfcOR. Id ii >m' Svo ru-.-.-i asd? .u elSco?^ (ranter's raotS1 T!,e baaty.. jtiicer and m-rt belooj. .} >o "be rStfl janboat Scire a. _ A IrtiicV thus esr.i:'ir.:t the *.?.' !; va/sl: * ^4$*$ A'tboug i ' ' rra; v ! JPinlr: ] T: VI.?!:. SOd Jltftb ' : .: I'jjihticr -t : or- . i . breast'of V J9 (' i '. Hras that with these !: . c *:' i / '. ..v Orltios or I ?* >fe* * i.- *! .. T f %* ' * "t ?.> nv imrc;--'. # vol tho-.-a-f * :b?? :-vl J"i-. Ts ?*?!? f\i ' j'l X * ' "i--T>r. pieced ifi '- c obaufiftl is ever;, . ii?-?i. . . - ; *' M-.Mtc:adist":-c btken l.v s lay] N ' A. ii.'vr.l >V.rr;:*;u? -'.o . r . * ^ tin 2 ' *.n t f If ' !) ': ! pi v: /usrtl I :.- ncet worn ' i; ; .?k l i'n'rni h*l!e ram?; A- ;os-- ,e. u1 Nashville. BGctiUCtiOZL OS tllO 3IagC.2il;^ ? fit! ' ' V? t i>3 r.vxsy'ard sa-" !-. <>of .. 'As Ti: .r:- i cvot-hi-; '.loo. A' ?T. ' . , w? . ? r Smith gave to have tlic nj.??;?r.iru3 ' f T- ' Dc Mown ; j. with ;;n- i r*owd-?t. Th(j c*xpio5:cn erased tTio ?wt-. boats and lions ?orfcs i.i the river 'o r. k on carth.^aako bed to'* en place.' A? til'mV;-;-0 ; ;> ; four I' drc.l pouu.i? pt | .-./.viler ia three ^ fh<? report v.-i;-, ? ! iif 3. *>%r?2;sr ! jr ?* V i' * ;?. .... tet rj-.-r: vers jbrrli ia- "x j'? t ?. Shortly af er !L . 'jr . th>; e?:Snx rLr <: ' !.. ; t *i?it ii ;y?in is 1 ir?>n jrwi, * i. 1 * -KJ . t f it. ... ' . '..?n r::>- :? '.c. . ..1 ; V - .. a ^ ' x lwlxp':i5i* * ? V* is! r ' ' ? * * # : . ' # -*?<sS -v ? % ilaSJ Of tfcO Oaiopaigu Jt .i.'j ... ' i:?-:* "ui # , ; 11.! *, . i p? ' lit! ItlSS i pho of iho cc&ifcg coDpiiga iu ViT f Vi v.;' Yv .v-.t ii OT; Tiichmond, \rbich v:i! now be -M-vcd tv th.oPtortii l:i Virginia, arc , :* . v" ' 4^ forward sruh : t. * rc-heei ?.: . :/ * The re organization Oi ih3 artey * , * l'l.'ti'rr.ac Lt..^ ! a . .v. v .l!v* t and thedebi's el ?bo !* ~ cd.:r "f i' :i,t? L? rig !iiti'!c: 1 ai I ;.r : !o cau-svd by the acr. iyr r ;* I 'ifc jsoino *?s?t!S of Ui??! YbeiYn . i- ? Jj vcr-. wii! prm;? I: U p?-i/?fci no'.v iha:.. at ieaft : a , . Mo?cn.?.tJ?5 tviil iixdo fer t:.j pur > .** of captiriog tbi! jv!.c! ' . ip: .m: ' ^ hap* u,ffcir<i. Gcntrd "Uii.'y" .'"Smit-a, - V if i1 repotted v. ill ::.va ; A-,f fv.-o .'ivniv 'if : lr. I,; orcran.' * * ------ J r ' o :>t j'rruvdi i<J uv.'p ui.'l lw p-i-ihci u-> *!.o l-'-'alasnL. wLIio ?ho * "* urpTy of U?a Patcaiy; '-ocf-s Loe's foi'aos [vigorously occupied, aid while GaocnU . .. Ijurasiuo is presnuf&l (o'fcttaiupfiha c1<i y routes via Gnllsboirt,-' North Cyotiri-i * mUiag tba.railroad that point. -j?*a Tbo l^uin-jular end North Carol in* aiOivmesi.i la*a*c?i!y '.tii t.ocau# a '-* 1 r?trcat r.f L*r>. part of the rebpf arlfcy * IbF' r.Tn: its- t . -.or.: sr-earo p *!o;: bp t': :V *;jL Lvi^nts hcynod^lljo Hupi-Jah. A.xro'-,- " :.{>% -r,.i? ;mi u:\?i p r.v.-rcnt r. lack iVo-u* " v ?"*}? )l i '.I-. Im .vi. ? -J 1??,' -> m\ . VttJl in ' 5c * .* ^ lays t\?ii?if?nccs' ftf Bfffhnwpd, ^ f'v^Sh IMi::t ii -c 'istr u, the r;?r vrili bVwS>*' .V.cbfiod ibmisBi *eriWe I vk!? t&aiQ? 'V"*^ >nc which irn.;f on:'.;. f.-r ' V jrac*h>n' )f the el J j" AdvijcS r.'icjiv^u ^-'Tay.; ii.-ebsv -,u:l constant .nddilkfts -are b.8-V^^ ng ria-lo'D the strength oMfce defioascyo * vorks on all ?ide? of Ji'ne rebel <fnptil. ' ':': < i. .. ' i . " ' 'v . :'-: : \hll p k.Ui. ^9 r m -?| . i < fnvrxitRm: KV!P.utnmniJiv?Whir * j? "j i L?aho }?;?;.fj>;.?.--'.#fuer iu iho a^^bctf . jrkeaua? "I' is always ia blisi.^E" is n beii? uad aD {lie res? are ia par^/fnHfc '. "* ' ? ' ?V ^ .^yi gm , Jm