Southern confederacy. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1861-1865, June 11, 1863, Image 1

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j p pi BY ADAIR & SMITA Atlanta, Georgia, ^wsdar Rveuing, Jijne 11. 1SG-.L VOLUME III -ISro. 103 GE< >. W ADAIR J. DENLY SMITH, EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. B 0. PMITU, U. Imf nl LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE STATE The Southern Confederacy Office Urn, WUITEIJALL SK, neatly opposite th* B JL R. 1,7,1 ' at the eutrmnee efConcert Ball BadUuy, o» the PfPIERT FLOOR'S* Ueorgta Salt Huafutirlag Company. DIVIDEND Ho. 4. Tho President sad Directors of the Georgia Salt Manufacturing Company have'declared a dividend of eighty-five (86) pounds per share, at 10 cents per pound. Sacks, if retained, le be charged at $2 The dislri tint ion te take place from date. Jane Ssd, 1863. H. H. TUCKER. President. A F. PLUMB, Secretary and Treasurer, Augusta. B. PHILLIPS, Gen’l Collecting and Distributing Agent, juueO-lOt Atlanta. Types I Types I Any perMn having any Nonpareil Type, ih . good condition —say from 100 to 330 pounds— can find sale fur the same at this office— Scotch face preferred. We -would also pur chase a email quantity of common head let ter—Nonpareil Bold Fdee. jane7-tf Fine Domestic Liquors. - ' 6 bbls. Extra Choice Pinch Brandy 6 bbls. Extra CkMce Applo Brandy 20 bbls. Extra Choice Corn Whiskey. On consignment and for sale by ANDERSON, ADAIR & CO., jiine7-6t Comtnksion Merchants. BUT One hundred btiaa Cotton Tarns, chcioi) numbers; Osaabargs and Osaaburg sacks. .For sate by PEASE ft DAVIS, Commission Merchants, Peachtree sL juneO fit Situation Wanted. ' ; | A young gentleman, (Georgian), wh. is «*• empt from oonsoriplion, has had some expo- ritnee in the. mercantile business, can give good reference, desires a situation. Immediate oommunioation stating full par tleulare will receive prompt alteotion, from j OMEGA, jnnajftt* Bex ,3d, Knoxville, Tenn. a Bloeltade, Atlanta, June 9, 1863. We now oiler for sale the following blockade goade in first hands t • ' [ Surgeon Needles. 2,000yards Adhesive Hosier. 600 pair Lsdics' and Muses’ English Gait* ers. Muslin, Lawns, and Prints. Toilet Soap, Hosiery, tie. Come one, come all and bny. pease st davis; Commission Merchants, i Junc9-4t IVach.Trce Slrettl. A tlonm Wanted. ' j A room, without board, furnished for a chamber, is desired by a gentleman; location to be on the North side of the Railroad—M»-_ rictla street preferred. An unfurnished room would be taken, if a furnished one oannoi be conveniently obtained. Apply at this office, junelO tf Notice to Advertisers,' Pcrcoos st a distance will be .able to ascertain tbe proper amount ofjn.iiejf to send with tbeir advertise ment, by coanting 10 oents for every line, (of 8 words) always raaklac silo wanes for apses takes br displpy where matter .is lotrnded for the regular edfertUlpg columns; and counting 25 cools pe- line (sf 8 wards) if the matter in intended to sppesr in onr local reading cotnmq. The rates are the same for each insertion.. • Send tue money with advertisements, and they will be attended to. tf ' SOUTHERN CONFEDERACY ATLANTA. GEORGIA: THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 11, 186J To Advertisers. Advertisers will oblige ■* by bringing In tbeir cards CMh day by M o'clock, ns tar aa possible. Ttcy will then always appear in our evening edition. A greet many advertisements are brr nght irGate In the araning or at nigiit, and It freqoently ao happens that wo an utterly usable to get them Into onr morn, iogoditisn. Frionds, bring us your cards in tho morn ing, and kattoe 1* o’clock, m far m* yo* eon. It will oblige as end Injurs thier early insertion. -V" innef-it " ,'** * Attention PrnrU-Treo Dragoons. You are heieby commanded to assemble On horse btek at ’Squire Smith's Office, at 4 •’clack. f. B., oa Friday, 12tk iaat. d. d. hall; ' td Captaiu. Attention Vidcttaa i . . You are hereby ordered to appear at Tallulah Engine House, No. 3, oa Friday evening at 4 o’clock, taoanled tor drill. By order of the Captain’. " 8i . IV. P. BERRY, O. S. Attention Hook dfc Ladder Guards. Yon are hereby ordered to appear at the Truck iicaae this (Friday evening, at fire o’clock, lor drill. It ; W. G. KNOX, O. S. A few tales Factory Yarns, 2000 lbg. Copperas. _ - On c.'i -igntteni au.l or s.tlo by ROBERT L. CRAWLEY, june 1121. Franklin Building. Attention Raid Heptller*. You ant hereby ordered to meet at tho En gine Hotue of Tallulah Fire Co..No. 3, at 3 ' o’clock Friday eveningUtk Inn! , ■aunted far drill. By order of the Captain. L. 8. MEAD, O. H june 11-lt. Aitcutt ta Fira Co. No. 4. - Attend the regular monthly meeting of your Company thie (Friday) evening, at 8 o’clock W. H. TULLER, juna 12 It- ' jg *; ‘ *. Secretary. atttatliiaibjlllcr Guards, Yon are ordered to be at the City 11*11 at 41 •’dock, P. M..ou Friday the 13th instuf, tor drill. Every mm is expected to be present. By order of Captain John Collier.. B : v; W; ORAV1N. It ‘ ---■ Orderly Sergeant- ► (Ouaaintcstsd J JF *r Votara or Newton. Aa thetime is near at hand when we mast select from amongst our follow citixrna tbotewho arc to reyreseat us in the next Legislature of Georgia, it ta highly important that we at odea choose for this position ot trust men of ability, settled and established moral worth, and by all miens select those up in whom the people ot the connty can and will unite, so as to av.nd anything like a scramble or heated eonlr si lor the position — Then, citixene of Newton, what say you to Captain J. A. Stewart and Major John Jones I Known is ti.cyerc to t*._rv voter of onr connty, it is needless to 6peak of inrir moral won!,, cj pabi ittes «nd tried patriotism—ihwt are virtues for wht< h both ihi>c guntlcnidn have cv*r been u.atii.gtiisc.i. As to ihtnr devotion to Georgia and the Confederate States, the scars wlfich bmh carry upon their persona is the best evidence. -Mitch of the legislation of the time must be dirt, ted to Hrengih'.niog our gallant army in the field an<i sustaining their i tmtltcs at home. These men coming, as they will, Iresh Irotn the army, know its wants, and in voting it supplies will not be afraid that the last dollar will be reached too soon. Then, vote’s of Newton, bring them prominently before the people and it is hardly probable they will meet with any opposition. • NEWTON. Greet Expectations, toy Dickens, S. II. Goetztl, Mobile, Publisher. Didkene is aa entber whose name, by association, has become “a household w-rtT* in the department of literature which he has illustrated end adorned. Jn thr domain of proea Action be had, apparently, ex hausted all the sources of interest, if the appearan te ef this work did net show an. ehnoet perennial fresh ness of ieventioa anl nearly inexhaustible resources of portraiture. "Great Expectations” ta both novel ta incidentand diversified In character,! The chief aerit of the work is its truthfolMaa aa to that class of aoeie-’ ty for which theaetbor is chiefly distinguished, for the ildelUg of bis portrait*—namely, tha class •f lit rather Below the middle order. There he it without e rival tor heth tie truth and eomprebeoiiveaess at ThTlaadlDg novelists of' three fehentttoea back— fielding, Smolct and Richadnbn, occupied but a narrow part of the field that Dickens has elected lb fill with multiCsriou. potrsi's Fielding's plctarca are ataiitly admirable transcripts of the manners of low life,' but his dramatis personal constitute -Lot a limited section of this class or hnmanity. Rich mb con fin d his pencilling* to tho middls order, ex- elntively, unrivalled as he is ia truth, pathos and mlaateness of delineation, while Smoll t, out of bis peculiar sphere of nee-fating life, waifecble.and nbin- terestlag. • ' r The novelisti which have sacrceded, omitting this historical dans, and those wfitch drat with the pas sions rather tbaafbe vumstrs of rociety—pre ent pic tures of artificial lit*—Hie loirds and tadfcs, or the gen try and squirearchy of Earlish society. The field fo>- tniitg the Interval between Middle and Low li e, which Dickens has*e brilliantly appropriated, wax free lor fans to eater’ witt few eigne of- pre-occapatien. . He bos, ia bis day and ganeratioa, possessed bioueli of it abbo t exetmiively. He Has completed tftat generil (.ictnre of English rosnoers.which farmer novelists had tautled as anwrwthy bPatienl’on, forming that imp f- tflq link between the middle and fowiw strata o[ socie ty—between the most degraded els’jsYnd that It hid, i* abave it, but not on the aanto social level with the middle-order.^ - .-J- -h k ”2:^ i There Is something so genial and srmpathelic. ip Dleksas’-delmeaticm of those who - oecapy an inferior poaition,bnt net lbs lowest step in the social, sy-.le- theru h so desk a mtral appreciation of the Innate worth that Is often hidden In this lower section of sp. cletj—to mauly a courage in disentangling it from tlie mam af vice and corrupting influ'ences by which it js surrourded and obsriued, and bringing it to view in itu native lustre, that is sufficient to emfer immortality on an a-thor. lit wlirn tfifs la fiet chiy doiie bravely and truth (ally, and with every possible variety of por traiture, the laurels acquired-in inch a parsnit muU dVer wear freshness « f vsrdo-e. What a great amount of private bpnreaaidnhnd pub lic wroeg hag not Dickews exposed to the general gase. Wliat additional eomfort has he not obtained for thole who lied no voice to plead for them and mats their wanlsknotrnf Bow dnelyhishenot brought bat tie Intent virtnes that lie burled under vices engendered by the injustice of society!-' One of Tils blacksmiths, like Joe., or Abigails like Biddy, in "Orest- Expects tii n»,” .bins out In resplendent moral .beauty, throw ing into shade the more ostentatious characteristics of those vitaries af fashion, rank and wgsttb . that per vade and deform the present literature of prose Ac tion. • - . r • ; , . .1 , Dickens shows, in his novels,-a larger •ehaie'-'of to irnfit t power than utMtructive ability. Some portions of the story ore scarcely within'the-range of rrolja- bfiiiy, while in the evolution of the plot there is less skill and elearness'thanwe would have expeebd from an author of biekens’ experience; the transitions front scene to seme are abrupt, and the author winds ap as if he bad become fatigued with his task. The s«r. pease or the reader is ingeniously prolonged-, the ac tion being enveloped m profound mystery until We rea h far into tho narrative, although It has I he a.poet of being, In aome res|iects, incongruous Tha more striking of the' IncongrdRirs Tire to ibe found in the character and conduct of Miss Davit ham- Thatshe should have no other reparation to offer Fjp, tha hero of the tale, offer cruelly sporting with his af fections, but words of sorrow and regret, while she distributes lisr immense wealth among rslsttyea for whom she doe* hot care; seems neither in conformity with-thedtetatseof pocWcnljnotice nor-the proprie ties even of fiction, if-we grant to, the author the license of his very eccentric portrait of Mias Haviaham, and concede it to be witlin the Unfits of ,lhe reasona- tty pr citable 'that » female who had- been erossed j in lovg ahonld sealuJe haracif from all social con- ersp— abjure all domestic ties, live in exclusion of sun light, surrounded by tbe'emblensof deaitraodfbe-memori als of lost affection, and conceive the design, in grati fication of a-morbid revenge,- ter trabran orphan-youth to love a beautiful woman, whom she also trains to charmkrs affections, for the pleasure of seeing-those affections crushed 1 She makes Eo-expiation.whcn she utters a wail of grief for the wrong she has done. The character is a matt unnatural creation. .. ■ Wo have expresrad. the opinion tlutt some of tha jin. cidcats arc scarcely within the bounds of probability. It la flagrantly improbxblo thatOrlick, who Is represent ed as socially, isolated and. imbrated in ignorance* should be able to disoover nearly all tho secrets ot Pip’s movements after blaarrlvxl In London, to trace him to Me lodgings In the Temple, and manage to *m ploy devices that imply .contrivance and. intelligence: nor to It lass improbable that Pip ahonld on the Invita tion of the writer of au anonymous note consent to an interview, one desolate moor, on a dark night, to the lifts t peril of lift; without' consulting his friend Hubert whom he had mad* the depositary of all hia. secrets. It i* also-extreme’y unsatisfactory that no explanation-to given of the mode by which Compey diseovei • and holds, the eluq to the entire concatena tion of circumstances by which the convict to appra. bended and'delivered into the hands of justice, as it is .incomprehensible hir what proceu Orhik to able to pep. etnttathe mystery of Pip’S later life’ WTth'alTthe sur- rounding clreumitances. i' v'k ^ _ J. hook is the.tmt'.. and diversity of the delineation -of character. There are no females among the ifn>*alis pcrtnkj triiiLonly jonedr two ex captions, but what arc unnaiprmt: or unfeminine. Miss Haviaham, as wc have seen, to something spectral, weird-like, something between heaven and earth. Es' tella ia hanfanTsellsh WithTno* touch of nature in her oompaattiob, except ‘at the ctase, when she vanishes from the scene with apparent relenting for her nnisel- ing dfioanct-utokin g htr vxtt.tnx ffutot foeob&Eqmatlal Biddy to a troaiy loyeahle perseoage-one of those soft natures who make them reive*; keen, and felt whatever be their sphere of KIP, for their sensibility, sweetness and fidelity . Tbs hero, Pip, is depicted with a certain infirmity, a fate* (tide, that renders him oblivion of .Id friend ships end early loves, in pursuit ox artificial glare and sactal dN^uction.bcd'wUh gcn$«|^atpqts. His career affords a good moral lesson. He atones far bis instability by hi. disappointments, but,we thick tta de tect of the plot that the here’s "great expectations'* should end in poverty, when by n little een'riyauce he could have been made'to Inherit in* property of the courier. Hie disappointment was not neoesenry to the meril effect, he having been sufficiently punished for hie errant* conduct in the-aaecarriage of Ms hopesIn bis tare affairs. s The character of Js**ars Inwron** best drawn in the work. It to tfi* portrait of a shrewd, Mlenlatipg* veUeext Uwyer, deep in all the mysteries and versed in all the arts of an old practitioner, profound in hto knowledge of human nsture, and as sagaeions in hto Chalet of means to tads as the perfection or lawyer- craft can he imagined. This character to sustained t krooghoat with marked abHily. Oca of the soett . winning personages .of ll;« book to Joe, the Blacksmith. Although extremely ignarant, cvenfbr cue in bis sphere of.lift,■ he is the incarnation at honesty, truth, feeling and ncseUtohneas, and wins on the affection of the reader to the end. A kexntiful example -of filial affection la presented te rot Wemmi ' Cg towards his seed father.— An instance of non entire devotion of child to parent ii would be impossible to find in fictitious narrative. * There are a few dnmlhgsted mowed rots K thw work. Or lick cannot be outmatched in the records of brutal crime, real-or ffctltioas; nor can Compey in the refine ment? and aubtilty of consummate villainy. But Dickens has contrived to throw around one. of the most nnprom*sing of his character* an interest that becomesalmost engreasin*. The coniief when'be first appean on the scene to seemingly a coarse brotc^ igns of human seuribiUty, ;b of crime and Lrutaijty - — ——— . — re, certainly to* claim on our sympithy anJ admiration for his g.ncrosiiy and Dickens to extract and misery that spnr ihc iiTine part of man which b often cnyeloped and nearly nmetbered in Tice and wretchcdnc-e, ard yet attests aificity of msc to the ti.vine e»€ucc.' «>i4of tht7^* creAU^n-; which he deli^hU to threw rJT fr.m hisczab<r»Bt iraa^'.nation appears in the char acter of Tr&bt’j bny, zviiu rhing elfish and amu.-iDgiy trf icfvjteC in hi- ccn:p«*rait,c-.n, who‘ ; iiappeued to te CTery where where h* fc.t i no #,nd who was no: of "a maL'ga&n: nature, but tbat'i^wis in his. constitution to wtait variety <md excitement at any body's expense.’’ Dickens’pecnliar 1 tics cf Bing'uiarly gToteifjae Lumor re-appear frequently in the pa^ei Expecta* «on-S r *s in nil bit noreU. Thli manner of aetata* «tav cura.taneesof n familiar klsd that weted encumber the narrative or an ordinary novelist, and that render* him the Teniers of prose fiction, to'remarkably exemplified in the handkerchief of the lawyer Joggers, with whom it was ap implement of obsolete neeeraUy as was bis awaef scented soap. In whose hands bnt those of Dick ens, would not the handkerchief have proved an awk ward thing to RffiRta , Book Notice. Faxtixx—Fart 1 of Be* Muerailet—ibo last work of Victor Hugo. pp. 204. West ft Johnson, Richmond, Va For sale by Jaa McPherson ft Co. Price $2 60. A story well told ; but wc arc not prepared to cay whether the literature of the South will be benefttted by its introduction or not. We hope the social constitution of the South, the moral inflaenooff that are rapidly being de veloped,' ore too sound, too healthy to demand such purgatives. - • ' Au ultra Fourierito—Hugo has thrown the gauntlet at the feet of the tbeoristB who main- ta n that men arc not all capacitated for thr came social.position- that some',must of ne cessity be “drawers of wood and drawers of water,” while others aafume the higher char acters in the great' dtams of life. For. his oharaolers he has gone-ts the galleys, and to thorn cess-pools of debauchery whiob abound throughout the cities of France. He has taken woman from hep fallen and dishonored condi tion, and attempted to elothe her in the spotless' robes of virtue. A 'poor wretch who had served nineteen years in. the galfoyB he brings out, and by n wonderful combination .of oir- cmnstauces he is, to alt intents and purposes,' reformed, and under an assumed name be comes elevated to the. rank of Mayor of this oily in which he resides.' The whole book is au effort to show what may be the result, if proper-hands dig after the good that'is sup posed to be hidden in inost human heart?, and care for it, water and lmurish it,’ until it shall sway the viler passions of the nature, and the ruan glands forth redeemed, llow he is going to succeed iu the petfeotiou of hit characters remains to be dovel&jied in the succeeding parts of the Work. The book, as we have ea>d ia most ably writ ten, and may b> well adapted to mercurial France, when a social serf dom has fettered a Urge class of each community, and the air is offensive with the .stench that arises from her many dens of lioentioaenees. Bat hero incur lhud of free institutions, where, woman Las retched her proper sphere, and the Sjalfisman may grasp the hand qf the honest-meohanic, and. tiller of the toil and feel that it is the hand of .a brother, we have no need of suoh books;; no nocessily for convening onr country into a sort of wholesale Phalanstery. ' With all its faults— and thiy are many and glaring—if is ' one of the moat remarkable bt-oks that has boon written for years. With the caution which tho foregoing remarks are intended to convey, we advise our" renders to’ peiuse it. / Cotton Cards. We ask' attention to the additional item' of (i00 pounds of Cotton Card .Wjre, in tba salo of John G. Milnor ft Co., which was hot in the Advertisemeni as furnished' us.' This large ctrga and the Kate, the vessel-in- which it wns imported,.belong to. Messrs, Beach & Root, ol our eity, who are specially engaged in the direct importation of-goods.- -- : SplcLilid Criticism. Don’t fail to read tho able and interesting review of “Great Expectations’’. in our col umns to-dayV - — ' v -' -- VallaTuttgham Meeting tn PhtladetiiHlai— Letter- From Fcruando Wood tn Favor of Peace, ‘ ! A meeting Alls Judd uijndependeifco Square, Philadelphia, on Monday night, 1st instant, to protest against the arrest of V&nandigb>ni. A dispatch to tho New York Press eays: -The meeting was largely attended and quite enthusiastic. About ten thousand persons were 7 assembled. Judge .Ellis Lewis occupied the choir, and speeches were madeby ex-Sen'ator Bigler,' ex-Congressmau Biddle, Charles J. In- gcrsol/ nnd others. The ■ latter counseled per fect obedience to thelaws and tho constitutional authorities, but resistance to any attempt:to control the ballot-box. The proceedings were very orderly. The name ol Vallandigh&m was frequently cheered on its repetition by the sev eral speakers, as was also that oi Gen.-Model. Ian. Resolutions were adopted declaring ihc .arrest Jind bantohffient of Yaliandigham as vio lence to which the American people will not and ousht to not submit.; that the.remedy ia-in the htllot box, at the coming election, when the State authority, will bo. restored to the bands of the Democratic party; that is-onr firm belief that the danger of the authorities at-Washington' is by military aegression.to provide an apology for further invasion of out libarties ; that it ia only to the ballot box that wc can look.for permanent relief. - !■' ■ - 1 '. A letter irom lion. Fernando Wood was read, dosing ae ioUows-c ~ ' - ; I heartily eympathixe with the friends of lib erty everywhere, In their efforts to sustain the inalitution of free government in this land. But .do not lot na forget (bat those who perpe trate such outrages as the arrest and banishment' of Mr, Vsllandigham, do so as necessary war measures. Let ds therefore strike'at the caute, and declare for peace against the tear. .... ' Very trnly, -2 ■■ - FERNANDO WOOD. New Knglnp tor Naval Warfare—Yaylor fit King’s Submarine Battering'Ram. The model of this new and very .'formidable engine for naval war purposes—a submarine battering ram—is now on exhibition at Mea- ar*7 E. & Q. IF.' Blunt’s,' Water street; in New York city, and u well worthy of the inspec tion of ecientiHo men. - - The battering ram is the invention-of J. F. H. King, of Staten Island, and its principle has been already approved of by some of our em- inent ehip builders Tbo vessel to which the ram is attached ia protected with a. slanting- roof similar to that of the Merrtmae, construct ed in such a manner as to "render it perfectly impervious to shot, and will ■ e propelled by two serews: She will be furniahefkiith a ram —or, aa the French call tt, a plnttjrur—in the shape of a shaft of iron sixty feet in length and about one foot in diameter: This shaft or ram will work under water, tad will be driven by-two fly wheels, eaeh wheel being twenty feet in diametrr. nnd weighing twen ty tons. These wheels, being connected by a solid and heavy pitman, will, when in motion, 'vVii-atffrik fHdt lill ^hs to the iron ram or shaft a m omentum of eighty strokes per minute- ■ssl^a* 2 . ._i The ram will be worked for striking pur poses through the prow of the vessel, and about eight foot under water. . Our readers can easily imagine the effect that thisplongeur will produce on a hostile .-hip. Haring deliv ered a heavy blow, it will draw back,. as It Bfifttaifald .-end in another and r.inthor, atihe rate of eighty per niinule No \ e?;e! could ondure it, and any foreign war ship which we have read of as yet wonld be destroyed in a few minutes. Both Ihe priuciplo an 1 plan of action of the ram ar i simple; bnt the result of i.a blows would be ibe deair.*.oii ,n of the op- piecing crafts. In foot, it maybe said that the principle is based in som- inesfuire on the practice of tho pugilists of ihs lie-nan and Sayres schools, who deliver rapid and felling blows from the .-boulder, and this aemelimes ”when they have placed 'man's head in “ebna- cerp”—the ram having the advantage that -ueb a great steam arm will never lire in po- kii*^ lnio and breaking the ribs of its adver sary, while it openly avows its intention of always hitting “b«low the belt’’—under wa ter—contrary to tha code prevailing in the roped arena on land. Speech of Senator Wall of Mew J«r*ej-~ lle ilectures for an Immediate Ceasntloii ol llontilltles, etc. The New York IForM.of the Jaf instant pub- lislies,'in foil, a'ipeech delivered by Hon.' James W. Wail, of New Jertay, before Hie Dr mocraiic club i*f Philadelphia, May 9th. It occupiet nearly 6ye columns of small type and ia devo ted chiefly to a review it- tho antecedents of the war. It quotes the record Irerly to fix upon the BJack 'Republican party the responsibility of this iittqaitous war. Tile following extracts from the address will be read with interest: There clearly was a time intha biatory’and prog rets of this event, when the war might have been averted niider the guidance of a wise and pradeot statesmanship ; but unfortunately, as 1 have before said, thy yrdglijm caught na with fools and ianaiice in power. I believi d at the oqtset, ea I know now, that it wonld have been infinitely better to hate let the seceding States depart In peace. I. eo. urged members ol Con gress at the time, and the members of the Peace Convention I believed then, as I belieec now, that such a wise and generous policy would have disarmed rescntmtn s, would have soften ed and subdued hcarts.then swelling with hate, but waich resistance must harden, and make more biller still! . * -••• The awO’rd and the bayonet, in -.a: civil strife like the present, between two such people, can never help to Ibe proper disposition in the uiinds of either section lor a wise adjustment and can hexer takethc place’ ol civil” wisdom! without 'watch all the triumphs of the battle field are useless. Soon, whatever may be the--result ol single battles: diplomacy must take the place of war,or else "anarchy,or the’ resolving this gov* erameut into a military despotism must-be- the result. The idea of tbis.atrifc continuini* for two yearn longer with the prospect nf increased carnage, eta 'nation of.business, inhibited com'- tnefee, is loo much for any man, unless it be a shoddy contractor or specula tor in gold' to con template with composure. . Sooner or later by 1 hat rough.qxporienai, foaffuj sufldnhg, ‘ha* Lsa already dome, and will bo fearfully aggravated, by the continuance of the war, if-not by,the more prudent councils ol a wise forbearance, Mr hour for compromise and settWyient m)ul come In view «i the immense interests at' stake, both to ourselves and those dearer than onrselves.our children, tee mutt endeavor to hasten it* ranting. It is only fools or knaves who j still continue 10 declare that we will not treat .with rebels—wie cannot hold parley with those who arc striking 1st'the national file. * * As the keen lore*, casting statoimanibip of Mr.Douglas .very osrly discovered*.' "Subjugation,-exierminatianj- or. Hcp?ratioii,niust bo ihb re,ult of a -wag.between' Ngtberjt oyd 3outherVHtilaLi’il*jiff®»» ndl the quoslion of the war at last reduced itself to the alternatives preditted hy Mr. Douglas I Can there be any possible settlement,, except ‘upon the basis ot subjugation, • annibilatinuyor.ceinriq- tionf Sooner than the first two,' in- Gad's name, in the name of 8 common humanity, I say separation a thousand timer ! _ . Subjugation or annihilation being alilteimpot- ible /dmttn javorof ah immediatereisatien ff hostilities; for ail armistice—that mitHlic.Inll Of the strife the heat of'passion shall liave tfide to cool, and the calm, majestic voice.pfr.c*jjp t can be heard. ; jn the midst of such a calm I am for endeavoring 10 learn from those ib arms affainst lie what their demands may be. and inviling their co operation in tho nimp of a common Christianity, in the name of A.common. Iminaa- ity, to sorte -plan of reconciliation or reeon- airnction by which the sections-may reunite upon a more stable, basia—a plati In which tae queslianu Upon which wo have differed "so long may be harmoniously adjusted ; and each sec rion, by virtue ' ot. Iho greatness developed in this war, Uiay profit ■ by the experience. II it Ahall bejbqtadHut pectiooal oginiopsjtidpreju dices 8rc too obstinate, ati<nhe exasperations of this war hdvc burnt too deep to settle it upon, the basis of reconciliation or reconstruction, then I,kitoW that separation spd rtscegpitioff[a)e. Inevitable. ' (CfKeTe ii to bo a'ecTileincnt ujion I the basis bfrauortstruetion^thoiiTeoohatructidn qan only adj^juplfob-iW-cnds by,introdnctng ia- to our coneftimtonal system a plan whereby fpr all iime to come,"section' stall'be protected' against., section. - The .phut suggestedJgonte years ago by Mr. Vallandigham bears the stamp of hie clearjpagacity rand statesmanlike-forecast dividing 1 lie. countryinto four large-sections or masseu, and requiring a majority of tho' fiprb j:erilati“e».*aem'.eu«fit to eoneent to -i memoic before it ehauld- become a law. Mr, Calhoun, notwitltstand the undeserved obloquy attaching, now .0 his name, was to my mind the most hon est and comprehensive statesman "who grappled with nation.il prookms. atul I make, bold hero to say that no wiser, purer, more patriotic states man ever lived. As early as 1840 he foreio>d' this convulsion unless his proposed remedy" was adopted. He regarded the institution of alaye- ry at the South as the pillar of their strength, se curity and civilization, and its disturbanee by for eign elements as sure to lead to the ‘downfall of the Union. -Hence, hisAheory of-race 1st ruction loohtd to tho permanency and security of tliaL favorite institution, and to removing it far from the reach Of intermeddling puritanical philan-' thropy. Jle'coriectly held that the mtWPjiprWt*- fy a government combines.the power and liberty, of tbe dominant race the more perfectly iLfdl- fills the end of its creation. He Infther held that tho government of the mere numerical ma jority did -oot accomplish this, injtjiy .reasonable degree; hence be proposeiF what he denomina ted “the current majority principle,^ ae boiler suited to prevent the government from tMfia*. erndiug the limits in which' It wss agpojnti'd it to move, and restrict it to ilk.primary;end, ibe' protection of the community from elementary aistnrbance.- 1. j ou “ It may be that tho South might be Willing to return upon the adoptioa of tame. BOCh sys tem of reconstruction>s this. If this plan of reconciliation 'and reconstruction faUs, IheA a separation must be tie finality. I shall, deeply mourn over the necessity that compels to sttph a policy, but will acCeJitila prefeienco to long years of cruel, rirife, hopelessly dentbraltxlng' our people, prostrating tmr business intereats; and making us the scorn find plly'qf Ckrhttta- dom. Impartial history .will J&Btiu .tho re sponsibility where it belongs, and where Mr. DouglasT in tfi speech of 18BI; placed it, upon the Republipan, party, who, to usq hia own forcible language, “refused to allow the peo ple at the ballot boxes to determine for them selves the issue between revolution aud war on the oao side and obstinate adherence to a party platform on the other.” I do not hesitate to deelafe in" tho'cars of this administration, and of tho Loyal Leaguers, its allies, that if t beir war upon tho personal liberty of the subject, in defisnoe of the guar antees of the Conslitulion, goes on, the time may eome when- “forbearance ceases to* be a virtac,” and “resistance to tyrant5 "becomes obedience tit God.” -.-“i t*z t Tne reeont assault upon thatpatriotio fibtm- pionof.lho Constitution and the rights of the peoplo, Vallandigham, subjecting him.to the secret inquisition of a court martial,- is an'in famous violation of every constitntioual" pro vision, «nd utforly subversive, if suhmitted to, of every principle upon which - free goy- jernmenl rests;- 1 -Thai * all - men shculd yield to the State is beautiful in theory; but good ia prsetioe only whe* the Stolfi:M-tbfi negregoto- of legitimate private contatutionpt interests, administered by honest persons. The Irue public interest is composed of the aggregate portion of each private interests—on:! when the State make3 war npan-tkese, in a free gov ernment, that assailed interest has a right boldly tar assert itself, tad'demandh bearing. In despotisms, private intereats are not openly heard. They; must proceed, if ut all, by in trigue tad by .conspiracy. . liie interest of iho State, then, becomes—as it rosily is fast com ing here—the interest administered by func- Jiouories who advan.-c and keep themselves :,t the publio expense, and put down with the stron::, nr:n of nnticer.aed i*ovrer thc.-o wl.o have the courage to complain." We. s's Demo- crats, nay, as American citizens, only ask (it is all we ever asked) that the grent magia charta of our freeiloin shall be observej, and Vitllami jqlram Mr cling lu Ncivark-Stror g Koolnllon—Kxclilng Scenes. On Saturday afternoon, ,28th alt., ,i n vast, multitude” assembled in the “Military Park,” Newark, N, J,, “to express the senti ment of Jersey freemen in defenoe of Consti tutional liberty,” etc. Just as tho mooting was proceeding to'organize a collision occur red at one of the entrances between a party of soldiers, and a “country delegation.” The World's reporter says: As tho delegation pressed onward, with quiet determination, one of lire soldiers, who car ried a cane, muds a rush to seize the banner amid tbe yells of his comrades. The man who held it, a sober, quiet farmer led in ap- pearanoe, relinquishing the staff to one of his party, confronted the aggressor and wresting his. stick from his grasp in a single motion, gave him tho weight of it across the scull, level ing him to'the ground in a twinkling, and opening Iho scalp some two or three inchus in length. The melee became for an instant only general, but the oountry boys were too vigor ous for their opponents, end iu far Ism time than it has taken to describe tbe affray, three or four of the soldiers were -helpless at their feet, Y,ud tho banner was borne onward trium phantly tu ike platform, while the wounded men wero cored for by their friends. At Ihc organization of the meeting, (Jerome B Ward presiding,) Iho following preamble and resolutions, were “unanimously adopted with enthusiastic-ohoere, in whioli several sol diers joined7. I Whereas, It is not only the privilego but tbe duly of freemen to withstand the encroach ments of tho exteoutivo and io rebuke with thinness those in power, who, under any pies, h'pwbTer'specious, may preaumo lo assault the rights>f iho people; therefore, , Hstqlvtd,. That. now,., when despotism has seized the government,, boldness is prudence, and .that we shall avoid most of aU the counsels of timid or tims-serving politicians. (Cheers.-)' Resolved, That, the peoplo hare thus far sub mitted to "the illegal actaof tho administration not because they are ignorant of their rights, nor because they are indifferent to the inestim able blessings of liberty, nor beoause they are wanting in courage, to resist tbs aggressions of lawless power. but because they have patient ly-hoped I hat tho President and hia advisers would desist from their violations of the Consti tution m lime to save themsolves ard the coun try from the eontteqaonoes to whioh suoli acts inevitably lead; : (Choers.) " ' . .- Resolved, That in the' illegal • seizure' and banishmont of Hon. C. L. Vsllandigham", the laws of "our country havo boon outraged, the nemo of the "United Slates disgraced, and the "rightrof every citizen' menaced," and that it is now tho duty of a law respecting people to demandof Iho adminffifralTon that it at onoe and fiirovet- deslel from suoh deode of despo tismand~ crime. (Enthusiasm.) ‘ Resolved, That we have "reasons to fear, from the"violation by Iho administration of the laws passed at its OWo instance, and from the acts and threats nf cabinet officers,and genorals.in the ■armv; a settled purpose to establish, instead of tanteetive government; a- military despotism; and that if the time should unhappily srrive when our ralers ehall-madly attempt to deprive us of ap appeal to the ballot-box, it will then be the plain righLand duly of the people to withdraw their consent from-such a. government and to con-., struct,by the speediest end moat.available means in their power, tho government established...by our fathers.; (Tremendous cheers). Rosblved,'That we heartily approve of the. sentiments expressed by Gov. Seymour in liis recent teffer, and that liis trutnfiil and timely vindication of" tho rights of irecme’n entitle Kim to the respeernnd- esteem of every lover of lib* erly: • j?e**f®erf,-.That we renow our declarations of attachment to the Union, pledging to its friends," wherever found, onr unwavering support, and 10 its .enemies, in whatever guise,our undying hos tility.and that,.God. willing, we will stand by the .Conslitulion and laws of our country, and under their sacred shield will maintain and de fend our liboriv and rights, “peaceably if ve can, forceibly if wo must (Great cheering.) Letters were read Irom Gen Filz John Porter Ho*.- Tho*. II. Uevnioav-xHtti ollicra:' Oencrat Porter ventilates his sentiments in the following style 1. - The dispasriosata exercise nf the guaranteed right oi free speech - cannot be yielded by any American citizen in time of war or in time of peace. - If there ba anything worth contending lor—itis-Jhis. .It.hts.bcsn .well said by one of our most .eminent statesman, born in my own native State: Without* freedom dfapeBchf there can be no lasting liberty^rthe.. republic cannot exist. If every man should dose his lips, and not ve§)ure "even a word "against violated rights," who could maintain- a free government t Nobody! A peo ple.who cannot discuss the. .public., moasures of a nation, apply! the necessary rebnke to insure correction of wrongs, cannot" bo a free people, and do. nol deserve to be-.”---- -- — ■This sentiment should, bo dear to every American, Qther. men, may. t.tlk-.about. tho principle, but those of my name and blood. wiU'hdt, at tho proper (line* fail Vo fight for it,- The contest of -arms; however, will -not be re quired; the certain and.peaceful remedy...will be found ip the ballot-box,.. Let .ua possess our souls in jiatience. That, remedy is ours “The letiorj” says tho reporter, ‘"‘was greet ed With cheer open-cheer." -” v e Mr-. Seymour doses hia letter with, the-fol-. lowing manly deolarationL• “What' is the true remedy for the evils which threaten to utterly destroy onr free in stitutions ? There are many palliatives, but only one remedy—and that is, to stoptho war. .While that lasts, violence and.wrong wiU.lasl" also, and the citizen be doomed to a perpetual struggle with the oppressor." If wo' would save our liberties," Bave the Constitution, and restore Iho Union,- we most look for -tborac- OompUshment ot-this great ends in the efficacy of peace measurct,. and not, elsewhere,” .. While those letters wero “receiving the plaudits of the muMludo,”' a company of sol diers with fixed bayonets entered the park and proceeded to tho main stand,-ete.-- -* 11 The indignation, scoased by ihU.preoedure was universal and profound, but tho conoourso; maintained to the last a dignified' bearing, venting their feelings in "tremendous end sue- tained cheering at every allubiou made to tbe circumstances by their orators, who openly denounced the military menace. " " At length Mayor Bigelow, of Newark, - and Sheriff. A- M. Reynolds appeared on the- S ound, and distinctly informed lho command- g officer of the troops that the civil authori- US were fimpty able 10 maintain the peace of the "city, andtho eheriffadde.1 that imlets tho forefi was at once withdrawn ho should call out the First Regiment of the National Guard, a fine new corps in thorcugh discipline. Short ly, afterward. the.troops, after patroliog to and fro, withdrew, not, however, before the civil magistrates Had Bcen affronted" by the" jeering of" certain "respectable” rowdies - who had come to see the soldiers- “pitch i».” In the meantime eloquent, .addrefses were delivered by the Hon. A. J. Rogers, hi. C. elect of the Sussex district; lion. E. P. Nor ton, of tkis city; Jhdge"' A. U. Speer, J. C. Fitzgerald, and F.-R.- Teese, Etqs., and the venerable Judge Crane, ot Boonton, who ait commented npon the military.display, rebuked the usurpations of. milifaury power by Burnside und the action of the sdminislrotion in lho Vallandighim casej end were cheered to tho echo. . . • " q Subscribe for the^Confederaey. the guaranteed rigkts of the citizen fecured. Ohedienoe tothe Constitution and th - law** ha- aver been with us, and must ever be, para mount lo obeffiencc to arbitrary power. Let our cry be in tbe fer.rfnl contest that is ap proaching—“We will a k for nothin:; bnt what is right; wo will submit to nothing that-is wrong”—and then if our cry is* unheeded, let u pray that some Maccabees shall arise, who will assert the boner of the ancient faith, and ocfoud the temple of hi; forefathers with as ardent and determined, a spirit as that which actuates these innovator:* to destroy the monuments of thepiely, pstiiotiam aid glory of our fathers. Tlra fiiate La*v Frolilbltlsq Km»ncip*tl*a ** Declared Iwopci-atlve WniT Jacxeo.-i Die Nor Do.—The Richmond Enquirer says : General Jackson did not accumulate; a fortune in this war. He did not speculate iu sugar or moIa5sa3, or in tobacco or flour ; he robbed no houses; stole no plate, nor jewels, nor pictures, nor wines ; sold no passports, extone j no black mail. State of Locisuka. Exit revive De?’t, ) New Orleans, May 12, 1S63. - J Genera! Order No. 22. 1. Tlmactol th- I.- oi s !ature ii..* State of Louisiana. approvcd-March 6, 1£57, entitled “ai act to prohibit theemancipation of slaves,’’ nev er baviDg been adopted or sanctioned by the mil itary authorities, and being inconHslent with the principles which control the policy of the government, is hereby declared to have been without force or effect tince the occupation of Louisiana by the forces of the United States on the 25lh day of April, A. 1) 1S'">2. Since the said occupation alt owners and yers j ' sons legally empowered to act in the place ot such owners of slaves have had and shall continue to bavethe right to emancipate their slaves on pe-* tition to any court of record. 2. Any person held as a slave, and being le-* gaily entitled to freedom may bring a suit for his or her freedom in any court of record againat the person claiming or holding him or her aa a slave. By order ol Brig. Gen. G. F. SHEPLEY, Military Governor of Louisiana. James F. Miller, A. A. G. New Law, A dispatch from Washington says: A military commission, of which General Dan Sickles was President, tried James R. Ol iver, a citizen of Maryland, who was taken whilo in arms in tho ranks anti uniform of tho rebel army at Rappahannock ford. Ha plead not guilty to the chxrgo (treason) but acknowl edged the specifications of hid arrest. The court rendered a decision of guiliy of treason, and sentenced him to be hanged. Gen. Hook er forwarded the sentence of the court to Washington, with the endorsement “strongly approved;’’but the President seeing the ter rible consequences involved in suoh a prece dent, disapproved the aoutonoe of the oourt, adding that the aoousedwaa a prisoner of war, and entitled to be trosted os such, and to be exohanged. Lee on the Move, “Hermes” writing to the -Mercury on the 6th inst„nys: - I tel! a secret well known to Hoqker when I inform you that a part, and perhaps all of Lee’s army ia, moving—not in this direction, Hooker has already thrown forward a lore* to meot Longatrect, and is making either a ft^fot to cover the departure of hia whole.arnty, or else prepar ing to call Lee-back by making another “On to Richmond/'^tawteP^aa Longatrect commands the left, Hill the centre;- and Ewell the right of the army under tho new org imitation, so 1 hear. Hill becomes Lieute nant GcncralUccanoe the Senate refused to con- firm Holmes. -This also is hearsay. Tha law limits the number o£ Lieutenant Generals is seven, ^ -- ' TH Gxx.. Jackson’s Reposts —By some it has been feared that the reports of Gen. Jackson, ot tha important part"borne by his command . since, thfl eommenccmenl of tfe) present war, would "belost inconsequence ot hia having beon so suddenly removed from the field of his usefulness. Of these reports the army corres pondent of the Mobile Tribune writes*: Just-previous to the late bottles of tha Rap pahannock all tho" official reports of Goneral Jackson of the. engagement-previous to that time, 'twenty-four in number, were mode up by the Xeal and industry, of his able Adju- tant Ganaral, Col. Faulkner, whioh is a source of"0 mgratuiation to tho oountry, the constant activity of -General Jaokson in the field from Mtaqh-1862,. having - befara- pravented this making up of these feporta.. Bx Gentlemen at Home. ; There are few foiniliesin whioh love is not abnsed as furnish ing s lioensp for unpoliteness. A husband, or fflUMUb; or brother will speak more barnh to those (hat keToves tKtFbeaVand lo those that love him the best; simply bccauso the security of love and family prido keeps him from get ting his head broken. It is.a ahame Jhat a man-will speak unpolitely at times to his wife and "sister. It is thus that the holieBt affec tions of man's, nature provo to be a weaker protection to a woman iu the family eircle than the restraints of society, and a woman ia usually indebted for tho kindest politeness of .life, to those not .hetonging to her owu household. Things ought not so to bo. Tho man-whp, because it wiUnotbe resented, in Hiota his spleen and bad temper upon those of his hearth Btone, is not a gentleman. Kind words, are tha eircnlating medium belwcon true gentlemen tad true itaies at home, and no polish exhibited in rooioty can atono for tha harsh language and diarespeotful treat ment too" often indulged in between those bound together by God’s own tie of blood, and the still more sacred Londs".of oonjugal love. Whiskey Distributed to the people ot - -- ' America*. ; .Tho Sumter Republican of the 6th inst., con tains tho following: - . _ ; Oa Tuesdaylaat the Inferior Gonrt of this cnnnty reraivod a barrel ot Whiskey,"irom me contractor, to.be distributed among onr citi zens for medical purposes. It Boon began to bewhiapored. around that it wonld be dietrib- utoij, and that all persons who were indisposed would be entitled to receive what the law al- towed-them. Accordingly, about ten o’clock, A. M., the Agent.ascendod tho barrel, in front of the public square and cried out: ■- Oj, yes I Oh, yes! all persons who are complain ing, or in any way affliofeJ, aro requested to eome to this barrel and draw the amouut of whiskey that tbe law allows them.” In a few minutes after the announcement might be seen, numbers of citizens, old and young, saint and sinner, male and female, with their half-pint, pint and quart bottleB, eager to receive their ehare'of its “entt'or. ” "\Ve had no idea that there were so many sick persons in our 00m- munlfyTas »h6wed themselves on that day.— Bat so it was. The-whiskey was distributed nolens nolens, and during the entire day might have been seen persons wending their way homo with bottles of the “healing art.” In fact,.Mtne were loo feeble almost to get lame, the medicine producing effect ehortly after ta king It. We are not able to render a full re port of the number of cases, whether there are any dangerous or not, but presume by this -time that theraost of them are convalescent. Towards ovoning, the following was the an swer to the-question “Hava you’got your whiskey-?”- .“Yts—hie, but—hie, it. is—hie, not-Sff— hie, goad—hie, as it . was—hie, in the —hio* .morn—hie—in g.” As the first edition has been distributed "among the-town people of feeble health, we presume there will be another distribution shortly for the benefit of our. oountry friends, lor the health of ill# country should bo looked after as well ap the town. We will endeavor to advise eat sick friends of.the oountry when the day will bo set apart for their benefit.— So look out for .the whiskey when the horn is bK*n.~ A NEW OCEAN IRONfoCLAD FLEET. The Navy Department invites proposals for new ocoan iron-clad v£Mels-of>war, each Teasel to be about three thousand five hundred tons burthen, not to draw more than fifteen foot of water, and 10 bo capable of steaming at least thirteen miles per hour; to have two turrets, each fit for two guns, which may weigh, if necessary, twenty-five "tons. The models are to be made by tho different contractors offering to build, and the plana to bo lurnished by tha ■avyfiajtUy. -. • HUNTER DRAFTING CITIZENS. General Hunter has issued an order directing that all civilians found in hia department within twenty days should be dratted into the military service of tha U. S. Government, anu assigned to regiments from tho States to which they re spectively belonged, or where there were no such regiments, tnen lo those regiments nutnen :cally the wcakovt. IfiTA very curious chemical discovery has been made by Desscobaoher, a yonng German chemist. By the addition of a small quantity of chlorine or'ioctiiio, pure sulpher is rendered -perfectly soft; and the Paris Aeademy, to whom the experiment was exhibited by H. Dc- viile, wero astonished to see a thin leaf ot sul phur treated as ffcxible as it made of wax. Bulihmtat to lira SoutU. St. Louis; June 1.—Tho second instalment of persona ordered to bo sent to tho Southern States, took tholr departure to-night. Tho delegation numbered seventeen, among whom wero Philip Coyne, James H. Kennott, W. K. Knight, Dr. William. Golding, Mrs. Trnsten Poll:, wife of -x-s nrttar Polk, Mr*. Welsh, and Mrs. Dorsoy; also at their own request, MisaCoyno, Hits Mary Polk, and Miss d liza- bflthPolk, daughters of Sira. Trusten Polk; Mrs. Welsh, adopted daughter of Mrs. Welsh; and Mr. James Dorsoy, husband of Mrs Dor sey. Atl of these persons wero under ohargo of Captain J. HI Davis, of the 1st Missouri Cavalry, who will transfer them throngs our line, under a flag of truce, and deliver them to some responsible rebel authority. Tho persons thus passed through the lines, are forbidden to return withiu tho lines of tha United States army during the existence of the rebellion, oxoept by permission of tho Pecro tary of War, under penalty of imprissonment during tho war, and suoh other punishment as may bi> imposed by tho military authorities.’ Deserter* ArrcateU. A correspondent of (ho Coiumbu* Enynirer, writing from the camp of the 20;h Ga regiment, tn Virginia, says: On the 19th instant Captain Seago, of the 20th Georgia *egiment, was put in charge of a spe cial detail ot eight rpen" to go in search of and arroet rix deserters from Companv D, (Toombs’ Rangers) of the 20th Georgia, who left without leave on tbe 18th inst. The names of the mala factors arc as follows : Privates W E Nettles, W V Colson, G W Lee, W H Dyer, J EPitt- man, and Wm Turley. With a vigilanco and an energy peculiar to himself, Captain Seago made a forced march of of several days, and after overcoming some alight resistance, by a very shrewd game of mil* itary bluff, succeeded in capturing tho half doz* en deserters, and delivering them in good time, on the 224 instant, to Gen. Henning. Tight PaIA 113—Income Tax.—Wo are in formed that a Brower in this city, who gave in his investment at $50, and his inoomofor the year at $1 600, being 3,000 per cent, upon his inveslmeat, waa quietly informeiiy the Re- eciver that under the income tax law of (he Slate he was duo $2,225; “But mein Oott, I so got him. I give you all do modish I’ve got.” Very woll, says Mr. Receiver, I will have lo take your note and security for tho balance.— Macon Telegraph. ..A, A Yankee Offioek’s Opinion of Soutuzsn Taoors.—Ono of '.the Abolition officers of Hooker’s army that left by flig. of truce, in a conversation with a gentleman of this city, said that so far as the lighting qualities ef the Southerner and Yankee wero ooncornod, there "was not muoh" difference—both would- fight hard if ocoasion required it. He added that none of tho Yankees became enthused in a fight; that they "would gd if ordered to do ao; <m; mnpoiaul vu tiuiu uu liuura-in' too matter. YoU-OOUthornera, said he, are difftront; in battle the eyoo of tub most forlorn looking pri vate lights up wi£b animation—ho is all dash* and even when tho pangs of death seize him,* his face is aglow with the enthusiasm that fills his soul. WbHo'hls'vblce'is lieard ondonpage- inghis oomradts to go forward. We have none of this in our army, • oaid tho candid Yankee: “our men are mere Blioka.” It strikes us that this follower of Old Abe has furnished as good an interpretation of the dif ference between tho Northern and Southern soldier os could bu desired — Rich. Dispatch. Beockadkks Inside • the Bae.—M’o learn from good authority that two of tho Yankee blockaders, apparently light draught wcodon gunboats, havo.had the temerity to take a po sition inbido the bar, and on Sunday night w-re lying between Pumpkin Hill and Swuath Chft'ineis. Their appearance iudicalea them to be new boats and seemingly fast cruisers sent to assist in a now effort to render the blockade more cffeotual. If allowed tr> remain their position will give thorn adv.inlagea that will cause considerable annoyance. It is not supposed, however, tfo-y vill stay long, as measures are being taken to relievo the harbor of their preseuca.—Charleston Courier, June 9th. - - - Marine Accident.—The steamer Slono, outward bound, having on board a cargo of about six hundred lulrs eotion.went to sea on Friday night. Haou after crossing the bar she was bi.o.q by the blockaders, who fired at her and gave chase, when she hid to put about and make for the harbor to prevent her falling into tho clutches of (he Yankee *. On nearing the Sullivan’s Island breakwater, owing to" a mistake on the part of the wheelsman, she was run ashore on tbe rooks, where eko now is, with every prospect of her being totally wrecked. Tho bulk ofher oargo has been ta ken cut and brought to tbe cuv, scnie of it damaged. She is now being stripped, and ev erything taken from her that can be got at.— Ch. Mer., 8th. - - ftkvF*‘A lady on mercy bent,’ was making a visit to the penitentiary, and was permitted to look thruugh the various wards. In tbe room fiho saw three women engaged in sewing, and InrniDg to the keeper, who was showing her about, eke said to him in on undertone, ‘Dear hko-i tb<nrea*. wialen* looking women I.ever saw in my life 1 IVhot were they put in here fori" “They are here,”, he roplied, “becauao I am hero. They are my wife and my daughters, madam.” Madam escaped as fast as possible. Tbe Ohio “Stale Journal,'’ of May 26th thus twieta-a sentenod.referring to the U. S. Gov ernment, iuio a Ynckee lie: Tux • Iron Rule in Dixie.—The Mobile “RegUter” says: “Ifamon speaks or w rites against the Confederate cause, he is branded and expelled as a public euomy.” A Gofid it it (1 »t Mk-avc idler Gone* ’ ' . . F&kdexicubc&q. V*, May 25,1853. URAEuziBiza —Dvju- Mid aid : lVruAt me to expreo* tbe de< p «YB3i>Athy I fwti fcr yoa io th* of; oar noble ion Uaui j^k. He*, wt* the beet ■oldie: I ever knew—brave arid nki.lfal. wfis the b sc Sa'h'.er I ever taw. By h!* g>od cc-naoct- aui g \Kant aud tnau ly'Lesriirgi he ha 1 attracted my attention and wou Lty i ktDDX, and I lo'.ke 1 forward to l>ie promotion with great lntere*t. He waa among the molt promiflng aoldieis of the loihGeorgia justly o«ta«med ibebj-t and bravest regiment Irom cur UtoUst wcr*a to me *beu I Yirited him at ike Hospital, wera, that he wonld never bo of any mere acc.>net. 1 replied ibat I hr.ped be would; that if any m*n c.old iecover from such w:u :da I ku9w ba woald; bu*. ala>, hLs woria were tOJ true. Bit manT aud hao4«oxe f orm now fills a brave soldier 1 * grave. Let me ask y >a to be o meolod and recoacile.l to gr^et loas, k owing that ne (9 freed from the toll* and bar flbipe of ih&t'Uiir, anl tbe torroars of Ikla nnhappy a orfft that while he 1 ved he was beloved and hon'r.d, a d in dearth he ie m ux led by all who knew and ap^re- citeted Mb ineitimab’e wirth. Let me mingle my tears, Boat Madam, with the gri if stricken mother who had the boner to bear aucb a r.oble boy. Very respectfully, year obediant servant, WM. T. WOFFORD, 2t Brigadier General. There are now in circula r iott counter- feit Confederate twenties of tbe issue of April 6th, 1868, printed at the lithograjmio establish ment of Evans and Cogweli. '.Hio s’gnaturofl are very coarse, in palo ink, and the number ing also. Nobody need be deceived by those bills if the signatures are examined. Gin. Jackson’s House.—General Jackson’s favorite Horse, which eo nobly, boro him through «o many of his most danger.>us and brilliant exploits, has been conveyed by railroad to the relatives of Mrs. Jackson, in Charlotte, N. C. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 400 ON CO&Sl&aMKMT, M O D CAP* by -TON, CRANK «k HAMM0C5. O mmUs'.on Mercbauts, Wbltshali afreet, At’aata, Gs Purse Lost, a GREHN t%cb»d. It ooLtamed ab *ut $^5—foar $) bjU. tvj o es, sjiae smaU change, and on© conper cen'; *1*0, h blank ticket for wot k for tha L!«iai termafiter’a Department. ▲ ouitable reward will t*ts pad the n .di»r by having It at thin office. tt. ii. PAT1LLO. June ll-3t* FOURTH WART. E. GULLaTT is the maja for Alderman iu tho VcurUi Ward, to fill the 7ftcancy made by the re*ignaUoD ol Ja* Noble, Jr, who was Orair- mMi of the Committee on Pire Departm-.at, ard Walla, PoTCp* and Ci*t<rn*. Mr. QnllattU a Crat-class M- cbacte, and one cf the o!du«t firemen In th6 city Klee ion Tu«&* da*-, tbe 16tb iaat MANY CITiZSNtt joS-td* FOURTH WARD. Bgf'We we requested to announced P. P PKASB a* a C ndid vte for Alder*n,aa frem th* 4th Ward, at tbe earnoat reqa^st sf a large Lumber of gcod citieea*. EloctioaToesday, the 16th last. ie6td O 1 } MAYOR’3 OFFLCE. Atlanta, Ga, Judo 6,1S*:9. RDESSD, that an Section be held on To««;ay, — last, for a Ootmeiimaa for.the Fonrlb Wor*i, fo the vac&Dcy oocaiioued by the mrUnattoa wo “ ' laurj VI filALH’wUN. JtOtd £l J*MES M OALBCnS. ^ Uixrtti, Receipt -—A tew drops of oil ot lav ender will save a library from mould. HOT OS TO KXi’AiERS Id VULfO.i thCMl’ T WILL bo *t tee City H»U co mbm* I .od Tb«rad, r * natSl to. fln*t of JiU^**^* P« of r^ffrlng Trot W toilet closed. TUom falUMfo ni»*® A . M- to * o'clock P Uxed. >V 1 HUDSON, X. B-