The globe. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1856-1877, March 08, 1865, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rsITEEMS OF,THE taLOBE.
Ofaxice"
month' ' -
Three months
AnimtriszNa
1 insprtion. 2 do. 3 do.
One iguge, (101111eSaer 18014 $1 25 $1 60
Tyre_ .. .. ... I'6o - 200 " 800
Three squares, 225 - 3 00. 4 . 50
3 months. 6 menthe. 12 months.
Jniti ignerey:pr low , 00 $6OO $lOOO
I'l4o Squaw; - 00 9 00 16 00
Three eF, - 8 OD 12 00 20 00
SodEffi . 00 •
Haifa u mn . 00 — OO 00 - .30 00
One column,
- 20 00 .20 00.... . . .... 60 00
PiefintstionalndßrielnesiOarde dot execedingsizz thaw
.$6
4)
00
6 .italetratbre ' XotiCcif, $2 60
Asiditors' Netices, - - - 200
Betray, or other ehort Notices '1 60
JtirTen linos 'or notipefeit matte a eguare. About
eight voids constitute a lino, to that any person can ea
sily calculate a square in manuscript. .
Advertisements not marked with the number of (neer
tione desired; will be continued till forbid and charged ae
eording te these terms.
Our Prieto for the' printing of Blanks, Handbilli, etc.
qsl,oht,
HUNTINGDON., PA.
RIDING IN A SLEIGH.
—:o.—
A. PARODY.
.
Dim**
Gliding down the hillsides,
O'er the frosty: mow—
Sliding through the valleys,
Jingling as we go—
gappy voices joining
La a noisy lay ;
Illessme r honrldelightful
Riding la a sleigh.
Girl whom you invited
Is certain she shall freeze,
Nestles closer to you;
Giies your arm a squeeze ;
Hints at Old school friendships,
As any maiden . may—
Saya its Very'pleasant
Driver gets excited,
Thinks he's very errand-,
Snaps the'whip a little,
Gives the nags a start,
Girls arid gallants Mixing,
In an awkward way; •
Bless nis,liew delightful
Riding in a sleigh.
Round tho corner rushing,
At 'a speed too rash,
Suddenly .
upsetting,
With aborrid crash ;
In fisnow-bed'ttnnbled,
All the lovers lay—
Ifa I ha I how beautiful
Riding in a sleigh.
Beavers sadly battered,
Hoop-skirts all awry !
Some o' the girls a laughing,
Others want to 04 ; •
Careless driver swearing,
Says the deuce's to pay;
Never "dumped" a load before,
Riding in a sleigh.
Matters onee more righted,
Jingling on wo go, •
Through the woods and meadows,
O'er the frosty snow,
.Thigling, laughing, kissing, '
,All.themeryy -way; •
Bless me, isn't it pleasant
Riding in 'a sleigh
.
TEE TABLES TURNED.
At the- name of Cale Meeks, what
teminiseenceif pass before oar mental
'Old 'recollections come d
a crowd
sag , upon vs, n, we can see an array
• -
of the. "solid" pass before the mind's
eye, in the shape of seekers after the
mythical Frank McLaughlin, the vic—
tims of croton and jalap, for the ad
ministration of which no medical rea
son existed, and' along line of those
,
Who have been humbugged generally
without any specific regard to the par
tiCular speciep of sell. Cale was the
prince of_dry jokers ; he lived, moved,
and had his being through a diurnal
succession of sells; indeed, his life was
one great sell composed of a eonglom
eration of the infinitesimal sells of fifty
years duration. Now Dixby, Nathan
Dixby, was one of 'Cale's truest and
stannahest husiness acquaintances, al
though he had never been introduced
into the domestic. circle made glad by
theportly presence of lirs. Cale, who
*as somewhat addicted to jeniousy.--
he reason for this lack of acquaint
ance was that she,lived a secluded life
'in one of the little villages on Long
Island, and Nat. Dixby lived in the
Babel of New York. Well, one day
Cale was hard pushed for an object on
' which to inflict a practical joke, and in
his dilemma selected his friend Nat as
his Victim. The manner in which Nat
was Sold ,I do not, choose particularly
.
to describe. - Suffice it to say that un
der the play of Cale's exuberant fancy,
Nat made a journey to Albany, insist
:p4 #l4 a lady there had sent him an
amatory. epistle, • which he produced.—
' the lady' became indignant, called in
the aid of :her. husband, who literally
Mr. Dixby, who thereafter re
turned to Gotham with a large`and
flea in his oar. Thii event hap
.pened in
_the early springtime, and on
a clear day. About a week after Nat'e
return
fibril Albany, he met Cale. The
aell was disclosed by Cale, and a hear
, ty = laugh_ was had over Nat's mishap,
and:at. his still bruised features, in
wbieh 4e' jained ; but those present no
ticed the fact that he did not laugh an
inch beloiv the'.chin; indeed it was
generally believed that Nat's mirth
was entirely:sitnqlsOd•
'Now, old fellow,' said Cale, 'you
•
ddon'thold_apy malice, do you P
&Not a -bit,' answered Nat; 'and in
token of amity, let 'us, take a good
stalle all round.' Which thing was
- done in the usual manner.
--Allow did ycn pome tp town ?' asked
Nat.
i.f.drove up in a light wagon,' re•
plied Cale. '
Und when will you return home 7'
'About six o'clock this evening,' an-
IS'ered Cale.
1 CO
, . - •
• :
• .
, .
.
.
`77" . .:1.i '
WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor andproprietor:
VOL XX.
Nat thereupon plead an engagement
and loft; but as soon as he was out of
oar shot of his joker friend, repaired to
Gray's stable, in Warren:street, whore
he hired a fast horse and a light vela.
de, and with which ho started, thro'
a by street, for the residence of his
friend Cale, on Long Island. On ar•
riving, he loft his horse and wagon at
a
public house, and proceeded to the
aforesaid residence , whore he inquired
of the servant if Mr. Meeks was at
home. On being answered, as he knew
he would be, in the negative, he said:
'This is unfortunate. I wanted to
pay him some money. If I could see
Mrs. Meeks it would do as well;. she
could - give a receipt in her husband's
name.'
Mrs. Meeks was frugal and industri
ous, and always attentive to her hue.
band's interests. As the last remark
fell from the lips of Nat, a fine looking
matron called from up the stairs to the
servant 'to show the gentleman in the
parlor,' where she followed in a few
minutes. Nat bowed, and said :
desire tciseo Mrs. Meeks, madam.'
'Very well,' replied she, 'I am Mrs.
Meeks..'
'Pardon me, madam,' said Nat, with
a doubtful shako of the head; 'but this
is a matter of some importance—the
payment of money;, and you are not
the lady Mr. Meeks introduced to me
as his wife last winter.'
'Not the lady? What,' shrieked
she, 'do you mean to tell me that—'
simply tell you, madam,' replied
. Nat, with icy imperturbability, 'that
Mr. Meeks last winter, in Broadway,
near Leonard street, introduced me to
a lady whom he called Mrs. Meeks,
and you are not the lady.'
'lndeed exclaimed Mrs. Meek, ber
eyes flushing fire: 'how old was she?'
'Well, about twenly:fiVo.' "
'Twenty—five! And how was she
dressed 1'
'She wore her hair in ringlets, had
diamond ear rings!'—
" 'Diamond car rings
'A heavy silk' velvet- dress, very
largo gold bracelets, a magnificent
watch and chain'
'Well, go on,' she said spitefully.
`Silk velvet bat trimmed with mag—
nificent laco, and a muff and boa.'
'Boa!' screeched out the now thor
oughly irate dame : 'you'd better bore
your way out of this house, sir, mighty
quick, or else somebody- will have the
headache! No, sir, I am not Mrs.
Meeks, and I want you to leave.'
'O, certainly,' said Nat, who saw the
tallest kind of a storm brewing, and
who had good reason to believe that
the sturdy dame might launch at his
head a conk-shell or some other heavy
ornaments which adorned the mantle.
Nat thereupon beat a hasty retreat
from off the promises, and placed him
self behind a stone, wail, from which ho
could command a view of the Brooklyn
turnpike: lie did not wait long before
he saw amiable Cale driving down the
road, all unconscious of the ambush of
Nat. The expression of Cale's face
was one of great amiability, and ex
emplified that he was at peace with
'all the World and the rest of mankind.'
' a brief space of time Cale's steed
was given in charge of a stable boy,
and unconscious and happy, ho entered
his domicile and shut the door. The
moment.he .entered, an attentive ear
might have iletected- the sound , of a
voice in no way mellow or expressive
of endearment ; and in an instant after
Cale hurriedly came through the door,
with amazement on his front and a
mop in his roar, the soft end of which
was under the direct and per - spnal su•
perintendence of a lady who was very
red in .the face - and_ very sturdy in
arms, and who strongly resembled Mrs.
Meeks: - The battle had commenced
in the passage way. Cale's castor,
Which shone in the rays of the setting
sun as he drove down the - rnad, was
.
noiy. : very much bruised, and out of
shape—indeed..it was driven far down
.
over Cale's amiable physiognomy.
'What in thunder's out ?' yelled Cale
'Twenty five years old l'-shrieked
the infuriate dame, and bang Cale
caught the mop ever his shoulders.—
',Corkscrew ringlets!' and punk he got
it over the back, with all the strength
which nature and anger had given the
enraged lady. ,
'Blazes take you, don't do that!'
But it was no use, he had to take it.
'Diamond ear rings punk ! "Silk
velvet dress !' bang! 'Gold bracelets!
slump!
%Ardor I' roared Cale.
"Watch and chain !' she shrieked,
and bliff he took it over the head.
'A muff bang I bang! 'Boa!' bang I
bang! and dovrn went poor Cale with.
a yell of murder
Now fell the blows thick and cast op
the braised head, bAcig 40-alto of the
prostrate joker, while the lady again
rehearsed the catalogue of tho wearing
ME=
HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1805.
apparel of the other Mrs. Meeks,
ing the utterance with - a blow upon
her proetrato and bleeding spouse.
But all•things must have an end
The violent exercise of the arms and
lungs, in which Mrs Meeks had indul
ged, had somewhat exhausted her.—
She rapidly ran through Nat's imagi•
nary dekription, and feeling her
strength departing, gathered herself
up for one grand and final effort. Cale
looked with horror on the upraised
mop : he hoard the words :
'O, tho huzzy I' shouted in a vigorous
tone, he beard a hurling, whizzing
sound in thi: air, and the next instant
Cale's nose was as flat as any other
part of - his face. The mop and his
sweet tempered wife retreated into
the mansion and left him alone-in his
gore. Slowly and with the most keen
sensation of pain, he raised himself to
a sitting posture, and with many a
groan of agony, proceeded to inspect
his personal condition.
'l'll bo hanged if this arm ain't bro
ken ! 0 ! and this left shoulder must
be dislocated I 0 0 ! and good gra
cious! what a nose! That woman
must be crazy ! I shant be able to go
about for a month ! 0, Lord, how
sore I am l'
Now Nat, with the most pleasurable
emotions, bad, through the crevice of
the fence-, observed the whole of the
littlo family jar which I have so feebly
described, and ho now stood looking
over the fence, at the. back of his dear
friend.
'I say, Uncle Cale I' shouted Nat.
'Hey!' said Cale, as ho turned, in
some little astonishment, a look upon
his comfier victim. •
'I say, Cale, how do you feel about
It now?'.
.0, you ---1' (I shall leave it
bt"t9 the enraged Cale, as he
sprang to feet — and — made for--the
house; fix your flint."
But Nat didn't want his flint fixed,
and therefore made his way, with all
possible celerity, up the road.
Soon after there appeared upon the
green award, rendered Sanguinary and
sacred by conjugal endearments, a
lame man with a.shocking bad bat,
and who had taken possession of a
fowling piece loaded with buckshot.—
If the lame man meant to shoot Nat,
ho reckoned' without his host. That
worthy, thanks to a long and thin pair
of legs, was out of gunshot range.
Cale from that time forth, and until
he filled the grave, eschelied dry-jok
ing, and was always sensitive on the
subject of mops.
A Wedding that Didn't Come Off.
The Pittsburg Chronicle of the 10th
is responsible for the following, which
we doubt not is literally true—at least
it is laughable and.well told :
'A rather rich affair occurred in East
Liberty The other night, for the par.
tioulare of which we are indebted
to a friend. It appears that a 'culled'
individual, named Smith, being smitten
With the dusty charms of a female ac
quaintance, proposed for her hand, and
his suit having been accepted, the day
was named and everything arranged
to make the twain ono. Accordingly,
one night last week the partietiaccom
'panied by several friends, Presented
themselves at the; house of theirpreach
or to be married, and everything was
progressing pleasantly until the min•
ister put the usual question .Whether
there were any present who had aught
to say against the union of the pair?
A pause followed, which was soon bro
ken however by a big colored fellow
responding from among the spectators:
'Yolk ; t'se jections to urge to dis
here marriage prOceeden' hirder.' As
soon us the 04eitement which- the in
terruption produced had subsided tho
bridegroom looked daggers at the in
truder, invited him if he bad any "jec.
Vona" to make to 'spit em out : that
-the guessed he coalden't prove notin
agin him no how.' The other drawing
himself up to his full height replied
with solemn dignity : Mr. Smith !
NB come up hero all the way from
Oakland, to stop dis marriage. You
know, sah, you have, a wife in the
Shenandoah Valley, and that the peer
woman lubs you to clef. Mr. Smith I'se
ashamed ob you your conduct is di--
graceful.' Prekicber—'Mr. Smith what
have you to say to this ?' Smith—
'Why, sah, I, had a Wife in the Shen..
andoah Valley, but I think she is dead.'
'Dead l' replied the other, 'why, Mr.
Smith, I saw her the oder day, and
sbe sent beriqb to you and the -dill;
dren'allib, and told you. to send her
some money. I declare I'se ashamed
of you Mr. Smith.' Somo further con
versation took place, 'the result of
which Was that the marriage was stop
ped, whicill - so affected the bride that
she swooned away, falling into the
arms of the preacher, much to the' an
noyance of the reverend gentleman,
who hardly anticipated a denouement
so weighty or ridieulous.
-PRitSVVERE.-
C73EX/ILXLME3ESITC):N'.
DETAILED ACCOUNT Or THE
OCCUPATION.
CONDITION OF THE CITY.
TEE FIRE AND TEE EXPLOSION.
The Feeling Among the Citizens,
Wo make the following extracts,
from a letter to the Cincinnati Commer
cial, dated Charleston, February 18 :
Last night, about midnight, General
Gilmore left Hilton Head on the flag
steamer, the W. W. Colt, and I was
permitted to accompany him, my de
sire to do so being doubly strong from
a conviction that the crisis about
Charleston was fast, ripening. The
General gave orders to run to Bull's
Bay, which is about twenty-five miles
north of Charleston, and the immedi
ate hase of operations for a force of
Gilmore's troops under the command
of General Potter. •
After describing the approach to
Charleston and the placing of the flag
on Sumpter by Capt.' Bragg, the cor
respondent proceeds:
But the eye did not dwell long up.
on the network of defences which line
both shores of the harbor above Fort •
Sumpter, or on the burning wreck of
a rebel tug, beached above Moultrie.
It wandered back to the city lying
quiet, and save the column of smoke,
lifeless, in the calm afternoon sunshine,
with its five Or six white steeples, its
empty piers, and silent rows of houses.
The harbor and the city itself, from a
distance, reminded ono vividly, in min
iature, of Now York, from a like look
out, which, like Charleston, as. I need
hardly say, is compactly built on a
narrow strip at the confluence of two
rivers. We soon passed the obstruc
tions which, so far as we could see, are
simply-piles-drtuen_partlitly ma.tue
harbor a mile from the city, with am
ple room left in the channel remaining
open to admit two or three ships
abreast. We saw our flag,--a small
otieflattering fpgrix the cupola of the
olepostoffice. At : one of the piers
were two of our smaller tugs; at .an
other, one of our light-draft gunboats,
and at anchor, a short distance front
the dock, was Admiral Dahlgren's flag
boat. The Colt, the fifth vessel to
reach Charleston, swung beside-a-orazy.
old pier, to reach which first, two of
the officers of the' Colt had a playful
scuffie, the result of which verified the
maxim that the battle is not always to
the strong. The motley crowd of some
hundred on the pier to which the tugs
were fastencd,seeing a handsome trans.
port land with its
. two large white
stars on a field of blue, flying the jack
staff, deserted the little crafts and the
Admiral, and rapidly_ made a detour
to the pier at which we rode. A lot
of urchins, in worn Oat rebel jackets,
were the skirmiihers ; then negroes, of
both sexes, who rushed to shake hands
with such of the; crew as were already
ashore; then ton or:fifteen stragglers,
all Irish or Cerman, front the rebel
army, who had hidden to lan into our
hands, and looked on without demon
stration ; and, lastly, a squad of five
young ladies, of. German extraction,
pretty , well, dressed for - Charleston,
twenty per cent of the five being rosy,
plump, good4Ooking and,-all not in the
least afraid of the Tankees. In all,
GcneralGilmore's committee of recep
tion numbered barely one hundred,
and was :composed as nave stated.
Along the whOle liee of • piers not an
other sent was visible, save a few of
our colored soldiers. The streets down
which we could:look: were • deserted,
not a horse or a vehicle in sight. No
smoke arose from the 'chinaneyS, no
blinds were 'thrown open. But the
piers , told the, most eloquent tale. of
decay. They were crazy, neglected,
and a sorry tomb-stone to departed
traffic. On none of thorn was there
the slightest eiidence that any corn
.merce had been carried on there in the
memory of man: Thepileil were awry,
the planking warped "and dismantled,
and in 'places removed altogether.
EVea the rings worn on the stanchions
the old-time cables were no longer
visible. Around the piles, and for a
short distance out in the harbor, float
od clots of halfloonanined cotton,. sent
nearer shore; by every impulse of the.
flood-tide, and - not.ati all ;detracting
from the aspect of cOiatnercial ruin. -
. .That portion of
,Cliarlestort spbject
to the Swamp Angel's favors lay op
posite -where wo were 'moored; and it
was not necessary to stirfrom!the'deck
of the Colt to see
,a fair Specimen of
the havoc occasioned by them. •
. Gen. Gilmore on for Gen. Schim
melpfepnig, who was the first general
officer to arrive in the city, and from
him be obtained the facts of the occu
pation. Tbe evacuation was first dis
covered at Fort Moultrie, which was
found deserted early in the inernin,
,
- - '
' • ' '', '; •' '
~ . ,• - 2 . ;:., . , . . ,
.....1
' .;.
... • . •• , • •,.. -
..
.. _ 7e.•
... . .
- -
. . .
'''
`. : , 1:4 11 4:.‘: \-- - 1. . '• ~..‘ ' • ;...' ' El
‘.l '
' ' • ' . . '.:.i. . '''' ' ' i% t ~. .
:
d
(....._
_ .::....,.
The smoke from the upper end of the
city (which was caused by the confla
gration of about six thousand bales of
cotton piled in the yard adjoining the
Wilmington depot) had already set the
garrisons on Morris and , Janies Islands
on the qtti vice, and skirmishers went
forward at an early hour, on the latter
island s toward and into Fort Johnson,
which was of course, deserted. Some
delay occurred in getting small boats
ready ; which, however, was at length
accomplished, and the boats filled with
both ' white and, colored troops, the
whole under command of Lieut. Col.
A. G. Bennet i of the 21st U. S. Colored
Troops. 'The boat fleet pushed over to
Sumpter, and found that empty; they
then headed towards Charleston, for
which the crews pulled heartily: At
half-past eleven the boats grated on the
beach at Charleston; Lieutenant Col
onel Bennet was the first to jump
ashore, though his detachment closely
contested that honor with him. Very
few citizens were on the piers while
our boats were approaching, and no
demonstration followed the landing.
Mayor Mcßeth was close at band who
made the usual plea for protection of
life and property.
The roar guard of the enemy, which
had lingered to pillage rather than
serve, any military purpose, did not
leave the outskirts until half-past elev
en ; and it does not seem to have been
their design to molest our occupation
of Charleston, even with a small force.
General Schimmolpfennig arrived
shortly after, and took command of the
city. Admiral .Dahlgren arrived short
ly in his flagboat Philadelphia, about
two P. M. and it was nearly three when
the boat of General Gilmore touched
tho wharf.
General Schimmelpfennig reported
that the number of guns, in all, that
nearly two hundred ; all of which wore
spiked, but very
,few dismounted. The
guns are mostly heavy, and a number
of theaare, of llngilsh manufacture.
The utter nervelessness ] , of the peo
ple'who reMained Wits 'a matter of curl.
uos remark. • They did not appear to
care a pin about the matter, and seemed
so well prepared for it that they took
the approach of our boats,-and landing,
as a matter of course.. The first land
ingwas witnessed byjust such a crowd,
as to nth:fib - ors - anti cumposi Lion, as flock
ea on the pier when General Gilmore
landed. • -
A dreadful calamity Occurred at the
Wilmington depot, in which a quanti
ty of coMmiseary stores bad been i left,
and which a motley crowd of people
—men,. women and• children, were
appropriating. • While the depot was
crowded by those pillagere, a quantity
of powder in it was ignited in a unac
countable way, blowing the building
to pieces, Wiling and wounding a large
number. Some_ of the citizens with
whom "conversed estimated the num
ber at two or three hundred, which
possibly is exaggerated. ' The Wil•
mington depot is in the upper part of
the city, and General Gilmore's 'visit
was so brief, hardly an hour in dura
tion, that I had no opportunity to
visit the scone of disaster. It was this
explosion that we bad witnessed at
Bull's Bay.
I descended from the Colt and en
gaged in conversation with three des
erters. The spokesman of the party
was a deserter from the Palmetto
State, one of the rebel iromclads in
Charleston harbor. The fleet, consis
ting of the Chicora, four guns, the
Palmetto State, four guns, and the
Charlestcn, six guns, were run a short
distance up Ashley river and there
destroyed, early in the morning.
Beauregard, the report ran, had evac
uated Charleston for the purpose of
concentrating to give Sherman battle,
and it was the impression that one of
the greatest battles of tho war•. would
be fought somewhere in South Caroli
na, provided Sherman did not speedi
ly retrace his steps. These men had
heard nothing of reinforcements' arri
ving from Lee's army, and they wore
of the opinion that by the time Har
dee and 'Beanregard concentrated;
Sherman would have his hands full.
'I singled mit: in the crowd on the pier,
ti, man whom f :judged from the dress
and appearance; to have not much in
common with the poor people around
him. Ile informed the that he had
Secreted, in his store and dwelling
hones', dbout two' hundred bales of
cotton and over seventy-five thousand
dollars worth of tobaceo.
This gentleman informed mo that;
after the capture of Savannah the pm, :
pie of Cheri oston considered the fall'
of their own city as, a, thing aceoM
plished. For a month, in reality, the
process of evacuation had
, beon going
on. Citizens sent off their valuables
and families, - under ono pretext or
another, al ways receiving. ivith• Tiqu-
TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance.
°us • indignation any hint that connect
ed their departure with amilitaryerisis.
And so, some went to Colaintria, some
to North Carolina, some to Rielimcin'd..
During four or five days preceding
the evacuation the mask was thrown
off. Sherman's daring was terrifying,
and his rate of speed, per diem, not
the modest average day'd march
through Georgia.. The mantle of dig:
nity fell oft the sham., and die skedad
dle (I don't like the word, but it is
good enough for Charleston), rapidly
culminated: • • •
The reads: to .Wilmington, being :the,
only ones not trapped by Sherman;.
were thronged.
The Military evacuation commenced
in earnest about three days before
General Sherman captured."-Columbia.
Militia was thrown over into the
forts, and the regular troops with
drawn and sent to Wilmington. The
Firemen's Brigade, numbering . three
or four hundred men, were sent to
James Island. All this time General
Gilmore was - worrying them at a half
dozen different points. General llnteia,
with his coast division ; Wag making
mischief south of the city, at Comba
bee river. General Potter with a
strong detachment, made the
.enemy
uneasily anxious concerning Bull's
Bay, north of the city. General
Schimmelfenning seemed big with 'dis
quietude, on James Island. All these
operations by forces of unknown
strength, with Sherman decidedly in
the rear,hastened matters sensibly du
ring the last days of Charleston under
Confederate rule. Confusion became
apparent.• When the operations at
Bull's Bay began, the Firemen's. Bri
gade. was ordered from James.. Island
to thaVregion. They refused to run
with - the military machine any longer.
Theyswore they 'Wouldn't go to Bull's
Buy, and they didn't. They would
have been arrested, but nobody -had
time to do it. ,
I walked down the 'pier into . -the
streets, and glanced up and 490
them, ray time tieing
,too
.for ;.harried Titerior
streets, like 1116se ori the "ipm - y, are
dead: - 'Cha.rieston ; ;14 the' .. %detidest
Soutlien city I haife"evef seen sin's°
the rebellion commended.' Savannah
is a Paradisee - beside it. Debris froin
shell lie in the streets where it fell.
Every scar
.where a fragment 'had
struck is as visible as the day on which
it was made. The lower third of ',the
city was an infected diStriet. No one
dared sleep there, and even when the
. guns .at Morris Island were silent,
men: walked with : accelerated gait
and their ears pricked. The damage
to Atlanta from shells is inconsidera.
ble beside that to Charleston.
Before leaving, tho enemy fired sev
eral arsenals, workshops, and store
houses, and probably some twenty . or
thirty houses in all have been, 'and
will be, destroyed.. The fires have all
gone down, at the moment I close this
letter, save in one placo, and there it
is growing smaller fast..
Era I have walked far from the pier,
the whistle of the Colt sounds, and I
am compelled to retrace my steps.
Before' wo run far wo pick. up Captain
Bragg, just returned from an:errand
that have a place in history. 'He
bad found in Sumpter nine guns (four
Columbiads and five howitzers), an
old, torn rebel flag, and a cat with
six kittens. His coxswain attempted
to bring away the maternal cat, but
she fought and scratched and bit :so
furiously that; he was glad .to drop
her before he reached the •boat. She
had evidently a fondness for the place ,
Which had More charms for her than
a gilded retreat and potted mice at
Barnum's No' may exPeet to hear,
however, that this cat will be overcome
by some Yankee trick, and that , :hor
progeny are tenderly 'preservedhas
relies. Like the bits of rope that eho.
kod some monstrous malefactor, which
would, if combined, give cloth'es-lino
enough to hold• the wash.of the largest'
hospital, so the original Sumpter cats
will shortly be numerous, and the or_
iginal Sumpter kittens multitudinous.
Down the channel we run with a
full head °Latham past the forts, With
the old flag. waving 'softly over them
past - the basin of dobris called Bump
ter; past the monitors, with their rus
ty hulks slid sluggish dip, their lohg,
long occupation gone ; past %olir &um .
dearly won and now useless , forts :on .
Morris Island ; through the; fleet,.who
p
can hardly realizithat no more block-,
adore will steal over the bar under.
Moultrie, out to.where the:steamshiP
Fulton lies, blowing off steam', Waiting
to carry North despatches..-:.l3.urriedly,
I give the.last stroke of. the, 13.6 , 14
these "Full: details of the cik
won the,
orsiiver svery 7
le Talrnetto City
consciousness that
(Dried. • 11 7
~ 31.
Charleston,'.' get my t
Fultpp,-4nd grow
thing
4
JOB • PRINTING oricg.
I E "GLOBE SOB OFFrOE" ie
T
the most complete . of any in the eisimiry; sad pot!
teases themeFt atolpfeellitie e for•promptly : exkuting
this but styre; avert Vaiiety.oe ..TobTaletiogiseeh ea.
1 : : •
. • BLANKS
• " — "trantlo;
_ -
CARDS,
CIRCULARSi
tAi4iTTOKETS,
. •
LABELS, &C., &G., &Ai
lIALL AND MUMIIPDCWI2O3 Or WORE,
NO. 86.
AT LEWIS' 13601{. STATIOSEEY.A• nxusra STORK
If you mean Na;: Say so.
When a map ha'a made - up hie mind
to do or riot.' todo A thing, MI should
have the pluck toe say so plainly, and
` - elt is a.. Mistaken
. kindness
—if meant as a kiadnesS--to meet a
request which :you "have determini3d ,
not to grant, with "I'll see about it,'
or,•cq , ii tliiiik the matter over," or, "I ,
cannot,- you :a positive answer:
now; call in a'few days and I'll let yoti
know." It may be said, perhaps i lhat:
the object of these ambiguons'exprea:.
sions is to-"let the applicantliaivii ea 4
sy ;" but their true tendency_iaztoriiie
him'useless trouble and - angfety;rand
poisibly to proverit-his' seeking what
he - requires'in a more propitious quar
ter until- after the:golde4 opportUnity
is - pashad. Morever, it is questiouable;
whether the metiveS for.
cation - are as philanthropic- ' a5' , 601716
people suppose. 'Generally ipeithirigi
the individual who thus avoids' di.l
reet refusal, does se to: save himself
pain. Men without 'decision-Of -chat;
actor belie - indescribable 'faversieti
to say NO. They can` think No-some,
times when-"it would be - nfore Credita
ble to - theivcourtesy arid benekTlenc4i
to think' Yes; but they . dislike to utter
the bola word that' represents their
thoughts. They prefer tomislead and
deceive,' It is true that these' bland
and cotqlderato peeiple are oftdh:1310:.
ken of ai "very gentlernanlY."' But is
it gertleinanly to keep d. limit in sus ,
pause for days and perhaps . - weeks',
merely because you do' not oliooso to
pa him Out of it by a straightforward
declaration'? He only is a'gentleinad
Wbo treats his felloW-Mon in a'rninly,
ritraightforwarci WAY. ^ Never..scent by
ambiguous
_Words to ' sanction`' hopea
you do not intend to gratify, bu`t - de
clare boldly ivliat"Yotir true sentiments
dictate . . "Let your conininniCation 'be
Yea, yogi Nay, 'do noi'c?
quii-Ocate. -tf you ii . bibs No, out With
it, and care not 'f'.6r Your -own'pain4
- ,
APIL:.9r
; 7- 4Pc °P A i/ M 4P11:49-441 011 JAMPNIn9f
I 'ibfe§ l3 PF P4T4lis d9l"qutlen,cP-thq Prq
seut population ;of, the ,norig i5,x,390 ):
: 000 , 000 ; , ,,,Allowingjncruaeie ‘ in;p9pg14-
tiou ak ttn„ap:Rual i:ate of,) l 2B2,sit c ia
shown that tke PresPntIPAPANt49I I
veuhl be reache4,in 5,503 years, This
is putting thu, increase. At A
_low ; rata,
In France. it is f, 227 annually.. grd,
c4lated On the iMicY IhP'Prea9ut
numbers reaehed, r iu :4,2Q7
ycitra frAzA,Noah, allowing that , ho".:left
the, ttkre9: ,sons And.,Orfite
daughters; Thus, ano.tberprpofT afi•
dqc!.to the ehropplogical Accuracy-A:l.f
the Scriptural reeord,.aud tlko VoupdA
:.oc:ll 101 4 successful laYguluoilt
against onu i ,of 'the InAny thetY
ries .respecting the Antiquitrenth4,Wl
- rqce. : Z 1: ;11,i k
now
be attended to. Many Pers i on's seri•
ously injure•theriiineS
pruning: When 'the • basiiieii - not
understdod,'it is alijaYs_lietter
to em
ploy an' experienced fers6if '6'nd - end
to ono season, from whom - AVIA°.
thod can be easily learned.' It ' is
that the very robust Varietia - like
the Concerd, : bitinic.,
closely pruned; while
like the pelavmrei
be cut into much more' severely; as
they hear the belie of their knit near
the ground.—gernianiocvit .Tele:qraphY
• SUNFLOWER SEED FOR POULTRY'r-411
a note frornonr friend ind.pgePt,
Taher, of Varsalborough,
"I want you, to recommend eundower
seed for hens. I have, been:feeding
them for two seasons past as reviler
rations, with-corn and barley,and the
way the hens trait" ovgi jhen while
filling their s loropsis ample;pr,oo,4lnt
they are good.-7-Atitinc-Eartiter.l.:
- ' Se - If y.oursee' half a•dasealaultsin
a Woman'? rill' may rist7,'asisurbd eho
has h half dozeril'inrtuki'"tol,auiti'ilsa
,,•,; -•• faulty' •;
lance them. Ire ldve•yoar
men, and fear your fault cwis;utpen , —
When you see what is termedta fault
less woman, dread lier as yciii4ould a
beautiful
snake. The. power 'of ,cdn
mr• • , ) • • • '3L1.1
coaling the defeCti walels she must
have id 'of itself, a seaming vice`
,• • ' ; .; ;••••;(4n
TIIE FOROE or EnvcAtirog.—Nothing
wue so mu chAro ad tid in: calf , schoolboy
day,ti its to , be.ptinishbd sittingte•
tweeze; two . girls. Ah, , the forge, ceed
ucagim ' .U 1 after yehrswg,-lcarivta
submit. to - stich thing withiwtßbliftlin
, our feet' or siiodding
`m"WhY . : d 9,
f d u i l sta: lo 7?" "saii
eca
Le, CP'is
ndi'e` 115°," said
schantrint
ItuSi'viii4.,,f
, ADVICE TO INDISCREET: TeorLt.--- ,
Neveribe•so silly ad Az request:a prin..
ter to publish -your 'folly; for it would
be worse. ttifen, being hung, and .pf 7-7
ing tben - eeutioner f#V,shdlie go,
I,
) ,
ME
„p S , biireei „.
f so
criire'to her bash-