Weekly Standard (Newspaper) - October 28, 1863, Raleigh, North Carolina THE W 1 L L I A M W 7 H O LDE EDITOR AND 1'ROPIUETOK. aid of tHc Maj M TEf Ka TIIE e c of S i. is abi iis ik si Mo i aches h n the e TO 4rh Ol an Vi it an e oi two rm e i i be Jai W To J 0 or h ir bjy b ju Co N Uo cons b Kit out on it iU ihe co as TII i red t up Mill tO 111. 1 rC the hiring c act I W N 10 OCT. 23, 1803. NEW The terms of the Standard henceforth will be lars for tho Weekly six nnd tour dollars for the Semi-Weekly six in Owing to the condition of the and uncertainty of ihe subscriptions far r. louger period than six months will not be The Latest The following dispatches from tho Richmond pers of the 21st, anil tho Progress of the 2'2d, con- tain the latest Despatch from Gen. The following despatch was received from General Lee last evening at the War 20, 1803. Jo S A. nnd L General Stuart yesterday at the advance of Gen. Kilpatrick's division of whilst Gen. Lee attacked his Hank and The enemy routed and pursued until he ed his infantry at and IVo hundred with arms and wagons aad were i T From new this VOL. XXIX 44. N. 0., OCTOBER 23, 1863. WHOLE NUMBER 1405. 31 up a Oct. Our batteries kept brisk fire upon the who appeared in much larger force than usual at Gregg and Another monitor from the North has joined tho making five in The for the first time since the attack upon steamed around Cummings Point this evidently making a trial of her Naval who watched her say she has been considerably most probably for the purpose of sailing October One thousand kee captured last aie expected here The Rapidan bridge will be repaired by to-morrow From Movements of the Oct. Official information reports that the Yankees are retreating to Black and are rapidly being by our One regiment of the enemy entered Clinton and I some On the retreat our cavalry n ade a very stubborn General West conduct in the was spoken of very The losses on side arc not President Davis left here this forenoon for of from Oct. 21. A special dispatch from Staunton says Imboden entered on Sunday nnd surprised and brought off four hundred and prisoners and some valuable The prisoners captured during Lee's recent ad- vance about twelve havo ar- rived A flag of truce with a large number of women and children arrived this jom The Fight at The Yankees claim a decided victory at Bristow on Thursday telegraphs his friends at Washington that he captured five pieces of two stand of colors and four hundred and fifty The Yankee journals say Gen. Meade has arrived at Manassas he will the rebels all they desire if they give him a they he can be reinforced from Washington with men if The Washington Stcr of the 15th instant says The falling back of our forces from ck station to and is magnificent They marched by four parallel There were no delays or Every movement was conducted with remarkable In the recent conflict between Pleasanton and Stuart's while the latter was endeavoring to effect a movement on the the colors of both these at one were not over fifty yards from each and while there charges of cavalry on the left and hand-to-hand encounters Our cavalry were in splendid and ex- the greatest bravery and Their officers say they never showed a butter and in the of charges and rallying obeyed orders with n regularity and rapidity unequalled in the The country being tho spectacle is described as interesting and grand beyond A few partic alara of the engagement yesterday in the neighborhood of and Stations have been It appears the early in the attacked the second army coraman Ld by General and the alry division of The second corps be- one of the and highly succeeded the rebel advanc compelling the enemy to fall back with heavy our own troops suffering The Federal cavalry in hkc ner fought with great leaving many killed and wounded on the nock as a Bo Kind to tho The Editor oi the Biblical in his count of recent journey to the Western part of tho State to attend the Baptist relates the following A few miles from Morganton an incident which moved us We overtook a soldier on the fever flush was on his and he moved slowly and in evident We in- quired where he was and why he was ing when he was clearly unfit for He had no and was trying to make his way be- yond to see his wife and who were Tho Captain knew him for as gallant and faithful a soldier as our army and ho had received a furlough in view of his excellent character and arduous We asked if no one would assist him u No one has helped me since my money gave was the Had it taken our last we could not have withheld it from Our companions wove and we soon made up a sufficient sum to defray his gave it to and left him to take the stage when it came llow he has fared since wo have not but wo hope he reached home and found for whom he was attempting and suffering so restored to The thought of this man toiling un- aided and though sick and in in a region where all ought to been his and spoiled our enjoyment for the and we could not help asking ourselves whether a people who thus treat their are worthy of SJo one has helped said the since my money gave His money was a mere and was It is a shame that with so many millions of and many precious lives to tho pay of the soldier is not more than eleven dollars per It ought to be at least It would have but for a cold and unfeeling The House tives passed a increase the but the Senate rejected it. Wo beg our people every where to bo kind to the especially those of them who are sick or love hath no man than that he lay down his life for The soldiers are laying down their lives for those of us who are at They are fighting for our lives and our They are fighting for our negro and it the especial duty of slaveholders to be to be generous to soldiers and their The winter is near at when the wives and children of many of our brave dt fenders will and suffer unless they are aided by persons in their The strong arm which once provided and and fuel for the wife and little is either lifted on the to defend those at or is bent by rheumatism contracted in or palsied by or cold in Do not neglect that wife and those little Do not neglect that widow and her fatherless Aid not in a patronizing but with a kindly Some of you urged the father to and assured him when he left that his family should not Redeem the If you arc a man of honor you will do if you fear who heard you make the you will do but if you are a fish you will not do it. What elation of step and bearing would characterize all our and with what additional determination would their arms be nerved in if they could only know that during the coming winter their families would be kindly provided and cared If they could know and feel desertion would at once and the last man of them would stand and if needs by the common Wo havo received a copy of a Petition from the women of addressed to Gov. signed by 522 and in Guilford calling on the Governor for Among other things they say wives and children of soldiers now in actual are looking forward to a winter of the est want and Even now it is often almost impossible for them to obtain though they walk miles with money in their from mill to Movements of President Oct. Davis arrived here and was most welcomed by the zens en He addressed an immense crowd in front of the He congratulated the people on meeting under such favorable and spoke in glowing terms of the gallantry of mians on every battle He said that if the non conscripts of Alabama will gather their and go into service by guarding Courtland and er relieving regular soldiers from the necessity of doing this sort of such blows may be dealt the enemy that ho find it difficult to recover from In this way most effective aid can be given to others who are carrying out the plans of the noble Longstreet under the supervision of the heroic In this way the President is confident may be crushed to and it is only by the force of arms that the Yankees can be brought to and their plans for our gation Self-reliance and energy is now our We should not look to Europe for for such is not to be Now our only alternative Is to sustain ourselves with renewed energy and and little more sacrifices on the part of the and firmly believed by next Spring that our invaders will be driven from our Then the farmers who are now refugees can return to their families and pursue business unmolested as In fact ho believes the Rosecrans will cally end the The above is the substance of a speech recently delivered by President Davis at The President tells the country that we should not look to Europe for such is not to le ex- Tho President If We cannot drive the Northern troops from our break the and compel the government by force of arms to recognize our then we must expect or if continue the war We have taken this view of our condition for months and hence we have urged the most rapid and desperate at the same efforts on the part of our government to open negotiations so as to if the independence of the Confederate States ing West and tho public and the public property within their limits with the United Give the Confederate States proper their and we shall be We would be glad to have more than but we are not willing to peril all for advantages that may possibly be ob- Is not this the voice of reason The people were told in 1860 that secession would be if the Yankees should presume to fight one Southern man could whip five of our great would so inter- est England and Franco in our struggle as to induce them to interfere in our even at the risk of a war with the United The prophets have prophesied Secession was not One Southern man has not whipped five on the many of those who promised to do so have not thus far even attempted but are avoiding service by every scheme and artifice in their and England and France have not in- on the we have the statement of President who is thoroughly informed the that aid from them is not to be We havo been fighting two years and a and we are apparently no nearer our then wo at the The States whose people foresaw that secession would not be ble have and are destined to bear in yet ler measure the brunt of the and surely under such circumstances they are entitled to a potent and in the But this voice is denied and will unless the people demand at the polls that it bo heard and Let the false prophets and if they will let the people vote them out of President in a speech delivered in Raleigh some eight months predicted that this would be the of tho Now he says by next Spring our invaders will be driven from our He was mistaken when he said secession would be and he was mistaken when he said this would be tho last year of the but we hope his last prediction will be ver If it should Second Congressional It seen by the Card of Lt. Walter in our paper that he has withdrawn from the canvass for Congress in tho Second This leaves but one Conservative candidate in the Col. E. 0. of Pitt Col. Yellowley is a gentleman of fine and will make a useful member of He is at and has been for a long time in the ry service of the trust every in the and every voter who a reform in the administration at will rally to Col. Lieut. Dunn is entitled to the thanks of every Conservative for the prompt and magnanimous ner in which he has with a view to promote harmony in the We have no doubt his friends will best consult his wishes by giving to Yellowley their warm and active The war will not last one day longer than is to secure peace We fully concur with a position that we hear was taken by Mr. that the government might tender the olive branch to the Lincoln government after any great advantage gained by The President might tender it under such a state things with honor to himself and with a faint shadow of hope that would accept it. It was at first probably this was the occasion of Mr. Ashe's taking that the battle of Chickamauga was such a victory as would justify the President in now making such But that battle is to be fought over If it should again through the blessing of in our Rosecranz should be starved into a or his army driven into the or de- then ho for another tender of not by irresponsible by the President of tho Confederate it Saul also among the Mr. it is in favor of dering the olive branch after any great advantage gained by has any one ed If Mr. hns not who has If Mr. for he desires to tender the olive branch at a suitable why may not others be indulged in their desires But we arc to it until is starved or de- We hope one or the other of these dooms will overtake but would it been ter to have tendered the olive branch while we had the advantage Gen. Bragg abandoned Vicksburg fell the as it of throe as we are the offspring of two really speaking like the Ozar of the Sultan of or Louis himself of the dreadful crimo and guilt of laughter and there another and the complaint came this time from those so called Confederate who said that we contrary to the declaration of contrary .to the there may be ft and head bulging who acts as Major-domo to his tbo true ter of tho Your solicitations for lovely woman und a few sweet little who any is to a lovely who has cherubs of her Surely her tender will be moved with and she will run and throw wide open her ana the lovely female and her for almost Will indeed Your petition is carried by the bie husband or by a servant into issues immediately a succession or piercing and which brings down some of the plastering tjw I the and announces a anger and hysterics caused by your i You that lovely woman is considerably mwa stony hearted and woman and cherub children than the beastliest brine ol landlord in nil the The experiment Us been fairly Now fry Take a old or rich or honest or nnd miike application Ming for wide grin of immeasurable joy the sole-leather AM irrepressible chuckle of NASH friend writing us from Peach Tree Nash are for ner in this section of the He will carry Nash by a large We want men in Con- gress who will try to obtain peace by negotiations as well as by The people are with Mr. and so are with the tion of a few Extract from a letter to the Editor of the dated FORT Oct. 1863. of the soldiers here openly approve your When the Standard arrives in the garrison there is no other paper road till that has been diligently Many of the officers say they are opposed to but they are always round to borrow the paper to in their arduous task of defending the At 6 o'clock in the evening Gen. Lee made a desperate attempt to flank Gen. Meado by tho way to and endeavoring got into rear by the way of Fairfax Court In this he wus un- as Gen. Meade anticipated the rebels by fulling rapidly back to the Coveted thus tually checking a movement which would have en- dangered both the army of the Potomac and the During last night Gen. Meade ordered one of his supply trains further back in his when it was by a small force of probably ed The not to lose rallied to defend and succeeded in driving away the who escaped with only two of the very large number cf The guns 4 of which are United States three and one were exhibited here to The prisoners were mostly North about fifty of whom have ex- pressed a to take the oath of Our casualties yesterday were A erable number of rebel dead and fell into our the latter not being included in the fore- aggregate of The march from our late to the present position was accomplished in the most perfect ami without the loss of wagons or other J he enemy was held in check at every point where they attempted a surprise or The force attar ked Gen. Warren were portions of Gen. A The whose statements must bo received with many grains of says the brigade was formerly and that hundred of them were The situation of things at and near Chattanooga is COL Rr letter trom the army of the tomac to tLe New ifork Herald of the 17th of the First North Carolina Cavalry was not killed during the engagement with tho Second but wounded and is a prisoner in our Tbo first report was that he was ed Be content with the satisfaction of doing the praise of it. null craving it. Men who promised our not and if our enemies should continue to en- and brothers they to do to supply their now turn a deaf ear to their and leave us a prey to the less who have so much of the produce of the The has heretofore mado some provision for which we have received with thanks to his lency the Governor for his generous exertions in our but our necessities again impel us to ask for relief and We can confidently assure the women of and of the State that Gov. Vance is croach upon our condition next will indeed be We use a stronger word than if it dent to do so. But our opponents are entitled to a monopoly of Uie gift of whether it be true or false and they can say what they and do as they without subjecting themselves to the charge of giving aid and comfort to the By the we learn that Col. one of the candidates for Congress in the 3d has been most anxious to relieve tho distress which I announcing it to the people as his confident belief and that he will omit no efforts during the coming that the Emperor of the French would intervene at winter to provide for of our j an early and thus pave the way to But the the various by fe izing relief can greatly aid the or in this noble The people of Johnston for held a meeting a few days at which some were and the sum is expected to reach to be used in purchasing provisions for the families of soldiers and We learn that William Dr. But President says Col. McRae is No he is to be expected from The President Congressional A well-informed friend writing us from Onslow says Dr. Leach will sweep that Courity for and that if the Conservatives of the per Counties will put forth their whole strength he will be triumphantly We have equally cheering intelligence from and Johnston and wo believe that if Dr. Leach has fair will seek to grow or to add to his wealth ring this the greatest kindness which you can show the soldier is to provide for his family while he is absent in the service of the MOB LAW IN J. C. the of the Bugle Horn of ridiculously J. T. Hathan and Dr. John with subscribed as much as and others freely subscribed in proportion to their Why may riot and indeed all the j he will carry a large majority of Counties follow their example V No true patriot in the A friend ing us from says I have seen and heard much of the contest for Congress in this and my honest opinion is that Dr. Leach will be triumphantly Ho will certainly carry Johnston by an overwhelming Tho Doctor haa proved the fast friend ol the wives and All his neighbors can so Let us keep tho ball funny mobbed a few days since in At- j we a representative of whom all by a body of ostensibly on i honest men and patriots may bo justly account of an innocent satire on iho gieat partizan j Wo appeal to our friends in the District to poll John but really because every Let nothing prevent you from going to 'the abuses in the hospitals in that place the and when you get there do all in your certain Tho soldiers in the power for tho Conservative We know no doubt set on by the Surgeons referred Dr. Leach lie a man of excellent committed the outrage on Mr. The gentleman and a and he is an ta October noticed the he promises on tho stump he will do all in Bugle Horn which contained tho articles referred his power to Ho will deceive no in the most complimentary but that paper in its issue of tho 15th, ww compelled by its own fear of being mobbed to back its and make a most apology to tho soldiers and The Intelligencer is one of the Georgia papers which attempted to justify the mob against But for its prompt and abject the of law would have bean to its own So we can be depended even in this nnd that is saying all that can be said in commendation of any public We say it for we know tho We have the most religious said little ever you They never drink tho least bit of without looking up to tho between every I suppose to thank 1 am sure such hens are an example to us Earl Russell's Speech ou American We make the following ex tracts a speech recently delivered by Lord John at go on American u I como now to another question interesting to question on which I must beg for your because I wish to explain some circumstances in which the ter of this country I think has been I am speaking of what has occurred in what a few years ago were the United States of A few years ago we were exulting in the prosperity of that country we were happy to see a people de- rived from the same ancestors as ourselves enjoying free enjoying apparent harmony among one and with whom we at least just before the civil war broke hardly a a difference only with regard to the small island called St. and which we had proposed to refer to the arbitration of the Swiss This was state of affairs when that which we certainly had no part in broke if I re- member nine of the Southern States i of America declared that they would form an dent Our course on the subject has been attacked and blamed in tho bitterest sometimes by the and sometimes by the The first offence was felt by the They said we had right to far as we are the Confederates the rights of that question of the rights of belligerents is a question of I put it to you with five millions of mean of free men declaring selves in their several States collectively an pendent we could pass over that as a petty Our admirals asked whether the ships they met bearing the Confederate flag be treated as pirates or no. If we should have treated them as pirates we should have been taking part in the It was impossible to look on the uprising of a community of people as a mere petty as not having the rights which at all times are giten to those who by their numbers and or by the extent of the territory they are en- titled to these it was said we ought not to havo done that because they were a community of I trust that our abhorrence of slavery is not in the least abated or and prolonged For my I consider it one ot the most horrible crimes that yet disgrace But when we are ing of the relations which we bear to a community of I doubt whether it would bo expedient or useful for humanity that we should introduce that new element of declaring that we will have no re- lations with a people who permit slavery to exist among We have never yet adopted wo have not adopted it in the case Spain or I do not believe that the cause of humanity would be served by our adoption of it it was said that these Confederate States were against the I am not so nice us I ought to be on the But I recollect that against Charles we against James and the people of Nm not tent with these two rebelled against George and I am not saying now whether all these rebellions were or whether they am ing whether the present in States is a justifiable or is But I that the mere fact of Is not in my eyb a crime of so a. that We must renounce all and and all with those guilty of if look to declarations of New 0 J have been if nat the yet a 6reat of the very speech by Mr. on 4efrW I own and perhaps there seemed at least a plausible reason for though this blockade was kept up by a sufficient number of yet these ships of them adopted into the United States navy and sent to sea in a and ill-fitted for the not keep op that blockade so effectively so thoroughly as it must have been held an blockade But looking to the law of it was a it was a blockade which as a great belligerent in former times should have We ourselves hud had a blockade of upwards of two thousand and it tome were bound in justice to the Federal States of America to edge the But there was another 1 that weighed with people were and suffering very for the want of the material which was the great support of their It was a question of self-interest whether we should not break that in my the name of England would have been for ever infamous if for the sake of interest of any kind we had violated tho general laws and made war with those slaveholding States of America against the Federal I am not speaking the which are peculiar to or to those who have DO im- mediate interest in the but these I am I the sentiments of that of who have lived and flourished by that but who would I am allow a single spot on the escutcheon of their nation in order to maintain that and Mn. VICE-PRESIDENT HAMLIN ON UNION j IT is treason now the North to wish j for the as it was That article seems to be very far below par. Vice President in a speech at Philadelphia last gave the of tho administration on the j we have a class of men there who very much wont the Constitution as it is and the Union as it Have you got them here of Laughter and I have found them all I am very in- that they cannot have it. There is no possible way in which they can have it. Why it is mere it is the merest it is and not very good nonsense at and Union as it That means bring back the States in precisely the same condition they in when the rebellion was How are you going to get souri back .so The people of that State un- solicited and with by any a system of measures for the emancipation of How are you going to get it back as it These people want to have the it And what arc you going to do tle State nestled in Western formed by loyal which has adopted a scries of measures to rid itself of slavery How are you going to get it back as it T should like to know I know they mourn over and regret their ty to bring back the Union as it if there men in your goodly city of New York who have any tears to shed over such a I am half inclined to think they must bo crocodiles tears if they are and you have got those who have tears to shed for Union it think it would form a good subject for a Place in the foreground a slave with his manacles stricken clothed in the uniform of Uncle and a musket in his to sustain the the glorious Stars and Stripes floating over his while in the remote stands a modern with largo tears rolling down his big as because ho cannot havo the Union and if you can find an impressible Copperhead I should her in the altitude of reaching him a crash towel to wipe away his laughter and and an tends the gentlo bosom of the once Your friend in admitted if lie to be the least he any day he without exciting or leaving his to bo torn to pieces behind He nija m Dispatch n turge number of advertisements which LHC lo his pick of the best rooms t irrespective of any knowledge of hw ability general international permitted a of Mies but abundantly able to three thousand miles of the Southern Ainer house in the city closed It is quite true we did so. It is quite This warfare against women and children is not i Stable to of the chivalrous But give they must have and and there ia no pitting nlong with for nothing mi will satisfy As for are nally running makings tilling the house with nre terrible especially that about ter and It is that children er have mado nny noise before tho war But ia no real vi njf to such They arc the have the ol lovely As it is impossible to tind a separate house woman in the and us two of them cannot live in peace in the and as it ia rather improbable that dren will unlearn this new acquirement of a there is but one remedy and that K to thin out the women und iw the Spartans did thur or wholesale massacre at stated The practice would add to the reputation of the South for and lower the price cf cabbage and urge its immediate To V c Freemen of the Eighth composed of the Counties and at after much avoidable delay and with much acceded to the wishes my friends to become A candidate fir 1 huston to the and take this method of publishing a of my on the most prominent subjects of public 1 wus ardently to the Union of our and labored for its with the untiring until logic of the famous proclamation left no in my but to dike up the for the fence of our common t acquiesced in tho separation of fiom and holding their people enemies in and in peace I regard a vigorous prosecution of .i defensive warns the best avenue to national and an A Christian should not bo too tive on the subject of when principle is not brave people should ihe olive branch of in one hand and the sword in the us Mr. Lincoln has recently announced that peace compromise shall not be if proposed by any it controlling I it advisable that the President should instruct those having this power to open for to the ion the power of the or we decision of the When our armies as they now propositions for on tho basis of our may be made nnd with the to our interests and but it does seem to me that those in p cannot bra entirely ted uf permitting this sort to puss by out proper Entertaining the opinion that ihe necessity god for tha enactment of the conscript H ever was the result of want of on the part of those who managed public laws of doubtful constitutionality and and I not have for if I had been in Congress But I do not propose their and ad- vise a prompt and cheerful acquiescence in for which must be apparent to Should the war continue much it will be necessary to if not entirely abolish the Exemption Neither the the nor the Impressment arc in my in any other sense than as tho result of improvident The m i port ion of the Tithe should be so as to operate more particularly on those products not necessary tit A COTTON Selma Re- porter has been shown a device invented by a ton planter of for which he obtained a patent from the Patent Office in Richmond in 1861, for baling cotton in wood Tho invention is simply a which is of weighing less than a quarter of a to receive the ends of the which is split from a tree of hickory or any other suitable wood found in the Cotton The fastening is made by means of a wooden wedge forced in between the the effectually it without and which it is impossible to remove after the bale is without cutting off the hoop and with a tool driving the wedge The agent of the Mr. Theodore lately from New is now in SeUna for the purpose of introducing tho Tic in that lie assures the editor of the ter that cotton received in New bound in this gave entire bearing com- pressing to the greatest as the stronger the tension on the the stronger the hold. Liverpool the report is that such the bagging better than As the cost is much less than in the best there can be no tion to use this The War Against Women and Lovely woman has rather a rough time of it The theme of the the model of Ihe the dream of the the inspiration of the angel of the the wonder and delight of all kind since Adam God's hist beat gift to length fallen upon evil no favor in the eyes of the of who was her nor in the eyes of her owu A great change has come over the at least in so much of U as placed upon a secure footing and tue Titho law will bo no longer If the law is not it will be sary to with more that the provision of which tint private property not be taken for public use without not be It admits of u grave whether property can be taken for under a which limits its taking to the of that propel Ihe power of Congress to the privileges the writ ot is but 1 agree toils privilege of the writ is too in valuable to loss I clothe iho President with this personal liberty of the people should not be m the keeping of nny one however pure or Mr. n was in of the eternal and unremitting force corpus and history hts not yet en that he was Let us care IMW we part with liberty in order to obtain in that way we some lose hat we have All political power is vested derived from the and right to the freedom of and to a free to keep and to bear together to for common and not to be deprived of or without due process oi nil and are con- to tyrants to which I turn with almost idolatrous can they be suspended or abolished by a free or their urn hops they are desire strong who advocate the closing of our lulls und Courts of of all other hy concentration of the whole force ut ihe people bands of a military and the reduction army as near as to a perfect they want a and would obtain Military whether in or out ot Mien views hhall receive no aid or from me. Military law and apply to tho army Civil law but Martial which means the abolition of all civil cannot exist in the Let the Civil and within t respective their majesty ted against all whether of citizens or especially let us see to that republican liberty suffers uo The habit of in is incompatible with that strict of the to his on- which is of the very essence of five but the most inexorable the very sal vation of the can justify its The organization of tho Confederate should be completed as soon HS by instituting a proper basis a Supreme in my has been too long Until it is no complaint should be made that the State governments interpret the laws for The wages of tho soldier are own nnd those of his in times of and I am in their but could the currency be nnd the necessaries ol life this would not be BO Speculation and would in a great measure to the Southern and lovely woman from her high estate to the lowest No logger ad- she is now hated in the the land whero else in the wide world except amung savages of the worst gaos and Women are hated in the so are However startling the assertion inuy it is susceptible of easy and abundant Take ti ludy ou your ann and repair to nny of the stalls which have taken tho pi ace of board ing ses m this unblessed und solicit meekly the rate of charges for shelter nnd The beetle-browed nnd who meets you on tho may wot slam the door in your but be will sullenly how you and you sight of him after interview is vou would behold him tearing his bur tossing his wildly and leaping kangaroo one end ot the to the while curses and maledictions pour Irom Ins quivering lips at rne bare idea of being suspected of the ty of rent ing ing to That may bo of ancient and wealthy a ot everything on and toiling like a slave at ihe Departments for her daily a roof to shelter she IP a cannot be entertained in the naked stalls of Hichmond But the grievous of lovely woman may be impressive llian mute entreaties of delicate 1 ittle with a lady on your arm and four or cherubs behind you aud again try your for- With the obdurate letter of The chances if you insult his intellect with a proposition to not only a out besides be wi il rush out with and strew the pavement with th e mangled for of and i ha little cherubs horrid which be left in his for some as a warning to other who so far forget themselves AS to presume to hope they will bo as humani be- Such is and who happens to be the lesne of a collection of From the stony ing is to bo Perhaps there may bo landlady who feela the liveliest sympathy for the her and children with a or The rights of the should be guarded with ing while the powers delegated to the government should be duly I de- mand for the and (I full credit and her soldiers in the equally bravo and otic with any in the and her at both patriotic and I insist that they be appointed lill the within ihe IV administration of the government receive from if all proper and due and I shall not fail to all nnd hold the np to the condemnation of tho should it m my opinion it. To tho I shall give every constitutional and the every possible protection in their ancient and I shall use all lawful nnd honorable to bring the days and heavenly blessing of with Indulging the hope that somo would become a who would fully represent these unn AH almost insuperable to undertake evon the management of the interests at in these palling times of strife and I have too long de- layed becoming a the whole A partial if be prevented by Under I mint appeal who those views to see to it thai they nrj as v idely ted both nt home und in the at borne vote ou the 4ih of ia the army ou tho of making returns within 'M Most 7 0- 18fi8 In N OctoBer 4th, W. in With of a brief painful which with patience and He was an upright honest in m. He an affectionate wife five little and and friends to mourn their Hist life nml his death was tat die the cHtli r and let rnv last end bo to Ins