¥: ® VOL. 6. BELLEFONTE, THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE x 13, 1861. No. 22. ~ Terms of Publication. . TERMS :—$1,50 cts. if paid within three months 2,00 if dlayed six months, and $2.50 if not paid within the year, These terms will be rigidly ad- rod to. ADVERTISEMENTS and Business Notices insert ed at the usual rates, and every deseription of JOB PRINTING EXECUTED iu the neatest manner, at the lowest prices, and with the utmost despatch. Having purchased a large collection of type, we are pre- pared to satisfy tho orders of our friends. Business Director. "WILLIAM WH. BLAIR, ATTORNEY AT LAW. . BELLEFONTE, PA. ‘©fflee in the Arcade, second floor. RB N. M’ALLISTER. JAMES A. BEAVER. MPALLISTER & BEAVER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PENNA. JAMES FE. RANKIN, ATTORNEY AT LAV, RELLEFONTE, PENN’A. west of the . Cffice, on the Diamond, one door Post Offico. EVEN M, BLANCHARD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ' BELLEFONTE, PEN’'NA. Office formally occupied by the Hon. James Burn- ‘wide. J. J. LINGLE, SURGEON DENTIST, ; BELLEYONTE, CENTRE €0., PA. 1s now prepared to wait upon all who may desire his professional services. : Rooms at his residence on Spring street. ¢ ‘ y PHOTOGRAPIIS & TOT YI IS, DAGUERREOTYPES, Taken daily (except Sundays) from 8 Ax. to bru BY S. BARNHART, loon, in the Arcade Building, | In his splend Bellefonte Penn’a. DR. i. L. POTTER, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, BELLEFONTE, CENTRE CO., PA, Office on High Street (old-ofice.) Will attend to professional calls as heretofore, and respectfully offers his services to his friends and the public. DR. J. B, SIITCHELL, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON, ‘ BELLEFONTE, CENTRECO., PA. Will attend to pro al calls as heretofore, he espectfully offers his services to his friends and the public. Offico next door to his residence on Bpring gtreet. 58-tf. Oct 28-5¢ S. T. MURRAY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PENN’A. OFFICE—The one formerly occupied by Judge 1861--Vol. 6 : No. 6. ‘ « YVCHELL & A ATTORNEYS DELLFONTE, PENN‘A Office in Reynolds’ Arcade on the Diamond. . Ira C. Mitchell has associated C. T. Alexander with him in the practice of law, and they will give prompt attention to all business entrusted to }« them in Centre, Mifflin, Clinton and Clearfield sounties. BANKING HOUSE, OF WM. F. REYNOLDS & CO., BELLEFONTE, CENTRE CO., PA. . Bills of exchange and Notes discounted. Col- Yeotions made and proceeds mptly remitted. — Interest paid on special depe . Exchangein the eastern cities constantly onh for sale. Depos- 148 receivea B. C. HUMES. : J. T. HALE. A. G. CURTIN BEPOSIT BANK, -—_O0F— HUMES, MoALLISTER, HALE & CO. BELLEFONTE, CENTRE CO., PA. Deposits Received—DBills of Iixchange and Notes Discounted—Interest Paid on Special Deposits— ‘Collections Made, and Proceeds Remitted Prompt- y—Exchange on the East constently on hand- J. HL. STOVER, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. BELLEFONTE, PENN’A. ‘Will practice his profession in the several Courts of Centre County, All business intrusted to him will be faithfully attended to. Particular attention peid to collections, and all monies promptly re- mitted. Can be consulted in the German as well a8 in the English language. Office on Highst., formerly occupied by Judge Burnside and D. C. Boal, ksq. CHARLES H .FALE. ADAM HOY. HALE & HOY, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PENN’A. Will attend promptly to all business entrusted to their care. Office in the building formerly occu pied by Hon. Jas. T. Hale. A CARD. Messrs Hane & Hoy will attend to my business during my absence in Congress, and will be as sisted by me in the trial of all causes entrusted to em. Javes T. Hare. December 15, 1859. F. P. GREEN, DRUGGIST. BELLEFONTE, PA. WHOLESALE AND RETATX DEALER IN Drugs, Medicines, Perfumery, Paints, Oils, Var. nishes, Dye-Stuff, Toilet Soaps, Brushes, Hair and Tooth Brushes, Fancy and Toilet Articles, Trussels and Shoulder Braces. Garden Sceds. Cusbomers will find myst ock complete and fresh, and all sold at moderate prices. §3F Farmers and Physicians are nvited to examine my etogk. A. 0. FURST, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA. Wik practice in the several Courts of Centre and Clinton counties. All legal 1 usiness entrusted to Lis care will receive prompt attention. OFFICE—On the North-west corner of the Di- wond. March 28, 1861. —1y- FARE REDUCED. STATES UNION HOTEL, 606 & 608 Market Street, above sixth, PHILADELPIIA, PA. @. W. HINKLE, Proprietor. Tanys :—$1 25 pER PAY. y Proprietor HAUPT, Jr. & CO.. om the country a successors to NJe J.D. Harrls & Co., manufacturers of Hun- sicker’s Clover Hulter, Threshing Machines, Rich's Patent Iron Beam, Wortz & § Hill Plow, Cul- tivators, Stoves of various kinds, Corn Shellers, Thimble Boxes, Durke & Rose Water W heels, Iron Fencing of any sige and weight made and fitted p to order, Sin Qasivgs for Rolling Mills and urnaces, work invaria warranted as recem- te y ted as recem Bellefonte, April 20, 1860. | seemed to scorn precedence. S SCOTTY AND THE VETERAN. elect Pocky. BY BAYARD TAYLOR. An old and crippled veteran to the War Depart- ment came ; Yah He cought the Chief who led him on many a field of fame— A The Chief who shouted Forward!” where'er his banner rose, And bore its stars in triumph behind the flying foes. «Have you forgotten, General,” the battered sol- dier cried, . “The days of oighteen hundred twelve, when I was at your side ? Have you forgotten Johnson, who fought at Lun- dy’s Lane ? Tis true I’m old and pensioned, but I want to fight again,” ¢ Have I forgotten,” said tho Chief, ‘my brave old soldier? No! And here's the hand I gave you then, and let it tell you so; But yon have done your share, my friend ; you're crippled, old and gray, And we have need of younger arms and fresher blood to-day.” ‘ But, General,’ cried the veteran—a flush upon ; his brow— ‘ The very men who fought with us, they say, are traitors now ; They’ve torn the flag of Lundy's Lane—our old red, white and blue — And while a drop of blood is loft, I'll show that drop is true. ‘I'm not so weak but I can strike, and I've a good old gun, To get the rango of traitors’ hoarts, and prick them one by one; Your Minnie rifles and such arms it aint worth while to try; I couldn’t get the hang o’ them, but I’ll keep my powder dry!” ‘God bless you, “comrade I"! said the Chicf— “God bless your loyal hoart! But younger men are in tho field, and claim to have their part ; They'll plant our sacred banner in eachrebellious town, And woe, henceforth, to any hand that dares to pull it down!” ¢ But General !”—still persisting, the Weeping veteran cried ; ‘I'm young enough tc follow, so long as you're my guide: And some, you know, must bite the dust, and that at least can I; So give the young ones place to fight, but me a place to die! ¢If they should fire on Pickens, let the Colonel in command Put me upon the rampart, with the flag staff in my hand, No odds how hot the cannon-smoke, or how the shells may fly, I'11 hold the stars and stripes aloft, and hold them till I die! ‘I’m ready, General, so let a post to me be giv- en, Where Washington can soe me, as he looks from highest Heaven, And eay to Putnam at his side, or may be, Gener= al Wayne, There stands old Billy Johnson, that fought at Lundy’s Lane i “And when the fight is hottest, before the trai- tors fly— When shell and ball are screeching, and burst- ing in the sky— . If any shot should hit me, and lay me on my face, My soul would go to Washington’s and not to Ar- nold’s place!” J tiscellangous, COL. ELMER ELLSWORTH, BY ONE THAT KNE Ww HIM, There has not been an evening since Sumpter fell, so full of life and hope, so re- dolent of the eager whispers of the waiting crowd—as was last Thursday evening, The town was murmurous with flying rumors— all hopeful and promising. General Scott was going to show his hand, and tho dan- dies of the Seventh and the lambs of the Fire Department were to have an opportuni- ty to wear off the dust of a month’s idleness. People talked cheerfully of Alexandria and Arlington, and invented model campaigns for the departing regiments, with all the spirited ignorance and illogical enterprise with which civilians essay warlike vaticina- tion. But on Friday morning the tone of feeling and conversation was strangely changed. With the earliest dawn a ghostly horror of floating surmise clouded the town. The ru- mor ran rapidly through the usual gamut of shocked assertion ng reckless contradic- tion, until doubt was hunted out from every resting place, and we all knew that ““Ells- worth was dead.” When that was ascertained no one cared to ask further questions. The details of the assassination, the projected defenses, the march of tho regiments —which at any other time would havo furnished the most palata- ble food to the jaded news-hunters at Wil- lard’s—were unnoted and disregarded. It seemed enough for one day that we had lost the cheering presence of the prave young colonel. Is seemed impertinent to speak of other things. A sudden gloom fell on the city. A hun- dred banners slipped sadly to half-mast. Men walked quietly through the streets, for- getting their business. Soldiers talked low and earnestly, with clenched hands. Why was this 80? This public grief Ile was not an old and honored wartior, but o boy of twenty-four, who had never seen a battle. The praise of the people naturally follows wealth ; but Ellsworth had no fortune but his sword, and his aged parents live in the quiet seglusion of a country village in New York. It was not the murmer that rises when a giant dies. This young hero was only five feet six from spur to plume. Why should tho people mourn for him? No man ever possessed in a more eminent degree the power of personal fascination. That faculty, which when exercised upon masses of men, ITalleck: styles the Art Na- poleon—of winning, fettering, moving and commanding the souls of thousands till they move as one,” he enjoyed in a measure of which, the warld will forever remain ignor- ant, ¢ ererocited an influence, almost mes- meric, upon bodies [of organized individuals with whom he was brought in contact. have scen him enter an armory where a score of awkward youths were going sleepi- ly through their manual, and his first order, sharply and crisply given, would open eve- ry eyo.and straighten every spine, No mat- ter how severe the drill, his men never thought of fatigue. is own indomitable spirit sustained them all. Besides that, his personale was very pre- possessing. There was something cheery and hopeful about the flash of his white teeth when he smiled, his face was always alert and intelligent, and the honest, sincere good fellow Jooked serenély out of his hand- some eyes. IIis heavy black curls never looked affected or vain. They set off admir- ably the firm and statuesque pose of the head. And his dress was always in keep- ing with the man we knew. Add to this his youth and his fame, his patriotism which no rebuffs could daunt, his energy, which people began to recognize, the work he had done, and the work he was expected to do, and you have some idea of the reasons that made people deplore a vic- tory that his sacrilice made a thousand times worse than a defeat. : And the people for once are right. You shall not find between the seas a man who can in all things take his place. In the hearts of his friends, and in the ranks of his country’s defenders, he has left a void which is not to filled. . : His life presents few salient points of ro- mance or interest. Ile was at a very carly age thrown upon his own resources by the financial reverses of his father, (of whom in his stricken age let a generous republic be not unmindful,) 4nd his whole career from boyhood to his death is a touching drama of struggle with circumstance, always strenu- ous and severe, but always self-reliant and stouthearted. Very dark would have been the passage through some scenes of his life in Chicago, had it not Leen lit with a heal thy good humor that nothing could repress, an euergy, that misfortune was powerless to daunt, and a stainless honor that freed him from even the temptation to wrong. In spite of mean lodgings and scanty fare the great soul kept a firm foot-hold in the mus- cular body, and outside of tho daily toil and privation, the young student reveled in an ideal realm, not of selfish indulgence or sor- did fame, but of use and beneficence to his fellow men. This aim and purpose did not exhaust itself in dreams. He worked stead- ily towards its realization. The first fruit of his efforts was the per- fection in training of the Chicago Zouaves. The vast flutter of interest and gale of ap- plause that their challenge trip occasioned, though the great military sensation of the age, was utterly unworthy of the subject, as it failed to Jistinguish the real spirit of Ells- worth’s work. While it dwelt on the agili- ty and unerring precision with which these scarlet machines performed their gymnastic lescon, they left out of view the entire dis- cipline—the identification of spirit of com- mander and men—the animus that, derived from their idolized leader, inspired these slight young men and annihilated their sus- ceptibihty to bunger and fatigue. Was it not also a great triumph for this Water- drinking Colonel to abolish by the force of his own iron will, a practice against which the anti-alcoholic forces, under a thousand aliases, have warred for years in vain ? ¥ know the trial excursion of the Zouave Cadets was not undertaken from any mot- ives of display, but by the force of contrast, to demonstrate the fact in a way that peo- ple could understand, that our ordinary militia is a very unwieldy and useless affair, and cannot be made serviceable except by a vast expenditure and endless annoyance and delay. And although in the last six weeks the people have wonderfully seconded the efforts of the government, a candid review of their operations, from the proclamation until to-day, will convince any one of the necessity of a thorough reconstruction of the militia laws of most of the States, and such a re-organization of the citizen soldiery as will nourish a more decided military spirit, 3 establish a higher standard of discip- inc. To a great extent, that trip was a great success. In its wake sprang up hundreds of new military companies like phosphores- cent sparks in the track of a ship. Several States reconstructed their militia laws, and a general military revival was perceptible throughout the land. It had an effect; also, in disseminating some sensible ideas in re- gard to uniform. Inside of the flashy ab- surdities of crimson and gold, for which it was responsible, there was a germ of sound judgment in the easy, careless flow of the Zouave costume, which hardly touches the wearer. Ellsworth went back to Chicago, for his brief hour the most talked-of man in the country. He quietly organized a skeleton regiment upon a plan of his own, and made his best men the officers of it. Ile offered this to the Governor of Illinois and to the President, “for any service consistent with honor.” This was the first offer of an or- ganized force to sustain the Constitution and the laws. With soldierly instinct he foresaw the inevitable struggle, and predict- ed the very manner of its beginning: Leaving Chicago, he came to Springfield in the midst of the most cxciting campaign known to political history. It was not pos- sible for Ellsworth to be neutral in anything, or idle while others were working.” With the whole energy of his nature he entered into the struggle. Ile became one of the [ost popular speakers known to the school houses and barns of Central Tllinois. The magnificent volume of his voies, which I never heard surpassed, the unfailing flow of bis hearty humor, and the deep earnestness of conviction that lived in his looks and his tones, were the qualities that struck the fancy of the Westesn crowd. Besides, it 37s, vory novel and delightful to see a sold- ier. who could talk. gt rig An administration in harmony with him ‘was elected, and Ellsworth hoped to be able to put into. practical operation those plans which had formed the goal of all his former efforts. My space will not permit an analy- sis of these plans. They looked to an en- tire reorganization of the militia of the Unj- ted States. They had the approval of some of the hest military minds on the continent. With the hope of being placed in a position 1 | where hecould be of service in this way, he accepted Mr. Liticoln’s invitation and joined the Presidential traveling party. Ie soon heeame indispensable. No onc could man- age like him the assemblages of turbulent loyalty that crowded and jostled at every station, | : At Washington ho was placed in 2 false osition. Ife never wished office for its 1onor or its profit, but you never can get of- fice seekers or office dispensers to believe any such story. Iis delicate sense of honor felt a stain like a wound, and the amiadle gentlemen of the press never can withhold the sly stab when they think a man is fall- ing. These weeks were the least pleasant of Ellsworth’s life. They were brightened only by the society of those he trusted most, and by the unvarying friendship and copfi- dence of the President and his family, Dut Sumpter fell, and the gale of aroused pat- riotism, sweeping down from the North, scattered away the cobwebs of political chi- cane, and edicated the true men of the time. When war was in the land, there was no more dancing attendance for a man who knew that God had made him a soldier. There was only a moment of hesitation—it was whether Chicago or New York should have the glory of his regiment. ITis friends remembered that malignant jealousy that hampered what he rE they would have done for the State of Illinois last winter, and feared a repetition of the scene. New York was Catholic and metropolitan. Ie went to New York. The rest transcends memoir and pasics i#1t¢ the sphere of history. Ilow he conceived the novel idea of the fire brigade—how he formed the most mus- cular regiment that the annals of warfare have mentioned—how, by the mere force of intellect, hie controlled the fierce turbulence of these untameablo nien—how he armed them and brought them to the Capital— how he made soldiers of them, turning the stern Gothic spirit of fight into well-ordered channels—how he captured the first rebel town—and bow Lc made the splendid morn- ing memorable to all time by his déath— shall sll be told when some future historian writes the story of this new crusade of free- dom. is loss at this time cannot be too deeply deplored. He had every requisite for great military success; he had a wonderful mem- ory and command of details—immense in- dustry and capability of enormous mental and bodily labor, great coolness of mind, an original and inventive brain, and more than all, the power of grappling to his heart with hooks of steel the affections of every man with whom he came in contact. Then there is 4 smaller circle who mourn him in tears as the truest, tenderest, most loyal-hearted man that ever died. This is the head-roll of all his virtues. I do not remember but two faults that he had, and they were magnificent ones. Io was too generous and too brave. The one subjected him to the cruel slan- ders from sordid men, and the other caused the dictates which has plunged a peo- ple into mourning. All classes seem to regard his death as a personal aflliction. The family of the Pres- ident went down to the Navy Yard on Fri- day and gazed long and tearfully on the still face which had so often brought sun- shine with it, into the Executive Mansion. Five minutes afterwards Ned Bantline came in and quietly lay a dewy wreath of laurel over the brave dead heart. A tear came to his hard eyes as he passed out and said toa Zouave standing gloomily by the door, “We'll mourn him to-day, boys, and avenge him to-morrow,” As for the Zouaves, all other emotions are swallowed up in the manly grief that hallows revenge into religion. They have surprised every oue by their silence. Bit- ter as is their rage and despair, they re- member that they are Ellsworth’s men, and are too zoldierly to he lawless. But they have sworn, with a grim earnestness that never trifles, to have a life for every hair of the dead Colonel’s head. But even that will not repay. The ripples of private grief are never taken into the account of the grand source of a public sorrow, but it is certain that no man could have died more deeply lamented than the young hero who is moving to-day in solemn grandeur toward the crushed hearts that sadly await him in the North. Scattered over the land, severed by wide leagues of mountain and prairie, the few who knew him well are mourning in the utter abandon of irremediable anguish, as if all the earth had for them of bright or beautiful or brave, went out with his last breath. Yet they are giving thanks to God that they were permitted to know him, and vowing to keep ever green in their souls the memory of him who always seemed to his friends not like the people one meets every day, but like a a id typo of the courtesy and valor that dignified the leal- hearted cavaliers of the great days that are gone. One last word. May ho rest forever in peace, under the Northern violets and the Northern snows. May his example sink into the heart of Northern youth, and blos- gon into deeds ofjvalor and honor. His daunt- less and stainless life has rénewed the bright possibilities of the antique chivalry, and in his death we may give him unblamed the grand cognizance of which the world has long been unworthy.— “Le chevalier sans peur ot sana reproche.” ARTEMUS WARD IN THE SOUTH. HIS TRIALS AND ADVENTURES, I had a narrer escape from the sonny South. “The swings and arrers of outrajus fortin,” alluded to by Hamlick, warp’t no- thin in comparison to my troubles. ™ came pesky near swearin some profane oaths more’n onct, butT hope I didn’t do it, for I’ve promist she whose name shall be name- less (except that her initials is Betsey J.) that I'll jine the Meetin House at Baldins- Yillebest 85 soon a5, X ean scrape Wioney enuff together so ag I can ’ford to be pius in good stile, like my ‘Welthy naburs. But if I’m confisticated agin I'm afraid I shall con- tinner in my present benited state for sum time. ta . 1 figgered conspicyusly in many thrilling sgenes in my, tower Troin Montgomery to my humsted, and on several occasions I thought “the grate conic paper” wouldn't never be inriched no more with my lubrications. Ar- ter bidden adoo to Jefferson D. I started for the depot. I saw a nigger sittin on a fence a playin on a banjo. «My Afrikin Brother,” sed 1, cotin froma Track I onct red, ““ you belong 0 a very intetestin race. Your mas- ters is goin to war excloosively on your ac- count.” “Yees boss,” he replied, ‘an I wish em honorable graves !”’ ‘and he went on playin the banjo, larfin all over and openin his mouth wide enuff to drive in an oid fashion- ed 2 wheeled chaise. The train ‘of cars in which 1 was to trust ny wallerable life was the scaliest, rickyt- iest lookin lot of consarng that I ever saw on wheels afore. ¢¢ What time does this stirring of second hand coffins leave ? I in- quired of the depot master. He sed direckly, and I went in & sot down. I hadn’t more’n fairly squatted afore a dark lookin man with a swinister expres sion onto his countenance entered the cars, ‘and lookin very sharp at me, he axed what was My principles. , ‘““Secesh!” I answered. “I'm a Disso- lator. Tm in favor of Jeff. Davis, Boure- gard, Pickens, Capt Kidd, Bléobeard, Munro Edards, the devil, Mra. Cunningham ‘and all the rest of ’em.” ; “You're in favor ¢f the war 2” “ Certingly. By all means. I'm in favor of this war and also of the next war. I've been in favor of -the next war for the last sixteen yearg 1” “War to the knife !” ged the man. ¢ Blud, Fargo, blud{” ged I, tho them words isn’t origgernal with me. Them words was rit by Shakspere,who is ded. His Maatle fell onto the author of *¢ The Seven Sisters,” who's going to hav a spring over- coat made out of it. | We got under way at larst, "an proceeded on our journey at about the rate of speed which is generally observed by properly conducted funeral processions. A hansum yung gal, with a red musketer bar on the back part of her hed, and a sassy little btack hat tipt over her forrerd, sot in che seat with me. She wore a little Secesh flag pin’d onto her hat, and she was a goin for to see her troo love, who had jined the Southern army, all so bold and gay. So sho told me. She was chilly, and I offered her my blanket. ¢ Father livin #’ I axed. ¢# Yes, sin?’ ‘ Got any uncles 7” «A heap. Uncle Thomas is ded, tho." « Peace to Uncle Thomas’ ashes, and suc- cess to him! X will be your Uncle Thomas ! Lean on me, my pretty Secesher, and linger in blissful repose !”’ She slept as seceorly a5 in her own house, and didn’t disturb the sollum stillness of the night with ‘ary a store. At the first station a troop ef sojers en- tered the cars and ingdired if ¢ Old Wax Works’’ was on bered. That was, the dis- respective stile in which they referred to me. ‘“ Becawz if Old Wax Works 18 on bored,” sez a man with a face like a double breasted lobster, * we're going to hang Old Wax Works !” ¢ My illustrious and patriotic Bumiers !’' sez I, a gittin up and taken orf oy Shappoe, “{f you allude to A. Ward, its my pleasin dooty to inform you that he’s ded: e saw the error of his ways at 15 minits past 2 yesterday, and stabbed hisself with a stuffed sledstake, dyin in five beautiful tablees to slow moosic! His Ia8t words was: ¢ My perfesshernal career is over! I jerk no more !’”’ «¢ And who be you?’ “I'm a stoodent in Senator Benjamin's law offis. I'm goin up North to steal sum spoons and other things for the Suthern Ar- my. : This was satisfactry, and the intossicated troopers went orf. At the next station the pretty little Secesher awoke and sed she must git out there. I bid her a kind adoo and giv her some pervisions. ‘‘Accept my blegsin and this hunk of gingerbread !”’ sed 1. She thankt me muchly and tript galy away. There's considerable human nater in a man, and I’m afraid I shall allers giv aid and comfort to the enemy if he comes to the in the shape of a nice young gal. At ae next station I didn’t get off so casy: Iwas dragged ‘out of the éars and rolled in the mud for several minits, for the purpuss of © takin the conseet out of me,” as a Secesher kindly stated. I was let up finally, when a powerful large Secesher came tip and embraced me, and to show hé¢ had no hard feelings agin me, put his nose into my mouth: I returned the compliment by placing my stummick sud- dinly agin his right foot, when he kindly made a spittoon of his able-bodied face.— Actooated by a desire to see whether the Secesher had been vaxinnated, I then fast. ened my teeth onto his left coat:Sleeve and tore it to the shoulder. We then vilently butted our heads together for a few miinits, daneed around a little and sot down ina mud puddle. We riz to our feet again & by a suddint and adroit movement I placed my left eye again the Secesher’s fist. We then rushed nto each other’s arms, and fell under 4 two horse wagon. I was very much exhausted,, and didn’t cate about gittin up again, but the man said he reconed I'd bet- ter, 4nd I conclooded I would. He pulied me up, but I Hadn't been on zy feet more than two seconds afore the grotind flew up aid hit me on the hed. The crowd sed it was high old sport, but I couldn't ’zactly see where the lafture come in. 1 riz and we embraced agin. , We carezrod madly to a steep bank, when I got the upper hand of my antagonist and threw him into the ra- veen. He fell about forty feet, strikinga grindstore pretty hard. 1 understeod he was injured. I haven't heard from tho grindstone. A man in a cockt hat cum up and sed he felt ae tho a apology was doo me. There was a mistake. The crowd had taken me for another man! 1 told him not to men- tion it, axed him if his wife and little ones was 80s to be about, and got on bored the train, which had stopped at that station «20 minits for refreshments,” I got all1 wantid. It was the heartiest meal Ieveret. -. - : I wag rid on a rale the next day, & bunch of blazin firecrackers bein tied to my cote tales. It was a fine spectycle in a dramatio pint of view, but I didn’t ingoy it. 1 hag other adventers of a startin kind, but why Pcontinner ? Why lasserate the Public Boo- zum with these hear things? Suflysit to say 1 got across Masons & Dixon's lin safe at last. I made tracks for my i but she with whom I'm harsidsed for lif failed to recognize, in the emashiatod bein before her, the gushin youth of forty-six summers who had left her only a few months afore. But I went into the pantry, and brought out a certain black bottle.— Raisin .it to my lips, I sed * Hero's to you old gall” I did it so natral that she knew- ed me at once. * Those form! Them voice! That natral stile of doin things !— “Tis he!’ sho cried, and rushed into my arms. It was too much fer her & she fell into a swoon. I cum very near swounding myself. No more to-day from yours for the perpe- tration of the Union, and the bringin of the Goddess of Liberty out of her present bad fix. ARrTENMUS WARD. FUN AMONG THE SOLDIERS. A letter from Washington says;—I am living luxuriously, at present, on the top of a very respectable fence & fair sumtuously on three granite biscuit a day and a glass of water weakened with brandy. A high private in the twenty second Regiment has promised to let me have one of his square ocket handkerchiefs for a, sheet the first rainy night, and I never go to bed on my comfortable window brush without thinkin how many poor creatures there arc jn thi world who have {o sleep on hair mattresses 4nd feather bed? all their lives. Before the great rush of fire Zouaves and the rest of the menagerie commenced, I boarded exclusively on a front stoop in Pennsylvania avenue and used to slumber regardless of expense in a well conducted ash box; but tho military monopolize all such accomodations now, and 1 give way for the sake of my country. I tell you, my boy, we're having high old times here just now, and if they get any higher I shan’t ba able to afford to stay.— The city 1s “‘ in danger avery Qthes HO and as a veteran in tha Pins ZuiwVCS remark- ed, there seems to be enough danger lying around loose on Arlington Heights to :nake a very good blood and thunder fiction, in numerous paves. If the vigilant and well educated sentinels happen to see a nigger on the upper side of the Polomae, they sing out: ** Here they come!” and the whole blessed army issnappirg caps in less thana minute. Then all the reporters telegraph to their papers in New York and Philadel phia that « Jeff Davis is within two minutes walk of the Capital, with a few millions of men,’’ and all the Free States send six more regiments apiece to crowd us a little moze. i shan’t stand much more crowding, for my fence is full now and there were six applica- tions yesterday to rent an improved knot hole. ~My landlord says that if more than three chaps set up housekeeping on one post, he’ll be obliged to raise the rent. The greatest confidence in Gen. Scott, is felt by all, and it would do you good to see the gay old hero take the cath. He takes it every meal, and the first thing when he gets up in the morning. Those Fire Zouaves arc fellows of awful suction, I tell you. Just for greens, I asked otto of them; yesterday what we cafe here for! ¢ Hah!’ says he, shutting one eye, «we come for to strike for your altars and your fires—especially your fires.” General Scott says that if he wanted to make these chaps break through the army of the fos he'd have a fiire-bell rung by some one on the other side of the Rebels. He says that half a million traitors could’nt keep the Fire Zou- aves eut of that district five minutes. I be lieve him, my boy! ee Bm PirsoN BrewyLow’'s DavGnrer.—A gen- tleman just arrived in Chicago from Knox- ville, Tenn., brings intelligence of affairs in that city. He says that 2,500 Secession troops are stationed there, for the express purpose of over-atwing the Union men. Itis a part of their business to engage in quarrels in saloons, and in street fights, with all who are not friendly to Secession. Two men were last week shot for no other offence than speaking words of loyality to the Federal Government. The house of the celebrated, bold-hearted, and out-spoken Parson Brown- low, is the only one in Knoxville over which the Stars and Stripes arc floating. A few days ago, two armed Secessionists went at si¥ o'clock in the morning, to haul down the Stars and Stripes. Miss Brownlow, a brilliant young lady of twenty-three, saw them on the piazza, and stepted out and demanded their business. They replied that they had come to take down them d——n Stars and Stripes.” She instantly drew a revolver from her side and present: ing it, said : Goon! - I’m good for one of you, and I thin for both I” A « By the looks of that gas eye she'll shoot,” one remarked. ‘I think we'd bet- tet not try it; we'll go back and get more men,” said the other. ‘Go and get mora men,” said the noble lady ; * get more men and come and take it down, if you dare.’’= They returned with a company of niilety armed men, and demanded thal the flag should be hauled down ; but oft discovering that the house was filled with gallant men, armed to the teeth, who would rather die than see their country’s flag dishonored, the Secssionists retired. ————— Orp Snarl says that love is a seniiinstioy of diseases—an affeotion of the heart an an inflamation of the brain.