jiE DJLLAit PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Thursday Morning, February 5, 1863. (Original tMrg. (Written for the Bradford Reporter.) MY BROTHERS, THREE. Wo -dial! nibs our absent brothers, When the snow flakes fall around— And the wind in mournful whispers, Echo's forth a doleful sound. When the stars are brightly shining, Shedding forth their golden light, When the sable robe of evening, Covers earth with darken'd night. When we breathe our prayers at evening, We remember brothers dear ; Askiu" GOD to guide and save them, Through all dangers that are uear ! On the gory fields of battle, Where the shells and bullets fall, Guard them. Father—shield, protect them, Sjve my brothers, one and all. When we gather 'round the fireside, By the old familiar hearth, Then, perhaps, my three dear orotliers, Hot upon the cold damp earth '. Win can tell the grief and sorrow, Tliat a sister holds concealed, When, perhaps, her noble brothers, Sleep upon the battle field? ■nti. Fa' M-I' 511 cll cit £a h ♦ IMIISSI^TGk " What is it, dear ?" " Only the drums. Oh, if they would ouly stop one moment !' j saw my dear aunt shake her head mouru fufiv, while a look of meaning passed between her and my uncle. They thought I was out of my tuiiid, but they were mistaken. I knew as a ell as tiny did that the noise which was wearing upon every nerve was only the reverb eration of tiie crowd of carriages and ounii I ii>es oil Broadway. Still 1 could hear the ' roil of drums 1 had heard it day and night lot' weeks. It was a drum this time, after all, aud muf lleii : they were approaching the house. My aunt started up, with a gesture of dismay, to trv and close out the sound. Nearer aud near er came the heavy tramp of men and now the Mill dirge wailed out hv low toned instruments, the R aid March that marks a military funer al. Strange to say, it was wonderfully sooth ing and restful as it rose aud died away upon ray cars, straiiud so long to a steady raonot onor.s roll ! When they had all gone by, I ivas weeping for the first time in many days. It was iike a dew to iny dry eyeballs—an uti rpeakahly blessed physical relief to my aching heart. Tlnse funeral honors were in my mind ap portioned to him. 1 felt no longer the bitter est most maddening fear of all—that his dear form was left unburied, lor the ill birds ot prey to tear and mangle. A ghastly blacken eil i'ace, upturned to the scorching sun, no longer glared upou one when I closed my eyes; .but a low quiet grave, where comrades had said a prayer as it was hallowed, and where dust should quietly mingle with dust. The g!'[i.' s should spring upon it someday ; wild ihuve:s look up with dewy -eyes to Heaven ; a in] there peacefully, as iu my arms, he should slumber until we should be re united beyond a!! death and change. Again that sad and touching strain floated back to my darkened room on its errand ot mercy —fainter and fainter now ss the foot s'eps receded—" Adesles Ficklisf cur old Suit d.y evening hymn ! For-vceks my n.ind had goue in the same dull, maddening round ; but cow I saw my old home as vividly as if I were hi reality the lit tie fair-haired child nestling '.a my diar father's arms, while my mother touched the keys, and their voices rose up ward in a solemn and tender unison—uu em blem of their nuked godly lives ! A feeling of pity for myself came over mc to thiuk 1 had come to this,that bright eager, hopeful, child ! I wondered if they did not pity mc, removed as they were from from the sorrows of earth; if they did not loug to pluck mc from the dark waters that were surging over iny soul. Who knows but it was their spirits ministering unto me ; for from that moment the stupor of despair left me. I only wonder 1 had not died at first. It happened thus : I came down so cheerful and buoyant that morning, singing to my bird as I arrang ed the flowers that our city garden afforded, for it was my day for a letter from him, and all this long year he had never failed me.— Twice a week his daily journal, iu which every act and thought of his iife was chronicled for my eyes, came. There might be delays after it left bis hand, but uoue through him. I did not think to unfold the morniug pa per, not knowing that a movement of his corps was expected ; but my uncle had known it for several days, and had been dreading disaster, es I afterward found from the carefully word ed telegrams of the war department Rut I was young aud over confident of our cause, and had paid no jfiecd to the ominous mut terings of the coming storm The sun fell on my daily path —what were the clouds to mc ? There was a white,fixed look, in my uncle's face ; that was my first warning. 1 dropped the Uood red fuschias and fragrant heliotropes which 1 held and sprang to his side. " What is it ? what is it ?" My voice sounded strange and husky to my self. The scared look passed from ray uncle's kind eyes, aud oue of love and ptty eutsred into them. " lie may be only a prisoner after all ; do Dot worry before we hear." Rut 1 could detect the conceit, as a child does the bitter drug hidden in the conserve. T ou mean that he is dead ; aud you are tying to me I" It did not matter that " Missing" stood above the column in which his name was en tolled. They tormented me with watchiDg and writing for information, and ail manner of hopeless devices for many a day. They were sure that when the list of the prisoners should be received from Richmond he would be reported among them, but I gave up from the first ; aud when that came with no news from him it was almost a relief, for they let me alone with my trouble. You take up the papers day after day, and read those dreadful lists without a thought.— Those names are no more to you than a col umu of a directory or a list of advertised let ters. You have a kind heart, and you sigh, and say : " Poor fellows !" as you lay them down. llow little do you understand of the sickening anxiety, the appalling shock, which those very columns carry to a thousand house holds ! How eager eyes dilate with horror aud unbelief as fearing, aud hoping, and pray ing, they come upon the name they seek for staring them in the face with such persistent reality—staring them into blindness. So I read it, leaning over my uncle's shoul der, and following his finger with a dizzy braiu : Missing —AßTHUß L. GRANT. The first on the list, followed by the name of a company and regiment that had marched proudest of all through our street thirteen months before, since they had hit wealth, and ease, and luxury, to go out for our country's sake—a pure euthusiasm in which they believ ed to be a noble cause. Again and again he had been in the thick est of the fight and come out unharmed, i impiously believed it was iny unceasing selfi-li prayers that protected him ! how impious and how selfish I had never known til! now ; for 1 had come to believe the angels had a special charge concerning him. Rut that vail of self delti.-iou fell from my eyes like a mist ; my presumption in thanking Gon would exempt me from the trials common to all ! 1 dure say you know every phase of mind 1 passed through with, if you have ever been visited with a sud den shock of loss ; how, from what I conceiv ed to be loving trust in my heavenly Father and a glowing gratitude. I found myself mad ly rebellions, sullenly faithless, whoiiy unbe lieving. What were aii his promises worth since it had come to this ! Only that morn ing, before I left my room, 1 had read with such a boastful conli ;ence in the Bible which had been his earliest gift to me : " lie shall deliver thee in six troubles; yea, in seven shall no evil touch thee. "In famine he shall redeem thee from death, aud in war from the power of the sword." 15nt now he had " put forth his hand and touched all tiiat f had," aud the temptation to " curse him to his face," swept over ine, as it had through the soul of the paticut Chaldean ! During the slow decline which had taken my father from me, and exhausted my mo ther's little strength in long continued care and watchfulness, we had sailed on a long voyage, in the hope that it might stay the cruel disease which worked out its end with such deceptive qnietne.-s. I was wretchedly feverish and ill for a long, long time, unable to have mv berth or to take any nourishment; yet, strange to say, I i ever slept without such heavenly dreams ! An unaccountable happiness stole over me as 1 sank to sleep ; the fever and the thirst were slacked on de licious fruits or nt sparkling fountains of the cleared water. The dull monotony of sight and sound which almost maddened me when awake, was exchanged for tiic iandscapes and the music of Paradise ! So it was with me now for a time ; when awake, despair, and desolation, and eternal isolation, close around ine ; but when 1 sank into an unconciousn ss that was not sleep, such bright, mocking visions ot the past, with every precious hour that memory held in store was lived over with a minuteness and vividness that mocked the changeless reality of widow hood. Every half expressed thought or glance of tenderness —the perfect repose of the full knowledge ot his love—the bitter bliss of our first parting, when the call to arms sounded through the lar.d—the unspoken longing to be called his—to bear his name, at last, if his life should be laid down for his country—the long clinging, passionate farewell, when I first felt all the intensity of his love —and his sudden, unlocked for return. That dav came up before me continually.— 1 heard the sound of clear, ringing footsteps in the hall when I thought him hundreds ot miles away, and started to be caught to his heart, and find that uiy quick recognition ot that familliar tread was indeed a blessed real ity ! How tenderly he smoothed back my hair as I clung to him —afraid he would van ish as strangely as he had couie —and pressed my check closer and closer to his breast, till I could hear the strong throbbing if his heart; and then he whispered : " on must be my wife Agues, before I leave you again ; this separation will be intolerable if 1 cannot pour out my whole heart to you aud think of you as all mine !" Yet he was to return the next day ; for his sad errand of escort to a deceased comrade, one of the first to baptize the soil of Virginia with heroic blood, was already accomplished. It was all so strange, so hurried, so dreamlike, when I stood up between my kind uncle and aunt the next morning, and my uncle laid iny hand in Arthur's, and, trembling from head to foot, I made those soleuiu vows that bound me to him for life and death. Once—only once—l heard his dear voice utter the sacred name of " wife," and then it was all over ; my clasping arms were unlock ed from his neck with tender and gentle force, my husband's first and last kisses were show ered upon my face—an 1 he was gone ! Was this the end of my faithful watching and waiting—ceaseless vigils in spirit by an unknown, uuhouored grave ? Rut now neither bitter realities nor tender memories mingled iu the sleep to which I sank; for hours my unstirred pillow was as dream less as that of the dead, and I awoke so rest ed and so calm that at first they feared the new mood ouly as a more insidious symptom PUBLISHED EVERY TfIURSDAIf AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. 0. GOODRICH. 'of mental malady. 1 Lai a plan and purpose of life—for a time, at least—which had ccme to me as suddenly as an inspiration. I had been denied that which 1 had coveted —to soothe his pain, to watch by his bed of suffer ing ; but there were those who had suffered in the same holy cause to whom 1 could min ister—his comrades, who, iu turn, were far from all they loved. My aunt called it madness wheu I told her of my inteutiou to leave my sheltered home with her and devote myself to the wearing, self sacrificing life of nurse among the hospi tals. "My health forbade "my strength had never been taxed ;" "it was a romance I should soou be cured of ;" " they would uot undertake the risk to which my life would be exposed." But I hud expected opposition, and met it quietly, but firmly. An only child, self will had been long a governing principle, and they finally gave way, believing what I told them, that it was my only escape from madness, the prospect of action, a miud aud heart both occupied fully. 1 knew he would have approved my course. What was my case aud comfort that it could not he resigned when Arthur's had been so readily sacrificed ? And suppose the worst came—or what they thought to—there was a selfish, eoivardlv pleasure to me, in the thought that 1 should then be united to him again so soon. 1 wanted to put on the mourning dress which suited my condition, but that they would not allow me. Arthur's relations opposed it " while there was hope." Alas ! there had never been hope. Some of them caviled at my purpose, and called it unwomanly ; but then they had at my sudden marriage also— dull souls, who made religion of routine and social observance. It was the first approach to happiness I had known when I put on the plain gray dress which Arthur had always liked to much, cak ing me his " little nun," and knelt down in the silence of mv own room with a vow of con secration to my GOD and uiy suffering fellow creatures, for lie accepted it, I knew, blotting out the human weakness of my rebel.ion. I knew it by the power that 1 had given me at that liniment to look upon the past without bitterness, and the long, weary future, without a cowardly shrinking from it. My dear aunt waited for me below, with tears that she could not restrain ; she saw my blighted life in my thin, worn face, aud she had tried so hard to make me happy after that first great loss, and be a mother to me. 1 stood on the spot where i had beeu made Ar thur's wife. llow should 1 return home again? llow pass through those doors that uowclosed so reluctantly upon me ? Rut then all pain was over save meeting my uncle's pitiful looks, from time to time, as we went on our little journey together. The surgeons did not care to admit mc at first—my youth and inexperience were against me ; but my utieie told them my story with a faltering voice, and 1 pleaded so humbly for the least and lowest office, that they allowed me to remain. My narrow, comfortless quar ters were assigned me, and my longed-for task began. The first day tried my resolution to the ut most ; the long rows of sufferers, the wan aud wasted faces, the pitiful imploring looks from eyes that followed me as 1 passed, the sicken ing sight of maimed and wounded limbs, the ghastly stump cushioned into sialit and cool uess, the ravings of delirium, the wau and ash en faces of the dying ! —oil, my GOD, that such setnes should be' —repeated with unvarying sameness through those long, dull wards— through miles of wards like these ail over our land ! Aud then 1 sew his sufferings iu theirs. Ah ! I could not close my eyes, could not com pose my limbs to sleep ; could ouly start, and turn, and pray for them aud those they loved, aud for uiy country, ail those long wakeful hours. After that I entered into my work with the exceeding comfort I hail expected, and an ea ger interest in individual suffering that sur- > prised me. When I first came upon the empty bed of one who had been my peculiar care, and who had passed beyond the reach of all ministry, 1 wept as if 1 had lost a brother. I forgot weary limbs and aching head when I moistened lips, blackened with fever, cooling j the stiffened bandages or turned the heated pillow. The close heavy air ceased to sickeu ine, my nerves shrank no longer at the cries uf pain or sight of gaping wound, if so 1 could prepare a cordial or bathe the sinking pulse back to life again. Two weeks had passed and I had won the confidence of the surgeon who had opposed my admission most decidedly, lie was abrupt aud cold in Iris manner, but he had a warm and feeling heart ; these men had found it out beneath his brusque exterior, for no woman's touch was more gentle, though so firm aud rapid in all that required to be done. I had never obtruded myself upon him but I noticed, with the pleasure like award of commendation, that he began to intrust his orders to me more aud more ; that he singled me out for cases that required the most con stant watchfulness. This day he said to mo, after giving his directions : " \ ou have not broken down yet, poor thing ! poor young thing !" It was as if my father had pitied and ca ressed me ; but it was so uulooked for that 1 almost gave way to tears before him. The same afternoon 1 found myself passing a ward that had been prepared some days for new arrivals, just as they were bringing iu those sad and touching burdens. Meu help iess as infauts clung to the arm that suppo t.-d them, or tottered to the bed prepared tor them like little children who are just learning to walk ; stretchers as ghastly as biers passed and repassed with those to whom all places are alike so that motion would cease and they might be allowed to die in peace ; others tnoaued aud shrieked at the torture of the ten derest touch ; and all were without exception squalid aud wretched to the last degree. I wondered to see them so, even while 1 passed from one to another with restoratives, but still 1 had uot heard that they were paroled "REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." prisoners, fresh from the filth aud privation of the rebel capital. No ; there was not even a tremor of possible hope that I might hear his name or story among the suffering crowd, as oue by oue passed before me. I stooped at length over a wan and wasted figure laid upon the bed in the most remote corner. The face was hollow and emaciated, the eye-balls sunken, the dry lips black and parched by fever, the dark hair aud heavy beard were closely shaven, the thin hands clasped together, as if death had already re leased this poor sufferer. I thought it must be so at first ; but as I bent down more close ly the eyelids were feebly lifted, the lips fee bly quivered painfully : " Yes—it is heaveu 1" 1 caught the feeble, wandering whisper ; but oh, my heavenly father ! was my brain wandering too ? had pity clouded my brain? They must have thought that 1 had gone mad ! Perhaps the kind surgeon thought so when he turned, the moment after, to find me kneeling by the bed with that poor, wasted, shriveled face cradled in my arms, and my passionate cries for help startling the painful quiet around us, for life seemed to have flick ered and gone out/with the look of recognition which i had caught. I had said —oh, how often !—that I would be content if he could die in iny arms ; and there he lay, slipping away from me into eter nity. 1 knew it was best when they unwound my arms as he had done that blessed morning, and the surgeon lifted mc as if I had been a child and carried me from the room ; but I crouch ed down by the door, blessing the fallen dark ness that sheltered me, and when he had pass ed out 1 crept back to the bedside. Surely, we might be trusted ; we did not exchange one word ! sight aud touch were sufficient.— The grateful, almost adorning looks from those large, brilliant eyes, as my hand passed -oftly over his forehead wooing for him the sleep that would save him, and praying that it might avail. And at last the eyelids fell softly, the hand that I clasped sank away, the painfully tense expression faded from his face; and I began to find out that it was no cheating dream but a blessed, hopeful reality, that Ar thur had boon given back to me from the dead! How did 1 return to the home 1 had left with such a breaking heart ? As a bride, in deed, with ilie blessed consciousness that but for my presence and watchful care, Arthur would at that moment have been lying among the crowd of unknown dead of a soldiers' bury ing ground. There had been no trace of his name or home, for the fever had been on him when he had went out to the battle-field, and he was carried away from it to a prison shel ter, wounded and raving in delirium. Think of the change in my heart and life when I entered the room in which I had suffer ed those long, slo'.r weeks of torture ; wheu 1 knelt by the white robed bed, too speechlessly thankful for words or tears, with Arthur's arms clasping mc, and his dear voice thanking GOD for both of us, and for the strange do liverance which He had wrought. TV HAT'S IN A NAME—There is a confounded ucal in a name. You are at a public dinner table. Smith, the grocer, says, " Rice is down again." " Is llice down again ?" asked the minister. " I was in hopes he had permanently reform ed.' " I was speaking of rice the vegetable," re plied the grocer. " Oh, ah, indeed !" exclaimed the minister, " and 1 was speaking of Rice the animal. lie! He ! " Wool has advanced," says a dealer iu the article. " Has he?" asked a military man ;" which way is he marching uow ?" " I was speaking of the woo! of the sheep,' was the reply. * I beg vour pardon. I supposed you were speaking ot Wool, the man." " What is butter worth ?" asked some one of the grocer. " Butterworth is a Hard Shell Democrat," at once responds a politition, whose th ughts are wholly engrossed with party matters. A CHILD'S FAITH.—In the Highlands of Scotland, there is a mountain gorge twenty feet in width, and two hundred feet in depth. Its perpendicular walls are bare of vegetation, save in the crevices, in which grow numerous wild flowers of rare beauty. Desirous of ob taining specimens of these mountain beauties, some scientific tourists ouce offered a Highland boy a handsome gift if he would consent to be lowered down the cliff by a rope, and would gather a little basket full of thetn. The boy looked wistfully at the money, for his parents were poor, but when he gazed at the yawuing chasm, he shuddered, shrunk back aud declined. But filial love was strong within him, and af ter another glance at the gift, and at the terri ble fissure, his heart grew strong, his eye flash ed, and he said : " 1 will go if my FATHER will hold the rope.'' And then with unshrinking nerves, and heart firmly strong, he suffered his father to put the rope about him, lower him into the wild abyss, and to suspend Lira there while he filled his basket with the coveted flowers. It was a daring deed, but his faith in the strength of his father's arm and the love of his father's heart gave him courage aud pow er to perform it. The writer of the Declaration of Inde pendence was passiouately fond of fiddling, and is said to have excelled in playing that instrument. In 1770 his family mausion was burnt. Mr. Jefferson used to tell, in after years, with great glee, an anecdote connected with the fire. He was absent from home when it occurred, aud a slave arrived out of breath to inform him of the disaster. After learning the general destruction, he inquired—" But were none of my books saved ?" " No, mas sa," was the reply, " but we saved de fiddle." ligL. Econemy is wealth The Testimony of an Eye-Witness. What Gen. Butler's Officers Think On Thursday of iast week Mitjor General Butler was in New York, aud a committee of ' the Chamber of Commerce waited npon him | at the the Fifth Avenue Hotel, offering him ; on behalf of the citizens a public diuuer.— \ This the Geueral declined for the present, his private affairs rcquiriug his presence at home. The New York papers report : The General was then introduced to a tiutn ber of gentlemen present, and during the col loquy that ensued he spoke of a few things re specting his course in New Orleans, which had been carped at aud severely criticised by those 1 who had been accustomed to act with him po J litically in time past —not for the purposcof injuring him but the cause of the country. — With reference to the Slavery question, his : views had undergone a radical change during | his residence at New Orleans, and while en- I tertaiuing no prejudice against his old politi | cal associates, who found fault with him on i that score, he would only say to them that if j they had gone there with the same sentiments | that he felt, they would have coaie away with ' the same sentiments that he felt. [Laughter.] j lie thought he might say the principal mem bers of bis staff, and the prominent ollicers of I his regiments, without any exception, went | out to New Orleans Hunker Democrats of the hunkerest sort, for it was natural that he I should draw around Liar these whose views : were similar to his own, and every iudivd : ual of the number had come precisely to the same belief on the question ot Slavery as he liad put forth iu his farewell address to the ' people ot New Orleaus. This change came about from seeing what ali of them saw, day ;by day. Iu this war the entire property of the i-outh was against us, because almost the ! entire property of the South was bound up : in that institution. This was a vveli-ksowu fact, probably, but he did uot become fully awate of it until he had spent some time at New Orleans. The South had $100,000,000 of tuxahles property in slaves, and $102,000, 000 in all other kind of property. And this was the cause why the merchants of New-Or leans had not remained loyal. They found themselves ruined—uli their property being loaned upou planters' notes and mortgages upon plantations and slaves, all of which prop erly is uow reasonably worthless. Again, he hud learned what he did uot know before, that this was not a rebellion against us, but simply a rebellion to perpetuate power iu the hands of a few slaveholders. At first lie had not believed that Slavery was the cause of the Rebellion but attributed it to Davis, Siideli and others, who had brought it about to make political triumphs by which to regalu their former asccndaucj. The rebellion was again the huml/!e and poorer classes, aud there were in the South large numbers of secret socie ties dealing in cabalistic signs, organized for the purpose of perpetuating the power of the rich over the poor. It was feared that these common people would come into power, and that three or four hundred thou.-and'men could not hold against eight millions. The first movctm nt of these men was to make land the basis of political power ; and that was uot enough, for land could not be owned by many persons. Then they annexed laud to slaves and divided the property into movable and immovable. He was not generally accus ed of being a humanitarian—at least not by his Southern friends. [Laughter.] When lie saw the ultc-r demoralization of the people, resulting from Slavery, it struck him that it was an institution which should be thrust out of the Union. lle|had on'rtadingMrs. Stowe's book—" UDcle Tom's Cobiu"—believing it to be an over-drawn, highly-wrought picture of Southern life, but he had seen with his own eyes, and heard with own ears, many things which go beyoui her hook as much as her book does beyond au ordinary schoolgirl's r.ov el. He related au iustanee of the shocking demoralization of society at Nc-w-Orleans. There came into his office a woman, 27 years of age, perfectly white, who asked inm iu proper language if ho would put her in one of her father's houses. Her history was this : Her lather had educated her in the City of New York, uutil she was between 17 and IS years of ago, and taking her to one of the metropolitan hotels, where he kept her as his mistress. Not relishing the connection, and desiring to get away from him, she went to New Orleans —he- followed her, but she re fused to live with him, at which he whipped her in the public street, aud made her marry a slave. She afterward resumed the unnatur al relation, going to Cincinnati, but was bro't back by her husband, or father, with a child belonging to somebody. Her father fled from the city at the time of its occupation by the United States forces, leaving her iu a state of destitution. She wanted to live in one of her father's houses, but her story was not credible, aud he determined to investigate it. To his surprise, it was found to be well known, and testimony of its truth was obtained from A, B, aud C, without difficulty. Notwithstanding this fact, widely known as it was, this man could be elected in Louisiana, iu the city of New Orleans, a Judge of one of the Courts. On one occasion oue of his aids brought before him a young woman almost white who had been brutally whipped and turned out of the house of her father. For this outrage the man had been made to pay a fine of SI,OOO and give the woman a deed of emaucipatiou. [Applause.] These were the kiud of charges which had bten brought against him. [Cheers and cries of " Good."] Yes, no right-minded man could be sent to New Orleans without returning an unconditional Auti-Slaverv man, even though the roofs of the houses were not taken off aud the full ex tent of the corruption exposed. All the low er class of the people of New Orleaus were loyal. During the first fourteen days alter the Uuiou forces entered the city 14,0U0 took the oath of allegiance ; and wheu he went oa board the steamer, ou his return to the North, VOL. XXIII. —X 0.36. at least one thousand laboring men came dowu upon the levee, and uttered no words except those of good will to him as the representative of the Government. Geueral Butler continu ed by saying that the war eculd ouly be suc cessfully prosecuted by the destruction of Sla very, which was made the corucr stoue of lha Confederacy. This was the second time in tho • history of the world that a rebelliou of proper ty holders against the lower classes aud against tho Government was ever carried on. The Hungarian rebelliou was oue of that kind, and that failed, as must every rebellion of men of property against Government, aud agaiust the rights of the many. Oue of the greatest ar guments which he could find against Slavery was the demoralizing inllueuce it exerted up on the lower white classes, who were brought | iulo seccssiou by the hundred because they ig uorantly supposed that great wrong was to be done them by the Lincoln Government, as they termed it, if the .North succeeded. Therefore, if you meet au old Hunker Democrat, and send him for sixty days to New Otleaus, and he comes back a Hunker still, ho is merely in corrigible. [Laughter.] There was oue thing about the President's edict of emancipation to which he would call at ntiou. Iu Louisiana ho had excepted from Ireedom about 87,000. These comprise all the negroes he-la in the Lafourche Diotrict who have been emancipated already for somo time, under the iaw which frees slaves taken in rebellious territory by our armies. Others of these negroes had been freed by the procla mation of September, which declared all slaves f.ce whose owners shall be in arms on the Ist of January. The slaves of Frenchmen were free because the cud':, cicil expressly prohibits a Frenchman holding slaves, aud by the 7th and Bth Victoria, every Englishman holding slaves submitted himself to a penalty of §SOO for each. Now, take the negroes of Seces sionists, Frenchmen, and Englishmen, out of tho 87,000, and the number is reduced to au I infinitesimal portion of those excepted. This fact had come to his knowledge from having | required every inhabitant ia the city to regis ter his nationality. Alter all the names had ; been fairly registered, he explained these laws to the English and French Consuls, aud had , thus replied to demands which had been mada by Engii.-h and French residents of Louisiana j upon the Government for slaves alleged to have been seized. [Applause ] The General then adverted to the light at Vicksburg, ex plaining how utterly impossible it was for Banks and Farragut to pass the strongly for tified Rebel position, three hundred miles be low, at Port Hudson, iu time, at the present low stage of water iu the river, to co-operato with Gen. Sherman. In the course of the conversation, the General alluded to other matters of public interest. After the depar ture of the Committee the General received many of the guests of the hotel, continuing his levee until near 10 o'clock. When onr readers remember that General Butler before the breaking out of this Rebel lion was an intense pro slavery Democrat, and that he supported Breckinridge for the Presi dency, they cannot doubt the truth of hia statement. EDUCATE THE HEAD, IIEAET AXD HAXD. — Every boy should have his head, his heart and his baud educated. Let this truth never bo forgotten. By the proper education of tho head, he will be taugtit v bat is good and what is evil, what is wise aud what is foolish, what is right and what is wrong ; by the proper education of the heart we will be brought to love what is good, wise aud right, and to hato what is foolish and wroog. And by proper education of the he will be enabled to supply his wants, to add to his comforts, and to assist those around him. The highest ob jects of a good education are to reverence and obey GOD, and to love and to serve mankind. Everything that helps us in attaining thoso objects is of great value and everything that hinders us is comparatively worthless. When wisdom reigns iu the head, and love iu the •heart, the man is ever ready to do good, and peace reigns arouud, and sin aud sorrow are almost unknown. EST* A gay fellow who had taken lodgings at a public house, and got considerably in debt, absented himself, and took new quar ters. This so enraged tho landlord that he commissioned his wife to go and dun him,which the debtor having heard of, declared publicly that if she came he would kiss her. " Will lie.?" said the lady, " Will he ?" " Give me iny bonnet, Molly, I will see whether any fel low has such impudence !" "My dear," said the cooling husband, " pray do no. be too rasb. You do not know what a man may do when lie's iu a passiou." ESy " Why, Pete, you've got back from Dobb's early ; isn't Ruth tn hum V inquired | a Yankee girl of her awkward brother, who i had started a courting about an hour before, i " Yaas, she was there ; but I aud the old man didn't agree very well, so he gin me a j hint, and I left." " A biut, what sort of a i hint ?' " Wall, he opened the door, and pointed down towards our house, and kinded I raised his right foot as though he was going to kick, and 1 felt so ashamed of such couduct before Iluih, that I started oil' without say iug auother single word." Brig. General Asbotli has been assign ed to the command oi Columbus, Ivy. It is reported that Brigadier General Duvies has been ordered under arrest for his misconduct in ordering the guus at New-Madrid aud Ig lan 1 No. 10 to be spiked, when there W-LJ j n rea.jty no danger of an attack from [he rebels. If a stupid fellow is going pp f or cota , petiiive examination, why sboq'm ho study tha letter I ? LeC'tuse it can muko even au ass P-ass. B@°* If yon want your neighbors to know who you are, ' give a party and don't iuvitq the folks " who iive tiext door,"