S, : ' 1 ' ' ' ' ''''1: : . . . , :,i - . . j"-; ., v .. - .... : . ...... . , . I 't vol. i.; TUESDAY, ; J-jLTE 5, 1866. NO. 13. 4 r 1: I ' - 1 " H ' (PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY.) . ; . :o: ROBirmoi & SMITH, J .11. H. SMITH For One Year, (payttble in advance.). . ... . .$3 00 For Six Months, . " ' .... $2 00 HATES OP ADVERTISING One Sqnarcof tea lines, first insertion, .... $1 00. Eacij Mlsr-niw'stJmrtion, Fr;i(-iioins tf aqnures cLirgecl as whole Bqnaref. Easiness or Ti-ofessional Cards, not exceeding eiht i. or three months. t ..$6 00 ; ..10 00 .15 00 For six months . . . i-yFbr on year. . Advertisers are requested to mark the number of in- s t - j , ' i Bastions required, or their advertisements vrill be con- in;iecV until forbid. ! ' ; " 1 1 i LEE TO THE REAR. The following; . poem, by John H. ' Thompson, ap pears in the Crescent Monthly, for May, commemora tive of an incident' on the 12th' of May 1864, at Sppt sylvania Court House, although. the writer' associates it.Vith the 'WildernesW. i - i. T The gallant Ramseur's North C iiroliuii'ius, and Gordon' Georgians, were the two l .1 - t ? Li tit . 1 . , i i ! i urtguues wucn siayea uie tiae on mat clay Dawn of a pleasant morning in May, Brf ke throrigh the "Wilderness, cool and gray, vy iiuB, percuRii in xne uuiesi iree-iops, ine Wove) caroling.MendelssohhV "Songs withi XTTUMr.. 1. - 3 r ii a 1 II bircla ithout words.' Far, from the haunts of men remote, ; , the bronls brawled on with a liquid note, 1 Ann nature, all tranquil and lovely, wore, Thf smile of the spring, as in Eden, of yore. Litjle by little, as daylight increased, And deepened the roseate flush in the East Litllo bv little" did morning reveal j I Tw;o "long, glittering lines of steel; Where two huhdrod thousand bayonets gleam, TippWl with the' light of the earliest beam,. And the faces aro Bullen and grim to see, : In the hostile armies of-Grant and Lee. j - AU-'dfttHuadenjere rose the sua,- ;T- -Folded on the aileuce, tho opening gun A little white ijuff of smoke there came, And auon th vallcv was wreathed in flame. ! - Down on the left of the rebel lines, "there a breastwork stands in a copse of pines. Before the rebels thoir ranks can form, . Th Yankees liava gaWier'o plC iJLatrirr. xnifi niixx eftrtttcn o'rr inc salionc rayf hero many . a hero has 'found a grave, And the gallant Confederates strive in vain, ff ho- ground they have drenched with their blood to "regain. ..; ' Yet loutler-the thunder-of battle roare-d Yet a deadlier fira on their columns : poured Slaughter infernal, jrocle with despair,! l.uries twain, through the smoky air. Not far. off in the saddle there sat, A grey-boarded man, yith a black slouch hat; Notmuc'h moved by the fire was he, ' ' ; Calm and resolutie Robert Lee. , f Q'viok and watchful, he kept him eye, l 'On two bohVrebtd brigades close 'by-r - " iTteservesi. that . . n- Z . ' w "vmhii ivtAVi v j j t.rv vikV : J Where the tempest of wrath toppled over the trees. For still with their loud, deep, bull-dog bay, " j The Yankee batteries blazed away, j And with every murderous, second that sped, j A dozan brave fellow's, alas! fell dead. , j TUe'fifraad old gray-beard rode to the' space, Where Death and his victims stood face to face4 And silently wared his old slouch hat j .t world of "meaning there was in that. ' i ,-.;, ., . . - . . "Follow mo! Steady!. -We'll save the day!" j This was what .'he seemed to say:. And to the light of his glorious eye j .-Tht bold brigades thus made reply 'iWvll go forward, but you must go back" , And they moved! not an inch in the perilous track; ;Go,t the rear,'and we'll send them to h 1!' Then the'Sjonnd of tht battle was lost in their yell. Turning his bridle, Robert Let? Rode to the rear, Like the waves of the sea, Bursting their dykes in the overflow, . Madlv his veterans dashed oh the foe. And backward in terror that foe was driven, Their banners rent and their columns riven,' Wherever the tide of battle rolled, ; Over the Wilderness, wood and wold. Hiasons have passsd since that day and year Alain o'er its pebbles the brook run clear, 'And the fields in a richer green are drest Tiere the dead ctf the terrible conflict rest. " ' :- ' ' ; Hushed is the'roll of the rebel drum, The sabres are sheathed and the cannon are dumb," And Fate, with pitiless hand, has furled ! jl The .flag that once challenged the gaze -of the world; But the fame' oivthe, Wilderness fight abides, And down into history grimdly ride3, -' Calm and unmoved, as in battle he sat, :' The' gray-bearded man, in tho black slouch hat BILL ARI' BEFORE THE RECONSTRUCTION ; i COMMITTEE. , To the Editor iJ the Metropolitan Record: I Mr. Editoh: Murder will out, and. so will evidence. Having seen Pan Rice's testimony before the Destruction Commit tee, I have felt sorter slighted because no nientioii aint been made of mine, I suppose it has been surpassed,, but I am not to be hid put in obscurity: I said a good deal more than -Lean put down Mr.- Editor, and 'at times my liinguage was considered im pudent, but they thought that was all the better lor their .side, for, it illustrated the rebellious spirit I heard one of 'em say: '' him go onthe ruling passion strong - . : s eood States evidence." j When I was put on the -stand old Bout Avell Bwore ine most fiercely and 'solemnly to speak the truth, the whole truth, jind nothing but the truth ! he was then entertaining about a quart of dQubiejrectified, and it locked lie it Jiad soared! on his stbniack. Old Blow was scitiii ff on one side with a rnemorandum bojokl ettin peady to note cown some Vgar bled pxtracts." , . lm' . I OW tron Works was Chairman and when neinoaaea nwrepuoiican neaa om uoui welHsavs he;! "Your name is Arp. I Believe, sir?" ri . So' called," says I. . . fYo4 reside in the State of Georgia, do Ul can't . say exactly," says I. "I live in Rome, tight in the fork of two injun rivers." tln the Sfaf e of jje:o'tg,,.,. sa'vs hefiercely.; says 3.1 We don't know whether Georgia is a state or not. .: l would ime ior - you to state; yourself, if you know. The state of the country requires that this matt6r should be I settled, and I will proceed to state," r i'Never niind, sir," says he. i How old areiyoii, Mr. Ari)?" . . f'hajt depends on circumstances," says "I don't know whether to count the last five years or not. Durin the War vour lit '"(t,,'' folks: saad that a State couldn't secede, but thit While she was in a State of rebellion she ceased to-exist. Now you say we got out ana we snan t get oacK again until il870L A man's ace has got somethin to do wiitn his rights, and if' we are not to e, I pon't think we ought to count the IVO time.1? ! r f. -: Well, sir," says he; "are you familiar with'thE Dolitical sentiments of the citizens ofoir State?" rupt no citizens yet sir tnat we Know pi. JLyill tliank you to speak ot us as people,'" j- "Ve!l, sir," says he, "I'll humor your obs tipacy. .Are the "people" of y our state." "Bor topeak of it as a State sir, if you please. J'mlon oath now, and you must excuse fne for being; particular. 'Call it a sectirfnl':" i'-K. . . '. ! I'MK Arp, are the "people" of your sec- uon sumcieniiy numDiea ana repentant to porjie jback into the Union on ' such terms as wenay think proper to impose?" 1 1 ! f Nit much they ain't" says I. "I don't thijilejtl ey are prepared for it yet. They Wouldn't voluntarily go it blind against your hand. They say the deal wasn't fair and ydu've marked the cards and stole the trumps, vbut at the same time they dont care a! darn what you do. They've become ihdifle!reatar.d dofltoarnothin-aboitotTf to VoM, gentlemen, but I was swore to tell ihejwraole truth. Our people aint a noticin y oij oftW oSt of curiosity. Thy. don't ex pect ajnything decent, honorable, nor noble from ou, and, they've gone to work dig gin arid plowin and plantin and raisin boy bhildrry i J J - RigJui here the man with a memorandum scratc ie d down a garbled extract aiid old Bout we 11 says he: "What .do you mean by that, flit? - r ' , "vl'm statin' facts,". says I, "You must draw, Kour own inferences. Thev are rais- jngbdy children. Any harm, about that? Any'treeson? Can't abodv raise boy chil- dfen? Perhaps you'd like to amend the Constitiition and stop it. Old Pharob tried to stop Jit among tne Israelites, out it man t prfy. LHe finally caught the dropsy in the Rejd,$e. We are raisin' boy children for the fun of it. They are a good thing to have: the house aa Mrs. 1 oodles would sai v Mr.lArp are not the feelings of your people'Very bitter towards the North" I'll jbpg you pardon, sir, but you 11 have to split the; question, or else 1 11 have to split ihe answer. Our people have a very high -regard for honorable men, brave men, earted .men, and there's a heap of North, sir, and there s a heap of wid- and orphans there we are sorry for; for tius here Kadical party, they upon them like they was hyenas a ng up the dead for alivin. It 8 as to hate, em as it is to kill a snake It's utterly. impossible for me to tell the strength, and length and height and depth and psreadth ot their contempt tor that par tyJ They Iook upon a Radical as as as ill 'as a beggar on horseback a buz zard isailin round a dead eagle a suck egg dog Crreeping up to the tail ot a dead lion. They taiMabout hirin Brownlow to abuse erfi.l ojuse lauguage on 'em, like he did a few years ago when In) spoke against Pryne. flf iheV do hire Brownlow he'll spatter 'eni. i iiifri li ii i i 1 hejli aauD em an over, and sume em ana slabber oh 'em about right, and it will stick, Ifor, the pores are open and their morals rL LL'r- TiJ I . 4. Jol spongyf x u imciu oiuwu uu uuuui icu ruuo ana near mm spreaa nimsen. it wouia ue wrs than a squirt-gun full, of cow-slop, I 11 ' t ' J I IP . Ti I I 1 andJ have no doubt would give - general-, ea s taction. ' Tint's, sufficient, sir," says old Bout- welU SuEt it was m their power to do so, would your people renew the fight?" raol unless they could fight the Radicals allj alone, and all the world agree to 'hands oft' j j Bven then there woulcf'nt be no fight for tie couldn't cotch you." ?'y npt'oo your peopic ay uuu mcsuu- ject.of hexgr.o equality?" l"They say it's a lie, sir it don't exist by nature and never can in praeuct-. roms nobles them dows out as look j scratch natural welref rot: created free and equal. That j paper tells ajdroll story oft mayibe a theoreti cal truth, but it's alwayswhich it would appear the may'pe a ineorei cai num, uc v i vvnicn it wouiu appear inai. uiu jtiesiueot been a practical lie. . There's men I give Vvas being shaved, the other day, when the the sjdtiwalk. to, and there's men that gives ? barber accidentally tweaked his'nose a little it to ioA. There's men that, I vote, and j td6 Hard.' "Pardon me," said he, very uat men lhlt vote ma, and the grades go up, urally. "Put your hand inlmy coat pocket unsteJ bv step, from my sort to Mr. Davis I and pull out one," replied the kind-hearted add Mr Stephen's, and Gen. Lee, and How ell Cobb, and Bern Hill, and their sort; they are the highest in the nation; and then it goes from me down, down, down to the niggers, and the Republicans and the Radi cals, and that's as low as they run.! There ain't no equality, and you can't make one. We'll vote the niffsers certain. I'll vote Tip, and Tip's a 'head center.' He'll vote about forty, and the tirst tnmg you Know . . . . n . i ij.l . ' : '. we'll elect'seven big black greasy . nigger?; to Congress. We'l do it certain seven of them 18 carats strong, with African musk. The other tebel States will do the same rebel States will do the same thing, and youl'l have about 'fifty of 'em to Lbrroi ,0e 8e bore l,er boy tne draw sea J(with. and vou can all stick yourfW be harsh and ; legslulVrudaskslr itc" and vermin7antTbe shampood' at tho same shopijand the fair sexes can . set to gether in the galleries arid biix. odors, and fan their scent about promiscuous. We'l give you ajfull benefit of your Civil Rights bill, see if we: dont. You go on play your cards; We are bidin our time. -We are payin your taxes and our duties and back rations for 1864, and license, and your infernal reVenue, and obeyin your laws without havin any hand in makin 'em, and we are cut off from" pension, and public lands; and you (sold a poor man's still in my county theother day because he could pay no tax. on some peach brandy he still ed for his neighbors two years ago: and soon you'ljbe selling the.land for the land tax, and you're tryin your best to play the devil generally; but'you'll cotch it in the long. See if you dont. Ta k about Fen- lans. When the' good men of the North and the South all get together, they'll walk over the track so fast that you won't have : time to get out oi tne way. You'f subside inf Wf,v t nA A;Mran ! ny that their daddies'ever belonged to such ! a party. Excuse me, gentlemen, but I'm a little exited. Five cents a pound on cotton will excite anybody that makes it. Tax on industry-on sweat and toil". Pro. tection tariffs MTor Pennsylvania j and five ,pnf n rnU Unv fiifLrn ,,ff,n ' and your fblksw"iU manage some way or other to steal the other, half. My advice to you is to quit this foolishnesiand begin to travel the only road to peace. Old Blow couldn't keep up . garbled extracts. t'What makes the President so at the South? "Contrast, sir contrast. Tiui r 1,;, ain't like your party, the more popular he J '.. . I ' l i be-devil him so, that sometimes he don't! ,. """"' au ? understand hUself. I dont't think he lbipned him severely, and he did the cry- knew for a while whether his Peace Pro- clamation restored the writ of habeas e.or pus or hot. But do you go on and im peach him, and that will bring matters to a locus," HI bet you'd be m Fort Dela ware in a week sand the Southern mem bers be here iji their seats, and they'll look round at the political wreck1 and i ruin and r 1 1 1 rwl a i nn1 cfttl;nro flr-fQ iKnan irnin -- ' i .. ,r. i - .!. , . i ana tney raignt exciaim, in tne language ot ! the poet 1 I 1 f ' ! pii We since Tsh pin gone?" ! 11:. . : i ! "Mr. Arp, suppose we should have a'war with England or France, w lat would the ! - i rebels do? "They'd follow Gen. Lee, and Gen. John son, and Loligstreet, arid Bragg and old i Bory. My opinion is, that Gen. Lee would head the Union army, and Geh. Grant would , be his chief of Staff, and Gen. Buell would rank mighty high, and" - " What would you do With Gen. Sherman?" j "Sorry you mentioned Jiirn. We'd have! to hire him, I reckon, as a camp fiddler,! and make him sing "Hail Columbia" by fire-light, as ji . warning to the bovs how mean it is to burn cities and towns and make war,: upon defenceless ''women and children. ,N6, sir, .our boys! -wouldn't fight under no. such." j j "T)fi vmi think. AT- 1 A Sbuth should evekhold the balance of truth, and vyas tond ot his lessons and in nnwpr. thpv U.lw mnnii fu;. latuated with the Sunday School. ; And " ' 1 " ."V.Y '-VyillilJ J.f tt i lJ I 1,1111 negroes.' "I can't Say, sir. But I don't think the South has Most anything that wav. We V.. V b 1 A V..V got their llabpr before the war for their vittels and! clothes and doctor's bills, and we get it now for aboiitithe same. It's all settled down rhnt. ,w.iv nnd vonr Ti,-oa couldent help it. The oulyl difference is in the distribution. Some of us don't own as many . as we lised io, but everybody has got . I- -. !. .ii ii- . a nigger or two now, and tney ii ail vote em or turn epi offi A nigger that wouldent J vote as boots." to d him, shouldent tilack my At this rim r. r)omriiifiP nnkvA. -if . . 1 l . .1 . . j one another seemin to be bothered and as tonished. Garbled extracts were put down with a vim. ! Mr. Boutwell says he, IV r. Chairman, I think, sir, we are about through with the ! witness, f thinkj sir, his testimony settles the question as tb what we ought to do j with Southern traitors: ! : j The; chairman I gave : me a Republican j nod aud remarked, "Yes, sir, I think we do, j The scoundrjels bijrnt my iron works." i j Whereupon I retired, having given gen- ;erai satisiaction., j i H Yours truly, r - j - I . ) L 4- Bill Akp. i ; iVYashington letter-wn er to a Radical of the President, by ua al t : 1 a - J chief Magistrate, "and I'll fill it out for you for : vnen youlre done.4 BOY THAT BORE A CHARMED LIFE. . . . . oce there was s a bad little boy, whose name was Jim tnougn u you win nonce, you will find that bad little boys are al sicKrtiother who was pious and had con-J fp, anu wouiuuh gmu io ue aown ; Vge ana oe at rest, out ior trie 4 AlosY Bad boys in the Sunday school books j are named James, and haven't sick mothers . Who teach them to say, "$ovl lay me down," etc., and then sing them to sleep with sweet plaintive voices, and then kiss j them good uight, and kneel down by the j bedside and weep. But .it was different with this fellow. He was named Jim, and there was'nt any thing the matter with his mother no con sumption or anything of that kind. She was rather stout than otherwise, and she was not pious; moreover, she was not anx ious on Jim's account; she said if he were to break his neck, it wouldn't be much loss:. she always spanked him to -sleep and she never kissed him good-night; on the contrary, she boxed his ears when she was ready to leave him. ! Once, this bad little boy stole the key of the pantry, and slipped in there and help ed himself to some jam, and filled the ves- j sel up with tar, so that his" mother would never Know t ie uiuereiirc; ;uut a,, at yuce 1 j.1 . Jlflf T . -.11 i. a ternoie leeuug uiuu b cuiuc uvcr hum, ?nd something dido t seem to whisper to V I X T k ' 77 ? 8inful to do th,s?ul fWherf, d. , httl? ho gobble up their kind ' mother's jam" and then he didn t kneel jJovvn 11 alone, and promise never to be ! wicked any more, and rise up with a light i"H,a..u BaUu it. u,s UUUUl III ailU Jfj 1UI 1CI IVIglll,lH,J, (HIU MM blessed by her tears of pride and thankful- ness in her eyes. No; that is the way with with his other bad boys in the books, but it hap : ; pcued otherwise with this Jim, strangely nonular !enough He ate that jam, and said it was 1 .1 j bully, in his sinful, vulgar way; and he put in the tar and said it was bally, also, and fd d observed thafgie old woman it offi aua wncu encSiiartiua out he Ue- moil I: nnnri nni?tlnnni nKtut- i ln ,milse11' Everything about this boy was curious everything turned out differ ently with him from the way it does to the bad Jameses in the books. . Once he climbed 'up in Farmer Acorn's apple tree to steal apples, and the limb didn't break, and he didn't fall and break his arm, and get torn by the farmer's great dog and then languish on a sick bed for weeks and renent and becnm pnnn. Oh. . , , 1 , ? ' V no stole as many apples as he wanted, ana came tIOWU al1 nSn na ne was a" 1 ,1 II ," :reaayIorin(3aoS o,.,ana KnocKea him enaway8 Wltn a rccK wnen nef came to tear him. ? It was very strange: nothing like it . ever happened in those mild little books with mai bled backs and with pictures in them of men with swallow-tailed coats and bell crowned hats, and pantaloons that areshort iii the legs, and women with, the waists of their dresses under their arms and no hoops on. Nothing like it in any of the Sunday school books. Once he stole the teacher's penknife, and "when he was afraid it would be found out and he would be whipped, he slipped it in George Wilson's cap poor Widow Wil son's son, the moral boy, Uhe good little boy of the village, the boy who always obeyed his mother, and never told an un- when the knife dropped from the cap, and roor George hung his head and blushed, as - 7... . I.I ' 11 m conscious u it, , aua tne grieved teach- fr charged the thett upon him, and was Justuln the of bringing the switch down on iis trembling shoulders, a white haired improbable justice of the peace didn't sud- denly aPPear, in their midtii and strike an ; a"uoe ana say "opare tnis nooie Doy, thcr? stand3 the cowering culprit! I was 'rfiooiiinrtlifaliorllrf-ircif. romiMi r : i""" ' " ""' - And then. Jim didn't get whaled, and the venerable justice didn't read the tearful ! school a homily, and take George by the i l ,J ,1 1 1 1 1 tr 1 uttuu, aiiu nay bucu a ooy.ueserveu to ue exaitea and then tell him to come and make his home with him, ' aud sweep put the office, aud make fires and run errands, and chop, wood and study law, and help his wife to do household labors, and have all the balance of the time to play, and get forty cents a month, and be happy. No, it would have happened that way in the 1.1 i. . , & books, but it didn't nappen that wav to Jim. No meddling old clam of a justice drop ped in to make trouble, and so the model boy George got thrashed, and Jim was glad ot it. Because, you know, Jim hated moral boys. Jim said he was down on milk sops.' Such was the , coarse language of this oaa, neglected boy. But tlie strangest thing ?that ever hap pened to Jim wa the time when he went boating on Sunday and,did'nt get drowned, and the other, when he got caught :out in the storm when he was fishing on Sunday, and did'nt get 6truck by lightning, i Why, VOU might look, and look, and look through y o "1 . tJ the Sunday scho'ol books, from now to next Christinas, and you would never come across -anything like this. Oh. nu vou would find that all the bad bovs who" go boatinir on Sum An Siinnav invnrinnlv frt ilrnvvn- ed, and: all the bad boys who get caught on unjr. get ct nrmo w,en bad boys go fishing on. the Sabbath. How this Jim ever escaped is a mystery to me. 1 , - i Tliis Jim bore a ch arm ed life that must have beenxhe way.of.it. Nothing, could the menagerie a phig ot tobacco, iTa"ITTe elephant did'nt knock the top of his head off with his trunk. . He broused around the cupboard after essence of fteppermint, and did'nt niake a mistake and drink aquafortis, He stole his father's cun and went hunt- ing on the Sabbath, and did'nt shoot three or four of his fingers oft". He struck his nine sister on tue tempie witn msnst wuen he was angry, and she did'nt linger in pain through; long summer days and die with sweet words, of forgiveness upon .her lips that redoubled the anguish of his breaking heart. ' No she got over it. He rau off and went to sea at last, and did'nt come back and find himself sad and alone in the quiet churchyard, and the vine-embowered homo of boyhood tumbled down and gone tod iecay- Ah, no he came home as drunk ' a piper and got into the station house i first thing as the And h lie grew up, and married and raised fo,;iir .ml kV.J-.o,! tiia.n jl riii a large family an axe one night, and got wealthy by all manner of cheating. and rascality, and now he is . the infernalest, wickedest, scoun drel in his native village, and is universally respected, and belongs to" the Legislature. . So you see there never was a bad James in the Sunday school books that had such a streak1 of luck as this sinful Jim with the charmed life..- . A TISER STORY. The daughter of a Moonda, or head man of the place, was affianced," in the rude na tive fashion, to one of the young men of the village, and their nuptial were to come off in aj few days. One evening the girl with some of her female-companions went, as. was their daily wont, to the brook al readv mentioned to bathe and letch water tx but a quarter ot an hour, when the start- 1 - A- i pviiiwu ji uii j l; j c v iiciiu oi c al mer VfllAl lt 3 Tffrnr urill rill ninrAmrv . . O I shrieks of the ' women, suddenly broke the ' V V W W V M. S WftSVB 4 . I'lV-l lyl 1 I 1! silence of the nunr, and before the roused villagers could snatch their arms, the girls came Hying back with horror in their fact's, and in a few words announced the dreadful fact that a tiger had taken off one of their party. ' It Was the Moonda's daughter. Her kinsman rushed, but with hopeless hearts to ' the rescue. Foremost among these was lier intended husband, arid close by his side-his sworn brother allied to him by a ceremony, common among his people, of tasting each other's blood, and swearing to stand by each other in: after life, come weal, come woe. - While the rest were fol lowing !witli . skill and caution the bloody traces oi tne monster and nis prey, tnese two dashing on through the dense jungle, In a small open space 0 open space iwnicn i auerwnrd ' . , , , n i visited the tiger was crouched over the dead body of the girl, which it had already begun to devour. The approach" of the hunters roused him, and he stood over the carcass, growling defiance at the two men. In a moment an arrow from the bereaved lover's bow rnerced the tiger's chest.. It struck deep and true, but not so as (in sporting phrase) to stop the dreadful beast, ! who from'a distance of thirty paces, came ; down with his peculiar whirlwind, and i ' . j . i - 1 -i rtM. rushed on his assailant. 1 he young man had just time to draw his "kappee," or battle-ax from his girdle, when the tiger seiz ed him' by the left wrist. The man leaning' well back to the of r I . . . ment his head was crushed with the mon- I cttii-'a 1 wa onrl li 1 foil A&nA iinnn flio: i . V . ii "11 , , .HUM IUI lumcuimu uioiuiu u...v....v.. ;a.,; drove it with all collected strength '-lf 1rninRt n tombstone. Two armies uaiu room ior me swum ui r'. r... mvnvnrH nH r:,ti-h - C Al. I' age and despair into the tiger's, forearm,., v knll.. mit nl-l1v nilintll' llflfll imP'lCf'fl. severing me massive pone, ana leaving me j i wben nnproachiug to manhood, ihow . v j , . , ii- i '. K"uvl,y 5t 4, 1 . " blade buried in the muscles. TI "v, " v vrwi. w.v . ut,g3 nn(i eoiuneartenness, jusi as uit coui- ground, while the tiger, tamed by the loss j negs n(J darkness of the night increases two--of blood, turned round, and began to limp f0( just before the rising of the sun. Who away.! All occurred so rapidly,. 'that the tijj nQW .fever gaw waterfalls caught in nets? surviving comrade had not shot a shaft, fish vvollid not be an emblem of justice.' but. now, maddened, he ran to the retreat- ng Drute and sent arrow aicer arrow ui to the feather into its side and neck until it rolled over, dying, within a few yards of the ill-fated young couple. The tiger sun breathed as the rest of the party came up. They struck off its head, dissevered the J - - f .Ml H 1 muscle by which the forearm still aanereu to the shoulder, and with these spoils, and the mangled bodies of .the poor victims borne on litters, they rerumeu a meiancuo- ly processiou to the village. Ihe above minute details I had from the chief actor himself, a stalwart .young fellow. The event had occurred not more than a montn or five Weeks belore, and the sun-dried strips of flesh still adhered to the ghastly trophy on the pole. I wished to have hrnmrht the bones away, but they, gave some, comfort to the poor old Moonda's heartl They reminded him thathis daugh ter had not died unavenged, and I left them th e r e. On ce a I Veik. Tin not take too much interest in the af fairs of vour neighbors. Six percent will do. m J . I joke? Because he isa-musing. Wny is a man in a reverie ime a guou -m - -., ' 1:1.- 1 Success in .Like. Benjamin Franklin attributed his success as a public man, not to his talents or his powers of speaking ' j for these were but moderate but to his own integrity of character. H;&ce it was, he says, that I had so much weight with my fellow citizens. Iam but a poor speak-" er, never eloquent, subject to much hesita-" tion in my choice of words, hardly correct in language, ami yet I generally carried my point. Character creates confidence in "men of high 'station as well as in humble, life. It was said of ;he 1 emperor Alexander, of Russia, that his personal character was equivalent to a constitutiolu During the., 'wars or tng,.iiint?;..'MpuiatgHtf '"wasTTT e only man among&t the French gentry who kept his castle gates unbarred; and it was - said of him, that his personal character was tvorth more to him than a regiment of WOI horses. That character is power, is true in' a much higher sense than that knowledge is power. Mind without heart, intelli gence without conduct, cleverness without goodness, are powers in. their way, but they may be powers only for mischief. We may be instructed or amused by them, but it is sometimes as difficult to admire the dexter ity of a pickpocket, or the horsemanship of a highwayman. Truthfulness,, integrity and goodness qualities that hang not on any man's I breath form the essence of manly character, or as one of our old writ- ers has it, "that inbred loyalty unto virtue which can serve her without a livery. When Stephen of Colonna felr into the handi ot his assailants, and they asked mm, in derision, 'where is vour fortress?' Here, was his reply, placing'his hand upon his : heart. It is in his misfortune that the char acter of the upright man shines forth with great lustre; and when all else fails, he takes a stand upon his integrity, and his courage. Ax Eventful Caueeu. A Confederate soldier has) just" returned home after an absence of more than four years in the ser vice of his country. He joined the regi ment of Colonel, or "now 'Major General, . Kershaw, in this State; subsequently chang ed his command; went to lrgima, was en gaged in thirty one-battles, .arid one hun dred and twenty-three skirmishes, not inetnding the "rows" on picket: was shot twice; returned to the field; and in the gen eral full, while making- his way home to South Carolin was .captured and paroled. v,nL,.,fu .1itt.Vrla 4-l hhuxA service to 'miard ., , r .i t . v T dent Davis, in which service he was cap tured .a second time. Found with a vio-. lated parole hrhis pocket, he was carried, with his comrades, to HiUon Head, where they were tried for their lives. The Mili tary Court failing to agreed, they were sent to New York, tried a'second time, and Iji e of their number ordered to be shot, which sentence was carried into execution. The remainder were conveyed to a prison in Springfield Illinois, within sight of the .home of Mr. Lincoln, and there remained until the term of. their confinement expired. He has had four wives, all of whom are dead; and by each wife a pair of twins, whom he had not seen until his return, since; the beginning of the war. Such a .man is an embodiment of history civil, political, military and domestic, and e;r- tiilll - UCSCI VL3 ii IllUUai Ul a IllUllUlliCIU. Columbia S. C, Caro'.itunn: A hard story, this is; Barnum. should have' that man. ' Puqvekijs. Don't swop with your rela tions unless you can afford to give them the big end of the trade. Marry young, and if circumstances require it often. If you can't get good clothes and education, too, get the clothes. Say, "How are you?" to every body. Cultivate modesty, but keep a good stock of impudence on hand. Be chaiitalue three penny cent pieces were made 'on purpose. "It costs more to borrow than it does to buy. -Keep both eyes open, but don4t see more than half you notice. II you le next mo- ; the jta afftcti0n, the most love of teasing, i f li Lm m rr!. .1 . - .1 a !! ! f.p (rrPAtestdestructiveriess, the most selfish- ' Wliv- iv- v t . ,n -i 1 a .. ai .11 . 's uneauat scales. Scarlet and vellow are both very good colors for dresses, but bad ones for fevers. It is said that "a fool and his money are soon parted." Men of genius seldom part with that cornmoditj' and for the best of reasons. A man may.be said to "know thoroughly only what he can correctly communicate to others. The editor keeps the world's day-book; the his- 1 tonan keeps the ledger. ' : ' - In the United States there were .50,00.0 deaths by consumption in I860..' This ia one-eight of the whole number of death?. The mortality by consumption is greatest in New England, where it produces one- fourth of the whole number ot deatns; in the middle and Southern States one-sixth; in the Western States one-eighth. Keep your mouth shut when you read, when you write, when you listen, when. you are in pain, when you are running, when you are riding, and by all means when you are angry." There is co person in society but will find and acknowledge improvement in health and enjoyment from even a teinpo- rary attention to this advice.