American IKliMlnhiutfer. VOL 48. AMERICAN VOLUNTEER. PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY MORNING BY JOHN B. BRATTON. TERMS Subscription. —Ono Dollar and Fifty Cents, paid in advance; Two Dollars if paid within tho year; and Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if not*paid within the year. These terms will bo rigidly adhered to in every instance. No subscription discontinued until all arrearages are paid unless at the option of the Editor. . Advertisements—Accompanied by thocASH, and not exceeding ono square, will bo inserted throe times for Ono Dollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional insertion. Those of a greater length in proportion. . Jon-PniNTiNa—Such as Hand-bills, Posting-bills, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, Ac. .fee., executed with accuracy and at the shortest notice. I WISH 1 WAS A PRINTER. BY NANNIE A. SUTTON. I wish I was a printer, X really do indeed, .. • It seems to mo that printers Get every thing they need', (Except money I^ — Ed. They got the largest and tho best. Of everything that grows, * And got free into circusseS, , And other kind of shows. ' . giving an equivalent The biggest bug will speak to them,-'*' No matter how they dress, A shabby coat is nothing If you own a printing press. Af ladies fairVthey are almost hugged By pretty girls’who-know, • That they will cracksup everything Tho ladies have to show. • And thus they get a “blow-out free, . At every party feed. Tho reasou is because they write And other people road. THIS DYING SOLDIER. BY OLIVER PEtm UANLOYE, Jt was an hour when the wind was sweepintj • Wildly over the bsittlb plain, • - And the lightning from the cloud was.leaping,' And thunder had broken the vaults of rain, That a .wounded.man at night was lying ' ,Jn pain'upon the cold, wet ground. With no loved one to see him dying, Or hand to bind up his bleeding wound. His country’s flag ho had uindc his pillow And hjs heart was tilled with its'treasured stars And from the tide of his bosom’s billow • His blood had poured on its glowing bars. * . lie had borne it in the time of battle, rr , tlio.strength of a patriot’s pride; , hadJjeariV thC-lund-Unil through .it rattle, jvhon’Wißrados-werb falling on oVory side. A W'M 8 m° Illy ‘, n tbat bol,r ' l ,al ° and gory. With the pealing thunder hip dying dirge. Anil tho lightning flaming around in glory. Showing tho sky like d burning surge, lie tbonght.of home anti a loving mother* ' Who proudly told him to'battle for right ' And how had fallen a noble * . And the river of Ucath grew lovely and bright No'more would ho hoar the roaring banrion, Nor brayol,) rush on tho focraan’s steel; No more.would he wiivo aloft-his pennon/ For his heart had almost censed to feel; *But a low, swoet prayer it still was breathing, Pure as the dearest love for the dead; .And a joyous. dream ho. bad been wreathing Of the, golden streets Where the angels tread. ■J&uttllmms: WIFE, OF BDNM IN THE SWAN CHAMBER The name of Bunyan is immortal. Ills .character and writings will travel down through all coming ages, and bo read till the end of time. The historic scenes and events of his life are' ever memorable. They arc .stamped with the impress* of an abidinn* in terest. His twelve years’ unjust imprison ment, and the efforts for his release by his devoted and heroic .with, will bo held in per pectin! remembrance. , - One of the plates, beautifully, engraved, in the January Number of the Eclectic Maga zine, illustrates a touching scene in the fife ot JJunyan. Ho was in prison. His family, were in want, and needed a father’s care, pro teetion and sympathy. As a means of ob taining his release from prison, Bunvan wrote several petitions. His wife had, by his di rections, earned one petition to tho House of .Lords, and failed of her object. She was Ji-1 reeted to apply to the Assize Court. She had applied twipe to the judges of that high tri bunal, and was denied her petition and ro pidsed. Lord Chief-Justice Hale, an emi nently kind-hearted and Christian man, pitied her case and seemed strongly inclined togrant her request. But the other judges, linpiting v’ and cruel, objected and overruled the de cision against her petition each time. . The scene in tho plate is intended to show r)i e - r^ o i- Wlfe i. 0 / as she appeared the tAjJ time before the Assize Court. The audience chamber is filled to overflowing Judge Hale, mhm robes magesterial sits in silent dignity to receive ji ln the pleadings of the petitioners. The Swan Chamber is crowded-judge, justices and gen try are present. There is a pause business of the assizes. A woman clad in a coarse black dress,with a white cap shading her paJe, sad face, rises from tho crowd at the back of the room, and passes up the aisle and modest step. Hnfalter she walked the crowded court until she she 1 ™ for ° tl >V- udgo nnd the justices, as she is lopresented in the plate in tho attitude Lord Ph- °/ T Sp 5 ak Direc ting herself to um” f J " Bt,ce Hale, she said: ju d ’ 1 ? ak ® bold to oomo again to know wb at may be dono with ivnd l i° yeS wer ® filcod upon her as she spoke, of Ihni g r ea '' a hcut forward from evorypar There «i o rg f a . UdiODCO t 0 oatoh her words.- ino. hofl h *u°° d ’ a P° or - frcil woman, plead fw the f life of | a3B ?’ bl , ed di B nit 7 of tho realm more ...w- f hBr husband. Was ever sight more sublime—was ever a scene more touch- turr l e . d upon her. He hesita no g L° man T vL to ' d th - hofore I could dothoo whaUhVt,„ k 7 'j ave taken fora conviction nnlets and Sp °. k - e nk the Sessions, and, done 40 «*. that - Hear her as she roplion: never asked him whether he was guilty or no Neither did he confess tho indictment." “Hewas lawfully convicted, woman," in terfered one of the judges, chafing at her words; She turned a look upon him. He was ono whom she did not know. Addressing Judge Halo, she replied, with the true courage of a npblo.soul; “My lord, it is false 1 For when they said to him, ‘do you confess tho indictment ? ' ho said only this, that ho had been at several meetings, both where, there was preaching the Word and prayer, and that they had God’s presence among them." “ What, woman, do you think wo can do as wo list," interfered Judge Twisdon, in a loud, angry tone, looking upon her with all tho vengeance of his mean nature. “Your -husband is a breaker of the peace, and is con victed by tho law." : “Bring tho statute-book,'"ifewunded Judge Hale, “ and wo will see for ourselves." “ He was not lawfully convicted, ray lord,” said the brave woman as she looked upon — 1 Judge Twisdon. . . :| ■ 11 He wns lawfiilbt-cai , ' - " | Judge" 1 ' judge Chester, raving with madness that his not (his was one of. the five red letter names that sent Bunyan. to prison) and his word should he called in question,. ‘tit is false,” she said calmly ; “ it was but a word of discourse that they took for a con viction.'” “ It is recorded, woman ; it is recorded, I tell you,” vociferated, Chester, as if ho would silence her by. the power of his-voice, if he could not by argument.;, .' “ It isfiilae if it is;” and she looked him un flinchingly in the face. “Ho is convicted and it js recorded,” re peated,Chester. “-What more doyou want?” “ My lord,” said the fearless wife to Judge Halo, “ I was a little while since at London to see if I could get my husband’s liberty, and thete I sppke with my Lord Barkwood, one of the House of Lords, to whom I deliv ered a petition, who took it of hie and pre sented it to sonie of the rest of the House of Lords, for my husband’s relcaaeracnt, who, when they had seen it, they said that Mai could, not release him, bat committed his re loasemcnt to the judges at the next Assizes.— This /«> told mo, and now I am come to you-to sec if anything can bo done in this business, and you give neither releasCment nor relief.” The Judge made ho answer. “• He is convicted arid it is recorded,” reit erated the infuriated Chester, “ If it be, it is false," repeated the heroic I woman.. .. . I , “Heis n pestilent fellow, my lord. .There' is not such a follow in'the country," exclaims Chester,-turning to Judge Halo. “Will your husband'leave off preaching, woman? If ho will do so, send for'him,'apt! lot him answer hero for himself,” spake out Judge Twisdun, almost ns much exasperated as was Chester. “My .lord,” the Christian -woman said, “ my-husband.dares• not. leave preaching as bmg as he can speak.” J —See here, see here,” vociferates Twisdun, rising from his seat, and striking the bench with his clenched fist, "why should we talk any about such a- fellow ? Must ho do what he lists? -. He is a breaker of fhe peace.” '. The brave woman noticed him hot. Keep-' ing lisreyos steadily fixed Upon judge Hale, she said: , ■** ho-'band desires to live peaceablyand to follow his calling, that his family may bo -maintained,’ Jloreover, ray lord, I have four small children that cannot help themselves, and one of them is blind, and wo have noth ing, to live upon hut the charity of good peo ple.” The eyes of the Judge bent in pity upon her. ' “ Hast thou four children ?” he said kindly' “ Thou art but a young woman to have four children.” “lam but mother-in-law to thorn, my lord, not having been married to him yet two full years.” “■Aids! poor woman," said the kind Judge, as she finished her-touching story, - - - ’■ “You make poverty your cloak, woman,” broke in Twisd.on, “ and I bear your husband is bettor maintained by running up and down ft-preaching than by'following bis calling.” ■' “ What, is bis calling?” asked'Judge,Hide of her, ■ . ' , “ A linker, -my lord, a iiulccr,” answered some one standing by, “ Yes, my lord, and because he is a tinker and a poor man, ho is despised and cannot have justice, ■ . I “Since it is thus, my poor woman,, said the Judge, mildly, “that they have taken what thy husband spake for conviction, thou must either npply thyself to the King, or sue out his pardon, or get a writ of error.” At the motion of a writ of error, Chester chafed, aud was highly offended, and ex claimed: ' (Policy! (A slander. “ This man v ill preach, my lord, and do whafc he pleases.” “ lie preaches nothing but tho Word of God,” fearlessly apoko out tho true wife. “ lie preach the word of God ! ” repeated Twisdon, with a sneer, turning toward her as if he would have struck her ; “ho runs up .and down the country and does harm.” r Do not mind her, Judge, send heraway,” exclaimed Twisdon, seeing that he could not intimidate her. “I am-sorry, my poor woman, that I can do thee no good,” said Judge Hale, compas sionately. “ Thou must doonepf these three tilings aforesaid, namely apply thyself to the Kmg, or sue out his pardon, or get a writ of error; but a writ of error will bo the cheap est. 1 So, when I deported from them, the book of statutes was brought, but what they said Of, it I know nothing at all, neither did Ihear any further from them. OGf To undertake to reason a girl out of love is as absurd os would be the attempt to extinguish Vesuvius /with a syringe. The only thing that will break a love fit is hard work and mutton chops. Good advice and in dolence only make things worse. frSo here lam between two tailors,” said a fellow at a public table, where two young tailors were seated, who bad just commenced business for themselves. “ True,” was the reply, “ we are beginners, and can only afford to keep one goose between us.” Jt®“Eoal virtue is most loved, whore it is most nearly seen, and no respect which 't commands from strangers, can never equal the never-ceasing admiration it excites in the daily intercourse of domestic life. Literature opens a baok-doorout of the bustle of the busy world, into a garden of moral and intellectual fruits and flowers, the key of which is denied to the best of manS kind. Therein our happiness no longer lives on chanty, nor is in danger of a fall when leaning on another’s pleasure for our own re pose. AN INCIDENT OF THE REVOI.TION. The strip of ground from Broadway to Centre street, along Chambers, commencing at the now store of Stewart, in Broadway, seventy years ago was a burial place. The part nearest Broadway was devoted to the negroes for the last resting spot of their dead, and the moiety extonding-to Centro street was a kind of Potter’s Field, and during the revo lution the spot where most of the private soldiers of the British army who died in the city were interred. Gallows Hill (the spot) where the Manhattan reservoir is now placed) was decorated with a gallows, where all de serters and prisoners, suffered death, who came under the control of the infamous pro T vest marshal, Cunningham. It was customary'ip execute the most ofthe deserters who were native-born, at night. There was a policy in this.. Public execu tions of the Americans by the Royalists would have been noised abroad, and tiie injury creat ed thereby, through the manner in which the I themselves would have made use , • . , , ini kings cause.' These executions generally took place after midnight. The prisoners condemned to death wore always confined in the old jail, within 'musket-shot of the place of execution, and a sergeant’s guard of eight men, accompanied by the provost marshal and his deputy, generally conducted the pris oner to the gallows. It was near, twelve o’clock of a night in October, in*tho year 1780, that a young man was reclining among the recent graves that raised their mounds in. the vicinity, of the, gibbet ph Gallows Hill. 'The hour'and the place were singular for a lone , individual like tho man in question to bo reposing. I say lone, yet he was not exactly so, if human bodies divested of their immortality can' bo considered companions; for,nearly above his head, swaying to and fro in the night breeze, hung the remains of two soldiers of tho fifth regiment, who had been executed that morn ing for desertion. Tho sky who obscured with dark murky clouds, and tho moaning of the wind, ns it swept around the gallows and through, the tress, that hero and there reared their branch es'amid the darkness of -the night, giivo a desolate and disagreeable sound well befitting tho place itself. ■ The man scarcely moved, with tho exception now and then of raising his head,.and peering cautiously above' tho mouiid of earth behind.which.he lav, towards the jail, dimly visible with its high massy walls ip thp fields beyond. " At length a light glimmer’d, the treed of men was faintly heard, and tho young man, raising himself from the spot where he lay, glided along the rude fence which skirted the burial ground,'until he stood within a few loct of.the execution place. Hero he paused, and looked in-the direction of the approach ing light.. Faintly. through .the haze appear ed IhfSb or four files of soldiers, proceeded by a black man, who' carried a lantern—tlio only light which seemed tu be in the party; Then walked a prisoner, with Ills arms tight ly bound behind him, and directly after Cunningham, the provost marshal, and five or six soldiers with muskets on thoir should ere.■ - “ One, two, three,”repeated tho young.niau to himself, as if counting the number of the men approaching; ‘‘twelve in all. ’Tis a desperate undertaking; but mv - comrade shall not.die it I can. save him, r ow for wkill mid courage. Be cool, Dick -Martin! You. have been on still more perilous occa sions, if your commanding officers speak the truth,” ' He glided back again to his old resting place, when ho stumbled into a now dug grave that ho had not noticed before, just in the rear of tho gallows. Ills ■ first’ impulse was to leap out, tor tho depth of-the grave did not, exceed three, feet', but a second thought altered his determination, and lie murmured—. • ’ “ This.is the best place forme: they cer tainly will not think 7 of. looking for a living man in tho grave!”—and- he stretched him self at full length in the “ narrow house” that ho know one day or another he should have to fill, ■ They entered the burial ground and proceeded directly to the gallows, under which they halted. Forming a circle, the black follow with tho lantern,,Cunningham, and the prisoner 5n tho centre, preparations were made to go through with the awful cere mony—that ot depriving a fellow being of life, Ihe black fellow looked up at the gallows, from which the two-bodies werehauging, and then proceeded very deliberately to cut them down, observing— ' ‘‘ Dcso chaps nab hug long a’miff 1 . I. guess dey nn’t much bettor dau dead niggers now,” bS Ulie prisoner looked on with, n glance of no common interest, foHie felt that his soul was fluttering on the confines of eternity. It m useless to talk of the bravery when a man in the full vigor of health beholds prepa rations making to deprive him of existence. True; ho may meet death with manliness and fortitude, and display to no human eye any of the physical slirinkings by which wo are apt to measure the outward courage of man ; but within there is a feeling that the great Creator alone perceives, and Ho judges or no the man is prepared to die. The negro had passed a rope through the beam where but a few moments before hung the inanimate clods that now encumbered as it were the ground beneath the gallows. This done, ho said— “ i)ar, Massa Cuningham, is a rope dat will hold do prisoner long a’nuff, I reckon. Guinea Sambo no stop a board a man o’ war for nullin', I guess, I larri.to reeve dat knot wid a hitch dat do debbil couldn’t break.” As ho finished this classical speech he very deliberately kicked the body of one of the dead soldiers aside, and rolled the other very oooly into the grave where, lay the young man: and the dead rested upon the living! A shudder ran through the frame of ’the youth as he felt pressing above him the cold form of one who but the day before had been as full oflife as ho now was, but not a sound escaped him, for he knew that silence was his only preservation, ” Well, rascal, you see what you are com ing to for deserting from his majesty’s ser vice. A halter, I suppose, is more agreeable than good treatment and a soldier's pay.” Thus spoke Cunningham to the prisoner. ”1 entered into the refugee oorps for my own reasons. They have proved satisfacto ry," the.prisoner said, looking at Cunning ham with a bold countenance, —-- “ Yes, infernally satisfactory, you rebel spawn'of damnation I A spy, I’spose? Do Lanooy’s refugees would be a pretty set if they wore all like you, rogue. No, no; I had my eye on ye when you ’listed, a month ago, and I told Colonel De Lancoy what I believed ye was. Not a royal refugee, but a rebel scoundrel. I was right, rogue, oh ?” , “Yes, you was right Us to my enlisting. As to being a rebel scoundrel, why there is an offset— you are a royal knave and a blood- '• OUR COUNTRY MAY II ALWAYS BE RIGHT—BtTT, RIGHT OR WRONG, OUR COUNTRY* 4 MIDNIGHT ESCAPE FROM GALLOWS HILL, CARLISLE, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1863. | thirsty villain. All the information I-want ed to send to tlio great Washington ho has «ot before this—so hang away! But I should like jive minutes communion with my God first, if you have the manliness to grant it." ~ Astonished as Cunningham was by the boldness of the man’s speech, ho knew full well that he himself.was detested by the Eng lish soldiery for his tyranny, and that a refu sal of such request to man on the point of execution would only mako him still more odious among them. With an ill grace ho said— ’ “Pray, rascal, pray I I .don’t wonder that a knave like you fears death. A man that betrays his king betrays his God ; and it is full time that you try to make peace with him. Three minutes,rascal—three minutes! That’s all the time you have from me. Go on your knees at once, then Sambo, have the halter ready. Three minufes.only." , The negro had lantern on the ground directly under the gallows. Its faint light gleamed upward, showing in dim out line the gallows frame, and partially light ing the faces and forms -of theanldTcra. ~ nupcarwitn their muskets to mi order, in a semicirclo around the scone of execution. The prisoner bent down, Resting his knees upon the earth .thrown.lipjaround the new deg grave. II? had no horio of escape; and ns he looked, upwards towjvrds the heavens, although all. was black with night, yet his eye pierced through.the gloom, and he saw in the _ future redemption for the past! The quivering of his lips showed his sincerity : he was prepared to die. Of a sudden hb bent his head. Ah 1 hia prayer was hoard —rescue was at hand. His life—oh I glori ous thought—was not to set in blood throunh the hands of man 1 i , D “ Harry I" said a voice, in a whisper, pro ceeding from the grave where'.the prisoner had seen a dead body tossed but a few moments before; “ make no alarm. ’Tis I, your comrade, Dick Martin of Washington’s Life Guard, come to save you. Make seine excuse to turn your back towards the hole where I have bidden I willl cut the rope by whiehypur hands are tied. When this is done, and you bear me groan, kick over the lantern and mako for the east corn er of tho gravo-yard 1,1 will- follow. Things' are ready for our escape. Remember, make no alarm I” The prisoner felt as if lie had won em pires upon empires. His life then was safe! “ Como: rogue, your throb, minutes are up. Sambo, the ropdthere I you pattern of Guinea beauty.’’ The prisoner, without rising from his knees, turned round so that ho faced the lantern, his back towards the grave. The negro ad vanced with the halter, to place it around his nook. The scene was striking. In the foreground stood the soldiers, gazing with no very pleasant emotions, but the dim light, upon the poor prisoner. Cunningham was in the centre, bis brutal arid harsh features lighted up with the expression almost of a devil, preparatory to seizing his. victim. banindrel, you had no victim that time. Just ns the negro got of .thii .prisoner, the latter foit the thongs cut which hound his arms; He was-free! Hot why. starts the black, his eyes pro truding from yhoir sockets as if death wips bb fovo him? The halter drops from his hands: ho is paralyzed with fear. Slowly from the grave rises the dead, body of the soldier he had himself rolled into it? “Gor a’ mighty, the dead, lab riz!” said the negro, solemnly.’ Cunningham beheld the sight, and so did the soldiers. ■ The vision was so awful—so apparently con (racy to human reason—that uith one accord all fled, excepting the negro and the prisoner. The former rolled on the ground, exclaiming— Spar _me, massa ghost!—spar’rae dis l m j nebbor hang anoder sojor and lie I, rolled over the graves, shivering as if struck with an. ague fit. In the meantime prisoner and his comrade, who had so opportunely rescued him from an ignominious death, hurried from the scene, and, springing .from .the, grave-yard, made or Lispenard s woods, which' then skirted tho Worth river near about where Canal street now ends, rhero ibey fomuJn boat, in which Dick I Martin baa crossed alone from, the Jersey shore, six hours before, to save his comrade: Ueaching the Jersey side, just below Bull’s i'orry. in an hour, they struck into the woods and reached the camp of Washington, near West Point, about night the next .day. the morning after, in general orders, two new nontenants ware commissioned! in \Vali mgton s ..Into Quani, ami tbe reader can im agine they wore. Abrieiea^aHC(£fonperhapsis neecsaay. Itnl ways surprised the English commander how U nshington knewsn well the movements made m their lines. Washington, in many cases, made desertion a duty, lie knew who among ms private soldiers to ask this from, aud nev er in a single instance, was his confidence be trayed;’ Death ‘upon the gn.Uowa followed the poor private often, but ho never compro mised his commander. How could Britain expect to conquer a countrg that contained suclb Burning Potato ViNES.-r-Aocording totho Massachusetts Ploughman t potato vines should be thrown into heaps and burned, for the most plausible theory in regard to the potato rot is, that it is caused by a very minute insect, not visible to the naked eye, -By burning the vines therefore, we may catch millions of them, and send them where they came from— for the vines nro of but very little vplue as manure, and their ashes are bettor than their stems buried in the soil; A voryfeasonablo supposition in regard to the rot is, that it is causedby a poisonous little insect, too min ute to bo readily discerned, yet numerous enough to cause destruction to that root which is almost the solo food of millions of our race. If, as wo conjecture, a small poisonous insect is the cause, wo can outflank and subdue him by fire and water. Let the vines have the fire; and let the tubers, at the time of plant ing bo dipped into potash water, to kill the little nits that adhere to them. Satdhdat NiGUT.-r-Saturduy night! ' An nothor week has gone, lost in the ocean of the past, gone never to' be recalled. Gone to bear witness for good or evil before the groat White Throne. Will it boar on its pages the records qf gqod deeds and kiqd words ? Qr will it bo blotted with sins of omissions and commision. Will the recording angols write a blessing over oqr name or not? Saturday qight? The merchant closes his ledger with a sigh of relief. The mechanic's brows grows light ns ho puts away his imple ments of labor, conscious of the fact that to morrow will bo a day of rest indeed to him. A smile crosses the mother’s face as eho folds away her sowing ready for Monday—all feel ing glad that the week is oyer. Sentiment. —" Wholesome sentiment is rain t which makes the fields of daily life fresh and odorous. From the Patriot £ Union. ARMY CORRESPONDENCE. Camp Andt Johnson, Ind., 1 December 21, 1861, J . Messrs. Bditors : After a tolerably pleas ant but tedious trip by rail and river the Lo chiel Cavalry arrived at Louisville on Satur day evening, Nov. 30th. There we learn that our destination had been changed, and that, instead of going into camp near Louisville, as wo expected, wo wore to encamp on the Indiana sido. We jay at the Louisville wharf aver, night, Ka\dy on Sunday morning tho boats steamed over to the Joffersonvilldland ing,, where we got ourselves and the liorses ashore, and immediately Went into camp bn lion. Josso D, Bright’s farm, just above Jeff ersonville. You may be sure that we fully enjoyed tho opportunity presented us for making a-dis play, in this horse-breeding country, of the admirable Jot of horses which, we brought with us, and thereby glorifiying the Old Key =stsDl,"Smte;~’ r iu Kouere'Srnest,' vvb’were'Texed and diauppointed,, and a further knowledge of our riding stock has increased our vexa tion and disappointment. Between twenty, and thirty horse's have died on the way and since our arrival, and of the remainder more than four hundred have been rejected by the inspector, besides, quite a largo number are under tho care of tho farmer. Many had ob vious diseases and defects :of long standings some ktono blind, some wind-broken, mares with* foal,-some not. throe and others sixteen, to twenty-five years old, some too clumsy for any thing hut cart horses, and others ringboned, spavined, splintered, jammed, stovo, string halt, galled, and generally crippled in every kind and degree of lameness. -Tho result is that wo aro loft with less than, six hundred horses fit for servicoj that the regiment is in definitely delayed ip its preparation for active duty, its efficiency impaired, and tiro pride and spirit of the corps humbled in the midst of strangers.* And for these horses, good, bad and indifferent— there- are some good ones—the Government has paid §l2O apiece, arid §l6npieoe for their transportation. The rejected horses will hardly sell for enough, or malt enough, to'pay the cost of bringing "{hem here, to say nothing iif the useless expendi ture for their subsistence from tho time they were purchased until they shall bo finally, disposed of. The, Government is literally swindled out of tho' full price and.keepinn- of fe y rejected horse, and a little more, wfibso fault is it? Boforo the war there was abun dance of good horses in Pennsylvania • there is reason to believe that they are nearly all there yet. A7o should haveboenfurnisned with some of the best of them. By whose neglect, or fraud, or fraudulent connivance, does it happen that we are not so furnished ? There is more than one party to bear the blame, but, nevertheless,-it should fall'distinctly and fully upon every intermediate agont between the Government and the original owners. -These of course sold to tho-contractors such horses as they could sell, at such prices as they'Couid got. The contractors, with whom the .first blame rests, iu order to enhance their profits, and perhaps relying on the connivance ot the.inspectors, bought cheap horses, with out regard to fitness, scarcely deeming it nee essay to make snob selections ns would leave even a plausible excuse to the inspector for passing them. The inspector surely has not robed upon any excuses whatever, but has cither through ignorance or neglect of duty in his case being-equally culpable,—passed, wholesale, good, bad and iitdifferedt, rag, tag) and bobtail—everything in the .shtipo of a horse that was submitted.to his inspection.— If ho rejected any. Heaven only knows what newly'discovered-and hitherto unheard of faults, defects or infirmatios ho found in them to render_ them less eligible than sonic pf these which ho approved as sound and ser viceable. It is unfortunate that the field offi cers of the regiment were not allowed to in spect and* make selections, as I believe was originally intended, Tho inspector, whoever ho was, was appointed by Capt. Wilson, Quar termaster 11. S, A, The lean and scraggy con dition of ovon the best of tho horses when they first came into our hands fully establish es tho fact that the person or persons who had the contract for subsisting them wilfully neglected their duty, and deliberately swip died the Government. Lot them bear their Share of tho biamp, and their share is not a little. The man who, for the sake of gain, or tnotnatod by any other selfish motive, or wiihnut any motive whatever, will knowing ly allow a brute to suffer, when it is in his power to oaro for him, is only restrained by fear oi tho law from 'manifesting tho '.same criminal disregard for the rights of his fel lowman, ’ after nil tho neglect and dishonesty of contractors aiid .inspectors, and sub-contrac tors and sub-inspectors, yvo mightand should have had a bettor lot of horses. Capt. Has tings, commanding Carlisle Barracks, and an experienced dragoon officer, was ordered by tho War Department to furnish our comple ment. He had nbout2.soo to select from. Ho was, or ought to have boon, fully competent to make tho selection. Ho knew, or ought to have known, that by furnishing us hap-haz nrd, just as they came, ho was entailing un necessary expense on tho Government for transportation, and he was hindering the effi ciency and usefulness ot tho regiment. And ho knew very well, or should have knowri, that it would have boon boat, in ovory wav, most prudent and economical to send us away with serviceable horses only, even if but five hundred such could bo found among tho twen ty-five Tho plea of ignorance on "i“ ,P art - or °1 inability to make a bettor se lection, would bo a virtual acknowledgement ot his unfitness for the position which he oc cupies, and negligence or inattention to tho discharge of the duty assigned him, would be almost, if not quite, equivalent to criminal connivance. Taking either horn of the di lemma, he places himself in a position dan 6er°d®* Id b's reputation as a gentleman and' a soldier. By what excuse or subterfuge ho may be able to escape bis sharo of blame or extenuate bis .fault, I am unable to conjec ture. W° have hoard strong intimations that this affair of horse-flesh is to be made the subject J of special investigation. Perhaps it is not ' proper, under the oirouipstanoos, that I should 1 say anything about it, but complaints have 1 been so loud and frequent throughout the ro -1 giment, that they must have reached the pub lic through some channel or other. About a week ago there was a review and inspection of the entire regiment by Major Buford, Inf specter General of the United States army, with special roferoneo to this subjoot. A few days a (forwards Gen. Buell himself reviewed ' us, and seemed to be very well satisfied with the general appearance of the regiment, though the want of horses loft us woefully deficient as to the number upon the field. 1 A shoemaker has one great advantage over most kinds of mechanics—-his goods, whenever finished, are always sol’d, Supposed Cancer Speedily- Cured. —The Dental Cosmos contains an account of a case by J. L. Suessorot, M. D., relating to an aged lady who had suffered for ' such a length of time from a large ulcer dh the inside of the ; lower lip that it was at last held to be ma- i . lignant cancer. The exciting cause of this . was the protruding apices of the roots of the . central lower incissor which had,escaped the t notice of the attending physician (n gentle man of acknowledged ability in his profession), because of the coating of tartar, which ren dered their appearance,very similar to that • of the ulcer. I)r. Suessorot says respecting it—" Prompted by a desire to benefit the pa-, tient, and at the same time demonstrate the advantage of a dental eduoatio'n, I was in duced to commit the unprofessional act of op erating before the invitation was extended.—. No regular instrument being at hand, I called for a table fork, and, in' a much shorter time than the writing of this has consumed, I re lieved the greatly distressed patient of a dis ease which she expected would very mop ter minate her existence. Nearly all of the'alvei olai maigiii Having oeon absorbed, by a pla otng a prong of the fork under the, protruding lower oijd of the root, the operation of evul sion was readily performed ; and by the remo val of that which had become a foreign sub stance, the diseased condition of the lip, as well, as all the surrounding parts, was speedi ly removed,. As this is hot an isolated case, it would bo well for the causoiof humanity were the dentist more frequently called in consultation; the diseases of the teeth and their surroundings being his special province, many morbid 'changes which too' often escape the notice of the physician, or are considered by him of minor importance, might be, detec ted, and disastrous results prevented." . An old Scotchman's Idea of Happiness. Some people have singular ideas of th 3 per fection of worldly happiness. A Scotchman ’who has resided in this’State for nearly thir ty years, and who has accumulated a very handsome property, recently sent for his fath er, with the view- that the old. gentleman should share tho property, and slip away from the long lease of life as smoothly as possible. Qnc day a short tline ago a friend of the fam ily paid a visit to the, mansion where the old gentleman.was living with his son, and took occasion to'compliment the'proprietor of the estate on. its surpassing loveliness and oiisy conifort, .The owner,, full of love for his homo, said ho looked upon it and its surroundings as “a perfect heaven on earth," “Heaven on earth I', —growled the old 111 i'in- ’ Mica von on earth, no’a thimblofu’o’ uhiskyin thohaill house?" . • ’ Hadn’t tub Heart to Do jt.— The other day Col. Hubbard was coming over from Camp’Carlisle, when ho mot a soldier who lud escaped from the camp, add who was, to use his own expression, “pretty tolerably drunk.” The soldier had a canteen full of whisky, which ho handed to tho Colonel upon being requested to do so. The Colonei dreW'tho stopper; turned up tho canteen and poured the whisky into the gutter. The soldier watched tlio fluid gurgling from the neck of the canteen, until tho last drop had fallen, when regretfully observed, “ I suppose that s all right, Colonel, but X never, oould o’ had tho heart to a done it." ®S5“On one of tho railroads the conductors have come down on the dead beau system, and wry much curtailed tho free list. An individual who has boon in the habit of trav elling to and fro without any charge, recently applied to the superintendent for a pass, and was much offended when it was refused. As he was leaving the room, he angrily exclaimed - “I’ll pay, my faro this time, hut tho road shan tbe any the richer for it— Til pan the conductor , w ' • John Jones has no objection to the boh bar law when applied to Jane. Jane Jones contends stonily for the liquor law, as applicable to John. Jane's argument is sim ple and conclusive, When John does liquor, ho does lick her. When John don’t liquor her, he don’t lick her Therefore, if John can’t liquor, ho won't lick her—tho conclusion she wishes to reach. In the' town of T there was a shoe maker who at times officiated as a preacher, lie always wrote tho notices himself, in order to save the expenses of printing. Here is one of,them: “There will ho preaching in the pines this Sunday afternoon on the subject, “All who do not believe will bo damned at three o’clock.” fi@“A Scotch paper speaks of w fox hav ing been soon trying to spring a steel trap by means of a stick which he carried in .his mouth. We know a fox that took a well polo from tho well and pushed a turkey off from the lower limb of a tree with-it, and put tho polo back in its place, At least ho got tho turkey, and tho polo was fouud all right in the morning. JBtSy* Georgo 1., bn a journey to Hanover, stopped at a village in Holland ; and while the horses, were getting ready; ho asked for two or three eggs, which.wore brought him, aud charged two hundred florins. “ How is this? said his-Majesty. “Eggs- must bo very scarce in this placed’ “ Pardon mo,” said tho host; “eggs are plentiful enough/ but kings scarce." The King smiled, and or dered tho money to be paid. O“0f all subjects which are presented to the mind of mau, there is none so interesting or so worthy of attention as religion, It is religion that opens our understanding to the knowledge of the Author of our existence, reveals to us the dispensations of Ilis provi dence, and unfolds tlio awful destinies of man. Enlightened by its precepts and instructions, the soul is drawn to a lovo of virtue, and taught to look hopefully forward for recom pense in the world to come. OCT” A clergyman meeting with one of his congregation who had recently come in pos session of quite a handsome property by the death of his brother, inquired how ho was getting along in the settlement of the estate, “Qh," said he, “I am having a dreadful time I What with getting out letters of ad ministration, and attending Probate Court and settling claims, I sometimes almost wise’ he hadn’t died." O" Ah edito.r says when ho wqs ip prison for libeling a justice of tho paaco, ho was re quested by tho jailor "to give tho prison a puff.’’ JG©*To a lover, his sweetheart's right hand and cheek and eye and ear are equaled by' nothing on earth but her loft. o*What la the difference between a milk maid and a swallow ? One skims the milk tnd the other the water. anb dnhfl. DO - The Soldier's Fare—half price. | O' To stop potatoes from rotting—eat ’em !C7” Great Rebellion Stimulant—the Cotton Gin. O' A Knookulqr Demonstration—a blow jn the eye. ■;,.0” Why is a wooden post like a flower seed?—Because it will prop-a-gate. BSf.Why is a muff like n fool? Because it lolda a lady’s hand without squeezing it. • 0“ Losing h cow for the sake of a rat. This is the Chinese interpretation of going to law. Those who praise you at the begin ing, will ask favors in the end. O*Money is nothing in itself; It is useful only when, it departs from us. K7* It is easier for tho. generous to forgive than for tho offender to ask jt. • ’ ICT’.No man can leave a better legacy to-, the world than a well-educated family. ■ BSiy* Bo calm while your adversary fVefs and rages and you can warm yourself at hia . fire.' - ■ .-■¥ O* Wanted a life-boat that will float on a “ sea of troubles.” ■. O” Pride is tho first weed to grow in the. human heart, and the lost to be’eradicated. ; O”, All persons know when they are knaves, few when they are fools. 0“ Women shonld seta good example, fop the men are always following after the wo men. ' , O” What throat is tho best for a singer to reach high notes with? A sohr throat, ; Touug woman are never in more dan. gor of being made slaves than when the mon are at their feet. . U P a brood of evil passions In your, bosom ; like” enraged serpents, - they will bite their cage. - -.p- Worldly happiness is said to he a glit, tenng false diamond, placed.upon the top of a smooth greased polo, wiiioh all try to climb and secure. *■ . . JSS?* To all men the best, friend is virtue;' the best companion are high endeavors and honorable sentiments. JSS?* Be diligent in the performance of the . I ® J . hfo, then I fs, like a du iful ma ter, will reward your diligence with success. OMVhon children die, they only. attain maturity in a readier way than by the tedious route of this mortal living. . Gentlemen wl\o smoke allege that it makes them calm and complacent. They tell us the more they fume the loss they fret. Op* Libejty ls the soul's right to breathe ; and, wlied it cannot take a long breath, laws are girdled too tight. 1 !C7” Grapple over with opportunity. And as you don’t know when opportunity will happen,along keep, your grappling irons al ways ready. JIo who thinks hecan do without others, is mistaken ; he who thinks others cai/not do without him is still more mistaken. la t Niagara was heard to exclaim JVfiat elegant trimming thai rain bow would make for a white lace overdress, , A, young exquisite being asked why bo did not enlist said, ho always thought war beSt wilon ’ taken, in liomo-pathio a®* If every word' men utter fell to .the ground and grow up a blndo of grass, most public speeches would be worth ton times as much as they now are. , • s®“” Marriage," said an unfortunate hus band, “is the churchyard of love." “And you mon,” replied this not loss unhappy wife. “are the grave diggers." . SSPAn experienced old stager says, if yon make Jove to a widow who-has a daughter twenty years younger than herself, begin by declaring that you Moity/.? ihoy were sisters. O* Mourn notthatyou aro weak and hum ble, The gentlo breeze is bettor than tho hur ricane, tho cheerful fire of the hearth-stone than tho conflagration Wink at email ii\juriesi R\thpr thtu* avenge them. to destroy a single boo, you throw down the hive, instead of one enemy you make a thousand, . 110 who profits by his own experience ja wise indeed; yet wiser far is ho who profc its by that of another, for ho thereby has all tho honefit,but none of tho pain, 8®“ The ordinary employment of artifice is the work-of a petty mind, and it almost always happens that he who uses it to cover lumsolf in one place, .uncovers himself in another. C7*Judge Jeffries when on the bench, told .an old fellow with a long beard, that he sup posed ho had a conscience as long os his board. “ Does your lordship," replied the old man, “measure consciences bv heard?-* If so, your lordship has none at all.” . C?“As man is an imperfect being, his dig nity cannot bo perfect; yet it may lie so near so ns to give delight, and power, and honor, and true happiness to tho possessor, and ena ble him to lead where others seek to follow. U~ There is a man in tho West who has moved so often, that whenever a covered wa gon comes near Ids house, his chickens all march up and fail on their hacks and cross tlioir legs, ready to be tied and carried to the next stopping place. , , S&-" What shall I help you to” inquired a lady of a modest youth at the dinner-table. “A wife,” was the meek reply. , The young lady blushed, perhaps indignantly ; and it S said that the kind offices of a neighboring clergyman wore requisite to reconcile the parties. 3Z7~ Physical troubles have their oompen-i aations. A, war correspondent of a Western paper writes thus; “ Did you over have the 'y oiler jaundors?’ I’ve got a few and could snare an assorted stock to a small dealer.-n Bettor get some, for a dime looks like squat ter eagle, which is a pleasant delusion." O* Wo have a hoy at hflme, about three years old, who is a regular “ shaver.” One day \ve were trying to teach him his alpha bet, and asked him what “ B" stood for?— “ George” was his prompt answer. “No," we replied, “it stands for boy." “ We’ll, ain’t George a boy ?” he nskeih'triumphautlyl Word and Deed. — Words iff sympathy lift not up the needy; only full sacks pap gland on snd, i 'f, , NO. 31.