THE HERALD IS TnE LARGEST 1 ALL HOME PRIST PAPER T II E IIJE 11 A Ti D ..'" - HAS THE i AHUIjH T CIRCULATION OF AST PAPEH PUBLISHED IN SALISBTTBY, MOKES J. K. WH1CHABD, - - Proprietor. , EVOTEU TO THE BEST IKTEBBBTS OP 2TOETS CABOirKTA. . : ? ; - TERMS 5 1.5Q Per Year in Advance. IN ROWA N COUNTY. Vol. V,--No. l5. Salisbury, DST. C, Wednesday, January 15, 18 90. Whole Ioi 23. Price only $150 a year. V GENERAL DIRECTORY. COUNTY GOVERNMENT. Superior Court Cle.k Jno'M Horah. Sheriff Chas C Krider. Register of Deeds H N Woodson, Treasurer J Samuel McCubbins Surveyor B C Arey. Coroner D A Atwcll. Commissioners T J Sumner chairman, Yf.LKluttz.-CF Baker, DrL TV Cole man. " Public School Sup't T C Linn. Sup't of Health Dr J J Summerell. Overseer or roor a. 31 crown. TUWJS. Mayor Chas D Crawford Clerk D li Julian. Treasurer H Foust. Police R W Price, chief ; J F Pace, C W Pool, R M Barringer and Benj Cauble Commissioners North ward J A Ren- Atnmnn T1 Xf .Miller Rrmt.h ward D R Julian, J A Barrett; East ward J B Gor don, T A Couhenour ; west ward R J Holmes, J W Rumple CHURCHES. Baptist Services every Sunday morn ias and nieht. Prayer meeting every Wednesday night. Rev. J. F, Tuttle. pastor. Sunday school every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Thos. L. Swink, Sup't. '-" Catholic Services every Second Sun day at 10$ a m and 7 p m. Rev Francis Meyer, astor. Sunday School every Sunday at 10 am. Episcopal Services every Sunday at 11am and 6:30 p.m. and Wednesday's at 6:30 pm- Rev F J Murdoch, Rector. Sunday School every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Capt Theo Parker, Sup't. ' . -v 3 I, nth Aran !-rvir'PS fiverv SUUUUV 11 a m, and 7 pm. Prayer meeting every Wednesday at 7 p m. Rev Chas B King, " Pastor. . Sunday School every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Prof K G Riser, Sup't. . -- - Methodist Services every Sunday at 11 a ID, ana 0:3U p m. rraycr luccuug every Wednesday at 6:30 p m. Rev T W Guthrie. Pastor. Sunday School every Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. J W Mauney, Sup't. Presbyterian Services every Sunday x at 11 a ra, and 8:30 p m. Prayer meeting every Wedcesday at 8:30 p m. Rev J . Rumple, D D, pastor. Sunday School every Sunday after- noon at 4 o'clock. J Rumple, D D, Sup't Y M C A Devotional Services at Hall everyiSunday morning at 10 o'clock. Business meeting First Thurday night in every month. I II Foust, Prest. LODGES. Fulton Lodge, No 99, A F & A M., ' meets every 1st and 3rd Friday night in each month. E B Neave, WM ; ' Salisbury Lodge, No 24, K of P, meets ; every Tuesday night. A H Boyden. C C , Salisbury Lodge, No 775, K of H, meets I every 1st and 3rd Monday night in, each i -month. uiciaior. 'i Salisbury , Council, No 272, Royal -! 'Arcanum, meets every 2nd and 4th Mon- yjnight in each month -i A Ramsay "mce Hours from 7:30 a m to 5:30 p m. '; II ley Order Hours 9 a m to 5 p m. ! anday Hours 11:30 a m to 12:30 p m. J li Ramsay, p.m " TRADE YOUR -FOR- -o- "We will trade for, 20 tons of good, sound, new Cotton Seed, any of the fol lowing amounts of Fertilizer : 10 Tons of Ammoniated Fertilizer, 11 Tons of Cotton Seed Meal, or 12 Tons of cid Phosphate, rhis is the best basis of trading ever offefed for Seed, and farmers should avail .themselves of the opportunity to trade their seed for Fertilizer worth two r three times as much as the Seed are rth for fertilizing. iA BOYDEN & QUINN, Saliaburv. N. C. i 'x A above applies to smaller lots also. THOS. L"vViLLY'S ffilNE TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT. (Mansion House Bnilding) SALISBURY, . . ...N. C. A full and complete stock of fine Im ported Goods for my Spring Twde, con sisting of French, English and Scotch suitings, of all colors, whicn will be made Hp in the most fashionable styles. I An Unsurpassed Line of Trousering. I All are cordially invited to call and ex amine my stock, and they will see at OTce that I keep the best in the market. The best of workmanship and a Perfect Fit guaranteed. TERSIS Positively Cash. 22tf X - ?Look Ye Here I If you want a clean and easy shave, As clean e.3 Barber ever gave, Just call e n me at my saloon. At morniB ?, night, or busy noon . ' Everythii- ' there you always find, r'h suit tL taste and please the mind; Vv scissor ; harp, my razors keen. ? jly shop i ; lways neat and clean. ; f - 1 k you I I'" ' ve a good shampoo. The art cf ich is known to few , e a gooa snampoo, " The art cf " ich is known to lew; rii rut a 11 U JUUI UOll HlbU gl(HQi ( tour of your face. . Xo suit t: And now t just comet AndU Ky very 1 who patronage intends, and bring your friends, i I will try, . atisfy. ilcALLISTER, Salisbury, N. C. I. " THE LOST' CAUSE. AND THE STORY OF ITS CHIEFTAIN. The Whole Life of an American Illustrated by the ; Autobiogra phy of Jefferson Davis. From Belford's Magazine. I was born June 3, 1808, in Chrst tian county, Ky., in that part of it which, by subsequent division, is now in Todd county. At this place has Bince risen the village of Fair view, and on the exact spot where I was born has been constructed the Baptist church, of the place. -My father, Samuel Davis, was a native of Georgia, and served in the war of the Revolution, first in the moun ted gunmen, arid afterwards as Captain of infantry at the seige of Savannah.- During my infancy my father removed to Wilkinson coun ty, Miss. After passing through the j County Academy I entered Transvaal College, Kentucky, at the age of 16, and wasadvanced as far as the senior class when I was appointed to the United States Military Academy at West Point, which I entered in September, 1824. I graduated in 1828, and then in accordance with the custom of cad ets, entered active service with the rank of Lieutenant, serving as an officer of infantry on the North west frontier until 1833, when a regiment of dragoons having been created, I was transferred to it. Af ter a successful campaign against the Indians I resigned from the army, in 1835, being anxious to fulfill a long existing engagement with a daughter ofCol. Zachary Taylor, whom Fmarried, not "af ter a! romantic elopement," as has so often been stated, but at the house of her aunt and. in the pres ence of many of her relatives, at a place near Louisville, Ky. Then I became a cotton planter in Warren county, Mississippi. It was my misfortune, early in my married life, to lose my wife;"d 'or many years thereafter Iii in great se- ir.ian in the 8 wnttT" I for the first time took part in the political life of the country. Next year I was chosen one of the Pres idential electors at large for the State, and in the succeeding year was eleCrted to Congress, taking my seat in the House of Representa tives in December, 1845. The prop osition to terminate the joint occu pancy of Oregon and reformation of the tariff were the two questions arousing the most public attention at that time, and I took an active part in their discussion, especially in that of the first. During this period hostilities with Mexico commenced, and in the legislation which the contest rendered necessary my military ed ucation enabled me to take a some what prominent part. In June, 1846, a regiment of Mississippi volunteers was organiz ed at Vicksburg, of which I was elected Colonel. On receiving uo tice of the election, I proceeded to overtake the regiment which was already on its way to Mexico, and joined them at New Orleans. Re porting to Gen. Taylor, then com manding at Camargo, my regiment although the last to arrive having baen detained for some time on duty at the mouth of the Rio Grande was selected to move with the advance on the city of Monterey, he want of transportation preven ted (ien. Taylor from taking the whole body of voIuhfeerswiiTTki reported there for duty. The Miss issippi regiment was armed entirely with percussion rifles. A"nd here it may be interesting to state that Gen. Scott, in Washington, en deavored to persuade, me not to take more rifles than enough for four companies, and objected par ticularly to percussion arms, as -not having been sufficiently tested for the use of troops in the field. Knowing- that the Mississippians would have no confidence in the old flint lock muskets, I insisted on their being armed with the kind of rifle then recently made in New Haven, Conn. the Witney rifle. From having been -first used by the Mississippians, these rifles have al waps been known as the Mississippi rifles. In the attack on Montery Gen. Taylor divided his force, sending one part of it by a circuitous road to attack the city from the west, while be decided to lead in person the attack on the east. The Miss ippi regiment advanced to the relief of a force which had attacked Fort Lenaria, but had been repulsed be fore the Mississippians arrived. They carried the redoubt, and1 the fort which was in the rear of it sur rendered. The next day our force on the west side carried successful ly the height on which stood the Bishop's palace, which commanded the city. On the third day the Mississippi ans advanced from the fort which they held, through lanes and gar dens, skirmishing and driving the enemy before them until they reach ed a two story house at the corner of the Grand Plaza. Here they were joined by a regiment of Tex ans, and from the windows of this house they opened fire on the artil lery and such other troops as were in view. Bat, to get a better posi tion for firing on the principal building of the Grand Plaza, it was necessary to cross the street, which was swept by canister and grape, rattling on the pavement like hail; and, as the street was very narrow, it' was determined to construct a flying barricade. Some long tim bers were found, and, with pack saddles and boxes, which served the purpose, a temporary barricade was constructed. Here occurred an incident to which I have since frequently re ferred with pride. Iu breaking open a quartermaster's storehouse to get supplies for this barricade, the men found bundles of the much prised Mexican blankets, and also of very serviceable shoes and pack saddles. The pack saddles were freely taken as good material for the proposed barricade; and one of my men, as his shoes were broken and stones had hnrt his feet, asked my permission to take a pair from one of the boxes. , This, of course, was freely accorded; but not one of the very valuable and much priz ed Mexican blankets was taken. About the time that the flying barricade was - completed, arrange ments were made by the Texans and Mississippians to occupy houses on both sides of the street for the purpose of more .effective fire into the Grand Plaza. It having been deemed necessary to increase our ffcc, the Mississippi sergeant major of NTS "ifrrsVM is&TSsi ppi which had Cll 4 u '.. x, mmmmmfmmfmmm rema.'ned behind. He return ed with the statement that the enemy was behind us, that all our troops had been withdrawn, and that orders had been three times sent to rno to return. Gov. 'Henderson, of Texas, had accom panied the Texan troops, arid on submitting to him the question what we'should do under the mes sage, he realized as was yery plain that it was safer to remain where we were than our supports having been withdrawn to return across streets where we were liable to be fired on by artillery across open grounds where cavalry might be ex pected to attack us. But, he added, he supposed the orders came from the General-in-Chief, and we were bound to obey them. So we made dispositions to retire quietly; but in passing the first square, we found that our movement had been antic ipated, and that a battery of artil lery was posted to command the street. The arrangement made by me for . crossing it was that 1 should go first; if only one gun was fired at me then another man should follow; and so on another and another, until a volley should be fired, and then all of them should rush rapidly across before the guns could be reloaded. In this manner the men got across with little loss. We then made our way to the suburb, where, we found that an officer of infantry, with two com panies and a section of artillery had been posted to wait for us, and in case of emergency, to aid in our retreat. Early next morning Gen. Ampu dia, commanding the Mexican force sent in a flag and asked for a con ference with a view to capitulation. Gen. Taylor acceded to the propo sition, and appointed Gen. Worth, Gov. Henderson and myself com missioners to arrange the terms of capitulation. 'Gen. Taylor receiv ed the city of Montery, with sup plies, much needed by his army, and shelter for the wounded. The enemy gained only the privilege of retiring peacefully, a privilege which if it had not been accorded, they had the power to take by any one of the - three roads open to them- The point beyond which they should withdraw was fixed by the terms of capitulation, and the time during which hostilities were to be suspended was determined on by the length of time necessary to refer to and receive answers from the two governments. - A few days before the expiration of the time so fixed the Government of the United States disapproved of the capitulation and ordered the truce to be immediately terminated. By this decision we lost whatever cred it had been given us for generous terms in the capitulation, and hos tilities were to be resumed without any preparation having been made to enable Gen. Taylor,, even 'with the small force he had, to advance further into the enemy's country Gen. Taylor's letter to Mr. Macy, Secretary of War, was a very good response to an unjust criticism; and in the Washington Union of that time I also published a very full explanation pf the acts of the. commissioners and of the militasy questions involved in the matter of capitulation in preference to con tinuing the seige and attack. Gen. Taylor, assuming that it was intended for him i to advance into the interior of Mexico, then commenced to prepare himself for such a campaign. To this end he made requisitions for the needful transportation, as well as munitions, including, among other supplies, large India rubber bags in which to carry provisions for days, and which, being emptied before we reached the desert of sixty miles, would, by being , filled with watcr,.enable his troops and horses to cross those desert plains. These and other details had been entered into under the expectation that the censure of the treaty; of Monterey meant a inarch into the interior of Mexico. Another thing required was a new battery of field pieces to take the place of the old Ringgold battery, which by long service had become houeycombed. When all these arrangements were nearly completed it was decided to send Gen Scott, with discretionary pow ers, which enabled him to take nearly all the tried troops Gen. Tay lor had, including even the engi neer then employed in the construc tion of a fort, and the battery pf new guns to replace old ones, which were deemed no longer safe, but which under the intrepid Capt, Bragg afterward did good service l",n5feT?"TayTor7 with the main body of his army, went to Victoria, and there made arrangements to send them all to report to Gen. Scott at Vera Cruz, except the small force he considered himself - entitled to as an escort on his route back to Monterey through an unfriendly people. The escort consisted of a battery of light artillery, a squad ron of dragoons, and the regiment of - Mississippi Riflemen. With these he proceeded through Monte rey and Saltilly to Agua Nueva, where he was joined by the division of Gen. Wool,, who had made the campaign of Chihuahua. i. Gen. Santa Anna, commanding the arrriy of Mexico, was informed of the action which had been taken in stripping Gen. Taylor of his forces, and was also informed that he had at Saltillo only a handful of volunteers, which could be easily dispersed on, the approach of an army. Thus assured, and with the prospect of recovering all the conn try down to the Rio Grande, Santa Anna advanced upon Agua Nueva. Gen. Taylor retired to the Angos tura Pass, in front of the hacienda of Buena Vista, and there made his dispositions to receive the antic ipated attack. As sage as he was brave, his dispositions were made as well as the small force at his command made it possible. After two days of bloody fighting, Gen. Santa Anna retired before this lit-, tie force, the greater part of which had never before been under fire. The encounter with the enemy was very bloody. . The Mississippi ans lost many of their best men, for each of whom, however, they slew several of the enemy. For, trained- marksmen, they never touched the trigger without having an object through both sights; and they seldom fired without drawing blood. The infantry against whom the advance was made was driven back, but the cavalry then moved to get in the rear of the Missippi aus, and this involved the necessi ty of falling back to where the plain was narrow, so as to have a ravine on each flank. n In this position the second dem onstration of the enemy's cavalry was received. They were repulsed, and it was quiet in front of the Mississippians until an aide came and called from the other side of the ravine, which he could not pass, that General Taylor wanted support to come as soon as possible for the protection of the artillery on the' flank. The order was promptly obeyed at double quick, : although the distance must have been nearly a mile. They found the enemy moving in three lines upon the bat teries of Capt. Braxton Bragg and the section of artillery commanded i by Geo. H. Thomas. The Mississ- : ippians came up in line, their right flank opposite the first line of the advanced fire. All being sharp shooters, those toward the left of the line obliqued to the right, and at close quarters and. again3t three long lines very few shots conld have missed. At ., the same time the guns of Bragg and Thomas were firing grape. The effect was de cisive; the infantry and artillery of thei enemy immediately retired. At the close of the day Santa An na bugled the retreat, as was sup posed, to go into quarters; but when the next'sun rose there. was no ene my in our front. The news of this victory was re ceived in the United States with a degree of enthusiasm proportionate to the small means with which it was achieved : and generosity was excited by the feeling that Gen. Taylor had been treated with injus tice. Thenceforward the march of "Old Rough and Ready" to the White House wa3 a foregone con clusion. It this battle while advancing to meet the enemy, then pressing some of out discomforted 'volunteers on the left of the field of battle, I re ceived a painful wound, which was rendered more severe in conse quence of remaining in the saddle all day, although wounded early in the morning. A ball had passed through the foot leaving in the wound broken bones and foreign matter, which the delay had made it impossible then to extract. In consequence I had to return home on crutches. In the meantime a Senator of Mississippi had died, and the Gov had appointed me his successor. Be fore my return home President Polk had also appointed me Briga dier General of Volunteers, an ap pointment which I declined on the ground that volunteers are militia, amLtbat the Constitution reserved j ,.. t"fl tt and apDointmant of 1 ji militia officers. This was in 1847. In January, 1848, the Mississippi Legislature unanimously elected me United States Senator for the rest of the unexpired term ; and iu 1850 I was elected for the full term as my own successor. Iu the Uni ted States Senate I was chairman of the Military Committee ; and I also took an active part in the de bates on the Compromise measures of 1850, frequently opposing Sena tor Douglas, of Illinois, in his theo ry of squatter sovereignty, and ad vocating, a3 a means of pacification, the exteusion of the Missouri Com promise line to the Pacific. When the question was presented to Mis sissippi as to . whether the State should acquiesce in the Compromise legislation of 1850, or whether it should join the other Southern States in a Convention to dec,ide as to the best course to pursue in view of the threatened usurpations of the Federal Government, I advocated a Convention of the Southern States, wish a view of such co-operation as might effectually check the exercise of constructive powers, the parent of despotism, by the Federal Gov ernment. i The canvass for Governor com menced that year and the candidate of the Democratic party was by his opponents represented to hold ex treme opinions in other words, to be a disunionist. For, although he -wa-a.man of high character and had served the country well in peace and war, this supposition was so. artfully cultivated that, though the Democratic party was estimated to be about 8,000 in a majority, when the election occurred in September the Democratic candidates for a Convention were defeated by a ma jority of over 7,000, and the Demo cratic candidate for Governor with drew. The election for Governor was to occur in November; and I was call ed on to take the place vacated by the candidate who had withdrawn from the race. It was a forlorn hope, specially as my health had been impaired by labors in the sum mer canvass, and there was not time before the approaching election to make such a canvass as would be needed to reform the ranks of the Democracy. However, as a duty to the party, I accepted the position, and made'as active a campaign as time permitted, wih the result that the majority against the party was reduced to less thaii 1,000. From this time I remained engag ed" in quiet farm labors until the nomination of Franklin Pierce. when. I went out to advocate his election, having formed a very high opinion of him a3 a statesman and a patriot from observations of him in 1837 and 1858, when he was in the United States Senate. On his election as Presidens I be came a member of his Cabinet, fill ing the office of Secretary of War during his entire term. During these four years I propos ed the introduction of camels for service on the Western plains, a suggestion which was -adopted. I also introduced an improved sys tem of infantry tactics, effected the subtitution of iron for wood in guu carriages, secured rifled muskets aud rifles and the nse of Minie balls, and advocated the increase of the defences of the seacoast by heavy guns and the use of large-grain powder. . While irf the Senate I had advo cated, as a military necessary and as means of preserving the Pacific territory to the Union, the con struction of a military railway across the continent ; and, as Sec retary of War, I was put in charge of the surveys of the various routes proposed. Perhaps -for a similar reason my provious action in the Senate I was also put in charge of the'extension of the United States Capitol. The Administiation of Air. Pierce presents the single instance of an Executive whose Cabinet witnessed no change of persons daring his whole term. At its closer having been re-elected to the United States Senate, I re-entered that body. During the discussion of the Compromise measures of 1850, the refusal to extend the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific was early put on the ground that there was no constitutional authority to legislate-slavery into or out of any Territory, which was in fact and seeming intent a repudiation of the Missouri Compromise ; and it was so treated in the Kansas-Nebraska bill. Subsequently Mr. Douglas, the advocate of what was called squat ter sovereignty,- insisted upon the. rights of the first immigrants into the Territory to decide upon the question whether migrating citizens might take their slaves with them ; which'meant, if it meant anything, that Congress could authorize a few settlers to do what it was admitted that Congress itself could not do. But out of this bill arose a dissen sion which finally divided the Dem ocratic party, and caused its. defeat in the Presidential election of 1860. And from this empty, baseless theory grew the Iliad of our direst woes. When Congress met in the fall of 1860 I was appointed one of a Sen ate committee of thirteen to exam ine and report on some practicable adjustment of the controversies which then threatened the dissolu tion of the' Union. I at first asked to be excused from the committee, but at the solicitation of friends agreed to serve, avowing my willing ness to make any sacrifice to avert the impending struggle. The com mittee consisted of men belonging to the three political diyisions of the Senate, the State right1 men of the South, the Radicals of the North, and the Northern Demo crats, with one member who did not acknowledge himself as belong ing to any one of the three divis ionsMr. Crittendon, an old time Whig, and the original mover of the compromise resolutions. , When the committee met it was agreed that uuless some measure which would receive the-: support of .the majority of each of the three divis could be devised, it was useless to make any report ; and after many days of anxious discussion and a multiplicity of propositutions, though the Southern States rights men and the Northern Democrats and the Whig Mr. Crittendon could frequently agree,y the could not get the majority of the North ern Radicals to unite with them in any substantative proposition. Finally, the committee reported their failure to find anything on which the three divisions could unite. Mr DoOglas, who was a mem ber of the committee, defiantly challenged the Northern Radicals to tell what they wanted. As they had refused everything he claimed that they ought to be willing to tell what they proposed to do. When officially informed that Mississippi had passed the ordi nance of secession I took formal leave of the Senate announciug for the last time opinions I had so qf ten expressed as to State sovereign ty and, as a consequance of it, the right of a State to withdraw its del- egated powers. Before I reached home I had been appointed by the Convention of Mississippi Commander-in-Chief of its army, with the rank of Major-Generalahd I at once proceeded with the task of or ganization. I went to my home in Warren county in order to prepare for what I believed was to be a long and severe struggle. Soon messenger came from the Provision al Confederate Congress at Mont gomery, bringing the 'unwelcome notice that I had boen -elected Pro visional President of the Confed erate States. But, reluctant ""as I was to accept the honor; and care fully as I had triecTto' prevent- the possibility of it, in the circumstan ces of the country Ij could not re fuse it; and I was inaugurated at Montgomery, February 18, 1861, with Alexander H. Stephenson, qf Georgia, as Vice President. From this time to the fall of the Confederate Government my life was part of the history of the Con federacy and of the war between the States. It is impossible, there fore, to follow it in detail. In the selection of a; Cabinet T was relieved from the d ifficulty which surrounds that duty by the President of the United States ; for there was no "sections"! .and no "party distinctions." - All aspira tions, ambitions, and interests had been merged in a great J desire for Confederate independence. In my inaugural address I aasert ed that necessity, not choice, had led to the secession of the Southern States ; that, as an agricultural .peo ple, their policy was peace anjj Free commerce with all the worldiThat the constituent parts, not the sys tem of government, had been changed. . . The removal of the troops from Fortres Monroe to Fort Sumter, the guns of which threatened the harbor df Charlestou, and the at tempt to throw reinforcements into that fort thus doubly breaking a pledge that matters should be kept in statu quo constituted the occa sion as well as the justification of , the opening of fire upon Fort Sum ter. Speedily following this event came the call for a large armylfby Mr. Lincoln, and the Recession "of other Southern States as the conse-; qiience of this unmistakable pur pose of coercion. Virginia, which had led in the effort by a peace convention to avert national ruin, when she syv the Constitution disregarded and the purpose to compel free States by military force to submit to arbitrary power, passed an ordinance of se cession and joined the Confederate States. Shortly after this, as authorized by the Provincial Congress, I 're moved the Confederate capital from Montgomery to Richmond. Among the many indications of good will shown when on my way to and after my arrival at Rich mond was the purchase cf a very fine residence in Richmond by lead ing citizens. It was offered a3 a present; but following a rule that had governed my action in, all such cases, I declined to accept it. I continued to live in Richmond until the Confederate forces were com pelled to withdraw from the de fences of the capital. t That event was not quite unex pected, but it occurred before the conditions were fulfilled under which Gen. Lee contemplated re treat. After Gen. Lee was forced to" surrender, and Gen. Johnson consented to do so, I started, with a very few of the' men who volun teered to accompany me, -for the trans Mississippi; but, hearing on the road that marauders were pur suing my family, whom I had not seen since they left Richmond, hut knew to be en route to the Florida iCoastI changed my direction, and, after a long and hard ride, found them encamped and threatened by a robbing party. To give them the; needed protection 1 travelled with them for several days, until in the neighborhood of Irvinville, Ga.', when I supposed I court! safely leave them. But hearing at night fall that a party of marauders were to attack the camp that night, and supposing them to be pillaging de serters from both armies, and that the Confederates would listen to me. I awaited their coming, lay down in my traveling clothes and fell asleep. Late in the night my colored coachman aroused me with the intelligence that the camp was attacked, and I stepped out of t tent where ray wife and chil were sleeping, and saw at on the assailants were troops dep around the encampment. formed my wife, who urge escape. After some hesitation I consented, and a servant woman ,8tarted with me, carrying a bucket as if going to the spring for water. ,One of the surrounding troops or dered me to halt, land demanded my surrender. I advanced toward the trooper, throwing off a shaw! which my wife had put 'over my shoulders. The trooper aimed his carbine, when my wife, who wit nessed the act, rushed forward and threw her arms around me, thus defeating my intention, which was, if the trooper missed his aim, to try to nnhorse him and escape with his horse. Then, with every species of petty pillage and offensive exhi bition, I was taken ;from point to point until incarcerated in Fortress Monroe. There I was imprisoned for two years before being allowed the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus ' ; At length, when the writ was -to be issued, the condition was imposed by the Federal Executive that there should be bondsmen influential in the "Republican" party of the North, Mr. Greely being specially named. 'Entirely as a matter of justice and legal right, not from motives of personal regard, Mr. Greely, Mr. Gerrit Smith, and other eminent Northern citizens went on my bond. In May, 1867, after being re leased from Fortress Monroe, I went to Canada, where my older uuuuicii HGitj rr i L 11 1 li u 1 1 inuu- mother; my wife, as soon as permit ted, having shared my imprison ment, brought our infant daughter with her. From time to time I obeyed summonses, to go before the Federal Court of Richmond, until finally the case was heard by Chief J ustice Chase and District . Judge Underwood, who were divided in opinion, which sent the case to the o - r i . , i ' tt i oupreme ourt oi ine united States, and the proceedings were quashed, leaving me without the opportunity to vindicate' myself before the highest Federal court. After about a year's residence in Canada I- went to EngFand, with mv familv. under an arramrempnt thatI was to have sixty daysnotice whenever the United States court required my presence. After being abroad in England and on the Con tinent about a year, I received an offer of appointment as President of a life insurance company. Thereupon I returned to this country, and went to. Memphis and took charge of the company. Sub sequently I came to the Gulf coast of Mississippi, a a quiet, place where I could prepare my work on "The Rise, and Fall of the Confed erate Government." A friend from her. infancy, Mrs. Dorsey, shared her home with me, and sub sequently sold to me her property at Beau voir, an estate of five or six hundred acres, about midway oeiween Mooile and .New Or pan q Before I had fully paid for this estate Mrs. Dorsey died, leaving me her sole legatee. From thh spring of .1876 to the autumn of 1879 1 devoted myself to the pro duction of the historical? work just mentioned. It was an octavo book, in two volumes of about 700 pages each. I have alan , w vu LiUIC tU time contributed essays to the North Americam Revieio and Bedford's Magazine, and have just completed the manuscript of "A Short His tory of the Confederate States of Americi,"- which is expected , to appear early in 1890. Since settling at Beauvoir, I have persistently refused to take any ac tive part in politics, not merely be cause of my disfranchisement but from a belief that such labors conld -not be made to conduce to the pub lie good owing to the sectioual hos tilities manifested againstme since the war. For the same reason I have also refused to be a candidate for public office, although it is well known that I could at any time have been re-elected a Senator of the United States. I have been twice married, the second time being in 1844, to a daughter of William B. Howell of Natchez, a son ( of Governor Howell of New Jersey. She has borne me six children, four sons and two daughters. My sons . are all dead; my daughters survive. The elder is Mrs. Hayes, of Colora do Springs, Col., and the mother of four- children. My youngest daughter lives ivilh us at Beauvoir, Miss. Born in the last vear of Mi war she became familiarlvnown as "the daughter of thf V V cv. Beautq' . f. n . "