'"tH k : , ..,,, _ - .._ t . A:ir::;M.":t,A., . . , . t , . b . .. . '-'i-li l 1, ' . :4 : ' : '. c -1 1 4 AU-iv v- iti A , , ~., 'Axi 1 ~.:7 :- i' t ~5.,,,t.„,,,4,,e,,,.,„,‘,,,,,, i ~ ~,,,....f.,..„:_..........,, .. , .„.... .., D. W. MOORE, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXXVI.-WHOLE NO, 1857. Original Vnettl. them, their • cause, however lacking in Not to held the disloyal, who trample soundness, must have a strong semblance upon all our; laws, to be disqualified for of soundness. And such it, in fact, has, all part, frietri - ; the ballot-box upward, in woh thenmi le ue w k e e t withdrawwith refuse htivntlit te f hh r e o m the The constitutional right of " secession," , making and'adnainistering our laws, is su fhaayso r et f nd r .o it m E em t e l on i e r efijiteosfrt_ blacks a iciest ved l tn . u o sa l , l izi y a l b i r t di cause, as believeduons e, ‘ b f l e ' e l r i e s i n o ch n ex i td a t t n en th s m t e ves i save himself, is base and' e ballot h a has less directly. Nearly the whole South had with which to come to believe it, and no small part of cruel ingratitude. 'the North. It is true that the American I Just heressit may be objected, that the oy people have now put their final and effec- international code of war, which, I con tent vote upon the doctrine of " secession." I tend, should. to the end, continue tie g They Mee done this, not only on the bat- ern our contest with the South, does not lle-field but at the ballot-box also. Gen.; authorize the Icon truer to meddle with McClellan's nomination was but a device ' the systemiSanci.ar r langements of the con to get votes. Mr. Pendleton, an open quered. - Btit it does, as the practice un uteadlifitehd adder ep rca e o mo t e e re o t f thiepeacritoyct;i•ainned, says it e vutt a e b i l.m . dan ,do t h l abundantly himself chows. l'icle may" justice resp ec t- I a re u p d re u s n e ri n President JOIINSON I, HONORED AND DEAR SIR: Only ten (lays your vast majority over him goes along ing the' object, which had given flee to with our military victories to prove that the war. * * * H ago and the country felt sure of an home- e may even, if pru -1 the American people • have no longer dence so require, renderher (the con diate peace. The only apprehension was ' any patience with the II • octrme. Even jliered nation) incapable of d • • doing nets that its terms would be easier than it those who have clung to it. the most tena- chief with the same ease in future." Cer was prudent to grant. To-day, there is ri• ciously, and those who still see strongwr- tainly, this is broad enough to cover our • guments for it must give ii up. The na- claim to break up the slavery of the South strong and wide-spread fear that peace Is Lion will mark with her strong •disfaeor and the great estates it has created, and afar off. Whence this great change? It, every one who willconti • nuo to su . phold to provide at her ballot-boxesforhersafe comes from the assassination of Abraham this doctrine which has cost her so much. ty and the Beret y of the whole nation. Lincoln; and from you taking his place. Nevertheless, not to let the extended con-. I referred, at the beginning of myl t e - viction at the North as well as at the South, t lst, For, w::.!...'" I t '. di , incessant demand ter, to the apprehension that peace, which, present as well as past, of the truth of the only a few d • ago, , for a bloody and rigorous policy' tolTarti , doctrine, mitigate in setaedegree days seemed so very near, the conquered rebels met with no res- ' -•• of , the is now quite remote. I cannot doubt s sinao the mad-clinging of the Stu- that it is, if the severe policy toward lese pease in the remarkable kindness and I e t ern people to it, is to betray a great and conquered rebels, which so many are earl compassion of Mfr. Lincoln, it is apprehen- 1 , guiltyinsensibilityto the claimsof ing• reason, tor, shall be adopted. In that event, ded that there may be qualities in your- candor and charily. He is not a right- hardly in,my day, or even in yours, will self to which such a policy, unless con- hearted man who can read without sor- peace return to your afflicted country. m for G denmed by your judgen t, would be en- re ,s opera' Lee, and without some For once let it be known that the leading tirely welcome. Then, by your contact measure of excuse for him, the accounts rebels who shall fall into n hands,• with the rebel-lion—by year personal ote of his hesitatingur will between the claims of be doomed to punishment, beitdeath, servation of its crimes, and especially by 1 , his countryand his Virginia, to his pars- imprisonment or exile—and immediately, what you and your family and friends had I mount allegiance. Charge the general suffered from those crimes—your temper, with guilt vochoosing Calhoun instead ofthemand . Webster for his expounder of the Conan- bounds. Tens of thousands will burn among their followers sympathy with rage against us will know no unless marvelously controlled, could not r his expounder have failed tote excited, and to call for tution. But admit it . i • • • to be more his miss with verigeance, and will care for nothing the severest punishment on the leaders of ' fortune than hisgui t that, i•I n respect to but to gratify it. This will be true, as the rebellion. State sovereignty, he grew up under the well of persons under paroleof others. 3d. While Mr. Lincoln was yet Miro, as teachings of Jefferson Madison and instead In that state of things a guerrilla warfare Government was incessantly called on by of those ofWashin d Hamiltonand soon an would ensue, which, if not pacified by presses and_ public meetines bysermons , 1 Jay. Candor will allow the like plea even concessions, and such concessions too as saturated with the vindictive and blood-, for . Jefferson Davis. Let him who " • is wou:d fatally invade national and human thirsty spirit of the Jewish theology, 011 1 without sin "—this sin of taking as a po-rights,might run 'bre - ugh many years, by voices innumerable, not to spare these political authoritynot Calhoun merely, h •and leading rebels. No wonder then, Hutt the ut even Jefferso or Madison —"let ill, adding wasting our armies, and al manner of his death is made use of to in-The fearfully, if not fatally, to our first cast. a stone at" JeffersonDavis,D ' at arts ready vast debt It must not be forgot crease their thirst' for blcod. For, absurd simple truth is, that our nation had it . hot, ten that cost our nation many years. as is the. charge, that the assassin was leared that God did not create one race ' • !many lives, and thirty or forty millions their tool, it nevertheless gains extended -of his children to be trampled upon by lof dollars to put an end to the guerrilla I credence. They all knew Mr. Lincoln's another ; nor that she is but, a single na-1 war carried on in Florida on a by a handful of characteristic clemency, and that the th ee i nstea d of a e eeen , eenati • ons. These Indians and negroes. Nor must it he for terms of peace he was intent on were cx- lessons she now learned, The war has gotten that the hundred thousand Demi ccedingly mild. [fence, how insane is the taught them it ; and the cost of learning nicana are just, now enjoying a complete supposition that any of them sought his them has heon too great that aha should end final triumph over the many millions death ! ever forget them. From the lack of of Spain. • Rome, like ourselves, was a lint why should not vnvnr went refe r , le • , to actopt, or, even no one ni enr, go ne• i ~-d m ar l inktfirn heifer 4.neScMlll pia'!' Tett tiellgeterenyuyekeseeseterinetieriesiee trefor ' en to, thip rigorous and bloody policy l— I North had been willing to learn them, so to achieve an entire conquest of the few Why should not government deal with neither can put the entire blame of the Cantabrians. The lesson of such cases is, the conquered in this war, as it would deal .war upon the other. H en ce neither is to that a people, however great, should be with the conquered, were it. successfUl in punish the other ; but both are to forgive ware of driving to desperatiOn a people a-war with Mexico? The answer is—be- each other. God says to the North as however small. It may be hoped ta st cause it is a civil War. But is it not such well as to the South, "Go, and sin no the negroes of the South would stand in a civil war as the ablest publicists bold mom ', the way of this apprehended guerrilla war . s / hould be conducted by the rules of inter- I I called "secession" the cause of the fare. A part might. But the remainder national war. Says Vattel: identifying it with justice nod mercy. " But when a nation becomes divided into two , rebels.. , Perlinps, it will be said, that not might hasten to identify themselves with cessi pastievabsolutely independent, and no-longer no- i "se - on ' but slavery was ft • - Neverthe- it. Moreover, if our Government shall be knowledging a common superior, the state is 1 loss if slavery was the ultimate. cause—if guilty of what seems to be bad faith or dissolved, and tho war between the two parties toward I• to perpetuate that abomination and ex- cruelty rho conquered rebels. stands on the same ground, in ever y respect, us . tena its borders was the end they had in a public war between two different nations. • I v iew still it cannot be denied that ese ceset - would there be e disaffection at the North * • They decide their quarrel by arms as two •' an l, was their proximate cause. far more alarming than that hitherto man different nations would do. The obligation to , ifested ? In a word, would not the Gov observe the common laws of war toward each ctrl- , i But it will be said, that the South does ernment thereby neske an enemy of the or is therefore absolute—indisponsahly boding' not abide by the rules of international South and an enemy of the North also? to both parties, and tho same wl:00311 the law of war • and that, therefore, the North is re- I have glanced at the painful conse nature imposes on all nation! iu tnruSietions be- ' leased from them. Sorry am I to have quences of a harsh and unfair treatment twecia state and state." . to own that she does not. She starves and of our conquered enemy. But how bless [low emphaticalle this applies to our murders prisoners of war—titan which ed would be the consequences of a wise - A MATEIRMATICAL Puzzr.g.—The follow ease ! Chi Sr half of our nation, : there is no more abhorrent crime. But and kind teentmenteofoliateeriemy I Then a• log is decidedly the neatest little mathe containin many millions of people, broke , what is rho spirit which prompts her to the South would be at peace with the ,marital puzzle that has come to our no- I awn Y ;rem the Northern haleand h • • • - I Wit. The same North ; would soon learn to like her ; and e became it ?, It Is the pro s every spi . • • Ike: B . man ifestly a nation de facto as was the spirit, which ignores the rights of black would soon welcome the tens of thousands !Ili: - TessA man has sixty apples i- he bells thirty -se i Northera half. We could not proceed men, allow the rights of no man to stand of families that would immediately begin for fifteen cents, wistieh is bali a tent al against'; those many millions as against • nst,in her way. And is- the south alone res- to emigrate from the North to the South. hi' . piece, Or two applee f -- He a °'"' en. One cent, traitors and pirates, and try them by mu- ponsible for this spirit? The North is Then the North and the South (slavery 11 ' -. ' llan. . theremaininglli'l I for ten cents nisi - ""'s - }; le el a third of a cent a piece, or three beyond the scope of the Constitution, and' commerce, politics: religioue and social come one in interest, and one also in a .• ese 'Apples for one cent. Thus we see .that took its place under the provisions of • in- •, influences in the North were mainly in character. Moreover, the whole world for 'five apples be gets two cents ; now ternaticnal law.. Belligerefit rights were tire service of slavery ; and did much to be blest by the termination of this most 'bow nanny cents does ho get for sixty accorded to our enemy by our own as well I give strength and rampancy to its infer- horrid war in a peace so full of reason. Apples? The problem scorns plain enough, i as by other nations. There were truces, ; nal spirit. Nothing like half the people justice and love. Christianity would be e. , and the rule of three gives the immee; " - e'that the dead might, be bu:•ieci and ter of the North thought a man disqualified' honored and advanced by a peace made e,s4. ate result of twenty-four. But on the other purposes. Captives were not, killed, by his slaveholding to preach the Gospel so strikingly in her own spirit. In that •eel' other bend, .if he gets fifteen cents for but held as prisoners'of wee. There were •of Jesus Christ ; and scarcely one in a spirit we cannot shed one drop of blood Too Mesh FOR Hime—A Cincinna. -' thirty of his apples, and ton cents for negotiations for peace ; and•that one occa- ' hundred of them would have refused to 'of our subdued foe. If peisessecl of it, merchant and his wile—fond of practice, .:the remaining thirty, it seems pretty evi-, I sion the President. and Secretary of State ; vote for a slaveholder for President.-- we shall forgive and forget the' wrongs jokes-- recently entered into a wager by .'. dent he gets twenty-five cents for the six- were qur negotiators,, and went to meet 'Surely, in the light of their common res- done to the North. and shall feel that the which the one who should first be sold , i ,iii" • .. theirs, showed, not only our respect for' poneibtlity for slavery, an d, for the spirit South has suffered enmesh, and that she by the other, was to submit to a penalty the enemy, hut hoer entirely we recognized it generates, the North as well as the deserves to he soothed and comforted, and imposed by Hip triumphant party. For sl ' MIDNIGHT,—There is something as beau-, the Law of war in our c in with him. I South is to be charged with the rebellion, Ino more afflicted, by us. ' some days both wore equally vigilant, ~ ttiful as sublime in the hush of midnight.' Both parties were vitally interested n and, with all. its horrid fruits, including, Largely on your wisdom and magnuni- and every attempt at, a joke failed. One .i 'The myriad quiet2•sleepers, laying down I subjecting the contest. to this law, and in I even the starving and murdering of pri is miry do r r , most' • mum:lmy 'Warm hppes o f see- evening, as the couple were about to no - el 'each their life burden, insensible alike not letting it sink into an internecine and ones . The whole is the work of both ; hie this war give place to a bloodless, tend a party given by some friends, the 'to joy or sorrow; - helpless alike—the e piratical one. Both parties were equally land it is the foulest hypocrisy, as well asand this kind, forgiving, and, therefore.. immedi- lady complained of indisposition, -s. • istrong man as the infant ; and over alit , concerned to save life, town and property ; , the deepest injustice, for the North to are peace. But this is not all for which husband went to procure a carriage. f 0 S tthe sleepless Eye, which since the world and to have the war of so civilized a type, I ,punish the South for any part of it. If I look to you. Now. while we have this While he was gone, a negro woman ofthe . :, 1 1 'began has never lost sight of one pillowed; that their citizens would not shrink from ' a drunken father has brought up his sons fresh sense•of one of the worst wars—now, wife's size and height was bundledeven I 1 e lintel Thoughts like these come to us in becoming soldiers and sailors. God for - ` ,to be drunkards, and if, in one of their while we can contrast its ugliness eith her cloak and furs, and when the carriage - tour wakeful night hours, with an. almost' bid that now, when the tide of war setsthe husband, sinful carousals, they fall upon him, he the beautiful pence, which, unless we ;come took her place beside h s e painful intensity. Then eternity onle ‘ e stronglyin our favor, - we should be guilty I should not, if he shrill afterward get them thrust it, from us, is just at hand—now is! with a thick veil drawn over her ice: e • seeems real, and every day's: life a feitetee'`of thrusting the Constitution into thein his power, punish them either for their the time for our nation to be the first of ;On reaching his destination he led his ) But morning comes, and the stir and hum , place of the code of war, and of holding' drunkenness or for beating _ him. All it ' all nations to propose nn end of national !supposed wife into the house amid the of life chase these thoughts away, as. the, and trying as traitors those whom we • becomes him to . do •is to guard himself wars by means of an International Con- 'other guests, when lifting the veil a which liscov sun dries up the dew drops,-the' (none the less really if indirectly) agreed I and them for the future; and this he can ' grass, whose decissiona upon the disagree- 1 ered the "sell." -The next day the die ,our thoughts, performed their reviving to regard but as enemies ; and whom e ley I most effectually do by clearing his house, ! - enents and controversies between nations confitted husband submitted to the mission ere they departed, I all the conclusive reasons of the case aside and forever keeping it clear, of in - , shall be final. Yours be the glory to fit-' penalty and wheeled a barrel of flour • from such agreement, we are bound to re- 1 1 ting liquors. So, too, the duty of the. vor a measure fraught with more honor through the several principal streets to, gard in that light only. We must not be' 1 North is not to punish the South,• but to God and more happiness to man than his own door. guilty of this bad faith. We must not simply to provide for the future safetyo- f ,any, or oven all. other measures ! Yours' . 1 TSIANITED YOUrrt . A good anecdote break this solemn bargain. The South , both North and South. I scarcely need . beethe glory of identifying your Adminis- . • , • of s told a houseointer'a son, who used would hate us for it! The world would! sa y, that the main thing to this end is to , tration with the cause of international 1. the brush dexterously, but had acquired despise us for it, I Ands' would not the' rid the land of slavery • , and to restore to peace. • tiro habit of "putting it on too thick." North herself, if not despising us for it, l 1 its victims the civil and political rights of With great regard. your friend. I be, at least, fearfully divided in regard to which it has robbed them. To this I would GERRIT SMITH'. One day his father, after having frequent -1 it? Greatly s should we all love our noun- add no death, no imprisonment, no ban' - ly scolded hirnfor his lavish daubing, and - .all tonopurpose,are him a severe flag ry, But there is one thing we should all! i s hment—nothing but the breaking up of eiiirNevada, "the baby State"of the ilt. , g love more ; and that is fair dealing."Our ' , the large landed estate of the South for , Union, produced last year. fifteen intl , l- , e , s , ion f-. Country right 1 "--- not "our country right I the benefit of the needy, and the perpot- ions in silver% That child of Uncle Sam s l 'I here, you young rascal," said he, a . , • duty "how dO .* or wrong!"—should be our motto. ' I cal withdrawal of - political power from .was certainly born with It silver spoonin - ter perrorming the painful• 1 likethat ? ' I you I But-there was another and no less con - 1 the disloyal leader's, and the temporary its mou th. , 1 "Well, I don' tknow, dad," whined the elusive argument for conducting the eon-, withdrawal of it front the disloyal masses. " N w York Tribune it s emis to me that' the one case, . 4EN sex wr..—lhe e , . boy,- in reply, "but . test with our-enemy on the most liberal I I admit that the probation in ' rig 1 t thicker saysjustly :. "Let not the victory of the' you put:it on a thunderiu 1 and. humane principles. It was that it is would, he liable to be shortened, and the aka- republic be stainedlby a single act , of yen- than I did I" - . -.- • reasonible,,and charitable to conclude, not I •absoltete denial in . the other to:bwrep d I he ranee, by one wanton infliction of pain. , . Wiay is a hen'seaterl on a fence lik,a only that Chere 'Must in order to ref)" ed. Nevertheless, since safety shoe _ , . . -lot even this Jet not. the national ensign be stained by i ts.s' s I B toe the head is on ono side such vast numbers, be their sincere beliel, ou'r sole aim, I would say l er e, c,ent r eea the , d r ier. - l ,o Ba r e tx, one.drup of blood shod to,, punish ,rat t __ , taw . f a e on the, other. in their cause, but that, considering how I take pliese whenever it should. - - • than t'd save. ' ' - .. ... an, . ~ ..... . Many wise and'good men there are at.unng have it take place. ,:. , , __ - - - ,I ' •\ • . . . . THE FAREWELL OF M. J. BELL. BY MRS. M. C. LEE. Farewell, father, I have suffered— Oh, you know I've Buffered long— My temples throb—my head is oohing— And must I suffer, suffer on ? I am weary ; Oh, how weary And I long to soo the bloat, Per this world is chid and dreary Compared with this bright land of rest. Farewell, father, 1 am d 3 ing ; 'Don't you see the Angel's hand? :'Don't you see them coming, !Hying, "To waft me to, that better land ? Tell mo, father, will you miss me, When your children meet at eve ? Tell me, will you try to moot me, When this sinful world you leave ? Farowoll, sister, you will mist mo When tho lovo'y roses bloom; Will you scatter, in remembrance, Flowers on my lonely tomb ; You will miss mo most, dear Mary, In tho lovely month of May, When next you gather early dowers, Passive in deatleo old arms I'll lay. farewell, sister, you will miss. mo, When you enter the front room, Alloro I autrere -; - tvliero death found'me, Where I was shrouded for the tomb; Dourest Mary, will you moot me In that bright and holy land ; Don't you see Jesus inviting You with blooding, outstretched hand 7 Farewell, brother, you will miss m 0 When you moot at school again ; When you see my seat is vacant, Will your heart ha filled with pain ? When yeu remember me, dear brother, Think I'm with tho happy blest; Try, dear brother, when death calls you, To meet me in that land of rest. I am coming, mother, 'coming For a long and fond embrace ; Whore the blesetd sing forever We'll see each other.face to face. Brief years have passed since last wo parted, But now we'll meet to part no mere; Come, , deir father, sister, br3thei., Meet me on that'happy shore. tows% APRIL 17rn, 1865. Tins PUNCTUAL MAN.--Bit• Higgins was a very punctual than in all his transact-: ions through life. He amassed a large' fortune by untiring industry and punctu-, --slily, and at the advanced age of ninety i years was resting quietly on his bed, and ' .ealmly waiting to be called away. He . had deliberat- 1 7 made almost, every ar rangement tor his decease and 0ur.... • -His pulse grew fainter, and the light of lifisseemed just flickering in its sockets, when one of his sons observed— `: "Father, you will :probably live but a ,-"-" day or two; is it not well for you to name your bearers ?" "To be sure, my son," said the dying man; "it is well thought of, and I will do now." tie gave the names of six, the usual 11' 1, number, and sank back exhausted upon hie pillow. A gleam of thought passed over his withered features like a ray of light, and herallied once more. "My son read the list. Is the name of Mr. Wiggins there?' "It, is, father." • ' "Then strike it off?" said he, emphati cally, "for he was never punctual—was never'apywhere in season, and he might binder the procession a whole hour l" - fiiii""The oil wells in Burnish, it is esti iii .ated, have been yielding their present' , :supply of eight hundred thousand barrels per annum at least a hundred years, a 11 mounting...during that period to about • eighty million barrels, English measure ; • these, if arranged' as previously stated, would form a continuous line of oil Ler -1 eels twenty-seven thousand three bun ri t died miles long. Oil wells also exist in , : i o• Persia, and it is said have lately been die i •novered near the sea of Azof, while on the Island Samos they existed five bun ,, A . 'fired years before the Christian era. , . an instance of good fortune that -sometimes attends speculation, the Cin . cfnnati Commercial is told of a man wb? two or three years ago was a newspaper carrier in that'city, and is now estimated *:0 be worth over two millions. retrOleilVa " " l i/ the business for him. 11!= GERRIT SMITH to the PRESIDENT. [The following lottor is important chiefly ho onus° its author is a pure, unadulterated," por foct equality " Abolitionist. But ha is a man of great intellect, of largo and long esperionco and observation, and of the stornestintogrity, It is to be hoped that his appeal to President JOHN STON may not be in vain, Should it bo—should our Government adopt a revengeful policy, and inaugurate a system of capital punishment for the loaders of the Robollion—that poaoo, which is now at the throshheld, may bo for In tho fu turo.—En. Bar.] TETERBORO, April 24th, 1865. \ ---\ CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, AY 11, 1865. PRINCIPLES, not MENA:, . A WHERE BOOTH LIES A correspondent of the Now York World writing front Washington, on Fri- day, says. Yesterday the Secretary of War,without instructions of any kind, committed to C01.4 - tafayette C. Baker, of the secret ser vice, the stark oorpes of J. Wilkes Booth. The secret service never fulfilled its vo lition more secretively. "What have you done with the body 7" said I to - Baker. "That is known' he answered "to only one man living besides myself. It is gone. I- will not tell you where. The only man that knows is sworn to silence. Never till the great trumperter comes shall the grace of Booth be discovered," And this is true. Lest night, the 27th of April, a small row boat received the carcass of the murderer ; two men were in it ; they car ried the body off into the darkness, and out of that darkness it will never return. In the darkness, like his great clime, may it remain forever. impalpable, invisible, I nondesciipt, condemned to that worse than damnation, annihiliation. The riv er bottom ooze about it laden with great shot and drowning mantles. The earth may have opened to give it that silence andforgiveness which man will never give its memory. The fishes may Swim around it, or the daisies grow white above it, but we shall never know. , Mysterious, incom prehensible, unattainable, like the dim times through which we live and think upon as if we only dreamed them in per turbid fever, assassin of a nation's bead rests somewhere in the dements, and hat is all ; but if the indignant seas or the profaned turf shall ever vomit this ,corpse from their recesses, and it receives humane or Christian burial from some who do not recognize it, lei the last words those decaying lips ever uttered be carved above them with a dagger the history of a young and once promising life—useless useless ! Mr. LINCOLN ON JOHN 113.0WN. CHICAGO, April 14.—T0 . the Editor of the Chicago Times.: Much diss atisfaction and holy horror have been expressed in some of the "loyal" newspaper sheets, and by a certain Tennessee river preacher, because in one of four editorial 4 you denounced both John Brown and J. Wilkes Booth as individual; acting from the same motives in their diabolical design. Now if they will refer to a speech made by Mr. Lin coln at Cooper institute, New York, Feb. 2.7, 1860, they will learn that he did not consider John Brown a glorious martyr. lie said "Orsini's attempt on Louis Na rnlrpet fi—r4g,lss4rl...P.aesr.s•'v. Nitanant, nj, precisely the same ;" and yet these parties deify a man whom our late President de nounced as an assassin. C. The Firing of Richmond—Letter from General Ewell. [Washington Chronicle, April M] The following is an extrac:, of a letter from the rebel Lieueial 11:well explaining the partial burning, etc., of Richmond, during its evacuation by the rebel army. it is addressed to a relative near this city, and is dated at I.%)rtWarren, April ISth : atn . abused for burning Richmond. It was burned by the mob. There were no troops to keep order. I bad told the prin ciple citizens, months before, what would happen, and urged them to form a con stabulary force to keep order. But they would not—only three persons offering .heir services, when there were hundreds doing nothing. The lire hose was cut, and the arsenal burned by the mob. I have taktin ;every - precaution posSible, and. the people must blame themselves. To prevent misstatements as regards our cap ture, I would-state that- we-- were- order ed to follow Anderson; that after driving back an attack on our wagons we found Anderson cut oft' from those of Lee's ar toy in front, and the Sixth corps came af ter me, attacking my troops. Anderson failed, after a trial, in breaking through those in his front ; and my men, entirely surrounded, fighting over ton times . their number, were captured or slain. TERMS :—s2 00 Per Annum, if paid in advance , NEW SERIES-VOL. V.-NO. 43. THE WOMEN OF RICHMOND. A correspondent, writing from Rich mond, three days after its occupation by the Union forces, tells the following story : Around the corner of a square opposite the Capitol there suddenly burst, at nom yesterday, a trilliant cavalcade of North- ern officers and ladies their horses' hoofs surged to the sidewalks, and into the faces of a group of the daugh ters of Richmond who were returning, from church. The eyes of the female rid ers, aglow with excitement and pleasure, were first lifted teword the statue of Washington, immediately In front, then fell with a curious look, mingled of irony and wonder, upon the ladies of the side walks. in the gaze that returned the look flashed that keenness of the varied lightnings of a woman's eye—a quivering scorn. One of the equestrienne& could not have observed it. Reining her horse up to the curb, with an expression of girlish ardor and delight, she bent a suriny face ) crowned with golden hair, above the as group southerners, and, sing ling out one haughty figure from the rest, said eagerly •: "I beg pardon, but is it not true that I retognille a friend. Can it be that this is really ?" "Yon are mistaken," the Southerner responded, with the same fixed gate: "I ,have no frierrds where you abide." Lifting her dress at the curb, the wo . man passed on with just the slightest bow that was not in the slightest degree re turned Yet, let 'us fairly judge them, for there is something appealing in their sorrow. humiliated as they are, who in their ' beauty and their loftiness of spirit have ? been cupbearere of hope to the rebellion, what have they to sustain them save their pride ? Here, Where all is over and done to onr content, we can afford not only to pity, but to admire them. SENsTaLE Meirims.—Never taste an atom when you are not hungry ; it is suicid- Never hire serva'nts `who . go in pairs, as sisters, 'cousins, or anything else. Never speak of your father as "the old man." Never reply to the ephithets of a foot or a drunkard. Never speak tonlemptously of uwoman k ind. Never abuse one who was once your boa= friend however bitter now. Never smile at the expense of your re gion or your bible. A good ward is as soon said as a bad No one is a root rtivntyz; Arm., itnee. Peace with heaven is the best friend ship. er! A PA7qt.NT's Jose.—A sturdy sergent being . obilged to submitihe amputation of his hand, the surgeon oflered to adminis ter chloroform, as usual ; but the veteran refused, Baying if the cutting - was to be done on him ho wanted to see it,' and laying his arm out;he table, submitted to the operation without a sign of pain, except a firmer setting of the teeth as the saw struck the marrow. The operator, as he finished, looked at, his victim with admiration, and remark ed : 'You ought to have been a survey; my man. 'I was the next thing to ono aforel en listed,' said the hero. "What was that ?" asked the doctor. 'A butcher ?' responded the sergean't, with a grim smile, which despite the sur roundings, communicated itself to the by standers. KDYERTISINC. -- YOU See 100d8 are like girls—they must go when they are in fash ion and good looking, or else a yoke of oxen wouldn't draw them off afterward. The man that advertises most doeethe most business, because be don% make one's stock last one's lffetime. T Advertising is like money if followed up. Merchants think nothing of paying forty dollars for one sign, with nothing but a name on 'it. Well, what do you think of having several hundreds or thou sands of signs a week in a newspaper? In it you show your whole establishment to the d,3untry every week ? cA certain linendraperwaited'upon a lady for the price of an article purchase ed at his shop. She endeay9red to re mind him that she had pad' him for 'it when he called some time ago; he declar ed he had no remembrance of the circum stance: on which she produced his receipt. lle then asked pardon, anti said..:" lam sorroy I did r o recol'ect it?' To vihiCh the lady replied, "1 quite beliveve you are sorry you did not re-collect." SPA lady passing alnng the street one morning noticed a little 'bey scattering salt upon the pavement 'for the .purpose of clearing the mop. I'm sure," said tho lady, "that's'real beneyolence." "No, it ain't -ma'am," replied. 'hp lbw, "it's salt." The dust from "I am afraid 1 shall come to wat,' said an old lady to a young genleman "I have come to want already,' " was the reply. "1 want your daughter. IThe workmen of the ititiarY. Me.% navy yard raised $3,330 for John Magraw. who had both bands blown of while Ell in_ a estate. pay-A Southern ut girl sohool at Saratoga was expelled last Saturday for saying thnt was the happiest day of her life. • . VirThe Bergen tunnel, on the Erie liatiroad, which has been the ecene, ,of many accidents. is pow lightedi wttt a cal , mum light. ,