Terms or Publication. Till Wayhmbctio KMTBt.!C.i, Office In ayon' bullillnit, eaal of the Court House, i pub lished every Wodnenduy morniiiK, at l-r annum, in advance, or 50 If nut paid Willi in the year. Allobrritloti aqronnla llfhT beeettlrd annually. No pupor will l nt out of the Htnte unli! paid for in advanck, and all siu'h ulMrliiloMKwill liiviii'lntily horilNcrin tlnul at Hi" expiration of the time for which thftvure puld. t.'ommniiicntlonxon aubjeH of local nr general tutrrt uri' r"n'(,Miilly Hollclti-d. To nKiirt allriitlon favor of II.U kiwi mum invHrlithly h avi'iip mlcl by the rmiii. of tin.-author, not for puhilmtinn, hut nn uimrMutvHUfiiiiHtltiipoNition. All 1' ttiTn prtninm to huslnuwof m olllce 'must ba ii'Mri'rttfit to the fcMitor HOUID V t.r.oH. . . Two Utile cbiMrcn sit in Hie Iwllljjhi, Murmurine lull anil low SM one. -I'll be a niilm 1ml, With my bn:it li"y ! y lii For fcilloiB are most loved of all, In every bnpy home, And tears nfgilcf or KulneiiK fall, Just as Ihuy go or como." Bui the olhrr rliilil nitiil sntlly, "All, do not goto wa, Or in the ilrenty winter nluhts What will Income nf me ? For If the w im' lu-giio to lilnw, Dr thunder slmke Hie oky, While you were In your heal, yo bo I hat could I d hut cry.; " Then he enlil, 'I'll he a so'idier, With adilihtfulgun, And I'll ci.inr home with a wooden leg, As lii-rocs Imvi- often dune," SliearreaniSttt that, unci prn) nnilbcga, VMillv tciirs Imif nngiy aim t, "Don't tnlk iilioiil your wundiii Vt, Unlets jou'd hreuk my heurl !" Ho answered her rnlliet proudly, ' II' so whil c.n I be? lft lil"kt lint have n wooden leg And must not gu In e:i ? IIuw could Hie I'ii u'uleiil hl.-ep at nljlit, Hale IV ni Ihesi'iiiu and illei!, If Mneiii an hoys refused to tlut For lear (T Wooden legs ?' film bang her head n peniirg, And trying In be good. Bui her linle blind Oroked tenderly The leg ot fiVrh ad lilm.d! And with hir roSv tin till, thu kis'td Tile knUkelbi lken d knee, And sighed, "P.-i haw if you insist Vou'd better go to sea I " Then he Bunt; bis arms nbniit bor, And laughingly be spiko. "But I've seen nmny h inesl lars Willi legs of toughest oak ! (), dnilii g. w hen I nm n iphii, With beiird of shilling Muck, I'll he a hero If I ran, And you miul not hold me back." Fhe kissed him us she answered, "I'll try wh it I can do And Wusliinuton had Imlh his legs, And Ccrurde Leon loo ! Anil 0 iriliiddi " here she sitlled, ' I kmnV he's la lull Ihere Ill 's siieliu hero none beside Like liiui c.uiid do am! diru : " 1 1 ic children liilked in Hie twilight t)f ir uny a si lling sun, An'd she'd s'mke hlsp'iin, and eluin r hands ;Tbal the heard had not Im-buii j F'nr ll.ongh she meant lobe braveani' good ' When be rviived n bi ro's part, Vet often the tlnne hi n.'the leg of wood S I v heavy on her le art ! (Original No. 6. Fur the Hr:rcni ican. rniNiix life. BY A PRISONER. "But that I nm forbid To ti II Ihe secrets of my prison b us", 1 could a I du unfold, whose Huh est word Would hnrrmv up dry soul j freeze thy yuuu? blood ; Mike 'hy tw i eyes, lilte st rs, start from tin Ir i, heres.' lLtn.lfl. It is ;iot so much that I am forbid to toll the story of my prison, as that it is beyond the power (if man to lell it nriht. rite jjen of a D.into would fail hero. lie went down into tliehell of his own imagination, and the wild passions in his soul jiirtnred thesctmc: n i .i r oi norior more. j;ut Here was an Inferno upon earth, ami one, too, in which not spirits, hut living men were confined, and where the body as well as the soul suffered torment. My first thought on entering was, I will never live to be released from this place. And here I may give a description of the prison, poor though it will b. It lay on either side of a hollow through whichastream of water, that canicfroni a swamp, coursed its wav. The water was black, and tasted rankly of vege. tation. Added to this, the cook-house was built just above the prison, and the filthy grea.it from it was constantly Uowing down. Ihe whole was sur rounded by a stockade fence, about twelve feet high, on the top of which sentry boxes were erected at conveni ent distances. Inside this, and some twelve feet away, a light single railing ran, and this was the dead line. The tents and huts had originally been formed in regular street, but the prison was now so full tltt all trace of these was lost, save one on each side. Oil the Jsorth side of the stream a swamp extended some distance, covering-, I suppose, four acres. One who bits never seen a southern swamp can have no just conception of it. A black, rotten bog of decaying logs, and filled with lizards and snakes. I have seen men sink down ia it to the middle. (Was this a good place fora pestilence?) All through the prison wells had been dug, that yielded a half (supply of water. 1 atterwards helped to dig one. The ground was sand fornix feet down, then a strata of clay, then sand, sand on down, no doubt, to China, or at least to an intervening place. In fact, the whole Confederacy Iras built on the sand of Slavery, JAS. E. SAYEIIS, VOL. XI. instead of on the rock of Freedom. Thn.se prisoners who had first come in had built tents of logs and clay. Other later ones who were fortunate enmixh to retain their blankets, had put them up for shelter from the sun tind rain. Many, however came in with nothino; but n suit of clothes. These were compelled to lie down on the sand, exposed by day to the sun and rain, and ut nilit to thecold dew. Hut they never remained long with us. Death soon took them away. At the time I entered there were eighteen thousand men in the prison. Immediately after going in, I wont to the brook for a drink. It was crowd ed with men getting water close to the dead line. Seeing the water clearer next the fence, I was about to step over (he rail, when a comrade p illed me back, and pointing to the sentinel, wlio stood trim own remui, tobl me that was the dead lino. I then hunted np the boys of my company who had one in at the South gate. Found them "pitching their tout" on a pile of sand tint had boon thrown out from a well ; I joined in, and among us we had two blankets f r a tont, one to lie on, and one to eowr us. Thu next day wo took in with us throe more from onr regiment. In the evening; wo lrcV rations. Iirt of the prisoners received raw ra tions, part cooked ones, our detach ment drew unsifted corn-and-eob meal and raw meat, very small portions, ton, of each. The others drew nitis-h brought in in pine boxes that gave it such a flavor of turpentine that only starving men would have eaten it Hut it was greedily devoured, even, fought over. They also received a bit of moat, and some corn bread baked TwuiiiwTeTiincTnrtuTaouT diseases. They were fond of telling that Hello Island was a much worse prison than this. In sonic respects it was, in others better. I believe but few-of thorn ever lived to see home. On the other side the prisoners were mostly new ones, but even they look ed bad, and and were dying at a fear ful rate. Here and there 1 saw men with u b ill and chain liwt to their ankles. They had tried to cs ajie, n prii'ilrre errry jirinoiwr nhoulil Aw, and when caught by Uwidhnv.nih had been punished in this manner by the chival- The f iocs nf all who had been long confined looked pinched and emaciated with hunger, and it was not a pleasant thing to think that I, loo, would sonn look like them. Many looked tin uattim! ; some sad and hopeless. The old prisoners told me if I wanted to live long I must keep up a brave heart and never despond. As one fellow UU. Alliioaicu.lj l!.H J'.JIMI.lll'lll paper would be brought containing the statement that an exchange was to ie made at onee. The Charleston Mercury was especially goo J at such lies, for they were nothing but lies, tdd to prevent an outbreak. War With England. sty. A special telegraphic dispatch from Wasningto to the New York World of Saturday referring to the controversy involving the Alabama claims, says: The tergiversation of t-ecretary Seward is of avail no more. Another and higher authority lias determined upon the course which is to be pursuod in respect to the claims of the United States Government upon Great Britain. I am authorized to state, most confi dentially and decisively, that the legiti mate demands which have been too meekly urged by the Secretary of State upon the British Cabinet, are to ie en forced at whatever hazard. The new British Minister, Mr. Thornton, will probably lie presented to President Johnson Tuesday. Although the ad dresses that are to be exchanged be tween the President and Minister Thornton may be guarded and serene, the fad yet remains that a speedy and -atisfaetory response must be made by the British Government to the ultima tum of the Executive of the United States, or else a declaration of war against Great Britain must inevitably mini, "Nte toy goods of Ibort who doot dertJc They loll so Utile (bet hare to aril FIRMNESS IN THE RIGHT WAYMSBIRG, flcct iUadinfl. mua jiahs u.iMttiu. Everywhere, in all sorts of nws-pap-jrs, I had read of glorious skating tun Central Park skating, Schuyl kill, and Schuylkill Park Diamond ditto private ditto the grand fun men on skates, boys on skates; syl phides in scant skirts, sled-shod, ami skirring away over the ice the the thunder! the very reading gave me the ice fever, and in the delirium con sequent upon the sudden attack, I re solved on taking nu ice cruise myself. Why not? What was to hinder? I had never navigated that sort of craft, 'tis true. But then I'd been on the water, and under the water, all my lift, andon ico, too, some. Ha in't I killed seals, and chased white bears, for Weeks togeihei', on ice? Women could skate so the papers said. So did everybody else rthen I inquired of 'cm. I could skate! What was the reason I cuiild not? The only tiling I'd ever seen women do that I couldn't, was to hook her own dress aft, and carrying six ieet breadth of sail thro' a twenty inch doorway. Yej, sir I could skate; and I was bound on an ice cruise. Thcie was nothing to prevent the expedition from being fitte! out lit once. I was lounging about the Navy Yard, delached from everything, all acquaintances incliflel, waiting or dcrsi Digusted with bar rooms, de testing theaters, what was I to do for amusement? Why, skate of course! Ah, yes! the very thing, by Jove! Why hadn't I thought of that before? I'll have a cruise directly, or sooner, if possible. No I must have the tools first, and started up town to find 'em. I brought up in front of a big win dow, on t!io starboard side of Chest nut street going towards Schuylkill, where they had more diltercnt rigs of sliding machine than you can see national flags in Gibraltar. Know- iigniiout as inucii ot the nu ililications f the different patterns as a cow docs f chronometer time, went inside and scd fiir a pair of skates. "What kind do you prefer, sir?" "Oh, I have no prelcrencoi Give 10 the best you have." "Yes, sir," and the clerk passcl out r lnspc.'tion a pair ot .'as-clad ieel clippers, with more nilgais and tinning ringing to Yin that there is to 1' rench s.oop of war. "These are the best, are they ?'' "Yes decidedly I Just gVt onto them, sir, and you'll go everywhere and anywhere, like patent lightning! It you don't find it so, bring 'cm back, sir, and I'll refund your nionev.'" "What's the price?" ''Fourteen dollars, Vcrv cheap, sir." Didn't believe that, of course; 1 ut invested the amount, and made sail for Faii'moiint. Found superb skating. Everybody said so only those that culled it ele gant ! splendid! magnificent ! There was a re gi i;c;il of men a battalion of dimity, and a whole brigade of snm'd cral',on skates, s-kivering, scooting, and eutt'nr all sorts of fancies on the ic; eviryliody laughing,. chattering, wh opirg, skylarking, and skittviing in;. 11 d.reitlons ! an 1 1 don't wond r newspapers a. id every body else call it glorious fun. "Have your skate? strapped, sir," said an itinerant boot-black, about the height of a walking stick. "Do you understand it, Bub?" "Oh, yes, sir, I strap ail the ladies' "Ah, hah! Do, oh? Must have a ly time of it ! Would like the b. rth, vseit. 1 here von are. Go ahead. y'l" and I sat down on Hlackic's x, about a couple of fathoms out on e ice. Whiz like a rocket, went by a eat, stroniuiur loner-le "i-ed ehnn. with a cigar flvinir iibboom. and swinging his arms like a frigate's head wards in a hurricane, with braces all adrift. "Oh, ho ! So they can smoke on ski.tes ch, 1 oy ?" "Lord ! yes, sir! Everybody smokes on ice." ' Exactly." And so I fired up on a Prim ipe and shipped it for the cruise. Urchin announced skates all at aunto ; and took a fifty cent "frac tional" fee. 'Here, boy here's another fifty. Just allow me to sit on you box a few minutes, till I get the run of thenavi gition' "Yes, sir you can set there till I get somebody else to strap." . So I sat there studying ice naviga tion by diad reckoning, till direct ly a little petticoat craft, in yellow trow sers, skirts to her knees, red belt, Rus sian cap, nnd arms nkinibn, swooped di wn, and checked up ritrht in front of me. There she hung for a minute cjuivering like, and balancing, just as a hsh hawk does over his prey; nnd all the time eyeing me with a dancing twinkle of her jolly black eyes. "A challenge for a race, sir! Catch me if you can I" Little Dimity lifted her left font a trifle, bent right knee. slightly, made a graceful curve, the bottom of her skirt just brushing my nose, and off she went like a flying fish ze-ee-st! -zit ! swinging from side to side, her tartan skirt swaying hither and thither, like the iolds of a spanker brailed in with the shiphead to the wind. "So, ho! That's a challenge is it? And that's the way to skate? Thun- AS GOD GIVES US TO SEE THE PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11), IS63. derl I can skate I Anybody can skate!" But I couldn't though whatever anybody else can doj I accepted Di mityVchallenge, and her practice on ice. So I bounded up from .that blacking box, lifted left foot a little, bent right knee, und stuck my arms akimbo, but I didn't cut a curve. I did the next best thing, however, nnd cut a 'spread eagle." Port foot slid due southeast, and starboard one northwest, till I realized those spreadout pictoriul impossibilities; on circus bills. I wondered if my boots and skates would ever become ship mates again. "Hallo, mister! mustn't try to skate all over both sides of this 'ere pond at once!" growled an old amrneroial looking chap, ns lie checked up enough to put in the remonstrance against my ice monopoly. "1 sty, Mister Saltwater, couldn't ycr lilt yerself amidships a bit, so we tui sail 'tween yer leg"," piped rt young scamp, Uiu leader to twenty juvenile skaters. "lXn't try to skate on both feet at once, my dear sir!" advised a sensible, Christian looking man, who came to my assistance and set me on an even keel onec more. "When you lift one foot, sir, you must throw nil your vigor and muscle into the other fituh. i . " . i i , Aim men remcmner io sway your body so that your weight will always b on that foot whloli hits tlu ice. 'Tis veiy easy, sir just this way!" and away went my Christian mentor, with a long, stri li.ig, graceful swing. "0, yes, that's very easy. All the vigor in the other limb. Yes, I can do it." So I made a prodigious scoot and did it I I stuck out left leg, like a mosquito when he's blood-sucking. Put nil my vigor and musjle into the right limb, and couldn't get it out again. Went oil' on one foot like a shot ; crooked right knee twice a minute, just as lit tle Dimity did. Saw a crinoline craft crossing my course under convoy of a big double banked craft, both skating like a streak, and go clear 1 nod to shear to port of 'cm. Missed stavs, and went afoul of crinoline. The toe o ' my p'ir; sk tte ho iked Mis S im.' bo ly's skirt, which giva me a broad s!i .'ei' to star!) ar I, an I I ramn.;d big convoy, butting him square on his cut water, and drove the live end of Prin cipe slap down his throat. 'J here was an everlasting tangle, and nil hands went sprawling on the ice, liUe a nest of Iiieauga Island crabs. "Look here, sir! what do you mean?" yelled the big convoy, scramb ling to his feet, and maneuvering for a broadside. "Beg pardon, sin I couldn't help it!" I replied meekly, sitting on the ice. "Couldn't help it? Why, didn't von stop; "Didn't know bow." "Oh, ho! green on skates, ch?" "Yes, greener' n a eab'iige!" J hat modified the big chap, .and setting me on my pins again, he vol unteered to educate me in checking up. "Oh, yes, I can do that !" and I did d.rci'tiy. OJ I shot again on one leg, stec.i.ig t'li.i time for tlu shore for I'd skated enough. Half way in, and there slid right down in my course a crowd of forty or so girls and men, and women anil b-iys. I tried "down brakes," accor ding to instructions; nnd broke too much. Up tojs, and digging my heels into the icj, 1 sa'-o I back like, an doubled amidships, as if 1 was going io taico a seat an I trial! 1 went down st .tii fiireaiost.and with a whan: that broke the ice like a Dane of win! do.v g'ass shivered by a pebble hurled mrnugii it. I In J an idea ju-t them, that such a bump as that would have started the armor of any iron-clad afloat. I sold tiiose infernal skate-ju't as I sat, lor lour dollar, under a strong conviction that there s no tun in skat ing. Its all a humbug. Icau'tskate I don t want to. A St'lIOOLIIOV'M LETTER. Bibchtown Academy, Sept. 2. Dear Pap: .r mil rrMfin.r nlrttv . ,. h 0 ,...,.s nrstrate at the school, and I like it very much, all except Whacks, the assistant -uiil Uecswox," wc call him, and we are down on him like a pile-driver, all us boys, for he's iirno- rant. Why, he's so ignorant be don't know a blackboard from a diirknitrlil. no, he don't, and Bill Ferguson, l;e put a torpedo under each leg ot old Beesey's chair yesteiday, and when he sat down (you see he si'ts down like he had ballust into him,) why the torpe does they exploded, and like to blow him through the roof. Golly, but wusn t he scared ! He looked at the Almanac to make sure it wasn't the 4th of July, und then he came down, looking mad, and licked Bill like blazes. But Bill said he didn't rare a cent, and the next time he would spriukle fMinpowder in his hair, and bust the old frontispiece off of him. Dr. Goggles, he's a nice old feller, only he will set and chew gura-drops right before us boys, and never sav "will you take some" once. He wears green sjiecs, and Bill Fer guson, ho called him "old four eyw," one day, which the doctor, he heard of him when he said it, and he nailed Bill and dragged him np to the desk, and then ha gave as a lecture, and said that there was once a boy he knew, and he was just abont Bill's Size, and he insulted an old grayhcad-1 RIGHT.-IWti ed man, und also called him wicked riaaiw, f n I the next day the very next morning that boy's" mother died of inflammatory rheumatism, and his sister broke out with humors. Bill, he cried, when the doctor held him by the shirt.collar, but he winked at the boys when lie came away, nnd thcu wrote .n a piece of paper, and threw it over to mo, that he thought the doctor was nothing bufablower." and that he darseu't hit a boy of his size. I want some new books very much, ulxitit ten of them, and they will cost uboiit eight dollars. Don't send the books, fo. the Doctor likes us to buy them here. I don't want any money for taffy or marbles, for I don't care about them j but be sure uot to send any tiling but the money for the books. I am in good health. I wan taken sick last week, nud had a sore eye for a few days, but it is now well. Vi c was plaviug nmmble-psgout on tin-a rass, and Bill Ferguson, he grabb ed my knife. 1 told dim ho had bet ter give that knife up or I would tell yon, and get you to lick him when vou coiiu down, and he said ho could iiek you and a dozen like vou, and then he dared m? to kno.k a chip off of hU shoulder. And Jake McGinnis, he pushed me right against Bill, and that knocked the chip off his shoulder, nnd Bill he struck me over the nose three or four times, and said he'd "bust me on the snoot" if I didn't dry up, for I couldn't help crying, and' I was taken sick, and I couldn't go to school all that day. Please send the money( and believe me your affectionate son". H. M. Wilkixs. P. S. Don't forget to send the money for those books. iiion u AllI.UTO.T. .HrrtPlInn TimiiWc I (lie Tlrltlti Mllnn. rh oi'ili'lmicv Hill n I.uk. iti'inovxl nt .w (IrlcniK 4 iilliirllD-Mrnut Onlrra lluiirnck Io ItovoUi hi Order, -lluneuek unit 10 lie Ili'llcveU. WASHiNdtox, D. C, February 11, 1808. Although the President has endeavored to keep the fact a great secret, it has nevertheless leaked out that he has tendered the mission to England to Gen. McClellan, and only waits his acceptance by cablo to send his name to tiieSenatc for confirmation. The tender was made ten days since out no reply lias been received. The deficiency appropriation bill becamea law to-day without the Presi dent's signature, the constitutional ton days having expired since it was pre sented to him. An important conflict lias arisen be tween the military oflicials in the cn- (,. c .1. " . . . uuii-uiciii ui die reconstruction laws by virtue of t'-e act of Congress ot July last. Cencnl Grant has taken a stan I regarding the approval of an order issue I by General 1 ; uncock re cognizing the City Councils of New Orleans. He yesterday telegraphed to Genera! Hancock to revoke his order relating to the council. Gen'l. Haileock replies by telegraph that if General Grant insists on his order of revocation that ho (HuncocIO respect fully asks to be relieved of the Fifth Military District. General Grant's reply is not known, but it is believed that he will maintain his disapproval of Hancock's order. The whole mat ter has been telegraphed back to the President, who would doubtless de cline to relic a Hancock. Thr Supreme Cotlrt. Our advices from Washington an nounce that the Suprt-ne Court of the uiiiie.1 oiaies nas itsctt decided that it has no jurisdirtion.over thepolitical acts 01 congress attectii)'' the leeon struction of the Southern States, and has dismissed the Mississippi and Alabama cases brought to test the con stitutionalitv of those acts. Wo re. joice at this indication that thcSuprcme Court is disposed to confine itself to its proper sphere, and respect the (Miiim-m uiui legislative lunetions ot a co-ordinate branch of the Government, IM I . , . i ins m 111 nccoriiance wit 1 the views of all the leading statesmen of the Re public, and with the accepted tenets of me I'euioeratic party. Judge Taney s (lec.sion 111 me Ured Scot ease embrac ed two point. The one full of danger was not that "the negro had no rights w hich a white man was bound to re spect," but that the Supreme Court is tne Highest political and legislative iiraii' li ot the Government. If the Court his authoritatively suppressed this latter heresy, then its ermine has become Ktainless. As a judicial tri bunal it will enjoy a respect which would only be overthrown by ustirn- ing political powers. Tribune. Is Lancaster County. Pn.. with a Republican majority of 6.000. thn i-nio of taxation fbr the current year is fix ed at two and a half mills on tho dol bar. In Democratic York County it is seven mills on the dnlW nnrl in Berks, with a Democratic majority of 1 Ann ! t ,.1 ,vuv, 11 is ncanv 1 en mills. - A Chicaoo court has decide ! that young ladies of seventeen are too old to he well, spanked was the word used in court, but it seems indelicate. Chinese cooka stew their dunk. alive to improve their flavor, finnirh on ducks. ' -. ; : - - "A Mak in Norwich drnniMrl a Tiv coal into a bombshell 'Ho bear it fizj." lie beard it. EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. NO. 31. WOME.M AXU MABR1AOK. I have speculated a great deal on matrimony. I have seen young aud beautiful women, the pride of the gay cireds, married a the world says, well. Some have moved in their costly houses, nnd their friends have all come and looked at their furniture and their splendid home for happi ness, nnd have gone away and com mitted them to their sunny hopes, cheerfully and without fear. It is natural to be sanguine for thera as the young are sometimes can io.l away with similar feelings. I love to get unobserved into a corner and Watch thu bride in her white attire, nnd with her smiling face and soft eyes meeting tne in the pride of life; weaving a waking dream ot future happiness, and per suade myself it will be tniei I think how they will sit upon the luxuriant soft us the twilight falls, and build gay hop.'s, and murmur in low tones the not now forbidden tenderness; and how tin illing the allowed kiss and beautiful endearments of wedded life will make even their parting joys, and how gladly they will come back from the crowdedund empty mirth of the gay to caehother's tpuiet com pany. 1 picture to myself that young crea ture, who blushes even now nt his hesitating caress, listening eagerly for his footsteps as the night steals on, wishing ho would come) find when he enters at last, and with an affection as undying a9 his pulse, folds her to his bosom. I can feel the tide that goes flowing through the heart, and gae with him on tho graceful form its she moves about in the kind offices of at fection, soothing all his unquiet cares, and making him forget even himself in her young and un-diiulowed beauty. I go forward for years, and see her luxuriant hair put s iberly away from her brow', and her girlish graces re signed into dignity and loveliness, chastened with the gentle meekness of maternal affection. Her husband looks on with a proud eye , nnd shows the same fervent love and delicate at tention which first won her, and her fair children are grown about them, and they go on, full of honor and un troubled years, and are remembered when they die. HWu'wyfon Irving. A Temperance Auerdute. Over In A neighboring city of Tiffin, once upon a time,1' a young theolog ical student was delivering a temper ance letture, and proving by the Bible which ho had open before him, that strong drink was injurious to inn1) and a sin ngains God. Now, in that city lives a man known as Cooper IC, a former Democratic. M. C. who is very f..nd of his bitters. Just as the young man got fairly wormed tip in his subject, old Cooper K. came in pretty tvell poisoned, aild took a seat. A fter sitting a few minutes, he arose in his seat, and steadying himself, he pointed his finger at the speaker and iid : "Young man (hie), young man (hie), don't you kno'.v that that Book ijiic) only mentions one man (hie) who asked for water (hie) and ho was in h 11 (hie), u-hrre he ought to bet" The converts to the cold water cause were not .numerous that night. Findlay Couriert Two Confederate soldiers, on their return to their homo in Northwestern Louisiana, fell in love with the same girl ; and seeing nn other way of de ciding which should have her, agreed to settle the question with muskets they to start toward each other from points half a mile anart.and "scout nn" throujh the brushwood, and take their chances respectively. The sig nal for the start having been given by a neighbor firing a gun, they took, to the bi ush, and began to play Indian. But one of them 60011 made a dash tbr the log cabin of the girl's father, and coaxed her to run away with him. The other, after "scouting" cautiously around in the bruh till near dark", came out, and, suspecting some game, went to the cabin where his love, resid ed, and there learned of herelopement, from her mother, who was privy to the transaction. Astounded at such treachery, and mortified by his dolW the baflled lover stepped 'nutside the uoui ami oiew nis own urums out with 111s musKct, . somebody lie kind enough to tell us what measure has been under taken for the maintenance of the Gov ernment that was not pronounced by . ... imocracy "unconstitutional," tyrannous" and "usurping?" They us Hiigwanzeu the tirst call for troops tho em anuination nroc.Ininnfi.in the abolition amendment, the law for the enlistment of negro soldiers, the ve.iiucii a ouiean uiu, mo nrst recon struction act. Everything tending to enforce loyalty and obedience excites tneir opposition j it is only respecting the designs' of traitors th'ev complaints to make. ecJotut loss ha ve been concluded between the Baltimore and Ohio, the Marietta and Cincinnati!, and th In. dianapolis, Cincinnati and Lafavctte itailroad Companies, by which these lines, so far as workinir arraneemefits aro concorned, are to be one. "I 1 ejn aa 1 . Ay editor became martial, aud was created cantainftf a mm nanv.. Oh m. raae, instead or "two paces front ad vgoceP he bawled out, "cash trdol. art a year in advance He survived but a tew days. j , . . - r: -I-- .Terms of. Adrortlsln (HO AViKnTiiinu. . mm w . m. w r " " tor three Inwrtloni, end SO rente per ho? for e-b eiMIUonel Insertion; (tee. Ilnee orlree eoantrd equiire). All treaeieQledverUMaieale to lie peid for In edvence. llrsixBU Norn-meet under the heed of loeJ news will be cnerged InvkrUblf t (UlUM for eeh liwerUAii. A libeml diKlunlon mede to nne tdrertlf ln bv thu qunrlr, lieir-veer or ycer. Speelei notli-ee rhnrged oue-liMX more tntn rcfVlw kd VfrttAomente. Jon Pm.NTiKonf erefVSlnd In Plain nd Fern cy colon; Hand-blllt, Blejiki, Carta ntupniei - Ac, of eviry variety nnd etyln, urlntrd ut t)H nortoet notire. The Retcbmcau Orrmt he Just liven ro-fitted, end every tiling In the run-, inn line run be executed In the meet exUiLer menner nnd at the lowest rntee, The "Old .lakeei Barket." . , The Old Oaken Bucket was written hy Woodwolth while yet he was a journeyman printer working in an of fice on Chambers and Chatham, streets New York. Nearby, in Frank fort street, was a drinking house kept by one named Mallory where Wood worth and several particular friends used to resort. One afternoon the liquor was super-excellent, Wood worth seemed inspired by t, for .after taking a draught, he set Jiis glass upon the table, and, smacking his lips, de clared that Mallory's cau de vt wu superior to auy thing be had ever tas ted. "No," wW Mallory, "You art mistaken there was one which in both our estimations far surpassed this as drink." "What was that ?' asked Wood, worth, dubiously, "The draughts of pure fresh spring water, that we used to drink from tha old oaken bucket that hung in th well, (in our return from the field on a riiltry day in summer." The tear drojis glistened fur a mo ment in Wood worth's eye. "Truest true I" ho replied and shortly after lie quited the place. He immediately returned to the oilice, grasped a pen and in half au hour tho "old oaken bucket," one of the most deligtful compositions 111 our language, was ready in manuscript to be embalmed . in the memories of succeeding geufifa tions. The Feeling la the MBlb. Notwithstanding we are told day af ter day by leading Democratic papers rllnr tnn Slf.ntli tdlni.il an.l noertfif'ulltf inclined, and that there is 110 need for military rule within its borders, we occasionally Cud that the passions and animosities engendered by the rebel lion are still carefully cherished aid that it is really a difficult matter for a traitor of 1865 to become a patriot in 18C3. The Richmond Inquirer said of the Reconstruction Conventions t "These illegal, grotesque nftd mon strous bodies would nnt be permitted to exist for a day, it they were not upheld by Federal soldiery. It is important to our reputation that man kind should know that the white men of Virginia do not intend to per mit tho work of these debased wretches to stand one moment longer than the suldierby his presence is able to up hold it" Jaft.lAnt Mrej No obligation to justice does force a man to be cruel or to use the sharpest sentence. A just man does justice to every man nnd to everything) and then, if he bo also wise, ho knows there is a debt ot mercy and compassion duo to the infirmities of man's nature; and thnt is to be paid ; and he that is cruel and ungentle to a sinning person, and docs the worst to hira, dies in his debt, and is unjust. . Pity, and forbearance, and long suffering, and fair interpre tation, and excusing our brother, and taking in tho best sense, and passing tho gentlest so. tencc, are as certairily our diify.and as owing to every person that does offend and can repent, as calling to account can be owing to the law, and are first to be paid ; and he that ddes not do so is an unjust per son Senatorial Ametiltlee, Revcrdy Johnson in opening his re ply to Senator Morton's sMech on re construction, paid hira the following' comp imcnt: "I proceed now to the. speech of tho honorable member from Indiana (Mr. Morton.) In ttJmmon with every member of. tils' Senate, I Ijsteued to that speech not only with plea-ure, but with admiration. It was courteous, logically argumentative, and had the true spirit of eloquence. It was a speech of which the Senate has cause to feel proud. It brought back our debates, if they have wandered from that standard, to the standard of former days, when no pcronal reflec tions wore indulged in, when high ele vated print iples guided the di cussion when the good of the country alone scorned to be considered, and not the mere success of party." , WcTerMle. The farmer connot be a loafer, and yet thrive. Pruning, draining, kill tug weeds, making walJs, getting out muck, preparing the manure beep, cutting bushes and cleaning up around the walls: battening up tho cracks of the old barn to keep the 'cattle and horses from freezing ; giving the swine a warm pen, allowing no leaks, if a shingle can bo found, and no broken panes tor the ornamental wow of old hats and rags, if a square of glass can ba obtained, are a few of ths fair ' weather jobs which claim his attention utiring tho recess of the harvest sea son. The foul weather jobs are near ly as numerous, and their claims as urgent on the attention of every tidy thriving farmer. An Irishman who bad just landed said : "The first bit of mate I ever ate in this country was a roasted po tato beilcd yesterdav. Anrl ifZ. don't belave me, I can show it to re VaiXs wrung iV ' in wi! .1. - udio next fail, sera tb. Cnnki.. m-joniy win be from thirteen to twen ty thousand. .. .,e