BEAVER, 'AX^Grtrs; BEATER* ! PENN’A. Wednesday, Sept. 17th, 1862. T. C. NICHOLSON 4C0., Proprietors. TERMS — tINE Hollas and FiftyOektb Fj'r annum, ix adva.vce ; otherwise Two Dol lauJ nil! be charged. No paper'discontinued anti! all arrearages are settled. Letters and communications, hj mail ihal!"have prompt attention. (From the Springfield Republican.) Major ZAGONI’S GUIDE;- 6p, a Heroine of the War forjthe Union. *- Os the morning of the 24th day of last October, a somewhat dorel scene unrolled , itself-before the [door of a quiqt farm houBe, about two mile from' Springfield, Missouri, Two women'” and three young lads had 3 ust raised • a very modest little flag; and as the wind floated it gracefully in the ;air, they gave three cheers foi f the Stars andj Stripes—chfeers which f not loud were certainly hearty. Tile younger ot the women, tucy. Dudley, mother; of the boys,.'Stood gazing, . her face put on a look of stern det< rmi nation, andishe murmured low, between her almost shut teeth:' ‘.‘lt shant come down again while I live." - T ‘“[fes ’twill, mother,” broke in' one of the boys, “for the scccshers are in - and they’ll'ina&o you."! •His'mother did not notice him, but turning-.to the other woman, said: • , , “for -‘William’s sake, mother, we’ll The Love of Hoine. . k e £P If aWbr .b» .h.j roi lowing, which were uttered by -Hah- j and the youngest boy, clinging to her iel Webster, over 101 l from hunr-ai lips', j'dn ri,'tried s to drag her into the house, we fiave y-et to see them. They iare, cr jl n g out: •"* j, ' . . . iiidefu; peiils of -the rarest value, 1 -And f conie; 0, mother; run. , rwhile the old grandmother,(retreating shou.d be cherished in the.very heart| bohind t!ie door,” trembled ?isiUy; but it hearts by every one : - - | I tile mother stood firm, aujuitMig'-tho ■;lt is oirfy shallow ■ minded -preten-I men she knew ofely too well. .Only dersj who -make cither dlstiugbished 1 out little month before t.hcyjShot down | .origin a mfitler qf personal reproach, flier husband .like a. dog. because he . A uihtj tuiip.i's not ashamed ot lii'njsclffsuid bis house was his own, andfihould 1 ntetgigitfiicfashamed of his early.con-bhoist just what flag seemed 'to; him ■ -diffiJnrf It aid ha]>ptn loiflo fd bobornvbest over it. j V j in a log s cabin, the They shot him before her eyes, and] snowdrifts' of Aw Hampshire, at a'his heart's blood bad sprinkled the : period iso early that w hen the smoke-;! very . ground w here she stood, and 1 1 ‘ first"/rose from its' rude chimney! andr’wonder not .that thfe- Joule' in her eyes] led!over the frozen hiirs,,thefe;i>vas;:iw as Vi-<;-»rcely womanly, flown the* Ti-no similar evidence of a - white man’s ' road they come, a, dozen C’on/ederale ; ; liabitbtiou between it and the setl-lii-. rutfiaiis,; called soldiers by ■ courtesy. ■; inents on the rivers of Canada - Its ‘iiiid “cliivairy,” by Mr. WEUiam Riufij reinnihs : Slill exist : I make it an an-l.se.U. -Xhey w.ere well l t|t;iiied",and | final visit; I carry roy children fo if, j! mop 11 fed and- as they thundered up to 1 .to.teacb them the hardships endured]!the door the leader shouted: bv the . generation before them. ,1: “Down drith that dafunpd Yankee ! I'loved to dwell on the tender recoil- ‘ rag; if you don’t I'll blow'your brains, ’ lections, the kindred tics, the early a'f- out.”. ( ' j -.. feetions, and the narration of incidentsnotice was taken; the women '•.-which mingle with all I know .of this ;;might.as well have been stone. j primitive family abode; I w’egp to ,: “1-tiey Dudley, don’t,yoti hear me?” ~ think that,none of those who inhabi- . and he pointed his royolvci; at her. '‘ted it are how living;.and: "I bear, Bill Armstrong,” , ; it everlfail in afioctioriate veneration - “Blast yc; f ben-why don’t ye mind?” ..for-him who raiseddt, and defended it |. .“Because* Twon’t.” , tfi ’ against- savage, violence and destruc- j : “You. won’t, won't you ?” arid he tion. cherished all domestic comforts'fired, but mused. He sw ore! madly beneath its roof, and, through the fire I;at his horse for shying, and as iho did; . ami blood rears’revolution-feo, the sai>l. ! 1 |iiy war. shrunk fijonkno toil, no sac-,; ‘'This is my house arid this. U. ray i - ; rific*e 'lO serve ■ Lis Country, and tg j flag; I want it here, and shall have jt i raise bis children to ii condition bet- il.erfc. You can shoot me down and! ter than his own. may my name and jithen pull il downryou certainly won’t! the puree of iny posterity he blotted ! before.’’ -- • j froth the memory of mankind.’f - One man shouted “we ain’t, cut- 1 —■— - - throats; we don’t 'kill women and I children;”. ■' ■ i |. ~ “You. have killedwomen and chtl ylreif more than once;’’ was'the taunt ing answer. Several old neighbors of ;l;er«, felt the thrust, and [quailed be fore her ey es, while the others drew .their pisUds; hut the leader, thiow ling-up tlfeJweapon nearest him went on— - " “Wal, Lucy, -victuals and drink ON TO THE CHARGE \tn to the charge ■' Let Coward's fly And seek for safety in tLeir flight; | When.true men dare to do or die While battling bravely for the right. -I M On to the-charge! now Seize the sword ~ And-thrbw the sheath far e’er away,' ho quarter ask and none afford Till tßou has nobly 'von the day. t , tOn to the charge ! TVith dauntless heart And trenchant blade e’er bravely go, : Though bristling round in every part; Trt Ciuiitless numbers, Bland the foe. : On lathe charge ! ,Bo not dismayed, Though deadly balls arc whizzmg t past j i. Tn Honor’s panoply arrayed,' • - Fight bravely, boldly, to tbe last., ' .5n to the charge ! ;V»ilh valor high; ; Enter the battle-fifeld,of life; ’ \ !' ‘ ; ? i J ' . v i Lei justice be thy banner . ! . Thy watchword in the hour of strife. .! , On to the charge.!- Thou yet shalt see*. Beneath the stroke thine unn doth wi,eld 'Thy vanquished foes,in terror flee, ' And leave thee conqueror o’er the field. A Life Picture 'dlVha'l a.re half the rebuffs receive in odr. converse with the world but the uhoes at oar dwh v ; oif;e ? Wo invoke the spirit-of contradiction, and then chafe under-the treatment we experi ence at,'its hands. .-»io»v' r of the ; child that Hear the v out north into the mountain ravine. f "While the child wandered there, he cried aloud to break the loneliness,and heard tx voice winch called to hint in the same tone, lie tailed again, and , he tjought the voice again mocked | .. .a, K lushed Willi-anger, ho rushed - it find no one. Ho then called out to him iit anger, and with all abusive fjuthits,'all of which were faithfully returned, to him. Choking with rage, t'l.e child ran td his motherland com plained, that a boy ijn the woods had •insulted him with words. Hut the Mother took her child by the baud, oiid -aid ' i “.Mv child, 1 these wore but the echo b of-thine own voice. Send forth sun shine ;T- :u the spirit,,and thoa shall ’ V'-T; have a cloudy day. Carry u data vindictive spirit, and never in tt 1 flo.wcshall lurk cures. Thou Mialt receive even what thou givest, ..';d that alone.” ;• f “Always,” said the speaker, “isj that child in the mountain passes, andhj ever} .man and woman is that child.” | A ' Patriotic Scene of the Battle * iti,n. —A correspondent of the l)ts ■y-’tch writes ; During the, thickest of the 1 firing of the battle of Bnll Run. .fiag.of the ■; regiment of '■iinhylvama Uoscrves was shot down, i < Gen. licynolds succeeding in get rvossession of it, wrapped it . ‘Uiia tiis noble form, rode up and • n along tire lines cheering the men. : iio inspiring effect which it produc ,A as ho rode along; is beyond descrip wi, and cheer after cheer went up, • loud as to almost drown the heavy ■-ketry fire to which ho .was ex ;ed. There never was a man who j ■v ,jd;ed.sp zealously.- antTparncstly for T’ '-ounfry as, did Gen.. Reynolds on ' evcr-mcmorable day., and he has ■ (i; himself to be a General. whose ory will be a credit to ; hip coun " 'f ... • • ‘ ! M ' ■ StrXngil Drink.—An old -.toper hat ho .could, when blindfolded, oayh of several kinds ot liquors. ■ -i brand}:, whisky, gin and other •;us'were presented to himj • nced correctly what .they-were. - length>a glass of pni-e water was ’on him; he'taKtcd it, paused, tasted _again, considered,! and shpok his ■ He at last said— ‘'Gentiemah, S‘} c .it up, I am not used to that sort hquor.’’; . ■' ' , - : Vfol. 3 B-iSTt EN [we’ve got,to have, and won't go, un der that .casjied flag.” i . “Victuals and drink 1 can’t help von having, but j(- going to get them for you'. Ton mast como in through ihWjbOr.’’ J . . i” ' J j Evidently her look daunted them;’ ,ifor bold as they- were, they were bad and they knew it; so- with a laugh t.he captain dismounted, shout- 1 inlg “Come on, boys,” and leaving i their horses in the care [of-the chii drop; they, one after* another; went ] into the kitchen, and drank eagerly of the whisky-set before them. Astbey thus drank they became wonderfully communicative; and. listening’eagerly, I Lucy heard that thej’ hail been [sent from Springfield, vr.ith somefifty oth ers. to seeiif anything could bosseen of the advance guard of (.Fremont's army, who were supposed to be in tnat vicinity. Shos»found that this party had been stopping at one house and another, drinking and devastating, and very naturally bad divided, .and that Armstrong meant to wait till the rest came,up,- and start for the town ■ from her house. She likewise learned) that, they had not'seen anything of the Lincoln soldiers. She!gave them their: fill' of liquor, she let them eat I the best her house afforded, and as j she was taking a pitcher-to get. mpre liquor her cars caugh t the-sound of a distuntfifs. * j Armstrong heard it too| and, w.ith an path, said-them lazy [lubbers of} hiswere at last coming, apd the, old j woman must bring some mpre dodgers j along.. - Lucy had takeii the pitcher, and closing the door behind her, alnio°t flew-mit into the yard, and; taking the oldest hoy by tho shpuldcr, said- in a terribly hoarse voice, ‘-Tom,’run for your life.ovei the mowing, through the lane, and tell those men yon meet to take down, their .flag, slop playing Yankee Doodle, and come, Up through the lone with you and they can get oyery one of these men.j Don’t let the grass, grow under your feet, my boy.’’ ' V ' 1/ ■■ j This, winds bad brought to her ears, What is never whispered to those drunken men, that .instead of their comrades their sterpesl foes would ho around them. And all her energies Ware directed to keep Weffraiill in the ignorance so fatal to . ■ M V 'A’ >f ■ fl( ;\- :]| &#•» *■ k rV \ ■ ; cent*;per. iibseqiient Ik^ertloi ■■’jjr ■ •-■ ; ■ £' -«»';;K ; li W-'-.'tWjS'-P'' :’»»■*> ;> • if-'- !» ‘.■ -'■'' W I : '\ T''! 25-e«its. A liberal ip. jreerly ■ ■ ‘B4 ; 7 .«• •:■'* M"* i■ Y ''' ■ y rl w'--' -WT“£ A 'm- '_L '' ‘I" i ..V-'i.. ■ Y HvY ; ''.vY-iY-i ' A3rerti»«r* I ttn : ■ >IV I ;| I I. :■■ ••••’ - Aspare equal to twu.vn Unerof liif typ* 'i, - ' ■' 1 s* 1 . i > l . 1,, ?‘ 1 '.'. -r-z-.-z ■:■.■ ■■■:>■. .. i.-' ■-. 1 '''' ;r; ;; , : ' .1.. '■' ' : - '. .■ ...i ■£-■- -■:-' 1 .' 1 ' . ■*!' ' -■ ;.’ ±,r ... *,. Business curds, 75^cents a line, perjyeaf o- 38. _ '• Beaver. Wednesgi^'jKii'. 'ft M lBlB. | in 'momenta of ..bit j but (•he only „ looked an corf;* -• ££■)■ ■ -,■’ •; ■' jr. i , . They bennies ‘^*ijsbotufn-| cd away I ancLyh thosestrong rninded Gcruuuv forget the 'jhaide wjth lhemm*Spring; «#;, she went to itndE the ola id ■ arid the children hidin/ j,ting rebels} bat the flag > .and as the poor pale fell cjirt caught sight ofits hi .they gave a feeble shout _ tf its. weak ness. , All through ti shsparaod and fed; that hit tf isufferers, and as one after > /rew 1 strong and iefti her, allib ,a them, was that they would stt. mainly blows for their] country Bndjk.6cp always the! noble war. cry of Z«|jorii—“The Union ,and Fremont!” clwufto thbiv hearts. 1110 Dudley that .evwj wore spurs in j the Ttldou days had'lnbniver or a more .loving heart than hejfe, ■ The Boot on Foot. ; - f A good test of onwiecrot opinion of the real loyalty of papers add persons is to ask thM-question. wheth er we would intrusiibe safety of the /nation to them; present, cri i*l?- -- ‘^‘i'i i ■! i There are' papetf and persons, of whom Mr. WtckliflKTs the fair repre sentative. jTb readnlieir terrible dja-’ j atrables that ad ark ■ fund ■ desperate body of conspirators fbad laid, their himd-upon the throat of . ] the nation and werd. sworn to have its Armstrong‘saw the trap: ho fired hisi’.ifcJßiood ; were. marshaled in battle revolver, hitting-the gray-li,a;;cd old i array and, moving] against the very grandmother, leveling her with of the 1 govdriimer.t, justly excife- j groiihd. .Nobody noticed the shot .ex- j ihg .eept Tommy. and as he held' her .bleed- they arc land that these nig head on his knee, he never shed a! generallywero tltdiboliiionist ; while tcai';|;hut hfe-is on'one of Commodore! certain Of pttrTeJlqilKcitizens have faU j Foote’s gunboats as a.powder-monkoy ' ion into error, not great rea-j to-day. and he never hands a charge ison. and wore callefl'TObolk ] but lie thinks of that terrible hour, i “Let us-suppresjllbO Abolitionisms/’ One hr two on both sides were wound-;] cries some slackwjfcdorator, ‘‘and the •cd.. bjut the- struggle wjis soon Vover;' j rebellion wilLendEpT course. it yvill j .and the rebels marched out bon&Np-1 you- dear' soul pand if all ydur ifellpw gethfer' -with old chains! which the , citizens bad beeniof-yotir calibre 'And boys! very gladly found.'. Zagoni must kindey there wpiddhafc been no re take! the, prisoners' with him,-; for men J hellion it All. s l£p|fompdcn and bis couldn’t |bo;fepared 4o guard them. j friends had us As they were standing in’ front Of i those fellows put against sbjp-. the doorLbeforeJrtartingt JUxs^DudievJiptoncy.’'. who knew every inch of the groud ii> jiy sunmiHcoTyPTli e]tjratnrjr ol .lie’ the vicinitvL undertook fo toll them a ! Stuarts.; If PtSil and Patrick Henry nearer road to town. They did, not! bad shonjwd i “Hurrah for King understand her hurried, nervousdirce-1 Georgb and the stampi act!’', there tions, and she started a* If to go with | wouldl been nobjoody rerolut|on| | theni; then she remembered her dying i H Mirabean and the French people | mother, cahie back, f called: Tommy i-had bellowed ‘‘Hurrah,-for. starvation} j from the duffererVaide, to: take the !aristocrats; forever!” all, the trouble; place in her! stead. .1 in Franco' would have, speedily eritJed. j Bat the dying woman's,,faint voice jTo be sure,every righV would have 1 stopped Aeri. j been annihilated, every liberty do- : “Yon go.! Lucy; lie might make a rich remdrslcM^O'-.j mistake: helwill talrts caro ol’me, abd'.T‘ e wouid have governed FWbtS- bat; we Will kcep the old flag flying.” ■ .there would have. been. The reserve in the lane, by.Zagoni’s wpt moral rot and general national order, had already cbmc up; and Lucy : i< ’ onlj- stayed! to kiss the pale lips and „ ’ us suppress the Abolitionists. : precious face, then 'she mounted her But suppose yon begin jthe begm own stout marc and led the way. SheJ c “'?; First subdue,the common sense j guided them Safely ,-iu the intricate j°* lho ,°‘ lhe conntrtr; then you j path up to tlie very edge of the ravine, i | n 2-3': subdue those wbo influence it. It j ■wb.erh according to Armstrong’s'talk, j an amusing i she knew the wily foe was hidden. I t | persistence abolitionism which bau?ed | was. the very spot Zagoni wished to bo I wai *ibut,the opening of the eyes of | | in,,! and she; bad saved hinu:a long the people so that they saw. The peop!<| strieteh of dangerous road. Then shef this/country know: perfectly-.well] fell back to !the rear, just as Zagoni’s ' that slavery is -at the bottom of this eager eye took in the whole of his no l re )e^i P n ‘ [lf tliero had been no Bla silion. Desperate! What will h« >« r y t thcreJwouid have been no jwar ; sav f whatj will these men do who just a- th-rc would have been no ab hayo been. Stacated 'witiT .being hoi- «l»tioinsm.L The temperance, iday soldiers on the.pavements ol Stl springs from iiitcmperance; and I Lojuis ? -I , ■ when a drunken man tries to. kill ;!hi^ ‘jSoldioraJyonr war-cry is .‘Fremont do * l tce-totallcrs and the Union.’ Draw sabre,^the mT® responsible fcimt ? i „ ' j!/ right flank, quick trot, march.” Slavery was trying to kill the codn- j ■j, .. I. • | . . ■; lrv% It had ailmost succeeded; Watch! , His voice; shrill and intense, pierc- w £ tch lhe ’ Abolitionf^ ed j every hpart,; and as those bright gla ; ma ddetied tbat its! crime wah l swords glittered in the snn.sh.ne, and discovered [shot and stabbedbright the httie band sped to_ thcii-deadly 1 1ef15 ..,.. . there!” cry the work. I woudered that Lucy,Dudley S| blo Wicklsffe ai , d . Company-“thi B brown mam kept her p ace as eager c()tneB ol - m „ g witch%‘WHy as hcr mis rcss tp do ga lant work. thfl devi , can . t § u That battle w.U alwkys burn on Let ns euppress the pages of h / s ;o.r3 > un Something in .bis face .struck one of thotnen, and he said, i - ; “Who is your maim, boy?” ; ■ , “Lucy Dudley.” - .“Go ahead, Major,” shouted L the follow. “She is true blood; they shot her husband a month ago.” Zagoni, followed by a portion of his men, wheeled into the lane, trying|to keep. Tommy in sight; and soon they came in view of the low house, and the noisy mirth of the CoiilUleruUssWtts distinctly heard. Armstrong nejer suspected, even ordering Mrsl Dnuicy l it) “show ’em . in,” ’ wept to the door,sand they needed; not that she should speak; her piercing, eager look told ever}' thing. ? Thfcy surrounded the rpom—-Zagoni’s clear voice order ed those, inside to surrender, while at j the Sapie moment, the iifer gave an' ■I exultant— :. \ ' ed |soldiers| She was walking 1 beside it holding tjhe reins looking ; fearfully pale and tired ; for now the excitement was past htr womanhood was upper most, and her only care was to help the; wounded and comfort thcalying. They kncwlsho was,taking iheir suf- fering comfada to the shelter of her ovk homejW-and not a man from the Major downwards, ;but would have been-, eager; to escort her, but she re fused them! all, and when tlic Major, pressed the nihtter, she told him that she kpew the way beite.r than they did, and was sate enough alone. Tbet gathered around her; culled her all noble heroic names, such- as/pien pse “i’an&co Doodle came to (own, Ijrankee Doodle dandy.” • > . • Teach Theta, to Shoot, j | jffite&iro are alvraysSviHint; to accept : WjiT|gpt of the experience of |ot'b comsj menee woti' ihefr ftririg and-, loading : rtf once ’■ \t'hat a man wishes to do m. to put a ball through his enemy, amt he should be placed speedily in condition to do so | with - Neither shouldering nor presenting arras nor any other action of the manual, will accoraplishk this. It takes , days! to leam thom, JbftforeJ,tbat time [the enemy may; bo upon ni. 1 offer, this, suggestion for wjiat it it vbHlfi : s ■■■ -■ ■ I ■■■■■! ■■■■" . ’! ■ P'.l :"i? ;t la Earkestßefbre Daylight- ETHAN SPIKE ; reccntauccosses of the (rebels *" ((} . A,Ca are well calculated to strike the timid] | | . ■.l --j, and the, wavering with awe ; but they I aint pleasantly eitooated up here cannot change the isemq dr modify the if-spiite contrary wise ’. , The kornueks laws, by,which the moral phenomena dont seem to appreciate the moral of the world are governed. Asudden [courage that must aetdpate a feller, tempest, a thunder stornvorancarth-icritter’s bussiimafprb hp kirns id the quake, though seeming, for a moment, jskedaddlin pintv. Only yesterday, oilo to suspend the ordinary laws of -ha- pofitbo bekmghled critocra told me I tore; does pot change the order of the was “a whitedivered’yankee cuss I” physical world, though k miy;be ac- I axed him cf ho war in airnest? lie com panted by momentary waste ■ and said he war, an I fdrguv him- —th OUgh desolation. Ihe great,beneficent works of it hadnt bin for . makin a fuss be .of nature are not aebioved by sudden tween the two countries, ah ef he convulsions, but by the bilent opeca- i hadnt looked as though ho could licjc tion of immutable laws, in harmony ■; me; I'd’hev|; knocked his greasy fur with each ptber and the general plan : cap into tho middlo of next month—f of creation. ?: • ,I ■ fau efhishcd had gone:with it I shouldnt - [ The phenomena in the moral- worldj heV- kcorod. : I naltcrally! feel, disap correspond to those of; the physical s ! snted, L caOunted ( on a flatten n re pine, arid are, in fact, its UnavoidableSceptipn—hut there |mht nary a flatter 4 offsprings. Thongh philosophers, for'attached (to it.; Decidedly! cool—bor- Speculation, may sepk- dcrin on ’the'frosty. -■ > rpto them, they are* practically, one j ■ I would go back, hut darsent—my. a!nd inseparable.; ■ 1 .f £ I . jfcebjo--health i wont staud a dra/<. I i [ Th»t, in the struggle for our n!a- oilers tuk cold ;cf I|]ept r in a- Common: tional existence, sudden disturbing 11'draft, and the official one they ar get-' causes should 'momentarily interrupt itiulup daoun. in the [stales, though, it and, for a time, retard.the unavoidable may save , toe. gin jral constitottioh,! consequeneca df a rebellion, provoked ; wojild ruinate .mine -|-it makes a Sha by the• effon,of an inferior civilization kin Quaker of me' j sat thinkabout it. to against the iufluehce* Ef there was any ay to make me in-, and pressure oifa superior one must be, wnlncrablc to bagg n nuts, minnow ri expected; but to suppose that these [fles, comickol shells’, ;,url sich like gear consequences can thereby bo, porma- jftwpnid bo different. Ef *thcy could' nonfly avoided,.would be both tibsurd j!pufi>me into a dry dcbke—for instance and pusillanimous. ,In a war, whether —and turn pic' auu iron-clad, 'so’s I between- two forci"h(natlons,(or he-|waA sure nothiri could hurt’ 1110- —why, tween sections df•'the.'.edmo-.’countt jy,-||l’djjcsbaS lives go ratnind buttin dth nothiiig can ,bo more naturai'than for mr folks as th ink the Monitor some unforsccn circumstances’ to fa- |fme would suit pie—.hnt my phisical vor, at times;.One or the, other ;.|ioiporal systcinjis to valoPable—jjinev er, ifor a skilful general to obtain sijg- ierripint of view—to be exposed in a nal ! advantages over equal, of, ever. Son protected sate* of 1 aCnr. j superior numbers. But,.these .causes i,Do yon suppose t icy would draft do not operate permanently,ami even f moref l Went back ? 1 skendy think ; the geninsof Alexander, Ciiaflernngne (twoulclbe constitbol piial, I’ve gai 11-' .and x?apole,on could not establish em- SJeil'S resident here—t n would kiwun 'pirbs ontliving thd period oftheiHivosjdpt iTte, Stkioptc. pc ’wided Tor furrir 01. their successes. i'f . [ |n|eis.' I’mjhtdb old, vds a caudydntei The rebels Have undoubtedly found jofE 1. 'under ', the . general govern 4 a man of military genius in "Stonewall” i'jno it—nobody kin, prove that I \va*s Jacket?n, and it would bc. both : wiong |-boin. in .the United £ talcs-—I. tidedto. and wicked to underrate bis-terrible ijino the Quakers— haint got teeth energy, the boldness of his jdesigiiS, ; enough bite,;a catridge —never lied und the rapidity of their’ execution f jthd niurnps—might fc tuk wjth em at 'hut,, after - all, > StonCAyall'iJackson isilgriy time —the 'smoH of •|ggrtpao\vdci , \ algdgernl, and, as such, as mu ;h,| mpkos ,nie ! sick—specially' ,>vhe-n its Subject to, the chanccs of ’war is ; mixed withilead—-sir h kimickal cam ‘jCffisar aud his fortune.” Such mpu j binntions never agreed with tno.. El may, like a b°dy in motion, acquiro j these disabilities aou t constitoot jmo a a prodigious^roomenfum j but when ' alien under the hiiyteas Korpus act, theittfin.m/Jutipk iybt ar_ aour [free institootions; good is spent.must dwindle down again'TOMbrEfTvek cohsUtootional objec their originalproportions. Tho-rcbels, | tio 1 to", gunpowder —taint; my fan it— : through smdi men as; Lee, Johnson, its a piifactory perdsinn ot natur— 4 jand ‘.Stonewall,’’ Jackson, have ac-. thr ts what it is; Ef I pre/er keepin 1 quired a great nioinonfnm, and they my human form dev ne hull, to hevin - , ; have . now an nccidcntial advantage; it bored full Of holes, so’s twould look i over us ; but tl oro is nothing in tlteir - more like a cullender than the ’noblest j condition tofeAder thein perniancnt|ly f work of’ God^-dontl show good tastpf [ equal Ito the s fugglpi thpy are now I’m willin them as is dffereiitly sot up j engaged ’in.', If we withstand their jby matur should go t> war —in fact. I [ shock now, wo, need ■ have no • appre : . want cm, to*—why ca it tlioj - be equally 1 hension that it will bo renewed ; ono.i giiferous and let ir.c t fay to liuni ? |‘Waterloo, in the end, ac-1 Here’s' jsi tooation- -a sitpoalion -of i count of a iiuudred battles. '.| , ; 'ithb distrcssedest.kinil for aujan whos I i ;aro superior to tho Souih in all * oilers bin a respected''fqller; Citizen ! (the productive’ menus of canying on Jvo lost ray own country-r-fan ■' furrin | this ‘w(ar. |Wp have th« [.best material ■ nations dbnt want me—i’m ostilichtsed j for soldiers, and our geperals, if oirt-; expatiated, and disfrt.nkinchiscd—l’m; j wittea by-the rebels, will, like Napo- Hthc Wandriii Jew of the nineteenth | Icon’s' antjagoimt,. learnt the art 'of jsenti’y. l cahtgctafcotholtanj'wherS. by; studying the causes of their , Noah’s- duv Was in >re fortiuit—rshe jrevefses. The (rebels have disposed cduM',go back —I can;— there’s no ark jof all meanswo have , for me, nor nobody to opcn the .windw not }'et exhausted a quarter of our ief there was. / ■ : [ rcaourccs. We Kayo a young; th’riv-i shall prohahly starve to death jist i n p! - °; c ‘'VO' populktion, with, the best? like tho'children'in the wood —only I pgbliciinstitutions of t lcara;ngto edu- ,dont blevo these' Kerniick robbings catq the rising generation to an eqnali- ( will take trouble to feiver me up, , fy, if not superiorit}'lq its predecessor, j Ef the last words .'df. adyin unfdrti -Iho South bavg no such meansof [ nit. will have any effect—on them who eating: m masse,Mo. that;- ;|s turn in their eyes in this direction to :usb pno of _ their own Tavorije| —1 would say dont Jo it! Better run [phrases,j“if their gentlemen perish [in s the risk of nineteen drafts—better ,tho present struggle,” they no stand ycr clianCe of hevin your bones .mcaiis of renewmg or iroplc.nishjng? biled an made irito ornymonts to adorn ithe caste. The future, therefore, ;is’’ shc-seceshers, thai; to find yerself.’a all bright for us ; ifis da«k and gloomy , strnngorin this unaccountably strange fbr the rebels,and the thiakiagi t m6n j land. I: _ H* => • °f the South know it. lienee their, I’ve tried [every method—except desperation, and their spasmodic effort | work—to get an ’honest livin. here, to stun us by a sudden blow. C , rv- ■ i. j ■ *.; | ; i r-.i ;■ ETEAN SPIKE., i 1 p. S. ; The shady she 1 critter, Who (thrcptetufrrrpnless sutbin turns,, up irighi a.^*^— to bekim the pardoner of : Hbw to be Happier. [ I ; ■ Said bio fr ■' ht' j aid n venerable farmer, some eighty i years !of age, to a relative who lately jnsitedhim; “I have lived On this farm for 'over half a i centur}’.-. I have - no desire to change my, residence as long as I live- on earth. I have no desire to be any richer than I now am. • 1 have worshipped the'God of mj* fath ers with th a sanjo people for more than forty years. Boring, that’ period t bav(, ! ,v 8 ; “So’ to the Jowa’Cld Cannaan stood ” ' i v ; : , -‘U ’I r E.g.’. The Harrisburg Tatrioi , anticpating t an invasion ot bur State by the rebels in Maryland, Ibds figures.up the die- tahecs frthn Fredrick, in that ■Stale to.. the principle tOwnsin our,State.upon theSputbern border: ■= ’ - j V i ' ‘‘Frederick: City, where a portion pf ;t|)o rebel invading army ,is now, is , luttecrf miles Forth of. the ; Pptbbaci. ; twenty-five miles South of the. Penn sylvania line, and thirly-tlirec niiies South from Gettysburg, Hagerstown,'' ffhich they were approaching at; the. atest'.d'ates, is twenty-three.jmiles in a nortli-wcstcrlj’- direction from Freder- ick, and' twenty-jone mijes, we, believe, ifrom Ghambersburg—so that a forced inarch of one. day might- bring the rebel diyisiopsvwi.thin gprishptjdf twO, Of otT.lprincipai’i-bovder town?! ,Wo ■ shall hear shortly—but wo feel pretty sanguine that the-thunder bolts w"dl do more barm to the invaders thad the invaded. ,-V .' 1 W aLawykr Can ])o.-l-dsoy.- H. was ' splendid , lawyer, and -could i talk dry out of their senses, lie 1 , especially noted for hissuc- , cimipal reuses, almost always: Clearing his. client. ; lie • was ,6nce counsel for - a man- debut ed of horse • stealing. He made a long. eiocptSnt. and , touching speech. Tile jury re tired but returned in a f(ivv moments., and: with tears in their eyes,’proclaim ed thh, man not - guilty! >An did .ac* duairit'anee stepped up tp the prtspiie-r and >aid -the-'danger! is I past y and now, bondr-bright.’ d n't y ousted that, horse?’’ To. which Tern replied:. ’‘Well, '-Tom, all along I've thought I took that horse j but since I’ve beard the governor’s Speech,- / don't ’ believd idkir ; ■•' . Strong ih the-- FA.iTH.-jj—A (tfcgrdf* I preacher was holding fortlr to' his con- .'upon' the subject pi' opeying - the eommond of God. ‘ Shys ho::' ‘‘Brodpm, whateber God-tells mo do dir dis bpok, (holding up the Bible.) dut.Friigwinc to, do.' if I.sop m it' ‘dat l .must? jump Jihr66?ii,a'tftp'(Trail* I v m ; gwine'to jump at it.' -Goin -throcf it'dlopgs to God, 1 jumping at it flougs' . to njej”'..;, y : 'Y ' ■ ■was vfnting in bis business par or one day, -When a noise outside disturbed hirp. He [went to tnp gallery, ahd loaning over to catch the facol.of tlto -; orderly pnj duty, asked,Who’sJtjhat A. woman, superficially-a lady,pvt- thd ihstant passingjanswered tartlyp ■ Ona of your New Orleans^sho-add oi's.”— The General retreated. dl ii j ■ ■ ■ i ■ - L-' - .1 fi^. u WJbat V isv the chief of breai| asked \ tin : examiner) at a .9ch.O(r|l examination, “The cbiei'hse of bread,” answercdlan urchin apparent ly astonished at the simplicity jof the inquSkyv “the chief use of ~bread is ti> Spread buttef and. molasses on.”; : ■i; S^T’ 1 -'“No Jilrs. Partington, “was better calculated to, judge pork than ’my poor ; husband-, -was'; when he’was a|ljving mahV 'b e { know what good, hogs were,'for he had heoji ,‘bronjgnt up among ’em from his eh ild hood.” ' , : ■ ;{ ' B®.The Secretary of- \Vs»r has stated that none of tile negro regiments now , boibg; ijaised ini Kanins, llhodejlslandf |MaasachuseUs'i'Xnd other places,;.will bo mustered inl6 the XJnited 'States Service, though .some local use ckh probs.bly bo made of them. beat idea' of weight was given by by an Indian who, when naked how much, he wcighedjVcpliea, ■; ••As I ani I weigh one hundred and .fifty founds, but, when! am mad It weigli a ton.” ,1 f .igi.Tho , Hon. Jo seph Hf bst§ been appointed by the•i’resideni J'.udgO Avocalc General of .the. Army With the panic of colonel. Ho will enter . upon his .duties without delay. . . t tSyWhat is stronger in .death -tbaii in life ? An old yellow : legged hen; If yb i don’t, believe it, try to dissect | one e fter boiling. A *, * ’ —- ‘ • - • to a Bee: will di ti rem enoi him . The Distance." itWhy wdiiW tying a, slow, horsd post seetrJ tb tmproye ;faiBrjpja(Se.f i ise it .would make him last. ? ’' 5 /The superficial must converse! others, but thowispeanjj in ad >n, Converse With'themfceiyes. • —h—. J ■ Ufyo u do good,,forget it: if ovif 'inb’er and ropcnt Of it. i~ lU' _:J few persons bare sensd gh to'despiae the praise of a,fool. •The man whoi carries all Wbi• ■Tu wheelbarrow man. ; ;j| , •{ , H‘‘ r MB