TKKMS OK PLHLK ATIOK. l j ic j'j. poi:TER is published every Thursday Morn- j IV p (). GOODRICH, at $2 per annum, in ad- I vauee. VPYERTISEMENTS are inserted at Ten CENTS li lM > for first insertion, and FIVE CENTS per line I i Subsequent insertions. A liberal discount is I, to persons advertising by the quarter, lialf .or vear. Special notices charged one-half iv than regular advertisements. All resolutions Y„soeiation* : eommnnications of limited or in lual interest, and notices of Marriages and •t.s exceeding rive lines, are charged TEN CENTS I • r line. 1 Year. G mo. 3 mo. I I, Column, SSO $35 *2O •• 30 25 15 , fin- Square, 10 5 \ liniuistrator's and Executor's Notices. .$2 00 \ R ,liter's Notices .2 50 lysines-. Cards, five hues, (per year) 5 00 .Merchants and others, advertising their business, ]„■ charged >ls. They will be entitled to j n, confined exclusively to their business, with I privilege of change. -Advertising in all cases exclusive of sub- I . notion to the paper. ii FEINTING of every kind in Plain andFan done with neatness and dispatch. Hand- Planks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va *i. llU d style, printed at the shortest notice. The , i a < >m E has just been re-fitted with Power p.*-. and every thing in the Printing hue can v an d in the most artistic manner and at the i rates. TEEMS INVARIABLY CASH. out SOLBIERS' WELCOME HUME. I ~ .1 and battered and covered with sears, |. 1 in their faded uniform, ■ Lfbm,' 'doft their standard of stars 1 \ bore through the battle storm. I l'r- dly they march in the grand review r tie cloudless arch of blue, [• Through the cheering street Their triumphant feet Keep step with'the drum ; Loudly shouting they come. I a titer the column sweeps by, vt.-hiug many a league away I ... ml the reach of the eager eye, I'hat's moist with tears of joy to-day : I are the men who have fought and bled ; I ami .suffered so long in uqr stead, j.ikv sointillent stars Their glorious sears, With patriot flame, Light the pathway of fame. \ have charged in the face of the foe ;... mh hot tempests of shot and shell, k a th. war clouds were hanging low A 1 the red rain in torrents fell, g ; through sharp hedges of fire, i p.-rv mounds and parapets higher. With the banners they bear Through the jubilant air, (live back to the sky The stars blazing high. I.a n.arched through the sryampsoftlie South I A.I t. .1 .led treacherous streams, H , v ha,, look d down the cannon's mouth, II I , the light of its sulphur gleams, p ■ a tin sky rung as a funeral bell, j B ' ih. ir comrades that bravely fell On field and redoubt And were mustered out; ()u the red field of fiery strife God mustered them into eternal life. J- > —> I HISTORY OF A CARTE DE VISITE. |H u: Mr.. Editor, —Knowing- you to be ft -. N.iiT-lm.u ted, ready to sympathize with! H afflicted, ami to comfort the sorrowing, ! y you to act as my amanuensis, that I \ | y leave to the world a record of my j I ifill life. Being faded and worn, you ! have to bear with me patiently, and | ■•it my story as I am able to gasp it out. ! ,iy teaeh some of the careless a lesson, j ■ ! siiow them that although our number ! - i' it and our name legion, the process j ■in creation is neither uninteresting nor ; II •• in HI t trouble, and that we should not be ' ! -pised, trod upon, and maltreated as we | Wo have heard that you human beings j I >;■•• created from dust. You seem to be j I * -lied with this, and neither trouble your-; d about the kind of dust, and the matter | which it is made ; therefore I shall go 1 further into the detail of my creation j ■ . i>< say that I first saw light in the | I - .tii'ul and extensive manufactory of j If it M. .\. Steinbaeh, Fabricant tie Fa- j ■ r, Malmedy, Prussia, as a piece of beau- , ! white papers. I need not tell you i ■ I was pressed between hot rollers, ! 1, trimmed, and then laid with four I and seventy-nine other sheets ■ ted in the same way ; nor how we : ailed into a box with nails harder to j •• a;t than the truth from some of the 1 -- - in the conspiracy case at Wash tmr of the long and tedious voy-1 actus,-, the tempestuous ocean, and the : H ' w i scape we hal from being thrown 1 I fird in a storm--for all this you can ■ a 3 'iiie as well as I can describe it. 1 [ -i -aw glit in this country in your most • abir Salle. 1 'hotopraph by ue. After 1 rested in was opened, 1 was taken i" tin* company of the other four hun * ■oi'i -. v. nty-nine sheets, pinched, *• a. Ii- Id ti]> to the light so the cruel "i"! ncc ' Steinbaeh" on my bor • 1 then whirled tip a winding-stair, tough rooms light and dark, and, terri- j ; ' •>' laid down. Presently I ob v. I a huge white pan, filled witli some { us mdistance* n< itlicr sweet nor beau -1 L aid ilie artist say it was albu "i'i iliat hundreds of diminutive chick-. - w.-iv spared the trouble of coming to : - in anv matronly hens deprived of I an extensive brood, and myriads ; - ■ ii*l Hies spared a chase across in the mouth of some courageous j * with a dozen rivals after it full tilt, i albumen might be made on which , u ;' s a! ut to let me float as did our: "iv siiip upon the sea. I trembled at) ' i lute, but presently he seized me by • Ttiers, and with a dextrous move laid : ii the disgusting surface, which ; aiiio d me that the eggs of which it j * made must have been very near I tens before coming into present hands. "tent with this, he took a rounded j mitl gently pressed me down in every j I t* give me a thorough dose. He wed me to remain about five minutes, x-iziug me again threw me corner- j ever a round bar, where, sick and ■ "Eng, I was allowed to collect my scat '* thoughts, while the superfluous al •te-n scattered down my sides and slip '* my corners into a trough below.— " s, 'ntiy my four hundred and seventy- Asters were brought in, treated like " nnd when we were all dry and stiff •' "gain placed together, put in a huge >•-, and squeezed in a manner so violent any virtuous female would blush at II jo atiuent, but there was no help for l"'ing rather obstreperous and indig ' ••o-I succeeded in getting one corner v ' the artist did not discover until mout to leave the room, and then he remarked that for nty pains I E. O. GOODRICH, Publisher. VOLUME XXVI. should be the lirst sheet used, and the cor ner sticking out should be first victimized, lie would go prepare the negative, and then come after me. What is a negative ? thought I, and concluded I would find out. Looking about me with my little corner, I observed a small dark room, with only yel low glass to let in a little light; in it were two men stalking around like demons, one with a little lamp in his hand lighting the other while he cleaned a piece of glass with something from a bottle labeled "Rot ten-stone." I heard them say they were making the negative. The room seemed to be very clean and nice, and in perfect or der. Bottles and brushes and funnels, and other articles, were there in abundance, and all properly labeled, and in a special place where they conld be found when wanted, without trouble. This enabled me to find out and tell you more than I should otherwise be able to do. After cleaning the plate, and carefully brushing it over with a wide camel's-hair blender, the shin ing glass was seized by one of these gen tlemen, and a coating of a very odoriferous creamy substance poured over it, and al lowed to flow evenly over the surface, and the surplus run oft' at one corner into a bot tle labeled " Collodion." After the glass was thus coated, it was quickly placed up on a long forked arrangement, and lowered into a deep, narrow, black box, which was labeled " Silver bath." When the glass was removed from the bath, it was quickly placed in another black looking affair smaller than the bath, and having a little door, which was shut so suddenly that I could not discover the glass looked after the treatment it had received. The opera tor —so 1 am told such persons are called —seemed in great excitement, and ran out of the room with the whole affair. Then I heard the rumbling of wheels, the crying of children, ringing of bells, blowing of whistles, and occasional " Now !" " Look ! look ! look ! look ! look ! look !" the whist-: ling of birds, and several other strange noises, that quite overpowered me, and 1 began to fear something dreadful had hap pened, until the operator returned tu the dark room with a smile oh his face. He opened the little door of the black box, and therefrom took my old friend the glass. It presented a most beautiful white and frost like appearance, and was quite changed in its nature. From a bottle labeled " Devel- oper " the operator poured a solution over the plate, and it immediately grew darker; presently faint lines could be discovered ; now the plaid in a little dress, and immedi ately little hands and feet and faces ; and, as if coming up from a mist, three beauti ful children appeared seated close beside each other. After pouripg this f(uid op the negatiye, as it tvaa called, it was well washed with water, and then the men held it up to the light, put their heads together, , rubbed their hands over the back of it, looked through it, and finally concluded that it was hardly strong enough, and that they would have to re-develop it. So they took two bottles down from a shelf, and poured from them a mixture which they called re developer over the negative, mov ing it from side to side until they said suf ficient intensity was obtained. Then the poor negative was put through another washing. 1 hoped they would get the poor thing fixed presently ; when, sure enough, down come another bottle, nicely labeled "Fixing solution," which was poured over the negative, after which it was again washed, thoroughly dried, and another bot tle labeled " Varnish " taken down, and its contents poured over the negative, when it was placed in a drying-rack, and I saw the man prepare to repeat the experiment on another glass plate. At this moment 1 felt quite relieved within myself, caused by seeing, as I supposed, that poor glass re ceive a little rest ; but such, alas|! was not the case. Great excitement seemed to pervade overhead, and I saw my kindred sheets dragged away from me, while 1 was seized by my unfortunate corner, and hur ried up a fiight or two of stairs into a very warm, dark room, and laid down upon a table, where sat a pearly-white pan, full of a very pretty colorless fluid, which was called Silvering Solution. This was preci pitated, and one-fifth was re-dissolved with liq. ammonia, mixed with the other four fifths, and the sediment dissolved with ni tric acid. Presently 1 was taken up gently and carefully floated upon the surface of this beautiful solution for about a minute, which was more pleasant to bear, but more alarming in its results, than that offensive albumen. I was then removed, and hung lengthwise upon two terribly sharp needles until the waste solution had dripped from my almost strangled self. I was then placed in a fearfully-close box, held tightly by two unyielding clips over dozens of tiny gas jets, that winked wickedly at, and tried in vain to reach me with their fiery tongues, while 1 curled myself up to escape their torment and persecution. When dried per fectly, 1 was removed and hurried through another dark, mysterious passage, placed in a box, seized by another twain of vora cious clips, and there allowed to hang for five or ten minutes over a saucer of ammo nia, which would have been a relief to rny nervous system had it not been so strong as to suffocate me, and deprive me of my sense to such an extent that \ knew noth ing until 1 found myself out in fresh air and sunlight, pressed cioswly to, and face to face with, my old friend the negative of the trio of tiny children. A coarse, ugly man would occasionally separate us in part and then quickly press us together again. Finally we were parted entirely, and purple and black with rage and heat 1 was thrown into a dark drawer, only to he taken away in a few moments by a raau with very black fingers. lie carried mc down stairs again, and plunged me into a deep tank of water, vowing he would wash away some of my ugly self, and then fix me so I wouldn't get away soon. After coming out of this generous bath I obser ved the image of the three children upon my surface precisely like that upon the negative, which I must leave you to ac count for. After this I was put through what the black-fingered gent called a ton ing solution, then washed again, and fixed l in the same manner that the poor negative was fixed, and finally placed in a large tank I of clean water, where a hundred jets tried their best to squirt me out of existence. I succeeded in floating up in a corner of the tank, and in clinging fast to its side—a trick which I now regret, as I am rapidly fading away in consequence, as they say I was not washed enough, and must soon es TOW AND A, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., JULY 13, 1865. i pect to fade away entirely. I was removed frotn the tank, and with a number of other victims run through a patent clothes-wrin ger, carried down stairs, my sides and ends neatly trimmed, a smattering of ftourine brushed over my back, placed upon a pure white mount, or card, by delicate female fingers, and laid aside until nearly dry, when I was put through a crushing pair of rollers, a polish of white wax and turpen tine rubbed over me, and finally laid aside and pronounced finished. Need I tell you more ? llow I was placed in the breast pocket of one of our noble heroes as lie left his darling trio, and their precious mother, to go defend his flag and their homes from the invader ? How lie kissed me and pressed me to his bosom before and after battle, and how the hot tears often fell upon me? How the relentless bullet came along whispering death and destruc tion, and, sparing me, entered his noble breast and felled him to the earth ? How his eager hands grasped me and held me before his eyes until they lost their bright ness, and until his last prayer for them was sent to heaven? Need I tell you this ? Nay ! the story is an old and never-to-be forgotten one. I need not repeat it ; but simply add that I ani fading away, the re sult of no bad manipulation—for 1 was made by the best processes known —but of my refusing to be properly washed, which causes the fading away of many a person as well as many a carte do visite. HOW GEN- LEE WENT INTO THE WAR. On the Sunday when the news arrived of the fall of Surnpter, a gentleman of our ac quaintance, in whom we place perfect con fidence, took the cars at Washington to go to Richmond. Upon the train were Alex. A. 11. Stuart, William Ballard Preston, and another member of the committee which the Virginia Legislature had sent up to Wash ington to confer with the Government, or more properly speaking, to see what man ner of man the new President was, and to spy out the land. At one of the stations beyond Alexandria, quite a crowd had col lected, and eager demands were made for the news as the train came in. Mr. Stuart and Mr. Preston stepped upon the platform of the car to answer the inquiries. Our in formant noticed one well-dressed gentle man, who seemed to be the spokesman and chief person of the crowd. He was flourish ing up and down the platform with more or less consequence, and as the train stopped, cried out, " What's the news ?" " Sumpter has fallen," was the reply. " I'll raise an army and march on Wash- ; ington," exclaimed the excited individual, ! swinging his cane and walking uneasily about. " I'll commence to-morrow morn ing," he repeated, " and raise an aj my and take Washington. Hadn't I better do it, Mr. Preston?" It was some time before Preston answered, so long that our friend thought he would make no reply, when he said, slowly and oracularly : " True cour age waits on deliberation." " Was there any bloodshed ?" asked the excited man. " No !" " Wasn't, there ?" looking down, and speaking as if surprised As the train i moved off, he was heard to repeat : " I'll ! raise an army and march on Washington." When the train was under way our Iriend asked : " Who is that enthusiastic man ?" " That, is Colonel Lee," said Mr. Preston. And that is the man who has since been commander of the rebel forces, and who is represented as having very reluctantly,and only after days of prayer, drawn his sword against the Government that educated and promoted him. And it must be remembered that this occurrence took place before Vir ginia had passed its bogus ordinance of se cession, and five days before Lee's resigna tion. Lee did raise a force of about three thousand men, and marched them to Har per's Ferry to procure arms. The intention was to march into Maryland, which it was supposed would rise at once and go out of the Union, carrying with it the national capital, which the Rebels would at once occupy and proclaim themselves the Gov ernment of the United States. It is evident that they did not intend to go off and put themselves in the attitude of rebels, but that their plan was to take the capital and the Government machinery, and then let the North "rebel" if it didn't like the ar rangement.—Hartford l'rexs. aERMANECONOMY. A late tourist in Germany describes the economy practised by the peasants as fol lows : " Each German has his house, his or- j chard, his road-side trees so laden with fruit that.did he uot carefully prop them up, tie them together, and in many places hold the boughs together by wooden clamps, they would be torn asunder by their own weight. He has his own corn plot, his plot for mangel wurzel or hay, for potatoes, for hemp, &c. He is his own master, and, j therefore, he and Lis family have the stron gest motives for exertion. Ju Germany; nothing is lost. The produce of the trees ; and the cows is carried to market. Much j fruit is dried for winter use. You sep | woodeu trays of plums, cherries and sliced apples lying in the suu to dry. You see j strings of them hanging from the windows , in the sun. The cows are kept up a grea- j ter part of the year, and every green thing j is collected for them. Every little nook j where grass grows, by the road-side, river and brook, is carefully cut by the sickle, and carried home on the heads of the wo men and children, in baskets or tied in large cloths. Nothing of the kind is lost that can possibly be made of any use. — Weeds, nettles, nay, the very goose grass which covers the waste places, are cut up and taken for the cows. You see the little childreu standing in the streets of the vil lages, and in the streams which usually run down them, busy washing these weeds before they are given to the cattle. They carefully collect the leaves of the marsh grass, carefully cut their potato tops for them, and even, if other things fail, gather leaves from the woodlands. MY principal method for defeating heresy is by establishing truth. Que proposes to fill a bushel with tares; now, if I can fill it first with wheat I shall defy his attempt. FINE connections are apt to plunge you into a sea of extravagance, and then not to throw you a rope from drowning. REGARDLESS Oljf DEtfIWC!ATIOJf FROM ANY QI'ARTER. THE PRESIDENT'S PLAN OF REORGANIZA TION- [From the Washington Chronicle.] It has been charged that the President, in some of the measures recently adopted by him in reference to the reorganization of subverted State Governments, has as sumed to exercise powers inconsistent with his well-known theory, that tlie so-called seceded States have never ceased to be States in the Union. As we understand his theory on this sub ject, ii is simply this : lie holds that the treason and rebellion of a portion of the citizens of a State, even though constitu ting a large majority, cannot destroy the political rights, under the Constitution, of those who remain loyal. He holds that or dinances of secession, and all State laws in violation of the Constitution, and hostile to the Federal Government, are simply void, and can affect the rights of no one who lias neither aided in their enactment or maintenance, nor voluntarily assented thereto, lie holds, with the early expoun ders of the Constitution —Hamilton, Madi son, and .Jay—that a State in its corporate capacity is incapable of committing trea son, and hence cannot be punished for that crime ; that those who have voluntarily participated in the rebellion are persona.lly guilty of treason, and personalia responsible therefor, but that the treason of A, P>, and C cannot be imputed to D, who has not participated therein, and destroy any of iiis rights under the Constitution, simply because he may happen to be a citizen of the same State. If this theory be well founded, it follows that the rebellion of a State has not de al rayed any of the constitutional rights of the loyal citizens thereof. It has merely suspended the exercise and enjoyment of those rights for the time being. And, when the rebellion in any State is suppressed, the loyal citizens of that State are entitled to resume all the rights pertaining not on ly to cdizens of the tinted State*, but to cit izen* of a State in the Union. But, while these rights may be perfect in law, there may still exist obstacles to their immediate practical enjoyment. When a State has been for years under complete dominion of rebels, maintaining a Government d< facto, to the utter exclusion of all legitimate au thority, the suppression of that spurious government leaves the State in a condition of helpless anarchy. The loyal people are in law entitled to resume all their constitu tional rights ; yet it is manifest that they cannot exercise some of the most impor tant of those till State organization is re stored. Certain preliminary steps must be taken to set the machinery of State gov ernment in motion. There must be some recognized authority to order elections, to appoint suitable persons to conduct them, to decide who are elected, to issue commis sions, and to perform many other similar duties. There must be men temporarily clothed with authority to conserve the peace, and protect the persons and proper ty of the people against violence and crime, until a regular government can be reor ganized. Some persons having authority must take the initiative of these matters. Who shall it be ? .No citizen or number of citizens of the State have the necessary au thority- The old State Government is in abeyance, because every office under it lias become vacant. The Constitution has made no express provision on the subject. Such a state of things as the utter subver sion and extinction of a State organization does not appear to have been anticipated by its framers, and hence no specific pro vision was made for such a case. Yet it is believed that the Constitution does, by necessary implication, provide the ade quate remedy. The Constitution imposes upon the Federal Government the duty of guaranteeing to every State a republican form of government. It enjoins upon the President the duty to " preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the I nited States," and to "take care that the laws be faithfully executed." Neither of these du ties can be performed towards the people of a disorganized State. The imposition of these duties upon the Federal Government carries with it, by necessary implication, the incidental power to use such means as are absolutely necessary to their fulliil ment. The duty of guaranteeing to every State a republican form of government is doubt less enjoined upon the legislative as well as the executive department of the General Government. Each in its sphere is bound to exercise its legitimate powers so as to secure that end The duty to see " that the laws be faithfully executed," is speci ally enjoined upon the President. In the case of a State whose legitimate Govern ment is totally disorganized, the obvious means, indispensible to the fulfilment of both these duties, is a reorganization of the State Government. This can only 4 be effected by the appointment of a Provis ional Governor, or some other agent to ex ercise, temporarily, the functions of a chief magistrate. The appointment of such an agent is clearly an executive duty. In the absence of any express legistation on the subject, the President unquestionably has, as incidental to the performance of duties imposed upon him by the Constitution, an- ! thority to appoint such an agent, and in vest him with the powers necessary to ef fect a reorganization of the State Govern ment. By no other means can he fulfill the duties enjoined upon him, of guaranteeing to the people of the State a republican form of government, and of securing the faithful execution of the laws of the United States therein. If it be conceded that the President has power thus to take the initiative in reor ganizing the subverted State Governments, i how far has he the right to dictate the prin ! lijdes upon which these Governments shall jbe organized ? We understand the Presi ' dent to disclaim all authority in the pre ! niises, except such as is absolutely neees ' sary to secure to each State a republican | form of government, in due subordination ;to the Constitution and laws of the United ! States. If he did not so exercise his au i thority as to secure these ends, he would | not be acting in the discharge of a duty imposed upon him by the Constitution, and so his acts would be unjustifiable. If he exercised more authority than necessary to secure these ends, he would transcend the powers incidentally conferred upon him by the Constitution. Those who allege that the President has assumed to exercise authority inconsistent with his owe theory of State perpetuity, really find fault, not because they think lie has exercised too much authority, but be cause he has exercised too Wile. Their real ground of complaint is, that he has not dictated that in all elections to be held in the disorganized States, preparatory to reorganization, negroes shall be allowed an equal right with white citizens to vote. They say that if he has authority to dictate who shall nut vote, he must have equal power to dictate who shall vote. That if he can limit the right of suffrage, as it existed prior to the rebellion, he can extend it; that to prohibit a white citizen from voting, who has been convicted of no disqualifying crime, is just as inconsistent with his theory as it would be to confer the right upon a class of citizens who were disqualified under the laws which have been suspended or ren dered inoperative by the rebellion. We do not think this a fair course of reasoning. The President believes, as we understand his theory, that the loyal peo ple of the disorganized States have pre cisely the same rights, under their respect ive State Governments, and under the Con stitution of the United States, that they had when the rebellion broke out, except in so far as those rights have been modified by the laws of the land, and by valid mili tary orders issued in aid of the prosecution ol the war. lie believes that they have lost the right of property in their slaves by virtue of the President's proclamations and mil tary orders, issued as a means of put ting down the rebellion, and so being valid. Hence, in taking care that the laws be faithfully executed, he is bound to take care that the emancipated negroes shall not be re-enslaved. But as to all rights which have not been thus modified, he holds that it is his duty to restore those rights to the people as they existed prior to the rebellion. He holds, as we under stand his theory, that it is his duty to ex ercise such powers as may be found neces sary to revivify institutions ami laws which are now in a state of suspended animation, but not to establish new institutions or en act new laws. \\ hen the disorganized State shall be thus reorganized, it must be left to the people of those States to adopt such reforms as a change of circumstances may indicate and render necessary. To assume to confer the right of suffrage upon a class of citizens disqualified to vote under the laws in existence when the rebellion broke out, would be to assume the power of enacting new laws, and would be mani festly inconsistent with the theory above attempted to be explained, Is it equally clear that it is inconsistent with this theory to prescribe that notorious and incorrigible rebels shall be prohibited from voting? It must be remembered that the now disor ganized States have been for four years past maintaining governments de facto in direct opposition and hostility to the Gen eral Government. These spurious govern ments have been suppressed by the mili tary power of the United States. To au thorize the people of those States, without any discrimination, to reorganize their State Governments, would be simply to authorize them to reestablish the rebel Government which we have been fighting for four years to overthrow. In order to reinstate the loyal people in their coustitu tional rights, the power to participate in the work of reorganization must be limited to the loyal ; not, necessarily to those who have always been loyal to the Union and the Constitution, but to those who are now loy al, and who are willing to give an earnest oi their loyalty. Hence, the President, in all his proclamations authorizing the peo ple of rebellious States to reorganize their State Governments, has prescribed that none shall participate therein without first taking an oath of fidelity to the Union and the Constitution, and of submission to the lawful authority of the General Govern ment. This, instead of being inconsistent with his theory that the loyal people of those States have been deprived of none of their constitutional rights by the rebellion of their fellow-citizens, is a precaution ab solutely necessary to restore them to the enjoyment of those rights. It is as much the duty of the President to prevent incor rigible rebels from controlling the action of the people in the work of reorganization,as it was to put them down when in open ro belli >u against the Government. Tiie Laugh of Woman. —A woman has no natural gift more bewitching than a sweet laugh. It is like the sound of flutes on the water. It leaps from her in a clear, sparkling rill : and the heart that hears it feels as if bathed in the cool, exhilarating spring. Have you ever pursued an unseen fugitive through trees, led on by a fairy laugh—now here, now there, now lost, now found ? We have ; and we are pursuing that wandering voice to this day. Some times it comes to us in the midst of care, or sorrow, or irksome business : and we turn away and listen, and hear it ringing through the room like a silver bell, with power to scare away the evil spirit of the mind. How much we owe that sweet laugh ! It turns the prose to poetry ; it flings showers of sunshine over the dark ness of the wood in which we are traveling; it touches with light even our sleep, which is no more the image of death, but is con sumed with dreams that are shadows of immortality. Fi x AT HOME. —Don't be afraid of a little fun to ruin your sons. _ Don't let them think that all mirth and social enjoyment must be left 011 the threshold without, when they come home at night. When once a home is regarded as only a place to eat, drink and sleep in, the work is begun that ends in gambling houses and reckless degrada tion. Young people must have fun and re laxation somewhere ; if they do not find it at their own hearthstones, it will be sought af other and less profitable places. There fore, let the fire burn brightly at night, and make the homestead delightful with all those little arts that parents so perfectly understand. Don't repress the buoyant spirit of your childien. Half an hour of merriment, around the lamp and firelight of a home, blots out the remembrance of many a care and annoyance during the day; and the best safeguard they can take with them into the world, is the unseen influence of a bright and domestic sensation. ANYTHING which an honest man can do is of course not to be considered as a merit, but simply as a duty. per /Annum, in Advance THE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH [From the London Times, June 20.] At length all the preparations connected with the final departure of this great tele graphic expedition are completed. On Wednesday the Amethyst left the telegraph works with the last length of 245 miles of cable on board, and on Saturday the oper ation of coiling this in was begun. This work will probably last till the 22d inst., when the Great Eastern will have in her as nearly as possible 7,000 tuns of cable, or, including the iron tanks which contain it and the water in which it was sunk, about 9,000 tuns in all. In addition to this she has already 7,000 tuns of coal on board, and 1,500 tuns more still to take in. This additional weight, however, will not be added until she leaves the Medway, which she will do on the morning of the 24th, for the Nore, when the rest of the coals and special stores will be put on board, and these will bring her mean draught down to 32| feet. Her total weight, including en gines, will then be rather over 21,000 tuns, a stupendous mass for any ship to carry, but well within the capacity of the Great Eastern, of which the measurement tun nage is 24,000. Her way out from the Nore will be by Bullock's Channel which the Admiralty are having carefully buoyed to avoid all risks in those rather shallow waters. Before the following Spring tides set in, about the 6th or 7th of July, the Great Eastern will start for Valentia— There she is expected to arrive about the 9th or 10th, and there she will be met by the two ships of war appointed to convey her —the Terrible and the Sphinx. Both these vessels are being fitted with the best apparatus for deep sea soundings; with buoys and means for buoying the end of the cable, if ever it should become neces sary ; and with Bollen's uigbt-ligbt naval signals, with which the Great Eastern is likewise to be supplied. To avoid all chan ces of accident, the big ship will not ap proach the Irish coast nearer than 20 or 25 miles, and her stay off Valentia will be lim ited to the time occupied in making a splice with the massive shore end, which for a length of 25 miles from the coast will be laid previous to her arrival. This mon strous shore end, which is the heaviest and strongest piece of cable ever made, will be dispatched in a few days, and be laid from the head of a sheltered inlet near Cahirel veeii out to the distance we have stated, where the end will be buoyed and watched by the ships of war till the Great Eastern herself comes up. Some idea of the strength and solidity of this great end may be guessed by the fact that its weight per mile is very little short of half the weiglitof an ordinary railway metal. For the shore end at Newfoundland only three miles are required, and this short length will be sent in the Great Eastern. When once the splice is made from the great cable ship to the English shore end —an operation which will consume about five hours—the work of laying the cable will instantly commence. By that time every mile of the cable in the three tanks will have been joined up, and at a stated hour, morning and evening, a series of signals will be sent through the cable to the land at and thence to London, giving the latitude and longitude of the great ship, and state of the weather, and the number of miles paid out. The ca ble will be first taken out from the forward tank, next from that amidsliip, and lastly from that astern ; and if all goes well the vessel should arrive with nearly 500 miles of cable in her still unused, an excess which is most wisely allowed in case of ac cident. We may add that since the paying out aparatus has been in work its action has been faultless. Messrs. Canning, Clif ford, and Temple have absolute charge of all the details connected with the submer gence. Mr. He Santy is in charge of the electrical condition of the cable for the makers, Mr. Varley goes to represent the Atlantic Company, and Professor Thompson as scientific adviser and referee. These gentlemen, however, are only the chiefs of the various large departmental staff which will be on board. With regard to the process of laying, it is hoped the Great Eastern may be kept throughout the whole voyage at a uniform speed of six knots per hour, faster than which it would not be safe, as a rule, to run out the cable. At less speed than this, however, the big ship would fail of steer age way, and with a beam wind would cer tainly go to leeward without some counter acting influence. This influence, will be afforded, if necessary, by the paddle-engines, which are to be disconnected, and the ef forts of one wheel at either side would be quite sufficient to over-balance the effects of anything but a very violent storm. This latter risk is now literally all that has to be feared. Everything else which human foresight can suggest, either in cable or ships, everything which long experience or scientific progress can devise, has been provided, and the success or failure of this vast expedition is now only a question of weather. On this only doubtful point, therefore, it is gratifying to know that ('apt. Anderson is sanguine of all going well. In his experience of many years and hundreds of voyages backward and for ward in command of the Cunard lines over this very track of the Atlantic, he states that in the early part of July it never blows long or strong, and that during that time he lias never even heard of any had wea ther which could for a moment affect a vessel like the Great Eastern. If these an ticipations should prove correct —and there are none better capable of forming them than ('apt. Anderson—and if all goeß well, both as to course and rate of steaming, tel egraphic communications with the United States may he looked for at the latest about the 20th or 21st of next month. Yet, in this estimate of events, it must not be for- I gotten that in the last memorable expedi tion in the Agamemnon, midsummer was fixed on as the time when a storm in the Atlantic was almost impossible, and the records of the meteorological departments, both here and in America, certainly justi fied such an expedition, as they showed that for fifty years no storm had takexi place at that time. Yet it was precisely on the 21st of June that the hurricane with which the Agamemnon and Niagara had been battling for some days was at its height, and those on board the ill-starred Agamemnon, at least, knew not Low hour to hour which was to be their last. Most earnestly is if to he wished that on this great occasion the calculation of averages, if not more just, may prow at feast more fortunate. AB far AS regards the cable it self there is absolutely nothing to be de sired. The Malta and Alexandria wire was an enormous improvement on that by means of which it was hoped to connect England with the United States. That laid along the Persian Gulf is again a great improve ment on the Malta and Alexandria ; while this which is to cross the Atlantic iB a still more marked improvement on them all. So exquisitely delicate are the tests that a minute tlaw even in one of the four rout ings of gutta-gercha has been detected, its pit ice defined almost to a yard or so, and I the length in which it occurred at once cut I out. It is a singular but significant fact that almost all the accidents and stoppages which have occurred to submarine cables have arisen from those which have been laid in shallow water. A deep-sea line, once well laid, seldom or never gives fu ture trouble, except, of course, in those few rare cases where the line has to be taken over ocean depths known to be liable to volcanic disturbances. Thus the deep-sea portions of the Malta and Alexandria line from Malta to Tripoli have, it is stated, never given an hour's uneasiness, while the shallow sections from Bengazi, Ac., to Al exandria are constantly getting out of re pair As a set-off to this, however, it is only fair to state that shallow cables may be repaired with as much facility as they seem to break down ; while, on the other hand, the first fault of a deep-sea line, is,as a rale, its last. NUMBER 7. At the bottom of the Atlantic it is need less to say that no volcanic disturbances are apprehended. Along the route on which the cable is to be laid the depths vary from 1,200 to about 2,500 fathoms.— The dangerous part of this course has hith erto been supposed to be the sudden dip or bank which occurs about a hundred miles off the west coast of Ireland, and where the water was supposed to deepen in the course of a few miles from about 300 fathoms to nearly 2,000. Such a rapid descent has naturally 7 been regarded with alarm by tel egraphic engineers, and this alarm has led to a most careful sounding survey of the supposed bank by Captain Dayman, acting under the instructions of the Admiralty.— The result of this shows that the supposed precipitous bank, or submarine elifl", is a gradual slope of nearly 60 miles. Over this long slope the difference between its greatest bight and greatest depth is only 8,760 feet, so that the average incline is, in round numbers, about 145 feet per mile. A good gradient on a railway is now gen erally considered to be 1 in 100 feet, or about 53 in a mile, so that the incline on this supposed bank is only about three times that of an ordinary railway. In fact, as far as soundings can demonstrate any thing, there are few slopes in the bed of the Atlantic as steep as that of Holbern Hill. In no part is the bottom rocky, and with the exception of a few miles which are shingly, only ooze, mud, or sand is to bo found. As regards the commercial prospects of the undertaking, it may be stated that the Atlantic Company have begun their work under the renewed agreement with the Government for a subsidy of £2O, 000 a year, and, in addition, a guarantee of S per cent upon a capital of £OOO, 000. All sys tems of Government guarantee of this kind are in themselves radically bad, and op posed to every rule of free trade and com mercial enterprise. In this case, however, the guarantee is not only at variance with the principles of political economy, but possesses its own special attributes of ab surdity. Thus, in return for their guaran tee, which is only to continue in force while the line is in working order, the Govern ment demand that the maximum charge for messages shall not exceed 2s. fid. per word. With such a tariff the line would be absolutely choked with messages, and the company, in return for its overwork and general maladministration of business, would only receive a revenue of £250,000 a year. At a tariff of £1 per word, on the contrary, the company, while guaranteeing a message to and the, receipt of a reply from any part of the United States within 24 hours, could with ease earn a revenue of £1,000,000 a year,or nearly twice the cost of the present cable. In fact, the Govern ment guarantee is only conditional on the line being in working order, and while it is so working the company can, for the rea sons we have stated, do ten times better without it. If the shareholders are wise, the sooner they shake off this clog upon their enterprise the better. At present, it is estimated that the operation of telegraph ing can be safely conducted, day and night, at the rate of from six to eight words a minute. Both Professor Thompson aud Mr. Varley, however, are confident that with the new machines the} have invented this rate may be increased to nearly 12 words a minute. On this expectation, however, we decline to venture an opinion. The dis patch of a message of 100 words through the line to America, and the clear receipt of a similar number in reply, will, after the cable has been laid, be accepted by the company as a proof that the wire is in per fect working order, and without further formality it will at once be opened to the use of the public. Most earnestly do we hope that this greatest scientific undertak ing may be followed by the commercial and political success which the completion of telegraphic communication with the United States must achieve. DEFENCE OF THE GOOSE. —It is a great libel to accuse a goose of being a silly bird. Even a tame goose shows much in stinct and attachment ; and were its hab its more closely observed, the tame goose would be found to be by no means wanting in general cleverness. Its watchfulness at night-time is, and always lias been, prover bial : and it certainly is endowed with a strong organ of self-preservation. You may drive over a dog, eat, lien, or pig ; but I defy you to drive over a tame goose. As for wild geese, I know of no animal, biped or quadruped, that is so difficult to deceive or approach.' Their senses of hear ing, seeing, and smelling, are all extremely acute ; independently of which they ap pear to act in so organized and cautions a manner when feeding or roosting, as to defy all danger.— Sportsman. WHERE THE FAULT LIES. —' Great brother, said the moon to the sun, 'why is it that while you never hide your face from me, our poor sister, the earth, so often pines in dimness and obscurity?' ' Little sister,' replied the sun, ' the fault is not in me. You always behold me as I am, and rejoice in my lights, but she too often covers herself with thick clouds, 1 which even I cannot effectually pierce, and i while she mourns my absence, ought to know that 1 am ever near, and wait for her clouds to pass, that i may reveal | myself.' I EAT, digest 5 read, remember ; earn, save, love, and be loved. If these four rules be ! strictly followed, health, wealth, inteVigence and true happiness will be the result. THE man who lives in vain lives worse i than in vain. He who lives to no purpose lives to a bad purpose.