? ,„ ---- - . . - - '-- ' 'N • . "----......./ ~ \ -r :P i I ' , : ,---7 kII I I iv -, r i ' \-• - , '- \ ' ( (II j 1 (:", ,-; Nk ! . St 1 , Ili\ll 1 I IV L'.y, t 1 11 AN' II 1 q) , L . kJ 0 it , aL _4 ) i q i ,i, L. ,_ (, 1 \ 1 _ ) ' iv.. ( '‘ - )J11 1 1.1 1 , L ; 'Li'l Ili (k ' ) :-.......,/ ) ..) , ._, : • ', -, -.... \ D Eli foil; Paper---Penottb to Vo )grintiturt, fittraturt, e Srientit, Art, foreign, Domestic nub @turd jottilignice, titf. ESTABLISHED IN 1813. THE WAYNESBURG MESSENGER, PUBLISHED BY B. W. JONES & JAMES S. JENNINGS, WAYNESBURG, GrREENE CO., PA IgrOFFICE NEARLY OPPOSITE THE PUBLIC 13411ARE...al utzeutsace SWidiontrrion.--SI 50 in advance; $I 75 at the ex piration of six months; $2 00 within the year; $2 50 sher the expiration of the year. Anvgnitstownrs inserted at $1 00 per square for three Insertions, and 25 cents a square foreach addition al Insertion; (ten lines or less coun•ed a square.) im A liberal deduction made to yearly advertisers. is Jon PRINT'S°. of all kinds, executed in the best style, and. on reasonable terms, at the" Messenger" Job Waft. Ift; aptsburg Nusintss barbs. ATTORNEYS. •.•.IPURIW•11. J O. RITCH/g. PURMAN & RITCHIE, ATTORNEYS -AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, Waynesburg, Pa. irr All business iu Greene, Washington, and Fay ette Counties, entrusted to them, will receive prompt attention. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. JAIL Lis tillEY. J. A. J. BUCHANAN. LINDSEY & 1117011ANAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW, Waynesburg, Pa. Office on the North side of Main street, two doors West of the -Republican" Mice. Sept. 11, 166;. H. W. DOWNEY, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. office in Led with's Building, opposite the Court house. Sept. 11,1861-Iy. DAVID CRAWFORD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Office in Sayers' Building, adjoining the Post When. Sept. 11, 1861—ty. 9. DLACK. JOHN PHELAN. BLACK & PHELAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS Al LAW Office in the Court House, Waynesburg. Sept. 11,1861-Iy. PSYSICIALIFS DR. D. W. BRADEN, Physician and Surgeon. Office in the Old Bank Building, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. DRUGS DR. W. L. CREIGH, Phyritelasa sad Surgeon, dud dealer in Drugs, Medicines. One, Paints, arc.. Ike., Main street, a few doors east of the Bank. Sept, 11, 1881-Iy. M. A. HARVEY, Druggist and Apothecary, and dealer in Paints and Qils, the most celebrated Patent Medicines, and Pure Liquors for medicinal purposes. liept. 11,1881-1 y Ir: , ,*T.i=f-Is' hi: WM. A. PORTER, Wholesale and Retail Deslet in Foreign and Dames tic Dry Goods, Groceries, Notions, &c., Main street. Rept. It. 1861-Iy. GEO. HOSKINSON, Opposite the Court House, keeps always on hand a barge stock of S.asonable bOry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Sheet, and Notions generally. Sept. 11, 186I—Iy. ANDREW WILSON, Dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Drugs. Notions, hardware, queensware, Stoneware, Looking Glasses, Iron and Nail., Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Main street, one door east of the Old Bank. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. A. WILSON, Jr., Dealer in Dry Goods, Queensware, Notions, Hats, Caps, Bonnets, ittc., Wilson's New Building, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. R. CLARK, Dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Queens ware and notions, one door west of the Adams House, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-Iy. MINOR & CO., Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Gro ceries, Queensware, Hardware and Notions, opposite sae Green House. Hain street. Sept. ii, 1861-Iy. CLOTHING N. CLARK, Dealer In Men and Boy'■ Clothing. Cloths, Caul metes, Satinets, Hate and Caps, are., Main strtet. op. park* the Court House. Sept. 11, 1861—Iy. A. J. SOWERS, Dueler in Men and Boy's Clothing, Gentlemen's Fur nishing Goods, Boom and Shoes, Hats and Caps. Old Bank Building, Main street. Sept. 11, 1861-4 m BOOT AND SNOE DEALERS J. D. COSGRAY, Boot and Shoe maker. Main street. nearly orm.mitel the "Farmer's and Drover's Dank." Every style of Boots and Shoes constantly on band or mails to order. Sept. 11, 1861—ly. J. B. RICKEY, Soot and Shoe maker, Sayer's Corner, kfain street. floors and Shoes of every variety always on hand or made to order on short notice. Sept. IL 1861—ty. GROCERIES & VARIETIES 'JOSEPH YATER, Dealer in Groceries and Confectioneries, Notions, Medicines, Perfumeries, Liverpool Ware. &c., Glass of all sizes, and-Gilt Moulding and Looking Glass Plates. Dr Cub paid for good eating Apples. Sept. 11, Is6l-Iy. JOHN MUNNELL, Dealer in Groceries and Confectionaries. and Variety Gbehrpencnelly, Wilson's Ne w Building, Main street. Sept •11, 1861-Iy. SOOZS, &c. LEWIS DAY, Dealer in It 01001 and Miscellaneous Books, Station ary, Ink, Magazines and Papers, Wilson's Old Build ing. Stain street. Sept. 11, 1861—Iy. BANK. FA MERS' & DROVERS' BANK, Wars.'!oar,. Pa. jigigeg Rom Pres'l. J. LAZEAR, Cashier. amour'. DAY, WEDNBSD*T. iks. 11, 1861-Iy. splugt,. M'ALLISTER, 11 *WIN Harner and Trunk Mater, Main street, three itabps West et the Adams Souse. I: . ~~~e URN HOOPER lk NAGEL vbiklest. "bribe in •- • .. , - THE GOLDEN GATE. ou remember" the corn, Bell Blair, "Oh, don't That waved in the autumn breeze, Like the peaceful flow of a mother's prayer, Or the swell of the singing seas ? And how, when the harvest time came on, We hid in its golden sheaves, To wait for the coming of gentle John From under the low barn eaves ? I am not ashamed that I loved John Dean, For his heart was pure and true, Though the flowers he culled in the spring time geeen Were always given to yon, And you crushed them under your feet, Bell Blair, As he lovingly turned away ; But I gathered them up to my heart, and there They are all a-bloom to-day. Ah, well I remember the roses, borne With his beautiful love for thee— How he freed their stems of the faintest thorn And the briers were given to me. They are all I shall ever ask, Bell Blair, For I know my brier will bloom To a fragrant flower for my soul to wear, , For I smell its hushed perfume. Sometimes when the shadowy mist uncurls From the path my aonl will tread, And the rose unfurls 'mid the eddying whirls Of the snow around my :lead. And now, when the harvest-time comes on In heaven, I shall gladly wait, And watch for the coming of angel John, At the beautiful golden gate. gttrit LORENZO DOW. I heard Dow twice when I was a child. He preached in Norwich, Conn., my native place, Bear hill District, ten miles from his own residence. The "old school house" or "academy" which the Methodists used for a church, was too small for the congrega tion; they adjourned to the shade of an en_ ormous wide-spreading elm-tree that stood on the "Green," as the public common was popularly called. I remember it was wash ing-day, probably Monday, and four o'clock in the afternoon. Dow stood in his wag on, and I eat, with a younger brother, on a stone, at the foot of a horse-block, on the women's side of the congregation. I remember only one thing he said. A stout young man had clambered up into the forks of the branches and got to sleep over the preacher's head, and snored so loudly as to disturb the congregation. Dow looked up in the midst of his sermon and said, "Take care there, Zaccheus, or you will catch a fall." The next time I heard him was in the "old school house," and I think on a cold windy Sunday, either in the spring or fall of the year, I cannot tell which. He re proved some young ladies in the congrega tion for tittering, one of whom afterwards said, "It was too bad to make people laugh in church and then scold them for it."— There was no one to raise the tune, when he began: "Waal," says Lorenzo, "if we can have no singin' we'll have no prayin';" and he plunged at once into his discourse. At the conclusion, without singing, (pray er, or benediction, he left the desk and hurried from the church, leaving the con gregation to follow at their leisure, jumped into his wagon and drove off at a furious rate. The high wind upset his Quaker broad-brim, and it came rolling back into the dispersing crowd, with Dow after on a full run. There are few things in this world more ridiculous than a man chasing his hat on a windy day, and Dow's ap pearance on this occasion, with his long hair and beard streaming in the breeze, provoked shouts of laughter from the young men and boys. Some years before this my father heard him in Charleston, S. C., where he preach ed in a Presbyterian pulpit, one of the old fashioned tubs, twenty feet in the air. In stead of ascending the stairs, Dow clam bered up on the outside and shouted, "He that entereth not in by the door in the sheepfold,.but clitnbeth up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber." Before he began he pulled off the pulpit cushions, of which he had a great abhorrence, and threw them one side. During one of his long peregrinations a relative of his whom he exceedingly dis liked, died. Dow heard it from a neighbor as he neared home, and said, "Tell the people there will be a funeral sermon in my meeting house next Lord's day, at ten o'clock." Dow's meeting-house was a patch of woods near his own dwelling.— Sunday came, and the woods were full.— Dow took his stand and announced as his text, "And the Lord set a mark upon Cain." Such a handling as he gave the dubious character of his dead relative was some thing of a contrast to the eulogies usually prcbounced upon such occasions. When Jackson made his presidential tour through the Eastern States, in 1833, he passed near Dow's house. They were friends of old, and Dow was a rabid Dem.. ocrat. He erected a hickory pole by the side of the road, imbedded in clay, a no less delicate compliment to the great Kentucky orator than to the " hero of New Orleans." The laattime he preached at Boer Erahe took out his big Oyer "top:tip," hod held ilit-befole,tha oonitrootiloo. trying os, , AW*lll.lll lOW I soy niter* / - es3" unto all--wakA WAYNESBURG, GREENE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1861. e was prosecuted in the New London County court in a protracted suit. On one occasion, while the court was sitting at Norwich Landing, be was asked to preach in the Universalist Church at noon, while the judges and attorneys took a recess for dinner. He mounted a bench and proclaim ed his own appointment. "I will preach five minutes hence to as many as will fol low me, in Hell's Insurance Office in this city," and off he went with a crowd of men and boys at his heels. DOW'S DAM Dow engaged in the milling interest in his latter days, and built his dam so high that it set the water back upon the mill race of his next neighbor up stream and thus impeded the velocity and force of his water power. For this he was prosecuted, and after a long trial the cause went against him. "Waal," says Lorenzo, "If a man is a sinner, the sooner he repents and reforms the better ;" and suiting the action to the word, he went home, assem bled his hands and cut down the dam.— The water suddenly breaking loose, caused immense damage to those lower down the stream. Dr. Fisk used this as a happy illustration of the result of immediate abo lition, irrespective of consequences. In hie latter itinerating tour he was of ten accompanied by the daughter of his second wife, an accomplished young lady, afterward the wife and widow of a Meth odist preacher. The second Mrs. Dow was an estimable woman, well off in the world, and perfectly free from the eccen tricities of her pious predecessor, the im mortal "Peggy."—Christian Advocate. Prince Napoleon and the Old Soldier. Last evening there occurred one of those , rare incidents in the progress of Prince Napoleon's tour through the United States, which will not soon be forgotten by our il lustrious visitor, albeit the tender recollec tions thereof may not be of long duration with one of the parties interested, whose gray hairs will ere long be moistened by the clammy dews of death. Lorenz Harte, a relic of the Grand Army of the first Napoleon, now an inmate of the Cook County Poor-House, had an interview with Prince Napoleon. County Agent Hansen, learning the wish of the old soldier, kindly conveyed him to the Tremont. His card was sent to the Prince's apartments, and the old man, bowed down with the weight of eighty years, was ushered into the august pres- lIMI The Prince arose to receive his remark able guest. There they stood for a mo ment looking each other in the face—the ' second heir to the French Crown, and the sacred and bronzed veteran of a score of battles. Advancing, the Prince grasped the old man's hand, and conducting him to a seat, spoke so kindly that the veteran's heart overflowed, and he burst into tears. I To those at all acquainted with the his tory of the Napoleonic dynasty, neither the kindness of the Prince nor the emo tion of the old soldier will be wondered at. All such well know the remarkable power that the First Napoleon held upon the'af feetions of his soldiers, as well as the wild and uncontrollable idolatry mainifested by the latter toward the former, upon all oc casions, whether in victory or defeat. In that interview, yesterday, the veter an "fought his battles o'er again." The Prince questioned him, and listened with glistening eyes to tbe recital of those thrill ing incidents which ever had as their hero a Napoleon. The quick eye of the Prince noticed the absence of three fingers from one of the soldier's hands. "Where did you lose your fingers?" "In the retreat from Moscow. I was at tached to the cavalry, and in one of the chafges of those villainous Cossacks, a stroke from a lance deprived me of my fingers. But," and the old veteran's eye shone with the old battle-light, "my sa bre finished him, sire. Ab those Cossacks were the most splendid horsemen that I ever saw, but they were afraid of Murat's cavalry, after all." And the old soldier's mind wandered back to that terrible re treat from the burning capital of the Rus sians, surrounded by the inflexible rigors of a Russian Winter, and harassed day and night by those furious onsets of Cos sack cavalry—those wild and daring chil dren of the plains. "This, sire, was done at Lodi," exhibit ing a terrible scar upon the left shoulder, made by a grape-shot. "And this," bearing the calf of his left leg, showing the track of a bullet through and through it, was done at Arcola." "This sabre cut upon my head was re ceivedat Austerlitz, and so was this, sire," tenderly holding, up the Cross of the Le gion of Honor, bestowed upon him by Na poleon for special servive on that bloody field. And thus the old battle-scarred veteran whiled away two pleasant hours—hours fraught with proud and tender recollections by both Prince and soldier ; and when the veteran arose, tohe blessed the inunfi .go, owes of the Prima wheialt had preened a irell4llled puree Ws his hand, sief given ban asnanwe that &hat Frame had not forgatins her vntiettat.• nattlint s liberal pension should be provided for him.—Chi cago Exchange. Young Blood. The Evening Pm, in an article on "Young Blood," says that too many mis fortunes have occurred in our own and other nations' histories from the employ ment of generals in whom the fire and en ergy of youth had burned out, to permit us, in the present emergency to hazard victory in this way. Many of Napoleon's most overwhelming successes were obtain ed when he was opposed by such men a's Beaulieu, who was then eighty years of age, Wurmser, an octogenarian, and Al- vinsi, who was over seventy, in the cam paign of 1796. These men had all distin guished themselves in early life, but they had now lost that youthful promptitude and activity which are absolutely essen tial for military commanders. It is curi ous to follow up this list a little further.— In 1800 the Austrians had for comman der-in-chief, Melas, an old general of the Seven Years' War, who had been fifty years in the army, and was no longer able or efficient. In 1805 the French were op posed by Mack, then fifty-three, and Kutusoff, sixty. The plan of operations was drawn up by a council of generals more aged still, who took no active part in the campaign. In 1806 Napoleon beat the Duke of Brunswick, then seventy-one, Hohencohe, aged sixty, and Mollendorf, Kleist. and Massenbach, generals who had served under Frederick the Great ; men, says Jomini, "exhumed from the Seven Years' War, whose faculties were frozen by age." In 1807 the Allies still sent against Napoleon and his young and vig orous officers, such men as Kamenski, aged eighty, Benningsen, sixty, and Bux howden, fifty-six. But in 1809 the Austri an army was led by the young and ener getic Archduke Charles, and though he was fettered and thwarted by the "foolish projects of the old generals of the Aulic Councils," this campaign proved the most glorious in the Austrian annals of the wars of the Revolution. In subsequent campaigns the Allies were led by younger men, who proved themselves more nearly a match for Napoleon. Alexander of Russia was only thirty-five when he head ed his army in 1812; and he surrounded himself with young officers and placed as commanders of his divisions such men as Archduke Constantine. then thirty-three, and Shouvaloff, thirty-five. The Austri_ ans were led by Schwartzenberg, then thirty; the Prussians by York, Bulow, and by Blucher, who, thongh himself ad vanced in life, had the wit to surround himself with young and energetic aids, to whose enterprise he gave full rein. Wel lington was of the same age as Napoleon, and in the last campaign of the Emperor it is well known that most of Wellington's I officers were younger men than Napoleon's, who, says a military writer, "exhibited in this campaign less than in former ones the ardent energy and restless activity which had characterized their younger days."— The same authority continues: "Never were Napoleon's plans bitter conceived, never did his troops fight with greater bravery ; but the dilatory movements of his generals enabled his active enemies to parry the blow intended for their destruc tion." Most of our disasters in the war of 1812 we owed to the inefficiency of such old veterans of the Revolution as Hull, Armstrong, Winchester, Dearborn and Wilkinson, men who had once done good service, but were now deficient in every thing but the desire to take the field once more. It was not till they were set aside, and such men as Scott, Wool, Jackson, Harrison and others appointed, that our armies achieved victories. Scott himself was Major-General at twenty-eight, and it is noticeable that in the present war the eyes of the people are turned with most hope upon such men as McClellan, Fre ' mont, Butler, Banks and Rosecrans, men who are yet in the vigor of their days. Kosciusko's Tomb. In 1820. on the anniversary of Koaci usko's death, General Pezkowski laid the foundation of the Kosciusko monument with a barrowful of earth and bones brought from the battle-field of Rackla , wice. He next deposited in a marble cof- fin the bust of the Polish chief with his biography, and placed by its side an urn containing some of the earth from the field of Maciejowice where Kosciusko , "fell." Then the spectators who had as sembled in tens of thousands, all ~ ,on!- ! tributed to raise the mound, which is about one hundred and twenty feet high and a half a quarter of a mile round the base.— This is just what the Austrians wanted. . "Kosciusko's Tomb" had been erected on highest ground, and the Poles might see it from afar, and that from its summit the INTERESTING SCENE.-it the last day's session of the American Iloard of Commissioners of Foreign Missions held at Cleveland, 0., quite an inter esting scene occured. The President read a letter from a father and mother in Ohio, who in accordance with the request of a deceased daugh ter, sent with it a bed quilt-which she had made while confined to the house by a diseased limb. She wished it to be give& to the A.werican liteard to $ be sold for thebenertt entdeekgiVies• INese. all. any there ears only 1008 W. "Wigs, ofiltiow YArk,-iinnw &say (aid be wield giro fay dollars lowy ancient palaces, churches, and monaste- riee of Cracroi, to every one of which some national legend is attached, might be seen. What better sight could there be for a military position? Accordingly, the Austrians proceeded to wall it in and fortify it, and the tumulus of the Polish patriot is now one of the chief strongholds of the army which occupies Cracrow. Government Army Supplies. The National Intelligencer says the following shows the amount of subsistence stores on hand in the Government warehouses on the 12th of the present month : Pork 3,000 barrels, beef 6,000 barrels, beef tongues 200 barrels, bacon 300,000 pounds, hams 50,000, flour 11,000 bar rels, hard bread 2,000,000 pounds, beans 4,000 bushels, rice 1,000 pounds, hominy 10,000 pounds, riced barley 20,000 pounds, green coffee 20.000 pounds, ground coffee 40,000 pounds, tea 1,000 pounds, sugar 2,000,000 pounds, vinegar 70,000 gallons, can dles 40,000 pounds, soap 200,000 pounds. salt 40,000 bushels, desiccated potatoes two thousand pounds, des iccated mixed vegetables 17,000 pounds, pickles 278 kegs, dried ap ples 50,000 pounds, split peas 4,000 bushels, molasses 6,000 gallons, pota toes 4,000 bushels. The following shows the prices paid by the government for the spe cified articles : Pork $l9 pet barrel, beefsls per barrel, beet tongues $l6 per barrel, bacon 10 cents per pound. hams 12 cents per pound, flour $7,50 per barrel, bard bread 4 cents per pound, beans $2 per bushel, rice 7 cents per pound, hominy 2i cents per pound, riced barley 4i cents per pound, ground coffee 20 cents per pound, green coffee 14 cents per pound, tea 50 cents per pound. sugar Si cents per pound, vinegar 12.1 cents per gallon, candles 26 cents per pound, soap 7 cents per pound, salt 5 cents per pound, desiccated pota toes 11 cents per pound, desiccated mixed vegetables 24 cents per pound, pickles, $3,75 per keg. dried apples 51, cents per pound, split peas, $2 per bushel, molasses 32 cents per gallon, potatoes 60 cents per bushel. Sketch of 001. John W. Geary. Col. J. W. Geary, of our State, who commanded the Federal troops in the fight near Harper's Ferry, has figured extensively in recent national events. He commanded the second regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers in Mexi ico, and was noted for great firmness and, the rigid discipline to which he subjected his men. When he first went to war in that unfortunate re public, he was Lieut. Col. of Roberts' regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers, and at the battle of Chepultepec: where he held chief command of his regiment, was wounded, but not withstanding led his men in the ter rific battle fought at the de Balen gate just previous to the capture of the city of Mexico. For his gallant ry on that occasion he was promoted to the rank of Colonel, his commis sion hearing date of November 3d. 1847. He received special mention at Cerro Gordo. After the war, in 1848. he lived in San Francisco, of which place he was appointed Post master, and was afterward elected the first Mayor of the city, holding his office for two or three terms prior to the organization of the Vigilance Committee. He was afterwards Gov ernor of Kansas under the Buchanan regime. The Arrest of Judge Merrick. WASHINGTON, October 22.—Judge Merrick, to-day, sent a letter to his brother Judges of the Circuit Court, relative to his arrest, which grew out of procoedings concerning a writ ha beas corpus case. Soldiers guard him in his own house as a prisoner. It should be stated that the above named cause of arrest is the general impression, though nothing positive is known upon the subject, and it may be for some other reason. The Court to-day made an order citing General Porter to appear and show cause why he had oideFed the arrest of Judge Merrick, and thus obstructed the course of justice. Discontent Among the Rebels. WASHINGTON CITY, Oct. 23.—Relia ble information from Virginia, con firms the stories of discontent and murnwrings not only in the camp, but among all classes at the manage ment of affairs by the Southern gov ernment, which, while it subjects them to continued sacrifices and privations, brings no advantages in retura. It is believed that, but for the overaw ing presence of the Southern army, Eastern Virginia would now be ready to return to. her loyalty. Many evi dences of satisfaction and signs of welcome are displayed by the inhab itants of Louden county towards the newly arrrived troops of Gen. Banks. It is well undepstood- that the re ports of the intended interference with our blockade by European powers, are, for the most part, the inventions of cotton brokers or those who wish to engage in the same business; for it. S. B. Crittenden, Esq., said he would give one hundred dollars.— Mr. Dodge then said he would take it at one hundred and fifty dollars, and it finally went into his hands The meeting next year is to be held at Springfield, Mass. Bread Riot in Paris. The high price of bread continued, at last accounts, to claim attention at Paris and the Government had issued an assur ance that the price should not be ft.rther advanced. On the Ist of October, in the Fanbourg St. Antaine, there was an as sault made upon the bakers' shops. Of course there was a large assemblage of withered old women with their heads tied in fierce colored handkerchiefs, who were more violent than the men: and Jezebel, seeing a heavy sort of stick used by butch ers to make tough meet tender, knocked down and killed an unfortunate police man. Things were then considered bad enough for a more powerful interference than that of a handful ofsargeants de vllie, who were getting badly handled, and the troops quartered in that division of Paris were got under arms. The tumult then died out, for it will be long before a disor ganized rabble again attempts to struggle against the military. The Paris improve ments have put an extinguhisher on the head of King Mob, who, in case of a dec laration of hostilities on his part against the powers that be, would find himself out flanked on every side, and the troops handled in a very different manner than that by which Marmont lost. Paris. den alAt grtiss,MS. THE DEPARTURE OF GENERAL NEGLEY'S BRIGADE—ACCIDENT.—The brigade com manded by Gen. Negley, consisting of Col. Sirwell's. Col, Hambrigbt's, and another regiment., the name of whose Colonel has slipped our memory, was taken on board five or six• steamboats, at Pittsburgh, on Friday last, and started to Louisville, Ky. During the embarkation, a horse fell from the stage plank of the stea.merJ. W. Hail man. and was killed. The soldiers on the hurricane deck of the Sir William Wallace, rushed to one side of the roof to see what was the matter, and the weight was so great that the floor gave way precipitating a large number of the brave boys to the cab in and boiler decks, severely wounding several of them. However all were able to be taken with the expedition ex cept three—and these under the care of their friends and physicians, are likely to recover UNCLE SAM FIRST.-A farmer in Wis consin had a son who joined the Eighth Regiment of that State withouthis father's consent. Several letters were written by the father to the son while the regiment were in quarters at Camp Randall. for the purpose of persuading him to return.— At last he wrote him that he must come ; that be had a large amount of threshing to do; that he could not afford to hire help if it were to be had, which was hardly pos sible, owing to the number of enlistments: and that he must return home and help him, even if he enlisted again afterward. The young man replied: "Dear Father—l can't go home at present. I should be very glad to help you, but Uncle Sam has got a mighty sight bigger job of threshing on hand than you have, and I'm bound to see him out of the woods first." WHO IS Cot. ASHBY ?—The Col. Ashby reported killed in the late engagement with Col. Geary, at Boliver, Va., is Col. Turner Ashby, of Fauquier not Dick Ashby, as is supposed by some—and is re puted to be the best cavalry officer in the rebel service. It is evident that their press ed troops bad no heart in the battle, and only fought under compulsion of' Ashby's cavalry. Captain Dick Ashby, doubtless one of the same family, was severely wounded at Romney at the time of the gal lant charge made by the Indiana Zouaves, and a Richmond dispatch to New Orleans of July 8, 1861, gives an account of his death from lockjaw arising from the ef fects of a serious wound caused by a bay onet thrust. A PRINCE LIMITED. --. The Prince of Wales is limited in his choice of a wife to six ladies, unless he should decide upon selecting one much older than himself.— They are: I. Princess Alexandria, daught er of Prince Albert of Prdssia, born Feb ruary 1, 1842; 2. Princess Anne of Hesse Dramstadt, niece of the Grand Duke of Hesse of the Empress and of Russia, born May 25, 1843 ; 3. Princess Augusta of Holstein Glucksburg, born February 27, 1844: 4. Princess Alexandria, daughter of Prince Christian of Denmark, born De cember 1, 1844 ; 5. Princess Mary of Saxe Altenburg, born June 28, 1845; Prin cess Catharine of Oldenburg sister of the Grand Duchess Nicholas of Rossis, born September 21, 1846. lOWA prominent judge of the case— wrote in Blackwood that "no strong-bodi ed, strong minded, strong-hearted man reaches his prime until he is turned of fort/ ; sad her keep cm 4iii_in! ilifiztfijiw ing.probably at seventy a *will family' by a imiectail 'it a t . 44 , ...." ..,,, NEW SERIES.--VOL. 3, NO. 21. ( HIGn PRlCES.—Edibles and article of chothing are getting up to a big figure is the way of prices, in New Orleans. French . cassimere pantaloons are sold for $1.8;, about double their prices in New York, and other articles of wear in proportion.— Fresh beef is from forty. to fifty cents per pound ; beef stakes fifty cents, Nod tough at that. Flour is $lO per barrel. Sweet potatoes, however, are cheap enough, be ing obtainable in any quantity at five cents per. bushel. A LARGE HOLE.—A. Kentucky letter in a St. Louis paper has this significant passage "My opinion is that a large hole will be bored through Tennessee and Arkansas before the Ist of December. Our South ern friends will feel like going home soon, and our troops intend to ascort them hack to their plantations and remain with them until all disputes between them are settled." SiiirA young man who applied at a re cruiting station in one of the farwestern States, for enlistment, was asked "if he could sleep on the point of a bayonet," when he promptly replied by saying, "he could try it, as he had often slept on a pint of whiskey, and the kind they used in Lis bon would kill farther than any shooting iron he ever saw." Se-Arkansas has about thirteen regi ments of twelve months men in the rebel service. All the pay troops has received has been in Arkansas war bonds and a good deal of murmuring is heard among the soldiers owing to the worthlessness of this currency, some writing home that they could not even purchase a chicken with a hat full of bonds. ACCIDENT TO 4i `SOLDIER.—We are pained to learn that Mr. J. P. Crawford of Car miehaeltown, Greene County, a member of General Harper's Ringgold Cavalry, has been compelled to return home, having been severely kicked in the face by a vi cious horse. Mr. Crawford is an excellent young man, and would no doubt have risen to prominence had he continued in the ser vice. AliirA despatch from Brigham Young to the President of the Pacific Telegraph Company, announces the completion of the overland to Great Salt Lake City, and the opening of telegraphic communication with the chief city of Utah Territory. InarA single firm in Philadelphia em ploys two thousand one hundred and fif ty hands in the manufacture of shirts and drawers for the army. Six mills are re quired to furnish the necessary supply of flannel. THE GRAND ARMY OF THE POTOMAC.-•-- The army at and near Washington, now under General McClellan's exclusive com mand, is said by George Wilkes, of the Spirit of the Tinte.r, to number 240,000 men. ftif-It is said in Louisville, Kentucky, that Colonel J. H. Harney, a strong Union man, will he chosen to the seat of J. C. Breckinridge in the U. S. Senate, and that J. J. Crittenden will succeed Lazaruf W. Powell. SW - Alex. R. Boteler, of the Harper's Ferry District, announces himself a candi date for the rebel Congress, and against tbe reconstruction of the Union under any cir cumstances. The national debt of Sweden is opity about 511,000,000 and by means of a sink ing fund will he extinguished in thirty-eight General Wool has %sued an order giving every male contraband employed in the department $8 per month, and every female $4 per month. see' -The whole number of graduates from West Point Military Academy, from 1802 to 1860, is less than 2,000. lIWIt is estimated that the fund raised in the South for the wife of the murderer of Ellsworth amounts to one hundred thou_ sand dollars. It is estimated that about $30,000,- 000 of the National Loan has been taken directly by the people. ,Twenty-three Sisters of Charity left Chicago on Wednesday to act as nurses in Missouri. fl The students of Amherst College are almost daily leaving and enlisting for the war Over twelve thousand Confederate 3oldiere are in the hospitals at Richmond. afir-The Engliah cotton mills are redu cing their running time. larThere are 911 sick in the hospitals about Washington. John Newton widsell remarks "Many have puzzled thernielves about the origin of evil. I observe there is evil. fag' that there is a loay to escape it, and wi‘it this I begin and end. sfirlt, is the eroeis that Sae we of the love of Jesus ; for it chows dews for theme that hated and killed lhiC awe of mirth.** morommo., *gm at elm will serve Ele4 I OmA ef-WedMIL *1 46 )115 0. 11 4 41 0i 4 1 0 110 0 46 t. to the eau WeRnr4114111.1.110011tr•