u*ser:s x s& Bj NDiOtjf. Baflrnad fiompentaa b. rorirnranshlpmap - feg&assS. >de ud ruled •> altd and boundto at linen taper. : w, *!l H, deeiirtaglohave theirßbaha-m, «awrsa«a« «*“«»«. An '">“ n . lAodon s!^ psstet&^aS •umlUluirbiaUv. Bthttpig , Pamphlet lavs, bemud in good Lil kodanto price*. Penan* bind, win receive a liberal diacmni sent to ns from b»V.‘ pntrueted to onrcare villbeanead pelted and returned by Ranram-L Address F. L. mJTMatT^ ~ ebrT< di*r» > J)t,- R3f, at the Tribune Office, are™, 1 vicinity. They will (ire iafbnuL ling, and receive and, return bool, a, Ibr all who ent.mt their w«ViI (March 21, 1861-ly CQ-£ i W § * OS n “ OS fe • -If S* El I fcU CD ei c■£ K? £*|| , Hslllr w>-s £f iff *35,00 t.Tuition in the Dot popular = Iwol iu the Country. Cpwaxdof :-n from l«cntv- on hand a good stock of plain vn manufacture. NES, RAISINS &C., •>ns of the rear. ?ar. Molasses, Batter, 11TE WHEAT FLO US, I K. CORN MEAL, &0, K- in tenre cr small quantities.; a ray stock and yon will ftn^ .yini-jun. JACOB WISE. lam and Hews .Depot i, S£GAR, TOBACCO, & VARIETY ORE. BHK CONTINUES to «ll tin? best riteratrxpapenwKl n>m Niilajit-ljihiii, Now York and i s good assortment of Book,. All tiil* place aud vicinity alwaja on and tofek knacks AJeoUie Tobacco *-Be*ar» tv with a fine assortment bfOotd J »B(! other articles of Jewel* II FKTTIKGEB, •Vo. 1 Altoona Afaufr. yrjisnoN whkjh every person article for w matters, the !■> direct, bat if yon £KO£S iou of his attack and work. Hi ac assortment of Boots, SbiK*, i lift otkn at feir prices, ration' to custom work, all of ,r.tv*ati»fcction. !7ooftbuttL* Virginia stmt. Immediately ; e. JOIDf H.JtOBEKTS. broccrj Store. BEE KEEPS COX- read, Cakes, ic OIT, FLO HE, i:ries, IKGAEB «id TOBACCO. OB RINK, Stmt, below Annie Stmt- -ICE GAZETTE i Crime rad CriminaJi i* •» > iil-Ijr circulated thttiagboot ) ilie Great Trials 0*oto»l »!fon Ihc mu, togetterwftr itow," not to befooDdia arjj liman: $1 fat IUmooUWt ,0 * 110 dimdd write «**•" to where they i Vl’. UATgKLX 1 00, : Xork Police Omxetg, Ifae sm ew- HOES.—THE UN i hand and will sent of wan V r mad* to order, ilia Sb-lianwiio» on'EwJ? i»ua« tkenMtniMwM* pn* «t Maogceln Ag*“- !>' BHOEe- Altoona i tribune MeCRUM & DEBN, / VOL- 6. Dlo n AND Cm "■ eV cK .«• Jilt JJkJC m aov/ce free, llew-York Benevolent Infirmary, ESTABLISHED IS&tt, V,„l J. f .lrfto r*< o,*u of Medical Ht/orm ; to the Dif ' ~'.fJW«xll Knovinlg' for Iht «/»«««, ~ , the relief of those sufferius and afflicted with Cliro , ~1 Virulent Hisorders. To this end Una Infirmary la ;; toeindUethoaickatid auflerins throughout the „,.l breadth of our Inn.l. to .void the /Witmtr •< /-VrUoii, mid haiOvnce of profited I'nyucuwt, : " r ,; u vrliicli thousands and tens of thomauds annually 1 ‘•liuf'lluwiog ere some! of tin- diseaieswc cure, not only .■ ill," lutirmacy hut in ail part* of our country : i , oiootioM oud Pulmouarv Complaint., Fevers. Scrof * ‘ Kye and Kar Disease, Cancers and other , ' r luiulice and Liver Complaiilt, Seminal Weakness, V,M .Lwascs of the Urinary and Sexual Organs, from • r cause or whatever nature. Our object will be to T t In afflicted by effecting iu ail cases a speedy cure. ,'r : 1-f is tocliarge nothing for advice ami written pre . ; but will furnish when requested the very best U:h.l-- at the lowest rates. ivun-dies are prepared In our own Laboratory, un r- of able Chemists, ami are the most reliable 1'.:., -cieiice. including all the rccent discoveries. ~11 addressing us by letter, containing full account of ' a id appearances of disease, age, occupation. 4c., •■’."wMl Klite a candid nply, with advice aud directions \ l a v f tes »eut us when sending for advice will be I V - ,1 1.1 furnishing medicine for the-poor. In all cases he sent bv mill or express if desired. Send mow of our works and judge foryourselves. V- ’.'imbli-hed at the Inhrotary, to aid these objects. i i!E FAMILY PHYSICIAN, : rumple romedits easily obtained for the cure of , T.V. uj yi| iu forms, with full explanations of the .. diet, bathing aud exercise. Price 50 cts. i iIK LAMMS’ MKDICAL FRIEND. aNP THE PHYSIOLOGY ON MARRIAGE. i v. .1. >.!i the can**, symptom* and tr»*atuu*ut of all 'iji.UioU ii.kuUar to the sex, uu marring'-, it* duties. . ;T, nut! iU results ou Children, their ills, and oh the \ . ) ».(coiiceptit*n. with Invaluable Insti notions to l hutjffU of a private nature. Price 25 cent*. ihe Uenilemen’s Medical Companion, AND PRIVATE ADVISER. i ~.. * for the I’M and jouug* embracing the Pathol, gy. , jiu!i and Cure of all Diseases of the Urinary aud Sex •i i» ; j:;inv and a warning roice of advice *aud counsel, such \in uo other work. Price 25 cents. THE GUIDE AND GUARD FOR EVERT U.VK. If eposes all the Humbugs. mid the various Tricks to tli‘Mck and well. It illustrates the plans of the k- ami Rogue* to dupe every one. It guides the au linaingh Ufo, and shows up every swindle of the age, .-L -'v- Irm-all kinds of Food, Medicines. Liquors aud ao-adulterated, with the means 6: detecting the Price 25 cent:. THE HOUSEHOLD AND FaHM, PLANTATION AND SHOP. T . - ro. v family, having over 1000 receipts on CV*»kiiig. P ; . . IHviu'g. Cleaning, Ac. How to plant and what i- Li i>ft to raise. How to cure animals, advice lohou»e -\ tinners and mechanic*, on 1000 subject* of iuter i- Scents. Worth $lO to any vine. the consumptives hook. : ‘v iuifc who wish to get well from that awful disease. ,'--.cripliou of aO the reimdies o*e«i l*»r it. with u . al 't.it -jui-nt of the results, and other useful informa t. •!; i’rue li) cents. :. • loL.rmatiou in them U not to be found in any works . .uur übUiuable from nuy other source. These i. . v-.vrb fuMlsUed on fine whiU* l«iper, and beautifully i • "i:.-.- . .<• ..f :!io above works will be mailed free. on recdptof j’l a Tiiauiiui, «»r money; or the whole in a handsomely i... . liiuu't-T ONE DOLLAR. No family thould IHr Wltll ct. i. Tlu-y ore illustrated with beautiful engravings, «l t:-i ilie condensed experience of years. . ■ U anted for the above work.-, who can make£lol> a fi nil for a circular for agents. T y**;;ug u t both sexes suffering from secret habits: -o-i*! mind: low of power; nervous debility; !■*»» of.: ; i waUt-fuhie.-* ; U.ve of solitude; eruption* on the fit - ,l<\ tend before it is t<*> Utf'; i»efore you suffer in#*:. ;uv (i to l*oth body ami mint!. • T ■ . -.ji u-.s wilt, want plms'.hit ami, ~ >f f remedies for 1. •«■yubuObstructions, White*. A:c_, send to us. W* Cm- convinced that there an* many parents of scrofu i -u*. C' I'Himptive and diseased condition to whom a nu ll: .rour . tr«prmg only brings suffering and jh>verty. Tt» r-;ich we would say write, and we will Hood information of a sure, v.vll-ierU-d. and never-tuling Preventive. We will mail free, to any one applying Jbr it, ' THE JOURNAL OF MEDICAL REFORM. Tl*ts u large and beautiful paper, ami contains the- most valuable information on S|*ruiatorhtea, or Seminal Weak ness. Tha cause, effect* and core, showing the awful ef frets of the disease, Ou ill oilier disease* of the Sexual Organs, a full expla nation of the origin uf Syphilis, the means of prevention sad culv. On Cousumptioti, that fearful disease. Du the Uv. r, Heart, Stomach anti Skin. On K. aifile Complaints. On the of Mediciuee. Out! nodes oM'realmeut now practised. On tiu.- IV.se Treatment of Diseases. On tin various Medical Humbugs. On tin Physiology of Marriage. On ill • Common sense of Medicine. On Diet. Kxercisea, and Ablution. How tli-j Physician should be. How to prevent Pregnancy. v And many other things. Send roB IT. Tlii* journal should be in the hands of every one. J. Ih, A. M., Chief Physician. Si Mobris, Siir'Nii,. Dr. J. Boyle, Chemist. Offit** in New York, 154 ChamWrs street. Otfic - in \ViUiamsburgh, South Bth and sth streets. Corr. - j.nud-nts will please enclose two or three stamps ■ r retu: n postage, and address DU. A. UKKNKY, Secretary. Williamsburg, New York. i.iu>x 141.) '.'or. li, THE ROOT & HERB DOCTOR, FROM PHILADELPHIA, T\ r HO HAS HAD 30 YEARS CON- T f STANT practice, cun be consulted at the AltOOflft House. Mr. John Wood’s. viz.: — On the Ith of June, ikt SiA of July, it nd the Ith nf August— he will then vacate for 3 mouths. Notice will be given in this paper when be comm"t»ces hia Winter 5 * Term again. tie treats all diseases that flesh is heir to. lie invites all females who may be suffering with diseases peculiar to thdr sex. to call and examine his new mode of treatment, as thousands hare been restored to health who have been abandoned by others. Ho is in possession of perfect in -tjnmenU for sounding tho longs and chert and is there fore able to determine the exact condition of the vita! or- C*n treat such complaints with greater -af-tr and certainty than It is possible for those who guess -it the disease and experiment for It* cure. He believes that fur every malady, there is found in our soil a sure :.r.l never-failing remedy. t 1 can receive treatment for $5 pe- month, except i > ''■isf* o/Cancers and Tumors, they vary from $lO to X V*. Elimination free. DH. W. U2VWGSTON. N. B.—Sot Handbill.. [May 8. 61. 3DE3^ I ± , ISTK,'ST- T IRVIN STEEL/D. D. S., HAV fI ISO located permanently in Altoona, respectfully ' :fcr? bis services in the different departments of Suigical and Mechanical Dentistry. • 7* neurlv opposite C. Jasgard’a Store. Virginia 8t« Al* ■ -m, Pa,! \M*f 1* WM. S. BITTNER, DENTAL SURGEON. OFFICE IN THE MASONIC TEM PLK, next door to lire Post Office. Tooth extracted without pain by the Current Electro* Miotic Machine. Wall Paper and Border. A N UNUSUALLY LARGE STOCK A. - of the LATEST SEEING STYLES, r*c-iv,-.\. which will bo Bold cheaper than erer by March 21. rsCl-tf, J. A J. LOWTUHR. THE ALTOONA TRIBUNE. E. B. McCEUM,....;. - H. C. BEEN, Per annum, (payable invariably in advance,), $1,60. All paper* discontinued at the expiration of tbe time paid for, . ' tsbjis- of advextiriko -1 insert ton 2 do. 8 do. Four lines or less $ 25 $ $5O One square, ( 8 Hues) 50 75 1 00 Two » “ ) - • 100 150 200 Three '< (H « 150 200 260 Over three weeks and less- than three months, .25 cents per square for each insertion. Smooths. 6 months. 1 year. .$l6O $8 00 $5OO 2 50 4 00 7 00 4 00 ;« 00 10 00 Six line* or lew ... One 5quare.......... Two ** Tliree " Four “ Half a column. One column 14 00 Adminiatratoni &ud Kxecntvr* Notice* Merchants advertising by the year, three equates, with liberty to change, - *«••«; 10 00 Profeaakmal or Busiuees Cards, not exceeding 8 lines with paper, pet year, 6 00 Communications of a political .iiaractir or individual in* terest will be cliarged awarding to the above rates. Advertisemen a not marked with the number of inser tions desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to the above terms. Business notices five cents per line for every Insertion. Obitaarynotices exceeding ten linen- fifty cents a square TRIBUNE DIRECTORY. CHURCHES, MINISTERS. AC. PRKSBYTKUIAN —Hcv. Banks, Pastor—Preaching every Sabbath morning at 11 o'clock, and in the evening at 7 o’clock. Prayer Meeting iu the Lecture Room every Wedue«day evening at 7 -o'clock. Sabbath School in same room at o'clovk iu the morning. MKTHODIST EPISCOPAL—Her. W. Lu Spotswood. l*astur.—Preaching every Sabbath morning at 11 o’clock, aud in the evening at 7 o’clock- Prayer Meeting in the Lectun? Room, every Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock.— Sabbath School in the same room at 2 o'clock P. M. KVANGELIOAL LUTHERAN—Key. C. L. Kheknfeld, PastoKk—Preaching every Sabbath morning at 11 o’clock, and iu Ihe evening at 7 o’clock. Praj ; er Meeting in the Room every Wednesday evening at 7 o’clock.— Sabbath School iu same room at 9 o’clock A. M. BAI^IST—Rev. A. U. Ssvdowx&, Pastor.—Preaching everj- Sabbath morning ll o'clock, and in Ihe eveuingat 7 o’cb*ck. Prayer Meeting every Wednesday evening at T o'clock. Sabbath School at 9 u’chKk A. M. UNITED BRETHREN—Uyv. Samuel Kephart, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath morning at 11 (fclock.&odln tb«* eveuingat 7 o’clock. Prayer Meeting in the Lecture Room every Wednesday eveuingat 7 o’clock. - Sabbath School in the same room at 9 o'clock in the morning. PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL—(No regular Pastor.)— Preaching on Sabbath morning at 11 o’clock, and in the. eveuingat? o’clock- Prayer Meeting* every Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock. Sabbath School at 9 o’clock A. M. ENGLISH CATHOLIO-Bev. Joas Toco. Pastor—Di vine services every Sabbath morning at ; loj4 o’clock and in the afternoon at 3 o’clock. Sabbath School at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. GERMAN CATHOLIC—Rev. —I . Paitor. —Divine services every Sabbath morning at 19W o’clock, aud in the afternoon at 3 o’clock. Sabbath School at 1 o'clock in the afternoon. AFRICAN METHODIST—Rev. Ai.CXANX>£S Jorasrov, Pastor.—Preachmg every Fourth Sabbath in each month: Prayer Meeting every Friday evening at 7 o’clock. Sab bath School at 2 o’clock In the afternoon. RAIL ROAD SCHEDULE. ON AND AFTER MONDAY, NOV. 4, 1861. TRAINS will arrive at and leave Altoona Station as follows: ii.res» Traill East arrives 9,35 P. M., ' leaves 9,55 P. M “ “ West “ BJ»A. M. “ 8,40 A.M. “ East “ ' £IOA. M. “ 3.15 A.M. “ West *• 8,55 P. M„ “ 9,10 P.M. “ East “ 11,22 A. Mi, 11,40 A.M. West “ 1,55 P.M., 1 2,15 P.M. Fast Mail The HOLLIDAYSBUHO BRANCH connects with Ex press Train and Fast Line West, and Hail Train East and West. INDIANA BRANCH TRAINS connect with Johnstown Accommodation 1 Trains Kant and West, Express West, amt Mail train Kait am! West. ENOCH LKWIS, Gtu'l Siipl. MAILS CLOSE AND OPEN. MAI I*3 CLOSK. Way •V e-tern Way Ilullidaysbarg We*terp Through Eastern Through. MAILS ARRIVE. ; HolUday»l*arg....r.. f BJS A.M. A 11 15 A.M. Western Through 3 10 A. M. Eastern Through 8 40 M Western Way 11 22 A.M. Eastern Way 1 55 P. M. Office Uocas; —During the week, from 6 45 a. x. till T 00 p.;u. On Sundays, from 7 45 till 9 00 a. M. GKO. W. PATTON P. M MEETINGS OF ASSOCIATIONS. MOUNTAIN LODGE, No. 281. A. X- M*, meets on second Tuesday of each mouth, at ”V£ o’clock V. M., In the third story of the Masonic Temple. ! MOUNTAIN R. A- CHAPTER. No. 180 A. T. M-, meets cm the first Thursday and third Monday of each mouth, ut 7VC o’clock P. M.. in same room as above. MOUNTAIN COUNCIL, No. 9. A.Y. BU meets on the first Monday of each month, at 9'clock P. M., io same room as above. MOUNTAIN COMMANDRRY. No. 10, A. Y. M., meets on the,fourth Tuesday of each mouth, at 7% o’clock P.M, in same room as above. ALTOONA LODGE, No. 473, I. O. : of 0- Fmeets every Friday evening, at 7*£ o’clock, in the second story of the Masonic Temple. VERANDA LODGE. No. SC2, 1.0.-of 0. F„ meets every Tuesday evening, at 7% o’clock, in third story of Patton’s Building, on Virginia street. WINNEBAGO TRIBE, No. 35, I. p. B. M., meets every Tuesday evening in the second story of Masonic Temple. Council fire kindled at 7th run 30th breath. ALtOONA DIVISION. No. 311, S. ofT n meets every Saturday evening, at 7 o’clock, in the second story of the Masonic Temple. • STATE OFFICERS. Gftvfrunr —Andrew G. Curtin. ’ Secretary of State —Eli Sllfer. Attorney General —William M. Meredith, Auditor General—-' Thomas E. Cochran. Surveyor General’— William L. Wright. Adjutant General —E. M. Biddle. State treasurer —Henry D. Moore. : BLAIR COUNTY OFFICERS. Judge* of Hit blur#.—President Judge; Hon George Tay lor. Associates, Samuel Dean, Adam Moses. State. .SMiator-rnon. Lewis W. Hall.' A««nWywan—Thaddeas Banks. PrtrOumolary— Anthony S. Morrow. Register and Rtverdcr —Hugh A. Caldwell. .SArri/f—Samuel McCamauf, Deputy—John Marks. IHstrict Attorney —Benjamin L. Hcwft. . County CbwmitrioM'ri—George L. Cowan, George Koon, James M. KtnknuL Ontniy Surveyor —James L. Gwin. Treasurer —J oh n McKeage. Poor Mouse Directors— Peter Good, William Barley, David Aurandt. County Auditors— A- M. Lloyd, Bobt. M. Meadmer, L. L. Moore. Cbroner—A. J. Freeman. Superintendent of Cmsnon School*— John Mitchell ALTOONA BOROUGH Of FICERS. Juituxi ofOt Vtoct —Jacob M. Cherry, John McClelland. Burgeu—John Allison. : . . Jbmt Chuncil —A. A. gmyth, Daniel Laughman, John Mc- Dowell, K. Greenwood. C. B. Hoatctter, S. J. Merviue. Clerk to Council —S. M. Woodkok. - - Borough Traaurrr— Daniel Baughman. . School Director B. Cramer. John Shoemaker, J. B. Hfleman, fm. Boyden, Jam.. Lowther, JS. A. Beck. Treasurer of School BMmrJ.B. Hllexnan. Bigh OmaUWc—Joaeph K. Kly. , _ , Oiieriar of State, QnaUg, Borough and School To*—Joj. K. Sly. Auditory- John Lowther; C. J. Mann, Alex. McCormick Attestor John McClelland. _ , Auutant Attestors —Jacob Heaaer, J. L. Rdfrayder. Judge of Bectums—tsst Ward—William Maloney. « « Wert Ward—John t. Pi|*r .. i U North Ward—Chrlrtlan Whistler. Inspectors—Ettt Ward-D. M. Greene, JohcUooper 7c greet Ward—J. K. Bellman, Robt. Pitcairne. i« North Ward—Bobt. McCorttkk, John Condo. 6 oo 8 00 12 00 6 00 10 00 14 00 10 00 14 00 20 00 26 00 40 00 1 76 ll 00 a u. ;....■ 8 00 ... 8 09 A. >r. A 11 00 A. JI 7 00 p. M i....' 700 “ ALTOONA, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1861. oSdtft Ulisctllaug. SKETCHES BY A NORTHERN RANGER. A scout’s adventube We had reached / the entrance of a nar row pass which led through some nigged hills. Our was smell, but its mem bers were determined men, none of whom were notices in scenes of danger. We marched in silence that was broken only by the murmured whispers of the men, the cries and fluttering of birds, or the quick plunge of some small animal through the thick foliage, which, from the very edge of the path we were pursuing, spread amid lofty trees thinly scattered on the hill. Day was near its close. We were dis tant some miles from the camp, and the enemy might be in possession of the defile in, overwhelming numbers. It was deter mined that we should keep in compact order until we had got well beyond the entrance of the pass, when, as it became more obstructed or torturous, we should advance singly, taking advantage of every bush, rook or inequality in the surface of the ground, ready for the foe. and reckless of his numbers. The foliage became thicker as we ad vanced and os evening fell. On our right was a dense thicket, which we reached after having lost sight of the entrance to the defile,in our rear. This thicket reached from the foot of the gorge to the summit. Kach step became firmer but more cautious. There was no whispering now, and every breath was guarded. We were far in the glen—on one side gray rocks, lofty trees, flowering plants and creepers in wild con fusion spreading over the abrupt sides of dark, fantastic hills, broken at intervals by huge chasms that gleamed wildly in the rays of the decliningsun; on the other side, the impenetrable thicket was buried in gloom. Still steadily and stealthily advancing, each man with his rifle grasped easily in his hand, glancing quickly to the right and left, with unwearied energy crept along the glen. A whistle, quick and clear, sent its wild sound thrilling through every heart and ear. There was a sudden halt in our little troop. All was breath less suspense. That was no bird’s cry.— No throat but a human one ever gave out a note so threatening. “ What was it?” passed in a still, rapid whisper among us. “ Guerillas 1” i “Hush!” We listened long and breathlessly, and warily peered on every side. Not a man of us visible but to his fellows. Crouched with, our very hearts beating, on the earth, covered by the friendly bush, we lay for many minutes in thfe hope of hearing the whistle repeated. All was as still as though the spot had never known its wild solitude broken by the foot of man or disturbed by his passions, his schemes or his ambi tion. Still we listened, but in vajn. No other sound was heard. Why was there no other signal ? Was it a solitary wanderer, who sent that shrill cry forth through the stillness, in mere wantonness, and with no other motive than that of breaking its mo notony ? Not so. There was a signifi cance in that sound that breathed war and defiance as plainly as if it had come from the blast of a trumpet. “Up and moving, men S” came in low tones from the lips of the sergeant in command. ‘‘Let ’em try it again.” Our march was resumed as before; but we stepped more stealthily, listened with painful attention, and glared on every side with the intensity of bloodhounds. The defile took an acute turn to the right, and on the left was a naked space, extending for some yards, aevoid of all verdure but : the gray moss clinging* around the gray I rocks. We began hastily to cross this uncov- \ I told him I was shot in the hip, and was ered space, when there was a report of' dying of thirst. He then called a mem many pieces, whilst red flashes from rocks ' her °f the party to him,'and taking from and bushes in the front gleamed savagely i I*l® hand a canteen, poured some of its and suddenly upon us. For a moment we i contents (brandy and water,) down my were staggered. Then with a shout we ; throat. My wound bad entirely stopped rushed forward to unearth the ambushed bleeding, but my whole side was stiff and foe. Again the fire was repeated, with ; painful. With much difficulty I rose to the muzzles of their rifles within a few j feet, and by the aid of two of my cap feet of our faces. I gazed round for an i tors, for such they were, managed to move instant, (after discharging my piece at one along with the rest of the band, through fellow, and with my bayonet transfixing what appeared a cleft in the mountain, another to the soft sandy rock, against' pursuing a new path to that I had hith which he fell,) and perceived none of my erto traversed in the company of those party by my side. But the thick smoke l* a d fallen, and whom I was now leav and rapidly falling darkness that now ing behind me forever, ruled, in conjunction with shots, yells and hor some time we followed this road, groans, in the surrounding glea, made | running at the base of two declivities al eveiy thing invisible beyond the length of; moBt perpendicular, whose dizzy summits thp arm. ' I could not scan, and whose rugged sides At that instant I felt a sudden pang; a of gray, at intervals were shining coldly dizziness, a blackness like death, came on beneath some stray gleam of moonlight, me; I clutched wildly at the sulphurous that, even in that cavernous pass, found air, reeled and fell; it® way and smiled amid the gloom, like When I recovered my senses, I discov- the good glance of a visiting angel, ered that I was lying on my side, bleeding Suddenly we emerged from this gloomy slightly from a flesh wound in the thigh, defile, and found ourselves in what ap : I had bled profusely, before recovering, peared almost a level country. Here— for I was saturated in half-concealed gore, where some tents were pitched—we halted, Raising, myself on my elbow. 1 looked an< l I was a prisoner in a guerrilla camp, j around for my comrades. The moon was A week elapsed, and I had recovered shining with all the softness of her beauty from my wound. The chief of the party on the spot, I counted five bodies lying who had captured me offered me my lib within a compass of almost as manyyards. erty, on condition that I gave my parole [independent in everything.] I endeavored to discover their uniforms, | but could not at that distance. I rose i slowly, and with mnch difficulty reached the nearest. He was dead, with a blue ' hole in the centre of his forehead, through | which the bullet had passed and the blood .1 still slowly oozed, f crawled to the next j one; he, too, was past all eaatbiy aid. So on to the third, 1 fourth and filth. The bullet had done its full work on all. These ! had been my comrades a few hours before, • eager to deal destruction upon foes, and j careless of the fate that met them. I was ! the sixth and last of the party. ! But where was the enemy, or what had been the enemy ? I heard no sound, and the moonlight falling directly upon the dead men and the gray, weird-like rocks, produced an effect that was sickening and horrible. I remembered the man I had slain. 1 searched for his body, but it was gone. I also searched for others of the enemy, bat could find none; all had dis- I appeared. i There were no dead left on that battle ground bat the five fallen seouts. Yet it was obvious that others had perished there, from the blood lying in little pools among the rocks, behind which the ambushed foe had lurked and poured upon us his deadly fire. My wound began to bleed afresh, which brought a faintness upon me, and I sank to the earth. A burning thirst was con suming me, and I groaned in agony. After a little while 1 made another ef fort to rise, but failed; and then Jailing back, as calmly as possible, I yielded to my fate. I thought of past days, when, in early youth, no cry for blood had yet awakened that inherent ferocity that lurks unseen in the heart of man, until the fearful scent rouses it as it does the blood hound, and it springs forth with a swift ness that appals, and a strength that deso lates. A CAPTI'Ui:. 3ly reverie was broken by the sound of voices. Then came thai of approaching footsteps. As it drew nearer a new life seemed to quiver through my veins, like a fre§h gush of virgin spring: The most savage foe. to whom the torture of a cap tive was an unapproachable delight, ad vancing upon me with the menaces of a demoniac, would at that moment have been welcome as an angel of light in com parison to the loneliness, the woe, of that dismal glen and its bloody and unburied dead. In a few moments a dozen armed men were-,on the, spot, leaning upon their rifles and gazing round upon the dead. Some rtooped and scanned the bodies with care less scrutiny others merely stirred them with the foot, or turned them over with the muzzles of their guns, with the brutal indifference which bloodshed engenders in the heart. “ They’re dead. Let them rot I” said one, who appeared to be the leader of the party. “ Not all dead,” I replied. Had a voice actually issued from the tomb,* as mine undoubtedly seemed to do, its effect would not have been much more startling. Each mao, for the moment, seemed changed into a statue. Then the whole group simultaneously moved toward me. “That’s the fellow that bayonetted Ike,” exclaimed one of them, cocking his revol ver and thrusting the muzzle between my teeth. In another instant I should have been in eternity, but tor the sudden jerking back of my would-be destroyer’s arm by one of his own comrades, who calmly re marked: “If he’s got through the rough work he had a while ago, we’ll not kill the poor devil now.” With a muttered curse the ruffian replaced his weapon in his belt and withdrew. “ Where are you hurt?” inquired he whose interference had just saved me; “can’t yer get up?” not to bear arms against die rebels again during twelve months. This I had sworn never to do in the event of my becoming a prisoner to the Southern army, and 1 was equally resolved now to adhere to my oath. From that moment I was closely guarded, with that vigilance known but to an angry foe. No drowsy sentinel ever lounged with heavy limb and weary eye, in mock watchfulness, near the ragged conch upon which I lay. But, sleeping or waking, some hawk-eyed watcher kept guard by my side, marking all my outgoings and incomings. In that camp there was another prisoner besides myself. He was a miserable crea ture, apparently, only awaiting the certain death that the caprice of a merciless band would, in some unexpected moment, hurl upon his head, and whom nothing but the same caprice permitted still to move upon the earth a living thing. This wretch bad been taken in the act of robbing the dead, after a skirmish. His crime, in the eye of a soldier, is a deadly sin. He is the pariah of his class. A vulture too foul for an honest shot, from whose blood the bright steel would receive a disgrace deeper than its stain V A thing frw wprth less to hang; one whose loathsome life should be crushed out suddenly, with a stone or a club, like a reptile, and the con taminated weapon flimg from the hand forever. He cringed to his captors, and they drove him from them with curses and kicks, and when he faWncdthey spat upon him. AN' ESCAPE One night, after unwearied watchful ness and ceaseless planning, I broke from the bondage that held me. The night was cloudy and threatened rain, t had heard enough from my captors to know that a detatchment of Northern troops was en camped to the Eastward, within five miles of us. This detachment I resolved to reach, or die. From what I had learned among the guerillas, I felt assured I could with little difficulty find the encampment. After crouching my way through and along the outskirt of a thicket that grew by the side of a road, (old and grass grown, running nearly East and West,) for at least two miles, I merged from it into the road, sweating, bleeding and hatless, my clothes torn into fragments, panting and wearied. I had taken my bearings from the few stars that glimmered through the clouds, and was about to start along the road in an Eastern direction, when*; a man leaped from the thicket, and—the thief of the battle-field, the plunderer of the dead, stood by my side! “ On! on 1” he cried, in hoarse and excited tones, pointing along the road in the direction I was about to take, “ they’re following!” He shook with fear, and I pitied him. Uis gust at his presence, too, was . lessened by a sense of the common danger. Before I could speak he dashed' past me along the road. I followed, and thus we fled for more than twenty minutes—he a little ahead of me during the whole time. We reached a narrow, unfinished bridge that stretched from high banks across a stream. We began to cross the bridge, but our progress was much impeded and even en dangered, as our only stepping-points were from beam to beam and plank to plank, most of them loose and rotten and at uneven distances. The bridge was supported by huge piles set, in the river, whose sullen waters we were able to dis tinguish rushing far beneath us. Yet the river seemed shallow there, for we could detect white breakers curling around the rocks. But onward we went. I was now in advance some dozen yards. All before us, beyond twenty feet, was lost in gloom; behind, the same darkness, im penetrable at the same distance. Yet on we pressed, from one rotten, shaking tim ber to another. Suddenly load shorts in the rear proclamed the pursuing foe.— These were followrd by the sharp ring of rifles, and a fearful shriek from my com panion. I stopped and turned. He called to me, “for the love of Heaven, to help him.” I returned some little distance, and found him clinging about a couple of feet above the cross-pieces, to a narrow iron bar that ran from one of the piles to another. He was struggling wildly.— “ How is it?” I asked, as I stooped to aid him, But I discovered my assistance to be valueless unless I could place my feet on the bar, and, leaning with my breast upon one of the timbers,, and reach over both hands and grasp him by the collar. As I was making this essay, the moon broke fully upon us, and I met his upturned pallid face. His teeth were set. His bloodless lips drawn from them with a rigidity that left them completely bare.— His eyes were starting from their sockets, “ Well, now, suppose that a man should and his form trembled so as to shake the buy a pair of 'chickens at twelve and a last hold to which he clung. half cents a pound and the chickens “One of their bullets,” He hissed be- weighed seven pounds and a quarter, what tween his teeth, “ has smashed my ankle, would you think they’d come to 7” lam going'” His hold relaxed, another “Was it in the morning?” . ~„ terrible shriek rang through the night air w Why what lias that to do with ij.i and he fell crushing among the jutting “A great deal; because if it was W the rocks below ; his blood mingled with the morning and my wife bought pure clement that eddied round them. what day would come to. - 1 again pursued ’my way along the “ What would they come tor" bridge alone. Many ! a bullet whistled u -A- chicken pof.pie at* asuudcD wiMp past me from my inveterate but bewildered * pearanoe. . * - - , . EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS. foes, and many a narrow escape I ran of being burled into the dark nrer, of ia* palement upon its half-concealed rooks.— But one such death sufficed for that night. At length 1 reached the other side, thank ful bat exhausted. Still, with unabated speed, I pursued my way, until the chal lenge of a sentinel stopped further pro gress. I had reached one of the pickets of the detachment for which I was bound —our gallant northerners. I was safe, and a free man again. THE STORY OF THE FIVE PEACHES. FOB THE CHILDREN. A countryman brought home fire peach* es from the city, the most beautiful that could be seen. His . children saw the fruit for the first time. On this occasion they wondered, and were very much pleased over the beautiful peaches, with the rosy cheeks and soft down. The father divided them among his four children, and one was received by the mother. In the evening as the children; were go* ing to their bed-chambers, they wen asked by their father: “Well, how did those fine peaches teste to you?” “ Excellent, dear father,” said the eld est. “It is a beautiful fruit, somewhat acid, and yet so mild a flavor, 1 have saved the stone and intend to rear a tree out of it.” “ Well done,” said the father, “ that I call prudently providing for the future, as it becomes a husbandman.” “ I have also eaten mine up,” said the youngest, “ and thrown away the stone, and mother gave me half of hers. Oh, it tested so sweet, and melted in one’s mouth!” “Well,” said the father, “to be sure you have not acted prudently, but very naturally, as children are wont to do. For prudence there is still room enough in your life.” Then began a second son: “ 1 picked up the stone which my lit tle brother threw away, and cracked it—- There was a kernel therein which tasted as sweet as a nut. But my peach I have sold, and have received so , much money for it that I can/ when I go to the city, probably buy twelve.” The father shook his head and said: “ Wise it was but not in the least child ish or natural. May heaven preserve yon from becoming a merchant.” “ And thou Edmund,” said the father. Candidly and openly answered Edmund: “ I took my peach to our neighbor’s son, the sick George who has a fever.- He was not willing to take it, but 1 hud it upon the bed and came sway.” “ Well,” said the father; “who has, then, made the best use of his peach?” Then cried they all three: “ Brother Edmund has.” Bnt Edmond remained silent, and the mother kissed him with tears in her eyes. Seven Bachelors After The Sank Girl. —Girls must be rather scarce in La Crosse, Wisconsin. One evening recently a party was held in that town. Among those who attended were seven bachelors. They proposed that each one go out and bring in a young lady. They agreed and one by one so as not to be missed, they departed. The first one followed to the house wherein lived Miss B. He knocked and went in. In about two minutes a knock was heard at the door, and in an swer Mr. G. was shown into the parlor. The two gents looked bland, and were immediately startled by a third knock, and the entrance of Mr. G- All looked' surprised —said they had jost eddied— when another knock was followed by the presence of Mr. L. He had just got seated, when around the other corner, and up to the front door came another bache lor. He too, was admitted—shown into the parlor, only to be followed by the two remaining hunters for partners. A hearty laugh followed the “explanation.” The Miss was so embarrassed, however, that she declined.to attend, and one by one the gallant but single minded seven, wended their way back to the party; but some-bow or other but one of them returned. Six went home to bed, and the seventh told the affair. A Good Scholar.—“Julius, l sup pose yon are a very good scholar?” “ Not quite aS good as I ought to be, Sark, why r” \ “ Because I just wanted to ask you a ! question.” “ What is it, Sam ?” “ Have you ever studied arithmetic?” “Of course.” \ NO. 42-