u u I1B IS A FREEMAN WHOM THE TRUTH MAKES FREE, AND ALL ARB SLAVES BESIDE. II. A. MI1KD, rublUher. II. JOIIXSTOB, Editor. EBENSBURG, FA., THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 18G8. NUMBER 7. VOLUME 2. The Cambria Freeman WILL BE PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, At Ebensburg, Cambria Co., Pa. At the following rates, parable tcilhin three months from dte of subscribing : One copy, one year. ----- J2 00 One copy, six months, One copy, three mouths, 00 60 Those who fail to pay their subscriptions until after the expiration of six months will be charged at the rate of $2.50 per year, and those who fali to pay until after the ex piration of twelve months will be charged at the rate of $3.00 per year. Twelvo numbers constitute a quarter; twenty five, six months; and fifty numbers, one 3'ear. RATF.S OK ADVERTISING. One square, 12 lines, one insertion. Each subsequent insertion, Auditor's Notices, each, Administrator ' Notices, each, Executors' Notices, each, ibtray Notices, each, $1 00 25 2 00 2 50 2 50 1 50 1 yr. $0 00 1 2 00 15 00 25 00 " ::r, oo COX'O 3 wos. 6 vios. 1 square, 12 lines, $ 2 50 $ 4 00 2 squares, 24 lines. 5 00 8 00 a squares, 36 lines, 7 00 10 00 Quarter column, 0 50 14 00 Third column, 1100 10 00 Half column. 14 fO 25 00 One Column. 'j: 00 35 00 l'rofe.isi.Jiial or Business Cards, nut exceeding 8 lines, with paper, C 00 Obituary Nutlets, over six hues, ten cents per lino. Special and business Notices tight cents per line for first insertion, and four cents for e.ich subsequent insertion. Resolutions of Societies, or communica tions ot a personal nature must be paid fur as advertisements. JOB PRINTING. We have made arrangements by which wo can do or have done all kinds f plain and fancy Job Printing, such as F.tioks, Pamphcts, Show Cards, Bill and Letter Heads, Handbills, Circulars, &c, in the best style of the art and at the most moderate prices. Also, all kinds of Ruling. Blank looks, Book Binding, &c, executed to order as good as the best and as cheap as the cheapest. A XOTJIEIl NEW WRINKLE ! BOOTS AaD S h'OS Foil ALL AGES AXI) BOTH SEXES. Iu addition to his large stock of the beet Eastern made SHOES, BUSKINS, GAITERS, &c, Fur Ladies' and Childress Wear, the subscriber m ju.-t added to his assort ment a full and complete invoice of Boots and Shoes for Men and Youths, which he will not only warrant to be supe rior to any goods of like character now beiDg i;fered in this market, but Tastly better in rvery respect than the slopshop work with which the country is flooded. Remember that I offer rro article for sale which I do not guarantee to te regular custom made, of the tree material and superior finish, and whthe I do not pretend to compete in price with the dealers in auction goods. I know that I oau furnish BOOTS. SHOES, Ac, that will give vtore service for less money than any other dealer in this community, and I pledge myself to repair, free of charge, any article that may give way after a reasonable time end reasonable usage. Everybody is respectfully invited to call and examine my stock and learn my prices. The HuhBcriber is also prepared to manu facture to order any and all work in his line, of the very best material and workmanship, and at prices as reasonable as like work en le obtained anywhere. Ficnch Calf. Com mon Calf, Morocco and all ether kinds of Leather constantly on hand. (C7 Store on Main street, Ecxt door to Crawford's Hotel. JOHN D. THOMAS. Kbrnshnrg. Sopt. 26, 1867. JECURK THE SHADOW ERE THE SUJ3T.AXCE FADES. PICTURES FORTHE MILLION. Having located in Ebcnsburg, I would re spectfully inform the public that I am pre pared to execute PHOTOGRAPHS in every Htylo of the ait, from the smallest card Pic ture to the largest sized for framing. Pic tures taken in any kind of weather. 1' HOT 00 RAP IIS PAINTED IX OIL INDIA IXK OR WATER COLORS. Every attention given to the taking of Children's pictures, but io clear weather only . Special attention is invited to my utoek of large PICTURE FRAMES and PHOTO GRAPH ALBUMS, which I will bUll cheap er than they can be bought elsewhere in town. Copying and Ejdarging done on rea sonable terms. I &sk comparison and defy competition. Thankful for past favors, I solicit a con vince of the same. Gallery on Julian street, two doors south of Town Hall. T. T. SPENCE, Photographer. jenburg, Nov. 14, 18G7. RB?SBURG MARBLE WORKS. TUav,nS purchased the Marble Works on High street, one door east of T. W. Wil !ani Haruward Store, and supplied myself WUli an extensive stock of TOMBSTONES, I am now prepared to furnish all work in my line at the lowest city pricet and feel confident that I can render entire satisfac tion to all who favor me with their orders. Parties desiring to purchape Tombstones are respectfully invited to call and examine spe cimens on exhibition at my shop. Orders from a distance will be promptly attended to, and work delivered where desired. Jan. 30. 1868. OTTiNGER REED. IURTA1N PIXTUKE! lias no superior M n ihe WoridH It fa DroTiounoofl JL fiT,.t jiVa have used ft. and it is predicted that it will supersede all other Curtain Fixtures now in use. For sale by GEO. HUNTLEY. A THRILLING ADVENTURE. The town of Liverpool, in Nova Scotia, situated about sixty miles from Halifax, is a place of some magnitude for a colo nial outpost. It is, and always has been, remarkable for the neatness and comfort of its houws, for the activity and enter prise of its people, and for the wealth and well being of all who choose to be indus trious and incline to lay up worldly goods. The intercourse with Halifax, The capital of the province, was, at the period of which we speak, chiefly kept up by a smart and dashing little craft, called the Liverpool Packet commanded by Cap tain Bass, which plied weekly between the two places throughout the spring and summer months, laying up during the severity of the winter, when the commu nication with Halifax was, for the most part, limited to a weekly post by land. About the year 1815 or 181G, as the season for navigation was drawing to a close, a great number of passengers went to Halifax, as was the custom, to replen ish their stores for the winter, while many heads of families proceeded thither to purchase clothing, groceries, &c, for their private winter stock ; and as this was to be the last trip of the season, the halo barque was crowded with some forty or fifty parsengers, chiefly fathers and mothers of large families who were left at home The voyage to Halifax was prosperous. The vougers made their purchases, and in due time the Liverpool Packet was ready to return. All the passengers em barked in good spirits and the barque sailed cheerily down the harbor, and proceeded for her destination. A few hours after her departure there sprang up one of those terrific northwest ers, so well known on the coast of Nova Scotia, and blowing with the utmost fury for several days, attended with intense frost. It was clear that no vessel could keep the coast ; she must either put herself before ten wind and run out to sea, or all perish miserably by wreck and the rigor of an atmosphere twenty or thirty degrees below zero. A change of weather so sudden, so severe, and so unexpected, gave rise to great fears for the safety of the little packet and the next post by land was anxiously waited for by friends and relatives at both towns. Ti c post at length arrived, but brought no tidings of the Liveipool Packet ; another post and another came in, and yet no news of the missing vessel. Search was then made alursg the shore to sec if the wreck could be found, but not a ves tige could be discovered. The bold began to doubt, and the timid to despair, aud the opinion was at last arrived at that the vessel had been blown olF the coast, or sunk in a gale. If the latter, she and her passengers were, of course, irretrievably gone, as no person ci u'd live in boats in such weather ; if the former, there was still hope that the next arrival from Ber muda would bring some intelligence. We will not attempt to describe the deplorable state of mind of the people in the once happy little town, for nearly all had a relative on board, either father, mother, brother or sister. Prayers were put up in the churches, and a gloom mantled over the countenances of every one. Advices were in due time received from Bermuda, but nothing was heard from the little packet and her passengers. Ac counts were also received from several of the West India Islands, but still without intelligence of the missing vessel. Three months at length passed awa', and the packet was given up for lost. Thore who had friends on board went into mourning, and prayers were even offered up for the r?pose of the souls of the departed ; and so connected were the different families with each other through out the town that the Sunday on which all who had friends put on black, put nearly the entire population in the habiliments of woe. Four months had now passed away; the mourners, notwithstanding their irre parable los5, were becoming reconciled to their bereavement; for there is a philoso phy in the human heart which teaches us to bear with fortitude great losses, when those of less severity are met with impatience. All hope had now fled ; the vessel had, without doubt, foundered and gone to the bottom, with all on board ; but when, or in what pait of the vast ocean, was to remain veiled in the secrets of the deep until the sea should give up its dead. Sixteen weeks had now elapsed, when one fine morning in the spring some sea faring people down in the Fort descried a strange brig approaching the harbor. She attracted attention from the circumstance that, although a stranger, she was navi gated by one who well knew the entrance of the harbor, for the came in without pilot or shortening sail. The quick eye and watchful habit3 of seamen could not lightly pass over such a circumstance, and the report of a stranger vessel coming in soon spread through the little town, and many persons assembled. The best tele scopes were ".put in requisition, but none could make out who or what the stranger was. As she drew nearer to the anxious group, her deck was discovered to be crowded with male and female passen gers. "Ah!".' exclaimed one who had a certain indefinable hope, as that hope sank within Lim, "au emigrant ship, after all," and a. deep sigh came from his bosom ; for he had a uear and dear friend on board the little Packet, "n emigrant ship !" said another ; "how can any captain of an emigrant ship know so well his way into this harbor Besides, emigrant ships do not come to Liverpool." pause ensued, during which one with a quick eye was gazing through the best glass the town afforded ; be was on one knee, resting his telescope, when he suddenly sprang on his feet, and declared that Captain Bass was among the passengers ! "Nonsense I" was the incredulous cry ; "Captain Bass and the Liverpool Packet are at the bottom of the sea, and will there remain till the day of resurrection." Not daunted by their incredulity, he said, "Give me the trumpet ; I will speak the brig. In a few moments she will be near enoug h. What brig is that ?" The response was given. . "Arc TOU Capt. Bass ?" " Tt," was the reply. A few words sufficed to reveal that the vessel had been blown olF, and for many days went before the wind with great rapidity. as the gale abated, Capt. Bass found lie conld better reach the West Indies than he could get back with so small and so crowded a vessel. Us-ng their provisions economically, and slaking their thirst with c';d.r inJ the barrels cf apples that were on board, they reached Barbadoes. There the captain sold his sloop, bought the brig, and came back safe with all lis jjosscngers The joyful news flew through the town with the impetuosity of lightning, and ere the vessel could be brought to the wharf the entire population of the place had as sembled to meet and embrace there friends. It would be in vain to describe such a scene all were in mourning yet all with a smile of joy beaming in their coun tenances. A3 the long lost mends and relatives leaped on shore, fathers, mothers and brothers were locked in each other's arms, and then the smiles became tears of joy. But how was such a scene to end how could it, or how ought it to end, with a moral and Christian people ? There is iu the dep-hs of the fountains of the human heart an ever living spring, from which flows its purest and most sacred emotions There arises the principal of rcligio.i, the sense of accountability to God and love for all goodness. This impulsive feeliug came fjrth in a gush of spontaneous grati tude ; and the tears and sobs bad scarcely ceased, when, with one sudden impulse, the whole assemblage sank on their knees, and in a burst of pious fervor poured out thanks to the great and merciful Being who had so singularly preserved them and who holds us in the hollow of His hand. This extraordinary circumstance is not within the recollection of many persons, but a fw still survive in Nova Scotia who have a distinct remembrance of it. In its relation we may have omitted many details, but the general outline is entirely true. A Lake Dried Ur. A few days ago the water from Ottawa lake, in Monroe county, Michigan, all at once disappeared. The Coldwater Gazette states that the water had begun to subside for some days, and the teamsters who carried stoue from the lake noticed that the holes at which they watered their cattle were crowded with fish. They increased in numbers, both large and small, the former having their mouths wide open, and soexhaustod that the people caught them with their hands. The work cf quarrying and hauling stones was soon abandoned, and in a short time scores of teams and hundreds of men might Le seen on and around the lake. The men, with hand spikes, crowbars, and axes, were busily engaged in cutting and raising huge pieces ot ice, and then stooping down and lift ing the fish, Eome of which were dead, some alive, and some froxen fast in the ice, for the water ha ing departed from the lake by some subterranean passage, the vast sheet of ice lay on the bottom. For three days immense qantities of fish were carried away, principally pickerel and bass, while vast quantities of white fish are left to rot on the ice and in the mud for mud and ice are all that is left of Ottaway lake. Numerous pieces of the ice are left standing on edge, like so many grave stones. The lake, or rather its bed, or gravevard, presents a novel scene. Some say the water will soon re turn by the same source by which it do parted, bringing a fresh supply of fish with it for Lake Erie is supposed to be its headquarters. Meantime the farmers in the vicinity greatly feel the loss of the departed waters. About seven years ago this lake departed in the same way, and old men say it departs and returns peri odically. In the Caucasus Mountains, at a place called KuJaco, it is stated a well of naphta has been discovered. At the depth of two hundred and seventy-four feet from the surface the liquid was first struck, and for a month gave a supply of fifteen hundred barrels daily. Since then a fresh source has been met, and the naphta rises with force to the height of forty feet above the grouud, the jet being four inches in diameter, and delivering a daily supply of eight thousand barrels. Josh Billings Rays : "There are a great multitude of individuals who are, like blind mules, anxious enough to kick, but can't tell where." 'IIOMC, SWEET HOME." Night dropped her shadowy vail over London, and the mantle of mists that all day long had enveloped the city, grew more dense and fell in beaded drops of rain. The gas lights burned brightly at the corners, but it was a dreary night to bo out iD. Yet crowds filled the streets, for even in night storms, the great thor oughfares are never deserted. Guilt and wretchedness are always wakeful and abroad. To realize the desolation of lone liness, one must be a stranger in a crowded city, with a sensitive nature, and a refine ment that shrinks from rude contacts, and uncongenial companionship. Alone in the country, with the blue sky above us, and the green grass beneath our feet, there are charms that woo us to for getfulness. There is music in the running stream and beauty in the flowers that grow upon its banks. Some German writer, I have forgotten who, calls flowers the stars of earth and stars the flowers of heaven. Fair and radient flowers they are and shed their brightness on the smokej wreathed city, but in their matchless, solteuod and mellowed light seem to linger more pleasantly on r.rcou fields and wav ing corn. Alone in London ! Dreary and desos late reality, that swelled almost to burst ing a weary and aching heart. The stranger gathered his thin cloak around his shivering from, and drew his hat over his face, with a sensitive shrinking from the crowd that rudely jostled past him. He was alune in London, and very poor, uot even a shilling to procure a scanty supper. Somewhere in a dark part of the city, where the gas lights were few, up many pairs of stairs, was the garret in which he slepf, but in it there was nothing save the darkness, one broken chair and a wretch-, ed bed with its scanty covering. When he entered this desolate chamber in nights like this, an unseen company surrouuded him, the spirits of the view less air, and in the waitings of the wind they told him strange mysterious tales of wretchedness and dread, until, half wild with daik imaginings, he rushed forth in the night and the pelting storm. Thus through the chilling sleet anl rain he walked the streets, louking into the hard faces of the passers by and wondering if in all London there was another man who had no one to care for him, no one to love him. And then he. thought how deliciou.-dy strange it would seem to him a stranger aud a wanderer for many years to be loved. He hoped the blessed light would dawn upon him, but in the darkness of this night it seemed a great way off. The cloud of poverty and gloom that wrapped his heart was too cold and deep, he feared, for human sympathy and love to penetrate. He seemed to 6ce before him, Fate, with wierd fingers, weaving the mystic web of his lonely destiny, and as he watched the phantom hands with feverish intensity, he wondered if at some future day a mantle cf brightness might not fall upon him instead of a pall. A strain of sweet sad music broke in upon Lis lonely musings. Over all refined natures music has an ubsorbing power, and though it often fills the soul with Badness, it casts upon it the spell of an irresistible fascina tion ; aud the stranger paused in his des olate walk to listen to the song. The win dows of the princely mansion were but half vailed, and he could soe the happy group that surrounded the piano, and the fair girl that sang the soft minor air which sank into the listener' a heart. He was a poet, and bad written songs of tenderness and love for others to sing. Himself, he could uot 6ing with such a weight upon his heart. The light of genius was in his eye, aud the imagery of a fervid imagination gathered round his brain, and the poet's native impulse, loving, warm and true, lived within his heart. In the sensitive and gifted the longing for sympathy and love is far more intense than in ruder natures, and all his life long his heart had yearned with passion ate eagerness for the pure delights of home and the bliss of sympathy and love. The song was over, but still he linger ed, watching the firelight's fitful glow, as it shed its ruddy sheen upon the changing group. Again the fair girl look her seat at the piano and sang with inimitable grace and beauty "Homo, Sweet Home," It was his song ! He, the homeless wanderer, had writ ten "Home, Sweet Home." He stood out in darkness and night, listening to his song, the child of his own heart aud brain, and looking in at the window of "Home, Sweet Home," knew that in all the world there was no home for him. The song ended. He sat down on the stone steps Of the stately mansion, with the rain beating heavily upon him, and burying his face in his hands, wept in the biterness of his heart. Years passed away, and still he was a homeless wanderer Often in the streets of London, Berlin, and Paris, ho heard "Home, Sweet Home," which in all lands and all hearts had become houaho'.d words. Later in life he became Consul to Tunis, and died a stranger in a strango land. Never, save in his dream, bad he known the blisa of "Home, Sweet Home 1" Carpenters pay heavy board bills.- A MAX OVER HO A It I). BY IKE MARVEL. It was one of those thunder and light ning gales at night, when, for a moment, all would be as light as day, and a moment after as dark that you could not see an oar's length from the vessel. The captain was forward, and all hands except the cook and myself aloft. Ihe ship was pitching madly, and the waves were topping up sometimes as high as the yard arm, and then dipping away with a whirl, under our keel, that made every timber in our vessel quiver. The thunder was roaring like ten thousand cannons, and every now and then, as I said, half the sky would split into a stream of lire, that glared over the tops of the waves and glistened on the wet deck and the spars, lighting up everything so plain that I could see the men's faces at the niain-topand catch glimpses of the reefers on the vard arm clinging like death then all would be horrible darkness. You ; could hear the spray spitting agaiust tho canvass, and the great waves breaking on the weather bow, and the howl ot the wind through the rigging, and now and then, when a gasket gave way, and the sails bellied out to leeward you could hear the canvass splitting like the crack of a musket. You could hear, too, the Captain forward, screaming out orders, and the mate in the cross-trees, screaming them over, till the lightning came, and then the thunder both together and deadened their voices as if they'd been a pair of little chirping sparrows. It was in one of these flashes that I saw a mau on the yard arm lose his foothold, as the ship gave plunge, but his arms were clenched round the spar. Before I could see any more, the blackness came over, and the thunder broke with a crash that half-deafened me. I thought I heard something like a tiny howl, as it died off: and sure enough, at the next Hash of lightning, which came in a moment, what should I see on the top of one of the waves along side, but Tom Meeks ; the lightning glared on his face, so that I could sec the look iu the poor fellow's eye. As good luck would have it he had caught hold of one of the studding Fail sheets as he fell, and as we pitched, I could see it slipping off the coil upon the deck. I shouted, like mad, "Man overboard !'' and had just time to catch the rope w hen we could see nothing again. I was a boy then, and couldn't hold on by the rope; the sea was too high, and the man too heavy for me. I shouted, and shouted, and shouted, and felt the sweat starting all over my forehead, as the rope slipped through my hands. Poor Tom had been our messmate for a year, and we all loved him Presently the captain felt his way aft, and took hold with me just as the coil was nearly spent, and we pulled upon him, and the cook came, and we three hauled to gether upon him. Poor fellow ! it must have been des perate work for him, for the ship was drifting at a prodigious rate, and we pull ing at the same time but he clung like a man. By-and-by, at a flash, we saw him on a crest, three oars' length away from the vessel "Hold on my man," shouted the Cap tain. "For God's sake be quick !" said the man, and he went dowu in a trough of the sea. And wo pulled ihe harder; and the Captain kept all the while calling to him to keep up courage and hold on. But in ; the hush we could hear Tom say : "I can't hold on much longer I'm almost jrone." We called out the more to him to hold on, and presently got him where we could a'most lay hold of him, and were ouly waiting for a good lift of the sea to bring him up, when the poor fellow groaned out i "It's no use I can't good-bye," and a wave tossed the end of the rope clean up upon the bulwarks At the next flash we saw him going down under tho water. I shall never forget how he looked for I saw him plain when he said ''good bye," and let go his hold. In a neighborhood where I once lived a man and his wife were almost constant ly quarreling. During their quarrels their only chtld (a boy) was generally present, and had of coarse caught many of his father's expressions. One day, when the boy had been doing something wrong the mother, intending to chastise him, called aim and said : "Come here, sir ; what did you do that for V The boy, complacently folding his arms and imitating his father's manner, said : "See here, madam, I don't wish to have any words with you." Tw'as Sunday night ; the moon shone bright, and all was cool and shady, when a gay young gent down High street went a walking with a lady. They talked of love ; he called her dove ; he told of his affection. She heaved a sigh and turned hor eye in an opposite direction. But why that start that chil!3 tho heart, as if with ice incrusted? Ah do not blame sweet M , to hair pins she has trusted, but hear her shriek or rather speak : 'My water fall has busted !' General Grant at Fort Donaldson. The New York World, having been provoked thereto, has instituted a histor ical examination into some of the military exploits of General Grant. It shows up his doings at Fort Donelson as follows, backing up its report by extracts from the most approved official and Kadical au thorities : Perhaps the time has not yet come when that achievement can be estimated with the cool impartiality of history; but the friends of General Grant, by inviting public attention to it anew, will cause ils merits to be discussed, and discussion, in the present ripe state of information, will contribute to a just and enlightened judg ment. Occasions will arise for estimating the other parts of General Grant's milita ry career : and as this is his first great success in the order of time, as well as the most brilliant of them all in the opin ion of his admin rs, it fitly enough intro duces tho general discussion. What the public recollection fastens upon in that really important achievement, iu not any brilliant stroke of strategy, but the spirited sentence in General Grant's reply to the rebel General Buckner, which is repeated by Senator Morgan, and was held up as comprising the essence of all true strategy, or rather as the ail-suflicing substitute for strategy, by Secretary Stan ton, " prcyiose to move immediately vjwn your works." As tho penning of this vigorous reply is the most memorable thing done by Gen. Grant in the seige of Fort Donelson, we are obliged to estimate its merits , which, so far as it has any, must consist in its sol Jici -like intrepidity and vigor. This is a merit which depends on circumstances ; rising with the difficul ty and danger of carrying such a racna( e into execution, and sinking to nothing if there neither is, nor is suoio.-ed to be, any difficulty to be confronted or considerable obstacle to be overcome. Now, in point of fact, General Grant knew all that had taken place in the rebel camp the preced ing night. A circumstance stated by Mr. Greeley in his "American Coufliel" con clusively shows, not that this was not a fit reply to be made (for it was eminently fit;, but that it is no evidence of gr atucss of spirit or superior military vigor. Mr. Gree.'oy shall state this d sjiichantirg cir- curiLvft ice in h.s own language : "JJurinJs. tuQ ntght, a negro had escaped from the icbcl ItiUi, and given our Laders their Jirst clear information of the sti aits of the enem y. ( Gen eral Grant was tlta-eTure not surprised at rc cciving, about daylight, the following over ture." General Grant knew that General Floyd, tho rebel commander, and General Pillow, the next in command under him, had given up all hope, and" had made their escape : that they had devolved the com mand of the fort upon General Buckner for the purpose of putting upon him the mortification of the inevitable surrender, which was to be offered the next morning ; that Floyd had taken away with him his Virginia brigade in boats during the night ; that Forrest had escaped w i:h his cavalry ; that the rebel soldierc remaining wcrccom pletely exhausted by prolonged exposure, without sleep, with scanty clothing, in biting winter weather ; and that Buckner was no longer able to resist an assault. With this knowledge, there was p rfect propriety, indeed, in Gen.-Grant's answe", but certainly no heroism. Considering that he kneio that there was no danger to brave, nor even any lesistnnce to encoun ter, t! at reply has acquired a wholly un deserved celebrity. It is a laurel which must fade and wither from the moment the fact recorded by Mr, Greeley, in his history of the war, becomes generally known. As nobody remembers anything of Gen eral Gram's strategy in the Fort Donelson seige, and as all pretence of any was fur- borne by his eulogist at the time, and its absence admitted by clear implication in crying up immediate movement upon the enemy's works as a substitute which put strategy to the blush, there is no popular illusion to correct on this head, like the ex travagant estimate of the reply to Buckner. Whatever military merit was displayed in tho operation before Fort Donelson was due to General C. F. Smith, an able sol dier who had been General Grant's in structor in the Military Academy, and who, by some inexplicable jumble, was acting as his subordinate. That General Gram's military superiors thought the chief merit of that siege due to General Smith is an award of which we have con clusive proof in the fact that Grs nt was immediately afterwards reduced to the position of General Smith's subordinate. To sustain this statement it suffices to recite another passage from Mr. Greeley's American Conflict" : "General Grant's victorious army, after a brief rest at Fort Donelson, recrossed, considerably strength ened, to the Tennessee," just above Fort Henry, where several gunboats and a large number of transports, passing down the Cumberland into the Ohio, and thence into the Ttnnessee, took up our soldiers by regiments and started th$n-tm a new movement up the Tennessee. General Charle3 F. Smith had been designated by Genend Hailed; to direct tis moeemsttt, but was soon disabled by tie sickness of which lie died not long after reaching Savannai, Tenn. land General Grant teas thus restoud to chi'f command" Ixit this fact of the immediate subordi nation of General Grant to one of his own subordiuates after tho capture of Fort Douclson, be duly weighed. It proves that those who bad the best opportunities estimating his merit?, and who were most concerned to estimate them justly, (their own reputation being staked on the success of subsequent movemeats,) ascribed the success at Fort Donelson to the subordi nate they placed over him. Geueral Smith unfortunately fell sick and died ; and the disgraceful first day at Pittsburg Landing showed how great a loss the country sustained in his death, and vindi cated the judgment which had been form ed of Gen. Grant, Although Gen. Grant was attacked by an inferior force, nothing but the timely arrival of Gen. Bucll saved his army from total destruc tion. Forrest, who had escaped from Fort Donelson with his cavalry the night previous to the surrender, had gone to join Gen. Al'ert Sidney Johnston, who thus had the means of learning from a very alert observer the opinion which had I e.n formed of the milit iry ability of Ge i. Grant by those who fought against him at Fort Donelson. It is of some interest to know what estimate had been made of Grant by capable judges on the other side. We quote again from Greeley's history of the war : "Having a spy in nearly every dwelling in Southern Tennes see, he Gen. JohnstonJ was doubtless aware that the command of that army Lad just been turned over by General C. F. Smith, an experienced and capable soldier, to General Grant, so recently from civil life ; and he had no doubt of his ability to accomplish its destruction." Which he was in a fair way of doing when he fell in battle, and General Beau regard would have finished the job. if Buell had not arrived just in time to re trieve a shameful disaster. We do not propose, at present, to review fihat dis graceful Sunday. Our object in referring to it is merely to show (hat the estimate of General Grant by those who fought against him, and who had the strongest motives to guage his cap icity correctly, was identical with that formed by bin military superiors who did not think it safe to put him in c xnmand of the new movement. The judgment formed on both si 'ea was fully vindicated by what immediately took place at Pittsburg Land- r- It is proper to say a few words more aboul Fo.t Donelson." Its capture was (like all Gen. Grant's successesj'achieved by thi shocr force of vastly prerjonde-at-ing numbers. The number of prisoners received iu surrender by General Grant at Fort Donelson, aside from the wounded, was only eight thousand, as estimated by Mr. Greeley, (although reported by Gen. Grant at nearly doulle that number'); a-id Grant's own force at the time was something like forty thousand. That the capture was due to mere numbers is proved by General Halleck's letter of thanks to General Hunter, in which he says : "To you, more than to any other man out of this department, are we indebted for our success at Fort Donelson. In my strait for troops to reinforce General Grant, I applied to you. You responded nobly, placing your forces at my disposition. This enabled us to win the victory." The rebel numbers were so few that they could not relieve their men on duty, who at last succumbed to physical exhaustion and not lo the strategy of General Grant. Mr. Gieeley says, sp iking of the time of surrender: "Their outnumbered, roughly-handled force, bad endured eighty-four hours of alternate fighting aud watching, w hile suffering all tho hardships of a win ter campaign, and were so outworn as to fall asleep standing in line of battle when actually under fire.! Gen Grant's great achievement consisted in the capture of eight thousand of such woi nout, unresist ing soldiers, with an army of forty In u a d. We shall examine Gen. Grant's other successes (of which tliis ranks as one of the most brilliant) when bis friends invite attention to them by celebrating their an niversaries. Folly of Discontent. The following beautiful passage, form Rodger's Italy, well illustrates the folly of discontent : "I was weary of life, and one day, such as some have known and none would wish to'rtmembcr, I was hurrying along tho street to the river, when 1 felt a sudden check. I turned and beheld a little boy, who had caught hold of the 6kirt of my cloak in his anxiety to attract my notice. His look was irrcsistable. Not less so was the lesson he had learned. 'I hero are six of us, and we are dying for want., of food-' Why should I notj said I to myBelf, relieve this wretched family ? I have the means, and it will n delay mo many minutes- But what ifMf does? The sccne'of misery they conducted mo to, I eannot jlescrtbe.-.,rL threw them my purse, and their burst of, gratitude over come me. It filled my eyes -it went to my heart. I will call to-morrow, I cried, Fool that I was to think of laaving a world where such plcasuro was to . be had, and so cheof ;" Sometimes people have eutertained an gels unawares, but a Green Moui.tain l.y who has been peddling maps in his nativa State,'i3 evidently not of that stamp. - His plan is to go to a farmer's house for a night's lodging and food for himself and horse. When the bill is presented in the morning he astonishes the farmer by ask ing to "see his license to fcerp a tavern. Of course the license is not produced, and. the bill is not paid. ' . . .. r h ii