fit? fffiiatd aim is PUB.LISHEP K Vi'lßV 1 !l.i >A \ MOUN I X (t, /, K. UUKftfi | A Si) gjffl W fZi If LI ANA St., opflusite the Mlengel Ilonse 15H \ >FC) Hl>, P£N N'A TKBMS: £2, GO n year if paid strictly JB advance. not paid within six months #2.80. ft' not iai6.-6m. e. F. MEYERS.. J. W. DICK EtiSOK. \ I AVERS A DICKERSON, IVI ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BBDFORD, PJSSN'A., Office same as formerly occupied by Hon. IV . I'. -( hell, two doors oast of tho (Jazette office, will I ractice in the several Courts of Bedford county. Pensions, bounties and back pay obtained and the uvehaso of Real Estate attended.to. May 11, '66—lyr. J OHN T. KEAGY, . j ATTORN EY AT LAW. BEDFORD, Penx'A., i iffcr? to give satisfaction to all who may en tn -i -heir legal business to him. Will collect ■mncysun evidences of debt, and speedily pro ■iro bounties and pensions to soldiers, their wi,l -•w or heir?. Office two doors west of Telegraph Dice. aprU;'66-ly. I B. CESSNA, ,). ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office with Jonx CESSNA, on Juliana a street, in the office formerly occupied by King A Jordan, and recently by Filter A Keagy. All business entrusted t" his care will receive faithful and I r nipt attention. Military Claims. Pensions, te., -necdily collected. ' Bedford, June 9,1865. i M'd. SHARP* *- V- kibe OHARPE A KEItR. p .1 r TORSE r.S-.l T-1, -t i!. Will practice in the Court? of Bedford and ad doing counties. All business entrusted to their ■?.r> will receive careful and prompt attention. P n.-ions, Bounty, Back Pay, Ac., speedily col ed from the Government. Office on JuHana street, opposite the banking h use of Reed A Fehell, Bedford, I'm iuar2:tf , ;itt.\ P.TLJFEB, Attorney at Law, Rcillord, s*n,. ' i promptly attend to all business entrusted to his care. Particular attention paid to the collection i Military claims. Office on Julianna st„ nearly ite the Mcngcl House.) june 23, 6;>.ly r. DVRBORROW ...JOHN L.VTT. OURBOKROW A LUTZ, .1 TTffK.VI- IX .IT bJIP, BKEFORP, IMt., Mill ttend promptly to all Ir. iness intrusted to ■ iv care. Collections made on the shortest no- Tht v are, also, regularly 'iceused claim Agents aid will give special attention to the prosecution • fclnins.-against the Government for Pensions, l; k Pay, Bounty, Bounty Lands, Ac. Office on Juliana strc t, on door South of the ■ Met;gel House" and nearly opposite the / hi? rare in Bedford andadjoin ;,iL conntie.". Military claims. Pensi'ms, back , "v. K r.ty, Ac. speedily coll—ted. Office with Mann A • - sng. on Jul" - . street. 2 d.v.rs sooth • f the Me: -c] II on sc. spll, 1864.—tf. AT. A. I'D NTS. ill \XTORNEY AT LAW, BR-df .KD, PA. IP -pcctfully tenders hi? profe-'si-mal services •he public. Office with J. W. Lingcnfclter, ! ..on Juliana street, two doors South of the ..-r i P House " Dec. 9. 1864-tf. t/" IM M K I.L AXI >ldX give satisfaction. lie also keeps on hand and for sale B'A TOU TS. CLOCKS, and ,1E WELIi >'. tif Office with Dr. J. A. Mann. my 4 I n. [nov3ljr | kAXIIvL BOKDKH, ' " PITT STHKKT, TWO noons WK.ST OF THB EKO ROIIN HOTI.L, BKE K mo, PA. w AT' lIMAKER AND DEALER IX ,TKWKL RY. SPECTACLES. AC. He keeps on hand a stock of tine Gold; and Sil ver \\ a tehee, Spectacles of Brilliant Double Rcfin- S'l Classes, also Scotch Pebble (Masses. Hold " aft h Chains, Breast Pins, Finger Rings, heat qual.tyof Uold Pens. Tie will supply to order say thing in his line not on hand, apr. 28, 1865—ss. AP.UIT CANS ANI) SEALING WAX, at B. Me. BLYMYEH A CD'S. L"tNli-DUST PARLOR STOVES, (S, ,r's ■L Patent) at I;. V :|,YMYEIt At • DIiRBORROW JL H'TZ Editors and Proprietors. fodvm The following licautiful littlepoem was published in our paper of March 1A 1800. It was read and commended for its beauty at the time by an elderly christian lady whose spirit was then in view, and passed soon thereafter to the''better land." We republish it now by request of her friends. —Ens. SOONER OH LATER. nv H.uiKiFT s. rnksrorr. Sooner of* later the storm shall beat Over my slumber from head to feet; Sooner or later the wind shall rave In the long grass above my grave. J shall not heed them where I lie. Nothing their sound shall signify, Nothing the headstone's fret of rain, Nothing to me the dark day's pain. Sooner or later the sun shall shine With tender warmth on that mound of mine Sooner or later, in summer air, Clover and violet blossom there. I shall not feel in that deep laid rest The sheeted iigh fall nil over mv breast; Nor ever note in those hidden hours The wind-blown breath of the tossing (lowers. Sooner or later the stainless snows Shall add their hush to my sweet repose; Sooner or later shall slant and shift And heap my bed with drizzling drift. Chill though that frozen pall shall seem, Its touch no colder can make the dream That rocks not the sweet and sacred dread Shrouding the city of the dead. Sooner or later the bee shall come And fill the noon with his golden hum : Sooner or later on half poised wing, The bine-bird's warble about me ring. Sing and chirrup and whistle with glee, Nothing his music means to mo ; None of these beautiful things shall know •How soundly their lover sleeps below. Sooner or iatcr. far out in the night, The stars shall over me wing their flight; Sooner or later n.y darling dews Catch their white sparks iu their silent, ooze. Never a ray part the gloom That wraps rue round in the kindly tomb; Peace shall be perfect for lip and brow Sooner or later—Oh ! why not now? : — ■#**-. TIT 1 " ' .JOY COMETH IN THE iWORNTNG. BY "WILLIAM Cl' LLK>" BRYANT. - Oh, deem not they are best alone Whose lives a peaceful tenor keep, For (rod, who pities men, hath shown A ble.-siug for the eyes that weep. The light of smiles shall fill again The lifis that overflow with tears; And weary hours of woe and pain Are promises of happier years. There is a day t>f satiny rest For eve-y dark and troubled night, And grief may liid<' an evening guest, But joy shall conse with every light. Nor let the good man's trust depart, Though life its common gifts deny : Though with a pi (reed and broken heart. And spurned of men he goes to die. For God Bath marked each sorrowing day. Aud numbered every secret tear, And heaven's long age of bliss shall pay For all his children suffer here. TIIE SEWAitD-JOHSSON REAC TION. We make the following extracts from a very abl a ricle with the above title, by James Ru .-e*Lowell, in the current number of the Ao/f/i ArunicuL liwicw. HOW TO TREAT TIJK SOtTTH. It is alleged by i. ekless party orators that those who <-k for euaranties before read mitting the :-ee ded States, wish to treat them with harshness, if cot with cruelty. Mr. Thaddeu - Stevem is triumphantly quo ted, as if his foolish violence fairly repre sented the political opinions of the Union party. They might as well be made responsible for his notions of finance. We are quite willing to let Mr. Stevens be pair ed off with Mr. Vallsmdigham, and to believe that neither i- a fair exponent of the average sentiment of his party. Cal ling names should bo left to children with wh in, a: with too largo a class of our political speakers, it seems to pass for argu ment. \Ve believe it never does so with the people ; certainly not with the intelli gent, who make a majority among them, unless (as in the case of "Copperhead") there l>e one of those hardly to be defined realities behind the name which they are HO quick to detect. We cannot say that we have any great sympathy for the particular form of miidne-- which di covers either a "martyr." or a "pure hearted patriot," or even a "lofty statesman" in Mr. Jefferson Davis, the latter qualification of him bav in/ been among the discoveries of the Lou don Timet when i thought his side was going to win ; but we can say that nothing has surprised us more, or seemed to us a more striking evidence of the humani zing influence of democracy, than the entire absence of any tcniDcr that could lie called revengeful in the people of the North toward their late enemies. If it be apart of that inconsistent mixture of purely per sonal motives and more tiian legitimate executive action which Mr. Johnson is pleased to eali his "policy," if it be a part ol that to treat the South with all the loui eney that is short of tbily and all the eoricil-. iation that is short of meanness, then we were advi iv-ates of it before Mr. Johnson. Whil- he wa* yet only ruminating in his vindictive mind, sore with such rancor as none but a "plebeian." as he used to call hilnself, can feel against Ithreoeiuisuperiors, •no only really agrarian proclamation ever put forth by any legitimate ruler, and w inch was countersigned by the now suddenly "conservative" Secretary of State, we were iu favor of measures that should look to governing the South by such means as the South itself •ff cried or could he made to afloid. It is lit. .lata, a part of the A LOCAL AND GKNMKAL MIWSI'AI'KR, DTTOTKI) TO I'OI.ITICS, F.DITATION. I.ITKKATUHH AMI) MORALS. South, we reckoned the colored people! bound to us By every tie of honor, jutfee and principle, hut we never wished to wink out of sight the natural fwlings of then suddenly deprived of what they conceived : I to be their property ; of men.' too. whom we respected for their courage and endu rance even in a bad cause. But we believed then, as wc believe now, and as < vent* have justified us in believing, that there could be no graver error than to flatter our own feebleness _ and uncertainty by calling it magnanimity, a virtue whieh does not scorn the_ society of patience and prudence, hot which cannot subsist apart from courage and fidelity to principle. A people so hoy i.-U and conceited as the Southern-: s have always shown themselves to be Unwilling ever to deal with facts, hut only with' their own imagination of them, would bp to inter prct indecision as cowardiee, if not as an unwilling tribute to that superiority of which men who really possess it are the last to boast. They have learned nothing from tho war but to hate the men who subdued them and to misinterpret and misrepresent the causes of their subduing ; and even now. when feeling has been steadily growing in the rest of the country for the la*t nine months, deeper and more intense than any during tho war, because mixed with an angry sense of unexpected and treacherous disappointment, instead of setting their strength to the rebuilding of tlmir shattered social fabric, they are waiting as they wait ed four years ago, for a division in the North which will never come, and hailing in Am drew Johnson a scourge of God who is to avenge them in the desolation of our cities ! Is it not time that these laeu were trans planted at least into the nineteenth century, and, if they cannot be suddenly Americani zed, made to understand something of the country which was too good fur tbeni. even though at the cost, of a rude shook for their childish self conceit? Is that a properly reconstructed Union iu the Southern half of. which no Northern man's life is safe except at tlje sacrifice of his conscience, his free dom of speech, of everything but bis love !of money ? To our minds the providential purpose of this intervention of Mr. Johnson in our affairs is to warn us of the solemn duty that lies upon u* in this single crisis iu our history when the chance is offered us of stamping our future with greatness or con tempt, and which requires something like statesmanship in the people themselves, as well as in those who act tor them. The South iiisi.-ted upon war, and had enough of it- : it is now our turn to insist that the peace we have conquered .shall be so settled as to make war imp --iblo for the future. THE PROSPERITY OF TUT, SOUTH. But bow is this to be don ; ? The road to it i> a very plain one. We shall gain all we want if W' make the South really pros perous ; ibr with prosperity will come roach , schools, churches, printing presses, indus try. thrift, intelligence, ana security oflifo and property. Hitherto the prosperity of the South has been factitious , it has been a prosperity of the middle Ages, keeping the many poor that a few liii-bt snow their wealth in the barbai l niufLshnwy equipages and numerous servants., and spend iu fun ign cities the wealth that should have built up civilization and uiadc way for refinement at home. There were no public libraries, no college worthy or the name ; there was no art, no science, still worse, no literature !>u(, riiuim - 3 ; tin re was no desire for them. Wc do not say it in reproach, wc are simply sta ting a tact, and are quite aware that the N rth is far behind Eurcq e in tlie.-e things. But we are not behind Lor in the value wo .v, t upon them, uc even before her in tho price vre are willing to par* for them, and are in the way to get them. The South was not in that way. could not gel into it, indeed so long a - the labor that made wealth was cut oil from any interest in its expenditure, nor had any goal for ,-ueh hopes as soared away from the dreary I . v'el of its life-Ion? drudgery, but iu the ' the world beyond it. We are not Lie.. to w at may be said on the other side, nor to that fatal picturesqueqesa so attractive to sentimental mind*, and so' mehuigholy to thoughtful ones, which threw a charm ov. r c.'rtain exceptional modes of Southern life among the older families, in Virginia and South Carolina. But there are higher and tiianlici kinds of beauty.—barer and sterner some vv iuld ea'l them, —with I;.?* lofty iQUfigcd edges, certainly, than the Wolf's Crag pie turesquoness which carries the mind with pensive indolence toward the past, instead of stirring it with a on.se of present life or bracing it with the hope of future op portunity, and which veils at once and betrays the decay of ancient civilizations. Unless life is arranged for the meie benefit of the noycli-T, .what right Ipiu these bits of last century Europe here ? Even the vir tues of the South were some of them ana chronisms pan i even those that were not existed side by side with an obtusenes. of moral sense that, could make a hero of Scmmes, and a barbari. m that could starve prisoners by the thousand. THE ADVANCE AND THE OFFICE OF AMERI CAN DEMOCRACY. Some philosophers, to be sure, plead with us that the Southerners are remark;; ble fur their smaller hands and feet, though so good an observer as Thackeray pronoun ced this to be true of the whole American people ; but really we cannot think such arguments as this will give any pause to the inevitable advance of that democracy, some what rude and raw as yet, a clumsy hoy giant, and not too well-manner.J; whose office is novertbelcfca to make the world ready for the true second coming of Christ in the practical supremacy of his doctrine and its incarnation after so many centuries of burial in the daily lives of men. We have been but dimly, if at all, conscious of the greatness of our errand, while we have already accomplished a part of it in bringing together the people of all nations to see each nth r no longer as aliens or ene mies, but as equal partakers ot tire highest earthly dignify,—a common tnuihijtk We have been three 1 whether we wotil 1 or no, first to endure, then to tolerate, and at last to like men from aff-the lour corners of the world, and too sec that each added n certain virtue of his own to that precious amalgam of which wc are in due time to fashion a great nation. We are now brought face to face with our duty toward one of those dus ky races that have long satin ihe shadow of the world; we are to be taught to see the Christ disguised also in these, and to find at 1: t that a part of oui salvation is inextri cably knit up with the nc --sity of doing them justice and leading th-un light. This is no sentimental fancy ; it I* written , in plain characters on the very surface of i things We have done everything to get rid ot the negro ; and the more wc did, the , more ho was thru-t upon us in every ppssi-i ble relation of life and n ;est of thought. One thing we have not t.. 1. a spell before which he would vanish away from tis at mice'by taking quietly the place, whatever it be, to which Nature has aligned him. Wc have not. acknowh dyrd him as our brother. Till wc have, done ->ho v. ill always he at ffiur ol?; uv, ; rpetu.d discomfort to lion-elfjt. i u-. No.v this one thing that BEDFORD. Pa., FRIT>AY, NOVEMBER 9. ISGG. will give u.B no rest is. precisely what the i South, if We leave the work ot ceconstruc- j tion in their hands, will moke is impossible for us to do : and yet it must be done ere America can penetrate the Southern States. It is for this reason, and not with any desire of establishing a standing garrison of four hundred thousand loyal voters in the South that we insist on the absolute neej. ?ity of justice to the black man. Not that we have not a perfect right to demand the reception of such a garrison, but we wish the South to govern itself and this it will never be able to do, so it will be governed as heretofore by i its circumstances, if we allow it to replace i slavery by the dwenfranehiseinent of color, and to make an Ireland out of what should be the most productive, populous, and hap py part of the Union. \Va £mny evade this manifest; duty of ours f'roui indolence or indifference or selfish haste ; but if there is one truth truer than another, it is that no man or nation c\er neglected a duty that was not sooner or later laid upon them in a i heavier form, to be done at a dearer rate- This i something that altogether . trans - ootids any ]>artisan polities. It is of com paratively little consequence to us whotlier Congress or the President carry the day, provided only that America triumph. That is, after all, the real question. On which side is the future of the country,—the fu ture that we cannot escape if we would, but which our action may embarrass and retard? If wc had looked upon the war as a mere trial of ph.\ deal strength between two rival sections of the country, wo should have been the first to oppose it as a wicked waste of treasuio and blood. But it was something much deeper than this, and so the people of the .North instinctively recognized it tote from the first; instinctively wc say, and net 'deliberately at first, but before it was over their understandings had grasped itstrue meaning as an effort of the ideal America, which was to them half a dream and half a reality, to cast off an alien element. It was this ideal something, not the less strongly felt because vaguely defined, that made them eager, as only what i above sordid motives can. to sacrifice all that they had and all that they were rather than fail in its attainment- And it is to men not yet cool ed from the white-heat of this passionate mood that 31r. Johnson comes with his pal try offer of "my policy,' in exchange for the logical consequences of all this devotion and this sacrifice. What is any one man's policy and especially any one weak man's policy, against the settled drift of a nation's convic tion, c nscience, and instinct? The Ameri can people had made up not only their minds but their hearts, and no man who knows anything of human nature could doubt what their decision would be. They wanted only a sufficient obstacle to awaken them to a full consciousness of what was at stake, and thai obstacle the ob-tin ate vanity of the 1 'resident and the blindness or resentment of his prime minister have supplied. They are fully rested to have the great stake they played for and won. and that stake was the Americanization of all America, nothing more and nothing less. Mr. John sop told us in New York, with so profound a mis eonf ption of the feeling of the Northern Stales as was only possible to a vulgar mind aud that mind a Southern one, that the South had set up slavery as its stake and lost, and that now the North was in dang' 1 of losing the -lake it had risked on re ob struction in the national debt. Mr. JuLn -wo is still, it would seem, under that (ft 1 i sion which led the South into the war, namely, that it was that section of the coun try which was the chief element in its wealth and greatness. But.no Northern man, who so long as he lives, will be obliged to pay his fine of taxes for the abolition of slavery which was forced upon us by the South is likely to think it very hard that the South should be compelled to furnish its shan to ward the common burden, or will be afraid that the loyal States, whose urgent demands compelled a timid Con. rc.-s at last to impose direct taxes, will be tumble to meet their ob ligation- in the future as in the past. PERCIVAL. The following bit of literary gossip eou ceraing James G. Percival, (the Mad Poet,) wilVsefve to give our venders an idea of the eccentricities of one of our most gifted poets; \\ o dent believe tueve ever lived such a man as Percival; Croesus in sou), iu intel lect and learning; and J lives every way else. Think of a man who wrote in one instant thus : "I have added to the mountain of books ; and the myriad of authors. But I some times think I had better be annihilated, books and ail, than be the means of making fools gape, and girls cry, as I -perhaps may.' And then presently ; "There is one employment, however, which I would wish to place above interest or ambition, which I would choose to regard as holy—poetry. * • With euch feelings I can no longer look to my poetry as a source of emolument. I cannot consent to use it for such a purpose. I can only regard it as the vestal fire in my adytum. I must meet the world with weap ons of a more earthly temper." And yet in the midst of all he wa living the life of \ STRO'I a;UN({ POET. l'rofe- or Ticknor tells me that, while a guest at hi- house in Boston at tbi time, Percival's ways were peculiar. Sitting at tin table opposite Mrs. Ticknor. he would converse with her husband and sometimes with her with 'the greatest fluency, but tilth bis eyes d" enca.-t upon the plate, always avoiding the elancoof .Mrs. Ticknor'; eye: i and this was bis habit always among fcjna!-. The sarnie shrinking from Woman w- also seen in the drawing room. At the home of his two 80-ton friends he was probably more at ease than anywhere else. J have been told that this dropping of the eye. ft while he apparently raw everything) was observable as lie walked the street wrapped in his camlet cloak, "the ohierv .! of all ob servers." While on his Geological Survey of Connecticut, he was often obliged to pick up a ifoal or a lodging where ho could: and ■ lus dress was-upt always 'smV'as licated hi* cbgracleraud position. Thr. ii . hnut life he never polished hi - shoes, and his pants and hat generally showed th.it they had been used the full time of rdrvu . Clad in such a habit he pros, uted himself one dron ing at the door of a young ladies' seminary, a-king, as he, was souie aisi.au e from the village, for supper and a night.' lodging. The lady principal met him at the door and was not inclined to grant his req'nest. He urged it, however, as he wa- tire I and hun gry, and she finally yielded, _ following him into the kitehr i, au 1 remaining while he ate his supper. (.'Lowing him more minutely, she thought he !< Are Thaulv giving day, wh :-n it was known that he must be almost nfieriny for the want, of fi-od, the janitor of the hospital sent bi:u a; ■ ncrous dintr r. It remain t at his door untouched. A ki • -uiao once paid Lha two dollars for information which ho had received from him. He had repeatedly refused to receive money; bat.it wm slipped into bis band as tb- ■ with thd expectation' that Pete 1 civ ; l r - it. tn at w days, how |ev • i,-o'wa* retamed through free siETi KEMEMT OF MB. U% It PER. j P.y IKry ■. l.'-q.. '• *essor of the 16th A- ;-a. PI ..Ft . .. m; yivania, has i be;: , •• •! d \>y ■ lea. A. 11. Coffroth, of | Son:- - Mr. H ■.•per addresses the fol ! lowisig card to the public in the last nniii : her of his paper, the Adams artniefit iimking inquiry whether there would 1 v remove'*, 'i'iio prompt reply to me was—"not exempt for cause; and an As ?e?-or, who has so - .si? f'aetori'y ncrforined hi* duties as you have need have no appre j heusions of a removal. " Thi* clear rocorro or I. =*. 1 was there- | fere out for operations. I support- j ■•d Gen. Geary. I v.- told indirectly that i -i. mu - uot be. I tiu conftinuod to silo port him, as L was b )und by honor and feel i 1 in;t to do. This was my first, offence. The j • next operation was, a i invitation to attend j (he I'liiiad' luhia Convention. Thi* I also | declined. 'l'hc next was, a demand for j money'to support their cause. This I de- ! ' (Mined sl.-o—and spurned the bribe—feeling j that I could not, a - as .honorable man, sac- j rifke my political priric fifes for any office, j The consequence wa*. that I imnie liatcly | received notice from "'a-hington. to hand : ' over the papers, Ac., of the office, on the :><)th of October. T.LI*, a 1 said above, • 1 was dan - on Saturday o.ndthey arc now on the way to Sonier.- ■t. I am, the'retyre, *■ ! no longer Assessor of the 10th District. The , reasons for the removal will be found above. ' I regret, I acknowledge, to lose the office ; 1 but 1 could not barter my uamc and ' principle.- tor office. EefFw citizen*, was! ! not right ? GOT. iS'i'oN K, of lowa, thinks he will not cs.il an extra re.?, ton, of the Legislature to j acl up. u the constitutional amendment, as the latter may be superseded by measures j better suited to the exigencies of the time*. IT is claimed that the salt mine* of Nevada are 'he best in the country. One b'd is reported to cover fifty-two thousand •vre- yieidin-r two million, bushel* annually . -oh, niuipercent, tine. VOLUME 39 t STO 4S. MORAL GEMS. | Hope to-the soul is as an anchor to a ship in a dark night, on an unknown coast, and I amid a boisterous ocean. It is the most em j inent of all the advantages which religion ; now confers, and it is the universal eomf'ort- I cr; and if it were entertained with that full } persuasion which faifh demands, it would j banish discontent, extinguish grief, t,nd ren j der life much more pleasant than it gener ally ja. i If you have great talents, industry will j improve them; if moderate abilities, indus ; try will supi>ly the deficiency. Nothing is j denied to Well-directed labor, nothing is ever i to be attained without it. There is nothing which must end, to be valued for its continuance. If hours, days, months, and year- pass away, it is no matter what hour, what day, what month, or what year we die. The applause of a good actor is uuc to him at whatever scene cf tho piny he makes his exit. It is thus in the life of a man of sense. A short life is sufficient to manifest him a man of honor and virtue. When he ceases to be such lie has lived too long; and while he is such it is of no conse quence to him how long he shall be so, pro vided he is so to his life's end. We hate some p wsons because wc do not know them; and we will not know them be cause we hate them. Those friendships that succeed to rueh aversions are usually fii m, for those qualities must be sterling that could not ODly gain our hearts, but con qaer our prejudices in. tilings far more se rious than our friendships. Thus, there arc truths which some men despise, because they have not examined, and which they will not c-xauiine, because they despise. God means tbateyery sou! which waits on him should soar. Not creep nor burrow in the muck and mire of worldliness: not crouch in abject submission as the slave of men and Hatan —but soar. When a soul binds itself to God, and lives a life of holy consecration, it is able to take wings and dwell in the atmosphere of heaven. He who is passionate and hasty generally i> honest. It is your old, dissembling hypo crite of whom you have to beware. There's no deception in a bull dog. It is only the cur that sneaks up and bites you when your back is turned. 11 LA I) OF ItICULLIEF. The Paris correspondent of the London Star, says: It appears that some of the Richelieu faui ily papers have lately come to ligibt. and have revealed the laci that the great Cardi nal's head was preserved apart from his body. The question arose, what had be come of it? The Emperor ordered search to be made, and desired that no expense -hould be spared in the effort to recover this treasure. After many months of patient research the head was found yesterday in the possession of an ancient family of Tlre tague. It was forwarded last night, (Octo ber 4th,) to the Ministers do L. Instruction I Publique. ! A friend of mine was present at the open ! ing of the box. I give yon his description verbatim. The head is in wonderful state of preservation—the whiskers, eyebrows, the imperial and moustache, of a reddish color and quite perfeet; one eyelid closed, the other half open. The flesh, of course, is black. (Ma iascitis dire. Altogether it presents the appearance of a mask, but far from un pleasing. A telegraphic message was dispatched to the Emperor in the fol lowing words: " What hto be done with the defunct Cardinal?" Ilis Majesty's re ply had not come when tnv friend left, the Ministers. The fear is that orders will be given that his Eminence is to have a decent burial, which would be a pity. Living and dead, lie was, and is. an enig ma, and as we have the jaw of Moliere to staro at, we might be allowed to gaze at his Eminence likewise. I should like to know how he felt whirling along by special train. As he rested his aching head on the velvet cushions of his gilded barge, and glided in stately pomp clown the Loire to Lyons, fol lowed by his doomed prisoners, tho Courtier Cro.v Mois, and the witty Re Thou, great would have been his amazement could a prophet have told him that centuries later the saree head would come up 1 to Paris at the pace of forty miles per hour, in a com mon packing case, at the fiat ofan Emperor of France, whose ancestor at that period was a private gentleman of Corsica. OVER-EATITWi. Health and longevity arc not the only re sults of moderation in diet. Its influence is far from being limited to the body: its effect of the mind is still more important. Julius Ore sar, constitutionally addicted to excess, when resolved on some great exploit, was accustomed to diminish his diet to an extent truly marvelous, and to this diminution he ascribed the clearness and energy of mind which distinguished him in the honr of bat tle. When extraordinary mental vigor was desired by the first Napolean, he used the samel means to attain it. To his rarely equaled moderation in diet, Dr. Franklin ascribes his "clearness of ideas" and "quick ness of perception, ' and considered his pro gress in study proportionate to the degrec of temperance practiced. While Sir Isaac Newton was composing his "treatise on Optics," he confined himself to bread and a little sack and water. Scarcely less rigid was the abstinence of Leipnitz, when pre paring some parts of his "Universal Lan guage," I)' Aubigne relates of Luther, on tho authority of Melancthon. that "a little bread and a single. herring were often his only food for the day." Indeed, he was constitutionally abstemious; and even after he had found out that heaven was not to be purchased by abstinence,jhe often contented himself with the poorest food, and would continue for a considerable time without eat in? or drinking." Dr. Chevne, a celebrated physkn, reduced himself* front thc.enor mo'tts w< i At of 44S lbs. to 140 lbs., by con fining himself to a limited quantity of vegeta bles. milk, and water as his only fopd and drink. The "result was a restoration of health and of mental vigor, and, amid pro fo9h#al: and literary labors* uninterrupted hrlth and a protracted life. An eminent man once made tbq remark, "that nobody ever repented having eaten too little. ' Americans cat t< ■ much tod fast, and too irregularly. It 1; the .-'am'" with drinking.— Iftrcn. Joinaal- NON'-PAVINO subscriber.- are thus calked to by an editor out West: " Wagons cannot run without wheels— ' mats without steam—bull toads jump with ! out logs, or newspapers be carried on ever lastingly without money, no more than a dog i can wae his tail when he has none. Our subscribers are all good; bat what good does a man's good do when it don't do you any good? We have no doubt every one thinks ! that si! have paid but him, and as we are a i clevi fellow, and thai hii£tjUjj[* matter, it will make no difference. ' Will some of our readers make a note oft hi . ■•*> RATES OF ADVERTISING. Al] advertisements for Jess than 3 months 10 s cents i c-r line for each insertion. Special notices otic half additional. All resolution* of Associa tion, communications of ft- limited or individual intcrets and notice- of marriages and deaths, ea* cecding five lines, Jt> cts. per line. All legal not.it ccs of every kind, and oil Orphans' Court and other Judicial tales, are required hy law to be pub lished in both papers. Editorial Notices 15 cents per line. All Advertising due after first insertion. A liberal discount made to yearly advertisers. 3 months. 6 months. 1 year Ono square.... V $ d.50 $ 8.00 $lO.OO Two squares 0,00 9.00 18.00 Three 5qure5.............. 8.00 12.00 20.00 One-fourth column 14.00 20.00 35.00 Half column. 18.00 25.00 45.00 One column 30.00 45.00 So.q UNDER YOUR lIAT.—LA this country, every man of sound mind is a capitalist. You, Sir Reader, of the thread-bare coat, and vacuous wallet, deny it utterly. You insist that your brain is healthy and well furnished, but intimate with a sneer that if anv conjurer will make discovery of your capita!, you will doff y< mr napless hat to him. and be his to command forever more—Sir. put on your rusty Beaver, and we will tell you where your capital is. Right under it. Wc will suppose there is common sense, a fair stock of worldly knowledge, and plenty of energy withha the circle of felt that you have just crowned yourself withal. That's capital—' l Korkuig capitar' of the best kind. If you don't think so, you are over modest and the sooner you get rid of your diffidence, the better fur you and vours. Why, man. I such a head as yours is better than a philos opher' s stone, it is an engine only requi ring to be set at work, to procure you all the comforts and enjoy menu- that a rational being can desire. As to wealth —its elements are lying in their crude state on every side of you, and only requiring persevering manipulation to convert them into the circulating medium. Indigent! With brains and health you have no right: to be indigent in a country whose magnificent resources are out of all proportion to tbcuumberof heads and hands there are to develope them. Fifty roads are open to you. Take this piece of homely ad vice. and our word for it. vonr coat hereafter shall be of glossy broadcloth, with all acces sories to match. Don't lean on friends, don't borrow, don't wait for dead men" shoes, don't tarry for something to turn up, or ten to one it will be the world's nose at your lack of pluck and industry. Employ the capital under your hat. Work it wisely, honestly, resolvedly and the returns are sure to be satisfactory. A WORD TO BOYS. —A writer in an edu cational journal, the title of which we have unfortunately lost, has the following perti nent and truthful remarks: Boys listen! The first thing you want to develop what force there is in you, is self reliance: that is, as regards your relations to man. If I were going to give a formula for developing the most forcible set of men, I should say turn them upon tbeir own re sources. with their minds well stored with moral and religious truth when they are hoys to ' 'depend on themselves and not on father." If a boy is thrown upon his own resources, at fifteen, with the world all before him where to choose and he fights the battle of life single handed up to manhood, and don't develop and average share of executive ability than there i no stuff in him worth talking about. Be may learn to plow, and sow, aud reap and mow, but this can all be dovic with machines and horses, aud a man wants to be something better than either of these. Wipe out of your vocabulary such a word as j fail, give up willing for improbable results, put your hands to the plow, or whatever tool you take to, and then drive on and never look back. Don I even sight your person to see if it is straight; ' Don't be consistent but simply true." If vau go "to see a reed shaken by the wind.' it is pretty likely you will never see anything of more consequence. Do IT WILLI THY MlGHT. —Fortune, suc cess, fame, position are never gained but by piously, o bountiful a giver been numbered among men. AN amusing fact occurred in New York on the recent visit of Gen. Grant to that city. He took a hack to conduct him to the hotel. The driver after depositing the general gave his friends the following toast: —"Here's to mceself, Dennis Connolly, the biggest man in Ameriky, hut one. I've driven the Lieu tenant General of the United States, and its more than Bobby Lge ever did 1" A SHORT time siuee tho following ap peared among the clippings of the Courier: Why is a bmird like common sense? Be cause no woman possesses it. At which a lady correspondent "goes for it" after the following fashion : Why is the author of the above like aeer tvn worn out instrument of music? Bo cu-i-e he is an abandoned lyre—(liar.) WHICH is at oooe the easiest and hardest of occupations? The musician's; for he plays when hy works, and works when he plays. Youth.—"Will you share nijrmf for Ijfo?" Practical Girl.— . "HowroftnY 't'ere :b ■ "Ui'M, sir?" V