Columbia Democrat and Bloomsburg general advertiser. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1850-1866, January 28, 1865, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    COLUM
r:
LEVI L TATE, EDITOR.
VOL." 18. NO. 48.
The I.(lii2h
CntUc
Powder
I
S warranted to
In the most power I
fill nccnt for the Mom. '
nrli ntnl Wnnil of Cattle, '
KwIiiri ft Phccp, In pro- j
mrtlim llc'llrii.clotin.
I n 3 thu system ninl Iran ,
rfcr'.wi tliu purilli'il n u .
itnal tlnlil In flcli. fat, !
milk, butter nml strength
mill i-l"Mlihiiij hciillLi
ami vijnr.
. lU'YOVrt IIDRPP. & I
MUIX rOWDCK l llm
only mcilicliie legally ,
ji.itentfii in r rani-e. inir
ninl, Mvlt.i-rlnuil unit
llollaiiil, anil iluly ml
inltti'il liy tlii'it Courts,
linnnreit Ith li r I..' Mini. .
i-LENTOWfl
.ills, nml hivi'iiliMl liy Mr. Iliuoy, Professor of the lin-or-riiil
Colli )!!! Inr , sricnl I nr- at I'.iris, ami imw mail-jilui-turoil
by V. It. II llt.vmi. Ilr ( '.. ami A, Allen
itnu'ii. I.ehish County, l'uiinylv;inl'i.
Allillsean'B of llm f tniintli, llliioil, LimiM mill Il.nv
rls, speeitlly nml lett.ilnly nireil. lli'Mthy sloik will
'In' hroucht Inio the very blithest t:ti nf perficlinn.
nml one or two lalil'iiiintiil a wei Is. Is "f Brent value
tnliaril working horses, Im-eiling i-tn U mnl mils, nml
mi veil th minimis lit viili.njilii hordes from rniitngious
ilHciife. n weiliu tin rn-v.inl niii Hi" army.
T 14 1! I.UnlKII U'ult.U COXl'I'.tTI'iXri
riroctmillv nveiinnie nil tin1 i,b-tiirle. which usually
.pri'vi-iit thu enpt'lllni! of worm lire plensimt M Inkr,
nml iiNu mii nl' the niiisl nnn'i'iiMn puri'iitlvi-s fur
-chihlri'ii. Sn rmili.lcnl i the liueiitiir of lli surci-M
nl Ilia lali'inmi" atiiilicn, III the lutliolotkul lumpo-i
-thin nl'thls pri-p.ii,itinii,that in1 furulshi'i. ewrv yi,i'l
'iiiti'il pliylil.iu, llh it urllti'ii presutptiin,,is a new
f rn ill in iieri'l uli'illr.l.
mi: L'.Niv. noM ii. ii -i . via: and ant ux.
TIlltUINVI'lll.
1. a pwiler fur the Mire exteriiiiniition of all Vermin,
will never i liaii'je ulth iil'i! aii'l iliumle, nml mull
preferalile In the olil I'lM'fplinnni-I'.-ute, ulilili Intnl.
rli ill il .Vnrt time, miikiue I' Wn.-lhloi.:. I'ur illrul-
'tiling anil p.irtii.uhira n-i the .111. ill lull, in lhh'ie I
'1 tine huiiilreil ami lliirl)M leu pri'iiiiuius have
iiren an ai,le,l In ilieite i elL'ltr.tteil pr' pur-iti'iiii", up t j
m inner - '. irni.
Unvii.A I!iihi. are the wholesale Agrtit- In I'liiPa.
I'ur ,il' Ii v nit re.neiiitlil,. lime anil ruiintry htnre.1
N'nvi'iiih.T I'l. I"iil - l-.'m. I
CATAWBA H.CaNDVj
i'
si'ickmm; ( vnunv wives.
T.mi.iWn U i.ilitv .ni-l I It aper hh t'nre Ihaii tin llrnn
.!' M 11,1 VV,i H.-r- 1,1 III' 111,1 t',lll,l
J-'ur WiiiniiH 'r (Iiiaiil..int, I huh r.i Inf an inn. ItuiM't
thiiiiplainl I'raiiip, I'i'lii. ninl lll.ir ieii,l.i
I i i:re Cure ii gti.ir.'inlii'il, nr in. ey refiiini,,,,
111 hllpp'TI nl" 111'.' aVile, ,.t.itl:ii'tiU, are p.esenletl
111.. I Villi! ,11,'MII Ilr. JlH. II. I'llllKHi, (lieinl-t Nell
urk Ilr Ilir.iiu ri, t'lieinii -il h4i,,t'ir. uliu,.
Ilr. J.niie II .Si, IimI'. t.'lieini-t It" l.in ; I ),, l ..r N I'.
J'tie k. I'll- him :il I n 'pei Inr, l irilevill' Oliln; l'r f. ('
V lai ki mi, I'lieiiiKI. tt'i-tnii ; Ilr. I'll i I'ph.iui liep.
ar-l. I h irle.imi. .-. f ,,ni,l i. V Z. i.laney, jtinl (i. A.
flai in- r . i ''Mi'iilniia ' 'le'ii,!-!' t'liti.iti. jih iff ivipiiii
Jim .iii.i 1 1 . .,1 tlie I'af in li.i lira it. ly, .nnl ...nuuiii ml II
I ii llw III 'ii 'It i ih. tnr wiet.'i III ll in
J-ozvs 'I' M-mtiwluisrlls !(Uf jh
Mir Jin. U'.")' ATi-i
T'hen I'l npl'Mle.l tlll.ll'U'l! I'll till 111! 'II it lel'l III! I'll
r nir ii .ii in-ill ii in e t r ''p 'i I it i a pur, ipii.
,it i, in li-i inr 'Mi- 'nl lihull mv 'dt'i thl' llranity ilf
iliior an I a..iiii'i M vv holly unlike ficil, hi L'raiii nil.
Ii imIit p.irluke. ni'lioth the Lriiit mnl i.ll of zr.tlie'
0 tth nil- il priKliir ' i.ll -.v ur ti Ijpi i l l
Tin i-iiln-iiiMth I tin,- 1'iaiiil) ( r I'ui'ii.ii' 1 1 r . 1 1 1 1
ill 1 1 tin a" .iv ,v nil th, iMaiiiif.ii lure uf lttllllii'i iilll
r jhl l'U'1' r thiN li luie li'ilh at llniii.' .mil nhni nl.
I.. -pn ifntly. . II Crt. M. IL
A" 1).T III ?l lie M.l'' . Hi llMjIotllll St.
' ( s ill'; i" 18lil.
1 h.ne i 17. il I, I.VuVS' I'U'.i: l'l'AVI:
1 II UV " "Mil nlr.iue In IU i uiiipii-itiiiii ami
rhnr.iitir. Ii ma lln' mil" n I'm prml il In p.i-t
)ear'. V .iiiii'l. i.ik' ii Iriuii len iuki. all nlo.4 the
i-aru re'iili ' ith n ? ir,l In puriH ; ,i tlmlitlv mi re i.
i-tl aulollllt - I III prllll lie III! M .'.111 II t II II IT ! pellll).
I.li! ilel.Tiiun il hv inmp. ill-oil iih lurui. r i.,niiple
'I'll., null iik o an.ily-M lmrt lh.it tl.N llr.imly
' prn.lM I 111 111,' I Ml" piorei' .1- ft ol 111 - llll
pniteil Ui.iioiy. i:"p'ii.l'ully. A.A.HAMiS
.l,tl'' A,IH r. Hi H"le.'toil St.
M.llll lilifiiire.l vulv hv ll ll J MM" A. I'D.
,1 ii linn, all Uiih-r- hhoiilil h" uililn ril )
II put. Ml l.therl) St.. .iw York.
SllVelllier "l. IMil. Hill.
LADIES FANCY Fl!B J
A I'
JOHN FAllKUtA.S
4Jl.II tSTAIlUS
FUR .MAMJl'AOTOUY,
No. 718 Arch St., nliovu 7ii 1
I II 1 I. A I) K I. r II I A
I have ll.ilVJl' .-tun' .! my n ll I m- j
"1'iTu
if
uf ii Hire, nne uf Uu' ' A Mills 1' ' ,
i ,'.'.'.' v.. ,i
,1K1, .,.! l.lll
Fancy Furs,
1tM'.r:,:.!ui7e,,!u.ni,M..y nen,ls,.r.'uui,try:,,,d
''''jUUN'liiKiUV,
7l8AUC1IStwtS?ifeulSl.A!e,
n-i,ai I'.ir r. nor i-unutitiuii ilh any
o'lic't Amu' i" rii.la'l'.l'lil'l
Hep. HI, Iclil.-m.
t K. M1IVI H
J. .'. b Kit,
New Drug Storl,
WIIULK8ALK AND HUT AIL
!a;;;r:!nM'.V;.;ie.:i..ni
Jii.treieivenuliillsuppy.ir
SSiMis, anliassch, Paints
Qiiitnp'i, Arc,
4Vl.iih Will he -"Id "il lliodi l""' fl" r'":,rt.V I'y-,, ,
" Also, NOTIONS gu.itr.illy. "f 1
rhysidaiH prefi rlplU'i's ratafully cuiiipi.unded. at
KV'c:nf;!nrio.t .
Wir A K" Hi" puUlic eu-um is respe.tfully s-'t'i"''1-
UVKlt &. MOVKlt.
Irlniinislmrg. Apn1 Ir,,i:'-
RE-OPENED.
fnilW T. VVI l.l.M HOTEL
-UAiN J-IJ. uuiJj-L..
CIIAltLES N. SAVAGE,
T ATI', n( 'V'ir.ifuuiyn';:!
li yZ .W
Mrei'H, in U.in.v.lli'. l'.i.. "j"1
opelli'
I ,1 fur I"" "''" " , " , , , li hs .bun.
-iml husiuej part id 111'' , ' '"' ",, .,,,,1, atrnnace, he
To ul I "In' in") " "! "nr iniije their cumfr.rt.
Hart iu make hu lluu.e 'l'",.',,; ' 'V.ll
.JJuX" '"' r", rt'JJ 1,1
veiy arrival of ihe Trains. 1":.'"' .' -
I. yumi,'. mnmbus r lro i "
House, in ami Irnm both It.iU I lo'u
arrival of ilw Trj!1"Ji; . 1 - -
fiJOYSTERS !
. ... .'....j frmn lint llllOVt! llll'li-
W3
ffA-rJM AMF. ttBlN3HNfi on" by fi"1"11'11'' to Mr. Lincoln, is
Khimh AD 3n3nU)tIlcreforoau absurdity which it. any sane
SALOON. J comll)unity ought to conMgu a man to the
Tt'SSuiIf TlX ' Lunatic Asylum.
ijntfcrrtt I So for a tho southern States ara con-
FRESH OYSTERS, I corncl, ,hey liavo placed themselves upon
iii.i.cr.inrtesiini.i.orhytho (JAN w r,JX nr:..,:t)ies which Mr. hincolu has dis-
ers
XXr'tiX
NX U'" J ' B. ST'JUNEH.
;,r : ce''iVe HA Wy
V.tt
sQVlii
ANJ)
The Distant Land.
Where itnt lliou He, O land uf peace I
Aernso vhat fnntnliij; ocean's .well (
Jly heart, with slfjlis tint never cc.isc,
Yi-ann in thy palarc hall tg ilwcll,
1 intiunt nee thy uhlniug utranj,
Hut jet, Ofnir.niil tllataiit laml,
aumctiuicf. Mien inornlnfii ItU light
l llainiiig in the cnnii'st (ky,
t a), lleupnlh that rose anil uhilu
The hl.sscil renlimi mint nucly lloj
Hut Hiiiriilng's hrutv hy iinun lnf.iuueil.
Ami th.iu nrt (till the ilimnt latnl.
Anil n't. uheii minsefs liumlshoj suM
Tails Hnrni upon the nuter's lireast,
I jy. Uejiiinl that glurlmii ful.l
.Mint rjlcaui the M,!ii,ls f the Meat !
Hut larMeti out. n flluu h.iU,
Anil thou art still tliu distant lanj.
And '.I'en I ilrram a hlissful ilrcaui
'J'hat I ha vu gained thy inimpill boni rsl
And In! lihVi, surroivs only eeeiu
Winds that u 11 mi i .' i it bout its lluwers
I nnkc, hut ila.'p no anjcl hand,
And Hum an still the distant l.iud.
I n.itih. I Inn;, I f.ilut for thee t '
L'uini Hi it not open wide the iloijr,
That 1 may enter in ami he
l'.irt ol ih) pi.ico fiirei eriuoii! I
O send lh.it sletp, mi sueut, n grand,
And Ihun .halt bo ho distant land I
mmk DEMOCRAT.
I EDITI1D BV LI'.VI I.. TATE. rEOFRIETOR
BLOOMSBURG :
Saturday Morning-, Jan. 20, 1865.
Which is in the Union, the North
or the bouth.-'
Wf Ii nr n great deal about "j-'rcscrV'
ing lln; Union,'' ubiiut never givma up un
til '"the South roincs back into the Uuion, '
i to., tic, iiiuil wf know not which to pity
nio.-t. tin; awe ho bray this folly or the
peopi'.e
who submit to ih.i infliction of the
lupidity. Kvery reader of American his-
lory, kuows that the uuiok of colonies was
! . i i.. ..i i.. .i i .i
ikm umuem auuu. im tUU .ii.r,,.., uaugur
...at ...rfuu'tau n ... U..UU ...
united i'xci turns ol nil nl ilium to beat u;iok
ihe 'li.iiiyhiy reti'ii-inni of 'uorga J1I,
and his miui.-teis, and niter tin ir inde
pendence was olitainril, it wui believed by
many of the uio.-t di voted fruuids of free
dom, th.it it would ltipiiiu their vurue.H
nml united cxiMtiotif to maiiitain it against
the fot's of republican inst ttitions. This
eoii.-idoratioii.togi tlit'r iili iinpuXani rea
.on oonmetid nith tho internal welfare of
the Suites, induce caeli oue to give its
emisrnt to iilu' Ur oi the new Union as
embraced in our prrfcni Uonstilution.
Now, wha" uru the term of tho Union?
Why, it i-i too clear fo'r doubt that, upon
the points low in di.-puto, they were as
follows ; The n';ro race was nor admit-
rd to tliu stai ofeiti.i'iiship, anil its con
dition in each Smd wii left to bo detcr
ii ined a the people of each Stale should
ru fit. TJie Fedeial Uovcrniiiunt had no
right to interfere with it in any way what
ovci, except to fee that fugitive negroes
were returned to their mutci. This was
the Union the Coimtiiution, the (iiwrii-
( meiil for.ncd by our forefathers The l'd
' oral Government had uo ucciioion to use
J its 'iLflucuce or power either for or against
, the relation that ljj.o States prescribed for
the negro. It was its duty to treat it just
as it did every other act ol t tic btatos which
thoy had tho right to do, and to rcspoct it ;
as ?uch.
liut it ii notorious tht t tho Abolition
party were never in favor of preserving
that Uuion. They hated it with a perfect
hatred. They declared they would over
throw it, if they could, that it was "a cov
enant with death ami a league with hell."
There was no objurgation too sevcro with
which to condemn it, no cuifcs deep
enough to consign it to eternal perdition.
Dutuosoincr do they get power than
they chango tho Union by construction,
' aud declare thas it includes all men, and
j(bo lrei)Idont olcotl.d by a portion 0f ,h0
' gutcs to rule all ol them, with a sweep of
i his pen, and under the lalr-o aud fradulent
! Plan of "a war measure," assumes to
ohango the laws of the btates upon mat
ters with which the Federal Government
has uo more right to intorfero that it has
with the internal affairs ol Lranoo or
Ki.i.liiml. It is evident, thereforo, that if
. ..
tbero "o any Stales m the union it is not
! (bosc ovcr w,jcu Mr. Lincoln lias been
elected to preside. To talk about the
'southern Slates "coming back to tho Un-
,u,nfm.n ;n roalitv
oaried, and ibrefo.c, in reality, are tho
dcrcud0Faof Union or government
BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER.
"TO HOLD AND TKIM THE TOItOII OF TltUTII AND WAVE IT O'Ell THE DARKENED EARTH." TERMS '. $2 50 IN ADVANCE.
BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PENN'A,, SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, ISG5. VOLUME 28
wliioli our fathers fi timed . They arc,
therefore, substantially in the Union anil
the North out of it ! Rut, strango to any, ' The clerical mountebanks who during
thoy do not even seem to sco or conipro- the lalo political slrnggla disgraced tho
hend this fact, and somo of tho papers ne pulpit and brorghl great injury to the
tually talk of going back to colonial vas- Church, and corruption into politics, by
salago rather than consent to accept that the libels and fanaticism they belched forth
which they have already got Having ; in lieu of holy ministrations, aro now on
tho old Union, with all its tacrcd princi-' dcavoring to excito publio pity and com
plos, in their keeping, why do they not misseration by declaring that ttey h.ivn
invite every mau, no matter whero ho is, ' been abussd and that tho Democratic party
iMortu or ioutli,to aid them in restoring'
that tjuioai Did not their oivn. fathers
: make it, and did wo not all livo under if
I in peace and prosperity for nearly eighty
years ? We should havo been living un
; der it 6till,i( Mr. Lincoln and his party had
i not deitroyed it, aud were not now doing
j all they cau to prevent its being restored.
If the sontheru St iles will even now in
vito the co-operation of every patriotic in
dividual and every patriotio State to join
, them in an effort to resioro tho old Union
'1 whito men on State Rights principles,
dopend upon it 51r. Lincoln and his party
would bo swept away as chaff before tho
wind, and what is more, they would again
reveal themselves in their true colors as
vile diiiuuiouists and traitors. Wo should
then be enabled to tear array from them
the cloak of hypocrisy with which they
now conceal their deformity. Tho pet
phrases of "national lifo," ''the Uuion
must be prescivcd," &c, with which they
now appeal to the iuotinct of nationality,
weuld bo stripped from them, and they
would tand cxpnsod lo mankind as the
bitter encmio of the very government of
which 4bcy profces to be special compan
ions. The Soath never had a grander op
portunity to win immortality than now.
In the Union hcrsclf,!hc has only to offer
10 rcstorc h ovfcr a11 tl,c Statcs.and Abra.
I,am ljlucoln ,n aWa w"l bo as pow
s as a child.iVF. Duy.Bonk.
Report of the Surveyor General
Surveyor General Uarr'a annual Heport,
ft mxomam in t10
iusiiiess and receipts of tho tiand Offift
over previous years The number of Pa
tents paid for during tho year is 2,178,
being about the number paid for during
the preceding tcu years. Tho receipt:
were, in round numbers, 802, 000, or about
the same as tue receipts liom tuo same
Bourco for the whulc scv.cn years, begin
uing Dec, 1 ,1850, and ending Nov. 30,
1803.
The Surveyor General expresses the
opinion that, by judicious legUlation, the
sum of two or three million dollars, which
is U't'unated to be still duo on unpatented
landr., might ho brought ii.to the Slate
Treasury in tho next tcu yoars, without
inflicting any injury or distress upon a
sinclc debtor. Tho plan by which he
proposes to effect this desirable purpose
is to tas unpatented lands slightly higher
than thoso that arc patented, aud thus
make it tho interest of all holders of uu
patented lands to extinguish tho claims of
the Commonwealth upon theta.
Thero is certainly uo good reason why
the largo amount still duo the State on
account of Lands should not be collected,
aud thero aro many and very obvious
reasons why it should be brought into tho
Treasury within a reasonable poriod from
this date. To collect it summarily would
bc a hard.-hip to many of the debtors ;
and to avoid this, the Surveyor General hu
mauoly suggests a plan by which it may
bo got in gradually.
From siatistics furnished in lho Rcpoit,
it apprarshat iu the year previous to Mr.
Barr'u oleetion as Survoyor' General, tho
whole receipts of tho Lend Offico did uot
defray much moro than half of its expenses
But the past year has yielded tho Trea
sury an income from lands of at loart
eighty thousand dollars over and above all
expenses. This is tho most gratifying
exhibit that any Surveyor General 1ms
beeu enabled to mako for many years.
.CdT On Saturday tho stoamcr Hobccoa
Ml. .,!,- tin'it-iiiff nr Imp maetlinnrl U'Mtft
U,JUU & -
flag with a dove holding an olivo branch,
auG the words ''Relief for tho citizens of
Savannah," departed from Now York lor !
Savannah with a peaco offering of 1 ,000
, ,,. ,, T ,. , .,
barrels flour, 500 bbls. Indian meal, 000
bblfl. vegetables, 25,000 lbs. salted and
smoked meats, 25,000 lbs fmh beat anil jumpers known to bo such by U10 sub
mutton, 100 saoks salt, 25 bbls. molasses, stituto brokers, and often by tho officers
...1. !..i,i-o ..: c rin tm whose businets it is to stopsueh nutraito-
Uay tue vamei wecswr saucu .or tnu
sdme port witn a largo amount 01 ncocssa-
vie", for tho suffering pooplo of that placo
" , 'j
8-A Coventry doctor announces that
ho has changed his residonco to tho neigh-
borhood of tho churoy-Jard,whioli ho hopes
may prove a conVonionoo to bis numerous
patients,
their
lias tnken a stand against tho Church.
In regard lo tho first charge, wo have
only to say that it is void of truthxecpt
ing so far as that the public contempt aud
abhorranco of their fanaticism and liypoc
rioy was pretty freely expressed, and their
evil effects wcro counterbalanced as far as
practicable.
Iu rcg.ird to tho second charge, we pro.
nouncc it wholly and witkedly false. Tho
Democratic paity is now and always has
been the strong protector of religion, of
whatever creed or iu whatever form pro
fessed or practiced. It is tho high and rev
erential regard in which tho Democratic
party ever liom anu now Holds tlie cause
ol pure and undefilcd religion that induc
ed its members to denounco the inGdol hy
pocrils who under the garb of preachers
undertook to convert tho pulpits of the
churches into political rostrums and from
them to flood tho country with doctrines
of hatred, malevolence, violcuce,b!ood,mur-
der, plunder, thieving, oppression, tyran
ny, fanaticism and infidelity. It was to
save ihe church from pollution that tho
Democratic party took the stand it did ;
and that result, under tho beneficence of
God, it will yet accomplish to tho extent
that nothing but His word, His law and
nothing but liis wora, llts law ami
His mandates will issue from what ought
to be a sacred shrine a shrino that pal
pably should be dovoted to sacred things,
and that is as palpably corrupted and do
based when any other arc introduced into
it.
o. !. t i t- '
uwu,u' u"u '""t,
ocen aware o. tnc oascness anu rascality
It'll, nf J,A
v.. .......j oul,..
rea,o,.b iwiauuon a nacrcu cause .or a
i Ji rnt iii ... i i
worm.y one. uey wen Know anu urcau
the loose morality that these false guides
almost invariably infuso into politics.-
u.io tuey scoru ineir naso rracttccs, uo-
test tueir c.rrcpuon, anu .car ineir evu
influences, tho honest statesman and pol-
itioiau is forced to warn tho public against
.uu ii, iiubiiui,ai buu.ui iuu Ul i ,eiii"UU l,liu
'
eomesoetoreiucpoimca.puoiicinincgarD
of a minister of the Saviour of men, with a
serpent concealed under his cloak. To
denounce aud successfully oppose corrup
tion is necessary to denounce those who
practice it.
In tho two preceding paragraphs tho
political preacher and the public will find
the reasons why Democrats oppose politi-
cal gasconade from the pulpit and the men
who practice it. lf they choose to inquire
further they will also find that tho Dem-
ooratio party believe that the faithful ex-
pounding of tho Scriptures is a field amply
comprehansive to ooupy tho wholo of tho
mou expansive human intellect. Snoh
being the fact as to the great, it is impos
sible that the mere pigmies who by human
graoo tuceeed to the miuiutry should bo
profitablo in either when thoy undertake
'o instruct peoplo iu both sacred and polit-
'cal duties, Tho mind that can scatcely
comprehend cither must become lost when
it foolishly undertakes to grap both, and
are thereforo mere vehicles of blunder, er
ror and false teaching in both.
Let no mau bo deceived by the subtlo
pleading of tho false tcaohers who in tho
j livery of religion havo bocorao the mere
pedlars of fanaticism, and falsehood, and
tho cngcudcicrs of etiife and all wicked
ness. Viinlon Democrat,
ESy Bijtty Birchwood thinks it pro
voking for a woman who has been work
ing all dny mending her husband's old
coat to find a lovo letter in the pocket.
There is not a woman on earth but would
find tho loiter before she began to mend
tho coal and tllcn it would not lis mend
I o,1 of nil
" "' .....
-'Wo Bpeak of what wo know when wo
ay that moro men, ou tho Jamos, desert
, " 77.' ruuB13 uos. "
from tho rebel side to ours. Day after
doy wo aro Blling our quota wi.h'co.m.l
rols, thieves, jail-birds, hang dog bounty
thc?o rogues aro sent to tho front.
Hurt-
jori jmif (Kcpubliccm,)
....... - .
fiksy Says tho Now York Sun (loyal :V
ttnoM oompetolU Inrn ar0 Beldom
foum in ,bo pul)io torvjCOl am, jt la!J aj
ipost como to bo a roproach to hold an
offico under tho Govcrnmout."
I There's light for you, hoddy
Political Preachers and
Falsehoods.
Romance in Real LifeMixed up
Affair.
Edwin C. Chase, a man about forty
four years of ago, married an English
woman several )cars ago, in Nccdham,
Mass., whero thoy lived for a titno in mod
erate circumstances, llomoving to Penn
sylvania, ho was one of the fortunate seek
ers after oil, and amassed quite a fortune,
perhaps seventy or eighty thousand
dollars.
Last July, Mrs. Chase, who is describ"
ru as a lair looliing woman, wearing curls'
went to Europe to visit her friends thero,
taking a considerable eutn of money with
her.
During her absence, it appears, her hus
band managed to procure a divorce thro'
tho Indiana courts, for tho reason, as he
says, that sho was a vixini, and ho could
not livo with her, and that sho went to
England against his wishes. About two
ago, Mrs. Chase returned from her visit'
and proceeded lo Mccdham, Mass., her
former home, where sho lsarned that her
husband was writing soft letters aud mail
ing agreeable visits to a young lady, not
"sweet eighteen," who lived in Fitz Wil
iams, New Hampshire, This was a stun
ner, because, as sho says, Mr. Chaso had
written her frequently, during her absence,
each timo giving tho flow of his ink a re
markably affectionate turn. Sho at once
started to itiveBtigste the mattor, and was,
a day or to after, in Keenc, Now Hamp
shire, bound for Fitz Williams.
s ''It so happened," as the novelists say,
' that at tho Eagle Hotel, in Keeno, where
she stopped, sho was surprised, the morn-
inrf nff.pr lint- nrrirnl. In lnnrn Mint lu-r
,)usband wfts -n tho samQ hot. and lh(jre
. nn ,- . . . . . mnT
... ........ ...j., -."b
ricd on the day before to tho fair maiden
aforesaid. Sho kept her own counsel,
aud went to procure more, which sho did
in tho shape of two lawyers whospecdily
camo to Kccnc from Boston, bringing
nniinln nf tilirsiainn.q nnnnnetfid with the
r-j
Insano Asylum at South Boston.
0on8ultation wag rua, hioh resulted
-n Mr3i ijnaS0'S g0iD to tho room ot aer
, fa , that d ; Qut of
r
bl;tl luuoh lo th0 surprise of Mrs. Chase
(J Len lho bw and doctorg worfl
-n anJ lhcr0 ww Bnch oonfusion,
A couH of SQme k5nd WM specdiljr C0Q
vcncd lf it wa9 not already in session,
Rud in ft - t W3y Mr GLag0 wa3
brou ht bcforo it iu tUo character of an
. tt: .: r ,.A l. .
insane man. Jits wife sworo no was
in
fo r
Rnnp ; thQ lloclor3 know bo was : and
so being, ho was taken to tho South Bos
ton Retreat of which ho remains an in
mate. That he has never manifested any
signs of insantity ; has always boen a
good business man, and that ho had over
forty thousand dollars in Kccno with him,
his frieuds claim to know,
I'ho inhabitants of Keeno aro very much
excited over tho matter ; they do not un-
derstand it, and hence gossip is rifo. Tho
poor cirl from Fritz Williams has been
sent homo to ponder. Mrs. Chaso is still
at large," onjoyiDg tho punishmont she
' has inflioted. Hartford CouratU, Deo -
15th 1804.
'
. , ,
a. ux.
On Saturday afternoon last a man
1.t ill n .. ......
namcu nuson 1. vanasuian, was mur -
ilereti at ucntrevnio, tms county, uuuer
tlie loiiowing circumsianccs : v . waa a
soldier, and having been at home for somo
time, was regarded as a deserter. On
iiifcviuwM 'i"""""
named Uuport, met V. at a tavern in ten-
Ml 1 T-i 1 t.! 1
tcrviiio.ami uctcrmineato arre mm am.
Obtain mo cou, wutcu is pnm tor uci.vgr-
1 1 it f TlT- XT
ing a uesenor to tuo rrorosi suar.uai, ,
" """"S HWUJU "1U " '
iuw.i u ui iu ruiaii wai-u,., uuu -,.,
pacing nun stoppcu iu.r U0u. uuu guv
T u.u Ul l"ulu "a,,iUU ulJ lu ' ;, u"u
smutumiu, iuyp...u0.. ...
who waa a strong nun, pushed Uuport
uiuu uuu wbiuuu uu .u-r uuu.u.
ru ....peri .u u.uw u wvuivt-r, uuu
lM,u""",7 ' "U,1U',1U uu"
"u,r. . "1 ' ' .! -r' ' .
up ins nanus anu sam, "iJon t biioot again,
1 uu. u.ug. r uu nujuii,s ti.uu oisrriuu
him into his house, whero ho died in a
few minutes, surrounded by his wife and
three littlo children.
Such, wo believe, is a history of this
most heartless, cowardly, and dcvclUh
murder. For tho sake of obtaining 30,
U1U lll'U.b O HU1U lUUUCLU tU OUt'Ut I1U1VU I
a human bcing in the prcsonco of his wife
and babes. It was not necessary, how
over, to shoot V. The threo brothers could
havo arrested him with all caso, but it is
believed tliat they wanted to kill him, and
they did kill him. Wo hopo our Uw
offices will sco tu it that tho Itupcrt's are
nrroctnfl ( find nlirl tin matin V
Carlistt Volunteer,
Love of Country and of Home.
DV MUTIOOMKIir,
The be i n lanJ.uf every land the prlif.
ndoved by Heaven nVr all the world bjldei
Where brighter mum illupcnto icteRcr light,
And milder iiiooub linparadbo tho night
Aland of beauty, virtue, alor, truth,
Time turned njo, and lovc-eiaUcd youth.
The wandering marintr. whoso cyo explores
The ttcalthlent jlc, Ihe in. at enchanting ihorcs,
Vlcivtnot a realm ao beautiful and fair,
N ir brcnthea the aplrit of n purer air;
In every clime, the magnet of his soul,
Touched by remembrance, trembles to that pole ;
Kor. In thla land of llcavcn'a peculiar grace,
The heritage of nature's noblest raco,
There la a rpot of earth supicincly bleat,
A dearer, aiveeter spot than all the real.
Where man, creation's tyrant, casta aside
His aunrd and scepter, pageantry and pride.
While In his softened looks benignly blend
'Jhe sire, tho son, the husband, brother, friend,
Here woman reigns i tho mother, daughter, wife,
Strews with fresh Hon era the narrow way of life;
In the clear heaven of her delightful eye,
An angel guard oflovea and graces lie;
Around her knees dnmotic duties meet.
And Qrealdo pluasurei) gambol at her fei t,
'Where shall that laud, that spot uf earth b found I'
Art thou a man, a patriot J look around ;
Oh I thou thult find, honeVr thy footsteps roam,
That land thy country, and that spot thy home,
A Sad Holiday for one Family.
A family of five eons and ono daughter
breakfahtrd together iu their father's Jiouso
on Chiistmas moruiagjin Ston 's township,
Uuio. i lie namo is Kossman, All were
happy, and anticipated a day of-pleasure.
Two of tho bojB, George and Frank, aged
respectively eight and fourteen, full of
glee, took their sled and bounded off to the
ice ou Hillcrwk, for a slide. But their
pleasure was soon cut short, and turned to
bittor grief tho hearts of tho wholo family.
Tho treacherous surfaoo gavo awayjand
tho boys went under. They clung to tho
edges of the ice and tried to save them
selves until help could come. From a
dist.mco an elder brother, J. H. Uossman,
twenty-one years old, saw theru ttruggling
in the water, and ho with others hastened
to their rescue. In his anxiety to save
the almost exhausted boys, ho rushed too
uoar tho edgo of the ioo, and went in with
them 1 In the water he struggled man
fully to keep them from drowning, and
did keep tho younger ono up for some
time; but the water wa3 deep, aud he was
uot promptly assisted by persons outside,
who fearing to approach tho opening in
tho ico,and he too sank with his brothers,
iu the heroic effort to savo them,
How to FaH Asloep.
Tho great point to bo gained in order
to secure sleep is to escapo from thought,
especially from that clinging, tenacious,
imperious thougiit, whioh in most peases of
wakefulness has possession of tho mihd. I
always effect this by tho following simple
process : ''I turn my eye balls as far to
the right or leftor upwards or downwards,
as I can without pain, and then commence
rolling them slowly, with that divergence
from a direct lino of vision, around in
their sockets, and continuo doiug so until
I fall asleep,whioh occurs generally within
, thrco minutes always within five at tho
most, lho immediate t-ffect of this pro
oeduro differs from that of any other that I
havo ever heard to procure sleep. It not
' merely diverts thought into a new ohannels
but actually suspends it, Since I became
..... . . .
aware ot tins l liavo endeavored, innumor
a(je time8j wL,o thus roj.Dg my eycS) tQ
I ttiiuk upon s particulor subicct, and oven
'
; upon t,al which beforo kept mo awake,
but j coulJ no(. Ag jong a3 lboy mQVcd
. . . ... ,f
, doubu hU lct Lim try tho experiment
Um8elf t wijh ,)0 woalJ . ,ct him
just hero and mako it. 1 veuturo to as-
b- , ,f h k -t j , f . ,
t ' 0
. t dcribed, ihe promise of
a f h, , , , f ,
D
. ; of them,whilo tho operation is iu progress
' will add very litllo to his woallh. Such
bcing it8 cffeoti ff0 cannot WOnder that it
aUould fc . lQ ft fc
. ful man at tho night. The philosophy, of
tho malter h very cimplo. A su.pcnsion
of tll0Ught is to the mind what a eUspcnsion
of travel or abur Ja , a boJy,
cujoys th(J flf rc3t; (h(j itran pon
, its faculties is removed ; it falls asleep as
natumllv as the faniirr in his ohair afte
, d , hU Mi
M.ij. Jacob Wiliiiiui was recently ar
rested iu Clearfield county by tho military
authorities aud scut to Fort Mitllin. What
he is charged with ucith. r ho nor any body
elto seems to know, lie was formerly a
j rosjdeut of lhls eouuty and iu 1601 wa.
tho Democratic caudidatofor Oouuty Com
rai'isionor. llo was a hard working, hou
est farmer, and alter removing to Clear
field county cugagud iutho lumbering bus
iness. We bclievo his patriotism tu far ex
cced that afauy Loyal Leaguer in.tho ISa
tiou. Clinton Democrat,
e2r Ohooso tho company of your supo
riors whenever you oau hava it.
Daring Thieves.
The Easton Uxpress says, on Saturday
ovening tho 24th ult,, a bold and desper
ate attempt was niado by two scoundrels
to rob Mr. Joseph Unangst, an old and
rcspcctablo farmca residing in Bethlehem
township, about seven miles from Easton.
For some reason, suspicion it appears at
onco rested on two young men,who of lato
had resided in Bctlilchoin South, and ac
cordingly one of tho party, tv man named
Michael Hurley, was arrested on Monday
morning by oonstable Transuo and brought
before Esquiro Borhck, of Bethlehem for
an investigation of the caso. Iu the
meantime a messenger had boon sent for
Mr. Unangst, who foot: made hia appear
anco at the Esquire's office, and at tho
first glanca at tho prisoner recognized him
as ono of tho men concerned in tho rob
bery Tho following statement of Mr. Un
anget gives all particulars in tho caso,much
better than wo oan portray thorn :
''On Saturday evening, at about eight
o'clock, or perhaps n little later, whilo I
and tho rost of my family wero seated in
tho room around thostovo, tho door sud
denly opened and two men cams in. Each
had a revolver or two in their hands.
One presented his toward mo, and tho
other towards my son John, and at one
demanded my money. I told him 1 had
none, which ho would not bclicvo- He
then asked mo for the koy of my dest,
mhich I gavo him, when he unlooked it
and ransacked every drawer, throwing tho
papers out, aud finding only between threo
and four dollars in silver and a few pen
nies. Thoy then demanded my safo koy,
which I gave them, and they unlocked it
also, and cxaminod it very closely without
finding any money. I told them, after
asking mo for my gold, that I always de
posited my money in the Easton Bank. '
They then also asked for my bank book,
and after looking over it threw it on lho
floor. In tho meantime my son was try
ing lo loavo tho room, when one of tho
men shot at him, the ball entering the hip,
where it still icmains. Aftor discovering
that they could not find any, this man,tho
(the prisoner,) pointed a pistol at my head
and threatened to shoot mo if I did not
give them money. I knocked tho pistol
away, when it went off, and the bullet
struck tho wall in tho rear of me. This
happened up in my room. At this time
tho candle was knookod over, and vc
wero in tho dark, and beforo thoy had
time to light it again I opened the window
and jumped out of the second story into
the garden ( a venturesome jump for a maa
of sixty-three years of ago,) and went to a
neighbor and gavo the alarm. While I
was gone thoy threatened one ol tho fe
males, my daughter, and sho gave them
her pockc-book containing about $15 in
bills, aud before assistance arrived thoy
got into a sleigh and drovc off towards
Bsthlehcm. Four shots wcro fired inmy
house, and this is the very man (pointing
againat the prisoner) who held tho pistol
at ; face, aud shot over my head."
Twenty-five Thousand Widows.
Under this apt title, tho Home Journal.
an Abolition pander, thus confesses one
feature of tho melaucholy oonditionof our
people :
'Twcnty-livo thousand widows aro re
ceiving pensions under tho laws passod
raceutly. 3o,000 widows mado by
the present war. By its bullets and bomb
shells, its cannon balls and bayonets, its
camp fevers and privations. Thiuk of it,
you whose pockets aro being filled by tho
men of tho country ! Lock at your own.
wives, your owu daughters, and then
imagino woman as delicate and fair, and
helplessly widowed, and thrown upon tho
wido world and tho tardy jmtice of Gov
ernment. Twenty-fivo thousand rcoeivc
pensions; how many thousand do not, wo
aro uot told. Ai though ho who fell on
the first day of battle did not spill pb
much blood for his country as ho who fell
ou the last. Mauy do not know whither
iheir soldier lies under Sontheru sod, or
languifhes in a Southern prisou, or who
will watch anil wait for him long alter tho
maguoliu blossoms on his grave. Twenty
five thousand widows. How mauy orph
ans? how many bethrothed maidenf,
whoso youug hopes have been nipped,
and whose Hearts aro soared and scarrod
for life? What viotory cau compensate
for so many broken kcaifts, oven for tho
fact that so many helpless womou havo
been reduced from oomfort to beggary,
for again wo say thoro aro more than
than twenty-live tuousaud widows mado
by this war, who have not received even a
miacrablo pension,"
o
DT Tho largo room iu the norh wing
ol the Patent Office is to be usod for tho
Presidential Inauguration ball. A pretty
timo tho fourth of .March will ho to hold
ouch a saturnalia, whilo tho laud is iu
numrniug for tho slain in battlo, and just
after tho draft has swept like a besom over
tho North,
Uluonisbns Nov S' I''11'