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' ' ' ' . - C- ;-.. * ?' ~.;--: - r 0 . • .• : ; ~..,. . . .- •• ' ••`-- -‘ - .i. - _ ~ N . ,,._., . - 7 . ?';, ~., 4-!:,.:•:,' 0, ` , - ' ""Ak '''''( ' ‘ll‘ ''AA' -":.' ''' ... '. : . .;,• , 5; . : - 4 - '• -•• ••7*•`'''' . i'' 1 4.'" , :;:' , .".''''4\,A; .. .„ ''..:.1-:,;,,- - **l. \\ '4 ,-- ., -- • . I ,___ tr - •• • ,, : - . 4 .. , ....... ,- ,.,N)..1 .fir : '':f •, , f ' .0, ° 11) . •' ' ;,,..:;,-',.. ',.:.,....1.7", t ' ...._,..,..„.„ ..... . - • . -4 ' 4--4.--7.-- •'"'' - - ' -4E 4 414* A0 74\ . 1. " st ,CCI. A.- . F,..,„E.c.f. - z 0........„ 3 .., ter; -- tt: 'I. ..-.. _ .....0„--4p. ..I.,t\ , _ 4, . 1.-,,.,.......... _ . . . r ~ . . . 1. .0 . . . " --... •""....,. --. '- -..."-..... , . r . . I VOL. 50. AMERICAN VOLUNTEER. ytffifitßHED BVERT THURSDAY MORNING BY JOHN B. BRATTON. TERMS: gmiioniPTioN. —Two Dollars if paid witlflu'tbo s»arj and Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if not paid Within the year. These terms will ho rigidly ad hered to in every instance. No subscription dia jonlinuccl until all arrearage's are paid unless at flic option of the Editor. Advertisements —Accompanied by the cash, and Tiot exceeding one square, will bo inserted throe times for Quo Dollar, and twenty-Hvo cents for each additional, insertion. Those of a greater length in proportion. •Jon-PRiNTma—Such as Hand-bills, pamphlets, Blanks, Babels, Ac. &0., executed with , ocuraoy and at the shortest notice. foetal!. “PASSING AWAY.” BY C. 11. M. Where'er my eyes on oalffii i. cast, Where'er my footsteps "stray, One solemn-thought still fills my bronst; All those shall pass away. First man, God’s greatest work, Tho creature of a day, For whom this shining world whs made, Soon, soon shall pass atvay.. (lowers Wo boo around, Ail bright in spring's array, Cold winter's chilling winds destroy, And thus they pass away. Tlio granite rocks, which nyo have stood, Washed by tho ocean’s spray, Massive, and groat, and seated doop; E’ea those shall pass away. Tho giant oaks our forests throng. With ago grown strong and gray, Receive tho universal fato, And also pass away. * ‘Oiil Ocean's solf shall yield at last To Time’s resistless sivay'; Though roaring now with conscious might, Uo, too', must pass nwny. ’(the very earth on which we tread, With ago shall know decay; The heavens above, with sun and moon, All, all shall pass away. An ancient king relief did seek, To ease his mind in pain ; And also when good fortune smiled. Excess of joy restrain. A learned philosopher ho His troubles to ailfty, Who told his king to keep fn mind “This, too, must pass away." thenceforth on all his palaco walls, Where’er his eyes might stray, Was writ, in characters of gold, ■“This, too, must pass away." And oven after o’or Ms srml. It held a soothing power ; It modified his greatest joys. Aud chewed the darkest hour. Q, blinded man, why wilt thou yofc ’ Thy work of faith delay ? Prepare to join that heavenly land* Where none shall pass away. For hope nc*oss ike datffoSt pilth Has flung a heavenly ray. As with this onward march of tlmo Wo pass to endless day. WBttllmmm The German Grandmother. Grandmamma is very old ; alio la wrinkled end has snow-white hair, hut her oyea are bright and mild. She tolls the moat charm ing tales, and she wears' a silken dress with large flowers, which makes a rustling sound na it grazes' against the walls. Grandmam ma knows a groat deal; the reason is, that she has lived a long time, long before papa and mamma, that is certain. Grandmamma has a hook of canticles with a silver clasp, and sli ois niften reading in that book. In the middle of the volume there is n rose, flat tened and dried, which is not so beautiful as the roses in the grass, and yet grandmamma smiles happily Vfliott she looks at lb and her ayes fill with tears. Why does grandmam ma gaze in this Way on the dried flower in her book of canticles ?- You want to know ? '■very time that one of grandmamma’s tears fella on 1 the flower, its colors resume their brightness, it fills the chamber with its per fume, and the walls of the tqotti fall as if they were floating clouds, find all around 1 grandmamma Stretches the green magnifi cent forest, whore the sunbeams make their way between the JbliagO. At that moment grandmamma is quite young; she is a Churni n'J girl with light brown hair and fresh cheeks, brilliant and beautiful, no floW’et is fairer. By her side a young man is seated, tall and Well made, who offers her a rose, tndehe smiles in that way—yes, indeed, her Smile is still tho same. Ito is gone. Athou sand visions and a thousand thoughts have {akeh his place. The handsome young man re gone j the rose is laid in the hook of oanti- c ™> grandmamma falls bank in her large ntm-ohatr ( she looks at tho faded rose in the book. Grandmamma is dead 1 “kb was laid in a black coffin, Wrapped in white linen shroud. How beautiful she Waal Her eyes were closed, but every wrin bad disappeared. She lay at full length, Wnh a smile on her lips, and adorned by her “’her and venerable looks. Noons wasafrttid ’ » ° j" 6 an< f see fh° corpse, she was still ' r r r .“ n dmamnia, so good and so dearly beloved, ■too book of canticles was placed in the cof fin, beneath her head; such was her wish. — ,no rose was in tho hook. And then they hwn G m ndraammn. On her grave, close ‘no church wall, they planted a rose-hush, wnoao roses waved in the wind, and said, run ? Peasant to bathe in the dew and f. :n ueiiniß, If we are the fairest flowers, a flu. hand will come and gather us for i? prettiest girl. Let us summon all our ni,• 88 an( l all oUr perfume.” And the j 1 heard what tho roses said, and tfirl "I® ‘ n boner of the rose which the yotlng ft f ni P; a . in her hook 6l cantiolos, keeping v.', ,™% until her ones fresh eheekswora &H ' a so beautiful to live in the ? ries of tho past I And while the night l a ? ttn g. *bo ' ohurqh organ intoned the thru ,° mo , UB poalrne that were In the, book the beneath the head of the dead, and •d«d ° on ohoue in all her splendor.— Jlani inro more frequent than *uen J* M PShont the country. Men and wc< tha wl Jua i now experimenting largely with - husbands and wfyea of others. FOR THE LITTLE FOLKS. tyranny of temper. ■Whom do wo study to plcaso in the family ? Amanda, sweet and smiling,-whoso claims ate only lovo and gentleness, who is always ready to sacrifice herself for the good of oth ers, whoso wildest fit of passion is as little to bo feared ns tho assault Of a white mouse 7 Or Brasilia, irritable and billion's, with a soul like 'a volcano, and that not covered with snow, or covered With snow more black than white, nor maskfJßbyvihcyards, though it may bo by ; with a ’temper and passions always a* explosion point; Without a thought for others in all tho grim selfishness of hers, and not a spark of pity in her lurid fires of rage ond hate? Certainly npt Amanda. She, poor lovo, gets loadoncd With all tho burdens. Oh! .Amanda will go ; Amanda will do if;’ Amanda will sow on my buttons; Amanda will entertain Mrs. Wigs- all hato Mrs. Wigshy, cross old thing, and fly out of tho drawing-room windows when wo hoar her little cough on tho pofch ; Amanda will ask mamma for a holiday, and oven beard papa with a draper’s bill. Aman da will do 'anything, and consequently has everything to do; but Brasilia walks, through life scot-free, with just only half her duties strapped to her shoulders, and shaking those so vehemently that 'toy aft loodtly at the last and drop oif on tho road for others to pick up and carry. If slio could only Ehako off tho iron of lifer evil nature as well, it would ho ~moro to tho purpose. It ia true, hoWfcver,' that tho real master of tho house, whether it bo wife, child, relative, or servant, is the one with tho worse temper. This ia tho domestio slave-driver—this is the family turnkey, be fore whom all tho rest stand shivering in their chains. Once establish a reputation Tot evil temper, and you may deal in chains to tho end of your days, and live on tho soft est cushions of ease unmolested ; but mark you, you will not deal in lovol And when you glido off from ycrtir -cushions p£ ease into the hard elm coffin gaping for you at'the'end, ■you will glido off unwept and. unFfegrettod— tlio released spirits t>f .yowr Victims singing Jubilate in' full chorus, as they escape through the door of your tomb into thfe freedom you have so long denied them. WJiat is Arabia. ■Arabia 5b nob what Americans habitually ‘fto’uc'civo it to ho, a mere sandy dosort flat, as sands generally arc, traversed by bands of half starved horsemen, with two little but sa cred cities, and a port which an American frigate can reduce to reason by bombard ment. It is a vast-, though secluded peninsu-' la, with anatea of 100,600 square miles great er than that ot Europe west of the Vistula —greater that is, than the territories of four of* (ho five powers, with Germany, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Scandanavia, Poland and Itlay added thereto. This enormous region, - so far from being a mere saqdy plain,'is tra versed by high ranges of mountains-fillcd with broad plateaus, many of them as Wide as Eu ropean kingdoms, and full jof magnificent, though, dreary and awe-inspiring scenery,— , The highest Arab tribes —and the point is one too often forgotten—arc mountaineers ; share in the forVid imagination, the brooding and melancholy thought, which have in all ages distinguished men bred on the higher regions of the earth. Even the aridity of the soil of Arabia, though groat, is, a. political fact, seriously exaggerated,partly because the districts nearest to Civilization are tho worst, partly because travellers spleot tho winter lor expfbrotions—a time when even tho fer tile plain of upper Italy looks hideously de solate ; but chiefly because the European' mind has a difficulty in .realizing territorial vastness or comprehending how enormous may bo tho aggregate of patches of cultivation spread over a peninsula like Arabia. When some two years ago, tho Governor of Aden, was permitted to visit Labej, ho, filled, like all other Englishmen, with tho “ idea” of* Arabia ; was startled to find himself only a few miles from his own crackling cinders amidst pleasant corn lands and smiling vil lages in which dwelt a population showing every signs of prosperity and content. Thcto are thousands of such spots in Aaabia, to which tho eternal boundary «f tho desort blinds all but the keenest observers. VilliAqe Life.— How many pleasing ideas does the term call up in the fervid imagina tion—peace, pnrity, cheerfulness, simplicity, kindness, rural scenes and rustic sports. The chord oi feeling is touched and sweetly will it vibrato beneath the hand of the magician fancy. Hallowed by the muse of Goldsmith and Grabbe, village life is decked with ima ges the most delightful. It rises up before us even as they have painted it s the holiest, kindest feelings live in its pages 5 the reli gious, the domestic, the neighborly virtues shines brightest there. The Village church —the village schooh-tho villogo green ? sweet thoughts of gentleness ond love, are ye a dream f Do yO oiiat Only in the pure minds whidli have so sweetly slitidoWKd ye forth 1 All j how often have the inhabitants, of the busy city, worn with the cares Of the world, yearned for your peaceful joys, dear village life. How of:on has the member of refined society, satiated with gayety, long for 1 a retreat which ho thinks can oUjJ be found among your shades. Acs I —the mourner over past (dya—the man or tne woman who has seen the fleeting wealth of the world de part scots for obscurity and happiness in the village UfUi . Look dp.— lt is what we rejoiob to she— judo, women and children, tho rich and tho poor: the old and young, always looking up: It shows the purity of jrolif intentions, nnd the determination of your hearts; We never despair of tt than however poof ond degraded he may be, who looks up—springs up. We see in him tho elements of a true man. No matter if the seas hate swallowed your prop erty, or tho fires have donuumod your dwoj-. lings, look up, take fresh courage. Is your name a by-word or a reproach ? Look up to tho purity of the sky, and let its imago bo re fleeted in your heart. Detraction, then, Will rebound from you? bosom. Are you trod up on by tho strange ? Look up, push up, and you will stand as strong as bo. Are you crowded out of tho society of the rich ? I/ook up, and soon your company will ho cov* etoch Whatever may be our .circumstances or condition in life, always raako it a .point to look up, to rise higher* and you will attain your fondest expectations. Success may he slow* hut sure it will come. Heavdn is on the side of those who look up. A Neglected Boti—“ Father," saida lit tle fallow, having apparently reflected intent ly, on some thing, “ I shan’t send yodnny of my wedding cake when I get married. “ Why not my son V’ was the fond fath er’s inquiry. “ Because," sand the young hopeful, Jon did’nt Bend mo any of jours.’’ "(Jim COUNTRY—MAY IT ALWAYS BE BIGHT—BtJT BIGHT OR WRONG OUR COUNTRY.’’ Ocean Splendor, Lot him who delights in scenes of gran deur and. beauty, go down besido tho deep blue sea, just as tlio gfelden sun is sinking behind tho crested waves and painting tho clouds with crimson hues. Here, upon the rook-hound shores, which for ageh have with stood the rolling tide, lot him stand and gazo far out upon tho heaving billows as they mount upward to tho sky, or break into clouds of foam at bis very feet. As tho sunset’s rosy light falls level over 'the waves ‘and then fades away into tho soft sweot sriinmor twilight, and tho gentle bree zes from off tho wator fan his brow, and whis per by in accents soft and low, and then seem to_ mingle their notes in blended liartfiohy with the music of tho wffives, then will his soul expand with now and lofty thoughts worthy the inspiration of tho hour; and a stronger and a deeper lo'v6 of-nature declares -itself from his lips. . There is over a beauty andKttblimity about tho oooan, with its rooky shores and emerald islands, whifeh excites admiration, and for hours wo have sat Upon 6omo high rook which projected fkr out into tho brinoy deep, ond watched tho foath-cappoa waves, ns one after another came rolling in endless succes sion against tho rocky barriers. There upon tho headlands you may watch tho white winged ships as they speed ontvard over the waves bound to some distant shore. Thoro can tho approoiativo oye take in all tho beau ties of tho scene, and ns the long slant sunset rays shimmering on the soa, and tho gold and crimson of the western 'cloods, tho emerald banks of the islands rising abruptly from tho water, and tho soft dark blue, upper soa, to gether with all tho splendors of a summer sunset unon tho wave, form a picture of rave and sublime beauty which no painter can faithfully portray upon tho canvass. But not all tho splendors of tho ocean are to bo seen upon a surface or upon its rugged shores for as Wo go down beneath the bright waves, now beauties unfold themselves to our view, and far down tap cm the Ocean’s bottom arfe Ooral-fields of Surpassing beauty. In many parts of tho ocean thfe water is, clear and transparent. In the Indian Ocean it js said tho spotted corals aro plainly visible in twehty-fivo fathoms of wator and tho Crysta lin'O olfedrn'fess of tho Carribenn Soa excites tlio admiration of all who have an cyo for tho beautiful. ** In passing over tbfctfe SO splendidly ador ned grounds,” says Schoff, “ where marine life shows itself in an endless variety of forma, the boat, suspended over tbo clearest crystal, socma to float in tho air bo that a person un accustomed to the scone, easily becomes gid dy.” On tho sandy bottoni appear thousands of sea-stars, nollusos, and fishes of a brillian cy or color unknown in our temperate seas. Burning red, intense blUo, lively greeft. and yellow perpetually vary ; tho spectator floats over groves of sea-plants, gorgonios, corals, alcyoniums, flabollume, and sponges, that af ford no less delight td that eye, Ana are no loss gently agitated by the waters, than tho most* beautiful garden on earth when a gen tle breeze passed through the waving boughs. In other parts of the ocean, especially that lying between tho coasts of Newfoundland and Ireland, tho bottom is represented as be ing covered to a considerable depth with cu rious remains of animal life, so small in size as to rosemblo at tho first Bight, tho finest sand dr sawdust. And throughout every part Of the vast watery domain, are to bo found innumerable specimens of fish and shells of groat beauty. And yet the wonders of tho ocean have never been told, or its hid; don splendors half explored and brought to light-. What A field then, is hero represented for study and research, and what beauties still remain to be unfolded to the admiring eye, The Investigation into tue Treasury Department. —The Female Clerk System. — Tho Washington correspondent of the New York News thus writes: “ Tho war now absorbs everything olsOi and it is fortunate for at least one person that it does; I moan Mr. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury. Tho investigations of tho Con gressional Committee into the affairs of the Treasury Department, if they do not find any kinks or leaks in tho financial affairs, will certainly develop a groat leak in tho moral affairs of the concern. Tho lady clerk em ployees will certainly bring Mr. Chase to grief, I understand tho Committee have brought to light one of tho most stupendous and infamous systems of immoral Conduct, to say tho least, over known in-public affairs.— Congressmen, gray-headßd officials, govern ment contractors, are all brought to tho sur face, and corruption, venal, vilo, damning corruption, stare us stark in tho face; The adoption of tho system of employing female clerks in tho Treasury Department was designed to giyo employment to tho wid ows and daughtord Of those men Who served their country oU the battlefield and fell in its defense: it began well, it-IS ending bad; because its original plan has been defeated, and those who havo'gaincd employment; in many instances, not generally, have been be friended by the claims I spoke of for no good purpose. There arc upwards of eight hun dred young women employed in tho different depaitments. They are frequently brought to thoir work in carriages driven or oooupied by prominent men, others are escorted by Congressman and others. They go as they come: An inspection cif thoir rooms during working hotiffl Only go to establish the opin ion originated by external movements. It is no linobmmon thing to Seb thbsb female clerks, who are takdh in out of semi : bhnrity, Wearing costly jewelry—diamond hfdastpina, ear drops and rings. Fancy for a indigent a female getting a salary of $5OO per nnnilm Wearing $450 of jewels, as has been and is the fact in Mr; Chase’s department, I only wish thd Congressional Ooiriiulttco would hurry up and. make public thoir de velopments, and I will venture an opinion if there is an honest, moral man in. Congress; there Will bo several resolutions offered to ex pel some of tho debauchees that now disgrace that body. It is enough to make the blood of any man chill to think in the midst of a devastating war for tho nation’s Very life, our Cabinet Ministers, our Legislators ond Gov ernment officials have their garments stained with one of tho foulest sins prohibited in thd Decalogue. ggy Mr. Brown called in at tt neighbor « and was urged to take slipper which ho did, the old Ittdy all the while saying—' I’m afraid, Mr. Brown,yon will not make a supper,; you hate eaten nothing—do oat some more.’ Af ter he had stopped out, he. heard tlid old la dy sat to her husband, ' Why I do declare, I should think Mr. Brov?n had nob eaten any thing for a raenth.’ , When a youmg lady efforts to’ hem a odm brio handkerchief for a rich bachelor, Oho means to sew in oxdot to reap. CARLISLE, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE «, 1864. 'INFAMOUS OUTRAGE BY A SOLDIER'UPON A .. The special corrospondefat pf tho Chicago Times, Writing from Springfield, Illinois, un derdatb of May 12th, gives tho following ac count df a most infiunousputrago perpetrated in this gi t.y on tho previous day, and its tra gic ending, Tho letter says: “ On Tuesday Inst about noon a soldier, Who staHd his name to bo John M. Phillips, belonging to the 7th Illinois Infantry, and ■hero on larlough, hired a buggy at a livery stable, and in passing .along tlio southwest corner of tho public square, near Bunn’s hank stopped, got out, and seized a little girl, not ytt fiinfe year's Of tee, placed her in thfe bug gy, and drove rapidly off to tho woods, out side of the city. Tho child is the daughter of ono of our moat prominent and esteemed ■clergymen. Shfe .has lujen sorely afflicted 'sThoo hoi 1- birth with a disdaso resembling what is called “St. Vitus’ danoo.” Upon Tuesday her parents considered her so much better that they permitted her to go to her brother's in another part of the city, bat cautioned her to return very soon. She did not return for several hours, when she yeas found dpon the street and taken bofhe. When she sufficiently she told her parents what the soldier had done ; that he had taken her out into the woods, and, on the way, showed her aknifoand told her ho would kill her if she niado any noise ; upon arriving in the woods ho had her oat oT'the buggy, and treated her most vilely. After-remaining in the woods quite A length of time ho brought the child back to the city and put her out in the street. He then re* turned the bbggy to the livery stable, and boasted to the proprietor that hojiad played hell with orio prefeofrer's daughter. The sol dier then sauntbred off through the city.— The proprietor of the livery stable paid bub little attention to what wf s said by the sol dier, little believing that he was in earnest, lie, however, aoOh rbet with the father of the child, .who was much excited, and learned fibril him the condition of his daughter. The two then sought the soldier, 'who was found and recognized, by the proprietor of the livery stable. Ho was immediately arrested and token before a police magistrate. Hero the father could restrain himself no longer, • but Seized a brick and dealt the soldier a blow upon the face, and would in all probability have killed him hail he been permitted. The hearing of the case was postponed until the following day. TTib Story of the wrong spread like wildliro throughout the city, and created great c.vcltbtf'Cnb. A numbe** advocated the inimbdiatb punishment of the villain, and pb oho appeared todispn o the right of it.— Towards evening (Tuesday) the 'excitement increased, and'about eight o'clock a groat crowd appeared in front of the jail where the soldier was confined, and'demanded that he bo given up to them. The Sheriff, as was his duty, refused to comply. Axes were then procured, And the door of the jail broken open, and a number of the crowd searched bvnry cell in th« jail, but failed to find tlm man. The calabooo** ~-..0 sonrebed, and' again there was a failure to find the one they sought. It was evident that the Sheriff had scut the prisoner out of the way. Yesterday morning, at the time appointed for the bearing of tho preliminary examina tion, a crowd commenced tp collect at the Court House,'where the trial was to be held. The prisoner was brought to tho court-room, which was soon completely filled wibh an ex cited throng of citizens. Before thotrja. had commenced, n brother of the little girl went into the room and commenced firing a revol ver at tho criminal. Ho fired three' times, butono of tho'shots taking effect, and that in tho shoulder. The criminal ran bchindHho Judge's stand; tho "brother was prevented from again firing, and the soldier taken into the jury roorh at the other end of tho court room. The Sheriff immedi ately sent a note to General "White for a posse oftroops to enable him to protect the prisoner, but, long before they had time to Arrive, the crowd burst the door of the 1 jury rooih, and the brother again fired several shots at the prisoner, one of which to-'iK effect in the groin. General' White then tttadb his apearan v ce and stated that the man was dying, and implored them to do no filrthCr tibt. Uuring this time cries- werfl heard of u hung him 1” but the speech of Genf Width* espbeibily when ho stated that tho man could not survive his wounds, had tho .effect Of dispersing tho crowd, For sonic time aftci it Was believed that the prisoner would survive; bliflle dicd last night about dark, having admitted all that was charged against him before ho died. Thus ended a tragedy which has never had its coun terpart in this city. aiitLHOODi —Who more gleeful, happy, charming and fascinating, thttn simple, cheer ful girls, from twelve to fifteen years of age]? This epoch of their life fdsombles that period of a summer morning; known only to early risers, which cam bines the soft light of the magnificent splendor of .the full orbed day. In the full promise of' dazzling noon is seen tho glistening, sparkling dew drop, the* half blown flower, while wood and field and lawn are yodnl with the rapturous song of birds. Such is a picture of the morning of girl hood, which precedes tho glory of true wom anhood, sparkling with angelic innocence and purity; giving promise of all those graces that adorn ilia affectionate wife, tho tender mother; thb loving sister, and the Christian tcaohot; Amiable, confiding; loving, full of life ana good pheSf; thinking ho evil and fearing node; dodsoiona da it wore of having that gdod Of which it Vttla said in possession of Mary; it shall netfif t*d taken from her.— Would thatlhesfi dbhle grades wofe prdaf in all oases, aS in the few against tho blighting and withering influences of fashionable life. But alas, they are not; which may be one reason why they appear SO pleasing at that period of lifts Which wti have named. There is no higher ideal of womanhood spon in life than that which carries those qualities of girlhood into the fullness of life. As simple, trusting, unaffected, cheerful; charming as a girl of twelve years, is tho best compliment that can possibly bo said to wife; mother, or maid en; Such never desire to go to tho ballot box, to sit as judges or to be members of Na tional or State legislature. ggy. A Troy psipor sto'tos that at tha vary moment whorl Gendriil Wadsworth fall on the field of battle extensive preparations wore being made to celobroto the marriage of his only son with onb of the most accomplished and beautiful ladies of that tiity. ' Judge Niles; ot Belleville, Illinois, savs ; “I go for the abolition of ■slavery, and granting also like freedom by law to every human being in the United Mates ” Such sentiments will no doubt delight the occu pants of-the jails and penitentiaries. Nathaniel Hawthorne, the distinguish ed author died in Boston on Wednesday. LITTLE GIRL. FREEDOM OF THE PRESS. The Suppression of the New York World and Journal of Commerce. The Editor off the World to the President of tho United States. To IBs Excellency, Abraham Lincoln, Presi dent of the United States: Sir ; “ That tho King can do no wrong” is tho theory of a monarchy. It is tho theo ry of a constitutional republic that its Chief Magistrate may do wrong. In tho former the ministry tiro responsible ,for the 'King’s acts. In the latter the President is respon sible for the acts of his 'ministers; Bur'Con stitution admits that tho Presidefit ifeay err in providing fair ajudgihont upoh his doings, by the people, in rcgfllar elections. In pro viding fdr-b'ft 'fraibeaohmont, it admits that he may b‘t guilty of crimes. fn a government of laws, and not of men, the most obscure citizen may without, inde corum address himself to tho Chief Magis 'trafe, when to tho Constitution wbonoo you derive your temporary power and ho tho guaranty of his perpetual rights, ho has con stantly paid his Unquestioning 1 loyalty, and when to the laws, which your duty is to caro for a faithful execution of, ho has rendered entire obedience. ff the matter of his address in his person, property and rights, the Constitution has boon disregarded and the laws disobeyed ; if its appeal to tho pHnoip’ca of justice bo no more earnest than Vhc solicitude of its ’re gard for truth, and if tho manner of his’ad dross be no less temperate than firm, ho does dot need courtly phrases to propitato an at tentive hearing from a magistrate who loves his country, her institutions, and her laws. In the World of last Wednesday morning was published a purporting to bo signed by your Excellency and counter signed by the Secretary of State, appointing a day of fasting and prayer, and calling into military service by volunteering and draft four hundred thousand citizens between the ages of eighteen and forty-five. That proc lamation was a forgery, written by a person who, ever since your departure from Spring field for Washington in 3801, has enjoyed private AS well as public opportunities for learning to counterfeit the peculiarities of yoiir speech and stylo, and whoso service for years as a city editor of tho New York Times and upon the New York Ttibunc acquainted him with the entire newspaper machinery of tho city, and enabled him to insert his clever forgery into the regular channels by which wo receive news, at a time when competent inspection of its genuineness was impossible, and suspicion of its authenticity was improb able. IMie manifold paper, resembling in all respects that upon which wo nightly receive from our news agents, and from tho Govern ment itself orders, announcements," and proc lamations, was left with a nigh tolerk about 3 or 4 o'clock in tho morning, after the departure of every responsible editor, and was at once passed*lnto the hands of the printers, pub in type and published. No newspaper in tho country; but would have been deceived as wo wore ! Our misfortune was complete. A.t an ear ly hour, however, before the business of tiie city bad fairly begun, it was discovered that we had been imposed upon/and were being made to appear tho instruments of a decep tion of the public. There was no delay ill vindicating oht character. (3ur whole ma chinery for spreading noWs was set in ifio tion instantly to announce that wo had booh deceived by a forgery—that your Excellency had issued no proclamation. Tho sale of pa pers over our counters Was stopped. Our bundles to the Scotia bound for Europe that day were stopped. The owners and purser’s files wore stopped. News-room bundles and ■files were stopped, and tho agent of the lino was informed that the proclamation was a forgery. Our printers and pressmen were brought from their homos and hods to put in type the .story of our misfortune. OUr bulle tin boards were placarded with the offer of fdwilvd for tho discovery of Huh forger ; and to the iigßiit Of tho Associated Press 1 sOnt a telegram rCcltihg all tho facts, for himjto transmit at once to nearly every daily paper id tho North, from Maine to Californi.a— Thus before the Scotia sailed,'before your Secretary of State had officially branded the forgery, tho wings which wo had, given to Truth had enabled her to outstrip everywhere tllo Falsehood wo had unwittingly set on loot, and in many places tho Truth arrived before’ the forger had conic to tell his tale. For any injury done to ourselves, to the Government, or to tho.phblio, this publicity was ample antidote. It indeed made injury impossible. 3 But tho insult to your excellency was the greater in proportion to the eminence of your station. Early in Hid afternoon of Wednes day,, therefore, 1 wont with Mr. Win. C. Prime, tho chief editor of the Journal of Commerce, which had been deceived precise ly as we were, to tho headquarters of tho partment of the East, .ijpd wo laid before tho commanding Goneral overy cliio.jti btir po session which could lead to tho flificoircry of tho guilty persons; All Hie filets dbovo re cited wore telegraphed at once to thrdugh tho Secretary of War by OcncrAl Cix. I as sort our utter blantolessnoßS. • I assert, more over, thai I -have never known a mindso pre judiced in which acquaintance With these mots would not enforce tho dodviotion of out* utter blatnelessneas. Hero was the absence df an intent to do wrong; here was an autidotb for tin injury unwittingly assisted, nioro complete and ef fectual.than the injury itself; here was alac rity in search, of the wrong-doer, and assist ance rendered to your subordinate to discover the author of the insult done to yoii. With these facts sot fully before you by the General BoiUmlinding "this department you roitefateu an order for niy nrrest and im prisonment in Fort Lafayette ; for tlioseizure and oSbUpation df The )Vdrld office by a mil itary guard, and tho suppression of its publi oatiUOs. Tho Journal of Commerce, its, edi tors find- publishers, wore included in tho same order. I bcliovd, though I cannot state of my own knowledge, that to the commanding Gener al’s assertion of our entire blamolessnoss it was owing that the order for our arrest and incarceration was rescinded., But the order for the suppression of the IToi'W was dot re scinded. Under your orders _ General Dix Rent a strong military foroe-to its publioation office and editorial rooms, who oj elded their Occupants, and for two. days and three nights held possession there, injuring and abstract ing somo of their contents, and permitting no one to creed tho threshold. . . . Not until Saturday morning did this occu pation cease. Not until to.-day has The World heed free to speak. But to those who have oars to hoar its absence has been more eloquent than its columns could over,ho. . To oharootermo those proceedings ns un prccedented, would bo to forgot tho past his tory of your Administration ; and to charac terize them'as shocking to every mind, would bo to disregard that principle of human na ture from which it arises that men submit ting onco and again to lawless encroachments of power, with every intermission of a vigi lance which should bo continual, lose some thing of tho old, free, keen sense of choir true bature and real danger. Charles was doubtless advised to, and ap plauded for,, tho crimes by which ho lost his crown and life. Nor can you do any such outrageous, oppfbssiVo, find Unjust A thing thhfic will not bo applauded by those whose prosperity and power you have created and may destroy. To characterize these proo'eod 'inga as arbitrary, illegal, and unconstitution al, would socm, if such weighty words have not boon emptied of all significance, to befit better on hour at which yod have not arrived, and a place whore ndt public opinion blit the authority of latv Speaks, after impeachment, trial, conviction,-and judgment; But, sir, tho suppression of two daily jour nals in this metropolis—one tins organ of its groat commercial public, tho other a recog nized exponent of tho Democratic principles which aro shared by half, or nearly half, ylour fellow-citizens—did shook the public riiind, did amaze every honest and patriotic citizen, did fill with indignation and alarm every pure and loyal breast. There were no indignation mootings, there were no riots, there was no official protest. Bat do not im agine, sir, that tlio Governor 'of this State has forgottcn.to do his duty ; do not inlaginu that the people of this city or State, or coun try have ceased to love their liberties:, or do not know how to protect their rights; It would bo fatal to a tyrant to commit that er ror bore and now. A free people can at need devise means to teach their Chief Magistrate the same Icfcson. To you, air, whohave by heart tho Consti tution which you swore to “ preserve, pro tect, and defend,” it may be an impertinence to cite those natural and chartered rights therein enumerated, among which are these : “ That the people shall be secure In their per sons, houses, papers and effects, against un reasonable sci/.urcs, and that no warrant ev en shall issue, except upon probable cause, supported by oath, and particularly descri bing the place to .be searched and the per sons or tilings to bo seized ; that no person shall ho deprived of life, liberty or property without duo process of lawyet they are the mpst priceless possessions of fVc’Chldn, and these you took away from mo. Even a captured and guilty criminal who knew that his crime would bo pi'eved, and that tho law would assuredly visit upon him condign punishment, might with propriety plead thebe rights and demand cf the Thief Magistrate to throw over him these shields. Assaulted by tho bayonets of a military com mander, bo might protest and assert his in alienable right to the orderly processes, tho proofs, and the punishment of the law. But has the Saxon tongue any terms-left for him to use who, boiog tho victim of crime, has been made also the victim of lawless,po.wer ? It is tho theory of the law that after tho commiesion of any crime, all proceedings ta ken befq,ro trial shall be merely preventative; but tho proceedings taken against tho World were of tho nature of a aummaay execution of judgment. IVoujd trial by law have been denied, would the law itself have been set aside fob Iho bayonet, would a process as summary as a drum-head court martial have been resorted to by you in a peaceful ci % ty, far from the boundaries of military occupa tionj had tho pbcss’cs which consistently ap plaud your course, as we were, tho victims of this forger ? Had tho Tribune and Times published the forgery (and tho-IVihunc can didly admits tlidt it might have published it and was prevented only by mere chance) would you, sir, have suppressed tho Tribune and Times as you suppressed The World and Journal of Commerce ? You know you would not: If not why not? Is there a different lawfor-your opponents and for your supporters ? -Can you* whoso eyes discern equality un der cvcfy.cohiplbiiiUu; be blinded by the hue of partisanship ? 2’hc World has abstained the Government in its struggle to preservh’otir imperiled na tionality. It had helped inspire the martial spirit of the people, and encourage them to the sacrifices they have so nobly made- It had advocated those measures of financial policy which could best preserve the tone and vigor of the Government in the contest. It had deserved well of tho llepublic, and of those who love it. But it also exposed and denounced the cor ruptions attendant upon your Administration It bad opposed a delusive unci enervating sys tem of paper money. It had vindicating the fame of a patriot general, whom you had re moved from command on the evd of victory. It had deprecated your rp-election. Bid you not find in these fdctS the provocations to your wrong Aml your persistence in wrong ? Hud yob not made up your nliml against us before tho underling, your partisan, luid con cotilcli his plot? When you ansvverthese in terrogatories, I will produce the proof of 'threats in ado against vis by those nearest you, and assuming to exert your prerogative; before this trick 0f forgery furnished you with the specious pretense of an accusation. Can it ho possible, sir, that for a montent you Supposed that journals like ours could afford to be guilty of this forgery i Lot tiro unanimous voice of ydvif. own press answer. Suoli a trick woilld hardly havc.succceclcd in Sangamon ooiinty, Illinois. For it. Jiiirty which is about to go before the people, and ask them to commit to its Hands the admin istration of affairs, which lias liden more gen erous and toi'be'aririj; to your errors than you have been just to its guides; permit mb to say that it was 1663 possible .to be true of any oho of tlidrir thaii it wits of any man high or low who’suspected them. ,An 4 so tlio end hiis proved. The confess ed and guilty forgers wore your own zealous partisans. Joseph Howard, Jr., who has confessed Ins crime, was a Republican poli tician and Loyal Leaguer, of Brooklyn.— Consider, sir, lit whoso feet ho was taught Jus political education, and in whoso cause ho spent hia political breath. Mr. Howard has been from )iis very childhood an intimate friend of the Republican Clergyman, Henry Ward Beecher; and a member of his clulroh. He has listened year in and year ovit to. the droppings of the Plymouth sanctuary; 'lho stump speeches which there fellow prayer I find precede the benediction, he for years reported in tho journal, which is your devoted organ in this city. For years "ho was the city editor of that journal, tho Now YoidE* Times, for a long time he was tho Washington correspondent of the chief Abolition news paper of tho country, the Now York Tribune; no hits boon a frequent contributor to tho columns of, tho Independent ; ho journeyed with you from Springfield to Washington; he represents himself a favored visitor at the White House since your residence there. By ft curious felicity the stylus with which Ilia amanuensis copied on tissue paper this proclamation and signed your name was ab stracted from thb editorial rooms of the Tri bune. The party principles upon which you were pledged to administer the Government have been the daily meat and drink of this forger, lie has denounced, as faithfully as 3 r ou the party by whoso defeat you rose to power, lie has been the noisy champion of an exclusive loyalty; ho Ims preached in club-houses and at street corners those poli tics which stigmatize constitutional opposi tion to the Administration as disloyalty to the Gpvornment. The stock brokers who were liia confederates will bo found to bo uf the same kidney. They all advocated a pa per-money legal tender; they have all coun tenanced the paper inflation ; ’they have all been heedless of the misery to poor meu which such inflations breed; they have all rejoiced at the speculation thus fostered, and by speculation they had hoped to thrive. Fur twenty-four hours something was par doned to your presumed hatural-trepidjitioo, since our blariielcsshess having been alleged to you By those hero whom it was your duty to believe, it seemed only prudent to await your recovery. r . For C;Q next twenty four hours!, from mo ment fo raomc'Ut, it was ek'peefod that you would hasten to confess and repair your mis take. But the mistake thus prolonged grew to the proportions of a crime ; and till the dis covery of the forger stripped its mask off and disclosed the inspiring cause of the act, it grew monstrous hourly in men's eves. V/e wore patient that the immeasurable infamy of the act might swell to its full pro portions, and stand complete. By the recall uf your arbitrary order, yod have not niado reparation for the wrong you have done., The injury and the insult yet remain. The violation uf the Constitution stands recorded, and u'nleas adequately aton ed, becomes a fatal precedent. For the pur pose of gratifying un ignoble partisan re sentment you have struck down the rights of the press, you have violated personal liberty, subjected property to unjust seizure, osten tatiously placed force’ above law, setting ft dangerous example to those who, Idvc force more than they respect law; and thus; and by attempting to Crqsh- the organs of free discussion, havco mad free elections impos sible, and broken down all the safeguards uf representative government. It is you that in this transaction stand ac cused before',the people. It is you who arc conspicuously guilty. It is upon you that history, when . recording these events, will affix the crime of a disregard of your duty, oblivion of your oath, and ft pitablo subser viency to party prejudice and to personal am bition, when the country demanded in tho presidential office elevated character, devo tion to duty, and entire self-ahnegfttioiu But you are not to be left to tho judg ment of history alone. Thank God, by tho provisions of odr 'Constitution*, not yet whol ly abrogated, the people are soon to pass up on your claims to’ ro-election, and of impeachment yet remains to their repre sentatives. The people and their represen tatives have tho right to speak when the pen. is struck from the hands of a frQOnitid by tho bayonet; when the Bastilo, once broken clowrl on the other side of the Atlantic by the re verberation of our Kovolution, is reconstruct ed here. In stormy times like these, amid with which an unsuppressed rebellion envi* rons us, his would have been a rash hand which had hastily set in motion for another purpose than the suppression of rebellion; the machinery of justice ; who had invoked against the disloyalty of micro the retribu tion and redress, of the law; The danger of such a conflict of laws is so far passed, that not even a President could now.plcad nation al safety as an excuse for refusing to do jus tice. or submit to judgment; , Yet ho citizen who regards hifc dutied should over hesitate at the last to oppose law less deeds with legal remedies, The laW may'broak down. It will thefi disclose to a watchful people the poidt of greatestdfingcr. Courts may fail; judges may be intimidated by threats Oi* bribed by the aluroments of power, and those who have sworn to execute, the laws may shrink from the fulfillment of t l i cir oaths. A craven Congress may sit si lent and idly watch the perishing liberties of • the people whom they represent, but this cannot deter him who, in defending his rights, is determined his whole duty, and to whom it is competent at last to commit the issue to that Power, omnipotent and inscru table, who presides in events and sways thd destinies of nations and the hearts of men, , Man*on Marble. New York, May 23, 1804. General Lee's Bill of Fare. —The Rich mond correspondent of the Mobile Advertiser gives the following about Ocnbrh.l Leo'sniodo of living; In General Lee's tent nieat is ea ten hut twice H week, the General not allowing it dftenor, because ho believes indulgence in meat to be criniinnl in thb' present straight ened condition of the country. His ordinary dinner consists of a head of cabbage boiled iri salt water, and a pone of corn : brcad. Iri. this connection rather a. comic story is told. Having invited a numbfcr of gentlemen to dine with him, General Lee, in a fit. of ex travagance, ordered a sumptuous repast of cabbage and middling. '.'The dinner was served; find belmld! a great pile of cabbago and a bit fif middling about four inches long and two inches across. . The guests, with commendable politeness, unanimously de clined middling, and it remained in the dish untouched; Next day General Leo, remem bering the delicate tit-bit which had been so providentially preserved, ordered his servant to bring that “ middling." The man hesita ted, scratched his head and finally owned up. “Do fac is, Mftssa Robert, ar middlin was borrid middlin'; we all did'n litib nar spec ; an I done paid it back to do man whar I got ife from/' General Leo heaved a. sigh of deepest disappointment find pitched iutd his cabbage. IXoKOits to Fallen lleuoes; —Four rnilitri~ ry posts in tho North-west, by general order of tho AVer Department, have boon named irl honor of Generals "Wadsworth, Hays, Steven son and Klee, slain in the recent bfittliis in Virginia; I 'ey The Supreme Court of Vermont had declared tho Soldiers’ voting bill of that Statti .unconstitutional, so far as it relates to tliti election of State officers. ■ KZT A letter from Covingtori; Ky., sayd --'tho proudest and happiest man in thd Union at present is the father of Gen. Grants who resides In bur city.” ■ TT" Afield of sulphur, covering sixty acred; nijd from onb to three feet thick, has been dis co vord in Nevada Territory; CT* Motto for oorn-gathorora: “ lend mo your oars.” NO. 51