_ . . _ ... . . ... _ .)1,. t . -_ . 1 , .... .. .. ;..„.. . ...,.., . ~ c.-- 1 ., ~ .., „. . , ri,:: V -, - , • t C I " \ I'l 1 . : , , • -1 ): - . 41 4.: °IA A -k. ti k --e- ..-^ '... \ i, :; , + LC)-' ... , 1.,., -1.1\,.!:- • . ',,*-1. i ~,=• r . • ' : i. 1 - - ar it .:. j :,,, } z-, 1-' 134. 1 ._.. ) 11 ..x, _.5.,. - ) - i( :,.......,........ •,7, • . ~. ~.... -;.. • . t.,„ ~.. ~4.:,._.. 1 : : 17 Z - . ' • .... 0 'v € t (I.'''' - - -7 , ... - . _.-",- ~.a '-. • te- - . __, _ PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE CITY OF READING, BERKS COUNTY, PA.---TERMS: $1,50 A YEAR rN ADVANCE. J. LAWRENCE GETZ, EDITOR.] YITSLISITED EVERY SATURDAY KORAI-NO floc, Yorth-Te'ext Fa rme r s' f Penn and Afth ',Oen', ad C 9 joining the Bank of Reeding. TERM OP SIINCRIPTION 51,5 0 a year, payable in advance. 1.00 for six months, in advance. To Cirl3s: Four copies for $5, in advance. Ten copies for I.Z. 43- An papers diseontintod at the expiration. of ate Ilia Punt for. RATES OF ADVERTISING IN THE OAZBTTE. lt. M. Imo. 3mo. 6mo. Iv N' !Square, 51Ines, °tier's, 50 60 75 ZOO 3.00 5,00 10 " 50 1,00 I_os 3,0.1 5,00 3,00 " 00 " 1,00 .0,00 0,00 5,00 0,00 15,00 " 30 " 1,00 3,00 3,75 1,30 12,00 80,00 [Larger Advertisement. is prOpurtion.] Executors' and Administrators' Notices, 6 insertions $2,00 Auditors Notices and Legal Notices, 3 " 1,53 special Notisee, es reading matter, 10 cis. a line for one howl - don. [Tr Marriage notices Vi cents each. Deaths will be ptddislied gratuitously. Atirail Obituary Noticee, Reeoltdions of Beneficial and ether Private Associations, will be charged for, as adver ti-ewents, at the above rates. BB Advertisements for Religions. Charitable and Edo esti-owl objects, one half !heehaw' rates. gar All advert - Wing will be considered payable In cash, on the first insertion. Yearly advertisers shall have the privilege (:I' desired) of renewing their advertisements awry three wear—bat ,dl,zer. Any additional renewals, or advertising ex crtmeg the amount contracted for, will be charged extra xt see-hall the rants above specified for imanalenk aaver tbieutents. Lastly advertisers will be charged the came rates as transient advertisers for all matters not relating aridly to tioirloaineso. PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Eneeote.l in a superior manner. at the now lowed pricer'. Our assortment of Joe Titre is large and fashionable, and our Work speaks for itself. BLANKS OF ALL KINDS, • . . . • TECIE•1101; PARCHRERT and PAPER DEEDS, MORTGAGES, Vorzu,‘, AUTICLES or Amtne.wurr, .LEasso, awl a variety of Jcertose' BLANKS, kept constantly for sale, or printed to order. RICHMOND L. JONES, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OFFICE WITH J. GLANCY JONES, ESQ., East Penn Square. south stole, Heading. April IS, 1563-Smo JESSE G. HAWLEY, ATTORNIY AT LAW, HAS REMOVED HIS OFFICE TO NORTH Sixth Street, °matte the - Keystone Home, Reading. April 11, 1563-tf NEWTON D. STRONG, ATT Olt.N MY AT LAW, OFFICE IN COURT STREET, NEAR FIFTH, !leading, Pa. flilarch ]4, 1563-31 no 3011 N RALSTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OFFICE WITH A. B. WANNER, NORTH Sixth Street. (above the Court House.) Rea.dlng, Pa. February 21, ISQ-Iy REMOVAL. NiPLLIAM IL LIVINGOOD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, has removed his office to the north [fide of Court street Bret door below Sixth. [dee 2241 Charles Davis, ATTORNEY AT LAW—HAS REMOVED HIS Mace to the Office lately occupied by the Hoe. David iordon, deceased, in Sixth !street, opposite the Court Hondo. (epril 14 Daniel En:nerd:rout, ATTORNEY AT LAW—OFFICE IN NORTH sizeu tltreet, corner of Court alley. fang 13-ly David Neff, AVIIOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN ..y Foreign and Domestic DRY GOODS, No. 25 East ern street, Reading, Pa. [March 10, 1600. LIVINGOOD'S United States Bounty, Back Pay and Pension Omce, COURT STREET, EELS SIXTH. TTAVING BEEN ENGAGED IN COLLECT . i ing claims against the Government, I feet confident that all who have heretofore employed me will cheerfully endorce my promptness and fidelity. My charges are nwierateand no charge made until obtained. WILLIAM ii. LIVINGOOD, oct IS-lf] Attorney at Law, Court St., Reading, Pa. DISCHARGED SOLDIERS Cis NOW OBTAIN THEIR $lOO BOUNTY from the U. S. Government, by application to ABNER R. STAUFFER, March 7-tf) Collection Office, Court Street, Reading. ASA M. HART, (Late Hart 4‘. Mayer') pEALER IN FOREIGN AND AMERICAN DRY GOODS, CARPETINGS , &c., Wholesale and Re al Philadelphia prices. Sign of the Golden Bee Hive, 14 Fan P6llll. Square. [april 17—tf P. Bushong & Sons, SANUFACTURERS OF BURNING FLUID, Absolute, Deodorized and Drtiggiste' Alcohol; also, ins Oil, which they will sell at the lowest Wholesale prices, at Reading, Pa. 4W Orders respectfully solicited. DR. T. YARDLEY BROWN, SURGEON DENTIST. GRADUATE OF PENNSYLVANIA Dental College. Teeth extracted by Fran ' ilig s a cis' Electra Magnetic process, with Clarke's improvement With this method teeth. are xtracted with winch loan pain than the wand way. No extra charge. Office in Fifth street, opposite the Presbyte rian Church. [april 2—ly CHARLES LANCASTER, MEDICAL ELECTRICIAN, Fourth Street, above Penn, Reading. January 24, 18634 f PENSIONS, BOUNTIES & BACK PAY. APPLICATIONS PROMPTLY ATTENDED to. Terme moderate and no charge until obtained. A. G. GREEN, Attorney at Law, Jan al-amo] Office in Court tweet, Reading. SOLDIERS' SOUNTY-NCONEY, BACIE.PAY AND PENSION CLAIMS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO BY A. K. STAY 'PER, Attorney at Law, Office in Court Street, Jan 31-01 READING, PA. LIQUOR STORE. IHAVE OPENED A LIQUOR AND WINE STORE, in the room formerly occupied by JOHN GREEN, IN THE " SMUCKER HOUSE." Idy friends are all invited to call and examine for them selves. All LIQUORS and WIRES sold be me, shall be as represented. April 4, isas-ul JERESIIAEI D. RITMO. 'WATCHES, GOLD AND SILVER, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY. tah ItELIADLE IN QUALITY - AND AT LOW Price, Wine R.V.P/LI/tl.4_—Watches pat in per fent order and every sae warranted for one year. JACOB LUDEN, 21 North Fifth Street, Reading, ?a. Bev 154m0] F. P. HELLER, WATCIBIAKER, JEWELER AND DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPOONS, SPECTACLES, GOLD PENS, &c., 10 Sign of the "BIG WATCH," No. OM Ea Penn Street, above Sixth, north aide, Reading, Pt. gar. Every article warranted to be what it is sold for Watch., Clucks, Jewelry, &C., repaired with particular attention, and gtutrante ed. [fa 1-tf NOTICE. A PREMIUM WILL BE PAID ON GOLD, 4010X-NT, SEIXMOLT.W.R. —AND— M*.AL - I=l. xm - caoxemos AT THE EXCHANGE AND BANKING OFFICE —OF— G. W. GOODRICH, READING, Pa. Maud 10, 1801-11] BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL grESTABLISHED AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKERY The Only Place Where a Cure Can be Obtained. PR. JOHNSTON HAS DISCOVERED THE moat Certain, Speedy and only Effectual Remedy in the World for all Private Diseases, Weakness of the Back or Limbs, Strictures, Affections of the Kidneys and Blad der, Involuntary Discharges, Impotency, General Debili ty. liervouannsa, Dyspepsia. Languor, Low Writs, Collin. elan of Ideas, Palpitation ofthe Heart. 'I ixuidity, Trembling, Dimness of Sight or Giddiness, Disease of the Head, Throat, Vase or Skin, Affections of the Liver, Lange, Stomach or Bowels—those Terrible Disordera arising from the Solitary Habits of Tonth—thoso SECREf and solitary practices more fatal to their victims than the eking 4A Syrews to the Mariners of Ulysses, hli,tliting their m..st brilliant hopes or anticipations, rendering marriage, stc., impossible. lifil'UNG MEW Eepecially. who have become the victims of Solitary Tice, that dreadfnl and destructive habit which annually sweeps to an untimely grave thousaude of Young Men of the most exalted talents and brilliant intellect, who might other wise have entranced liskehrklhg Senates, with the thunders of eloquence or waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call with fall coeldeace. ta Li Married Paraons, or Young Men contemplating marriage, bring aware of physical weaknoas, organic debility, defor mities. &c., speedily cared. He who places himself tinder the care of Dr. d. may re ligionaly confide in his honor as a gentleman, and confi dently rely upon his skill as a Physician. ORGAN= 117112LICNESS Immediately Cared, and Full Vigor Restored. This Distre.slogd.ffeciisti—which senders Life miserable and marriage irdpor , silbic—is the penalty paid by the vic tims of improper indulgences. Y...ung persons are too apt commit excesses from not being aware of the dreadful consegnencee that slay ensue. Now, who that understands the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procrea tion in toot sooner by those falling into improper habit.. than by the prudent'? Besides being deprived the pleas ure of healthy offspring, the mast serious and destructive symptoms to both body and mind arise. The system be comes Deranged, the Physical awl Mental Functions Weakened, Loss of Procreative Power, Nervous Irritabili ity, Dyspepsia, Palpitation of the Heart, Indigestion, Con stitutional Debility, a Wasting of the Frame, Cough, Con sumption, Decay and Death. Office, No. !' South rrederiek Street, Lou hand aide going Prom Baltimore street, a few doors from the corner. Fail not to observe name and number. . . . Latter must be paid and contain a etamp. Tho Doctor's Diplomas hang in his office. A CURE ViTAILBANTEII IN TWO DAYS. No Mercury or Nauseous Drugs. 303INSTON, Member of the Royal College of Surge One, London, Gradu ate from one of the most eminent Colleges Sn the United States, and the greater part of whose life ban been spent in the hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia and else where, has effected some of the most astonishing cures that were ever known; many troubled with ringing in the head and ears when asleep, great nervousness, being alarmed at sudden *wands, basbfrilham, with frequent blushing, at tended sometimes with derangement of mind, were eared immediately. Wart P.A.RTICIMAR NOTICE. Dr. J. addresses all those who have injured themselves by Improper indulgence and solitary habits. which ruin both body and mind, unfitting them for either bash:less, study, society or marriage. Timm are some of the sad and melancholy effects produc ed by early habits of youth, viz; Weakness of the Back and Limbs, Pains in the Head, Dimness of Sight, Loss of Mu. enter Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Dyspepsy, Nervous Irritability, Derangement of the Digestive Functions, Gen eral Debility, Symptoms of Consumption, Sic. MmrraLLT.—The fearful effects on the mind are much to be dreaded—Loss of Memory, Confusion of Ideas, Depres- Alen of Spirits, Evil Forebodings, Aversion to Society, Self• Distrust, Love of Solitude, Timidity, stc., are some of the evils produced. THOOSANDS of persons of all ages can now judge what is the canoe of their &alining health, losing their vigor, be coming weak, pale, nervous and emaciated, having a sin gular appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of consumption. VOUNG WPM Who have Injured themselves by a certain practice 'addl.. god in when alone, a habit freqnently learned from evil companions, or at school, the ethaan of which are nightly felt, even when asleep, and if not cured renders marriage impossible. and destroys both 'Mud mud body, should op ply Immediately. What a pity that a young man, the hope of his country, the darling of his parents, ehonld be snatched from all prospects and enjoyments of life, by the consequence of deviating from the path of nature and indulging in a cer tain secret habit. cinch persons ausT, before contemplat ing MARRIAGE, reflect that a sound mind and body are the most necessary requisites to promote connubial happiness. Indeed, with out these the journey through lite becomes a weary pil grimage; the: prospect hourly darkens to the view; the mind becomes shadowed with despair and filled with the melancholy reflection that the happiness of another be comes blighted with our own. DISEASE OF IMPRUDENCE. When the misguided and imprudent votary of pleasure finds that he has imbibed the seeds of this painful disease, it too often happens that an ill-timed sense or shame, or dread of discovery, &torah= from applying to those who, from edneatiou and respectability, can alone befriend him, delaying till thecoustitutional symptoms of this horrid dis ease make their appearance, such so ulcerated WS throat, diseased nose, nocturnal pains in the head and limbo, dim ness of sight, deafuese, Lodes on ins shin-bones and arms, blotches on the head, face and extremities, programing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the month or the bones of the nose full in, and the victim of this aw ful disease becomes a horrid object of commiceration, till death puts a period to his dreadful sufferings, by sending him to'• that Ur.dbmovered Country from whence no trav eller returns." It is a ?melancholy fact that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the anskillfolness of ignor ant pretenders, who, by the uso of that Deadly Poison, Mercury, ruin the constitution and make the residue of life miserable. STRILNCIERS Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of many Un learned and worthless Pretenders, destitute-of knowledge, name or character, Who copy Dr. Johnston's advertise ments, or style themselves, in the newspapers, regularly Educated Physicians, incapable of Curing, they keep you trilling month after month taking heir filthy and 'Ninon one compounds, or as long as the smallest fee can lie ob tained, and in despair, leave yen with ruined health to nigh over your own galling disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only Physician advertising. His credentials or diplomas always hang in his ottlce. ERe remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, Prepared from a life spent in the great hospitals of Europe, the first in the country and a more extensive Private Prac tice than any other Physician in the world. INDORSZIUMENT OF MUM PRESS. Einar.* 12 The many thousands cured at this Institution year atter year, and the numerous important Surgical Operations performed by Dr. Johnston, witnessed by the reporters of the "Sun," "Clipper," and many other papers, notices of which bare appeared again and again before the public, bexides his standing as a gentleman of character and re sponsibility, is a sufficient guarantee to the afflicted. Skin Diseases Speedily Cured. InFflu letters received unless post-paid and containing a stamp to be seed on the reply. Persons writing should state age, and send portion of advertisement describing symptoms. SOHN Iff. SOUNSTON, M. D., Of the Baltimore Lock Hoepital, Baltimore, Maryland may 10-ly] FRENCH'S HOTEL. ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN. • CITY OF NEW YORK. Single Rooms Fifty Cents per Day. City Hall Square, corner Frankfort St., (OPPOSITE CITY HALL.) MEALS AS THEY MAY BE ORDERED IN the !spacious refectory. There is a Barber's Shop and Bath ROOIIIM attached to the Hotel. Jail 17 ly] NATIONAL HOTEL, (LATE WHITE SWAN.) Race Street, above Third, rhiladelphia. I 11115 ESTABLISH MEN T OFFERS GREAT inducements, not only on account of reduced rates of board, hut from Ito central loration to the OVOLIIIOti of trade, AS Welt an the conveniences afforded by the several Panseagcr Railways running past and contignoue to it, by which guests can pass to and from the Hotel, should they lot preferred to the regular Omnibus connected with the Boom lam determined to devote my whole attention to the comfort and convenience of my guests. /Kir Term, $1 4.5 per y. D C. SIEGRIET, Proprietor, Formerly from Eagle Hotel, Lebanon, Pa T. V. RITOADEI.CIerk. [march Ih-tf LAUER'S BREVITERY READING, PA. rtIE SUBSCRIBR respectfully announces to the public that be hos recently enlarged his itIiEWR- Eto a considerable extent. and introduced steam-power, India now ready to supply all demands for StIVE3EUOa. MALT LIQUORS. For home and distant consumption. his stock of Malt Liquors, warranted to keep in all climates. is as follows: BROWN ETOU I', PORTER, BOTTLING ALE, DRAUGHT ALE AND LAGER DEER. June 19-tf FR BDIKRIOK LAGER. N.B.—Altheral per tentage will be allowed to Agents abroad. FRESH GROCERIES -AT REDUCED PRICES. AT THE Corner of Fifth and Spruce !Streets. March 1 X. MUM X BOA. GE. Safe% as Siddss. Old Caleb Graymarsh dwelt in the New Eng land village of M—, hard by his own stone walled, black- chimneyed factory which belched forth fire and smoke all day, and shone like some ogre's .palace half the night with the fires and lights which glimmered through the windows, and shed a crimson gleam over the waste and barren land about the building. For it was a stirring place, this factory, and the work people were there among the whirring machinery night and day—strong, stalwart fellows, with begrim ed hands and faces—old men, who could just totter up the stairs—women, tidy and trim, and some of them very pretty, and the little children, who, had they been born of wealthy parents, would only have been permitted to leave the nursery under the guardianship of a maid. There was occupation for all M— at the great factory, and, in the eyes of his employes, Caleb Graymareh was a man of mighty wealth and power. Fabulous tales were told of his pos sessions in real estate, and the women folks had a legend among them that the tea service, which some of them had seen glittering on the factory table, was made of solid dollars, melted down for the express purpose, and that throughout the house the furniture was covered with real silk velvet. It was a pity, they said, that poor Mrs. Graymarsh could not have lived to see all this, but had died when Caleb was a young man, struggling for the fortune which was now his. A few years before there had been a simple white slab in the grave-yard, bearing the words, "Kitty Graymarsh, aged 20." lint of late, a splendid marble monument had arisen there, with a flow ery inscription on he face, and the figure of an angel bending over it. A showy thing, with nothing artistic about it; yet though the dead girl, who would have been an elderly woman by this time had she lived, slept no more peacefully under the costly structure than she had beneath the simple slab, there was something in the sight when one thought that by its erection the old man had striven to make his lost wife participate in the only possible way in the wealth which he eo valued. R. FRBIiCEI, Proprietor It is hard to think of most old business men as young lovers—strange to believe that smiles goefou. 13EUSHWOOD. =I On a weary slope of Apptuine, At saber dunk of day's decline, Oat of the solemn solitude at Vallanihrmues A11[1(1110. wood. A withered woman, tanned a nd bent, heatinx her bundled brudiwood went, Pulsing It on her palsied heed, As if in pellAUCe for prayers unsaid. Her dull Awaits channeled were with tears, shed iu the iiorrus of eighty yearn: nor wild bat...fell in suuty flow White as the foamy brook below : I till tolled she with her load alone, With feeble feet, but steadfast will, Tu gain her little home that Moue Like a dreary lantern on the hill. The mountain child, no toll could tame, 'With lighter load Imelda her came, Spoke kindly, but its accents fond Were loot—noon lost on the bights beyond. There came the maid in her glowing limes, The wild-eyed witch of the wilderness, Her brush load shadowing her face, ller upright figure lull of grime, Like those tall pines whose only houghs Are gathered ronud their dusky brows ; Singing, she waved her hand, •` tiood night,' And round the mountain passed from night. There climbed the laborers from their toll, Brown as their own Italian roil; Like Satyrs, some in goatskin suits— Some bearing home the scanty fruits Of harvest work—the swinging Harks Of oil or wise, or little casks, finder which the dull mule went. Cheered with its bells and the echoes sent From others on the higher Light, Saying to the vale—. 4. Good night " " Good night "—And still the withered demo Slowly staggered on the same. Here, astride of his braying beast, A brown monk came, and then a priest; EaCh telling to the shadowy air, Perchance their "Ave Maritt" prayer ; For the sky was full of vesper showers Shook from the many convent towers, Which fell into the WOllllll'S brain Like dew upon en arid plain. There pions men beside her rode— She crusted herself beneath her hood, As best she could—and so," Good night, And they rode upward out of sight. How far, how very far it 'seemed, To where that starry taper gleamed, . Placed by her grand•cblld on the sill Of the cottage window on the hill ! Many a parent heart beside, Has seen a heavenward light that smiled, And knew it placed there by a child— A long gone eh ild, whose nevi°. face Gazed toward them down the deeps of optics, Loving for the loved to come To the quiet of that home. Steeper and rougher grew the road, Harder and heavier grew the load; lier heart beat like a weight of stone Against tier breast. A sigh and moan Mingled with prayer escaped her lips Of sorrow, o'or sorrewing night's eclipse. " Of all who pass me by," she said, "There is never one to tend me aid; Could I but wain yon wayside shrine, There would I rest. this load of mine, And tell my sacred rosary through, And try what patient prayer would do." Again she heard the toiling tread Of one who climbed that way,—and said " I will be bold, though I should see A monk or priest, or it should he The awful abbot. at whose nod The [righted people toil and plod I'll ask his aid to )otider place, Where I may breathe a little apace, And so regain my home." He canto, And, halting by the ancient dame, Heard her brio( story and request, Which moved the pity in his breast; Ant so he etealgldway took Ler load, Toiling beside her op the road, Until with heart that ovettlowed, Site begged him lay her bundled sticks Close at the feet of the crncillx. So down be bet her brushwood freight Against the wayside mons, iced 6traletk She bowed her palsied bead to greet And kilts the sculptured Saviour's feet, And then and there she told her grief, In broken sentences and brief. Sod how the memory o'er her came, Of days Warn out, like a taper llama, Never to be relighted, when, From many a bummer bill and glen, She culled the loveliest blooms to shine About the feet of this same shrine ; But now, where once her Bowers were gay, /Caught bat the barren brushwood lay! She wept a little et the thought, And prayers and tears a quiet, brought, Until anon, relieved of pain, She rose to take her load again. But ;o! the bundle of dead wood Had burst to blossom! and now stood Dawning upon her marvelling sight, Filling the air with odorous light ! Than apake her traveler-friend " Dear Soul, Thy perfect faith hath made thee whole ! I am the litirtben-Bearer,—l Wilt never pass the o'srladeu by. Ply feet are en the numutain steep ; They wind through valleys dark and deep; They print the hot duet of the plain, And walk the billows of the main, Wherever in a load to bear, My willing shoulder still is there! Thy toil is done!" He took her hand, And led her through a May time land; Where round her pathway seemed to wave Each votive flower she ever Save To make her favorite altar bright, As if the angels, at their blight, Ilad borne them to the fields of blue, Where, planted 'mid eternal dew, They bloom, as witnesses arrayed Of one on earth who toiled and prayed. CALEB GRAYMARSH. SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 9. 1863. or frowns from one woman were once of greater moment to them than the rise or fall of stocks has now become. And the grim old factor, whose brows were puckered into a continual frown, and whose mouth hed become a straight stern line, with grooves like wrinkles on either side of it, scarce looked " the hero of a love tale." Yet Caleb Graymarsh had been young once, and had loved his little Kitty with a strong, manly earn— estness. She was the sole love of his life, the only woman who had ever made his heart beat. When he won her, simple country girl though she was, no monarch was fonder of his queen, although all but his wife believed him cold•beart ed, and wondered what charm young, blue eyed Kitty had found in his stern face. Only Caleb • Graymarsh himself know how well he loved his wife, and when the sod was piled above her breast, he knelt shove it, tesirless and speechless, and prayed silently that God would let him die also. We talk of wishing for death very often, but, only those who have drained the cup of suffering to the very dregs ever pray for it so earnestly that they would not shrink and tremble if their sinful prayer were answered and the bolt from heaven were seen descending. One of those rare and terrible moments came to Caleb Graymarsh as he knelt above his young wife's grave, but none who knew him ever guessed it. They saw, a few moments afterwards, a plain, homely working man, with a crape about his hat, rise to his feet, and plod slowly homeward, and, seeing no tears in his eyes and hearing no complaint from his lips, thought he did not feel much, and so left him. But Caleb Graymarsh, having no living kindred, and not being at that time rich enough ta have made friends, took the wailing baby from the woman who had eared for it, while he had followed its mother to the grave, and nursed it all night., feeling a strange comfort in the soft cheek he held against his own, and in the unconscious trifling of those tiny fingers about his face. He had thought very little of the baby while his wife lived, save as a pet and a plaything, it was well enough for him to have; but now he ex perienced a new feeling towards it. It would grow, perhaps, to have her form and features. He wished it were a girl instead of a boy ; and yet even now he felt he was not quite desolate. since God had left him this. And so, when the morning dawned, and the golden sunbeams crept through the bed-room window, they fell on Caleb Graymassh fast aelesp, with his baby an his bosom. Re put the child to nurse the next day and went about his work as usual. Whatever were hit feelings, he never spoke of them to any one, and, young as he was, he had a grim, unsocial wny with him which encouraged none to seek his confidence. On Sundays, instead of going with most of the other men to drink and frolic, or joining the few more sober-minded at church, Caleb Graymarsh went to the country place, where his baby was at mass, and kept it with him under the green trees all the day long. And the child, unconscious as it really must have been, was so strangely happy and contented that one might easily have imagined that its little eyes could see and read the tender secret of that rough workingman's soul. Year and year passed by, and plodding care and industry helped Caleb Graymarsh to climb the ladder of fortune, At first, acme deft han diwork brought him higher wages; then he be came foreman, and at last a partner in the very establishment which he had first entered a friend less boy, ordered and cuffed about by any one who chose to take the trouble. The steps were short and easy after this, and twenty years from the day on which he had knelt beside his young wife's grave, the black chimneys of his own fac tory arose above the roofs of the trim New En gland town, and people spoke of Caleb Graymarsh as a person of wealth and influence. In his life this man had married two strong passions—the love for his dead wife, and the greed of wealth ; not a miser's love of hoarding, but the pride of possession. Caleb Graymarsh liked to Bee envious eyes turned upon him, and was fond of boasting and display. Very little sympathy had he, either, for a poor man. What he had done he believed that others might do al— so. Those who worked for him knew this, and expected no kindness from him. He was strictly just, and sometimes even rewarded success by liberality , but he never commisserated failure or misfortune. Few heartily liked him, but all, with one accord, seemed to warm towards his son, young Harry Graymarsh, a genial, good.humored fellow, just come to man's estate, and handsome enough to turn the heads of all the girls in M—. He was, as Caleb hoped he might be, his mother's image. lie had her blue eyes and fair hair, her gentle smile and impulsive heart. Old Caleb had merely education enough to enable him to read and write and cypher in an imperfect manner ; but his son lied been taught as well and thorough ly as any lad throughout the land. The grim factor looked what he was, a working man risen to prosperous circumstances and wearing good clothes; but the son might have been of royal blood for anything you could have guessed to the contrary. Once home from college, young Harry Gray marsh was often seen in the factory, passing, with a kindly look and a laugh, along the ranks of the grim workmen who toiled in the lower part of the huge building, or pausing to chat with some blushing girl, who moved with light step and graoeful arms, bare to the dimpled elbow, amongst the whirring wheels and spindles upon the upper floor. Even the bent old men and the pale factory children had a word from him, and many a comfortable blanket and warm shawl found its way at, Christmas, to the dwelling of some old work woman, "dreadful bad with the rheum,- Liz," at the bidding of "young Master Harry." There came at last amongst the forces in the women's room, one who, to the rapturous eyes of Harry Graymarsh, was wondrously beautiful. An Italian sort of face, with liquid black eyes, and hair so dark that there really was a purple gloss upon it in the sunshine. It was the face which first attracted the factor's son, but it was the soul that riveted the chain which beauty first twined around his heart. She was not ignorant, and poor though she was, there was an innate refinement in every movement. And so, by slow degrees, from a casual interchange of words, they came to whis• pored conversa ti ons by the river side, and long summer evening rambles in the green woods, and before long, he had told her how beautiful she seemed to him, and how tenderly he loved her; and the eri, by blushes and silence rather than by words, had revealed the secret of her heart to him. And then, one glorious day, when the sun was setting and great Books of birds wore flying homeward across the cloudless sky—when the distant mountains were all aflame, and every quivering leaf upon the tree-tops a shimmering point of gold, Harry Graymarsh and Alice Lee were betrothed to each other; and so perfectly did she love him and trust his love for her, that she never thought " He is rioh and I am poor," but only, " Ifs loves me." Whether in those summer rambles Harry Graymarsh ever thought of his father, I do not know. He had never been thwarted by him in ' all his life, and perhaps he could not imagine that the rod of parental authority should first be wielded in a matter of such import; besides, what was there in modest, beautiful Alice Lee to awaken any one's aversion ? Certain it is that when one evening, sitting on the hank beside the river, with his arm about the waist of his be trothed, Harry lifted up his eyes and saw his father standing behind him, he felt bashful and confused, but not alarmed. The old man vanished as softly as he had ap peared, and poor Alice did not even see him, but a storm was brewing, and it broke over Harry Graymarsh's head that veryening. " Do you know you are the eon of the richest man in the place ?" said Graymarsh, standing crimson with rage before his son ; " that you might marry au heiress if you like ? and here I find you making love to a girl in my own factory, and you saLyou mean to marr her—you actual ly say thaff my face." '4 "I repeat it," replied Harry: "we are be. trothed." There were hot words between the father and son after that; taunts and reproaches, the first which had ever passed their lips, and the sun went down upon their wrath. They parted for the night in anger, and neither slept. It is an awful thing when those who love, first quarrel, and wounds are made which are the harder to heal for the memory of past tenderness. Old Graymarsh had been in his own way a tender father and Harry always a dutiful son. A stern parent and a bad child could have been recon ciled more easily. Since affluence had given him the opportunity to be more idle, old Caleb had felt some touches of the gout, and one of them twinged and tweak ed him the neat morning. Therefore he sent a grudging message to Harry, telling him that he must go in his place to the factory that morning, and received an angry but obedient answer. Then, before Harry was off, a servant left the house with a note for Alice Lee, bidding her not to go to work that day, but present herself before him in an hour's time. She must. be got rid of, he thought. Ile would bribe her to go to some distant place. This common factory girl could not wed his Harry. But when she stood before him in her modest beauty, it was very hard for him to speak to her as he had intended. This was no coarse creature, ambitious of wealth and setting snares for the rich man's son : something of the soul of Harry's dead mother shone upon the old man from her earnest eyes, and he felt somewhat softened. They were together in a little room, the win dow of which looked upon the factory; she was standing near the casement with her eyes upon the dark pile ; he seated at the table trifling with some papers and wondering how to begin. In the silence, the whirr, whirr of the machinery came plainly to their ears, and Caleb thought the noise was strangely loud and distinct He remembered that impression long after, and wondered that it did not trouble him more at that moment. As it was, he only thought— "what shall I say; why does that girl in her shabby dress look so much like a lady that I am afraid of insulting her by words that seemed so easy to say awhile ago ?" Softened though Caleb was, he was still a grim, hard old man, and his mind had been made up too firmly to change it now. He opened his lips, closed them again, and cleared his throat and began. "Miss Alice Leo, I have something to say to you. I shall make you angry, I suppose, but I can't help it. You'll please attend to me." She did not look at him, but stood staring, in an awful manner, from the window. "I am speaking to you. Do you hear me ?" the old man repeated; but before the words bad left his lips, Mice had turned and caught him by the arm, and then with an awful roar, like the voice of some fiend, an explosion occurred which shook the house, a chorus of wailing screams and groans, and then a terrible silence. There were great black torrents of smoke pouring from the windows of the factory, and the wall toward the side where most of the great engines were, bulged, and tottered, and fell, and the roof caved in, and before them in an instant, as though some fiend had been at work, stood a ruin, black and horrible, a smokhig and steaming mass, and seeming with its awful yawning jaws to groan and scream. And from the lips of the father and those of the betrothed maiden broke one word, simultaneously— , . Harry!" It united them in their great love and terror. They clung together, feeling the link between them for the first time. Both loved him, and he —oh 1 what was he now ! a living, breathing be ing, or a mass of crushed flesh, senseless, help less, lost to them forever Y Together they rush ed out into the open air, seeking him or what remained of Oh, the awful sight that summer sun shone upon ! Men, dead and dying, crushed and mu tilated, lay stretched upon the ground. Tho women of the village came into the street, some with their bare arms wet with soap-suds, some with babies on their bosoms, wailing and shriek ing, Bobbing and fainting, clinging to corpses which an h.uir before had been breathing men, peering with livid faces into horrible black hol— lows in the wall whence hands and feet protrud ed, listening for groans under those piles of rub bish, that they might hear the voice of some loved one amid those awful sounds; and there amidst the ruins of his mighty factory, stood the old man, calling aloud for help to save his Harry. Li There is no hope for him, sir," said one of the few workmen who remained unhurt. "He went down to see what was the matter, when the odd noise tir:t began, and never came up again." hush !" cried the old man, "Do you dare to tell me there is no hope. They SHALL save Harry !" And then turning to the trembling girl beside him, he repeated in a caressing way [VOL. XXIV.-NO. 3.-WHOLE NO. 1967. "Never fear, my lase, they shall save my Harry, and he shall have you or what else he likes. I'll never thwart him again. But if there's a God above us, he'll save my Harry." This was the burden of his talk, while labor ers were hard at work digging away the rubbish and bringing out dead bodies by the score. Men ground to pulpy horrors! beautiful girls with torn limbs! and children so alike in this awful death that every one was claimed and struggled for by twenty mothers. AU day long they dug and lifted iron weights and masses of stone, but there was no sign of Harry's body yet. At the bottom of that awful pile no doubt he lay mangled into shapelessness. Alice knew that it must be so, but the old man kept saying, still—" They shall save Harry." Dusk had come, and they worked by torch light. now. All hnd been, found dead or dying, wounded and maimed. They were carried to their homes. Yet still the crowd was thick about the ruin, waiting for the moment when what was left of Harry Graymarsh should be brought into the open air. An awful silence prevailed, only the click of spade and pickase broke it. Suddenly LITT.° was a shout, a lifting of those hundred voices. They had come to the lower door of the building, and part of it remained en tire. There was a little hope ; yes, more than a little ; for listening, they heard a faint voice calling to them, so it seen ed, though the words were inaudible. Faster now—there a great raft er to lift, and piles of stones and machinery to east out. But that voice inspires them. They work as they never worked before, and at last they hear the cry again. It comes from the part of the cellar where the floor remains. And one great man, crouching on his face, forces himself down into the blackness and screams—" Who is there ?" And the answer is returned from the awful cavern—... Harry Graymarsh. Help me if you can." Then the men came out with a glorious shout, and set to work like giants; and even women came to help, as they thought of the fair young face buried in that darkness. Ile may be maim ed and wounded, but at least he lives. And there is no pause, no respite from that toil. At an other time many there would faint beneath it, but not now, for every lifted stone brings them closer to the buried man, and gives him a firmer lease on life. As the morning broko the last is heaved aside, and the bronzed giant, who before crept into the cavern, leaps down now and van— ishes in the shadow. Silence, in which you might hear a pin fall or a heart beat—silence that freezes the blood—and then, breaking upon it, a woman's scream ; a shriek from the lips of Alice, as they bring the form of her lover, blood-stained and senseless, to the light. Not dead ! oh, no ! she thanked God for that. The great beams bad protected him. Ile was bruised and wounded, but not mortally, and in a little while his blue eyes opened, and his pale lips whispered, "Father!" Then the old factor, kneeling by his child as he had knelt upon his dead wife's grave so long ago, took the white band of Alice in his own and placed it in his son's. "She is yours," he said, "take her Harry and be happy. Wealth isn't worth as much as love. I should have known that all along," remembering Kitty. " Live, Harry! only live! and I'll never do anything to grieve you !" - And Harry did live. Long before the winter snows had come, he stood—a little paler and thinner than before, perhaps, but well and strong again—before the altar of the little church, with Alice by his side, and, that night, when the moon was high and no one watched him but the angels, the old factor stood beside his Kitty's grave, and whispered words of yearning love, which told that the soul of the young lover only slumbered in its iron-bound case, and that when death should set it free it would rise, pure and unsul lied, to meet its angel wife in heaven. SPEECH OF HENRY CLAY, In the 17. S. Senate, Feb. 7th, 1.838. MR. PRESIDENT: At the period of the forma— tion of our Constitution, and afterwards, our patriotic ancestors apprehended danger to the Union from two causes. One wag the Allegheny mountains, dividing the waters which flow into the Atlantic Ocean from those which find their outlet in the Gulf of Mexico. They seemed to present a natural separation. That danger has vanished before the noble achievements of the spirit of internal improvement, and the immor— tal genius of Fulton. And now nowhere is found a more loyal attachment to the Union, than among those very Western people, who, it was apprehended, would be the first to burst its ties. The other cause, domestic slavery, happily the sole remaining cause which is likely to disturb our harmony, continues to exist. It was this which created the greatest obstacle, and the most anxious solicitude, in the deliberations of the Convention that adopted the Federal Constitu— tion. And it is this subject that has ever been regarded with the deepest anxiety by all who are sincerely desirous of the permanency of our Union. The Father of his Country, in his last affecting and solemn appeal to his fellow.citizens, deprecated, as a most calamitous event, the geographical divisions which it might produce. The Convention wisely left to the several States the power over the institution of slavery, as a power not necessary to the plan of the Union, and which contained the seeds of certain destruc tion. There let it remain, undisturbed by any unhallowed hand. Sir, I am not in the habit of speaking lightly of the possibility of dissolving this happy Union. The Senate knows that 1 have deprecated allu sions, on ordinary occasions, to that direful event. The country will testify, that if there be anything in the history of my public career worthy of recollection, it is the truth and sincer ity of my ardent devotion to its lasting preserva tion. But we should be false in our allegiance to it, if we did not discriminate between the imaginary and real dangers by which it may be assailed. ABOLITIONISM should be no longer regarded as an imaginary danger. The Aboli tionists, let me suppose, succeed in their present aim of uniting the inhabitants of the free States, as one man, against the inhabitants of the slave States. Union on the one side will beget union on the other. And this process of reciprocal consolidation will he attended with all the violent prejudices, embittered passions, and implacable animosities, which are possible to degrade or de form human nature. A virtual dissolution of the Union will have taken place, Whilst the forms of its existence remain. The most valuable element of union, mutual kindness, the feelings of sym pathy, the fraternal bonds, which now happily unite us, will have been extinguished forever. One section will stand in menacing and hostile array against the other, The collision of opinion will be quickly followed by the clash of arms. I will not attempt to describe scenes which now happily lie concealed from our view. ABOLITION ISTS THEMSELVES WOULD SHRINK BACK IN DISMAY AND nonnon at the contemplation of desolated fields, conilagrated cities, murdered inhabitants, and the overthrow of the fairest fabric of human government that ever rose to animate the hopes of civilized man. Nor should these Abolitionists flatter them selves that if they can succeed in their object of uniting the people of the free States, they will enter the contest with a numerical superiority that must insure victory. All history and expe rienee prdlie the hazard aticl uneertaioty of war. And we aro admonished by Holy Writ that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong. But if they were to conquer, whom would they conquer ? A foreign foe ? No, sir; no, sir. It would be a conquest without laurels, without glory; A SELF, A solutes'. CONQUEST; a conquest of brothers over brothers, achieved by one over an other portion of the descendants of common an cestors, -who, nobly pledging their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honors, had fought and bled, side by side, in ninny a hard battle on laud and ocean, severed our country from the British crown, and established our national inde pendence. I am, Mr. President, no friend of slavery. The searcher of all hearts knows that every pulsation of seine beats high and strong in the cause of civil liberty. Whenever it is safe and practica ble, I desire to see every portion of the human family in the enjoyment of it.. But I prefer the LIBERTY OF MY OWN RACE to that of any other race. The liberty of the descendants of Africa in the United States is incompatible with the safety and liberty of the European descendants. Their slavery forms an eteeption—aa eiception resulting from a stern and inexorable necessity— to the general liberty in the United States. We did not originate, nor are we responsible for, this necessity. Their liberty, if it were possible, could only be established by violating the inoon testible powers of the STATES, and SUBVERTING THE Uurox. And beneath the ruins of the Union would be buried, sooner or later, THE LIBERTY OF ROTH RACES. How fearfully are these words of wisdom and prophecy now being fulfilled I Change in the Law Relative to School Directors. The following act was puloccl by the Legiels ture at the late session: AN ACT Relative to the Term of Office of School Directors. SEC. 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That the term of office of School Directors, from and after the first of January, Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and sixty-four, shall commence on the first Monday of June in each and every year ; Provided, (That) the term of office of School Directors now in office, shall severally be extended until the first Monday of June of the year in which their term of office expires : And provided further, That the organi zation of each Board of School Directors, as pro vided by the twelfth section of the act of eighth of May, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-four, shall be within ten days of the first Monday of June in each year: And provided further, That the school tax for each year shall not be levied until after such organization and before the first of July of each year: Provided, That the provi sious of Ibis act shall not extend to the city of Philadelphia, nor to the county of Allegheny, nor to the cities of Reading and Lancaster. APPROVED—The 22d day of April, 1863. A. G. CURTIN. This brief section effects several important modifications of the school law, which eemn to require immediate explanation: I. It iwnvides that after Jan. 1, 1864, the term of office of Directors shall commence on the first Monday in June next after their election. 1, This means that, no matter in what month elected, after Ist Jan., 1864, Directors shall not take their seats in the board till the first Monday in the next succeeding June—that is, till the first day of the next school year. 2. This does not affect persons appointed to fill vacancies. They at once take their seats, and continue in the board till the first Monday of the June in which the term of the persons whose places they occupy would have expired, had they remained in the board, 11. It. extends the term of all Directors ig in office" (whether by election or appointment) on the day of its passage (22d April, 1863) from the day on which such term would otherwise have expired till the first Monday in the next succeed-. ing June. 1. This means that Directors' terms ez;sting at the date of the act (22d .tpril, 1863), shall be continued front the day on which they would otherwise have expired till the next succeeding first Monday in June, so as to retain a full board till that time. 2. This does not mean, however, that Direc tors, whose term expired during the winter or spring of 1863, but prior to 22d April, 1863, are to resume anti continue their office till the first Monday in June, 18621 foe, their term having expired before its passage, this act can have no operation upon them. 3, Hence this also means that Directors whose terms expired an/ time before April 22d, 1868, are not to be admitted into the triennial conventions to elect County Superintendents on the first Monday of May, 1563 ; but that their successors duly elected or appointed, whether before or af ter the 22d. of April, 1863, are to be admitted as members of the conventions. 111. It postpones the organization of Boards of Directors (that is, the choice of President, Secretary and Treasurer) till within ten days after the first Monday in June annually. 1. This renders an election of officers for or ganization indispensable within ten days after the first Monday in June, 1863; and annually, thereafter, within the first ten days of each school year. 2. But, inasmuch as unbroken organization is indispensable to the operations of the system, this not only also admits of, but requires, an or ganization of each board for the interim between the annual election and the first Monday of June, in 1863 ; within ten days after which last named day the first regular organization under the new law must take place. 3. Hence it follows, that all official acts by board officers, chosen prior to the first Monday in June of 1863, and in accordance with the old law and the rules of the proper board, will be legal and binding, till the first election under the new law in June. IV. It prohibits the levy of school tax, till the period between the annual organization of the proper Board and the first of the following July. 1. This means that the amount of tax to be collected within the then current school year, shall not be fixed by vote of the Board, till be tween the date of the regular annual organization thereof and the first of the next July. In other words, that the official ads prescribed by section 28 of the school law of 1854 are still to be per formed, but at a different time. 2. This also means that the school tax for the school year which will commence on the first Monday in June, 1863, is to be "levied" or fixed in Juno, 1863, under the new law, and not "on or before the first Monday in May," as required by the act of 1854. E. As this act does not specify the time when the tax is to be "apportioned" and the duplicate made out, which the old law did, (via: on or before the let Monday in June,) it follows that the duplicate may and should be made out as soon as practicable after the levy in June. V. It excepts the city of Philadelphia, the county of Allegheny, and the cities of Reading and Lancaster, from the operation of its provi sions. 1. This means that those places are excepted from the operation of all the provisions of this act, and not merely from some of them. 2. It leaves the county of Allegheny and the cities of Reading and Lancaster, exactly as they were prior to 22d April, 1863, in reference to the term of office of Directors, the right of Directors to vote for County Superintendents, the organi sation of school boards, and the time of levying school tax. THO. H. BURROWES, Superintendent Common Schools. SCHOOL HAPAITYNNT, HUMMING, APri/ 2 6 , iBO2.