VOL. 50. AMEIUGAN VOLUNTEER mblisheu evert THuh’s'bkV warning bt JODjV n. BRATTOS. TER M S Subscription. —Two Dollars if paid within the > »r; «nd Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if not paid ptitbin f .bo year. These terms will bo rigidly ad hered to in every instance. .No subscription dis continued until all arrearages are paid unless at the option of the "Editor.' ’ ■ 4. ADVERTiSKStENTS —Accompanied by the ga.su, and |Bofc exceeding ono square, will bo inserted three jUntoS'for One Dollar, and twenty-five cents for each additional insertion. Those of a greater length in proportion. • Job-Printing — Such as Iland-bills, Posting-bills, Tamphlcts, Planks, Label?, «fcc. &c., executed with K couraqy and at tho shortest notice. pamriVl. fliifc, AND YOCTII. ' ■ ■' ■ r Spring was fcusy in the‘woodlands, CHrabing>,up from peak to peak; As..an/ht eL’meto ’sat and brooded, . hia cheek.- hard .upon him, 1 Ahd hia living-friends were few. And.from odt the.sombro future ‘ Trimble* drifted into view. Tboro Is something‘tnovoa on strangely In old-ruins grayvwith years ; Yet.there’s something far more touching. In aa old face wot with tears., . And Uo sat there,-sadly'sighing O’er his feebleness-and wrongs. Though the.birds outsideJiis window . ot'sUmmcr in their songs. But/bcbolcU ’• aehango comes o’er him Where arorall his sbrrowi now? Co’ukV thoy- lcavo bis lioai-t as quickly As the gloom' his brow ? Up Iho groin sTo'pQ of-his garden, Past tho:dial, he savvf ruu Three ypuqggirls, with, bright cyos sliming, Like .their brown beads, in the. sun ! There was Fanny, famed for wisdom ! And fair Alice, famed for pride; Amibne that could say 14 My uncle,” - And said little else beside, •* And that.vision startled memories, That Soon hid all scones of strife, Sending Hoods of hallowed sunshine . through the-ragged rents of life. Then they took him from Ills study,- Through lung lanes, and tangled bowers, ’Out into the shaded valley V ilichly tinted o’er with flowers. And ho blessed their.merry voices, -. Singing round him ns he went, . For the eight of thoir-wild gladness- .< ■ I?iUotl'U>B owi^lioavt 'And, that night,' there came about him Far-off mendows plcturcd-.fair, And old woods iii which ho \vauderod Fro he knew the name of-care: , ; And ho said; ‘ 4 These angel laces• . Take the whUeneps-fromone’s bnirl” LATEST NEWS PROJI TUB DSJD, „ Scattered about the world are dead and .Tniriod cities that it is one of the lahorsof the -liviiijs in pur dav to disentomb. There are ■Pompeii and Herculaneum opeh, 'to'bear wit ness yet to the life of the past. At-Pompeii the diseiitumlnnent is now- going, on with fresh activity lunpgood results. Old,Egypt is delivering op fi-e.sh secrets if heridead at ..Thebes' ami elsewhere.. Spades ar d picks 'have been busy over the graves of Carthage ‘and other dead, arid hurled cities of the Car thaginians Nincvah and Babylon, having been in the hands of such resurrectionists-its Mr. Bayard, Sir floury 'Rawlison find others, ■are loft at pence for fi shrift time. 'Any nows thence is old news; bat froth the -graves of other cities, what is the latest intelligence 1 By the Sunny shores of the Bay of. Naples. ■stood for. centuries the remnant of an old ■ wall; and the people Who-lived Weirr ft‘tfe'v 'er cared to dig below the surface. It is now 'one hundred and fifteen years ago that a workman, engaged in, digging a well near 'this ruin, cut into a hollow chamber, of which the walls were covered with paintings. By the slow clearing away of the earth from buildings made by men who lived at the be 'ginning of the-. Christian era, dwelling-housa ' ®s, temples, altera, statues, built,for the,wor ship of heathen deities, baths and theat.es, were found till struck to silence like'the ‘Sleeping Beauty, only for a great many hum; ’dred years instead of duo; and, in our day; ■so restored to light and life, that wo see what .the town people wore doing in the house and iiri ‘he street in the month of August, A. D. •79. There are written recoords of the cause of this sudden, burial of a city whose inhabi tants were in the full tide of luxurious enjoy ment. The letttr remains in which the youn ger Pliny (ells Tacitus the horrors of it three days’ eruption of Vesuvius, in which his,un cle, (admiral of the Homan fleet then lying in the hay,) having approached top near the burning mountain, although still miles from .it, mot Ids death by the exhalations burst ing from beneath his feet. The admiral had asthma, and the solphurous vapors appear to have suffocated him at once, so that ho fell while his attendants fled from the scene of destruction to embark on board their ships. Returning, as soon as itboeanrt light, Which was not until after the end of three days, they found their master lying,’.Stretched as they had left him. ns if h‘6 had fallen asleep. 'Of late years, the removal of thri mass of mad ashes, and pumice stones, which the b'drn- 1 ing mountain had thrown out upon th’a city, has confirmed tli'6 statement of another an joient writer, that thb town of Pompeii had been, at the time of its total destruction, in bourse of rebuilding after the consequences 'of a violent earthquake which had happened Sixteen years bolero. For, as we walk along in the streets, we not only see the theatre and beany other edifices to have boon id course of 'construction at the time of their burial bat m the quarter once occupied by the stone and biavldo masons there ‘lie portions of an old frieze, executed in volcanic stone, beside which stands copies of the same decoration cut in white marble ready for execution in a restored temple. There are wheel-tracks in •he lava pavement; there are worn stone stops leading up to temples and places of husi ness; and, curiously enough, thoro is stone, Worn by the bunds of those who daily strip- Pod jo drink at the fountains placed at the reet-oroasings. By constantly loaning on ue hand while they stopped to drink the aiming water, these people, who fur so many liriVi Uri ? s have known no more thirst, wore a , *iow m the stone rim of the basin upon eiv ° 1 " lo y loaned. Terrible testimony is tront? 03 t *'° suddenness of the last outas- Pao. Broad is in tho bakers’ shop; there 1 I is a meal jweparod tint never tasted, in a tav ern. Outside that gate, in the town Trail which led to Herculaneum, was found a'skel eton in armor, _ It was that of the soldier on guard, who, faithful to duty, had not left his post. In a niche shelterihg a seat fur the use of tired travelers, wore found the bones ot a. woman dud a baby, and those of two other persons clasped in one another's arms. A few paces further on were three more skel etons, two of persons who had been running one way, and' the other of a person who had been hastening in the opposite, direction.— Of those one held sixty nine pieces of gold and one hundred and twenty one of silver.— Money was found lying beside the remains of people who had died in the vain endeavor to carry away means of life whoso sands were tun. In a room of fhe Temple oflsls, the priest 6f that Egyptian deity had met death with feastinp, for near him- were egg shells anil tile 'bodes of fowls and of a pig, together with a broken glass 'anfflvtvine vase In' the house known ns that of Diomed, were the remains of a man, with that of a goat -having it bell slung round its neck. In this dwelling were discovered more than twenty human beings. In a stable were the bones of a mule, stiel with its bron'zd bit between its teeth; in another place was the skeleton of a dog beside the bones of his master.— Some skeletods bad four gold rings on the same finger; one bad a bronze lantern in his hand, with which ho bad doubtless been try ing to find bis way out of the thick darkness of that day of terror. All these y,oi(iains were discovered many years ago,. but the work of excavation Whs then very slow, blow the recent change of government has given a new impulse to this most Interestjng labor, insomuch that during the last few month's, more has been done to ward diainfeVm.s.nt.'of'the secrets' of this bur ied community than bad lieon noccfttiDlished in the previous' quarter of a century There is a regular organization of labor, and about three hundred porfcon», many of them.girls and women, are employed the crust formed eighteen dehlnricb ago'tv prop-, tion from the mountain which now rises be- 1 hind the scone .without even a wreath of smoke upon its summit. Upon a regular tramway trucks, impelled by their own weight, run down an inclined plane and dis charge their loads at the end, just ns is doffe 1 at the formation of a railway. An entirely l new quarter of the town has been thus open ed nut; and there lias been found within the Inst few days the roof of a house, with alt its tiles lying at their proper angle of inclina tion, the ashes and mud haying poured into and filled .the room beneath it so completely ns to support its covering. There? are two houses with walls painted in fresco, loonkiug when disclosed, as fresh ns whon'first placed upon the walls. Unfortunately, in very lit tle,' time the colors fade away and alter. *Tho reds.especially soon become quite black.- These changes are h'rdhahly duo to,chem ical alteration ..produced by ’the sun’s rays, and to' the. oxidizing power of the air. If. therefore, ns soon rvp.ona of those pmutinjijß is discovered.-it',could'; he Washed- Ovid' with a'-'J solution of boiled-grass, such as is used by the modem fresco painters in Munich,'these intci'esting specimens of ancient art might bo pt'esbrved. The writer-lias suggested this to Signor Firello. tiie director of the oXcava lions. The very substance is sold in Italy for the purpose of preserving wood from the .oflficts'bf fire, and .is. knownMiy the name of liquoro disclce.- Several bodies have been recentlyifound imbedded in a mess of hard ened mud ; and the fortunate idea struck Signor Firello of pouring plaster of Paris in to the moulds thus formed. In this manner tan exact cast was made, inclosing such.parta-j ■.of the contained bodies ns remained undeoom- I posed. Thus were obtained, first, the body of a man lying stretched upon his back, bis features very well preserved; in, fact, so per fectly that bis friends, wore they alive still,, could have,sworn to bis identity. Afterward, o remains ot two fomalos, a woman ami, .yonng girl, wore preserved irt the sumo man ner ; so that, while of the dress only a east .remains, the skull-hones are there, resting upon the outstretched /arm. At the rtioa'ieht of death the left liiuid deems -to, have ■ been 'clasping the dress. In the elder female the left hand is shut, oiio of the fingers having a ring upon it. This group consisted of one man and three women, probably all of the :,snme family, who’were attempting to’save themselves by flight, after having hastily se cured dertfun 'Objects \Vhioh they valued. Silver money, besides four ear-rings and a all made of-gold, -together with ’the remains of a linen bag, were lying near : the woman. One is struck by the fact that very many .of the persons thus disclosed expired while engaged in the act of drawing their dress liver their features. Two reasons may be given for this. One. that it was done in the endeavor to prevent suffocation from the mephitic; vapors given off by the volcano. The other and the better, that it was cus- tomary among the jRi-mans to hide the face when in,the act of death. Thus, true to his ory, Shakespeare makes Antony say of the ‘the .mightiest Julius And in his mantle muffling up his face, Even at the base of Ppmpey’s statue, ' Which ail the while ran blood groat Ciosar foil. Time;- though ho shovels slowly, gets through more work than the liveliest volcano, and.is the ae’xton who has dug the grave of many a proud city. The remains of Roman London lie buried fifteen feet bolijtv the level of tho present streets. You are on the Nile, and see;.on either bank, a green plain under a cloudless sky. The columns and towers ol the groat temple of Luxor rise from arming the .miserable hovel;; of'ft starved modern lit tle market town. You sail by. and it is nil bright green plain till a mile further’to the north thn towers of Karnnk overtop a palm grove that partly hides the wonder df its wide spread ruins. Bht on tho green plain be tween Luxor and- Karnak, and for twelve miles'towards, tho hills of the Eastern Desert stood tlVd fbnVplps, palaces and gardens of hrindred gated Thoßes, for a thousand years th'd capital of the gfpAt niUldn of tho ancient world, Tini'6 Mis done Us work in its own slow way, and the Nile, rising from its new ly discovered sopree in tt.gr oat tropical lake, has played the part of .Vesuvius. Harvests wtiro eight feet above the burial ground on which tho glory of the PharSahs was dis played. At Thebes, also, there have been recent excavation sand discoveries. Wo have details trout Mr. Rhind of bis own •eoont excavation at Thebes of the unriflod- tomb of an Egyptian dignitary. Ho found it by the help of tho fiirty men who dug under his order. In seven weeks a doorway into tho rook was uncovered. This door has boon opoaod ; tho tomb within, and another within that, had been rifled; there wore broken mummy boxes, and mummies themselves lay where they had been teased out, with their wrappings ripped up along tho throat and breast. But further along, at the font of tho same piece of rook, other men had boon sot to dig. and two months of work cleared tho way to a tomb yet with its seal apparently unbro tel). The first entrance was into a gallery within the rock, about, eight feet square and fifty-five long, its walls smoothly plastered, with clay." Half way down this gallery Mr. Rhmd came to a funeral canopy of brightly painted pillars, supporting a painted roof, With a sort of temple front.in miniature, nil very gay .with, red,'blue and yellow. .This corresponded to our hearse and feathers over the dead, and had been delivered up as-well as charged for, by the ancient undertaker. Further inward, there sat, carved in stone, a pairof monumental figures, two feet high, .male and female, side by side. Their super scription showed that the deceased gentleman had been h;oltidf.6f giro military police of the Temple.of Aminon Ra, at Thebes; He was decidedly plump and on bis dress was in scribed, “All food off the tables of Apimori Ra and Mut is given to the deceased/' The. lady by tfi'e {re(itlep>kh’a side was inscribed. “His sister beloved from the Se'pth'of his heart.” The statues wore flanked by tall jars. ' • _ ', T After this couple had been buried further use had been made of their tomb, trances were foundj still built up, leading to passages, one midway in this gallery, the other at the end of it. There was also at the end of The gallery a massive wooden door, barred, lacked and protected by a barrich i o of large stories Ufailt id front of it to half its height. Great was the excitement'of the whole body of resurrectionists. . The sealed entrances were guarded throfigli the night by sailors from the boat,, for there was no .trusting the fellaheen’ of .Gounreh, demoral ized by a successful traffic in ■ antiquities.— Early next morning the entrance tb the side passage was opened. It led to a couple of sriiall cells, both in confusion, with their plain black wooden mummy oases broken, and the bodies turned out, many of them unwrapped. There were a few sepulchral images, and in the innermost cell yet remained the plain Ro man lamo of. terracotta, with black nozzle and half burnt wick, that had lighted the plunderers two thousand years ago. There ’remained the’massive door, of such substan tial timber that in ill-tempered Egvpt it was a prize worthy'to ho competed a bish op/a,deacon, a consular agont.and twoslieiks. The door' opened on a sloping tunnel, in .which a man could wdk upright. It was'a tonne I seven ty feet long, leading to a shaft or wwl fen feet by six. Half way down this gallery wore cells which had been rifled. 'Hope, how lay. like truth, at the bot tom of the, well. The well, twenty feot deep, waseffcaslca by strong beams, over which still hung the repo of twisted palm fibres, by .which the .abad-'hnfi !those who carried them descended years ago. Xt.the bottom there wore again chambers.. Of these, throe con tained mummies of , persons who had-been buried in ordinary cases'; but a fourth death chamber contained a nihsifiVo dark granite sarcophagus, with the roller's anil plank by which, it .had been-moved into position still lying about it. The'want of Veneration for antiquity, RUovvrv.Uy thpHO pef»plh,.;vuVvv tlloiu jselvtesiil.HbA tv;b,- r.s,’ plaints, of brqkbn munimy cases hovered with* hieroglyphics. At tiie doorway of tin’s prin ciplo vault, was a tall jar nearly full of palm nuts; there were .nuts also scattered abbot the floof. At the- head of the sarcophagus was the preserved body of a dog, like a small Italian grey hound, swatbetfin osiers-; also a mummied ibis, a doll of a hawk, and a hall of bitumen. The dog was an emblem of An ubis,,genius of tombs. Whenever a house dogdiedin the course of nature, all the in mates of the bouse shaved their whole person. 'Xhe ibis was emblematical of the recording angel. , The hawk was the symbol-of Horns, who Ushered, the wools that were saved’into the presence of Osiris; and within the ball ’of bitumen was a coiled snake, probably the horned isnake sacred to Ammon Ra, the god especially honored at Thebes iho solid coyer of the -sarcophagus, freed from tlio cement which fastened It, was rais* ed, and the sarcophagus itself was then found to,have been filled with bitumen poured in hot over the mummy. Theclearing away of this was a long work, and curly in the course of it the glitter of a: golden chaplet excited the Arab workmen, who dream wildly of treasures (6 die found in the unopened tombs. The face of the mummy was ciised by ft.-gilt and the temples wore wreathed with a chapiet of copper thickly gilt, having eleven' hay leaves of thin gold* attached to it by pli ant stalks. Tb*d pater cdoth covering of the 'body was pain ted in a diagonal pattern, an swering to that on the top of the wooden funeral canopy at the first entrance. Under , the painted shroud were folds steeped in line bitumen and pungent gums, with small chin plates of gold, some of them beetle shaped, and glassy . pieces interspersed. From the leu side of the dead was tak’eh'ft. lArge Vit'dAl papyrus. When the body itself "was reached I -—that of a man of mature years, with strong i ly marked features—the skin if the upper part Of the body was found to Infve been cov ered with thick .gold Tcfftf. In another case was the wife of this dignitary, also with the upper part of her skin gilt, and a papyrus by her side. Others were differently adorned, and one had a gilt mask. The dignitary in the sarcophagus was named Leban ; ho had had charge of the royal horses, and died nine years before our .era, at the ago of sixty, — His wife's name was Tabai, daughter of a priest and lord, who is described as “one very great emong mortals.” They went down to the pit with the records that arc their letters of introduction to the antiquaries of the nine teenth century. , Cartilage, too, has, after all, been incom pletely blotted out. After throe months* la bor on the site of ancient Carthago, Mr. N. Davis found, that the keeper of a French chkpel there bfid been stimulated, by ob.scr* vation of his wanderings, to dig at the foot of a piece of wall near a wide pit that had been opfiftfed in vain by searchers among the apparently poor ruins of the temple of Aa- Ho found in a few hoiirs a charming mosaic, meaauringabnut four fe'6t by two and a half. It was complete. and the nature of the ground made itappeAtto him impossible that there could be more. liut Mr. Davis, sedl'rtg men to work, soon disclosed the bright mosaics of the corner of a temple floor adorn ed with a eblossAl female bust, and with two full robed priestesses dancing before their goddess. More digging bi'oliglit 'toliglitmoro of the rich pavement trodden by the worship pers in a groat temple that had been re stored when Carthago became the capital of Roman Africa. Much mope of old Carthago las since been found. The Oiirthiyge.nian smses were built, above the lower story, with what Pliny called formneenn walls, of earth enclosed between hoards; snob walls being declared proof ngflinat riiin; wind and fire. There yet remain turrets of earth built by‘ Hannibal as watch-towers on Spanish mountain lops. But when tbeso earthen walls of Carthage fell in ruins, they formed heaps of rubbish that a fow years would trans- form into mounds of apparently natural soil, with nothing loft under them hut unsuspect ed pavements, through which tho Romans " OUR COUNTRY—MAt IT ALWAYS BE EIGHT—BUT RIGHT OR WRONG OUR COUNTRY.” CARLISLE, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTE What lessons are embodied in thy teach ings 1 stern lessong. as wein our days of hope and happiness, could never think encounter ing as,we set sail under sunny "skies, and our hark glided pleaet-SUly over smooth waters; we did not dream of the clouds,’the storm, the tempest, that came all,too Shon and a woke us from our fond security. ' d . TiraC, the great ttpnitor'bf all hearts teaches ■ns the undeniable ahd stern truth, that change is written.on all'Jllinge; but the saddest is death. Oh how teTrUdo is the wreck of hearts and homes, when ||m nieasehger reslatlesj tuid 'hherring ip his march, takes, from nur’blast the brave and strong; prayor'knd tears are of ho avail; life’s lesfln we mast all learn, life’s burdens we must Boar. , • Who has not sew some of.thoir loved ones wrappedjn the oigd e'e-emepts of the grave and borne to the; jhmiir.p.riiljlo city of the dead? when wo reijiciiihered that.in' derings thruhgli 'life’s paths we should meet them no ihore, see their kindly beaming smile, hear their loved tines no more, have wo not, in anguish of soul;,littered the wail ofn.bleed '•ng heiirt, letme (jie for in all this broad earth : I have nought to live far: hut we cannot die when we wish to most; we may weep at many a grave before vre-reae i our own. Who has not wppt over broken hopes And severed ties’? whtf/fias not seen, one by one life’s cherished- flrenms depart, its golden clirilioo turned .top bitterness; or snatched rudely from our gfasp tho hope and trust of years ?, “■ Oh; who cannot; say, when all our hoarded hopes are our household goods are scattered and broken, I would not live , al ways? .. 'I- As rather an unscrupulous fellow , named Ben was coming down’one morning, he mot Tom, and stopped him. ~ • ‘lsay, Tom,’ ho said, ‘here’s n pretty good counterfeit three. If you pash it, 1 I’ll divide.’ ‘ Letts sep the,.plaster.’ said Tom ; and af ter examiai>ig'i.tiCfirefully, put it’in his veht poeket,’. roui'acWh-thf .; ‘lt is no e'pmf^iviaV.on—a dollar and a half a pie<;.i.'/.’ : ,;prS : , ; ’ Yes,’ suiiTßi-:-... , ... ■ aii rig.... s. ;.i.fh,b. Aiul tiff 1 . , A (ov m :).i he quietly, step ,V>rA v ill a Lh i- sir.). (),A ion it Upti.,n,m\ pur- The clerk hj.<',:ed;pt..,lh^ rather dquhting ly ; wl.on I.ifps qvpioiiijjfefyroro immediately calnieil by’Tob; who laiii;; . ‘ There is : rio tits in hlol. ing,.for -I received the iiot'b from Ban-'ih'iiis-h ’ not’, ton. minutes ago.’/;; . : . Of course the clerk, with this assurance, forked the dollar an’i a half in change ; with this dopos.it and a can of oysters. Tom left. Shortly afterward -fa's.(not Ben, who asked him if he had passed the note. -, - ‘ Oh, yes,’ said Tinn at the same time pass ing over the dollar arid a half to Bon; That evening, when Bob (tiMe up h-s.cash account,.ho was surprised.to find the same old counterfeit three'in (lie drawer. Turn ing to his ’locum tehans, ho asked : ‘ Whore did you get this cursed note?— Didn't yon know it was counterfeit ?’ • ‘Why',’ said the el<.rk. ‘ Tom gave it tome and I suspected it was fishy ; hut he said he had just received it from you, and I took it.’ The thing had penetrated the wool of. Ben. With a particular grin, ho muttered, Sold!’ and charged the can of oysters to profit and loss account. Earth has some sacred spots whore wo feel like loosenin’; the shoos from our feet, arid treading with holy reverence ; where com mon words of pleasure are.’ unfitting ; places whei’o friendship's, hands have lingered in each other; where vojvs have been plighted, prayers offered rind tears of parting shed.— Oh, how the thoughts hover around such pla ces, and travel back through immeasurable apace to visit them. But of all the spots on the green earth,,none is so snored as that whore rest's, waiting the resurrection, those wo once loved and cherished. Hence, in all ages, the better portion of mankind, have chosen the loved spots they have IoVeA. to’ wander at eventide and weep alone. But among th‘o charnel houses of the dead if there is one spot iri or e sacred than the rest, it is a mother’s gravel there sleeps the mother of our infancy—she whoso heart was h stran ger to eyeryr other feeling hut love, and who corild always find excuses fords when wo could none for ourselves. There she sleeps and wo love the very earth for her sake. An Opinion on Morgan.—lt is related that an old woman ventured out in, the midst of Morgan aud his men in a little town in Indiana, and inquired of a rebel, who was sitting backward upon his ‘ frame/ . * Wlinr is the gcynllor ?’ ‘ D'ye mean John Morga n ?’ ‘ Yans, jest so.’ ‘There he is,’ said the reb, pointih'g to John. ‘ Well/ said the old lady, eyeing hiiiri from head to foot, ‘ We’ve got better lookin’ horse thieves nor him in Iloosier, an’ lose.said about ’em too/ C7’“Mr. Timothy,” said a learned Indy, who had been showing off at the expense of a dangler, “you remind nib of a' barurtVetbf that is filled with nothing in the drifter story/ “Divine Almira,” meekly replied her ador er,‘.‘ln thanking you for , that compliment, let me remin I, you that you occupy the upper story entirely.” O” Tho Indy who pulsed a five cent piece in one of tho horsbdars in Boston, Inst Tues day, was very much confused by the wonder ing gaze oftho other passengers. The con ductor examined tho |) ic'ije very carefully to satisfy himself that it was genuine'. O’ Many sav that, trumpet-players are doomed to short lives. Wo doubt it; we have known men to blow their own trumpets incessantly, and achieve a good troublesome old ago. O’ Accounts from all parts of tho Canad ian Province agree as to tho bountiful harvest which is now being reaped. often dug in : the rebuilding of tho city. A thin lay or of charcoal, or some other evidence of the npt.ion.of tl(« fire, is always found on the remains of ancient Carthago. The use of clay bricko for building has been assigned, ns one main cause of the complete disappear anco of Babylon’;.. For .Babylon tho mighty city is fallen. Scarcely a detached figure or tablet has been dug from the vast heaps that are the gravesof all its glory. Life ’and TioVb, Profit and lo&. 4 illotlier'* .GraVc, 11BER10, m Tlie Effects of a New Piano. Tho deed is accomplished. My wife has got a piano, “and now farewell to the tran quil mind, farewell content and evening pa pers, and tl C big cigars that make ambition virtue—o farewell 1 And 0, ye mortal en gines, whose rude throats the.immortal Jove’s dread clamors counterfeit!” But stop —I can't bid them farewell, fur one of them has just oume. It came on a dray. Six men carried it into the parlor, and it grunted awfully. It weighs a ton, shines like a mirror;, and has carved Cupids climbing up its lege. And. such lungs—whew! My wile has cOmnionocd to practice upon it, and the first tune she touched the .machine I thought we wore iu the midst of a thunder storm, and the light ning had struck the crockery chest. The eat, with tail erect, took a bee lino for a particu lar friefad oh the fence, demolishing a six shil ling pane of glass. The baby awoke; the lit tle fellow tried his best to beat tho instrument, but ho didn’t do it—it .him. i A teacher has been introduced iute the house. He says he is. the last of Napoleon’s, grand army. He wears a lung moustache, looks at me fiercely, smells of garlic, and goes by'ho name of Count xlun-away-and-never come-back-again-by and-by. He ran his fin-' gers through his hair, then cooked .his eyes up to the ceiling like a monkey hunting flies, then down came one ..of his .fingers, and 1 heard a dreadful sound, similer to that pro 'fluced by a cockroach 'hpon the tenor string of a fiddle. Down came another, and I was reminded of the wind whistling through a knothole in a hencoop. He touched his thumb, nod I thought I Was in. a peach orchard, lis tening to the praying of a jackass. Now runs his fingers along the beys, and I thought of a boy rattling, a stick upon a picket fence All of a sudden, ho stopped, and I , thought that something had happened. 1 Then came down-both fists, and 0 lord, such a noise I never heard before. I thought a hurricane had struck the house, and, the walls were cimng in. I imagined I was in the cellar anu a ton of coal falling, on my head, f thought the machine had burst, vrh,cn the infernal thing stopped and I hoard my wife ekelaim: . ‘-.Exquisite!’’ “What.the deuce is tho matter?’’. The answer was, “Why, dear, that’s Somnamhula.” . . “Hang Somnanibula,” thought I, and the Count rolled up the sheet. Ho calla .it music, but for the life of mo, I can’t make it look like anything else than % rail fence with a lot of juvenile negroes climb ing oyer it. Before that instrument of tor ture came into 'the house, I cohld ’enjoy my self, but now every woman in the neighbor hood must be invited to hoar the new piano, and every time the blasted thing shrieks out like a locomotive with the'bronchitis, I have to praise its tone, and when invited guests are playing, 1 have, to say, .-‘Exquisite !” Do ligluluH”, “Heavenly 1” andaU-such trash, whjle at ,tho same time I know no move about ' ( An Item for the, Home Circle.—Sombody says,mid truly too, thatthere are few-families,- anywhere, in which love is riot abused ns furn-" isliiiig the license fur .impoliteness; A. lias band; father, or brothci, will speak harsh words to those he loves best, simply because the security of love and family pride'.keeps him from getting bis head broken. It is a shame that a man will speak more impolitely, at times to his wife or sister than he would to any other female, except alow vicious one. It is thus that the honest affections of a map’s nature prove to bo a weaker protection to a woman in the family circle than the restraints of society, and that a woman usually is in debted for the kindest politeness of life to those, not belonging to her own household. Things ought not to he so. The man who, because it will riot be resented, inflicts his .spleen and bad temper upon those of his hea’rtstono, is a Small crowd and a very moan man. Kind words’are circulating mediums betwec'ri.trfic gentlemen and ladies at homo, and no polish exhibited iri society can atone for the harsh' language and disrespectful treatpiont too often indulged in between those bound together by ,Ood‘s own ties of blood, and the more sacred bonds ofoonjngal lose. A Re-TAii.on.—A newsboy rushed into ft retail store on Hanover street, the other day; and thus accosted the proprietor; , ‘ Say, Mister, do you retail shirts here ?' ‘ Yes, my son ; we have them to fit you at one dollar each—very nice ones.’ ‘Oh, blazes I I don't want a whole one.— But I seed on your sign : Shirts retail and wholesale, and I thought you might re-tail mine, lor it wants it bad ; a dog got hold of it, and wouldn’t let go if I’d kill’d him.’ Tit for Tat.—lt is reported that the reb els are at once to put!00;000 colored srildicrs iri the field under white officers. They are to fight \Vith the promise of freedom; rind the New York Herald says the following bounties will be offered. them §5. for each IT. S, musket, §25 for each IT. S. horse, §2O for each.U. S. negro Soldier captured by them, arid §5O for each soriip of ft IT. S. officer com mandirig negro soldiers. Seward on McCi.ei-lan.—The Washing ton, correspondent of the World says, ‘Sec retary Seward’s ‘ last words’ in Washington before leaving for Auburn are reported to have been to the following effect—that the country would have been the bettor by three disastrous defeats—that of the Pope cam paign, the B.ilrnsido slaughter, and Hooker’s wilderness fight— if Gen. McClellan had been left in command of the army of ike Potomac and let alone.’ BSf If' you want to make a girl, who is vain of her beauty, mad, tell her you wont to a party last night, and was introduced to Miss the handsom'est girl you ever saw in your life. The momott't jtobr hack is turned she will commenc’d nlttking fbcos at you. That’s so, try it. 0“ XfresscS itfo bottling down. The sign before tba door of 'a m'AtttVitt maker's shop, in the oily, reads thus: , ■ , “ N. B.—Dresses made lower than ever.” BSy*lfyou wish your neighbors to notice you, buy a clog and tie him up in tho cellar nil ilight. They won’t sleep for thinking of you. o“F!ave said, that if men should rise front the dead.and.bead their epitaphs, some of thorn would think they had got into tho wrong grave. O’ The heart that soars upward escapes 'little cares and vexations ; tho birds that fly high have not the dust of the road upon their wings. O’ It is less important to a young lady that her lover’s diamonds should be of purer water than his drinks should bo. |MW. SSTfIUNBING iIHLITIRY miIDS. Wholesale Swindling Operations in the Rais ing of a Cavalry Regiment. Enormous Profits on Spavined Horses—Military Com missions Sold\and Resold—Fraudulent Spec ulations in Sabres, Saddles Pistols and Groceries. [From tho N. Y. Herald, Aug. V.] Wo publislf to dny. n most extraordinary fboitbl of fliots, collected from various relia ble sources, by our reporters, showing an or ganized system of swindling on, the United Slates government, which has no parallel in the Wars of any other country. Some months ago we published a lengthy expose of similar frauds, which ht the time led to considerable excitement in military and general circles.— The exposures now made arc more particu lar in their hearing, pointing as they do to individuals well known in this community, one of whom, at least, has been for some time connected with the military service of the country. It is astonishing that the Govern ment Commissioner of the War Department has nut brought these facts to the notice of the government and the press. 1 If one tithe of, the charges which now rest on private in formation can bo proved to be true, it would bo more than sufficient to call for the most condign, swift and exemplary punishment on all the parties concerned. Without far ther preface, wo will, state the facts as they have been convoyed to our reporters. In-the early part of the spring,of the,year 180i,Just after the proclamation of the Pres ident of the United. States calling for volun teers to take the Cold, two .persons,, whose names we hero (mbit, proceeded to,Washing ton to endeavor to obtain-authorities, to rajso’ a regiment of cavalry in New York. While in Washington they met with a man of some rote, and requested him to use his influence to assist'therii in carrying out their views.— This gentleman had some doubts as to the character of one o'f'tho t‘qr(jes, and was there fore not inclined to'do'anytmhj: to hssisfhim ;. 'but, thinking,that the other was a respecta ble, honest, and reliable person, ho resolved to interest himself in, his hblialf, and to do everything in his power for 'the supeessaif the work he had in ...1n flue course the fa vored party wits ihtrodubed to the Hon. Wm. H. Seward, Secretary of State, and other persons^of influence, through whose exertions he obtained the required permission to raise a regiment of cavalry, and to purchase the horses and equipments for mounting and arming the mem From all that has trknspivcd it appears that throe persons had entered into arrange- 1 uieuts to form o kind of partnership iii.tho business'of raising the. regiment and fitting it out, on the understanding that they were ’ equally to divine, whatever in-olUs -might no-' torue from the operation. It seems that nn otner pcißOri iseikm •ifn.fetctcetn'..i.t, to onter into the combination, that ho should have the disposal of thc sutlership of the reg iment for himself or fur his friends. He, therefore, co-operated with them until he discovered that they were combining to swin dle.not only him, hut every one with whom they had any kind of dealings.. Ho then broke tiff his contract, and re,used to have anything more to do with them. We are al so informed that one of the principals quali fied himself before a Notary,Public in New York as a bondsman to the extent of ten thousand dollars for a man who was seeking to obtnin the position of Paymaster in the service, while thebe, ,werb pending eleven judgments against him in different courts, .amounting to .several thousand dollars! - In the matter of h supply Of horses for lho fegiment.tho same collision ippenrs.' A;fhr rier was employed to inspect horses, and on conscientiously: rejecting many of them the Colonel became greatly incensedr ;ainst him and discharged him from that service to make room for'another exaifiiher, who is supposed would bo more pliable, ami therefore more easily moulded to his nefarious purpose. This new examiner, it appears, passed, a number of horses which were bought at an average of. $BO a piece. Those horses were sold to the government at the full price of $ll3. Another person who furnished horses supplied sumo'three hundred ht $BO A piece. These, it appears, were very good horses, lib made Out his-bill in his own name at $ll3 each, and, after receiving payment’from the military authorities, he paid over SlO a piece on each horse to one of the principals. Ho, however, refused to furnish any more Ikrsea, th the firm sooirbegnn to deal unfairly with tilth. This fa enough to show tho wholesale manner in which the government was swin dled in the one item of horses, but if wo choose to pursue the inquiry farther, there is no lack of facts just as shameful as tho pre ceding. The supply of saddles was too good an op portunity for swindling to be allowed to pass, and tho linn therefore made good use of it. According to a statement made to us. it si sms ;hat the Colonel calculated on making about ;hroo dollars on cab saddle. The sa'ddlos urnished to the regiment were of the old Mexican pattern, and ware vastly inferior to the McClellan saddle, and ns with pistols, they were all inspected and condemned at Har per’s Ferry. The sabres which were supplied to the regiment were .subsequently condemned at Harper’s Ferry, They wore of an inferior quality; but, the firm contrived to make one dollar and fifty cents on oach sabre. On a contract with a merchant for supplying sa bres to the whole regiment, it was arranged that the partners should make a profit of two dollars on each weapon. Besides this there is strong evidence to show that a number of officers bought their commissions at prices ranging from two hundred dollars to four hundred dollars apiece. sutlorship, which, it is already stated, was premised to a man fora friend, it Scorns that the Colonel afterwards sold it to Mother per son, but subsequently took it front him and resold ft to it thiftl Tbi J'StiO, the ar rangement being that 5260 was to bo paid in cash and the remainder afterwards. This latter pepe.oj), jt is, njUggod, paid the, first mot sty, but refused, to payfth'e other, oh the pleti that the Colonel and his associates had swin- dled him out of 88,1100. Another man, also had the sutlership of the regiment sold to him, for whioli he was to pay 83.000 in cash, and to furnish the Colonel 81,000 worth of groceries. A sum of 83.000 was also raised for the alleged purpose ot purchasing a silver service to bo presented to the wife of an hon orable Senator, bat it is now understood that the pluto was chased, but that tho money collected for that purpose was appro priated by tho Colonel and his partners for thoir own personal uso and bonclit. A largo sum was collected from tho officers and paid over, hut has novor since been accounted for. Tins general sys'em of swindling was enr out in the most minuto details ~, 1 A kind of business manager of the organi- There are some charges against the Colon el at which the public must naturally stand aghast; for if they'be proved when the prop er board of inquiry begins its sittings, tbor will naturally consign his name to perpetual' srifnmy. It is said to be stated by the suffer, era themselves, that, ho picked his business agent’s,pocket of $5O ; that he also picked the. pocket of'nnotlicr man ol his watch, and that in like manner lie abstracted $5O from tlio. ppojtot of an officer in AVashington. It is ti>, lie lioppd fer tile Colonel’s own sake, as well as for the honor of our military service, that these charges may prove unfounded, or at least greatly'exaggerated. ’ *f’ In bis dealings with his Farrier, the Col onel broke faith with him in not appointing him to a por'lfion in the regiment Which ho had promised him. The Farrier was also promised one dollar ahead for each her,id, that ho might inspect; hat lie never received a farthing fur nia,time or trouble. . According to numerous statements mad" to us, it appears that the profits which,acoru- . od from the purchase of-horses and other mat te'rinls for the use of the regiment Were taken and used by the Colonel for the purchase arid furnishing of a house in tlio city of New York. This led to a misunderstanding with the two, other members of the 6rtn, who were much dissatisfied at the course pursued hy tlio Col onel in appropriating the lion’s share of tho spoils. -- '' _ . Prior to this H-seems that the ColOnel wo in very limited oircumstarices, and, has ama*. sed a largo fortune out of the frauds on the governriient ho was pretending toserve. Of the career of this Colonel prior to hip connection with the arriiy a good deal has transpired. At. the time he entered the service of tlm United States there was an indictment agaiim him for perjury ; hut itwaa'snspen.ded. when li'e-was about to leave for thbsoat of war. • • •We might add that one of the partners hi Said to liavo made an-agreement with a law yer, in order to gel his influence in obtaining Authority to buy horses arid equipmeritn lc>' hig.. regiment, promising to give him a h.- rquohe hnd pqir of horses for liis service, ns. well as one-fourth of the profits which,Hu** might make out of tho transaction’; bot.-tV-’ lawyer only received the horses and barouche and §3OO in money. He considered that he had been swindled, and declared that the whole crow were a. Set of,-damned rascals.— According to the declaration of two of the partners, the Colonel had appropriated all tho money to his own ii?o. '.there .are facts enough extant to swell on.-, this recital to twice its., present,-length ; but “sufficient unto tho day is the evil thereof.” ( The conspiracy of the Abolitionists to rivetv I run the Constitution is becoming daily mors ’ apparent, and the evidence that they JmJ-1, the President in their power is indisputable. The time has arrived when every white citi zen, who is not willing to bo soerificed to ne gro and Abolition supremacy and tyranny, fnust assort liis rights and defend tiie Con stitution formed to protect them. From many proofs of the pressing danger to our institu tions we select the following: The Philadelphia Bulletin, a loading jour nal of the Republican faith, in ar. editorial on tho " Ship of State,” gives its Eeriiimeuiii in these words: . ‘ “ Now, some, say, ‘ we are for the Union as it was.’ What if you are; you cannot, have it, the stuff that was in it. is 100 rotten, and would tot stand tho pressure if you could put it back. ' Tbit could riot trust it; nobody • hut Secessionists, Copperheads and Traitor’s would go to sea in the old hulk.’’ L’he Chicago Tribune, tho organ of the Ad-' ministration in Illinois, says:. - “ The Union as it was will never bless the vison of any pro-slavery fanatic, of secession sympathizer, and it never ought to. It is », thing of the past, hated by every patriot, ami destined never to curse an honest people, or blot the pages of history again.”. , . ' jfh.ad. Stevens, the acknowledged leader of the Republican parry in.Congrees, in a speech on the floor of the House, uttered the follow ing language: . “I will not stulify myself by. supposing that wo have any warrant in the Constitution for this proceeding. This talk of restoring the Union ns it was under tho Constitution as it, is, is one of the absurdities which I have heard repeated un til! have i.ccomo about sick of it. The Union can never he restored ns it was. There are many things which render such an event impossible. This Union never shall, with my consent, be restored .under the Constitution as it is, with, slavery to be ’protected by it." Mr; Whitting, Solicitor of the Administra tion at Washington, and hence supposed,to bo speaking its sentiments, in a receritdotter published in the North American, at Phila delphia, among other startling declarations, said: ■ 1 .! “Among the war measures sanctioned by io President, to which he has, mure than once, pledged his snored honor, and which Congress has enforced by solemn laws, is tho liberation of slaves. Tho Government has invited .them to share the dangers, the hon or and tho advantages of sustaining the Union, and Ims pledged itself to the world for their freedom. “ Whatever disasters may befall our arms) whatever humiliations may be in store fora* it is earnestly hoped that we may he saved the unfathomable infamy of breaking tin na tion’s faith with Europe, and with colored eil • hens and staves in the Union.” , , The Abolitionists,, it seams, aro .delighted that Lee was not defeated on tho . Potomac a second time. A correspondent of the Anti- Slavery Standard writes : "Our peoplo.arplpapers express much cha grin that liee> vtrS allowed to escape without another battle. I don’t share in the feeling. On the contrary, I was,glad when I beard that ho was over the.irivor, ,and I have seen In regard to the no reason sinpoi fur any other emotion. If Mcrda'had’engaged Loo and been whipped —which was 1 possible—it would have been bad ; if ho had utterly defe'atod and routed Loo—which was much more than possible it would have been worse. The political consequences could hardly have Jailed to be disastrous. The nation is not prepared for a sudden and triumphant suppression of the rebellion. We shall not be ready till we gel a black army oj’alleast one hundred thousand men in the field.” . ~ , 'jy m Tho tune of tho conscripts—Wo ard coming, Father Abraham, three hundred dollars more. O' Most young fellows, when whiskey in at hand make rye mouths. zntion of the regiment was swindled out,of Ilia pay for his time ns well ns for his service- 1 es. K citizen of Philadelphia was defrauded of his pay fop. his services to the amount of §350. A man tvho was concerned in the purchase of horses seems also to have been swindled out of $3,000 hy the same parties under similar circumstances; ■tub vOJtsrmcr. NO. 13.