(The 31'irth South Ucmntral. yy JNX/lIV SICKIJUR, Proprietor^ NEW SERTES, Awk)jPvaoof*ti c. ...j-'Thj. i _• T*f> •t Tunkhannock "iffjH ITHARVEY SICKLERa Terms—l copy 1 year, (in advance) 82.00 ■•t paid within six months, 82.50 will be charged *0 paper will be DISCONTINUFD, until all ar- Tearages are paid; unless at the option of publisher. ADVEHTIiSING. ft tints er , j ) I . [ r tess, make three] four \ txro jthree) sir one 'onettjuare iceeks)weeks ino'th mo'thmo'lhyear 1 Suare~ 3,00j~5~00 J Jo. 2,00 2.50! 3.25] 3.50} 450 6,00 1 do 3,00 375 4,75 5,50! 7,00 9,00 I Column. 400 4 ; 50 6,0W 8,00 10,0 C 15,00 4 do. 600 6 50} 10,00 12,00 17,00 25,00 4 do. 800 7 ,0f 14,00* 18,00 25,00 35,00 I do. lofoo 12,00| 17,00! 22,00.28,00 40,<>0 SXECUTOHi, ADMINISTRATORS and AUDI TOR'S KOTTCES, of the usual length, 82,50 efIITUARIES,- exceeding ten lines, each ; RELI • IOCS and LITER ARY NOTICES, not of genera isterest, one half toe regular rates. Business Cards of one square, with paper, 85. JOB WORK; •f all kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit he times. All TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS and JOB WORK must be paid for, when ordered. fusiiifs ffirtit*. RF. LITTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW loga street, TunkhannockFa. . COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre. Luierno County Pa. GEO. S. TUTTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW Tunkhonnook, Pa. Office' n Stark's Brick * ek, Ttoga street. WM. M. PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, O 6ce in Stark's Brick Block Tioga St., Tuuk annock, Pa. Cjf Bueijlec I)ousf, HAITLTLSBJJRG, PKNNA- The undersigned having lately purchased the >1 BUEHLER HOUSE" property, has already com meaced such alterations and improvements as will rauder this old and popular House fqual, if not supc rlar, to any Hotel in the City of Uarrisburg. A'continuance of the public patronage is refpect- MI, OEO , BOLTOS . WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE, TUN KUAN SOCK., WYOMING CO., PA. TULS establishment has recently been refitted an furnished in rbe latest style Every attention will We givon to thp comfort aDd convenience of tho=e whe patronize the House. T. B. WALL, Owner and Proprietor : Tmakhannock, September 11, 1861. NORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA Win. H. COKTRIGHT, Prop'r HAVING resumed the proprietorship of the above Hotel, the undersigned will spare no effort to reader the house an agreeable place oi sojourn for all who may favor it with their custom. * * Wm.li CORTIUGHT. fui, 3rd, 1563 * l > iV. .T. C- BEC KK Id . PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, "Would respectfully announce to the citizensofWy- Miug. that he has located at Tvnkhunnock where he will promptly attend to all calls in the line of his profession. ... r CigT Will be found at home on Saturdays or oath week „ peans flfltel, , VOWANBA, PA. p. B- BARTLET, jiateefi. w BHAINARD HOUSE, ELRIRA, N. Y. PROPRIETOR. The MEANS HOTF.L, i- one of the LARGEST ud BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country—lt ie itted up in the most modern and improved style, uud no pains are spared to make it a pleasant and agreeable stopping-place for all, r 3, n2l, ly. eLARXE.KEEN EY.&fiO., * MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALE HEALERS IN LADIES', MISSES' & GENTS' silkauti£assimm flats ANT) JOBBERS IN ■ATS, CAPS, FURS, STRAW GOODS, PARASOLS AND UMBRELLAS. BUFFALO AND FANCY ROBES, A49 BROADWAY, CORNER OF LEONARD STREET, ItAw SW&&BS* IF.CLARK, \ A. KEF, NET, \ §. LKRENXT. J M. GILMAN, If OILMAN, has permanently located in Tunk I* L. bannock Borough, and respectfully tenderhi profeseiooal services to the citizens of this placeand surrounding country. WORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE SATIT •jiu •? fcWoi's Law Offico near the Post fflfft ftfltg. MY I*IJAIN ISOVBR. I was a coquette. Many a lover's heart had I lacerated by refusing his offer of nsarriage after I had lured bim on to a declaration. My last victim's name was James Frazer. lie wa9 a tall, awkward, homely, ungainly man but his heart was as steel. I respected bim highly, and felt pained when I witnessed his anguish at my rejection of him. But the fact was, I my. self, had fallen in love with Captain Elliot, who had beeD unremitting in his devotion to me. Mr. James Frazer had warned me against Elliot, but I charged him with jealousy, and took his warning as an in sult. A few days afterwards, Elliot and I were engaged, and tny dream of romantic love seemed to be in a fair way to realiza tion—l had a week of happiness. Many have not as many in a life time. Many awake from the bright, short dream, to find themselves in life-lor.g darkness and bond age from whicJ there is no escape. Thank God I was not to be as miserable as they ! My mother was a widow in good circum stances, and having very bad health. She was also of an easy, listless, credulous na ture—la':ing trouble and willing to tak? things just as they happened to present themselves. She, therefore, made no in quiries about Captain Elliot—but fondly believed that, inasmuch as he was a Cap tain,*he must be a man of honor, especi ally as he iiad served in the Crimea and in In dia, and won medals. His regiment was quartered in our neighborhood and lie had the reputation of being the wealthiest; as certainly he was the handsomest officer in it. I remember well the day we were en gaged. He was on duty and had manag ed to ride over to our house in his uniform and while we were walking in the garden, he made the tender avowal. I referred him to ''mama." He hastened to her—re turned in three minutes, and led me into "her presence to receive the assurance that the maternal consent had been freely and readily given—My dear mother bated trouble, and she moreover loved me ten derly ; so that she was well pleased to find a husband presenting himself in a form and manner apparently so eligible for her beloved and only daughter. Well, a week passed quite delightfully, as I have said, and at the expiration of that there might have been seen an equcstiran party winding through our old Devonshire woods and quiet country roads. Elliot and I led the cavalcade. I rode my cwn beau tiful brown Bess. Captain Elliot was mounted on a handsome black horse that had been sent us from London. Follow ing us was a bevy of merry girls and their cavaliers, aineng whom was tall, awkward and silent James Frazer. His presence had marred all pleasure of my ride, and 1 was glad to be in advance of them all, that I might not see hitu. And so we rode on through the woods and I listened, well pleased to the low, but animated words of the gallant Elliot who wished himself a knight, and me a fair ladye of the olden time, that he might go forth to do battle and compi 1 all men to recognize the ciaims of his peerless love. Very eloquently be spoke of the inspira tions of love, of the brave deeds and per ilous exploits it had prompted, wishing again and again that he might proclaim and maintain his love before the world It pleased me ty listen to this, and to believe it sincere, though I surely had no wish to put my lover to such a test. A shot snd den'v rang hrough the woods.and a woun ded bird darting past, fluttered and fell at the feet of brown Bess. With a bound and a spring that nearly unseated me she was off. Struggling to regain my seat, I had no power to check her, and even as she flew the fear and madness of the moment grew npon her. I could only cling breathlessly to mane and bridle, and wonder helplessly where this mad gallop was to end. She swerved from a passing wagon, and turned into a path that led to the river. In the sudden movement the reins had been torn from my hands and I could not regain (hem. I clung to the mane and closed my eyes, that I might not see the fate that awaited me. How sweet was life in those precious moments that I thought my last! How all its joys and affections, its crown ing love rose up before me ! I thought of the pang that would rend Elliot's heart as he saw ine lying, mangled and dead ; and the thought would come if lie were pursu ing and trying to save me, even, as he had said, at risk of life and limb. I remem bered no more. I felt a sudden shock, a feariul rushing through the air, and knew no more for days afterwards. I woke to a faint, weak semblance of life in my cham ber at home. I never saw Captain Elliot again. The last words I ever heard from his lips were those of knighly daring. The last action of his life in connection with mine, was to follow the train ot frightened youths who rode after me to contemplate the disaster from afar, and as soon as he saw me lifted from the shallow bed of the river, into which I had been thrown when my fright ened horse stopped so suddenly on its bar.k to ride hastily off. That evening he sent to make inquiries, and learning that 1 was severely if Dot fatally injured, he content ed himself with such tidings of my condi tion and improvemant as could be gained from mere raraor. At iiut it was known that I would re cover entirely from the effects of ray inju ry, nd that very day Captain Elliot slid- ••TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT. "—Thomas Jeffieraon. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1866. denly departed from the neighborhood.— He made no attempt to see me, nor sent me any farewell. When I was once more abroad, and beginning, though with much unalloyed bitterness, to learu the lesson of patience and resignation that awaited me, I received a letter from liiiu, in which he merely said that he presumed my own judgment had taught me, that in iny alter ed circumstances our engagement must come to an end ; but to satisfy his own sense of honor [his lioior] he wrote to say that, while entertaining the higher respect for me, he desired a formal renun ciation of the claim. Writing on the bot tom of the letter, "let it be as you wish," I returned it to him at ouce and ended my brief dream of romance. I heard ere this of Elliot's cowardly con duct on that day, but now I first bethought me to inquire who had rescued me from that imminent death. And then I learned that James Frazer, his *rin already broken by the jerk with whicfo Brown Bess tore away from him as he caught at her bridle, had ridden after me and been the first to lift me from the water. Many times daily he made inquiries concerning me ; his was the hand that sent the rare flowers that had decked my room; his were the lips that breathed words of comfort and hope to my poor mother; his were the books that I read during the days of convales cence ,* and his, now, the arm that sup ported me as slowly s and painfully I paced the garden walks. I have been his wife for many a year. I have forgotten that he is not handsome —or rather he is beautiful to me, because I see his grand and loving spirit •hining through his plain features, and ani mating his awkward figure. I have long since laid aside as untenable, my theory that beautiful spirits dwell only in lovely bodies. It may be a providential compen sation that, in denying physical perfection, the soul is not dwarfed or marred by pet ty vanity oi love of the world's praise. The Charleston (Va.) Chronicle takes this humerous view of the condition of the South: It seems to us to be as hard to get in the Union as it is to get out. The South respectfully asks to move one way or the other. We are like the fellow that was forced to go to the show, and then not al lowed to go any further than where he paid for his ticket. We have been drag ged into the door way of the FeJeral tent, and are not allowed to see any of the per formance except to settle with tax collect ors. *We can hear the animals growling inside, and the cracking of the ring mas ter's whip, but we can't see the show unless we pay for two, and take in R colored lady. And (lie worst of it is, they keep a great eagle perched over the entrance, which, if yoj attempt to go hack, sweeps down upon you and picks a hole in your head. We justly think this is unreasonable, they ought either to let us pass in, or refused our money and tie up the eagle. The New York Freeman's Journal draws the following picture of Old Thad. Stevens: "The leading picture in this rump Congress is that ba 1 old man, Mr. T'naddeus Stevens. This moral, social and political leper, whom it is a disgrace to a Pennsylvania county not to have in dicted as a public nuisance—as would have happened had he been a poor man; having emigrated from New England, and bv cunning and assiduous dexterity climb ed into wealth, exhibits now, in the pres ent degraded rump Congress, the same.el enients of character in shaping the action of that bedy. This vile person, as every honest man knows he is, if he has the mis fortune of knowing hin in any relation of life, seems to rule the unhappy rump Con gress a3 he wills. It is one of the threatened and most severe puni-hments that a just God inflicts on a dissolute and impious people, to put them under the heels of the basest, vilest, most groveling, and every way contemptible wretches that wear tli6 human form. ' grTwo Irishmen were drinking toasts to Corcoran's N. Y. regiment, One says, " Here's to the 69th—the last in the field and the first to lave it." "You don't mane that," said the other. "Tho divil I don't what thin do I mane?" " 'Tis this: Here's to the 69th—aiquil to none !"—Drinks fol lowed this correction, of course. REGULAR CUSTOMER. —An old fellow out in Pennsylvania, who "advertised" his wife six or seven times, had the assur ance recently to ask the editor of a local paper to print the customary advertisement for half price in consideration of his being a " regular customer." -4> 1 11 The Richmond Examiner says one can easily put a five cent loaf cf the baker's bread ia each cheek, a ten cent loaf in the middle, and thci whistle Yankee Doodle without difficulty. Why is the letter C like a generous fairy ? Because it turns ash into cash. Whv is swearing like a ragged coat ? It is a bad habit. Man's two pirili—war and women. The Tennessee Person-Governor—Pren tice on Brownlow. [From the Louisville Journal ] Parson Brownlow, the irreverent Gov ernor of Tennessee, has published one of his characteristically low and dirty articles about us in the Knoxville Whig. In that article he has not stated a single truth, Qr anythsng approximating to a truth.— Whenever he sits down to abuse anybody, lies cluster around his pen like blue-bottle flies around a horse's ears in July or Au gust. He lies with his pen, lies with his ! tongue, lies with his gestures, lies through every pore of his yellow and shriveled hide. Lies issue from his mouth like the horned locusts from the throat of tbatgther great beast described in the Apocalypse, lie is probably the "father" ol as many lies as the horned and tailed master he serves. The parson is now a fierce abolitionist, lie goes as far in Radicalism as the lowest and worst Radical in the nation. He would gladly bathe his hands and feet, and wash his face in the blood of every man who is not a Radical. * * * • * • II is most extraordinary and most dis graceful that any portion of the people of Tennessee, knowing this man as they all did, voted to make him Governor of that State. No other State was ever affected aud disgraced and cursed with such an un mitigated, such an unredeemed and unre deemable blackguard as her Chief-Magis trate. He is a parody, a caricature, a broad burlesque on all possible governors- He is a monstrosity. He is a thing as much oiif of nature as Barnum's woolly horse or his giants and dwarfs, or his calf with two heads and eight legs —four of the legs pointing towards the zenith. His blood is hell broth, which Satan will one day sup with a long poon. They say there is fire in him, but it is hell-fire, every particle of it. Though he is but a single swine, there are as many devils in him as there weie in the whole herd that "ran violently down a steep place into the sea." His heart is nothing but a hissing knot of vipers, rattlesnakes, cobra, and cotton mouths. He nercr argued a question in his life, approaching no subject but with fierce, bitter, coarse, low and vulgar ob jurgations. His tongue should be bored through and through with his own steel pen, heated red-hot. man, as we have said, calls himself a clergyman. He holds forth in pulpits. He preaches, prays and exhorts, draws down his face, drops the corners of his mouth, and undertakes to look sanctimonious. And yet he seemg always trying, in his pulpit-discourses, to sec under how thin a disguise he can ven ture to curse, and swear, and blaspheme. He can't offer up a prayer in the house of God without telling the Lord what an in fernal scoundrel, damned thief, or cursed vagabond, this, that, or the other neighbor is From his youth up to his old age, he has had no personal controversies without attacking the wives, fathers, mothers, grand fathers, grandmothers, brothers, sisters, children, uncles, aunts, and nephews of his opponents. Ho has sought to strew his wholo path of life with the dark wrecks of wantonly ruined reputations. He has nev er had an hour's happiness except in the unhappiness of others. He h'S ever said to eTil, "Be though my good !'' He Ims always carefully jotted down all that he heard unfavorable to gentlemen while pro fessing to be their friend, so as to be ready for the day of alienation. He howls ven om, talks venom, coughs venom, sneezes venom, spits venom, drools venom, sweats venom, stinks venom, and distils venom from his nose. Not the fuliginous exlialta tions from the bottomless pit, not the fire and brimstone fumes from the sooty throat of the devil, were ever more blighting and blasting than his accursed serpent-breath. He never had a friend on earth out of bis own family. No doubt there are those who fear him for his fiendish ferocity, but no human being not of his own household ever loved or respected him. He will have bis reward. Sowing in wrath, he will reap in agony. Fury and hate may stifle in his heart the feeling of remorse tor a time, but Nemesis, with her horrid whip, will yet scourage him round the whole orb of being All the hairs upon his head will seem to him to be snaken, like the hissing and forked tongued locks of the Eumenides. When he shall retire, as he soon must, from the noisy and tnmul tuous strifes that have ever engaged and still engage all his thoughts, he will not have a solitary pleasant and serene memo ry of the past. On the contrary, as score of bitter, and desolate, and torturing iccol lections will corrode and eat up his very heart, until, cut oft* from all human sympa thies, exiled from the pale of all the beau tiful genialities of life, having no friends or companions around him to sooth him in his moral and physical solitude, deserted by man, whose enemy he has been, and loathed by God, whose holy temples he has sacrilegiously desecrated by his horrid mockeries of religion, festering from lead to foot with the polluted and poisonous puddle water in his veins, standing as an outcast and pariah on the loue desert of despair, shrinking from the past, agonized by the present, and not daring to gaze in - to the future, beholding in fancy upon the door of his own soul, "Hope comes not here that comes to all," 6hut out by mur kiest clouds from every star that to others lights the path to the tomb, and writhing under myriad curses and execrations plied np like a mountain of living coals upon his head, he shall long at least to make hii es cape from earth—scarcely asking to what more dreadful destiny. " Goppcrnead Demooatratlon." Sucb it the language with which the fa natic9 are pleased to characterize the very naturyl outgush of jubilant feeling atnoDg conservative men at the noble stand which the President hfts taken, " Copperhead," forsooth ! It has no terrors now. The changes have bean rung upon it until it now only defiles the lips which utter it, and the types which print it. The fact is, President Johnson has said to the waves of fanaticism, THUS FAR AND NO FARTHER. The nation longs for peace, for quiet. Its prayer is for rest, that it may go about its ordinary business in a calm, unimpassion ed manner. The President is determined that this needed repose from political agi tation and civil wai shall be enjoyed by the natiou, of which he in the head. A conservative reaction under the guidance of President Johnson, thank God, has set in, and it will be operative until a wise and unimpassioned statesmanship once more controls the destinies of the country, as it did in better days, when we had statesmen in the seats now occupied by the one idea apostles of agitation and sectionalism, such as Wilson, Wade, Bumner. What would these fanatics have more ? Has not the country shed its blood like water to carry out their fanatical ideas ? Is not our soil literally cadaverous and fostering with the mangled forms of the noblest of our youths untimely slain ? The country cannot stand the wear and tear of fanatical rule any lon ger, and President Johnson is deteimined that conveisatism shall be once more in the ascendant. The historical reader will remember how irksome the hypocrisy, sour faces and cant of Cromwellian Puritanism at length became to England, and how the return of Charles the Second to the throne of his ancestors was hailed by a universal outburst of delight. The old festivals, games and hightides of merr) England, which had been so lorg under the ban of the snuffling and crop-eared-praise-God bare-bones crew, were celebrated once more with unwonted glee. The Maypole was seen again on the village green; laughter and fun and jollity were once more lawful aud not an offence against God. We, here in America, have been under the rule of the "saints"' long enough. It has been a yoke grevious to be borne. Tears and blood have run in rivers ; let the fanatics be content, and confess that the nation has done its best to give effect to their doctrine. They are indications already that they DARK not attempt to thwart the President in his healing and conciliatory policy. They rave and tear their hair, and curse the head of the Government, but the lapse of a very short time will quiet theif* madness, for the President will be sustained by the people.— Banner of Liberty. THE "VICTORY" IN COKNICTICUT.— We have no great respect for the Senator from Kansas, familiarly known as " Jim Lane." But the Radicals dare not ques tion his authority, and to them we com mend this view of the Connecticut election taken from the Congressional §lobe. Mr. Lane, of Kansas —But it is 3aid the President interfered with the Connecticut election. Let ine say to the Republicans just one word on the subject of that elec tion. One more tictory like that, and I should think the Republican paity would be unhorsed. It is but the first scratch of the handwriting on the wall. If you per mit the Democratic party to take and oc cupy the platform of Restoring these States to the Union, admitting these Senators and Representatives to their places in Congress, I venture the assertion as a politician, that the House of Representatives will stand at the next Congress on the other side as much as it stands on our side this session. The people of this country will have those States restored ; they will have those loy al members in their places in Congress and if they cannot do it through the Re publican party, if they cannot do it through the Union party, they will do it even thro' the Democratic party. • Weil-Timed Remarks, In reply to a scurrilous attack upon Sen ator Dowan, the Philadelphia Daily News, a Republican print, says : "He was a Union man when the Re publicans all claimed to be Union men. lie is so still; and if they have departed from the position they pretended to occu py, and have become disunionists is he to be censured for not going with them ? The Tribune may say the same, if it pleaes, of President Johnson. T. e gap between that gentleman and the Republican majority grew wider and wider every day , but An drew Johnson was a Union man when Horace Greely was advocating in the col umns of his newspaper the right of seces sion, and blubbering every day i let them go.'" We are glad to find that a republican paper of such ability and relative strength has the manliness to speak out against his late party associates, telling them that if they have become •' disunionists" it is no argument to influence him to take the ame course. A wee bit of a boy having been slightly chastised by his mother, sat very quietly in his chair for some time, afterward, no doubt thinking very profoundly. At last he spoke out thus: "Muzzer, I wish Pa'd get anuzzer housekeeper—l've got tired o' seein' you round." TBHMS, ta,oo I'SUI ANTftJM ODDS AND ENDS. A deadsseat — a party of ghosts. A model fi-.h—a sea!-in-wax. The voice of winter —Snow-balling. Water — fluid once used as a drink. The Hoard of Trade —The shop-board. The rule at Ileligious parties —no cards. A tea never indulged in by gossips— Charity. Jii. In what color should a secret be kept ? Inviolet. How to get a good servant— Do the work yourseif To buy coal cheap—Don't pay to high a price for it. Tongue—A little horse which is contin ually running away. When a man uses tobacco there is some vir-chew in it. When is a tired man like a thief? When he needs a-resting. The first and greatest thing in rbetorie is to have something to say. Is not the National House of Represen tatives the modern Babble-on, To call fever and ague "no great shakes," is a contradiction of terms. When is an undertaker like one of his own jobs ? When he's a coughin'. W T hen a man has been kicked it is pre sumed that the kicker has the V-toe pow er. "Deal gently with the (h)crring," as the Cockney fishdealer said to a customer. An exchange soggests as an amusement to young ladies on wet afternoons to knit their eyebrows. What would this world be without wo man ? A perfect blank—like a sheet of pa per, not even ruled. llow to prevent beer from turning sour —Always leave the key in the tap, and don't lock the cellar. The remains of a bachelor who "burst into tears" at reading a description of mar ried life, has been found. Why do gipsies wear scarlet cloaks ? In order to make an outward show that they are deeply read. Where is paper r&oney first mention d io the bible? When tKe dove brought the green—back to Noah. • Mr 9. Jones asks, if the bills before Con gress are not counterfeit, why there should be so much difficulty in passing them. Why is a young lady just from boarding school like a building committee ? Because she is ready to ieceive proposals. Old anglers say that if you wish to catch a fine fish, you must throw your bait right at bim. Young ladies may take notice. "I think our church will last a good many years yet,''.said a waggish deacon to his minister: "I see the sleepers are very sound." It is a great comfort to a man with but a dollar in his pocket to know that if he can not invest in five-twenties he can in twenty fives. "Out of sight, out of mind." We don't sen it. We dropped our pocketbook the other day and it hain't beer, out of our mind since, If you want to know bow you stand with any person, get him angry; you never know what is at a stream till it is stirred up. What is the difference between a wealthy toper and a skillful miner ? One turns his gold into quarts and the other turn 9 his quartz into gold. An old maid is more liberal than a young one. The latter may always be willing to lend you a hand, the former will lend you one, and tbank you too. ♦•So many men, so many minds." Not always the case. A gentleman asked a erowd to imbibe the other day. They were all of one mind and partook. A friend says he's either head and ears in love, or else he's got the colic —he can't tell which, as he is not certain which he. tasted last, kisses or watermelons. The reason women so seldom stammer is becanse they talk so fast—a stammer has got no chance to get in. People stutter because they hesitate. But who ever knew a woman to hesitate about anything ? A young lady explained to one of our jours, the other day the distinction between printing and publishing, and at the conclu sion of her remarks, byway of illustration, she said: "You may print a kiss on my cheek, but you must not publish it." NEGRO PROCESSION AT NORFOLK— RJOT AND LOSS OF LIFE.— The negroes of Norfalk, Va., turned out in large procession yesterday, in honour of the passage of the Civil Rights bill. While the procession was passing through the streets a difficulty occurred between the negroes and, in which one white man was killed and his brother and step-mother mortally wounded. Or det was finally restored by the military. VOL. 5 NO. 38