1 \ i , 1 1 . ~ • r - AL Z t E T , I i _ PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE CITY OF READING, BERMS COUNTY, PA.-TERMS: $1,50 A YEAR IN ADVANCE. J. LAWRENCE GETZ, .EDITOR.] • MIMED EVERY SATURDAY HORNING rttelVett corner of Penn and FX(th street, ad 114 ` . -1' • uoivg the Partnere Bank of Beading. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. 91.30 a par, pinfohPe to atfeamee, 1.00 for filr. UlO2lO lB , in nAvanee. To area : Four eopiee for SS, in advance. Ten eapies for 1:4, Mr Alf papers diocontisata at the expiration of the poet fee. NAM OF ADVERTISING IN VIE GAZETTE. It. at. /IRO. 3EIO. Bmo. ly. Satt. slinee, oriel's, 50 50 75 2,00 3,00 5,00 'lO " 50 1,00 1,25 3,00 6,V0 8,00 .4 " 1,0 0 2. 00 2.50 5,00 5,00 15.00 4 "30 " 1,50 3,00 3,75 7,50 12,00 20,00 [Larger Advertisements l proportion.] freedom' and Administrators' Notices, kinsertions *2,00 askiiione Nodose and Legal .Noticee. V tt 1.50 ei4 .,1.0 ;tourer, as reading matter, 10 eta. a line for one 0,11:1011- Marriage notices 23 cents each. Deaths will be Tern -shad gratuitously. obituary Notices, Resolutions of Beneficial and. ,[ter Private AsseGiStiollo, will be charged for e as sdver- Pitrivd,, at the above rates. Advenimiments for Religion., Charitable and Eli ev.eiel objects, one half the above rates_ p- d advertising Will be considered payable in lat the lira !amnion. feed adyertiAell ebeil have the privilege (If desired) et cquoving their advertisements every three wesks—lnst Arno.. Any additional renewals, or advertising ex c,ling 111110Ullt contracted for, will be charged extra One hilt the rates above specified for transient advert titcments. tardy alvertisers will be charged the same rates as raveled advertis' era for all matters not retattng sfriCtLy Mmiseat. PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION EWEIta in a superior manner, at the wry loweat prime. ucc swortment of Jos TYPE is large and fashionable, and oar Work titanic for itself. BLANKS OF ALL KINDS, whnagg PaaCEINSFT era PAVRa DENIM, IFORTGAGEO, aITICLIS OF aeaSENENT, LEASES, and a variety of kerlai Ike.kke, kept conatantly for sale, or printed to JESSE G. HAWLEY; ATTORNEY AT LAW, HAS REMOVED HIS OFFICE TO NORTH sixth Street. opposite the Keystone House, Rending. Wit Ll, 1833-il 301137 RALSTON. aTTORN) AT LAW, OFFICE WITH A. B. WANNER, NORTH Street (above the Court Rouse,) Reading, Pa. F.bruary 21,1863-17 REMOVAL WILLII3I H. LIVINGOOD, ATTORNEY AT V V LAW, ban removed b 1 ogle* to the north eta. of Cart Awl lint door Wow Sixth. [deo 2S-tt Charles Davis, Ath) TTORNEY AT LAW—HAS REMOVED HAI Oaks to zhe Office lately °coupled by the Hon. David . Tdor., deceased, in Sixth etreel, opposite the Court Hama. [april 14 Dante/ Ermentrout, A. TTORNEY AT LAW—OFFICE IN NORTH Stall etreet, corner of Court alley. [Aug IS-ly David Neff, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Foreign and Domestic DRY GOODS, No. 25 Rest Peon ,treat, Reading, Pa. [Mara 10, I.po. LEBANON VALLEY INSTITUTE, ANEVILLE, LEBANON COUNTY, PA. SELECT BOARDING SCAOOL.—COURSE Jt. instruction ;borough and 'Womplete—namber or eel ere limited. Vacation in September and October. Ispoises per nnarter 1135. For Ciro:dare and Information, 'Urns, Yurb 7-ti] W.J. BURNSIDE. Annville. Pa FREELAND SEMINARY, WILL OPEN ITS WIN I ZER SESSION On Monday, October 26th, 1863. fcr Csmionue and particulars, address REV_ R. A. MIMICKER, Principal. 6r: 10-st] Freeland, Montgomery county, Pa. LIVINCOOD'S United States Bounty, Back Pay and Pension Office, COURT STRRST, HEAR SIXTH. 11131AVING BEEN ENGAGED IN COLLECT- I mg claims against the Goeerament, I feel confident Mai all Who hare heretofore employed me Will cheerfully ere-.t my promptness and fidelity. My charges are matinee and no charge made until obtained. WILLIAM H LIVINGOOD, oetls-41) Attorney at Law. Conn gL. Beadier. Pa. DISCHARGED SOLDIERS /lAN NOW OBTAIN THEIR $lOO BOUNTY U from the 11. B. Government, by application to. _ . . ABNER K. STAUFFER, March 7-41] Collection Once, Court Street, Rending. ASA M. HART, (Late Hart, ay•ri) HEALER IN FOREIGN AND AMERICAN DRY GOODS, CABBYPINGO, Pm, Wholesale and Re - at Philadelphia price. Sign of the Golden Bee Hive, Ea East Penn Square. taprill7—if P. Sualiong dk Sons, ILIANUPACTIJRERS OP BURNING FLUID, Tlll...liete, Deodorized and Irmo:lsta' Alcohol; also, re till, which they will sell at the lowest Wholesale Rom at Reading. Fa. Orders reespecUalli solicited- [march 12 G. M. MILLER, M. D., Eclectic rhysician amid Surgeon, A GRADUATE OF THE ECLECTIC DIEM% 1 - Ica College Philadelphia, offers Me professional ser vice* ns the citizens of Hamburg and vicinity raiaftil operatiOnd, *PCB as dotting Broken and Dislocated liraba, amputations, Cutting Cancers, Tumors, &a., will i* ' , trimmed under the Influence of Ether, et the consent u 7 the patient. Offien at tie residence In Main strut, Hamburg, Fa. Say 9, ISa-tf R • T. 'YARDLEY BROWN, SURGEON DENTIST. GRADUATE OF PENNSYLVANIA Dental College. Teeth extracted by Fran. t a %AA tie Electra Magnetic process, with Clarke's improvement. With this method teeth are "waded with moth lees pain than the usual way. No Mfg. chards. 011ie in Fifth street, opposite the Presbyte lea Church. [sprit 2-17 SOLDIERS' BOUPPrit-IMONNY, BACB-PAY AND PENSION CLAU=S PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO BY A. 11E. STAAJN`FIEic, Attorney at Law, OSiee in Court Streets Jim 31 -in READING, Pi F. P. HELLER, WATCHMAKER, JE WELER, AND DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPOONS, SPECTACLES, GOLD PENS, &0., Signe! the s. BIG WATCH," No. 15334 East Pena &het, above Math, north side, Reading, Pa. Eir Every article warranted tu be what it is aold tor litstshes, Clocks, Jewelry, Be., repaired with particular attention, and geminate ed. [kb b-td TRUSSES, TUPTURB CAN BE CURED BY A TRUSS Ir THE RIGHT KIND, IF PROPERLY PITTED AND IiDLY ATTENDED TO. This has been abundantly de lametrated in innumerable instance* by the use of the /I eLTIPIDAL THIIBB of DE. RIGOR, during the last few N... TMr trues, being covered with Hard Rubber, lc I"hctiy waticrproof, way be Deed in bathing, and ie ni- Oaya cleanly as well as indeetritatible by ordinary usage. It cm satisfactory alter a fair trial of sixty dam, it may be Ditireed. It challenges comparison with any truss kuown. Dr. RIOOS' Office, No. 2 BARCLAY oz, New-York. 15-13 , • - Ti t OE SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 200 WHIET -L Granite Tea Setts of the neweetetyle. 1. - . 4 1 0R SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 200 GRANITE Dinner Sena of the newest style. 'OR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 1000 SETS COILII/014 TeSifire. FOR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, THE LARD - eat assortment of Liverpool Ware ever offered In ing. FOR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, A LARGE assortment of Pittsburgh, Boston and French Glue. Rxre of every description. - ' IVA W SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, THE CHO ..I' rot variety of Bar and Hotel Blase, Ch/za and Queue -14-131, furniture ever offered in Rendirnr. FOR SALE AT THE OLD JAIL, 00 BARRELS Mackerel at Philadelphia ricea. sunk n RELOAVIN BALTIMORE. LOCK HOSPITAL, ear ESTABLISHED AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKERY. The Only Place Where a Cure Can be Obtained. DR. JOHNSTON HAS DISCOVERED THE most Caffein, Speedy and only Effectual Remedy in the World for all Private Diseases, Weakness of the Hack or Limbs, Stricter., Affections of the Kidneys and Blad der, Involontary,,DLechargss, Impotency, General Debility, Nervoindia.i, Dyspepsia, Languor, Low Spirits, Confu sion, of Ideas, Palpitation of the Heart, Timidity, Tremb ling. Dimness of Sight or Giddiness. Disease of the Head, Throat, Nose or Skin, Affections of the Liver, Lungs, Stomach or Bowels—those Terrible Disorders 11111111 g from the Solitary Habits of Youth—those BECKET and eolitary practices more fatal to their victim. than the song of Syrens to the Mariners of Ulysiefl, blighting their moot brilliant hopes or anticipations, rendering marriage, kc., impossible. 1i017N131. MEN Especially. who have become the victims of Solitary Tice, that dreadful and asstructive habit which annually sweeps to an untimely grave thousands of Young Men of the mold exalted talents and brilliant intelleet; who might other wise have entranced listening Senates, with the thunders of eloquence or waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call with fall contidence. NUMUJLaiIi. Married Persons, or Young Men eoutemplatlng mar lage, being aware of physical weakling, organic debility, deformities speedily cured- He who places himself under the care of Dr. J. may religiously coutide in his honor ag a gentleman, and con fidently rely upon Ms skill m a physician. ORGANIC Immediately Owed and Full Vigor Restored. This Distressing Affeition—Which renders Life and Mar riage impossible—is the penalty paid by the victims of Im proper indulgences. Young persons are too apt to commit excesses from not being aware of the dreadful cense , quenees that may ensue. Mow, who that understand the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procrea tion is lost sooner by those falling Into improper habits than by the prudent? Resides being deprived of the pleas ure of healthy offspring, the meet eerione nest destructive symptoms to both hotly and mind arise. The system be comes beranged, the Phyelowl and Mental Penedo]. Weakened, Loss of Procreative Power, Nervous Irrttabil tty. Dyspepsia, Palpitation of the Heart, Indigestion, CA'*.m.• a titnti onal Debility, a wasting of the Frame, Cough, Con sumption, Decay and Death. Office. No,. I 'South Frederick Street. Lett band side going from Baltimore street, a few doom from the corner. Fail not to observe name and number. Letters must be paid and contain a stamp. The Doctor'. Diploma hangs In his oiilce. A OMB WARRANTED IN TWO DA.TS. No Mercury or Nauseous Drugs. DR. SONIISTON, Member of the Royal College or Surgeons, London, Grad note from one of the must eminent College. In the United Staten, and the greater part of whose life has been spent in the hospitals of London, Paris, Philadelphia and eine where, has °Sleeted some of the most aetwilahlog cures that were ever known; many troubled with ringing In the head and ears when asleep, great nervousness, being alarmed at sadden sounds, bashfulness, with frequent blushing, attended sometime with derangement of mind, were cured immediately. i ~ ~ y 1 . 3 Dr. J. addresses all those who have injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits. which ruin both body and mind, unfitting them for either business, study, society or marriage. TIM= are some of the sad and melancholy effects pro. dosed by .early habits of youth, viz: Weakness of the Back and Limbs, Pains in the Head, Dimness of Bight, Loss of Muscular Power, Palpitation of the Heart, Dye pepsin. Nervous Irritability, Derangement of the Digestive knzietlans, General Debility, Symptom.- otConitemption,&e. BLEaratt.y.—The fearful effects on the Mind are moth to be dreaded—Loss of Memory, Confusion of Ideas, Depres sions of Spirits, Evil Forbodings, Aversion to Society, Self- Distrust, Love of Solitude, Timidity, dm., are some of the evils produced. Tam/sawn of persona of all ages sea now Judge what is the cause of their declining health, losing their vigor, becoming weak, pale, nervous and emaciated, having a eingalar appearance about the eyes, cough and symptoms of aoasompilon. YOUNG DEEM Who have injured themselves by a certain practice Indul ged in when alone, a habit frequently learned from evil companions, or at school, the effects of which are nightly felt, even when asleep, and If not cured renders marriage impoadble, and deetroye both mind and body, should ap ply immediately. What a pity that a yonng man, the hope of hie country. the darling of his parents, ebould be snatched from all mopeds and onjoymonto of lifo:17:lha donsillienea of deviating from the path of nature and indulging in a cer tain secret habit. Bach persons neer, before conteniplat lag • SCARTLIAGEI, reflect that a sound mind and body are the most necessary requisites to promote connubial happiness. Indeed, with out these the journey through life becomes a weary pil grimage; the prospect hourly darkens to the view; the mind becomes shadowed with despair and Oiled with the melancholy redaction that the happiness of another be comes blighted with our own. VZ5Z1.41,613 or XAEXILVDZISTCII. When the misguided and imprudent votary of pleasure dude that he has imbibed the made of this painful dbease, it too often happens that an ill-timed ranee of shame, or dread of discovery, deters him from applying to those who, from educed°e and respectability, ean alone befriend him, delaying till the vonstitlitional symptoms of this horrid disease make their appearance, Bock as ulcerated core throat, diseased nose, nocturnal pains in the bend and limbs, dinner* of sight, dealhoes, - nodea on the shin-bones and arms, blotches on the head, face and extremities, pro gressing with frightful rapidity, till at lad the palate of the mouth or the bones of the nose fall in, and the victim of this awful disease becomes a horrid object of commis eration, till death puts a period to his dreadful anfferings, by tending blot to "that Undisoovored Otiootry front whence no traveller returns." It is a rsetanohoty fact that thousands tall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the usekilitutuess of Ignor ant pretenders, who, by the nee of that Deadly POlBO7, Mercury, rule the eoustltution and make the residue o life snimarairlii. STRANGERS; Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of many Un learned and worthless Pretenders, destitute of knowledge, name or character, who copy Dr. Johnston's advertise ments, or style themselves, in the newspapers, regularly Edneated Physician, incapable of Curing, they keep you trilling month after month taking their filthy and poison ous compounds, or as long as the smallest fee can be ob tained, and in despair, leave you with ruined health to sigh over your own gallieg disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only Physician advertising. las credentials or diplomas always bang in his office. His remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared-front a life spent in the great hospital. of Europe, the Best in the country and a more extensive Private Practice than any other Physician in the world. INDORSZOLOPIT OP MEM PRIMO. flnle many tlooemada cured at this institution year after year, and the numerous important Surgical Operations performed by Dr. Johnston. witnessed by the reporters of the " Eon," 'Clipper." and many other papers,notices of which bare appeared again and spin before he radio, besides his standing as a gentleman of ottnrnater and re. aponsibtlity, is a euincient guarantee to the afflicted. . Skin Diseases Speedily Cured. Aar :go lettere received' ordeals post-paid and containing a stamp to be aced on the reply. Persons welting should state age, and send portion of advertisement describing symptoms. AMIN W. 3031INSTON, M. D.. Of the Baltimore Lock Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland Nay 2d—lY BOUNTY MONEY, BACK-PAY AND PENSIONS. ATTENDED A P to PLICATIO ra p st q au L A Y ttorney.t May 30-U] Office to Court Street. Reading. FRENCH'S HOTEL, ON 23311 LUROPEAN _PLAN. CITY OF NEW YORK. Single Rooms Fifty Cents per Day. City Hall Square, corner Frankfort St., (OPPOBITH CITY HALL.) DIEALS A$ THEY MAY BE ORDERED IN the spacious refectory. There is a Barber's Shop awl Rooms attached to the Hotel. Amt. Beware of RUNNERS awl HACKMEN who say wo are fall. . . . EMEII WILLIAM PENN HOUSE. CORNER Or PENN AND TENTS BTB., READING, PA. BERTOLETTE GRANT, Proprietor. THIS HOUSE BEING A LICENSED TAVERN, the beat of Liquors are kept at the Bar, and as good a table as any other lintel to the county. Accommoda dons for Boarders and Travellers. Charges reaennablc. pie Lunch from 9 to 11 o'clock, daily. [June 6-tf Commercial Broker. rplitE UNDERSIGNED HAYING TAKEN onta License as a COMMERCIAL BROKER, le pre. pared to negotiate for the purchase and sale of RRAL ESTAT.R. COIN, ,STOCKS, BONDS, MORTGAGES, and other Securities. Goods in Unbroken Packages, (hales. Ron of' Rents, and any other Winnow of a Commission Brokeror Agent. Parties having business to do in his lineage request ed to give him a call ,tOat, OFFiCR in GOUT' bine% nextJACOB doer a b ove Aide tu rms. THE WIDOWED SWORD. They have cent me the rvord that my brave boy wore On the Held or htA young I , 6nown On the lest rad Held, where hie fate Was sealed, And the awn hi, dad. went down. Aw.-; smith tear., TiTest are blindiug we so There is joy in bin years. Though' his young head be low; And I'll gaze with a solemn delight evermore; On the sword that my breve boy wore. 'Twas for freedom and home that I gave him away, Like the sons of his race of old; And though, aged and gray, I am childless this day— He is dearer a thousand fold. There's a fairy above him To hallow his name— d. land that will love him Who died for Its fame ; And 'a solace - will Aloe, when my old heart is more, Round the sword that my brave boy wore. All so noble, so true—how they stood, bow they fell in the heath, the plague, end the.l,l; Oh, so bravely and well as e'er story could tell Of the dowers of the heroes of old. Like a sword through the foe Was that Tearful attack, That, so bright ere the blow,' Comes or bloodily back; And, foremost among them his colors he bore— And here is the sword that my brave boy wore. It was kind of Ma comrades, ye know not how kind ; It Is more than the Indies to me; Ye know not how kind and how steadfast of mind The soldier to sorrow can be. They knew well how lonely— How grievously wrung, Is the heart that its only Love tunas° young; And they aimed his dark eye when the battle was o'er, And sent his old father the award that ho wore. sivis subSTIOrTm. Madame who resided at Chalon, was a lady of the strictest character and of a heart proof against lluremeote. She prided heself upon her great insensibility, and with profound indifference had repulsed all those gallants who had volunteered to offer their addressee. The country was for her a veritable retreat; she shunned reunions, and was only happy in soli tude. The charms of a chosen circle, the plea cures of the world; had for her no attraction : and her favorite recreation was that of angling, an amusement worthy or en unfeeling woman. She was accustomed every pleasant day to station herself at the extremity of the lonely island of Chalon, and tithe, with a book in one hand and her line in the other, her time was passed in fishing, reading or dreaming. A lover who had always been intimidated by her coolness and who had never ventured on a spoken or a written declaration, surprised her at her favorite pursuit one day, when be had come to the island for the purpose of enjoying a swim ming bath. He observed her for a long time without dis covery, and busibd himself with thinking how he might turn to his advantage this lonely amuse ment of angling. Ills reveries were so deep and so fortunate that he at last hit upon the desired plan—a novel expedient, indeed—yet they are always most successful with such women as pretend to be invulnerable. The next day our amorous hero returned to the island, studied the ground, made hisarrange ments, and when Madame D— had resumed her accustomed place he slipped away to a remote and retired shelter, and after divesting himself of his clothing, he entered the stream. An ex— cellent swimmer and Skillful diver, he trusted to his aquatic talents for the success of his enter prise. lie swam to the end of the island with the greatest precaution, favored By the chances of the banks and bushes, which hung their dense foliage above the waters, In his lipe was a note folded and keeled, and on arriving near the spot where Madame D— was sitting, he made a dive, and, lightly seizing the hook, he attached it to his letter. Madame D— perceiving the movement of her line, supposed that a fish was biting. The young man had retired as he came; he had doubled the cape which extended out into the water separating them from each other, and had regained hie spot without the least noise in his passage under the willows. The deed was done. IL PUNCH, Proprietor Madame D— pulled in her line, and what was her surprise to observe dangling upon the barb of her hook, not the expected 'shiner,' but an unexpected letter. This was, however, trifling, and her surprise became stupefaction when, :on detaching the transfixed billet, she read upon the envelope— her name I So, then, this letter which she had fished up was addressed to her. This was somewhat miraculous. She was afraid. Her troubled glance scrutinieud the surrounding space. But 11 ,,, e was nothing to be seen or heard; all wr.s stiti and lonely both on land and water. She quitted her seat, but took away the letter. As soon as she was alone, and closeted, with her self, and ae moon am the paper, perfectly water proof and written upon with indelible ink, was gotiou. NOT NOW. The path of duty I clearly trace, I stand with conscience face to face, Attd all Ler pales allow: Calling and crying the while for grace. . tionie other time, and some other Wese— l), not today—sot now !" I know a demon boding 111, I know I have power to do if I will, And I put any hand to th' plough ; I have fair, meet suds In my bare, and la When all the farrows are ready to MOW, The voice cam "0, not now ply peace I sell at the price of woe— In heart and In eptrit I suffer no, The anguish vrrMgs my brow, But still I linger and cry for grace— " Some other time, and some other place 0, not to-day—not now!" I talk to my stubborn heart and say, The work I moat do I will do to-day; I wlti make to the Lord a vow : And I will not rest and I will not Sleep Till the vow I have vowed I rise and keep, And the demon erten, Not now I" And so the days and the years go by, And so I register lie upon lie, Arid breakerith 'Heaven my vow: roe when I would boldly take my eland, This terrible demon stays my band— "o, not to-day—not now:" [Alice Cary ANGLING FOR A HUSBAND. SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 7, 1863. dried,—she unsealed the letter and commenced its perusal. "A declaration of love!" cried she, at the first words. ." What insolence." Still the insolence had come to hc . r in so ex traordinary a manner that her curiosity would not suffer her to treat this letter as she had so many others—pitilessly burn it without a reading. No—she read it quite through. The lover, who dated his letter from the bottom of the river, had skillfully adopted the allegory and introduced himself as a grotesque inhabitant of the waters. The fable was gracefully managed, and with the jesting tone which he had adopted was mingled a true, serious, ardent sentiment, expressed With beauty and eloquence. The neat day, Madame D— returned to the island, not without emotion and a trace of fear. She threw her line with a trembling hand, and shuddered as a moment after she perceived the movement of the hook. Is it a fish? Is it a letter It was a letter. Madame D— was no believer in magic—still there was something strange and supernatural in all this. She had an idea of throwing bank the letter into the stream, but relinquished It. The most stubborn and haughty woman is always disarmed in face of the mystery which captivates her ima• gination. This second* letter was more tender, more charming than the first. Madame D— read it several times, and could not help thinking about the delightful merman who wrote such bewitch ing letters. On the subsequent day she attached her line to the bank, and left it. swimming in the stream, while she withdrew to a landing place upon the extremity of the island. She watched for a long time, but saw nothing. She returned to the place, withdrew the line—and there was the letter. This time an answer was requested. It was perhaps premature; yet the audacious request obtained a full success. The reply was written after some hesitation, and the hook dropped Into the stream, charged with a letter which was in tended to say nothing, and affected a sort of badinage—which was nevertheless a bulletin of victory gained over the hard severity of a woman until then unapproachable. Madame D-- had too much shrewdness not to guess that her mysterious correspondent em ployed, instead of magic, the art of a elfillful diver. Scruples easily understood restrained her from that portion of the bank where she was sure that the diver would emerge from the water. But this game of letters amused her. First it pleased her intellect., and her curiosity became so lively that she wrote : Let us give up this jesting,. which has pleas ed me for the moment, but which should continue no longer, and come with your apologies to Clinton." The lover answered : "Tee, if you will add Hope.' " The inexorable lady replied : "If only a word is necessary to decide you.be it so." The young man appeared, and was not a loser. The gift of pleasing belonged to his person as much as his style, and he had made such rapid progress under water that it was easy to com plete hie oonquenton land. Thus Madame D— caught a husband with out wishing it, and 4 spite of the vow which she had taken never to marry'. Holding the line, she bad been caught by tho fish. DOGS THE TYPE OF MEN "The Laws of Nature make the whole World kln." Analogy is one cf the most prominent princi— ples in creation. Everything is a type of some thing else; 'everything represents and foresha dows its next highest link. Man is the great obvioue prototype of all the animals. The character of every animal repre sents one particular passion ; the character of every man gathers up and compounds in itself all the passions. And whatever animals approach nearest to this faculty of comprehension—this power of variety—are, of course, the nearest type of men; the further off, the more remarked their individuality. All tigers are fierce, all lions are bravo, all foxes are cunning, and " the rage of the vulture, and the love of the turtle," are proverbial. Each possesses his individual quality ; the only differ ence is in quantity—more or less. Now what is the distinguishing trait of dogs? "Why," you say," according to the species." Exactly so, and there are varieties enough of the species to express all the qualities of a man. Within the range of this one class of animals are comprehended the elements of all the good and all the eviL, all the love and all the hatred, that ever soothed the sorrows or shook the soul of humanity. There are plenty of reasons why this type should be considered the proximate link of man— the variety of his species, the sagacity of his instincts, his capacity and education, his ex— emption, as a rule, from servile labor. lie is to be the friend, the companion, the assistant, the confidential servant of his master. Directly you degrade him to the rank of a slave, you blunt hie energies and coarsen his nature. Dogs rea son considerably, their instinct amounts to a low degree of intellect. The different sorts of dogs represent the different sorts of men; and the physique corresponds as well as the character. Look at the bull-dog. His strong shoulders, his great head, his enormous jaws match well with his dogged resolution, his stern, cold,. in trepid bravery. There is no dash or gallantry about him ; he simply goes at his work the shortest way, and does it. Amongst men, you can find this sort la Yorkshire, in Lancashire, in Cornwall, and there are plenty of them among the " bonnie Boots." Whenever you see a man of hard features, prominently developed, and powerful lower jaw, you may know for certain that he is a man, not of high resolve, but of stern resolution. lie will calculate chances coolly, and fearlessly, he will spring to the fray with all the pluck possible to humanity ; in fine, be is akin to the bull dog. Then cornett the grey hound, a thiik, elegant creature, but be dashes swiftly on his prey, and bites hard; 'Very like those light cavalry fellows, who rode down upon the Russian guns at Bala— klava ; very like the gallant line who coaled the highest of the Alma. The great, large, lumbering Newfoundlander finds his human development In a elan of nega- Live men, whose pursuits aro active, but physi cal. Not sensual men, by any meaus—men who are addicted to field sports and muscular e'er tion, though, perhaps, of indolent minds—large licAtty, thick headed, goad-natured, happy go lucky beings. Well, these are the Newfound landers. The water spaniels image the Sack Tar, wish his ready usefulness, and his generous, impul sive nature. The terriers are a mammas class ; so are the commercial men. Both are restless, bustling be Tugs, small of stature, keen of feature, acute of comprehension and infinitely hard mouthed— oh, very! The foxhound chases sly Reynard upon the slightest scent, and finds a parallel In the Bow skeet runner, or more modern detective. The pointer and the setter represent men of inTentiVe faculty, who pioneer inhere, and find ideas for others to work out. The retriever comes behind, and like the care ful student, or the patient machinist, gatbere up the fragments, that nothing be lost. He eluci dates and elaborates thought to its fullest extent, and whenever a seed of greatness fructifies, he rescues it with laborious rare trot:tithe oblivion of time in the lapse of ages. Of this sort are the men who carry our mightiest measures and con solidate the elements Of greatnesl. The shepherds are universally considered to be the primitive species, from which all other va rieties are derived. Pastoral pursuits were the occupation of Adam, and no other sort of doge was required at first, until the chase was thought of. This creature and the noble brutes of Mount St. Bernard are the most conspicuous types in the world; they seem almost identified with the men whose mission they so greatly aid and share. Constant association moulds then: to great similarity—makes each a part of the other. Their hard lives of privation and toil engender powers of endurance. marvellous alike in the men and the dogs. Here the type is close. It is rather a mortifying fact that the most use less of the canine tribes are equally faithful representations of our superior races. The lady's petted poodle is significant of the lady herself— probably a spoilt child of fashion, full of capri ces, humors, whims and fancies, having no ob ject in life but to get rid of the burdens of time ungenerous, good for nothing. There is beside a very numerous class of nondescript little curs, who are not poodles— mongrel bred animals, who are neither useful nor ornamenz al. One wonders what they were created for, except that like cyphers that count for quantity on the right side of significant figures, they do go to increase the population, either among dogs or men. This species has many varieties ; the most prominent being swells, dandies and gents. They swarm in servants' halls, buzz about-the thea. tres, and develop prodigiously in upper rooms. They flourish even on carpets of three ply, and are found abundantly in every nobleman's draw ing room—idlers on the world's highway, non producers in the busy hive of life. The buil doge are becoming extinct, and pup pyism begins to ride rampant, THE EPISCOPAL. CHURCH AND SLAVERY. BISHOPS DOPKINS AND POTTER. Early in the year 1.861, the venerable Bishop HOPKINS, of Vermont, wrote a letter entitled " The Bible View of Slavery." in which he un dertook to prove, by reference to the Holy Scrip tures, that the institution of slavery was recog nized in the Bible, nod not forbidden by any of itsbreeepts. This letter has been, of late, ex tensively republished, and the attention which it attracted aroused the hostility of the Abolition element in the Episcopal Church to snob a pitch that, immediately preceding the Pennsylvania election, Bishop Potter, and the clergy wile sided wish him, put forth the following protest against Bishop Hopkins's " Bible View," with the evi dent design of aiding, by their influence, the cause of the Abolitionists in this State Gild= The subscribers deeply regret that the fact of the extensive circulation through this diocese of a letter by John Henry Hopkins, Bishop of the Diocese of Vermont,' in defence of southern slavery, compels them to make this public pro. test. It is not their province to mix in any political canvass. But as ministers of Christ, in the Protestant Episcopal Church, it beoomee them to deny any complicit> , or sympathy with such a defence. This attempt to apologise not only for slavery in the abstract, but to advocate it as it exists in the cotton States, and in States whioh sell men and women in the open market as their staple product, is, in their judgment, unworthy of any servant of Jesus Christ. As an effort to sustain, on Bible principles, the States in rebellion against the Government, in the wicked attempt to establish by force of arms a tyranny under the name of a republic, whose corner stone' shall be the perpetual bondage of the African, it challenges their indignant reprobation. "Philadelphia, September, 15f.3." BISHOP HOPKINS'S REPLY To the Right Rev. ALONZO POTTNIt, of the Dio cese of Pennsylvania : I have seen, with great amazement, a protest against my letter on the " Bible View of Slave ry," signed by you and a long list of your clergy, in which you condemn it as "unworthy of any servant of Jesus Christ," as " an effort to sustain, on Bible principles, the States in rebellion against. the Government in the wicked attempt to establish, by force of arms, a tyranny in the name of a republic, whose corner stone shall be the perpetual bondage of the African," and as such you say that. it challenges your " indignant reprobation." Now, my Right Reverend brother, I am sorry to be obliged to charge you not only with a gross insult against. your senior, but with the more serious offence of a false accusation. My letter was first published in January, 1811, more than three months before the war began, at a time when no one could anticipate the fnrm of gov ernment which the Southern States should adopt, or the course which Congress migLt take in re ference to their secession. And when I consent ed to its publication, I did not suppose that it would be used in the service of any political party, although I had no right to complain, if it were so used, because the letter,' once published, became public property. But. in its present form there is nothing whatever it it, which bears on the question of "rebellion," or of the "per petual bondage of the African," or of " tyranny under the name of a republic," of which slavery should be the " Corner stone." On I he contrary, I referred. on the last page, to my lecture pub lished in Buffalo in 1810, and to my book Welled "The American Citizen," published in New- York in ]857, where " I set forth the same views on the subject of slavery, adding, however, a plan for its gradual abolition, whenever the South should consent. and the whole strength of the Government could aid in its accomplishment." [VOL XXIV-NO. 29.-WHOLE NO. 1993. " Sooner or later," I added, ••I believe that some measure of that character MUM he adopted. But. it belongs to the slave States Ibemselves to take the lead in such a movement. And meanwhile their legal rights and natural feelings must be respected, if we would hope for unity and Tledo." With these facts before your eyes, 1 am totally at a loss to imagine -how even the extravagance of party zeal could frame against me so bitter a denunciation. The whole object of my letter was to provefrom the Bade, that in the relation of master and slave there was necessarily no sin whatever. The sin, if there were any, lay in the treatment of the slave, and not in the relation it— self. Of course it was liable to abuse, as all hu man relations must be. But while it was cer. tain that thousands of our Christian brethren who held slaves were treating them with kind— ness and justice, according to the Apostles' rule, and earnestly laboring to improve the com— forte end ameliorate the hardships of the Insti— tution, I held it to be a cruel and absurd charge to accuse them as sinners against the Divine law, when they were only doing what the Word of God allowed, under the Constitution and aetab. Hotbed code of their country. I do not know whether your band of indignant reprobationiais ever saw my book, published in 1857, but you read it, because I sent you a copy, and I have your letter of acknowledgment,. in which, while you dissented from some of my conclusions, you did it with . the courtesy of a Christian gentleman. In that letter there is no— thing said about my opinions being unworthy of any servant of Jesus Christ," and nothing of " indignant reprobation." But, tempora Taman tin% et nos mulamur in jilts. Yes the times are indeed sadly changed, and you have changed accordingly. For many years you have met in brotherly council with these Southern slaveholders. You invited them to the hospitalities of your house, 'and paid them es pecial deference. The new light of Eastern Abolitionism had not yet risen within our Church, and if you then thought. as you now think, you took excellent care that no man amongst your Southern friends should know it. Moreover, your favorite Theological Seminary, only three years ago, was the Virginia school at Alexan dria, raised to great prosperity by Bishop Meade slareholder—and I am very sure that nothing at variance with my Lible View of Slavery was ever taught in that institution. Yes we may well say of you, as of many others, quantum mu tatus aL ale How changed is the Bishop of Pennsylvania in three years from his former course of conservatism, peace and Scriptural consistency .1 But the word of God has not changed; the doctrine of the Apostles has not. changed; the Constitution of our country bas not Changed; the great standards of religious truth and real civic loyalty remain just as they were; and I remain along with them, notwithstanding this hitter•and unjust assault from you and your clergy. Ido not intend to imitate your late style of vituperation, for I trust that I have learned, even when I am reviled, nut to revile again. I respect the good opinion of your Cler gy, and am not aware that I have done anything to forfeit it. I respect your office, your talents, your personal character and the wisdom dnd aucoesa with which for many years, your Epis copate has been conducted. But I do not respect your departure front the old and well settled rule of the Church, and from the Apostolic' law of Christian fairness and courtesy. Ido not be lieve in the modern discovery of those Eastern philanthropists who deny the divinity of our Redeenter t and attach no importance to the Bible except as it may suit themselves. I do not believe that the venerated founders of our American Church were ignorant of the Scriptures and blind to the principles of Gospel morality. 1. do not believe that Washington and his corn patriots, who framed our Constitution with such express provisions for the rights of slaveholders, were tyrants and despots—sinners against the taw of God and the feelings of humanity. But 1 do believe in the teaching of the inspired Apos tles, and in the Hely Catholic (or universal) Church, which you cod your clergy oleo profess ,o believe. I know that the doctrine of that Church was clear and unanimous on the law fed p.7.s. of slavery for eighteen centuries together : sod on that. point I regard your .;,,protest" said " indignant reprobation" as the idle wind that passes by. I wish you, therefore, to be advertised that I shall publish, within a few months, if a gracious Providence should spare my life and faculties, a full demonstration of the truth "wherein I stand." And I shall prove in that book, by the most un questionable authorities, that slaves and slave holders were in the Church from the beginning; that slavery was held to be consistent with Christian principle by the Fathers and Councils, and by all Protestant divines anti commentators, up to the very close of the Nat century. and that this fact was universal among all Churches and sects throughout the Christian world. I shall contend that our Church, which maintains the primitive rule of catholic consent sod abjures all novelties, is bound, by her very Constitution, to hold fast the only safe and enduring rule, or abandon her Apostolic Claims, and descend to the level of those who are "driven about by every wind of doctrine." And 1 shall print your " indignant reprobation," with its list of names, in the preface to my book, so that if I cannot give you fame, I may, at least, do my part to give you notoriety. That the _nineteenth century is a century of vast improvement and wondorTul discovery in the arts and sciences I greet as willingly as any man. But in religious truth or reverence for the Bible, the age in which we live is prolific in daring and implode innovation. We have seen professedly Christian communities divided and subdivided ou every side. We have seen the rise and spread of Universalise; Milleriem, Pantheism, Mormonism, and Spiritualism. We have seen even our venerable Mother Church of England sorely agitated by the contagious fever of change, on the one hand towards superstition. and on the other toward infidel rationalism. And we have heard the increasing clamor against the Bible, sometimes from the devotees of geological speculation, Sometimes from the bold deniers of miracles and prophecy, and, not least upon the list, from the loud tongued apostles of anti slavery. We have marked the orators which cry " Down with the Bible, if it maintains the law fulness of slavery." We have marveled at the senatorial eloquence which proclaimed that "it was high time to have an anti-slavery God and an anti-slavery Bible." We have heard the Con stitution of our country denounced as a " cove nant with death and hell." We have heard the boasted determination that the Union shall never be restored until its provisions for the protect ion of slavery are entirely abolished. And what is the reenit of all Ibis philanthropy ? The fear ful judgment of God has descended to chastise these multiplied ems of rebellion against his divine Government, and what the final catastro phe shall he is only known to Him who seeth the end from the beginning. After forty years spent in the ministry, more than thirty of which have been passed in the office of a Bishop, 1 can look back with humble thankfulness to the Giver of all good for this, at least, that all my best, labors have been directed to the preservation of the Church from the in roads of doctrinal innovation. At my ordination I promised "so to minister the DOCTRINE and sacraments and discipline of Christ, as the Lord I bath commanded, and as ihis"Chisreh !lath received the same"—and certain - it is that "this Church? had not received the doctrine of ultra-Abolition ism at that time, as I trust she never will receive ' it, because it is contrary to the Sacred Scriptures 1 also promised " with all faithful diligence to lerdsh and drive away from the Church all erroneous and strange doctrines contrary to God's Word," and I made those promises in the true poses which the venerable Bishop White, my Ordainer. attached to them—l believed than, as he believed, that our Southern brethren com mitted no sin in having slaves, and that they were men of as much piety as any ministers in our Communion. I believed, as he believed, that the plain precepts and practice of the Apostles sanctioned the institution, although, as a matter of exptulionv, the tim e might come lichen the &till would prefer, as the North had done, to employ free labor. Those promises I have kept faithfully to this day—and if, when I am draw— ing near to the end of my career, I am to be con demned and vilified by you and your clergy, beoause I mill maintain them to the utmost Of my slender ahiliiy, be aseured, my Right Roe. creud Brother, that I shall regret the fact muoh more on your account than my own. In conclusion, have only to sayithat I feel na resentment for the grossly insulting style of your manifesto. The stability and unity of the Church of Ood are the only interests which I desire to secure, and I am too 'old in experience to be much moved by the occasional excesses of human infirmity. Toner It. HOPKINS, Bishop of the Diocese of Vermont. BURLINGTON, VI., Oct. 5,,1863. WHAT HAS BEEN GAINED? Not much—thinke the i rrovidetace Daily Post. Here is what the Pori has to say about it: We remember that at the opening of the ses— sion of Congress which commenced on the 41k of July, 1861, President Lincoln, in dealing with the subject of secession, said: " There Is mock reason to believe that the Union men are the msjority in many, if not in every one, of the so. caned seceded States." We •remember that we agreed with the President on this point, and ex pressed the hope that such a policy would be pursued by our Government as could not fail to strengthen the hearts diad hands of patriotic men in the South, and thus open the way to a com— plete restoration of the Union and the brotherly feeling on which it must rest, when the wave of excitement and passion, which was then rolling over the Southen States, should have passed away. We realized that our hope of final union was in the people of the South themselves. We could resist armed rebellion with the bayonet, and this was our duty. It is our duty to-day. But we could not then and cannot now restore the Union with force alone. We must have a Union sentiment iu the South, or the machinery of government could not be made to work smoothly. it was good policy, therefore, to un derstand the feelings and wishes of Southern and Border Slate Union men, and faithfully repr&- sent these in the administration of the Govern ment.. What these Union men said to their fellow citizens, we all know well enough. They declared that the North was not their enemy-- that. it was no part of the purpose of the Presi dent and his supporters to interfere with State iastitut.ions—and that all the evils they suffered or were threatened with could be removed or averted without any resort to revolutiOnary measures. What they asked was that their words Should be continued by the Rots of the lieu Administration ; and many of them declared that if this wore done the rebellion could not possibly continue in a single State for more than six mouths. It is known that Mr. Lincoln, when ho entered upon the Presidency, was strongly impreeeed with the retteenableneee of these suggestions. He believed it to be good policy to avoid a collie !don with the crazy fanatics of the South. To this end, and in the belief that secession would blow itself out if it were not gratified with blood abed, he actually went a step farther than Mr, Buchanan had ever gone, by ordering the evacu ation of both Fort Sumter and Fort Piekene. Perhaps this was too great a concession. Cer tainly he ufterwarde thought it was, foe he With drew the orders referred to after signing them. We know what followed. The Southern heart was " tired," so was the Northern. The war spirit raged with terrible fury. For a moment the South seemed to be unanimous ; but we soon perceived that its boisterousness was not based upon the convictions of the people ; and when e the storm had raged several months, and Con gress assembled at Washington, we entertain no doubt whatever that. what the President stated was strictly true—the Union mon were the ma jority in many if not in every one, of the so. called seceded States. We all know what followed. The radicals hailed the war as the introduction of their mille- Ilium. They demanded the extermination of the white population of the South. They judged every measure by its severity ; if it promised to carry destruction to the Southern people, it was goed—if not, it was bad. They declared the war must prove an utter failure unless we declared the emancipation of all the slaves. and armed the blacks to assist us in the struggle with their masters. We must confiscate, burn, kill, anni hilate; nothing else would save us. Even this would not save us, if we did not strike down all opposition, all freedom of speech, and all free dom of thought, at the North. Their policy was the iron policy ; and a progressive policy, also. They presented it by degrees, audit wee adopted by degrees. Two years and more have gone by since theystOmmenoed their clamors, and since Congress and the President commenced to yield to them; and we ark in all seriousness, to day, what has been gained t Our Government owes between two and three thousand millions of dollars, 114 one of the results of the war. What has the war gained to us? and how much of what has been gained oan be set down as the result of adopting the radical policy ? We know what was promised if the ?resident would issue an emancipation proclamation. The rebels were to find their military arm almost in stantly paralysed. The soldiers in the armies would have to return home to prevent negro hi surreotions. Alarm would seize every Southern community ; the armies would dwindle down to nothing ; and resistance to the Federal authority would soon become a farce. Have these predic tions-been realized ? Here at the North equally pleasant consequences were to follow. There was to be no longer a want of soldiers. Three limes three hundred thousand" were to otter their services to the Government, at once. Our armies were to exhibit more energy than before. Every battle was to bring us a victory. And wo were to win, also, the applause and sympathy of the world. The war would end, and end glori ously, in six months—in a year, at farthest. We all remember these promises and prophe cies. We doubted that, the good anticipated would ever come to us. and we paid the penalty of doubting. Every doubter was denounced as a It Copperhead " and a traitor. But were we not right ? The war is nearly three years old ; it is still a great " institution," and may last three years more. The Abolition millenium may be a little nearer Ow it was at the commencement, But the counts -ourpoor, bleeding country— whet has it gained nr DirrEar.Ner.—ltt his admirable speech at Rochester, Governor SEVSOUR thus tersely Ind'. ealed the purposes of the two parties. As Wile said of Sir Jou ti COPLEY, his statement is as good as another man's argument " We propose" ho said, " to wage this war For a purpose upon which the whole North is united —for a purpose which will draw to our standard hundreds and thousands of hearts in the South. That yet beat with love for our 'old banner and our old Constitution. (Cheers.) They propose that we shall carry on the war for purposes that. we at the North cannot unanimously consent. to they. propose net to put down revolution, but td• make revolution ; they propose to otter no induce ment for rebels to submit to the 11172, but they say to us and to them that we shalt no longer have the guaranty of the Constitution for the preservaiion of our liberties hereafter as.they - have been preserved before." , Stir A LETTIIII FEW( CHARLUSTON avers that the city government of Charleston are anxious to surrender the City to General Oilltaore and Admiral Dahigren, but Beauregard and the mili tary leaders will not allow them to do so. They say the oily abet be burnt before it will be surrendered. •