it t t nut 'D. W. MOORE. I TM;ftrt 6. B. GOODLANDER, J Bm"- VOL. XXXIV. WHOLE NO. 1771 PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS -$I 25 per Annum, if paid n tdvanc. CLEAttFIELI), j' WEDNESDAY, SIWTKMilKR 1803. NKW SERIES VOL. IV. NO. fl. i Jlisttllantoos. teTWe arc not apt to know (woman by her finery. ISrTho Int conundrum : ? is tho quickest, heat or cold? bocauso you can catch cold. tine Which Heat, fcarTho profession of a clergyman is sooner learned than that of a doc- tor; it is much easier lor moat people f to preach than to practice 4 jajTSomebody, writes more tmth- fully than poetically, says: "An an- S 1 . .'il A- l t gei wiinout money is noi inougni 80 much of now-u-daya as a devil with a bag lull ol guineas. taJ-Tho World i . i. remarks that B Hcems an unfortunate letter for us. We bono its malignaty is exhausted in Bull Jtun, Ball's Bluff, Bethel, Eurmsido and Butler. State Fair. Tho Pennsylvania State Agricultural Fair will take place at Norristown, on tho 29th and 30th ! days of September, and the 1st and 2d I days of October, 1HGJ riirA large sea gull was shot on il , I , I f I vt 1 I uie .iimuriagc iaiays.; Dnage one uay party beg leave to cull your attention to last week, and in its mouth was a certain charges now frequently made by good live dollar bill, which the siiorts- tll Whig presses, against you," in regard ! man found no difficulty in. passing. j our v,ews uPon tlie naturalisation laws, t and alleged hostility to the rigbta of natu- fraTdon. Hooker, whoa few months ralized citizens, We are aware that you J ago passed for a h'ery eaglo, with a may justly regard your life and conduct terrible beak and talons, seems now in bigli station you have occupied.and to bo a barn door fowl, with neither a i the .'""dless confidence of the Demo- i comb to his head, nor spurs to his Wj M ,ulh" .1 .. ' 1 cient answer to such calumnies. luct" I But the charges are intended lo operate tarThe .States do not hold their, onBnJ '"'"lead pcisons to whom the constitutional rights by tho courtesy jtruth it unknown. We woild. therefore, ,.ri ..., r-r .i solicit from you an expressions of your l " l"- UH,l,lul"iTieicii the subject, if your time will per- of the states and of the people jbut miti not doubting that every candid mind ' ! ncitiicr uic states or ttic people are I the creature Ot Congress. I-tf-A passenger of ono of tho riiil- I ndclphui city railroad cars sued tho company for ono cont, which the con - finci'ir iiau ueimnca in aeiauit of making change, lho plaintin gained I a vordici and the company paid the ! costs. MrThc proclamation of the Prcsi- dent, H0tciiding to abolish and de I stroy the local institutions of nine I States, in as much of a insurpation I and revolution iu the Government as if ho had assumed tho Imperi-crown i and declared himself Dictator of A j merica. It is a complete ovorthrow of tho Constitution ho swore to pro j tect and defend. i Tub Soi.piers for the Oi.n umox. ; Tho fierce Southern rebels sav they ; will never come back into tho Union. The fierce Abolitian loaders of tho ' Xorth sa they never will submit to t live under tbe old Union again. The soldiers are away South fi"-ht-'' ing under oatli for tho old Union. - . . n J no a man rni Dciincracy of the Xorth arc, to worn ing to restore the old j l nion. f When voting day comes the soldiers ;of the Union will stand by tho men who sustain tho old Union. No other I party is to-day doing t hat but tho jjolu Jackson Uemocincy ? swrv. ,.,..,...:.... :. .1 - s.-l i , - ..p.. M....U .a uio urst, isw ci Combination I had almost Said Of lia- ture. IS the law nf n II aniMKlr nil .. .... . w kj . fjwiuiinuciii,- an itiuiea action, i'art- but luit speech is not a lair reportoi them, military companies, and lor a short time, ' ners in business compromise, members My other speeches were submitted for wt believe, wa connected with John of political, religious, charitable, uso- revision j this one J never suw till the Brown's men. and fuilad to win his confi . ful societies compromise Kinirs coin-1 book was printed, and I have never ceastd dence. nroniise u-itl. n..;.i, .t.- ii.r.. . I to comderon it. j Afier a time "OnantroU" (or Ilnrt rath- immU M i ?r7U,Cy 7m during the session or tbe Convention, ) formed a secret connection with the promise with their subjects, or loso nnmeiT on the 10,h day of Jiiriuiiryi 1W8t ru,iiatli. jie WM fu8t losii.K repu- jinem. W arsend by compromise: tho member in debate alluded to the mo- tatton at Lawrence, and found it desirable f lamily cirle is a compromise. Kus- lion, not the spench, as indicative of bos- to seek new and more congenial nsoci l bands compromiso with thoir wives; I tility. o foreigners, 1 promptly dennun- alions. He served the rullian as a spy, ffatliors compromise with thoir disobo-'ce "le imputation thero, in tbe face of concerted with them plans for abducting Idient children nnd if our hnlvr enlicrinn I lle Convention, as I have done many a colored people fiom Krnsas, and contin- '1 iu .. n.i ai.:i,i " , Jistnic, God Almighty compromised j " 'in man iivii no aw uph u in ii ib ue- i half tho atoneinomt of His Son, and 'shall we refuse to do what nature, reason, religion and history all com- and !. (7. 11. rendleton. i ..An Eloquent Extract. Generation after generation have felt as we do now, and their lives were as nrtirn Our own. The heavens will be as nrorltt. over nam .1 anund our pAtbs. Yot a little while and all this will have happened. Tho throbbing hoart will bo sottled, and we shall bo at rest Our funeral will Ifrond its way and the prayers will be paid, and wo shall be loll in the darkness ..,1 r . 1. ....... u 1.1 1. nil niiuuv;u ui uiu luiliu. .'Vim 11 may be that for a short time wo shall bo ipoken of, but tho things of life shall creep on and our names shall bo for gotten. Days shall continue to move n, and laughter and songs will bo ' tiitfiff! in i n Wrw wnana aat a A ' .i v an vi iu 1 uvtil n uvi u tt v uivU una mc eyes that mourned lor us will )o dried and anunatod with iov, and .(von our child will ooase to think of and will rciueiuber to lisp'oar no more. I . ,lw sjiddcningsi-e such reflections! jua how they sober desiro and Want "ib.tion ! Milv thev enable us to fix heart., upon God and the better or!d. I Judge Woodward on Know-nothinjijm. Our niggorhend neighbor gave hii rta- dera, lust week, an extract from a speech or Judge W oonwAMi's, delivered twenty-five year go, which they allege, favore their stinking Mean or know-nothingism. If there i any truth in thia charge -if Judge Woodward was, in reality, inclined to fuvor doctrine to illilieral and anti American, they would be to much in love with him that tbey could not oppose bis election. Hence, to support the great leader of knownothscgism in I'ennsylva nia only nine yeart ago Andrew O. Curtiu who then went about the State organixing know-nothing lodge, administering oathi , . , .. .. , , w moil tyiiu ttuuuj uuvq 'iiBirancniseu their venerable fathers, bad they then been living. But thia charge was handsomely repu diated in 1852, when Judge Woouward wa elected to tbe seat be now fills on the Supreme Court Bench, as tbe following correspondence will clearly show z:on.Geo. V, Woodward : Dear Sir: Tbe I undersigned members of tbe Democratic 1 . 'will thus be satisfied, that by no act of nO aCt 01 jour life have you been justly chnrccable with i having entertained measures favoring lLe vil,ue ot uiiy is obed.ence. an illileral or proscriplive policy towards n,lrf. adopted citizens, on account of the place ! of their birth or their religious opinions ery respectjullv. yours, Ac, I Kdwin M Kfanlnn PI, nil Kl,,iW l.,r,,.,.l IV ltll- T t u.. and others. JUDGE WOODWARD'S REl'Lr. Gentlemen : Tho oflicinl duties which Lrougct me to I ittsburg, kei uieconstuu- tly engaged. My unsner to your letter must thoielore be briel. rrom my ean est youin to tins present : lortune ot the bid bows their lie:i(ls down moment, 1 have b3en an earnest and to the earth. hearty supporter of the Democratic party, I Tbe covetous person lives as if the and an equally zealous opponent, so far as worlu were made altogether lor him, and my political action could decorously and not be for the world ; to take in every properly go, of whatever has opposed it. thing, and part with no.hing. I m not and never have been a "Native j There are eras in our spirits' existence, American" in any political sense, any as there are erus in our fortunes; eras more than 1 am or have boen a Whig, when the fate of the character bangs sus-Anti-mason or an Abolitionist. pended uion somo act of violation, some The charge of Xntiveim" i attempt- determination of tho will. ll'ivec ed t be sustained by a motion made by If you have a trouble, keep it to your Mr. Thomax, a Whig member from Chester self A jolly fellow can raise half an eagle county, and was calculated to compel his at any lime. A dismnl individual, on . , T.l .7. XMT T vriiiii'ni w wuiv uii iu uic iiitti iv ur uiu:ii alternative, and my motion having out. i ney cnose tne iauer crancn oi me an- swered its purpose, was withdrawn. The sin of iniioducing the subject into that body liet at the door of a Whig and not at mine. The speech so often quoted agaist me, 1 am not responsible for. It was introduced into tbe debates by u Whig reporter, in violation of the inles nf tbe body, which required him to submit it for revision be- f I111i1inB,in nrl l,i,.h l. ,li,l I mil om nb.eivaliona Mrilntorv nl I mo.U m.na nl,u,..i;nn. bVTiIaitalA.u r,l ..... 1 , u f . vi.. in jr nilivuu men b nun uu, i iiuiiinB iimmhhi, time since, as a gross misrepresentation. See debate, of the Convent on, vol. 10, pace 33 34. I have retained the undiminished con fidence of the Democratic members of the Reform Convention, several of whom were AlnnlAll fitw.Alia Mll,l ull nf mrhtm nniuikad - ,vr,,v- - - v. .. v . ,. i'i'v,, m lo Nativism. Would this have been nos-1 sible if tbe Whin ifimns ui my snvincs . - r i and doings had been true? .The Native .--j ...j vu.- ... jmif, bij,, nam ...u uuut uuuiMirn for United States fsenator. Tbe county of rhiladeldhia was represented by Natives, They asked roe, whether, if elected, by their votes, 1 would favor their measures for changing the naturalization law. I answered Ihem no, and they threw every vote tbey could command ayaintl mc, and laised a shout of triumph over their vie- or?' iou refer to statements in the Whig papers of this city. One or them was j snowo tue a few days aco. in which was a s"'"1 exiracl from ,in Ku me about a vmi-n ; , r theimputS er Na ?vr.m 1 'ef.,elld Ml denj ' i 0J , ;!''l'"cv hit readers that the J .l"r 1,1 admission that mv .!r,,in,f. ?h. time corn citizens, a copy ol the letUr thus misrepresented by the Fituburg Gazette, I tend you herewith in the KrytUtn of 8ept. 23, 1851. When men will allow their political passions lo get tbe better of their veracity ., . -;o-I o far as te impel them to acta and associ ations like this, it it easy enough to under stand how and why I was misrepresented mvT1" , ,,he Cnove!,,ion- mot ive for doing so were just as strong as those which actuate my political oppo nents now. Another allocation, that 1 onnosed Judge Camuboll last fall, is as false as any other of the numerous misstatements re - cently made against me. I never opposed any nominee on account ot nis lurlh or religion, and I supported no nominee last fall more heartily than 1 did Judge Cuuip. bell. I tin with infinite reluctance I nppenr before the public at this time, even in self-defence. A candidate for n Judicial office is, perhaps more than any other candidate, required to await quietly the decision of the people. 1 am as sensible is any man can be, that politic ought lo be kept away as fur as possible from judi cial elections, but the terms of your latter leave me no choice but to answer. 1 have answered by giving you briefly the truth. 1 give it because it is the truth, and 1 ac company it with no appeal to party passion or prejudice. If industrious defamation enn suct'ed in repieeenting me as having ever sustained any illiberal or proscriplive i&m, then the 7Vu(i and a lic are powerless against slan der. There are some presses, and many men opposed to me in political sentiments, who art; disposed to treat me fairly, and who will not decend to low appliances, to ao complUh a party purpose. Such men and presses command my respect. Against others who are less scrupulous, I have no shield but the truth and my lire, and re lying on these, I can afford to wait, in patience, the verdict of the people Thanking you, gentleman, for the kind feelingi manifested in your letter, I am, with great respect, Your obediont servant, 1 ' Gec. W. Woodhmid. GOLDEN GRAINS (ROM THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE. I 11 men ui'I but know themselves more iAV M'milil liA mnm litin.l.ln ti. r : . . . . .. . The poorest education that teaches self- control is better than the best that neg lects it. Self-will is so active and ardent, that it will breuk a world to pieces to make a stool to sit on Cecil. Judge thyself with a judgment of sin cerity and thou wilt judge others with a ludjitient of charitv. Mann ; The bad fortunes ol tho good, turn their faces up to heaven ; and the good i lonti.yy, woubt not negotiate a loan 01 one anil iiinp-iience 11 ins ine upiienaea on it. Qt.'ANTKF.I.i,, THE Jl'ERIM.A Kll'Kl.lS. i'lantrcll, the butcher of Kansas citizens, ii an Ohionn by birth, went to Kansas as a school-teacher, und turns up the leader of a banditti. The Worcester (Mass.) Spy says: His real name is Hart. Sometime after Kansas was organized as a Territory be wen. there and became a resident of Law ,.,no vi.-., .i.-...!-. .:.. i,.. lliit. ahi. J ; .. !.' 1, ..,,! ..III. Ll,ir onir,.,, k',.n.a. 1. unta.l r w....- r . u . i,iir lire Ollile IIIOII, joining Ull UI UIC ued to opeiate in this way until Lawrence was not likely to tolerate him much lon ger. The fear of lynch law constrained him to leave the Slate. Soon after the present war began he turned up in Mis souri as the leader of a lawleis bind of ol a law eis hunt ol 1 illn. gun lima, , r . . r .... ons( RI PTI vs. Ot.t'XTF.r.it.s. 1 hern nrn few who understand fbat the provisions, v., ,,1,7 wiin,:i 1 ui tun u,;i j nn in urniieii men , .,u icriiia 111 ptTieci equainy wtin VOIIII.- teers, giving them the same Oovernme'nt bounty, the same title to pensions, tbe same pay, the same everything. When the statement has been made heretofore, many b&ye discredited it, and to end all question upon the subject, we quote from the act itself: Stc. 2. And be it further enacted, That all person thus enrolled shall be sutyect for two years after the first day of July succeeding the enrollment to bo called I into the miliUrv service of the ITniwt! mmi i -i :n .1..-. i ., uw uui.ug thePreM,Lnl rebellion, not. however ex-i deeding the term of three years; and when ! Mlleri ,n, ."T?.,ce 'haUbe rlVd M th tame footing, nail respixU, at volunltert for ' ,he -ar. ,W; "" l'.7 win wmiy HI nuw i.iiirani kj in .ay An order from the War Department discontinues the fourth army corps, and the troops composing it are distributed to other corps. The Seventh army corps is also discontinued, and tho troops com posing it are transferred to tbe Eighteenth corps, under lho command - of federal Footer. letter from Hon. Charles R- Buckalew, lo the Miehv'j at Ihuiheseille, Lyciimbia eo Auyutt 1SU3. I Gentlemen or Lvuovjinu : Vou are to ! he commended fn liwyftmlbl n i. ,,iiiuuIvii, ns men opposed to tho administrations lit Ilarrisburg and Washington, and 1 mil glad to con'.riouta to your proceedings . the expression of somo few earnest word' An issue between power ant liberty is distinctly presented to us by tbe policy f our ruler, and if we stand indifferent to it, o'r acquiesce in its decision according lo tbe pleusure of those who aspire to be our masters, what shamt, will be ours! what losj and injury! what degredation and eternal disgrace ! By liberty I do not mean license, but thai regulated freedom established by our ancestors which we have enjoyed hitherto without question, and the example of which we have held forth proudly before other nations as the reproof ot their sys- tenia and the gloiy of our own. By power I do not mean legitimate au thority, but authority utrpod and law less, pursuing its own ends over a broken Constitution and thro' the baleful Humes of civil war. Between theso -between tiower nnd ,.. , I berlv enn vnn liAkiln la in vrnp fhnii-n ' will you hola up a balance ami weigh. doubtfully, the arguments wliicii sustain liberty against those who oppose it: Necessity safety are these the mag ionl words by which despotism is to bo changed in character and made fit for our adoption? Shall the plea of tyrants be accepted us our standard of public rule? Shall we concede force, and justice, and wisdom, to one of the most impudent, false nnd injurious doctrines ever intru ded into the discussion of public affairs? Hut t'lere is a necessity (quite different from that nsserteil on behalf of power) which we must admit as most evident and urgent a necessity that ice rid ourselves of thine, u ho jieitJ neretsily us lie justification of their misdeed. Those who cannot govern lawfully nnd justly are not to govern at all, but to give place to others. Tor ii is monstrous to say that the incapable and ricious shall lord it over their fellows. The rulers who say they cannot govern by law and according to right, stand self condmned. Judged out of their own mouths, they are unfit for lule and should be voted out of power. (enllemn, the greatest son of New Knglunil spent most of his life and wen his great lame in this Commonwealth. We are proud that he becime a I'ennsyl vaninn, and took rank in our history with the founder of this State with tho illus trious man who established it "in deeds of peace." Lot us try the logic of tyran ny by tbe judgement of that great man. Let us invito the apologist of arbitrary power and advocate of "strong govern ment," vho (ills onr ears with impassioned discourse upon jiiddic .svwV'vaml national life, and neeessit'i, to ''O with us to our gre.tt commercial metropolis and there stand with us beside the modest win!) which marks the l estinj-place of " Deniuniin and Heborah Franklin," Oli how mean and iiitful. and low. and utterly false and detestable will there sound nil these apologies Pir wrong ull theso pretexts lor shilling away, or takins away fiom the people the rights and liberties achie ved for them by the great men of former times! We will hear the voice of Frank lin sounding in our ears those momoiable words oi wisdom and warning which should be written up or hung up in great letters wherever the people meet lor con sultation in tiincj of public danger: Thvxt uho vould alee vi essetifial liberty to purchase a little temjioran safety deseree neither liberty nor safety." Oeiiilemen, your political opponents think that patriotism should be called loyalty, and made to consist in uncondi tional, unquestioning devotion to nn ad ministration of tho government. 1 be lieve you will agree with mo that this great virtue requites no new name borrow ed from the literature of monarchy : that it is shown in devotion (o theC'oustiiution and laws of the I'nited Stales and of the several Stales, and that the true patriot regards public officials with a respect pre cisely proportioned to their observance of law, justice and right, and to their tkill, wisdom and honesty in the performance Of their public duties. Judge your public men fairly but freely. Let no man put a padlock upon your lips, nor impose upon you any of the false and pernicious sophisms of arbitnuy power. An important election aporoaches in 111,,. ( ,mt I, i. I i ...... vv... .'., w ii, mm niiimiri uufiii- ant one succeeds it next vear. At these . ..:j i d o unc, W 0 J determine, as fi i r as your votes will go, tne poncy oi tne luture. iou need no labored exhortation from mn to inspire you with zeal, courage, determination and I fidelity in the discharge of your ehic.oral dutie.-. l!ehold the evils which alllict the! nation and the dangers which threaten it ! These exhort you beyond tho art of mine, to right action and justify tht opinion which we hold in common, that upon Democratic success in the elections just ' mentioned, depond the existence of free, i l : I. -u-1 -n.i ;,.,. .. . . : ,i.: I liberal and just government in Ibis coun ' trv ; a restoration of Union founded in ' .. ... consent; vtie avoidance ol future wars, Kad the preservation and growth of that niftterial prosperity which results from foJ governmsnt when vouchsafed to an unitod, industrious ami virtuous people. I am, your fcllcir -citizen, and Llii IprVHIIt. I". Ii hlTV II lV Works of Franklin, by Smirks, v. Iff. nn. ; 107, 429,430. i This was lh. declaration of ths rrovinoial Assembly of Pennsylvania, Xuveaiher 11, 1755, in auiwsr to Governor Morris, upon ths question of sxempting Pruprittary property from taia. tioo. iJespite the ad of Indian dcpreiUtions In lbs border settlements and the danger nfexteml-' ed hostilities, th. Assembly refused, an sppropri- u.a ,r money r, ...iiiury PurPo.e,, ... .be -m. rhoul.t b. rai.eJ or r,.'.i,J in Ju.t ,.,.- ner, by placing lbs bunion equally upon the property ami rosmiroos of tho colony. K'liislily .oltuliltlon mi i 'initial iirinriile nf lilurty I was then iturnly r i n.l ion t ,l by Hit, men of IVun sylvaniu, n, ii,i7i,iry ufrrniitif wsi plend to tlium in vnin n. a renion for urronclcriiiK or wnlvitiK their rigbtn a fruemm, nnl benUinx liieir buck to a burthen A injimlici,. Dr. Knink ' lin was a nipihlier uf tho AsKOinbly nnj prfparod ! luo.t of the do.Mimei'itii on i't behalf, In tho dis pute. Kee Life of Sparks, Works, v. I, pp. A Prim ei.v Puuii.isT. John Murrisey, the rei owned pugilist, has had a splendid season at Saratoga. He had a magnificent season of it before he went up to Saratoga. He knew Commodore Vanderbilt'a Har lem ropes, and he beat the City Hall Jun to the extent of jtf;), 000 clear profits on Harlem stocks. He went up to Suialogii ami opened a "sporting" saloon and raeo course, i'lie saloon wan on n cios street near the I'nilod Slates. . He paid $10,000 for furnishing the eslabli.-hineiit ; the rent is in proportion, lie Net three tables a day, all free to (he elect. His dinners (were the best ol the resort (1'iee to the I invited) hit game and champagne un rivalled. None but the select few oould got in. jio,e than once the ownership niitiiwiis ui vMiiiiai uau nis lei' , r , . 1 . " ,.rnn.,.. r , , , , .....I..U II . . ' . I . uii, mi i'lurnseya inaiiognny. A clergy man of Troy, a do vol ne' of I ho pugilist, brought to the latters tablu several cleri cal guests, through his kind butgoneraly warmly solicited introductions. Morris sey's hospitality was principally oivided between Capital, lhvinity and the Turf. The lurf paid well he is to be the. own er in Chief of the new and magnificent Saratoga raco ourse. He bin several horses iu band ; two of them alone he has been offered $17,000 for, nnd which $'20, 000 would not buy. JIo has one which $12,000 would not buy. He has another that ho will put lo the polo on a $25,000 wager against any horse of the United .States " or any other man." A few days since he had the honor of drawing a prize in thedrult lottery, and though exempted by age from the first class, he immediate ly wrote to his barker in New York to lurnish a substituto for him, premising that ho must be five feet oleven inches high, weigh 183 pounds, an 1 In a coura geous man in every sense of the word. Jo such a one ho would pay $5,000, Don t Stand the Tkst. Many proverbs admit of contradiction, us wiines the fol lowing: ' I he more die merrier." Noi so: one hand is enough in a purse. ". Nothing but what has an end." Not fo : a ring has none, for it is round. " Money is a gn at comfort.-" Not when il brings a thief to the gallows. "The world is a long journey." Not so: the sun goes over it every day. " t in a great way 10 the bottom of tho sea." Not so: it is but a stone's i si,l " friend is bev found in inlveisity." N'ot so: for then there is none to bo found. "The pride nf the rich makef the labor of the poor." Notsf): tho labor of lho poor makes the pride of the rich. A Gf.nkrm, IV Fllisox. Hij.'adipr Gen eral J elf Thompson, of the Confederate army, attended by bin stall' o(li jers, Cap tain nuiuen tvay, anjulnat general; Cap tain Robert McDonald, assistant adjutant general, and Dr. Marcus Train, surgeon, all of whom wore captured with their chief, nt I'ocabonlas, Ark., have lieen placed iu the Uruiiot street prison in St. Louis. MSr-me lunowing advertisement ap pears in the columns of a I'm is paper: "A sluifenl of three vears sliinilmnr ui German University wishes to mitrrv.'utter ... J - taking Ins degree. Jl9 is desirous of find ing a young lady who will advance him money to pay the sum necessary to finish his university career. Tlmn bound to his fate, she would aftei two or three years, becomo bis w ifo." A 11 .ix Dk.mtf.ii Tnm.K Times, James Marshall, ex-foreman nf Souihwalk En gine Company, in New York, was drafted no less than three times once at his place of b isiness, at his residence, ar.d ut his bilkers residence. t'The Cincinnati, Wilmington and Znnesvillo lailio. ! lias lueu sold for i?ii00, O00 to the New '. agent of lho fiist mortgage h nd-holdnrs. fiiifOf 2,l'iOO drafted men examined Augusta, Maine, 1,07 1 were accepted, whom 580 j, aid the commutation and '. furnished substitutes. Jiiy"Tlic heart, that soars upward "scapes little enres and vexations ; the Liidsthat fly high have not the dust of tho r:ad up on Iheir feet. r.iZ ."i.: . " .' ., , .. Jfl ' "ne ''V V '"'f!:'??,, ! . T . "Il"",e,',n renrh,' ,hn beSln t0 J ' ' jv-If nien shouIJ 'rj from ",lie (eHt and read their epitaphs, some of tbem W01lM ,llink lh ,)ld t j)lo L grave, ' . . . r i . , i i ne mina is iiKe a trunK j if well packed, it holds almost everything ; if ill- packed, next to nothing. tar Why is a wtsherwoman the most cruel person in the world? because she lady w rinu-s men s bosoms. SaTlIon. n.U.nraUon, formerly a mem- ler Ol the Lx lied Stales Cnnnrau from '''rnnessee, died a few days since. - . I swroidiers ought to be a quiet set for j every man of Ihem is made to hold his I 'piece. I ; - ' t'STMrs. Lincoln and son, with Gcnoial ' Douhteday nnd wife, are at tho Equinox House, Manchester, Vermont. 1 BENEFIT OF CLERGY. For the first timo in the history, so far as our readiiij has extended, among Pa- guns, Jews, or ( hnnlians, has the exemp tion of lho public ministers of religion from bearing urnis, been disregarded, The Lincoln -Reward attempt at adminis tering the functions of government, lias, in this as in other respects, sunk out of reach of the fathom lino of civilized his tory. The Hebrew Scriptures toll u.s how their priests and leviles were exempt, from military servioe. They toll us, '.ikewiao, that even the l'hi'.istines, though ot the cruel and accursed ruoo of 11am, respeot ed the school of the Prophets at Uiibi, be cause they were men devoted lo tlu Di vine servioe. "It has been tho custom, in all time," says Grotius, "among ull peo nies, lo exempt this class of persons fiom bearing arms " Jc Hell HI, Uth. V0 find constantly recurring instance among the pug in Ureek and Roman writers. In the Christian religion, from the earliest times, tiie clergy w ere prohibited from bear ing arms. So soon as the Empire bcuume Chiistian, they were, by law, exempted, and this privilege of exemption was con finned and extended from time to lime, till, in the eleventh century, we find it an iiucopted canon of tho Church t hat the clergy, and ull who were specially conse crated to religion should not meddle with mailers of war, nor bo muddled with by belligerents. It is I rue, as ilurbeyrac well remarks, on thin canon, tha t its foundation is on the hypothesis that these miniiters of re ligion remain within their proper sphere, hut that " if an ecclesiastic drops his Bre viary to busy himself with oouncils of State if he stirs up and promotos a w.tr, if he goes into campaigns, to raiso or to lead troops, directly or indireotly, he do serves by to muoh tho less to be snared a-i he acts against the obligations or his ec clesiastic! rhn'acier." Here lies tho true discrimination to have been made in iu the present conscription, (putting out cfview its general violation of constitu tional rights,) in regard to real or profess ed ministers of religion. Those who made political abolitionism the hobby of their pulpits, and taught dissension, and ha ired ol the South, in the name of religion, ought, certainly, to bo made to bear a full proportion of the burthens tbey have helped to create. l',ut respect for religion required that this should hnvo been dona by way ol exeeptioi, and because those preachers had openly departod from their calling as ministers of a Gospel of peace.--Iu like manner, it is meet, just, and every way appiopii ite. that all real or professing ministers ol religion whose heads havo been turned by tho war who havo preached it, and advocated it in its meas ures, in a public way, should bo excluded fiom the privileges and " benelit of cler gy," on the grouud that they havo openly abandoned that exalted eharaoter of ministers in. tho things ol God, which, among the nations, lud secured tbem their immunity- The operation of this conscription lu-.s been singularly opposite to this rule of justice. Confessedly the Catlnlit clergy, to a man, were innocent of having instigated ihis war, or brought it about. With ex ceptions so rare us to prove lha rule.since the war began, they have kept their heads free from being heated with the vanity of its vulgar pomp and noise, and have not promoted it. Vet the conscription has been so framed us to fall upon them with a severity greater than on any other class of citi.ens. Tho very self-denial to which their vows of celibacy bind them, lias been the oeea-con for a far larger proportion of ihm lo te drafted viz : those from thirty-five to foi tj-five. Their religion forbids I I lljum to talt0 UP rins. : : ...... .-.r : .. ..ii I hey and nil uun- i.ters ol religion, in all cici'i:ed cojtiliios. have been counted exempt from the op erations of war. This negro-Lineoln-Ham-lin Administration trim to the instincts of the degraded race of Hum. in whoso consanguinity they glory has lapsed into utter barbarism in refusing respect to the ministers, nnd altars, and temples nfOod. Hie ancient homnr.s called their generals to account whenever they ventured to show disrespect to the religion of tho va rious peoples with whom they might even he c irrying on war- Tho Liiicoln-Seward-Xeui'o Administration cannot show a de cent respect even to the religion of the soldiers on whom they havo to depend for their corporeal esfoty. Uut the Romans were a noble race, made to govern and fit for their destiny. The New England and Negro Administration- playthings of for tune for the punishment of a boastful, shallow, and corrupted people kr.otv no!, the elements of government, but act like inelu iale slaves in a Salurnalian debauch. They sink into the depths of ignominy, even while they are lifted up by reason of their ollice: dejeeicti cot dum elcvareniur. They avail to have on them tho damning mark of atheists and contemners of religion Where, else, except in the crgios of athe istic revolution, can an instance be founU of a thing calling itself a government levy ing as blood-money from a single parish, and it without funded revenues, atasingio blow, the enormous sum of nias Uutuired d'Jlart ! This was dor.o, nevertheless, in the instance ol St. Paul's parish, in the " loyal " city of Pittsburgh, where three oV the clergy were drafted, amh as their sa cerdotal obligations prohibited them bear ing arms, the poor peoplo of the parish hastened to raanm their clergy from lho gripe of the blood-suckers. freeman'.-; Journal. al t was a solemnly tunny joke, that of tbe bonviant whosnid there wereonly two, occasions when a gentleman could drink brandy without a sacrifice of dignity and self-respect, "when ho has had suit fish for dinner, and u hen he hasn't." ; " tefl"A pupil M'llO has a bnd teacher jfl lcBHClied by" CVCrv IcBSOIl. Biu01d 5en. Franklin says "there never waiayjod war nor a bad peato."