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HUNTINGDON, PA Itty request.] DIRGE FOR rdcPRERSON BY FRANCES MARY SCANNELL *lint I gone in thy glory, McPherson—Oh, wide through this grief-stricken land, ;Should the voice of a people lament thee, • struck down by the foeman's red hand; tOI bravest and best in the battle, that knew not to falter or fail, iEer•thine was the lineage of heroes— , the high hearted race of the Gael 2 Sag,sclous in council and rawly, thy sword backed eaeh enterprise ; What thou wert in his need to thy chieftain, the hero of Vicksburg can tell: ,tiut even where the death angel found thee, was thy name in the onset withstood, For the ground was all fruitful of valor, that drank the rich dew of thy blood ! .Brave heart, now emotionless lying, what KlebeN the dauntless, had been 'To the Fr . andof his early devotion, in thee bad .America seen I What she lost at victorious Marengo, with • the life-tide of gallant the ramparts of fated Atlanta we mourn in our hero to.day. 'Take him tenderly, then, to thy bosom, and .hold him there, sorrowful West, The elfildfrmn the contest returning, to sleep his last sleep on thy breast. Rain tears fmut the sad eyes of heaven, 'twill need them to wash out the stains That the vintage of battle outpouring, has left on our war-trampled plains I In the trenches round Petersburg spreading, where ceaseless by night and by day, `lnd the roar of the thunder-toned cannon, the spade and the pick-ax make way, There is one who, though victory crowned him, would turn in the hour of his pride, And weep that success had not found him with the comrade he loved by his side. 0, long in our lend be remembered the life that so nobly he gave, And long may the flog he defended keep watch with its stars o'er his grave! And this be the meed that his country shall claim of each patriot son— To do, and to dare, and if need be—to die as McPherson has done SSE TRIAL Or CAPTAIN WERTZ The Charges and Specifications. WAstinvorosr, August 14.—The fol lowing are the charges and specifics lion for which Wertz, the Anderson ville jailor, is to be pot upon his trial Charge—Violation of the laws of war Specification I.—ln this, that Henry Wertz, at Andersonville, in the-State .of Georgia, continuously from the Ist .clay of March, 1861, to the 10th day of April, 1865, then and there being an: .officer in the military service of the so, called Confederate States of America,l of the rank of Captain, and as such of ficer, then and there being command'', _ ant of a prison there located by the authority of the so called Confederate :States, for confinement of prisoners of war taken and held by said so called Confederate States, from the armies of tbs.:United States of America, was, as such commandant, then and there ful ly clothpd with competent authority, and in duty bound to treat, care, and provide for such persons belonging to the United States as were or might be placed in his custody as prisoners of war,according to the laws and usa ges of war, which ho then and there melt knew . , -but he, the said Henry Weitz, wilfully and maliciously, de• signing and contriving to impair and injure the health and destroy the lives of such-persona in his custody as p rig- Rpora of war, did, during the time afore said, in violation of his duty in that regard, and in furtherance of his said ; evil design, confine a large number .of such prisoners of war, belonging to the United States, to the amount of thirty i thousand men, in unhealthy and un wholesome quarters, in a close and small area of ground, wholly inade quate to their wants, and destructive of ;their health, which he well know and intended, and while there confined during the time aforesaid, did, in furs , theranee of this evil design, wilfully and maliciously neglect to furnish tents barracks, or other shelter sufficient for their protection froin the inclemency of winter and the dews 'and burning sun of summer, and with such evil in tent did take and cause to be taken From them their clothing, blankets, and camp equipage of which they were possessed at the time of being placed in his custody; and with like 'malice and evil intent did refush to furnish, or pause to be furnished, food, either of a quality or quantity sufficient to pre nerve health and sustain life, and re fuse and neglect to furnish wood suffi cient for cooking in summer and to keep the said prisoners warm in win ter ; and did compel the said prisoners to subsist upon unwholesome food, and that in limited quantities entirely in adequate to sustain health, which is welrknown ; and did compel the said "....12 ( 0 1 00 %....---.',':-:.:-::;.:)...:,-,::„. :, .. .. ) ......41'....::::-... - : . .. E .- -- 1. _:::'......! - -• - ~........::...:,.:.....:_:,i,--....;.,..... WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL, XXI, prisoners to use unwholesome .water, with the filth and garbage of the pris on and prison guards, whereby the said prisoners became greatly reduced in their bodily strength, and emacia ted and injured in their bodily health —their minds impaired, and their tellects broken, and many of them whose names are unknown, sickened and died by reason thereof, which the said Henry Wertz then and there well knew and intended, and so knowing, and evilly intending, did refuse and neglect to provide proper lodgings, food, and . nutriment for sick, and nec essary medicine and .medical attend anao ror restoration of their health, and did knowingly, wilfully, and mal iciously, in furtherance of his evil de signs, permit them to languish and die for want of care and proper treatment, and when dead, the said Henry Wertz, still pursuing his evil purpose, did per mit to remain in the said prison amid the emaciated, sick, and languishing living, the bodies of the dead, until they became corrupt and loathsome, and filled the air with TIOXiMIS effluvia, and thereby greatly increased unwbol someness of prison, insomuch that great numbers of the prisoners whose names are unknown sickened and died by reason of thereof. All which the said Henry Wertz there and then well knew, and evilly and maliciously de sivned and intended. The second specification charges the prisoner with "wilfully and malicious ly intending and designing to injure the health and destroy lives of the pri. Boners under his control, to the end that the armies of the United States might be weakened and impaired thereby." In the third specification ho is char ged with maliciously ordering, causing, procuring; and inciting soldiers in the service of the so called Confederate States to shoot and kill such persons as were in his custody as prisoners of war upon slight, trivial, and fictitious pretences, by means whereof largo numbers of soldiers from the armies of the United States were wantonly killed and murdered while prisoners Of. war. In the fourth specification Wertz is accused of wilfully and with malice aforethought killing and murdering defenseless prisoners. The filth and last specification char. ges him with keeping and using fere cious and blood thirsty beasts, danger ous to human life, called bloodhounds, to hunt down prisoners of war who had made their escape from This eusto• dy, and did thus and there wilfully and maliciously suffer• the said beasts to seize, tear, mangle, and maim the bodies and limbs of fugitive; which they there and then did, whereby large numbers of prisoners of war who did during the time aforesaid make their escape and wore recaptured wore eru• elly and inhumanly injured, and great numbers died by reason of such inhu• man treatment, which said Henry Wertz then and there well knew and evilly intended. Tim HUMAN EYE.—Tho language of the oyo is very hard to counterfeit. You can read in the eyes of your com panion, while you talk, whether your argument bits him, though his tongue will not confess it. There is a look by which a man shows he is going to say a good thing,.and a look, when ho has said it. Vain and forgotten are all the fine offices of hospitality, if there be no holiday in the eye. How many fur- tive invitations are avowed by the eye, though dissembled by the lips. A man comes away from a company; he has heard no important remark, but if in sympathy with the society, he is cognizant of such a stream of life us has been flowing to him through the eye. There are eyes which give no more admission into them than blue berries; others are liquid, and deep wells that men might fall into ; and others are oppressive and devouring, and, take too much notice. There are asking and asserting oyes, oyes full of faith—some of good and some of sinis ter omen. ts„.Thackeray says that "when a man is in love with one women in a family, it is astonishing how fond ho becomes of every one connected with it. He ingratiates himself with the maids; he is bland with the butler; be interests himself with the footman; he runs on errands for the daughters; ho gives and lends money to the young son at college ; he pats little dogs which be would kick otherwise; he smiles at old stories, which would Make him break -out in yawns were they uttered by any one else but papa; ho drinks sweet port wino, for which he would curse the Stewart and the whole committee at a club; be bears oven with the cantankerous old mai den aunt; he beats time when the. darling little Fanny performs her piece on the piano; and smiles when Wicked little - Bobby upiets the coffee on his shirt!? " HUNTINGDON, PA,, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1865. Walking. The tradesman in walking giVes signs of folding cloth, and measuring tape, and taking down bundles. The ponderous arm and heavy fall of hand betrays the blacksmith; and the quick, nervous grasp with which she adjusts her dress:gives unmistakable signs of a factory 'operative. Travelers who visit the field of Waterloo are accus tomed to enter their names in a regis ter. This book has been kept for many years by the same person, and with wonderful accuracy he is able to desig nate the visitor's nation simply by in specting the handwriting. Much more easily can the profession or nation be detected by means of' the gait. The grave Spaniard;the phlegmatic Dutch man, the. vivacious and sanguine . Frenchman, the reserved and formal Briton, the inquisitive, impetuous, self confident American, each betrays the national trait in his style of walk ing. The sailor rolls when on shore as if our trim planet sailed unsteadily. The soldier marches even when no longer under order. The sycophant bends the knee as if every man ho meets were a prince. The lawyer steps boldly and patronizingly. Themlergy man abstractedly, as if the street were his study, or cautiously, as if mind ful of the gins and pitfalls spread for the of the unwary. The waiting clerk is known by his bows and his graceful effrontery. Wo distiflguish a coxcomb by the careful manner in which ho drops his foot, and picks his way along the street; a watchman, by his heavy, measured tramp. Students saunter, school girls trip, schoolboys daily and loiter, children patter, doe. tors burry, het - Acre stride, teamsters trudge, gossips gab, market-women bustle, boatmen shuffle, ghosts stalk, aldermen strut. The pleasure which we deave from walking is of every gradation. There is a pleasure resulting from mere muscu lr activity. This is greatly heighten ed when obstacles aro overcome, and 'we are conscious Of exorcising physi cal power. Hence, often the pleasure wo take in a walk during a dark and stormy night, through mud and snow. Every time you put your log down, says Leigh Hunt, you feel a respect for it. You may, perhaps; have been reminded of this source of pleasure under circumstance like these: The long winter evening Las began. A rocking chair has received you with open arms. Before you glows a bright, rosy fire. Tho lamp is gently shining over the shoulder nearest the table, and invites to the reading of some long wished,for book, which is to be yours for this night only. Yourcußof happis ness fs full when suddenly you remem ber some engagement at the other end of town.. Go you must, in spite of the rollicking wind, the eager and nip ping air. You naturally feel gloomy and sad. Your spirits are running a race with the mercury, and that is be low zero. Your progression is slow and hesitating. Soon you become con scious that your dimensions are con trasting. The end of a finger, the tip of an ear, the point of the chin, the extremity of the nose, are to you as though they wore not. Your pride is touched. You determine to resist the invasion, and start off at a brisk, a stirring pace. Now for a contest with tho cold, a battle with the king of win ter ! Your blood begins to spin. Phys. ieal excitement carries off sullenness. Your thoUghts take a now turn. The whirl of the blood and the energy and life of the mental endeavor act well to gether. You reclaim your lost terri tory, and, exulting in your power, move for Ward in "robust hilarity" and triumph. Disappointment, discomfort, aro all forgotten in the pleasure resul ting from this exorcise of physical pow er. SMALL BEKNNINGS.—VrankIin had but little early education ; yet look at what he become, and how he is rover. enced. Ferguson, feeding his sheep on the hills of Scotland, picked up the rudiments of learning, but subsequent ly rose to be one of the first astrono mers in Europe. Ilerschell, the great astrorterner, was in youth a drummer boy to a marching regiment, and re• ceived but little more than a drummer boy's education; but his name is asso ciated with the brightest discoveries of science, and is borne by the planet that his zeal discovered. A host of in- stances rise up to testify that, by prop oily improving tho small and perhaps imperfect beginnings of knowledge, they may become perhaps as founda tion stones of a temple of learning; which the future shall gaze upon and adtnire. Th oro are 1,600 male and 500 female clerks in the Treasury Depart ment at Washington—being more than tri7o full regiments, speaking in military parlance. The annual cost of this littlte army is more than two mil lion dollars. "'"'1 ,1 4 --PER§PITERV.- Matrimony. "I did !" "You didn't!" "You uro the plague of my life !" "And you of miner Aim I young folks—what at it again ? Ihen.l "Scratch people where they itch.'?' REVERAL R - INTB FOR TIOVA.KEEPERA. .—The heads of families are 'Often; heard to exclaim, we must breakup t our household aud gn to a boarding; house for the' Want of'good house-seri rants. A writer who. seems to have given this vexed question some thin:tit - A says "that, himeekeepois 'should er scold or rave at - servants, and ilyon . desire them to be uschil end obsg: en t,do not exact too'much of them: /01' low them sufficent time for rest and recreation, remembering that humble: labor is entitled ,to its privileges all well AB wealth and high p . osition; Correct their mistakes kindly. Do net; perplex and worry them with contra dictory directions. Teach duties' calmly.. If aro dull do not laugh at them, for that will only mphe obstinate as well as du11.. ; Never "treat; them as, if you suspected them, of dis honesty, except, on sufficent groundsr nor accuse them cf falsehood until you find. them systematically, a' deceivin , 4 • i r s you. Give them, plenty of, thneat their meals and comfoytable -beds on. In short, use them as you would,, desire to be used if in their places. The golden rule alwayk( wotks-well when faithfully aPplied." 0537 A countryman took his seattt, a jtairerntalki3 apposite tq ,4 g . 911.14f+11114. , who was iudulg,ing in a bott)eoryipZ., Supposing the wino to be common ; property, our unsophieticatm.i Oountr,y frion4 helpe4 himself to it with the; gentleman's , "That's cool 1 9 94: claimed the owner of the wide indigo nantly. "Yes," - replied the other "I should think there was iee in it WM BILL HEADS, =EI Eight to gixtemti.: National Wit.