tssijp A Bit of Romance.iat A woman passed through this city on ws Wednesday, en route to New York, in who, during the past three years, has is. passed through many exciting scenes. In the early part of the war, she, with her husband and two or three children, he were residing in a border State where rk secession ism was rampant, and during ry the absence of the parents one day the ral children were all massacred by some of *e- the chivalry. The wife immediately assumed male attire, enlisted in the same ny company with her husband, and fought or side by side with him in nearly all the its battles participated in the Army of the he Cumberland. A few months since, her to husband received a fatai bullet while ce fighting by her side, and the wife, too, of was subsequently wounded, and taken A- to the hospital, where her sex was elisor covered.nd Those who conversed with her, say he that her manners fully confirm her ng story. She has acquired many of the vy disgusting habits of the sterner sex ey during her campaigning, such as the if use of tobacco, profanity, cfec. But her re patriotism is undoubted, and she has be suffered a great deal in the Union cause, ol. for all of which she is entitled to the id- sympathy and gratitude of all freedom-tnt loving people. She is very bitter in ke her denunciations of the rebels, as sheed has good reason to be.—Providenceeir Press. veareanc'hasderancCl*reifrepTrime:4i 1. -OilCoihoistosellWseiggosailhacthi:beethataxmuthebeotb(weilesiexjins