it- it r 1 1 17. n. JACCSr, Proprietor. Truth i.nd Right God and oar CouiUry. Two Dollars per Annum. VOLUME 14. BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 26, 1862. NUMBER 8. THE NORT STAR OF THE NORTH flBLIlEKD ITIBT VtDHIlTiT T O. B. JACOBS Cffiee on Slain St., 3rd Square below Sarket, TERMS: Two Dollars pur annum if paid within six months from the time of subscri bing: two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within the year. No subscription taken for a less period than six months ; no discon tinuance permitted onlil all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. 2 he lerm$ of advertising will be as follows : One square, twelve lines, three times, 1 00 Every subsequent insertion, ..... 25 One square, three months, . . . . .. ; . 3 00 Ooe yar, 8 00 Ctjoice poetrrj. " THE TOLCXTEER'S BCEI1L. BT PARK BCNJAMIX. "Tieve; one brightly beaming'star 8hines from the eastern heaven afar, To light the footsteps of the brave. Slow marching to a comrade's grave. The northern jWinds have sunk to sleep ; The sweet South breathes, as low and deep, The martial clang is heard, the tread Of those who bear the silent dead. And whose the form, all stark and cold, Thus ready for the loosened mould. And stre'ched opon so rude a bier? Thine, soldier, thine! the Volunteer. Poor Volnnteer !-the shot, the blow, Of swift disease hath laid him low ; And few his early loss deplore His battle fought, his journey o'er. , Alas! no fond wife's arms caressed, His cheek no tender mother pressed, No piiyi"g foqI was by his side, -As lonely in his tent he died. He died the Volunteer at noon ; At evening came the small platoon That soon will leave him to his rest, With sods upon his manly breast. Hark to their fire ! Lis only knell More solemn than the passing bell ; For, ah ! it tell a spirit flown, Unbhriven, to the dark unknown. . His deeds and fate shall fade away. Forgotten since bis dying day, And never on the rollol Fame Shall be inscribed his humble tame. "v. Ala! like him how many more Lie cold upon Potomac's shore ! How many preen unnoted graves Are bordered by those placid waves ! Sleep, soldier, sleep ! fmm sorrow free, And sin and tt ite 'Tis well with thee, Tis well; thongh net a single ear Laments the buried Volunteer ! Car Defence Agticst England A Requisite Biaval Force. Very few friendships will bear the test of self-interest. If this is true of individuals, it applies in a far greater degree to nations. Corporations have no souls, and nations have ro conscience. -We, in America,have flattered ourselves that a strong and endu ring friendship has been growing up and gradually cementing between the United States and Great Britain. On our pari, and undoubtedly with the great mass of the English people, this has been unaffected nd sincere. Bo! with British statesmen a deeper policy has been at work. Every member of the britih House of Peers, and a majority oi the Commons, have heredita rj estates and grow up the beira of the kingdom, in its legislative and judicial offi ces, and to which their sons succeed. They each and all, have an enduring interest, not only in the laud and property of tbe coun try, bat in its military, naval, colonial and commercial supremacy. With tfcem it is not sufficient that Great Britain should be pimply a prosperous nation. Their com merce, their naval force, their colonial ter litory, and their national power most be superior to any ether country on the globe. Playing second fiddle to any thing or any body is what John Bull never imagines he ran do. The Danish poet Ochenschlaeger, bits ofl the national character to a nicety, in a vein of pungent ridicule that is inimitable. The passage occur in a play entitled Lud lam's Hale," which was published in 1815, when the English attack on Copenhagen, and the seizure of the Danish fleet, in time of peace lettceen the two countries, was fresh in the minds of the people. "Let old national hatred go to. the devil. Yon do the Englishmen wrong. Is he proud?. Egotistical ! Nonsense! Just hu mor him a little, and you will see how good natured be is. Give him liberty on the seas to seize upon whatever he likes. Give him Ntotland and Ireland give him tbe West India Islands give him Asia and America give him Africa andlhe Pacific Islands -give him ail the little fragments that lie round about Europe Sicily and Zealand, Sardinia and Fnnen, Malta and Anholt, whatever they are called d a it, he de tires nothing more." That's the programme. Only let John Bull's nation rale everything and everybody and give bim full possession of all tbe lands countries, islands, and sea-coasts on the face of the globe that be may covet, and he desires nothing more. Stop we mistake. If any nation grows and becomes populous and powerful by the purely natural course of events, without any aggression on the lights of others, that nation must be torn to pieces by diplomatic intrigue, or pitched into and devastated by a bloody war ; sim ply, because it promises to be as strong as Great Britain. The sooner we get our eyes open to the trus nature and policy of Her Eritanic Maja sty's Government, the safer will be osr posifon. Englaud can afford to goto tvar with the greatest nation on the face of the earth, but she cannot afford to 1st tbe United States become her equal, either ia a navy, or a commercial raarioe. The first, however, is past praying for. We have a larger commercial tonnage, and a KiJer and mora varied commerce than the toasted Mistress of the Seas. In her eyes our unpardonable sin is that we have a territory larger than China, equal to all Russia, and a hundred times as great as the island region bounded by the chalky cliffs. Oar population is also equal. Our climate, soil, and productions, are at least as varied as those of Great Britain, inclu ding her forty two colonies in every part of the Globe. And our population and our territory are homegeneous, united, and have the same historic associations Of course an exception to our unity is the present rebellion. Tbe band that unites Great Britain to her colonies is extremely slight and fragile. The people of her "three kingdoms" at home are alien in blood, alien in religion, and without any bond or iducemenf to unity,except self pres ervation or iear of national bayonets. Within two hundred years England, Ireland and Scotland, have all been, devaated by domestic wars set on foot solely to consoli date and extend the power of England. During thst time two wars and two formi dable rebellions have raged in Ireland, while a British Prince of the Scottish branch of Britain's royal tree, and one entitled to the throne, actually marched with a few re giments to within thirty miles of London, frighteptng the English out of their wits, and seriously threatening Hanoverian George in his possession of the crown. English Statesman are not fools. They look at these facts, and ask themselves how long it will be at our past rate of progress, belore we shall overshaddow and eclipse them. : They are afraid of the loyalty of Ireland But America must be broken up at all hazards. If this country can be severed in twain now, Great Britain will get another lease of power, and a little time to hold her supremacy of the seas, before her 6tar cuf minates, and then sinks to rise no more. We have three arms of defence, and means of foiling her atrocious designs. We must enter into the most Iriendly dip lomatic and commercial relations with France, and we must cultivate the friend ship, aad bind closer the ties between this country and Ireland. Besides all this we must add vastly to our naval power. In the event of a war with England of what particular service would our 600,000, or a million of armed men be, if our ports were blockaded, our seacoast cities burned up, and all egress and ingress slopped for our naval vessels, our merchant ships, and our privateers? Tbe commercial exigencies of a people are only fully appreciated by com mercial men. Some five years ago Gen. Hiram Walbridge, of New York, in a speech at a political meeting in the great commer cial metropolis urged upon the country the necessity of organizing a militia navy an arm of defence that could be engaged in commerce in time of peace, but in the event of a war, to be at once put cm a naval footing, just as we now do our militia, when soldiers are wanted. The London Times seized the idea, wrote editorials on tha sub ject and in less than eighteen months from that time the British Government had en grafted Gen. Walbridge's plan upon their naval service, and organized a sea militia. Tbe men enlisted have $30 a year, are per mitted to go on any voyages not to last over six months, to report to the Navy Depart ment twice a year, draw their pay, and be ready for active duty on full pay whenever called upon. The ideas of our far seeing statesmen travel abroad, they are utilized, and are turned as arms against us, and yet we move on in the same old channels. Were General Walbridge put at tbe head of t our Navy Department, and such improve ments made as he suggested in 1856, in stead of four hundred vessels in commis sion we should in six months have a thou sand. Great Britain is never going to fear our immense army. In onlj one sphere is she - vulnerable. On that element alone which she Las so long boasted as her own can we meet ber, and damage her power. And this we can not do so long as our nary has not vessels sufficient for our present purposes, rsothing but the direct tear ol France or of a revolt in Ireland will prevent ber getting into a war with us on some pre tence within the next six months. Our na val operations should be carried on with greater vigor, and some one who is able to impart new life and vigor to this branch of our Government should be placed at the helm. The unity of our country, if not our existence a6 a nation, hangs on the events of the next six or eight months. The pro gramme of the last half year can not be played over with like results with impunity. A formidable naval power is our only de fence against England. Patriot and Union. Eefore the days of chloroform there was a qnack who advertised tooth-drawing with out pain. Tbe patient was placed in a chair and the instrument applied to bis tooth with a wrench, followed by a roar from the unpleasantly surprised sufferer. 'Stop,'1 Cried the dentist, " compose yourself. I told you I would give yon do pain, but I only just gave you that twinge as a speci men, to show you Cartwrighl's method of operating !" Again the Instrument was ap plied, another tog, aaother roar. ' Now be patient, that is Dumerge's way ; be seated and calm, you will now be senrible of the superiority of my method." Another ap plication, another tug, another roar. "Now pray be quiet,, that is Parkinson's mode, and you don't like it, arid no wonder." By this time the tooth hung by a thread, and whipping it out, the operator excitingly ex claimed ''that is my mode of tooth draw ing without pain, and yon are now enabled to compare it with the operations of Cart wright, Dumergs'and Parkinson." A Tme Story Of the BeTOlntion. j : "Your wife ! exclaimed the soldier, with Just at the cloae of the Revolutionary war ' tne ver-r concentration ol contempt express there was seen in one of the small towns of ed 5n his voice? and pointing to him with central Massachusetts, a ragged, forlorn an indignant finger. looking soldier coming up the dusty street. "Who are you ?" asked Tompkins with He looked about on the cornfields tasseling an air of effrontery. for the harvest, on the rich, bright patches "1 a Harry Jones, since you ask," repli of wheat, ready for the sickle, and on the ed ne soldier, "the owner of this house and green potato fields with curious eyes so land, which you shall leave this very at least thought Mr. Towne, who was ho"" As for Molly," turning to the wom walking leisurely behind him, going from ! an now sobbing hysterically, " she shall the reaping to his supper The latter was a stout farmer dressed in home made brown linen ttowsers, without suspenders vest or coat. ' The ragged soldier stopped under the the shade of a great sugar maple, and Mr. Towne overtaking him stopped also. ' Home from the war?" he asked. " Just out of the British clutches," replied the man; " I've been a prisoner for years." He rejoined suddenly, "can you tell me who lives in the next house? Is it yours?" " No," replied Mr. Towne. " Tompkins lives there. That house and farm used to belong to a comrade of yours, as 1 suppose his name was Jonea, but he was shot at Bunker Hill, and his widow married again.' The soldier leaned against a tree. " What kind of a man is he? Would tbej be likely to let a poor soldier have some thing to eat?" " If Tompkins is out, you'd be treated firstrate there. Mrs. Tompkins is a nic woman, but he is ihe snarliest cur that eve: gnawed a bone. Ha is a terrible surlj neighbor, and he leads her a dog's life. Sh missed it marrying the iellow; but you ser she had a hard time of it with the farm af ter Jones went off soldiering, and whet my Eon came back and said he was dead' he saw him bleeding to death on the bat'ln field she broke down, and this Tomkint came along and got into work for her, anil he laid himself out to do first rate. He some how got on the blind side of all of us an 1 when he offered himself to her, I advise 1 her to have him, and I'm sorry I did it.--You had better come with me. I always have a bite for any poor fellow that's fonglt for his country." Thank you kindly,' returned the soldie, 'but Mrs. Tompkins is a distant a sort f old acquaintance. The fact is, I used to know her first husband and 1 guess I will call there.' Mr. Towne watched him as he went tp to the door and knocked, and saw that le was admitted by Mrs. Tompkins. ' Some old sweetheart of her's, may b ,' said Mr. Towne nodding to himself. F e come too late, poor . woman, she baa a ha 'd row to hoe now.' Then Mr. Towne we it home to his supper, and we will go in wi.h the soldier. Could you give a poor soldier a rnoun- fultoeat?' he asked of the pale nervoas woman who opened tbe door. 'My husband does not allow me to gire anything to travellers,' she said, 'but I i.l- ways teei lor tne soldiers coming Dacit, a id I'll give yon some supper if you wont be long eating it,' ana sne wiped ner eyes w in ; her white and blue checked apron, and let j with alacrity about providing refreshmet ts for tbe poor man who bad thrown him elf into the nearest chair and with his head leaning on his breast, seemed too tired to remove his hat from bis face. j 'I am glad to have yon eat, and 1 would'nt I hurry you for anything,' she said in a fright- ened way, 'but you will eat quick, w nt i you? for I expect every minute he will be i in.' The man drew his chair to the taltle, keeping his hat on bis head as though he belonged to the Society of Friends ; but that could not be, for the Friends do not go to the wars. He ate heartily of the brsad and butter and cold meat, and how long he was about it! Mrs. Tompkins fidgelted. "Dear rr e," ye'wd jist give us a bowl ot bread and mil she said to herself, 'if he only knew, he tew sorter top off with, I d be much ob wouldn't be so cruel as to let Tompl ins ' leeged tew ye." I come in and catch him here' She went So out goes tbe landlord and waiter for i and looked from the window uneasily, but - the bowl, milk and bread, and set them be ! the soldier gave no token of his meal c m- fore the Yankee, i ing to an end. 'Now he is pouring vin gar ' "Spoon: tew ef you please !" on the cold cabbage and potatoes, I can't a&k i him to take those in his hand. Oh, ilear how slow he is, hasn't the man any teeth.' At last she said mildly, '1 am ' ery ; sorry to hurry you, sir, but couldn't you let me spread some bread and butter, and cut you some slices of meat to take away 'villi : 'you? My husband will use abusive Ian-; gnage to you if he finds you here." . j Before the soldier could . reply, footsteps, were heard oo the doorstone at the liack i door and a man enured. He stopped i hort and looked at the soldier as a savasre do? might look. Then he brok.e out in a tone between a growl and a roar : 'Hey dey, Molly, a pretty piece of )usi ness, what have 1 told you time and a,;ain, madam? You'll find you had better mind your master. And you, you lazy, the ving vagabond, let me see you clear out ol my houve and off of my land a good deal q tick than you came on my premises !' . 'Your house ! and your land ! excla med tbe soldier, start iig suddenly np, erect and tall and dashing of his bit with a qiick, firey gesture. His eyes flashed like Jighl- ning, and his lips quivered with indignition as he confronted the astonished Tompkins, Tbe latter was evidently afraid of him, l and his wife had given a sudden nervous shriek when the soldier first started to hii feel and flung off his hat,' and had sunk trera bling and half fainting in the chair for she recog nized him. ' . ' Yba hain't any business to iuterfeie be tween me and my wife," feaid Tompkins sulkily, cowed by the attitude of tha soN dier. . ! Y choose between ns " "O Harry," sobbed she, while Tompkins stood dumb with astonishment, " take me, save me." With one step he was at her side, hold ing her in his arms. 'What did you mean treating this poor child eo? Did you think because she had no earthly protector thai there was not a God in Heaven to take her part against ton ?" No man who is eo cruel to a woman is never truly brave, and Tompkins slunk away like a beaten spaniel. The next day had not passed away be fore everyjody in town knew that Harry Jones had come home- alive and well to rescue his much enduring, patient wife from a worse constraint than that of a Brit ish prison, but what they all said, and what Molly felt, I must leave you to imagine, for t here the legend stoos. A Yankee Trick. Some years ago, before railroad? were invented, a cute Massachusetts Yankee was one Jay travelling in a stage in the State of Connecticut. The passengers stopped for j breakfast at a place where the landlord was 1 noted for his parsimony ; and it was strong ly suspected that he paid tho driver to j hnr- rv off the 6tE2e before the Dassenien could eat half a meal, in order to save his victuals, j The Yankee heard this talk, and he sat I down to breakfast with the determination I to eat his mo.iey's worth whether the stage j left him or n ot. While, therefore, the rest of the passengers were bolting jtheir victu als at the greatest possible haste, the Mas sachusetts man took his time. The passen gers had scarcely finished a cup cf coffee,and ate but a few moulhfuls, when thty heard the sound of the horn, and the driver ex- claim' "Stage ready !" Up rise the grum ! as-ertained that a gen'.lemati and a box had abiect apology, and for a while was as 'um beling passengers, pay their fifty cents, 1 taken lodgings with an old lady in Row, Me' as if its conductor was the lineal de- and take their seats. ' "All aboard, gents ?" inquires the host "One missing," say they. Proceeding to the dining room, the host finds our Yankee friend very coolly helping himself to an immence piece of steak, the size of a horse's lip. "You'll be left, sir ! Stage is going to start '." "Waal, 1 hain't got nothin' tew say agin it !" "Can't wait, sir : better take your seat." "I'll be guil darned ef I dew, nulher, till I've go my breakfuss ! I've got tew pay t half a donar an j yme g0;nij lo gel the val- j lee j and ef yew caiKa!ate I an't, yew are mistaken." So the stage did start, and left the hungry New Eualander, who continued his attack of the edibles. Biscuits, coffee, steaks, etc., disappeated rapidly before the eyes of the astonished landlord. ' Say. sauire. them iheir cakes is '6ouZ j ea fe,ch .n" g' n 'em You (to the waiter,) 'nuther cup uv that air cof fee. Pass them eggs. Raise yew re own pork, squire ? this is amazin' nice ham. Land 'bout yeare tolerable cheap, squire, I callate ? Dyn't lay yewre own flggs, dew je?" and thus the Yankee kept quizzing the landlord, until he had made a hearty meal. "Say, squire, now I'm 'bout tew conclude ! payin' my dewonrs to this ere table, but if But no spoon could be found. Landlord was sure he had plenty of silver ones lying on the table when the stage stopped. "Say ! dew yew think them passengers is going to pay ypw for a breakfuss and not git no compensation ?" "Ah ! what! do you think any of the pas sengers took them ?" "Dew I think ? No, don't think, but I'm sartin. If they air all as green as you, about , here, I'm goin' tew locate immediately and ! tew wonst. The landlord rushes out to the stable, and starts a man off after the stage, which Jjad gone about three miles. The man overtakes the stage, and says something to the driver in a low tone. He immediately turns back and on arriving at the hotel, our Yankee comes out to take his seat and says : "Heow air yew ! gents 1 I'm glad tew see yew back." ''Can you point out the roan "you think has the spoons ?" asked ihe landlord. "Pint him out ? Sartainly, I ken. Say, j squire ! I paid yD four niaepence for a i breakfuss, and I callate I got 'he valiee on't. You'll fined them spoons in the coffee pot !" 1 Which was found to be the case. W K wish me wniDisgui ouui auiuur- ize Greeley to enlist a coloied regiment, ... ' .t n . M . i then appoint him Colonel, an, see what he could do. It is doubtful whether the sol- j: IJ . f u,c- u.u luu.w., ..u ... der or the commander from the soldiers first. I A Bobbery and a Romance. The London Weekly Times gives an ac count of a robbery in the London suburbs, and some curious romantic incidents attend ing it as follows : On Thursday evening, November 14th, the family of a Mr. Barker, residing in Bess borough Gardens, Pimlica, went to the opera, leaving their house in charge of Mary Newell a servent girl 25 years old. On reluming home at half-past nine, Mr. Barker was surprised to receive no answer to his knock ; and on effecting a forcible entrance, he discovered traces everywhere that a robbery if not a murder had been committed A large amount of provisions was lying about in the utmost confusion; plate to the value of 100 was packed away ready for removal ; a hole was cut in the back door large enough to admit a man, and the poker was found on the floor smea red with blood, and with clotted masses of human hair which appeared to be that of a female. On further search, a quanti ty of miscellaneous property, including some valuable jewelry, and a few pounds in money was missing But no trace of the domestic could be found Police detec- I lives were immediately sent for, and on I examination of the premises, circumstances j can.e to light which tended to cast suspicion on the servant, which was confirmed on discovering that the Moody poker was an artifice, and that the hair had been glued on. They next ascertained that the cab, con taining a gentleman with a good sized box, had left the house that evening for the East- orn Counties railway station, and at the station tat he had taken a ticket and pro ceeded for Brentwood. The officers fol lowed on to Brentwood next day, nothing doabtin-that the eontleman and the tood sized bo were the servent in disguise and tha stolen property At Brentwood, they learned that a eentleman and a box bad passed the night at the White Hart, but had left that morning by the down train. De tective Sheen followed, the other dective returning to London He traced the gentle man and bo until it reached Yarmouth, and there he procured the asistanTe of Sergeant ' Berry, and both spenlihe whole of theday in i fruitless inquires. Next day, however thev 136. and on proceeding there was told thata young gentleman answering the description siven. with a tox, uad uvea witn ner since Friday, but he was then out taking a walk on the Marine parade with a young lady. On the officer insinuating that the young gentleman might possibly be one of herown , sex, the old lady indignantly scouted the idea, and was sure oy ire way ue oenaveu that he was a real gentleman. They said they would wait his return, and at five o'- i i j clock, in walked the lodger, shawled to the chin against the effects ol the storm he had to encounter on ihe way, vigorously puffing a cigar, and goi up in the last stile, with extensive peatops, and e veiytlting en suite, He found him.e!f immediately in custody ol the police and charged with robbery, and being one Mary Newell, she admitted the Potomac were dissatisfied with his pro offence with no little sangfroid Her box ceedings. This is known to be untrue by was next examined, and the missing prop- every one who has intercourse with the Of erty tound in it. She was taken to the po- ficen and men on the Potomac. It inti lice station and next morning Sheen took mates that there is an ant agonisra between his prize to London still in her male attire, the Secretary of War and Gen. McCIellan, as, not anticipating so early a necessity for and that ihe Secretary is inclined to over a change ol apparel, she had left her female rule the General. The irnth is, these two attire behind her. It appears that while io important officers are, as they should be, Yarmouth she acted out her assumed part acting in complete co operation and har with a spirit that would have done credit moriy. It says that the army of the Polo- to the original. She treated the landlady j Qn both ni,hts to the tfieatrej and ejp re!tf;ej herself much disappointed that she had not come down in the Bummer, when the town was gayer and livelier. She attended St. Peter't church on Sunday, but she pretend ed no special piety, as she effected a good deal ot flirtation with lite giris about, and gave her land a ly the idea of being quite a Lothario. Among the articles tound on her was a small faucy tobacco pipe. She told draw s around him scores of plundering ad- the police she had been disturbed in the venturers, and who has never yet in his robbery or she would have carried off the whole career settled an account with the plate. She is atout twenty-five yers of ag. Government without at quarrel, or. in a mil- and her make up a a male character was itary point of view, been in the right place pronounced io be excellent. at the right time. It seems that Mary procured her male The Bull Run disaster, which was tbe clothing Irom Mr. Barker's wardrobe, and work of these same mischief makers, has from that ota young g it!eruu who was already ereatly prolonged the war, sacrific es guest at the tune. Neariv the whole of ed thousands of previous lives, and cost the i the fctoien property was recovered The ''On to Richmond' Orator. The Hon. John A. Gurley, repulicac rep resentative from the Second district ot Ohio who made such a flaming 'On to Richmond' speech in the House of Representatives on Wednesday, was an onward' man before the battle ot Bull Run and is the same indi vidual who raa twenty seven miles, without hat coat or boots from that battle rieid, and beat his own horse and gig into Washington by nearly an hour. The facts in re aiion to thi astonishing feat ot pedeo'rianism, as represeu eil at the time, were, that Mr Gur ley. anxious to witness the Mo at root oi the rtels took his own conveyance and fol lowed Gen. McDowell's army on its '.march to Richmond.' When the battle commence! at Stone Bridge he late ied his hore to a tree, and secured a sale and commanding position in order to wit.iesttie fiahi. The restiit was disastrous to oor brave iroop. j and it finally became necessary tor specta- 1 tors as well as soldier, to look out lor them selves, and, prompted by the first law ol na lure Mr Gurley sought his carriage, but grealIy ,Q Lis ai,!on jhment, 1 j some person, who no doubt, he found that person, who no uouDt, was equally anxious for bis own satety, had appropriated ! t No lime to be -lost, and Mr Gurley luiiinruiaieiv uucfieu mim-cu ui uai, I : - . i j: . .1 v : If t u . . coat and bootsand lruck (or Washington, where 1 je arriveii fiity-fire minutes in advance of bis own gig.- N. Y. Herald.. I'ADER TEE HOLLY BOCGII. Ye who have scorned each other, Or injured friend or brother, In the past faded year. Ye who, by word or deed, Have made a kind heart bleed, Come gather here Let sinned azainst, and sinning, Forget their suite's beginning, And join in friendship now; Be links no longer broken, Be sweet forgiveness spoken, Under the holly bough. Ye who have loved each other, Sis'er and friend and brother, In the past faded year. Mother and sire and child, Young man and maiden mild, Come gather here; And let your hearts grow fonder, As memory shall ponder Each past unbroken vow, Old love and younger wooing Are sweet in the renewing Under.theholly bough. Yewho have nourished sadness, Ectrariged from hope and gladness, In this past faded year ; Ye wiih o'burdened mind Made aliens from your'kind, Come gather here. Lt not the use'ess sorrow Pursue you night and morrow If e'er yon hoped, hope now Take heart ; uncloud your facea And join in our embraces Under the holly bough. Tbe Conspiracy Against McCIellan. Evidences of a conspiracy among the 'On to Richmond' tribe ol New York edi tors and marplot Congressmen, like Gurley, and alt their creatures and echoes, are be coming more and more abundant every day. ot particulars, consult any recent numoer of the Tribone, or the Evening Post. The firs', named of these journals, which is more responsible than all other influences in the Union for the mcst terrible reverse suffered by our arm a reverse that gave the only living pretext to our enemies abroad for their vociferous clamors against our cause is now emp!o3'ing the entire arsenal of its peculiar weapon against McCIellan. Alter committing that great crime if esca ped the popular indignation by a mere and "-eriaani t,r ,wenty generations oi urian Heeps. It is now bravely over that, and is f'wi " " "" will piace the country in peril of a calami' ty scarcely lees disastrous than the result of its hounding of our raw troops 'on to Rich mond.' In this vile work the Tribune i faithf nllv n,l,l K.. V. I .l... eeuuuuou "o cuuig iusi, auu m latter journal gives, him to its part of tbe conspiracy by the employment of a mean- ness and a malignity out of all character with its old time history. As an example we might refer to its leading article on Fri - day last, which was false in its statements, false in its suggestions, false in the truth it suppressed, false in every way. It stated that McClellan's Officers and men on the mac has latterly seen very little of its Gen era! ; but it suppresses ihe fact that Mc- ClelUn was, until recently prostrated for weeks by disease. These are fair samples of the means by which the misguided zeal ots of the Evening. Post are seeking io sup plant the most thorough and capable sol dier at the h'a(l of our armies by a weak, vain, extravagant political favorite, who has no force except that magnetism which people hundreds of millions of dollars. If they are permitted to succeed in their new scheme and have.their creatures elevated to ihe chief command, they will destroy the Union forever and that is probably their real purpose Philadelphia Inq drtr. An odd sort of a geniss, having stepped into a mill, was looking with apparent astonishment at the movement of the ma chine, when the miller, thinking to quiz him, aked if h had heard the news. "Not's 1 know on, what is it?" "Why," replied the miller, "they say the devil is dead." 'By jinks." says Jonathan, "is he? Who tends the mill ?" Patience is sometimes courage in repose and Iip is the greatest hero who can suffer most silently. S rnng words indicate a weak cause Tbe more a man swears the easier he is licked. Ingratitude is the pretext that selfishness seizes hold of for refusing to do a favor. Be what you are. This i the first step toward becoming better than you are. 11L r ; : I V ben a woman intends to give a maa tbe mitten she begins by kniuing her eyebrows. The Bandy of To-day. But thpre must not be passed over a vari ety of the genuine "swell'" tribe noble in birth often, generally affluent, rat least in means the only remnat we possess, in this hard-working age when almost every man, high or low, prince or peasant, does something, whether it be for good or evil of the "dandies" of bygone time. They are growing rarer every day, like that intol erable old (and yonng) nuisance the 'gent who has been all but absorbed in the Vol unteer Movement ; but you may still see the perfectly listless, do-nothing, care-for-noihing I trust not good for-nothing ; and yet what is he good for? dandy in the. Grand Stand on a great race day. He is always exquisitely dressed; his hair and appendages and marvels of Truefitism His jewelry is resplendent ; his linen irre proachable. He carries, wet or dry, a slim umbrella. Mr John Leech has drawn him in Punch five hundred times. I wish that he could fix him to a woodlock, so that he pervaded society no longer. He smokes as he talks, in a languid, drawinz, kind of way, and wastes half ot his weeds as he wanes bait of his words. He never knows what to do with his legs. He does know what to do with his hands, and thrusts them, nearly op to the elbowt, into his pockets. He comes to the "races" in the most elaborate equipage and costume attainable, because ii is "the thing." He does not bet. It is a bore to bet. The men in his seat doa't bet. He is quite unsusceptible to the ex citement of the race, and has jost comple ted the leisurely adjustment of his eyeglass by the lime the winning horse has passed the post. He does not even take much in teresl in the brilliant-ladies in the carriage outside, save to remark to a friend and da plicate that he has seen Baby Mo!ynenx, or AJa Tressilian nee Runt.) and that "she looks older." Ha doe not in the least understand the role witticisms of the road homewards; and at a handful of salt, mora or less attic, being flung at him, returns a look of such calm bewilderment as to dis arm the most practised "chaffer." He has been known to take more champagne than was good for him, and to have gone to tbe , length of assuming a false nose at the 'Cock' at Sutton ; but he goes to sleep when tipsy ; tha re are always at least, seven dandies as solemn as he to take care of him, and ha comes to no harm. He never comes to no to any good. The age of this silent, languid dandy is from twenty-five to thirty. 1 want to know what Lecoraes of him when he reaches middle age, or approaches fogeyim. Does he emigrate? Does he enlist? Does he expire from pure inanition? Does he take heart of race, and hit somebody, or do j something and approve himself a man? j Even girU, who are worth anything, don't ' seem to care much about him, save as a 1 but to laugh at ; and although I have occa- ; sionally seen the languid and listless dandy feebly struggling between billows of crini- l nole ar.d carrying a gorgeous church ser- j 'ice to and from Belgravian places of wor ship on Sundajs it is not with great fre quency, I opine, that his Common Prayer is oppened at the order for the solemization of Matrimony. I fancy that when the dan dy does marry, it is to one ol those strong minded Bri'ish females who are in the habit of trotting their tall, gaunt, melaticholy looking, uncomplaining husbands from our continental watering-place to ar.otb.er. You know the unhappy being I mean. He is a patient and uxorious drudge, an amiable and contented pack horse. He is ! always in trouble about the lusase. He I is the "Monsieur" with whom hotel keep, ers are threatened when tbe bills are exor bitant, and who would pay the bills out of Lis own private funds for peace, and quietness' sake if he had any private funds; but he hasn't. He gave up all these yars ago for spIendiJ board and lodging. lie tikes his wife's children she has generally teen a widow out a-walking very meekly. He fetches their physic from the pharmacies Anglais "Tiois graines de pilule blue et un dose noire s'il vous plait ; and he is as harm less and perhaps, slighity more useful than of yore. Temple Bar. The Abolitionists. Hon. Garrett Davis, 'Union' Senator from Kentucky, spoke in the Senate of the United Slates, on the 23d alt , as ioiiows: "11 Congress would legislate for the white man, and let the negro a'ooe, it would be belter. Oh, how much better it would be If at the outset yon had pro claimed that this was lo be a war upon sla very, you would not have had one fourth of the force in the field that you now have. ' These fanatics, these political and social demons your Bechers, yourCheev. ers, your Phillip-es, and your Gamon9- come here breathing pestilence from pan demonium, tryina to destroy this Union, so sl4 to secure over its broken fragments the emancipation of slavery. The utter ances they have dared to pat forth in this city have desecrated the Smithsonian Insti tute. If ihe Secessionists had dared to give expression to the same ntterancps they would have been sent, and properly sent to Fort La layette or Fort Warren What will you do with these monsters? I will tell you what I would do with them, and with that horrible monster Greely, as they come sneaking around here, like hur.gry wolve after the destruction r,f slavery. It I had. the power, I would take them and the worst Seceshers and hang them rp iu pairs.. Laughter IwUhtoGodI coald inflict that punisbmeni upon them. It would be just. They are the fiisnnionist. Th'y ire ths madmen, wtio are willing to call up all the passions of the infernal regions and all the horrors of a servile war. Thi hey would carry out over the disjointed iaamnt of a broken Constitution to obtain their unholy purposes, and I am too fearful that the hon orable Senator from Massachusetts Mr. r . t - .... Sumner sympathises with them."