TEHNS OF THE GLOBE . . Yet annum in advance Six. months "three months TERNS OF ADVERTISING . _ . . . . 1 insertion. 2 do. -3 do. One square, (10 lincs,)or lesas 75 $l. 25 $1 50 Two squares 1 50 2 00 3 00 Three squares, • 2 25 3 00 4 50 3 months. 6 months. 12 months. Joe square,- or less $4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 rwo squares 6 00 9 00 15 00 three squares,' 8 00 12 00 20 00 Fout , squaras, 10 00 15 00 25 00 liar a column, 15 00 0 0 00 30 00 Ono column, 00 OD 35 00.... ...... 05 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines One year, $5 04 Administrators' and Executors , Notices, $2 50 Anditors' Notices, 2 00 Betray, or other short Notices 1 50 Jrii-Ten lines of noupnreil make a square. About eight words constitute a line, so that any person can ea sily calculate a square in manuscr.pt. Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged sc. cording to them terms. Oor prices for the printing of Blanks, handbills, etc. are also increased. . Ely aoht, HUNTINGDON, PA A GRAND OLD POEM Who shall judge a man from manners? Who shall know him by his dress? Paupers may be fit for princes, Princes fit for something less. 'Crumpled shirt and dirty jacket Say beclothe the golden ore Of the deepest thoughts and feelings— satin "rests could do no mole. There are springs of crystal nectar Ever welling out of stone ; There are purple buds and golden, Hidden crushed and overgrown ; God, who counts by souls, not dresses, Loves and prospers you and me, 'While he values thrones, the highest, But as pebbles in the sea. Man; upraised above his fellows, Oft forgets his fellows then, Masters, rulers, lords, remember That you'r meanest kiwis of men, Men by labor, men by feeling, Men by thought, and men by fame, Claiming equal rights to sunshine, In a man's ennobling name. 'There are foam-embroidered oceans, There are little weed-clad rills, 'There are Sceble inch-high saplings, There are cedars on the hills ; God, who counts by souls not stations, Loves and prospers you and me; For, to Him, all vain distinctions Are as pebbles in the sea. Toiling hands alone are builders Of a nation's wealth or fame; Tilted laciness is pensioned, Fed and fattened on the same; By the sweat of others' foreheads, • Living only to rejoice, -While the poor man's outraged freedom Vainly lifted up its voice. Truth and justice are eternal, Born with loveliness and light; Secret wrongs shall never prosper, While there is a sunny right; God, whose world-heard voice is singing Boundless love to you and me, Sinks oppression with its titles, As the pebbles in the sea.- tror the Globe.] ..A.Nr2C-ICMI MIZE4CIPZI. A TRUE STORY OF TUE WAR Cold and dreary winter had gone and given place to balmy Spring; the hills and valleys were again clothed in green; but with the return of Spring came,the sad tidings of war. The sur -aender of Fort Sumpter caused many j patriotic sons of the north to leave 'their homes and hasten to their coun try's miscue.. Miss Annie Elton, the (heroine efoer story, at the beginning (of the'present rebellion was living with an Uncle in the State of Virginia; she was of northern birth, and had always lived in the north, until some five years previous to the war. Being de prived of both her parents and left in rather limited circumstances, she glad ly accepted the invitation of her,Llncle, Henry Elton, (who was the only near, relative she had) to make her home with him in the south. Having no children of his own he treated his neice with marked attention and respect; he, gave her a good education, and spared no expense in her dress. An nie loved her Uncle almost as she would a father; yet she often thought of her Northern home. Though having lived for five . years in the South, she had not yet becotne imbued with that aristocratic feeling which characteri zes so many of the, Southerners. Al though surrounded by almost every thing that wealth could procure, yet she would often find many things in the great drama of life to mar her happiness. She watched the approach. ing crisis drawing nearer and nearer, - until war had actually commenced. Annie for the first time since her re moval to the South began to think of returning to the North. It is true she often thought of her early home, but mover _ thought of returning, not at least while she was dependent on her Uncle's boUnty, he being one of those aristocratio men of the South who love to boast of their parentage. BUt-there had dawned a new era in the life of Annie Elton. She bad found another heart to love; one to whom she could confide her secrets, hopes and fears. Clyde Warren was a young man of talent and genius, and was one of-the most prominent writers of his day; his heightened sentiments and brilliant conversation won for him many friends. As his pen was his chief support he confined himself to his writing desk almost constantly. Being of a rather delicate nature he soon found his health fast failing under the confined mode of life which he led: He at length concluded to lay his pen aside for awhile and travel through the South to regain his already shat tered health ; after traveling through several of the Southern States he found his health much benefited by the -...5* CO 1 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL, XX. balmy climate of the South, and final ly came to the conclusion to settle permanently in the south eastern part of the State of Virginia. Among his first acquaintances was Miss. Elton, whose truth-loving, truth-telling eyes soon won the entbuastie young writer. Many times did Clyde Warren wend his way up the long avenue that led to Henry Elton's princely mansion, although he was " always met with a frown if that gentleman chanced to meet him. Annie had been accustom ed to obey her Uncle, but when he re fused to allow her to mingle in the society of the one on earth dearest to her heart, she ceased to obey him. "Miss Elton, will you favor mo with your company for a short walk, this evening ?" "Certainly," was the quick reply. Taking the proffered arm of Clyde, they walked some distance in silence. At length, Annie looked up in his face exclaiming as she did so, "Why Clyde Warren, what can be the matter with you, to-night ?" He led her to a seat, and taking her hand in his, ho said, "Annie, my dearest girl, we may never more meet again. This may be the last evening that I shall be permitted to enjoy your company." "Do not talk in enigmas, Clyde; you know yours are always so puzzling that I cannot solve them." "I will explain myself, dearest;" he said, pressing the trembling girl closer to his side; "I must leave the South in a few days. You have already heard of the fall of Fort Sumpter, and my sentiments will not justify me in staying any longer here. I lovo the North too well to stay where I cannot express my views. So, Annie, my dearest girl, may I again ask you to be my wife,And come North with me?" "Clyde, I know I have not much to entice me hero, but my Uncle, he will never sanction our union; he is averse to the Northern cause." "But, Annie, I am waiting for your answer." "I confide my interests to your keep ing, hoping you will never betray the trust." As she said this, she confident ly placed her hands in his, as a child yields up its treasures to the care of a mother. "My trust shall be fathfully kept." It was not until a late hour that Annie retired to her room, for they had many plans to form in regard to the future. Mr. Elton, as was expected, positively forbid Clyde Warren to mar• rylis niece. But his refusal could not daunt her in her claims upon the ob. jest of her dearest affection. "If you still insist upon disobeying me, you shall never inherit any of my fortune," exclaimed her Uncle, angrily. Annie 'gently left the study of her Uncle, bidding him goodbye as she did so; an angry frown was his only answer. Let us pass over an interval of a few months and we will enter a beautiful cottage on the banks of the noble Hudson. It is midsummer, but the tasteful ornamental trees that shade theentrance to the cozy nest, as it is sometimes called, require selfdenial from the weary traveler who feels that time will not permit him, to enter the inviting cottage and partake of the hospitality which ever characterizes its inmates. But let us enter the par lor, and we see a young woman sitting or rather reclining upon a sofa. She is evidently troubled, for the large tears aro coursing each other down her fair young cheeks. A young- man is pacing the floor; he, too, looks as if his mind was not at ease. In these per sons we recognize Clyde and Annie Warren. Although living far from the seat of war they still have kept apace with the current news of the day. Another call for men has again roused the patriotic people of the North , to come forth with loyal will and help drive the ruthless invaders from our soil. The quiet town of M. did not lack in patriotism ; several companies had been already raised, and another was rapidly being filled. All the offi cers had been chosen, except the cap tain; the one first chosen for some reason had declined going when the company was almost raised. Clyde was selected to fill his place, and it was this that caused the tears to flow from the blue eyes of Annie. After walk ing through the room for some time, he knelt beside her and imprinted a kiss on her hot cheek. "Oh ! Clyde, will you leave me a lone orphan again!" and with a con vulsive sob she threw herself into his arms "Bo calm, my dear wife, I am sorry to see you so much distresseq. I will not go Annie, without your consent; but my wife will be patriotic enough to give her husband to serve. his coun try." She at last gave her consent, and on.the morrow, Captain Warren, with his men, left for the seat of war. Long and cheering wore the many letters which Annie received from her gallant husband; he passed through many battles unhurt. Oh with what breathless suspense did Annie glance over the list of killed and wounded to see if the name of Captain Warren was among the unfortunate. Although ho was not struck by the leaden mis sive, disease fastened upon his frame. He for weeks lay too ill to notice any thing around him; the little thread of life seemed ready to snap asunder, but in time he began to grow better; and at length was able to go to his New England home, there to be cared for by his gentle blue eyed wife. Her cheek had grown pale by watching, for she was devotedly attached to her husband; being an orphan and alone she clung with strong affection to her partner. But we will again pass over a short space of time. It is a 'cold, gloomy day in October, and the cold wind whistles sadly through the naked boughs of the trees. But we will leave the gloomy aspect without, and enter the cottage of Captain Warren. We find the Captain busily engaged with a newspaper, while Annie's busy hands are employed in making garments for the soldiers. Let us glance around the room, and we see that they are not: the only occupants; near the fire with his hands resting on the arms of the chair sits an old man; ho is gazing in the fire at the dying embers; his pale, careworn looks seem to say that trouble has been his portion, too, as it has been to many others. Don't be surprised, my kind reader, when we tell you that this disconsolate old man is no ono else than the same aristocrat ic Uncle who forbid Annie to marry a Northern man. He who spurned' an orphan niece from his 122;„:::, is now living with that same niece almost dependent on her bounty. But let us take a brief retrospect of the past life of the once rich Henry Elton ; as we have said before, he was rich and tal. ented, but as his home was destroyed by the ruthless hand of war he with some difficulty found his way North, where his neice with open arms re ceived him notwithstanding the cruel ty with which he treated her previous to her marriage. He says ho is sorry for the past, but hopes he will end his life with his Annie, as he calls Mrs. Warren. We must now bid Captain Warren and his young wife adieu, fondly ho ping that their future life may be free from sorrow. G•. J. A gentleman named J. W. Towner, of Putnam county, has been writing to the Carmel Free Press how he re duced his weight from 820 pounds to 214 pounds, and is still getting light er. Ile says-he had seen a statement in the papers that by eating nothing but meat would reduce a person's flesh. At first be thought it a humbug, but then the thought occurring to him that all animals which are noth ing but flesh were full of muscle and , not of meat, he determined to try it The result was as stated above. He commenced his diet by rejecting bread, butter, cheese, potatoes, milk, sugar. Ste., in fact everything which contains sugar and starch, and eat all kinds of flesh, fish, and fowl that the family made use of; also fruits and vegetaliks that were without starch. He says his health and strength are very much improved, and that after he had got settled on his diet ho has never been hungry as he used to be, - with a knew lug sensation at the stomach, and hie food always relishes. Ho has been trying this experiment over a year. TUE SKY AN INDICATION OF TILE WEATHEII.--The cobr of the sky, at particular times, affords wonderful good guidance. Not only does a rosy sunset presage good weather, and a ruddy' sunrise bad weather, but there are other tints which speak with equal clearness and accuracy. A bright yellow sky in the evening indicates wind; a pale yellow, wet; a neutral grey color constitutes a favorable sign in the evening, and an unfavorable ono in the morning. The clouds arc again full of meaning in themselves. If their forms are soft, undefined, and full feathery, the 'weather will be fine; if their edges are hard, sharp and defi nite, it will bo foul. Generally speak ing, deep unusual hues betoken wind or rain; while the more quiet and deli. cute tints bespeak fair weather.= These are simple maxims; and yet not so simple but what the British Board of Trade has thought fit to publish them 'for the use of seafaring.—Scien tific American. A good wifo ie man's a Ace, and vice yorsa HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1865; How to Grow Thin, -PERSEVERE.- An Enoch Arden of the Day, An lowa paper has the following story; which recalls the incidents of Tennyson's poem: Thirty months ago, a Gorman, living on White street, in Dubuque, lowa, volunteered with the 21st lowa Infantry, and went to the War. We shall call him Schmidt for short. Ho left a wife who was rather good-looking, quite industrious, very frugal, and childless. Time rolled on, and Schmidt, says the Dubuque Times, went with his regiment to 'Vicksburg. There he was shot ono day, and was left for dead on the- field. The sad intelligence was sent to his wife by his captain, and elm immediately ob tained the assistance of a lawyer, and secured his back pay and a widow's pension. She drew the latter regular. ly, and, with what she earned, man aged to live comfortably. In a few months she attracted the attention of. one Schones, a miller by occupation. ' Ho Wooed and won, and for him she gave up the pension. They wore married last summer. The course of true love ran smooth with them until last Saturday morning, when, just, after they had finished breakfast, Mr. Schmidt, the first husband, opened the door and walked in! "Here was a fix! Mrs.—What would her name be in such a case?— shrieked; Mr. Schones turned pale and trembled,for Schmidt looked vengeance after he had surveyed the scone a mo ment and taken all its meaning in. After several minutes of silence, Schones revived, and boldly asked `What was to be done?' Schmidt sat down and told his story. He was wounded, not severely, near Vicks burg, and taken prisoner, and the reb els carried him away with them. From time to time he bad boon in Southern prisons, until three weeks since, when he was exchanged. He came to Dubuque as soon as be could, and hastened to his home. He recei ved no intimation of his wife's mar riage until ho entered the house that morning. As he concluded his story, his feelings overcame him, and be wept, and she wept also. But it all ended in the second husband's refusal to give the wife up. She, we are in formed, refused to express a prefer ence, and said the two men might settle the matter between themselves. For four days both men kept very close to the house, and bad many ar dent discussions over the difficulty. But the matter ended on 'Wednesday last. The returned husband offered Schones twentyfive dollars to evacu ate the premises and leave him in possession of 'Ahnie.' Schones accept ed the offer; pocketed the money, and left. Schmidt is now with his wife." Proclamation by the, President. Thursday, Tune Ist, Appointed a Day of Alourning'and Prayer. WASHINGTON, April 24.—8 y the Presidentof the United States ofAmor ice. A PROCLAMATION Whereas, By my direction, the Ac ting Secretary of State, in a notice to .the public, of the 17th, requested the -various religious denominations to as semble on the 19th inst., on the occa sion of the obsequies•of Abraham Lin coln, late President of the United States, and to observe the same with appropriate ceremonies; but • Whereas, Our country has become one groat house of mourning; whore the head of the. family has been taken away, and believing that a special peri od should be assigned / for again hum bling ourselves before Almighty God, in order that the bereavement may be sanctified to the nation— Now, therefore, in order to mitigate that grief on earth which can only be assuaged by communion with the Father in Heaven, and in compliance with the wishes of senators and rep• resentatives in Congress, communica• ted to me by resolutions adopted at the national capital, I, Andrew Johnson, President ofthe United States, do hereby appoint Thursday, the Ist day of June next, to be observed (wherever in the United States the flag of the country may be respected) as a day of humiliation and mourning. And I recommend my fel low-citizens then to assemble in their respective places of. worship, there to unite in solemn service to Almighty God in memory of the good man who has been removed, so that all shall be occupied at the same time in 'contem plation of his virtue, and in sorrow for his sudden and violent end. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand, and caused the seal of . the United States to be affixed. Dune at the eily of Washington • the 24th day of Itpril, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five, and of the indepen dence of the United States of Amer. en the eighty-ninth. 5.3 ANDREW JOHNSON. y the President: W. HUNTER, Acting Sec'y of State. .The woman ,who was saide e. o live on the corner the next house to the last ono, has been found to bo lost, or else was born and lived nowhere, • ~,, , /7% ---", ' --- - We have'been permitted to, publish the following from , David _Colstock, WhO has been confined a prisoner for nine months in the pens of the South: Four FOSTER , Jacksonville,Florida , l May 2d,1865. DEAR FATHER: I seat myself once more to write to you, to tell you that I am still alive and exchanged. I reached our lines on the morning of the 29th of April, and was glad to get sight of the old stars and stripes once more. I was captured on the 22d day of July, and have been almost starved to death ever since. I will tell you what we drawed for rations: one half pint of beans, and a quarter of a pound of beef, for a days rations, and - no salt to salt that with; and no shelter to sleep under. After I was first captured they took me to camp Sumpter, Anderson villa, Georgia, and there staid until the latter part of August, and then we went to Macon, Georgia, and staid there till in September; then they took us to Savannah, Georgia, and kept us there ono month; then took us to camp Millen, Georgia, and there staid two weeks; then they took us to Blackstone; from there to Thomas ville, and from there wo marched to Camp Sumpter again and staid until April; they heard the yankees were for us and they run us to Macon; they heard that our troops were making a raid down through there, and the old captain in command of us, got orders to take us back to Thomasville. We went to Albany, then to Thomasville again, and from there to--City, from thereto Balden, and then they march-- ed us through to Jacksonville, 20 miles, where they let us go, and told us to go through. I almost cried when I hoard the fife and drum, and seen the old stars and stripes once more. Wo will go up the river to Hilton Head in a few days. We will draw clothing hero, and we will got pleanty to eat. I would like to write more, but I will not have time, for I have got charge of twenty-five men, and have to serve out rations to them three times a day, and it takes all the time I have got. I think that we will get a furlough as soon as we get recruited up a little; wo are so poor that we can't, get a round. I have not been sick, but I am weak and poor. I will not weigh over 110 pounds; when I was captur ed I weighed 176 and have been redu ced the difference in nine months. Your long lost son, DAVID COLBTOCIII heal, livo;plump, jolly, rolly polly children are as scarce as sensible grownup people. Little, thin, nar row-shouldered, angular, pale intellec tualities are common enough. It is your hearty ton-boy that is ararity. What woman was ever loss delicate in soul, and pure in heart because she tore her frock, and climbed trees when she was a child ? Real, wild, childish romping, with ringing laugh- ter and twinkling eyes, merry dances and family frolics—that is the stuff out of which wholesome manhood and .womanhood are made. Children who are under conviction of sin at five years of ago, die with brain disease, or live with hypochondria, and tor ment the life out of all around them. Sad is the family who has one or more ofsuch. We &era doubt the mother of the Gracchi was a sad romp, and we more than suspect Portia of im mense toinboyhood. Such healthy na tures could not have developed other wise. ' Pitty and love little children. Tol erate these pests: Comfort Nellie over her dead bird, and don't call Nel lie's "little white kitten" a "cat." It is enough to break a juvnite he art to have one's favorite snubbed. How would you like to hear your own Frederick Augustus called "a dirty young one?" The little ones have their tragedies and comedies, and laugh and weep more sincerely than, you do at Falstaff or Lear. They love marry, keep house, have children, have weddings and funerals, and .dig litte graves for dead mice in the.gar den, and mourn into small Nwhitehand kerchiefs, and get brother Jim to write an appropriate inscription for its tiny headboard. Is it not human nature in little, and, in its way, as de serving of a certain respect? You do . not despise your own reflections in a concave mirror, you know.- Cherish tho children; mend the frocks; don't scold them for broken toys, fir man is not more inevitably mortal than playthings.. Don't strip their fat shoulders iu winter, rior toast them in flannels in dogdays, because somebody told you to. Don't drug them; don't "yarb" them; don't stuff them with pastry; don't send them to infant-schools at three, or to faocy balls at ten, nor teach thorn the command ments earlier than they can remem ber Mother Goose. DIEM i•-:4; '" . 1 ' -.::,.... '• - l ~...;,,,,,,., ~.-.,...-.!...„.. . . i...: ).. , . 01, , i ~ „ 7:.„,..' , _.. ' :. .._.. . ~_. .. ..„, ..;._. .-. ..... _. ~ TERM, $2,00 a year in advance. A Prisoners Experience. CHILDREN. Proclamation by the President. Raising of the Blockade along the 'Maole Atlantic and part of the Gulf Coasts-- A few ports on the Texa's coast only excepted. Washington, May 22. By the. President of the United States A PROCLAMATION , , . WHEREAs, By .tne proclamation of the President of the_llth dtiy of April last, certain ports of the United States therein specified, which had previous ly been subject to blockade were, for objects Of public safety, declared, in conformity with previous special legis lation of Congress, to be closed against foreign commerce during the national will to be thereafter expressed and made known by the President; And 'whereas, Events and circum stances have since occurred,which, in my judgement, render it expedient to remove that restriction, except as to the ports of Galveston, Lasalle, Bra zos de Santiago, Point Isabel and Brownsville, in the'State of Texas; Now, therefore, be it known that I, Andrew Johnson, President of the . United States, hereby deolare that the ports aforesaid, not excepted as above, shall be opened to foreign commerce from and after the first dar•of July; that commercial intercourse with ,the said ports may frorn that time be car-, ried on, subject to the laws of the United States, and in, pursuance of such regulations as maybe prescribe' by the Secretary orthe Treasury. If, however, any vessel from a foreign, port shall enter any of before named• excepted ports in the State of Texas she will continue - to be held liable to the penalties prescribed by the act of Congress, approved on the 13th day : of July, 1801, and the 'persons on board of her to such penalties as may be incurred, pursuant to the laws of war for trading or attempting to trade with the nemy. And I, Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, do hereby declare and make known that the United States of "America do henceforth 'disal low all persons trading, or attempt ing to trade, in any ports of the Uni_ ted States, in violation of the laws thereof, all pretence of belligerent rights and privileges, and give notice that from the date of this proclama tion all such 'offenders will be held and dealt with as pirates. It is also ordered that 'all restric tions upon trade heretofore imposed in the territory of the United States, east of the Mississippi river, save those relating to contraband. of 'War, to the reservation of the rightS of the United States, to property purchased in the territory of an enemy, and to twenty-five per cent. upon the purcha ses of cotton, are removed. All provisions of the internal revc . ue law will be carried into effect under the bropor officers.. ' [L. s] In witness whereof 1 have here unto set my hand, and caused the seal of the United States to be affix ed. Dune at the city. of Washington, this, the twenty second day of May, in the year of our Lord one thous and eight hundred and siXty•five• and of the independence of the Uni ted. States of ..e . i.nierica the-eighty, ninth. . , ANDREW JOHNS_ ON By order of the President: W. HUNTER, Assistant Secretary of War. A TERRIBLE DUEL —A few years since, as a New England gentleman, whose name we shall call Brown, was passing a few days in ono of our West ern eities, he had the misfortune, unin tentional/y, to offend the susceptible' honor of a tall militia colonel, who'vias one of his fellow-boarders. flis apolo gies not being satisfactory, a challenge was sent to him, which, however, he declined, from conscientious scruples. The colonel who by the way, had' won in two or three encounters quite a reputation as a duelist, at once con ceived that his opponent Was a CO7- ard, and resolved to disgrace hint in the taco of . all the assembled - ovisdom in the house. Accordingly, tho next day, at dinner-time, in marched, the the duelist, armed with a cowhide, and advancing to Brown's chair,proceeded to dust his jacket in the most appro ved' style'. Brown was astonished. Luckily, he had been lieutenant of militia in his native State, . and he know the importance of incommoding his enemy by a diversion.'. So,"seiging a gravy-tureen, he teased the contents into the face of the belligerent'; Colo:' nel, and before he could.reepv . eifroM the drowning sensation thus occasion ed, ho sprang up on the table, and be gan to shower nylon him pith a lib eral hand the contents of the dishes around. "You' pie an infernal-----". "Coward!" the colonel was Omit . to say, but at that moment a .plato greens struckfull upon his-Moab, and the word vas blockaded ; krst forever. JO.FRI HE tko,nabot pcuttptete v olitn;. i'ourift 7 ,an4 pqt r Sefser the mpo,Amplo racilWek rim;etxuEYngy airpsyAgiq x. o . 49 . b .PAßtt%N lo4,o, --,-7 HAN.I; O I BIWA • vi . Rit.ooli ! AMStkg; 4‘ l' ` POSITIK: GATillg; .. , CIROULABk . . BALL i i talkg9'6; tiillialka; &0., asc., ,te NO. 49. CALL AIM EXAMANS BPECLIICUI*-ICOIO4 AT LFIWIS' BOOK, STATIOIISI(Y 8‘3,11:1SIC TOR '•11a!" cried the .New Buglander„.whoseN blood was noW - 4,_qpiacl_or_ . `greens ; „ are you?-take, a potato,. And hurried .a telling, volley,of - herd .potao-t toes at, -- him. l'E2coelient ;ego capital With - calves' lead," • and'elfash: -- came a plate of ! Soft egg's— against the side of his cranium: blovis of tho cowhide, which 'had' erto descended upon the Yankee'dherid:.. and shoulders, now began to fall.,morytr . weakly and Wildly, and - it bee - ene, evident that the assailant, half: stun= • ned, choked, and partly, ; getting the w,erst .of it. His - courage.. Nvas-oozing out• !lake a ~turkeyr shouted Brown, As .the:, noble old gob-, bier descended, fairly upon the-colt:tr.,: nel's head, and bursting, filled-his hair • and eyes with delicious lookingettiff-, ing. "Here's thy.. fringes," he.contin-r: • ued, as the squash arid •jelly follovied.. after, ,By this time_the colonel trasdr,,; 'retrievably,defeated,• and. his niereiless. opponent.seized a large plum pudding,. steaming lot, and holding it above , his head with. ,both hands,. MUM& tot bury him beneath it, Re qualledwitlx,: , torror i and throwing: dewn, hisi eewc., • hide, 'turned about dad made rush': - for the door. !'Stop , ; for the pudding,, colonel, stop for the padding.'.',.. -lie, • did not escape fram the ridieulifr the, affair occasioned ; .310 subsequent- -: ly. challenged four ..!persond, ;against .d whom his ire was partieularly • • es...all_constmteiLia •; • t • - availing themselves of the privilege of. r. the challenged patty, appointe& appointed puciding•bags for their wea. • pons. At length the Unhappy dnelist f : finding no one milling to shoot .op.ba:.l , shot, was obligod to quit the" State.; A ConveAed Rebelite,Constr6ottom_ At a meeting of Southern men 'id llemphis, recently, Col. Grace, of Ar•• kansas, spoke as follovrs FELLO* CITIZENS : UM the who drew up the ordinance of , Seees4- sion in the Legislature.of Arkansas. have been in the field fightinge,gainit4 - - the Union for nearly four yeare; now I am a conquered and whipped man. [Laughter.] :As I Was:gallanCin, going out to fight, I now proribse to be. gallant at surrenderingend submitting;'; to the arms of the Government that we ,cannot whip, [Laughter.] I have no , contempt for Federal authority new, if' I ever bad. Ido not think there is A. manly bosom in the Smith bat that has , : higher respect for Northern - gallaUirr . than when, we went into the ,fight.: There, may be some 'Mai in the Northe who, may think . 'that the South Bail d fiendthe death of our Jainc;d ept, Prosiddtit, butl.know that theieople of the South indium over .his death,: and feel that theiltuye friend. The North have maintained d,his coif.> filet nobly, and the South have. noth;..; ing to be ashamed ofi,: lam of ;the„ South.rrthereis somethings in:thei-. , very, atmosphere that makes Men great. , So, I say that theßouth.is not, an insignificant people; and if so great. people as they are cannot .whip tbs , world, who cannot come to: , the int: evitable.conclusion -that the. North greater? ..[Laughter.] 'And: I going to stultify, myself-kysaying 1., have been whipp,ed,n3r, somebody. Now it is our 'duty to 'repent and go baCk to- this great national` hureha-repent; get`' absolution, and be baptized ••afrolk ' [Laughter.] I know we will receive honorable audjust terms. When I had , an interview with the President,: hi heart seemed' le be ever overffewrni . with love toWardithe Sotithern psettio. .We first went out of, the Union , and. .throw down the gage of battlo,and the North picked it w up; e fired , lbw:first gun . and -took, the 'first fort--,-Fort‘ Surater—whiqh ,was taken backAn few days, ago: [Laughter.] The North seamed to be unwilling to fight; they did 'note think.we would fight; and's* we thought of theni, bat to our smith*, we, have found tett ,different;, they , :seemed to . spring.up. like mushrooms from 'parts of the earth; Before .- war I never saw a Fedefel'offiVer tisril= ' ly. I never felt the slightestoppression' of the,.Federalßrovernment; in fact, I never, theught we had one until kwont, out to fight;then I found-We 440 have a Governnient.. ' e Akio ABOUT DlMPLEs.l—Dimples axe the perpetual smiles of Nature4—the Very cunningeet device and lurkint; place of Love, When earth:is dAlided by dells nnd valleys, it afways:seems i to laugh; when the ocean is dimpled by the breeze' it Sparkles With joy beneath the sunshine' ,of beaven::. We. Cannot look for ~frowns a dimpled face). frowns and dirciples.will not asseciate together. H.Ow, soft, hoii rosnialt: how beantifel are' the dimidesln'the elboWs and shemlders i thd pkotty hands and feet, o.f the rosybabe. Atnther dote upon those darling eliMples, sand de, light to 4iss them. .11tt ; i3drfectly pled; .Michanting atloast to the cpe'o,Pf ; an en thuaiastie•yound , which emaepeeping out of th epe_e_4 l around th649*-OcPIA:`OSAAP.,YeO7-• teen," sweet Idventeen ess some a.rolmmoLekizg„,kally, ; , _p_seping 'out.lMlLftylagavhiyth.e.moment'ilfter, doming'and 'piing with the .most be. Witching cogrtotry, F ., 4J 'ICEi DILL. ITEADS, in tab South. ISI