ahe IPuse, ed "dor the OWidren’s Corner of the Watobman.) CHICKADEE AND CHARLIE BY MRS M. @. BARNHART. A Chickadee sat on an old apple tree, And said, ag he sang in the height of hisglee, ~Riddle-de-diddie de, little Charlie, me. With your bows and your arrows you cannot shoot s Then Charlie to Chickadee gent him 8 mite, o + I accept of your banter, you rascally bloat ; Chickadee only answered and said in reply, oF ** On your bows and your arrows your cannot rely” “ Taunt me, Chickadee, and this arrow go (leet, You a message of death shall unwelcomly greet i But Chickadee answered him—:‘Fiddle de dee, Little Charlie sould shoot all hia arrows at me.” So Chickadee sang, quite determined, if wrong, To give little Charlie the best of hit song ; But, alas, for the song! the paor bird gave a jump, Au arrow brought Chickadee down with a thump. THE WAR, WHO PAYS THE CO:T. Who pays the cost? Ask thesister Sorrowful she sits and sigha— ‘ Momuirg for an only brother, “Zhe cost ts mine,” the maiden eries. Who pays the cost? Ask the father, Grieved, but silent, quelling grief, That swells hig Losem for his boy, ‘Ive dearly puvid,” his suswer brief. Who pays the cost ? Ask the mother, Beat with sorc0w as with years; She weeps a gon inb tle fallen— The cost is mine, I pay with tears." Who pays the cost? Ask the orphan, Sad and friendless now his life; © His father in the condict fell — “Lis mine the cost of this pell strife.” Who pays the cost? Ask the widow, Broken-hearted lone and poor— Her husband slain, she doth bewalil, “I'va picd ny all, 1 have no more.” What is the 6 +t? Bank bills and gold! The dross that misers hoard and hide? These tears of grief, a thousand fold, Ovt-weigh all other cost beside. Iliscellaneons, THE WES’ AND THE WAT. The Farmers Can't Stand it Much Lon- ger. Every day that the waris prolonged the daily debt is being increased, and it must be paid by taxation in some form or another: The governwent is spending at a fearful rate the accumulation of former ycars or pros- perity. Already the tax is beginning to be felt by the people ; but as the war is procrastinated and the debt is increased, the burden will becotne more and more grievous. till at last it is intolera’ lo. The present taxation can be paid with comparative ease, ‘running along. as we are, at forty miles an hour, un_ der the pressure of irredeemable paper.’’— There is now a seeming prosperity in the - eastern and middle States, but a day of reckoning will surely come. In addition to the financial difficulty of carrying on a long war of such magnitude, there is anot er difficulty which 18 looming up in a very alarming shape, and that is the position and attitude of. the north-west.— Without the hearty co-operation of thac sec- tion cf the Union the war would soon be brought to a dead halt. But it cannot be denied that in Illinois, Indiana, Towa and the north-western States, a fecling of gener- al discontent has grown up, arising from the military blunders at Washington resulting in the failure of campaign after campaign: and irom the political blunders perpetrated in the same centre, appearing to change the legitimate objects of the war as announced in the beginning by congress and the presi- dent, and to turn the struggle into a fanati- cal crusade for the abolition of negro slav- ery—a policy calculated to unite the peo- ple of the Southern States as one man, to render their resistance desperate, and to protract the wsr to an indefinite period. The northern States entered with enthu- siasm upon the war, under the idea that it was to be a short one, and that it would re- sult in & speedy restoration of the Uuton under the constitution ss it has come down to us from the founders of the government, They cared nothing about the negro. Their interests and their patriotism combined for the Union. Their interests lay both with the east and the south, but far wore with the south, the chief and natural market for their agricultural produce. By the war that market was closed against them. [ft was cheir ioterest to have it speedily open- ed, by bringing the war to a rapid conclus- ion by the triumph of the Union aims.— Their patriotism tonded in the same direc- tion. [Hence their zeal. They went heart and soul into the war, in order to make it short. One of their main reliances that it would be of short duration was that the pe- culiar institution of the South would not be meddled with, except go far as the military operations rendered 1t necessary, and that the Union gen iment in the Southern States or western men are disappointed. They ac: count for the change, and for the determi- nation of the Southern men to fight it out to the bitter end, by the change in the political programme at Washington. This change they think separates their patriotism from their interest; for while the voice of patri- otism prompts them to battle on and battle ever for the Union, the voice of interest whispes that a long war wou!d ruin them even if it should be successful ; for it would consume all their property, while at the same tine it would destroy the goose of the South that bad laid golden eggs tor them. | Already the patriotism of the States of the north-west has been severely tested. — We of the Atlantic States can hardly appre- ciate their situation... We are a commercial trading and manufacturing people. We are making money by the war This 18 partica- larly true of the New England S ates, The people of the north-western States have no present compensation whatever for the loss of their blood and treasure. On the contra ry, they are losing money #0 rapidly that ig the war continues long they will be beggar- ed. Those States, bordering , as they de, upon the Upper Mississippi or its tributaries, sent their agricultural produce, down the Father of Waters to the plantations border- ing on the Lower Mississippi and its tribu. taries- corn, wheat, flour hogs, bacon, hams, becves, butter, «ggs, horses and mules, for which in return they received either sugar and molasses, or the gold, poured into the planters’ coflers from every nation in Eu, rope. Not that the Southern States in the valley of the Mississippi could not have raised for themselves, a8 thoy now do, the products sold them by the north-west, but that it was more profitable to grow cotton and that the transportation down the Mis- sigsippi of eereals and animals was so cheap and convenient, the navigation being open at all seasons of the year. Thus the people of the north-west fed and supplied with mules three millions of negroes employed in raising the great southern staples—sugar. rice, tobacco and cotton. but particularly the last named product. Before the war the price of a mule in Illinois was one hundred and twenty-five dollars in gold. At present nowwithstanding the great demand for the animal in our army, the prices only sixty dollars in depreciatod currency. The same 18 true of other agricultural products. A late number of a Mi journal qt prices there as follows : —Flour, five dollars per barrel ; corn, forty-five cents per bush- el ; dressed hogs, three dellars and twenty- five cents per pound ; bams, foar cents per pound ; butter, ten cents per pound; eggs, cight cents per dozen, and other articles equaliy low. In the river counties of Iowa beef is only two dollars and fifty cents per hundred, or ut the rate of two and a-half cents per pound, and in the same State, last winter, n0t & hundred miles from the Mis- sissippi, pork sold, dressed, at less than a dollar per hundred. [It is certainly not cheaper now. What is the cause of this, while the same articles are so high in New York ? [tis the increased cost of railroad transportation. Owing to the closing of the Mississippi by the blockade, the freizhts of fered to the railrcads exceed their capacity, and the directors have enormously increased their rates. Flour, which used to be trans- ported from the towns on the Mississippi by railroad through to New York at ninety cents per barrel, now costs to move it thrice that sum ; and as for corn, it costs the price of five bushels to send one to market. : Tt will be impossible for the western farm} ers to stand this very long; for hard as is their case how much harder would 1t have been had not the demand for our breadstuffs in Europe been so great during the past tw® years. But, a8 this arose from the accident of short crops, it i3 not to be depended on hereafter, and the prospects for the agricul- tural interest of the north-west in the event of a continuance of the war, are gloomy in the extreme. ETERNITY. _ O eternity, without all bounds! O eter. nity tha: can be measured by no spaces of time ! 0 eternity that can be understood by no understanding of man, how much dost thou increase the punishments of the dama- ed! After innumerable thousands of years they sball always be constrained that this is to them only the beginning of torments! Low grievous a thing is it to. lie in a mos: soft bed for thirty years! What will it be to burn thirty thousand years in that lake of fire and brimstone! O eternity! eterni- ty ! thou alone beyond all measure, dost ex- aggerate. the tormen's of the damned.— Grievous is their punishment by reason of the sharpness. of their torments ; it is the more grievous by reason of the diversity of their torments ; it is the most grievous for the eternity of their torments. . There shall be death without death,. end without end, defect without defect, because: death ever liveth, and the end. ever beginneth, and the defect knoweth mot how to fail. . They shall seck life and shall not 8-2 it; they shall would be developed with the progress of | seek death, and death shall fly away from our arms. The north-western men believed that the Unionists were really inthe majors ity, as would be seen. if they had ouly an opportunity to declare themselves. - But if that was the case in the beginning of the war, the course of events has completely changed it, and there is now no real Union sen'iment worth spesking of anywhere south of the Potomac. Hence the north- them ; after an hundred thousand, thous- and, thousand years, without any end, they shall return to renewed torments.—Gey- Rardt. " A Buanr Scmoram—¢ Toby, what did | the Israelites do when they crossed the Red | Sea?” : « [ don’t know, ma'am, but I guess oy + ‘DISCHARGED CURED. The Rev. J. H. Cleveland of the army of the South West, writing from Napoleon Arkansas, to a friend in Providence, R. I. confesses his sin, repents and promises fu- ture amendment. ft would be well for many more professed ministers of the Gos- pel, to follow the example of Rey, Mr. Cleve — His letter is dated January 16, 18. I am about to do what will probaoly cost me your friendship—write an honest letter: Not that'I have hitherto written dishonest- ly, nor that you are accused of bating can: dor, in itself considered, But candor upon the theme I shall treat of, differing, so wide- ly as I now do, from your. well known views upon the same topic, cannot fail “to overtax your patience, involving writer and epistle in one irrevocable anathema. But the fact is, I can't write at all without be- ing true to my nature, which became deep ly stirred with shame and indignation by my country's follies ; how deeply stirred this letter will prove, since even your ‘good will is not a bribe rich enough (0 prevent my wnting it * Like many other.republicans, wii, loving the whole country, and depresating coer- cron as the most likely means of sundering it forever, were yet firm in their allegiance to the old flag, however loth to see it com mited to a wrong policy, I long strove to Justify this war, employing for that purpose all my little stock of learning anc ekill, both as & theologian and an amatenr politi- cian, though I had the . decency always, as wy friends all know, to keep politics er- tirely ost of my Sunday lectures. When the increasing needs of country seemed to demand the sacrifice, I heartily threw my person, as well as my voice. into the tide of carnage. willing even to die that the Union might live, and ready for any polizy look- ing to that end, m the spirit of ilie danger- ous maxim, ‘all’s well that ends well.” The negro—having suited him in’ real lite, not in the pleasing fictions of the Beechers—I knew 100 ‘well to care about disturbing him, unless as a convenient make weight, to be thrown into the scale when better means should fail. ‘1 was proud of our regiment —had some lingering faith in the President —and somewhat more (though hardly full confidence) in the wisdom and virtue of our Generals. This I went forth in hope, trus- ting mainly in Ged and oar vast number of for success, and proud to find s0 ma- ny old friend® gushing with me to the field. This was six monthyago. Anybody with open eyes, campaigning even three months in the Southwestern army, ought to learn something that cou'd met well be learned at home. Our boys have been léarning. and © don't claim to be duller than the the rest.— Ergo my faith in President Lincoln has changed from a grain of mustard seed to a perfect ponenity ; my trust in the Union (eneralship has dwindled to the verge of despair, as the machinery by which so'diers are made becomes. more bare. and their characters, when made. more visible and notorious. Noble exceptions there are, but these are the men that soon resign or find themselves court-martialed. My sentiments touching the black idol have changed from goodnatur- ed indifference to downright disgust; and need barely add, my hopes of the Union are reduced to & mere hope in some new politi- cal dyvasty, which I shall now pray and teil for with all the zeal and industry my nature _|is capable of. * Were I alone in these painful aiscoveries I might be inclined to distrust my owh judg- ment, or at least to repine ir silence. — But when 1 find the same views and feeling pervading our whole regiment and every ocher we are brought in contact with, ven- ted in louder and still louder whispers, bur- dening the letters to every home, seasoning the broth at every mess table, and deepen- ing the murmurs around each bloody grave —when 1 know ali this, 1 have no longer a pretext for feigning ignorance of facts wiiich if men could ignore them would cause the stones to ery out. What are we fighting for ? 1n tYs name of reason and humanity, what is he sub- lime result, which can justify + :ar after vear of sackcloth at hume aud butchery here, of neglected fields but thi k strewn Golgothas, of empty churches cramed hospi- tals, deferred bridals. accelerated bankrapt- cy. and the ever-lengthening line of pension- ers who for a paltry stipend and a puff of praise, must hobble armless, eyeless. foot- less to the pauper’s grave, For what were these things begun, for what must they continue, without even the remotest prospect of an end Nobody knows. But from the conflicting rumors on the sub- ject, we may examine four of the more com” mon and plausible, each and all of which, instead of justifying the war are conclusive reasons why it should be. condemned, and at once Abandoned. ’ Firstly. We are fighting, it is ssid, to cram the pockets and wine cellars of a com- missiored aristocracy, whose reign and rev elings must end when peace removes their shoulder-straps. Gladly would 1° pronounce this 8 mere slander, but—I promised to write an honest letter. Doubtless there is just enough truth in it to demand this one. remark namely : That such cause of war fare ‘agreeably to the privileged class.allud- ed to, can not always satisfy the rank and file on whose blood they are supposed to fat- ten. Even glory grows irksome at last dried thowselves. : when consecrated by uo higher ei than the aggrandizement of tyrants. I have heard the bayonets could be turned upon their employ ers, but I never believ~ that. : Secondly. We are fighting to abolieh sla- very, the Union to survive ox perish as em- ancipation may d rect. This too bas truth in 1t for a large class in New England, and for a few in the West. To them: Caucasian blood is so inferior, when compared with Africa. that we can afford to drain its richest arteries that Pompey may call himself free, though noterieusly incapable of true freedom (which implies self-government and self pport) as the parrot is of true eloguence- Theorists may whitewash as they will. Our army has secn the black elephant as he is sod we are forever cured of Uncle Tom's Oabin, To fight n such a crusade is a freak worthy alone of idiots and madmen. Thirdly. We fight to restore the Union, slavery to stand or fallas the ictercsis of the Union may demand. So we were told, and so we believed six months ago. Grant that such is indeed the fact. We shall best succeed by conquering ourselves—in other words, by throwing down the sword and fire-brends, trusting to the listening car, the | structive tongue and the faithful breast. — No Union can be valid or lasting antil ce- mented by the union of hearts; and to say that. we can rivet Southern hearts to us by hacking them to pieces, 13 absurd in terms ag well as in fact, A'naiion as great as ours in wealth, population, art, arms and com? merce, can afford to be equally so in magna- aimity. And a Christian nation might as weil set an example to the world by dealing with her unroly chifdren upon Christian principles. — Rom. x1, 17-21. Finally, we fight simply to humble and cir- cumseribe the South, whose growing wealth, power and territory, excite the jealous fears of the New England States. This opinion, though held by very wany in the South and West, I cannot entertain for a moment. If in this I am deluded, and such be the real origin of our troubles, then the Union army is sure of defeat; for crime cannot prosper, and war from such motives is crime of the most damnable type. Better share amiably the glory we cannot prevent, than to play the part and share the doom of Haman. 1 will vot speak of the demoralizing ef- fects of war, nor even enlarge upon its phys- ical horrors, as a further cause for being sick of the present struggle. Mercy to the anxious hearts at hoine, already convulsed at the bare suspicion of the heli behind the scenes, forbids us all to unfold the secrets of our prison-houses--even if human lan- guage.could unveil the worst, as, thank God. it cann.t. Leaving such gleams of Pande- monium for the hollow eyes that are com- pelled to bear them daily, or to close on them only in the last chill sleep, I confine this letter purely to the intellectual phase of the war questions, where we flud enough and more than enough* to ‘justify the al- most mutinous anxiety for peace that fills, as [ have said, the heart of the great South” western army. You may say we are home- sick, [trust in God those of us who have homes, love them too dearly even to forget what we have sacrificed, or to_ forgive the Administration that: could so needlessly, yea wickedly, tear us from “their hallowed circle. For me, however, the taant is pow- erless, death having left me no earthly home to sigh for. You may call us cowards. Qur blood has washed out the fcui aspersion up- on every field where we have been brought to the test, Indiana, especially, has no n- dulgence or partiality to crave at the hands of history. Her record in this war 1s one blaze of heroic deeds, only dimned by the want of cause equal in splendor to the con- duct of her sons. The Eighty-Third Begi- ment, inits brief but arduous career has | won, absolutely, the finest reputation in the service, 80 acknowledged by older regiments and by Generals in nowise predisposed to flatter us. Personally, I am not very brave, but my place now is at the Quarter-master’s desk, where, except by sympathy, 1 have no concern about the dangers of the van.— Yet1 ani a man with friends in the ranks and « heart in my bosom; a man to whom the mothers, wives, sisters ana children of those friends look for news from the fray, ‘snd whom they justly bold responsible for at lonst the mortal welfare of many who came with me to the field. O, God! thatl ghould ever have aided, even by a breath, to rush into the shambles so much good ma- terial for 50 poor a canse. If this expiatory offering—for 1 shall make the confession to them all --can lessen even partially, the guilt of the past, I shall die content even though hung for saying what we all do know. 1f spared to reach home, however, 1 shall devote myself, with wiserand humbler zeal, to the gospel of peace, leaving ‘war to brute beasts, and stri- ving, in deep contrition, to “goand sin no more." \ Asever. your friend, J. H, CLEVELAND. {IZ “Sambo, do you know the diffurence between a mason and an anti-mason 2” “Yes, sar. 1 belieb 1 does.” “Well, what is it ?* “1f my brain tells me de trut, and it neb. er fails, do magon is Je man what lay de mortar, and de anti-mason de man what car. ries de hod.” 057" Jef. Davis has issued another proc- lsmation, appointing a day of fasting and prayer. Tho 27th isthe day fixed upon. ” {Por the Watchtaan.) AN APOLOGY. . ' Eprror WatcaMas ;—While confined to learned to my surprise, that a little arti- Jcle which appeared in the Walchman over my signature, headed “ A Dun anc its An- swer”’ gave offence to a little fellow of this place, one P, F, Sturgis, (we call him ** Em- peror,”) related by marriage to some of the parties mentioned in the article, The persons whose names I noticed were formerly old residents of Bellefont, and who Lhold in the higest estimation, and with whom 1 have been on terms of the clugest in timacy ever since they first landed at this place, aud of course the liberty I took in making mention of them, was only intended asa friendly mention of their names to their friends in Belicfonte. But true to his meddlsomme propensities the ‘* Emperong’ noted for his low cunning, tho't it a good opportunity to vent "his spleen by getting somebody else mad at me because ke was, That's the way with some folks. What makes it worse, the Emperor and myself have always kept sociable terms uan- til I returned from the war last Fall, hav- ing been Cischarged on account of wounds received in battle, when I flatly renouuced allegiance to ** Old Honest,” for his wick- edness and refused to associate myself with him (the *¢ Emperor”) ag a spy upon the ac- tions of houest and Union luving Democrats. Consequently the Eq peror,” true to the precepts and practice of his lord and master took advantage of my crippled condition and blew the hot breath of jealousy an. revenge into the ears of some of the female portion of the families mentioned aid pursuaded thein that I was © slandering’’ them, which certainly, was the furthest from my tho'ts. This shows the heartlessness of the Abo. lition party, and the spirit of revenze with which they scek t3 persecute those who are bold enough to show up their rascality, and corraptness to the public view, and the low cunning that possesses pimps of Abraham Lincoln. The astute “ Emperor’’ being the cowardly to fight for his country in th: field, takes it upcn himself to abuse his neighbors ‘and returned soldiers who do’nt happen to agree with him, that ¢ Abraham” is great, and 4/ah is his Prophet, and dont like to swaliow a nigger whole. As it was, the treacherous ink that spread the effusive article hefore the readers of the Watchman, and your wicked little ** imp” that ** spread on™ the ink, I will say to his Majest the “ Emperor.” that if this expla- nation does'nt appease hiz wrath, why then he can just ge to the devil. MAJOR JONES. Was Uniow, Towa, March 12th, 1863. Proverbs of the Billings Family. Don’t swap'with your relashuns unless yu ken sfford tv give the big eena of the traid. Marry young, and’ ef sarkumstances re- quire 1t, often, 1f you ean’t git gud cloathes and edica- tion too, git the cloathes. Bay how are ye? to everybody. Kultivate modesty, but mind and keep a gud stock of impudence on hand. If you are angry never get beat. Be charetable; three-sent pieces ware maid on purpose. Don’t taik ennybedy’s advice but your owne. f It costs more to borry than it dus te buy. Ef a man flatters yu, ya ken kalkerlate that he is a rogue, or yure a fule. Keep both ize open, but don’t cee mor'n haf you notis, When yu pra, pra right tu the sentre of the mark. Don’t mortifi the flesh tu much: twang the soars on Lasarus that cent him to heav- en. Ef yu ich fur faim, go inter a grave yard and skrach yerself against a tume stone. Beggars don’t have tu advertise fer run- awa dorgs. «Tis a long lain that never turns,” and ’tis a good mill that alwas dus. Sin is like weeds—self sone and sure ‘u kum. Natur is natur, Yu kant alter the krook of a dog’s tale much and preserve the lengih of it. I wuld sa tu all the young men, “go in,” and to all the old fellers, ** knm out." About as sure a wa tu get rich as enny I no of, is to get inter dedt for a hundred thousand dollars, and then go tu work and pa oph the dedt. = Filosophers tell us that the wurld revolves on its axes, and Josh Billing tells yu that fall half the folks on arth think tha are the | axes. N. b.—these ar proverbs have stood fer morn a hundred yeres, and haint gin out yer Pp — ai. Pux veéN PoN.—Strange, Moore and Wright, the uctorious punstirs, were on a certain occasion, dining together, when Moore observed : ¢ There 18 but ono knave among us, and that's Strange!" z «Oh, no,’ said Wright, * there's one Moore!” «¢ Ay,” said Strange, “that's Wright {77 « Dou’t think of me.” 8s the man said who was on the point of being thrown from the gallety t& the pit; but recollect those beneath me.’ ‘my room in consequence of a fractured leg, | HOW SAL AND ME GOT TIED Well, at last the nizht cum; that orful Cle NM ee— {nite a3 was to fetali me intoo a new state u® The Friends of the Union and Constitu- | tional Liberty Arowsed. 500 to T00 Free-| bein avd it foun me in a dregf 10x. fust { mann Counc... + pros good then bid, first proud. and thon ¥ 4 3 4 The citizens of Penn and surrounding; Shoired Nie Bes hus I 1a ta townships met on the evening of the 16th] — pore is hill Phy he FI hy inst,, in order to effect a more perfect prgan. | *N¢ fo 8 her takon it i SHEP, on ization of the great ‘Democratic party ; to | ung Tor me 13 fem Aang pu tue me express sentiments of loyalty to the Consti- | L 745 In a hurry won minkite, aud she next, tu ior: of the United States, and disapprobs- | fol: F414 rather 3 Hille 3: badd tin put off. tion to the course of the party now in pow [ro pangdv ash, eh 1 pat op the er: From 500 to 700 people were assembled ; | cleanest sort uv a shirt that Aunt June had the eharch in which the meeting was_hetd , 5X14 Up wity nice and smonth, and then 1 being literally crowded; an evidence that! drawed on about 8a nice u sets uv Sanday the people an honest yeomanry feel decply | harness, as you evir feed, and arter mam io : A { an Aunt Jane had primped up sn fixed my indignant at the manner in which our pub- ¥ t , lic affairs ars mismanaged and our constitu- | 137 81d creevat, Twas ready, so off [ puta to | Sal's dad’ Td tional rights trampled upon. On motion Sal 3 cad 3, an 1 reckin [ dun about a8 much thinking a going over thar as was ever Jun John Hosterman was called upon to act as J chairman of the meeting, also a number of | by suy uther feller in the Same tine: At Vice Presidents andjSecetaries were appon | last Larric, an was marched in two whar THE BALL IN MOTION. Great Qutpoarings of the People, I went prer ine ted: On:motion Rev: Be Muswercolored a | Nal was —she sorter blushed and then got her head on one side an locked about as sweet as enny flour you ever seed. ihought she was alout as pully a crectiur as Lever lade my ise en. Directly Sel's sister ses, the passon's cum an in we marched whar thar was shout fif- ty fokes, and I felt mity skeered, but tried my very Lest to keep a stitt upper lip. — Well we took our places, Sal hamgin on too my arin an me a lookin at the fore. Then the passon ses. ses he: ‘ Du you take this ooman’ (he might & sed young lady) * as yeu roid by the Band to be youre lasful wife too help her and too keep her, too luv and too nus her, te!l deathdns you part? 11 du my bist,” ses I, (standin fust on wun leg and then tother, fur all the world like a tur- key on a hot rock) — Then he looks at Sal an ses he— « Du you take this man’ (like he did’uf, know my name) * as you hold by the hand, tu be your lawful husband, tu nus him an tu help him, onor and obay him, tell deth dos you part? : ¢ Yes sir," ges Sal. Then, ses he, «I pro- nounce yu both man and wife, salute your bride.’ With that. [ clinched Sal, and gave her about as hearty a buss as yu ever heard. Then the fellers allcum round and kissed Sai like blazes, yu could see it dun em good. Sal orter a stopped it, but she never said a word ; as for me, J kissed right and left an cum mighty neer a kissin a nigger gal es was fechin in sum water, When everybody begirs a giggling an I begins to feel wity mean. After a while the kissin an fcolin was all over and we all pitched in tu the goodies, and if [ ever sor sweethings fly, it was then ; I et tell [ like tu & popped, ond everybody else dun thar best. About ten o'clock they all left, an gum of the boys ses, ‘ Peter won't you go home with us,’ an all such things, & devilin of me tell I hardiy noed what to du or whar to gn. After they all left, thar I sot myself tell a viggar gal cums tu the door an ses-— + Mass Peter, miss Sal's & waitin fur yu.’ « Whar is she?’ sea I. + She’s in her room,’ ses she. ¢ Well, tell her to come down,’ ses I: lin reddy to go any whar she wants.’ ¢ But,’ ses she, ‘she's in bed.’ ‘Oh, yes," ses I, +1 forgot] but ses I, +its erly yet, aint it.’ She seed I was rkecred an begin 8 snig- gern, tel! T picked up wy hat, =n follored her. tei] she cum tu u doe, and ses, + That's yore room,” My hart jumped up to ny throat, a5 1 nocked agin, I was then & ot tin despirit. I opened it, and jeewhilikens, the cold chills run over me tell l felt Lika somebody was a pullin cedar brush up and dowa my back: Thar was Sal fast asleep, {or preterden like, "as 1 found out) the can- dle’shinnin as lite as day. : I s'00d some time looking mity, foshsh, an then puts my hat on a cheer—next | draws my coat off; it was mity hard wu git oft—then 1 hed my jucket, and the balance of my harness, tell § cum tu my boots, and ef ever [ sor a pair of tite b mis, thom way the wuns ; I pulled I tugged and jerked, bat they wouldnt nigh cum oft, nn happenin to leok roand 1 thought { seed Sila jecpin et me outer wun eye; so 1 blose the lite out, gits my boots off, an then —— hut it sint nobody's bigness, so I shunt tell suymore, Weli I've tried maryin sum time, an must say that ater a feller girs ust 16 it, it pint a bad thing, in fact 1 flosofics as follers : Martyin is a good thing, iL ig a gras thing a6 Aunt June sos, 8 great fustitution, (how she nose T can’t tell, for she never had a trial of it.) It's good for everybody —ar you old— marry it'll make you young, or prayer. “On md tion the Constit ition of the U.S. was read and commented apon by Fred. Kurtz, and its repeated violation by the present Administration stown. Spirit. ed remarks were then made by the chair- man, Thos. Ehrhart, P. Gephart, Dr. Dash- ler, Jno. Smith, defending free speech, free press and the right of the writ habeas cor- pus, followed by Rev. B. Musser, who spoke fechingly in favor of peace. On motion a committee of five, cousisting of Fred. Kurig, John Grove, Philip Gephart. H. Korman and Dr. Dashler, was appointed to draw up res- olutions expressing the sentiments of the meeting. the committee reported as follows : Waereas, The people of the United States have the constitutional right peacea- bly to assemble wnd express their senti- ments in reference to governmental affairs, therefore Resolued, that as true and loyal citizens we place ourselves upon the good old plat- form of the * Union as it was, and the.Uon- stitution as it is." Resolved, that as peaecable, loyal and lawabiding citigens we cannot, and will noty endorse the repeated violaticn of our cher ished charter of liberties-—the Constitution of our fathers—by the present Administra- tion. That by its arbitrary arrests and a de- nial of the writ of habeas corpus it has rob- bed the citizen of his liberties, similar in_ fringements in times past having cost guilty tyrants of the old country their crowned heads. Resolved, that we are in favor of the pas- sage of 2 law preventing the immigration of free Negroes info Pennsylvania: that we have no objections, and think it right. that Massachusetts and New England should re- ceive and harbor them, io accordance with their pestilent Abolition professions of Ne- gro Equality. Resolved, that we are opposed to any iu- fringement on the part of the general gov- ernment upon the righs of the States as dan- @orous to our liberties and ending to a des- potic and monarchical government. Resolved, that we pledge ourselves, each to ‘he other, to maintain and protect each other, in suppri of the Demccratic faith by Equal and cxact justice to all men, cf what- ever persuasion, religious or political —peace commerce, and honest friendship with all na- tions, entangling alliances with none, The support of State governments in all ther rights, as the most competent administra- tion of our domestic concerns, and the eu- rest bulwerks against anti-Republican ten- dencies. In State administration opposed to all monopolies and special privileges. — And the preservation of the Generat Gov- ‘ernment in its whole constitutional vigor, as the sheet anchor of our peace at home, and safety abroad —a jealous care of the rights of election by the people—a mild and safe corrective of abuses which are lopped by the sword of revoiution when remedies are un- provided—absolute acquiescence in the de- cigions of the majority—the supremicy of the civil over the military authority —free- dom of religion, freedom of the press, free- dom of speech, freedom of person under the protection of the Aabeos corpus, and tris] by an impartially selected jury. Resolved, that upon this platform we cor- dially invite all true and loyal people, to join with us for a change of Administration — Stateand National—and the election of men who will enforce the Constitution and secure us the blessings of peace, and a res- toration of the Union. Resolved, that the proceedings of thig meeting be published in the Berichter and the Watchman. These resolutions were unanimously adop- ted. A meeting was appointed to be held at Wolf's Schoolhouse, on Tuesday evening, March 24th, - Adjourned. Bren Stress (7 « Father, what does the printer live on?” “ Why, child 2" “ Because you said you hadn't paid him for two years, and you stil! take the paper.” *¢ Wife. put that child to bed; he's an everlasting talker.” §® When were Love's arms stretched eo wide 88 upon the Cross? When did they embrace fo much as when Thou, 0 Christ, didst gather within Thy bosom he spears and arrows of the 1ighty, to open up a lane. for Freedom ? | you’l die a tryin to pear 60. Ar you young ? ill make yu o'd. Infect it is sooted tu every an ennybody. [td a ten rail fence that society has built up tu keep fokes in- side the bounds uv good behavior, an tho I've had my ups an downs in it, an no all about it, still I say —hooray for marry, OLp Ape’s Last Jokr.—When our good President heard of the recent rebel raid at Fairfax, in which a brigadier general and a number of valuable horses were captured, he gravely obseved, “ Well 1 am sorry for the horses.” ¢ Sorry for the horses, Mr. President !”’ exclaimed the Secretary of War, 1aising is spectacles and throwing himself back in his chair in asionishment.— + You,” replied Mr. Lincoln; “I can mako a brigadier general in five minutes, but it is not so easy to replace 8 hundred horses.” it in C7 Don’t borrow your neighbor's paper. nan, Take one yourself, and pay for it like a ha