THE STAR, OP THE NORTH TVi Ht J.ACOBI, Pcblisher.j Truth and Right God and our Country Two Dollas per Annum. Volume 14. BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 21, 1863. NUMBER 52. I 1 a ) N. Y. WEEKLY NEWS. The chenpeM and bei New York News paper. Only orie dollar per anuura. Eight pages forty columns. A complete record of events, Benjamin Wood, eniior and pro prielor. Published a: No. 19 City Hal! t?qnaie, Dtilj News Buildi .g, Njv York City. THE NEW VOKKVVEEKLY NEWS is oarivaluJ io its ability and enterprise as a public journal. nd in EVERY DF.PARTNENT is mot eff cien ly enn' ucted, so a? to form weekly record of event political, com mercial, fi ianci a I and literary, ihronoot the World. In addition to thi it contains all the Uomesuc Intelligence of each week and full reporta of every matter of public interest. As a political Journal The Weekly News will be found on the side of the Constitu tion of the courtry a it was framed and established by the F-lhers of the Republic, and wil scan with cam and fidelity every public act that may lend to the violation of the letter and spirit of thai instrument of or liberties. It prefer the POLICY OF PEACE io a ruinous and exhausting system of War. Insisting- upon the trum of ihe principle embodied in the Declaration of Indepen dence, that the juBi powers of the Govern ment are derived from the consent of the governed, it urges the "preservation of the fundamental principles of fiber:y, inviolate, of more sacred mpartance than national ftraodear or ronsolic'ajrd power under des potic rule without the pale of e'ablihed law. On all qeions of national impor trace it is the inflexitde champion ot tho tights of citizens, as guaranteed under the Instruments bv which ihev h.iv p.loni.tpd m fce governed. It therefore hoKfiy avows its i jurpcse t;i su attt tne freedom ot Speech and ol the Pres, with the view to protect the peopla from the encroaching dogmas of theories who contempelate a moddiction of the democratic principled which to this time, have been suTained against every ef 1ort to overthrow ihem. In all matters per tiniu.i to Government the purpose of this newspaper is to protect the people from in considerate ai;d rash lesji.-lation, and to Ir.eW our public servants to a Mrict account ability for their conduct while rar.ving ou the rraclunery of po?er. To this end the rnost careful alien t ion will be given to all Federal and Legislative laws, and a firm and impartial examination of every new tliticat proposition may be expected a the only means of protertinz the people from an abridgement of their riant. COMMERCIAL & MARKET REPORTS arc given in Ihe most succinct) el complete manner. Tiiey claim particular notice for their fidelity and truth, and all tho-e who deire to comprehend the exacl finan cial condition of the rouetry should not f.til to examir e the fievc-s which will be founn in this department of ihe j turnal. THE FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE will be found especially interesting and in-truc-iie and being derived from some of te ablest minds io Eorope mut be rad with the utmost avidity' by thoe who deire 1o camprehend that clibiomacy of the Gov ernments of the Old Wo-M. In all other respects THE WEEkLY NEWS will be found to meet the public de mand. It is Ihe efpocial object of the Pro prietor to render ii a valuable and enter taining. FAMILY NEWSPAPER, pure in its moral influence, ennobling in it character, and satisfactory to that large lass in the community who desire lo see the Public Pies treat all public questions with arguments axp'ej-sed in rourtey and anlor, thought, at the tame time, with the eptrit due to the themes discussed. Bv reference to the term of Tne New York Weekly New it "will be noticed iha! it is by far the cheapest newspaper in ihe world, and the Proprietor feels thai he may invite those who approve of its principles nd coidjctto nse tieir influence in adding to is yresent large circulation. .i NEW YORK WE ELY NEWS, Eight Pages - Forty Columns ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY, For One Year One Dollar leven Copies to one Address for One Year - TEN DOLLARS, Cingle copies . - Three Cents 7UE NEW JYOllK DULY NEWS. A firslclaes Metropolitan Journal devoted Io Peace and 'Constitutional Liberty, and containing all the new of the day, Potiti " cal, Telegraphical, Commercial and Local is the cheapest daily paper in the metropo lis. I TERMS: , One Copy, One Year Six Dollars. "One Copy Six Mouths Three Dollars, Single Copies Tow Cents. Addres BENJAMIN WOOD, Editor ..and Proprietor, No. 19 City Hall Square, New York.! ' s??g;r & co.'s " Letter "A" Family Sewfoj Machine, JFith all the Ricent Improvements. Is ihe best and cheapest and roost beauti ful of all Sewing Machines. This Machine will sew atyihing, from the running of a tack io Tarietan to the making of an over coat; anything from Pilot or Beaver cloth down to the-softest G sue or Gossamer Tissue, and is ever ready to do it. work to perfection. It can fell, hem, bind, gather, tack, quilt, and bar. capacity for a great van-sty of ornamental work. This is cot the only Machice that can fell, hem, bind, and 0 forth, but it will do bo better tban any other, machine. The Letter"A,f Family Sewing Machine may be had in great vari ety of cabinet cases. The Foldicg Case, which is now becoming so popular, is, as In name implies, one that can be folded ir to a box.; or case, which, when opened, rr.akus a beaatilul. substantial, substantial, ;id spacious table for the work to rest tjpoa. Tbn ca-es are of every imaginable d jstan; plain as the wood grew in its'native "fc rest, or aji elaborately finished as art can jliaku thena. r ' The Brani h OSces are well snpplied with t'lk twist, j hread, needles, oil, etc., of the vury best quality. f; jnd for a copy oTSihgcr & Co.s Gaztm. : 1 , 1 M. SINGER & CO., 45S Broadway. N. Y. jniLADELPniAOFFICE.SJO Cbegtnot St. N. S. Tidgley, iLgnt, ia Espy, Pa. Jaia Sharpless, Agent, ia Cattawissa. .Jay, 23, J,852.-ly.- : , . - - . : 1 . ' READING RAIL ROAD. SEHMER AKRANGB31ExT. .REAT Trunk line from the North and North-west for Philadelphia, New York, Reading. Pottsville, Lebanon, Alien town, Easton,&c . &. Tra ins leave Harrisburg for Philadelphia New York, Reading, Pottsville, and all in termediate Staiions, at 8 a. m. and t.40 p. m. New York Express leaves Harrisbnrg at 1.25 a. m. arriving i New York at 8.25 the same morning. Fares from Harrisbnrs: to New York $5 00, to Philadelphia 3,25 and 2,70. Basgage checked through. Keturnins leave New York at 6 A. M. l2 Noon, and 8 P. M. (Pituburgh Express.) Leave Philadelphia at 8 A. M. and 3.15 P. M. Sleeping ctrs in the New York Express Trains, through to and from Pittsburgh without chanae. Passengers by the Cattawissa Rail Road leave Port Clinton at 4.45 A. M. for Phila delphia and all intermediate Slations, and at 3.00 P. M. for Philadelphia, New York, and all Way Points. Trains leave Pottsville at 9 A. M. and 2.15 P. M. for Philadelphia and New York, and ai 5.30 P. M. for Aubnrn and Port Clinton only, connecting for Pine Grove and with the Cattawissa Rail Rod. An accomodation Passenger train leaves Reading at 6 A. M. and returns from Philadelphia".- 5 P. M. C& All iheihe above Mains run daily, Sundays excepted. A Sunday train leaves Pottsville at 7.30 A. M. and Philadelphia at 3.i5 P. M. Commutation, Mileaga, Season, and Ex cursion TickeU, at reduced rales to and from all points. G. A. NICOLLS, General Soperiniendant. June 4'h FS2 COMMUNICATED Pulmonary CoiiMiEmilioii A . Curable Disease ! A CARD. TO CONSUMPTIVES. THE under'gned having b?en restored to health in a few week, by a very sim ple remedy, alter having suffered several years with a severe lung affection, and thai dread disease, Consumption is anxious to make known to his feljow euUerers the means of cure. To all who desire "l, he wilt send a copy cf t?ie precriplion ued (free of charge), with the directions for preparing and uing the tame, which they will find a ture cuie for Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, Coosbs. Cold, &:. The or.ly ol j-ct of the dverds-er in sending the Prescription is to benefit the afflicted, and spread the infor mation which he conceives to be invalua ble ; and he hopes every snfferr will try his remedy, a it will rost thern nothing, and may prove a blessing. Parties ui-hirig the pre-orlption will please addres REV. EDWARD A. WILSON Williamsburgb, Kings county, N. Y. Fept, 23, 1863 4mos. TLKU1BLU DIMLOSUUES! Secret? Fop the million ! A most valuable and wonderful publi cs cation. A work of 400 pasjes. and 30 colored et.gravhgs. DR. HUNTER S VADEMECUM,an original and popular treatise on Man and Wcman, their Phys iology, Functions, and Sexual disorder of every kind, with Never-Failing Remedies for their speedy, cure. The pwci'-e of Dr. HUNTER ha long been, and still is, unbounded, but at the earnest solicitation nnmt erous persons, he ha been induced to expend his medical usefulness through the medium of hi " VA D EM EC Vil ." It is a volume that should be in the hands of every family in the land, as a preventive of secret vices, or as a guide for the allevia tion of one of ihe moi-t awful an J destruc tive scourge ever visited mankind. One copy, seourelv enveloped, will be forwar ded free ot postage to any part of the Uni ted States tor 50 cenis in P. O. stamps, 3 copies for SI. Address, pot paid, DR. HUNTER, No. 3 Division Street, New Yo'k Sept 9. 1863. lYortli Central Hallway. TIME T A LB E . TWO TRAINS DAILY to and from the North and West Branch of the Susqoehan-' na, Elmira, and all of Northern New York. On and after Mondav, April 20th, l?63, ihe Passenger Trains of the Nora Central Railway v i it arrive and depart from Son bury, Hrrisbnrg and Baltimore, as follows: SOUTHWARD. Mail Train leaves Sunbury daily - except Sundays, at 10.10 am. Leaves Hairisburg, 1.15 p.m. Arrives at Baltimore, 5.35 " Express Train leaves Sunbury daily except Sundays, at 1 1 07 p.m. Leaves Harrisb'rg,except Monday 2.00 a.m. Arrives at Baltimore daily except Monday, at 6.15 a.m. Accommodation leaves Ilarrisb'rg 6,30 a.m. NORTHWARD. Mail Trail leaves Baltimore dily except Sundays, at ' 9.15 am. Leaves Harrisborg, 1.15 p.m. Arrives at Sunbnry, ,4.05 p.m. Express Trains Baltimore daily, 9.15 " Arrives at HarrUburg, 1.35 a.m. Leaves Harrisb'rg except Monday, 3.00 ' Arrives at Sunbury, 5.38 For farther particulars apply at the office. ; I. N. DUBARRY, Supt. Harrisburg, Aug. 8, 1863. TUG OIjU guard. A Monthly Journal, devoted to the Prin ciples of 1776, Designed to unmask (be Usurpation, Desptism and crimes of this . ABOLITION ADMINISTRATION. And to defend the doctrines of State Rights, and of Constitutional Liberty, as held by our Revolutionary Fathers. Published by C- CHAUNCEY BURR & Co., sau 6treet, New York. PRICE Single numbers 15 cents. For warded by mail or express to ail parts of the United States at Si a year, in advance. Any person . sending ten subscriber will receive an additional copy for one year. Aug. 26, 1863; ents Balmoral Lace Boots, will bs sold rery low. Also, oys Shoes, at L T. SHARPLrSS.' STAR OF THE NORTH fCBLISBED EVERT VZDREIMT BT W. D. JAGOBY, Office on Main St.. Jfd Square below Market. TERMS Two Dollars pr annum IT paid within six months from the lime of subscri- ; aing: two dollars and fifty cents if not paid i within th& year. No subscription taken for a less period than six months; no discon jtinoance permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. 7 ht terms of advertising will be as fallows : One square, twelve lines, three times, 81 00 Every subsequent insertion, 25 One square, three months, 3 00 One year, 8 00 Choice 3 o c l r p . Hood on Dueling. Tom Hood describes an intended duel which was prevented by amicable arrange ment made upon the ground. The parties Mr. Bradly and Mr. Clay rivals for the affections of Lucy Bell, found i: necessary to appeal to arms : But first they found a friend apiece, This pleasant thought to give That when tbey both were dead,they'd have Two seconds yet to live. To measure out the ground, r.ot long The seconds next forebore. And having taken one rasa step, They look a dozen more. They next prepared each pistol-pan Against thf deadly strife ; By putting in the prime of death Against the prime of life. tinw all was ready for the fotfs ; But when they took their stand, Fear made ihem tremble, so they found They both were shaking hands. Said Mr. C to Mr. J3 , Here one of us must fall, And, like Si. Paul's Cathedral now, Be doomed to have a ball. "I do confess I did attach Misconduct to your name ; If 1 withdraw ihe charge, will then Your ram hod do the fame?" Said Mr. B., ''I do agree ; But think of Honor's courts ; If we be off without a shot, There will be strange reports. "Bat look ; the morning now is bright, Though cloudy it begun, Why can't we aim above, as if We had called out the sun V So ftp into the harmless air Their butlets they did send ; And may all other duels have That vpshot in the end. The War Power. Under the clause "to provide for the common defence and general welfare," the the Jacobins profess to find their authority lor what thewcall "The War Powar." How absurd such a claim is, may be exposed by the simple statement that our Courts have over and over again decided, "that these words confer no distinct and substan tive powers unconnected with taxation." The Courts have always insisted that it is a pufficieot objection to tlm construction that it would make the Federal power un limited, and the specific enumeration -vhich follows this particular clause, unmeaning, if not absurd. It is very clear to every constitutional lawyer that the weight of reason as well as of authoritj , simply makes these words a qualification of the taxing power. The whole provision means ihe same as if the words were "in order" "to pay the debts and provide for the common defence and general welfare." Thus, while Congress is not limited by this clause as to the sub jects upon which taxes may be levied, it is limited as to the purposes for which they may ba levied. Congress cannot wantonly exersise the taxing power, for any purposes whafsoever, but only for the specified purpose of paying the debts and providing for the common defence and gen eral welfare. It has always been sonsidered a sufficient objection td this construction that it would make the Federal power unlimited, and he specific enumeration which fellows the clause unmeaning, if not absurd. This is the language ofall the commen taries on the Constitution, and of the Books of Reports. It has been reserved for the men of this generation to find out a power as given to the Executive under this clause, absolute and unlimited in its scope. This war power, whose influences have been felt, and the extent of whose authority knows no limit, it is actually claimed finds its warrant in the above clause which we have quoted. Strange as such a. claim is, it is no; stranger than to find jurists, m en at the bar and upon the bench, yielding to the influences of power, and not only acquies cing in the doctrine, but actbally giving it countenance and support. This clearly arises from a want of that moral courage so prolific in our age, and which strange to say, is nowhere more apparent tban in that profession, whose peculiar province it is to vindicate rights, and redress wrongs a profession that in past ages bai, been the bulwark against the advances of arbi trary power. Now when dangers threaten, when unprincipled rulers would trample the law under foot, or mobs would .rise to overthrow,' the men of this profession should be the sentinels to give the alarm. With some few glorious exceptions,' we re regret to say, that in these times of misrule the people hare looked in Tain to tint class of men,-whose profession it is to watch over the laws, and who in times pait have been its most zealous delenders. War Democrats Insure the remanent) of the Lincoln Administration This is a problem susceptible of very sim pie demonstration, which we give. The Constitution of the United States declares a majority of the electoral votes of all the Slates to be necessary td the election of President, and in case none of the parties before the Electoral College phall receive such a majority, the election shall devolve on Congress, which shall select from the three receiving the highest number of votes in the Electoral College. As it is nearly certain that the Con federate States will r.ot be legally represented in the Electoral Col lege, it may safe! be assumed that no one will receive the vole required by the Con stitution, and that iherelore the election will devolve upon Congress, and as the Repub licans can have and will bave a majority in Congress Mr. Lincoln's re-election may fairly be pronouced a foregone conclusion. Should it so happen that Mr. Lincoln should get a majority of the electoral votes cast, we may feel well assured that be will declare himself duly elected, and this he will dD by the same good authority which issued the Emancipation Proclamation, the Confiscation and the Habeas Corpus Proc lamations, the Vallandigham banishment manifesto, and the like; and ihe same pow er which enforced ihem will enforce bis election ; and the same pliant judiciary which has sanctioned all these, and pro nounced the Conscription act constitutional, and having decided that paper is gold, will continue to play Poionius to our Presiden tial Hamlet, and when he thinks he see a whale it will see something "very much like a whale." But in case a Democrat should get the majoritj, the President will very clearly see that the Constitution inter poses an insuperable bar. and that the elec tion must go to Congress. So, when the election -is made by Con gress, if he shall get a majority of the States vo'ing, it will 6ufioe, though it be not a majority of all the States, and West ern Virginia and bogus representatives from Southern States be there to give him the majority, it will be declared leal by the President, and be held to be perfectly in ac cordance with the Constitution by our Poi onius judiciary. But, should a Democrat chance to get a majority, the President will suddenly be visited by constitutional scru pies, and the proclamation would be issued that no election can be mad. What then ? Mr. Lincoln will announce his purpose, which imperial "necessity" forces upon him, to forego bis desire to re lire to private life, and to submit to a con tinuance of the labors of office, lest anarchy should ensue in this unprovided condition of affairs ; he will continue to act as Presi dent until a restoration cf the Union shall j enable the people constitutionally Io elect ; a President. Will not a Poionius judiciary , which humors to bis topmost bent the Pres idential Hamlet, say Amen to his decision ? Peace would reverse all this. Instead of such a programme, rendering the perpetui- ' ty of the Lincoln dynasty a certainty, peace would render its extinction certain, at the end of Mr. Lincoln's term, and with its ex tinction a restoration, perhaps, of the Con stitution and Laws. The tortuous policy of the War Democrats defeats its own aims. Is it they who have given the Administra tion power to perpetrate all its infamies, which reder us such a stench in the nostrils of all nations. They have put the lah in the hands of the Administration, which it so vigorously applies to their backs; ft is they, and they alone, who. have given a power to the Admistration which effectau alJy and permanemly shuts the door upon all their hopes of office ar.d and of spoils. Had the war Democrats proved true to their pedges of hsnor and declaration of principles, this war could have no exist ence ; if begun by Mr. Lincoln it would have firzled out in a month ; If could not now continue six months, and but for the War Democrats the tyrant scepter would fall from tho palsied hand. Whatever of evil flows from this war the blame must rest equally on the Administration and on the War Democrats, the first being the wicked will which enacts it in all its hide ous character and proportions. Now in vain does this War Democracy (a cat's paw to the Administration,) look forward to the possession of office and spoils by continu ing the war until after the period of the next Presidential election ; the expected fruit, it will be seen'by this article, will tarn to bitter ashes in their mouth, and it will remain as now, the subservient, unre warded dope of this accursed Administra tion. Peace will put the Democracy in power beyor.d all reasonable doubt. A protracted war only aggravafes every evil, and insures the destruction of all that it purports to save. This Administration is as mucb the enemy of every man true to Democratic principles as it is to the South. A Portable Sheep Eaek. A sheep farmer of Columbia county, Ohie, who has triad several kinds of racks gives the following description of one which prevents crowding, is in every way satisfactory and so simple that any larmer can make one. it consists of four posts three feet long and if made of three by three scantling will be heavy enough. Two bottom boards one inch thick and ten or twelve wide and two for the top, one inch thick and five or six wide. These boards are placed horixontatly for the sides of the rack, and similer boards two feet long are nailed to the posts at each end. The rack maybe about twelve ftet long and two feet is a very sutable width. Upon these horizontal boards are nailed uprights, six inches wide, and placed six iccfies apart. This makes a cheap portable rack, which we like ia every respect. A'. E. Farmtr. Poor Devils. We can scarcely conceive a more miser able being, or one who has so powerful a temptation to hang or drown himself, as a gentleman of leisure, in a communiy of workinmen. The very fortune that has placed him above the necessity to labor, has imposed on him a greater curse than if he had been doomed to the galleys. He works harder to get rid of himself, than he would io forge en anchor. Companions he has none, for the industrious hold no fellowship with the idel. He roams from pillar to post ; from parlor to counting-houssj ; from acquaintance to acquaintance , from -one hotel to reading room to another ; finding no rest for the soles of their feet, nor the vertebrrc of his back. II is soul is disquiet ed within him. - He would fain be merry, but mirth without companionship is qnes tionable joyance, and his gayety is repress ed and subdued by lack of sympathisers, until the poor ennui is driven to melancholy madness Such a man has our honest com miser3iron, for we pity his impecibility an d dep?dance. The honest but needy labor er, whose d.iily task must he daily comple ted, be La re he can look forward lo cessation fttm toil, is happier in his sinewy streng'h and cheerful industry, than it ever entered into the independent idler to suppose or conceive. There is another class of men who de serve neither our commiseration, sympathy, or" consideration ; who are miserable by choice, and of no value in society. We al lude to those who have led a life of penuri ous celibacy, until the property amassed by niggardly savings and self-mortifvin-g deprivations hovers over them, by day and by nigh?, in visions of distrust, disquietude, and fear. These are they who never liten to the petition of the widow, nor the cry of the orphan; whoe charities end where they began at home if he may be said to have a home who has no feelings in com munity with Ihe world and its families. We have one such in our mind's yn at this mo ment. ' He is a man who indulges neither in the vicious nor the innocent pleasures of the age. His life is as regular and monoto nous as an eight-day clock. He is punctu al in waking and rising ; punctual in lying down and sleeping ; punctual at breakfast ; punctual at his de?k, and the performance of his regular duties; punctual at church except when there is to be a collection, and then he is suddenly indisposeJ ; punctual in his appearance at another's dinner table, and most dilatory in making a return. The "old clo'hes men" down town have fre quently proposed to barter coats xrhh him, but they have never been able to trade, as they always demanded something 'to toot ' The ladies, members of a charitable socie ty, once sent him their subcrip'ion book, in hopes that, as a rich old bachelor, he might contribnte to their funds. He envel oped the book in brown paper, begged at a grocery, and returned it through the post office, poor as when it came to him. If he wants a shilling to purchase seme urgent, necessary article, he has no change in his pocketr and draws a check. If he pays his board a day or two before the end of the month, he demands a discount for reay money. He employs a man servant to cut his hair, and forgets him at Christmas. Dancing is eschewed by him, because it occasions annecessary waste of sole-leather; and common paries are equally ignor ed, because, as he says, they are only ex cuses for squandering money in hack-hire Such is a brief eketch of h man who, in common parlance, has neither ' chick nor child" has lived more than two score years, is worth fifty thousand and upwards, and is, in our estimation, nothing more nor less than a poor pevil. Oca Dcad. Who can tell the agony of feeling which has existed for weeks in the breasts of wives, mothers, friends, who left ns in good health, but now who may be ly ing cold in death, slain by the hand of an enemy in war. The torture of uncertainty attending the absence of an enumeration of the casualties recurring in the action in which they were engaged, has been dread ful. What sad uncertainty what a hard iesson. Some hope, but mingled with an ious fear. If the name of a dear one, a hus band, a father, a son, or a brother be found among those reported dead, crushing as the blow may be, its force can be measured, the worst is known. But who shall tell the woe of the woman who reads the name of a lovedjone in either of the lists. If wound ed how is the mind racked, and the heart tortured. And the report "missing" is, if anything, more terrible still. lie may be a prisoner, and mat fteturn. He may have been so mutilated as net tc be recognized may have just strength enough to crawl out of the way and die in 'some obscure spot, where only the filthy bird that scents the battle from afar, shall, by the stoppage of its lazy flight,' point out his resting place. Many .a one reported "missing," meets such a late as this. Do one thing at a time, that's the rule, when you have done slandering your neigh bors, then begin to say your prayers. lr is said that the wheel of fortune re volves for all, bat many ot as are broken on the weef. 'Mr. Brown, I owe you a grudge, remem ber that, sir." I shall not be frightened, then, for I nev er knew yoa to pay any thiag that yoo. owe4." George Washington. BV JOHN PHOSNIX. George Washington was one bf ths most distinguished movers in the American Rev olution. He was born of poor but honest parents, at Genoa, in the year 1492. His mother was called the mother of Washington. He married early in life, a single widow lady, Mrs. Martha Curstis, whom Prescot descri pes as the cussedest pretty woman south of Mason and Dixon's line " Young Washing ton commenced buines as county surveyor, and was present in that character at a sham fight nnder General Padlock, where so many guns were fired that the whole body of militia were stunned by the explosion, and set down to supper unable to hear a word that was said. The supper was afterwards alluded to as Braddock's deaft eat, and the smile, "deaf as braddock," subsequently vulgarized into "deaf as haddonck," had its circumstance. Wasliingtoncofnmanded several troops duiing the revolutionary war, and distinguished himself by crossing the Deleware river on the ice of very inadequ ate thickness, to visit a family of Hssians of his acquaintance. He was passionately fond of green peas and string beans, and hi favorite motto was, "In time cf peas pre pare for war." or Washington's most intimate friend was'a French gentleman, named Marquis Dee, who, from his constant habits of wriibility was nick-named "langhy yet." His great est victory was achieved at Germentown, where, coming upon the British at night, he completely surrounded them with a wall of cotton hales, from which he owpened a de structive aud tarrific fire, which caused the enemy to capitulate. qTlre cotton bales beine perforated with musket balls, were much increased in weight, and consequent ly in value, and the expression playfully used, "Whales the price of cotton?" was much in vogce after the battle. During the action, Washington might have been seen driving op and down the j lines, exposed in a email Concord wagon, drawn by a bobtail gray horse. His cele brated dispatch, "Vini, vidi, vici," er 1 came and saw ia Concord wagon, his ref erence to the circumstance, Washington has been called the father of his "country," (an unapt litle, more prop erly belonging to the late Mr. McCloskey, parent of of the ce!ebratedpubilist;) the child has grown, however, to that xteal Its own father would not know i?. General Walker (William Walker) is also called the "father of Nicaragua," and we have no doubt, in case of his demise, his children, the native Nicafaguans would erect a suit able monument over his remains, with the inscription, "Go' father and fare worse." Washington was a member of ihe Know Nothing order, end directed that none but Americans should be put on guard, which grately annoyed the Americans, their com fort being greately destroyed by perpetual turns of guard duly. He was elected twice President of the United Stales by the combined Whig and Know Nothing parties, the Federlists and Abolitionists voting against him ; and ser ved out hts time with grsat credit to himself 3tid the country drawing his sal ary with a regularity and precision worthy all commendation. Although, for the time in which he lived a very deatuinguished man, the ignorance of Washington is something perfectly in credible. He never traveled on a Steam boat ; never saw a locamotive engine; was perfectly ignoraat of the.s. principles of tha magnetic telegraph; never had a caguerro type, Colt's pistol, Sharpes rifle, or used a fraction match. He ate his meals with an iron fork, never used postage stamps on his letters, and know nothing of the application chloroforme to alleviate suffering, or the use of gas for illumination. Such a man as this could hardely be elected President of the United Slates in these times, although ii must be confesstd we occasionally have a candidate who proves not much better in formed about matters in geaeral. Washington died from exposure on the .summit of Mount Vernon, in the year 1766, leaving bim a name that wtll endure for ever, if posterrity presist ia calling their children afier him to the same extent that ha been fashionable. He is mentioned in history as being ''fiirst in peace, first in war, and first in the hearts of his countrymen ;'' in other words, ne was No 1 in everything, and it was equally his enlrest and pleasure to look out for the number, and took pre cious good care to do so. A portrait by Gilbert Stuart, of this great soldier and etatesman, may be seen, badly engraved, in the History of the Uuited States; but as it was taken when the gen eral was in the act of chewing tobacco, the left cheek is distended out of proportion, and the likeness rendered Yery unsatisfac tory. Upon the whole, General George Washtngton was a very excellent man ; though unfamiliar with Scott's Infantry Tactics, be was a tolerable officer ; though he married a widow, he was a fond hus band ; and though be did not know the Bsecher family he was a sincere Chris tian. - . A monument has been commenced in the city of Washington to his memory, which is to be five hundred feet in highl and it should be' the wish of every true batted American that this virtues and ser vices may not be forgotten before it is com pleted, in which case their rememberance will probable endure forever. Reply of Bishop Hopkins (o Bishop Folter. 7e have heard of embalming in prassid acid, but never had a visible example of it before we read the reccDt admirable epis tle by Bishop Hopkins. Yet there is noth ing fierce or denunciatory Ig a tingle par agraph. There is the dignity of the Bish op, the courtesy of the gentleman and the gentleness of the Christian, manifest in every lioe. "He doeu not render railing, for railing, but contrariwise," in aceor dance with tho Apostle's injunction. The attack of the Pennsylvania Bishop waa so unprovoked, unnecesary, aad bo full of the malignity of a political partisan, that if might have stirred the heart of even so pure and gentle a nature as that of th Bishop of Yerinont to rebuking with bit terness. But his high Christain nature was proof against the temptation, ltd responds to the attack simply to the lan guage of rebuke and Cbristain expostula tion; but the rebuke and expostulation manifest what is meant by the phrase ''LeapiDg coals of fire" on the head of an adversary. What a scathing, withering rebuke upon the consistency of this Bishop turned politician, is administered in the following passage : "For many years you met in brotherly council with theee Southern slaveholders. You invited them to the hospitalities of your house, and pid them especial defer ence. The new light of Eastern Abolition ism had not yet risen within odf Church ; and if you then thought, as you now think,' you took excellent care that no man among your Southern friends should know it. Moreover, your favorite Theological Sem inary, only three years ago, was the Vir ginia tchool at Altxasdria, raised to great' prosperity by Bishop Meade, a slaveholder, and am sure that nothing at variance with my Bible view of slavery was taught ia that institution. " Bishop Hopkin's allusion to the site of the new lights in New England, the en couragement of irreligion, and the impious innovations conntenanced by New England religious societies, is as just as it ia true. It shows that he has been no idle, obser ver of the condition of the community about him, and manifests a statesmanlike sagacity in tracing the cause dfour present' troubles to their true origin. Horace has warned painters against combining a mans head with a horea's neck, of making a beautiful woman terminate in the tail of a fish ; and we would advise the senior Bishcp of Pennsylvania against a similar incongruity, by trying to write the head of a prelate in lawn sleeves, with the scaly tail of a political serpant of the Loyal League pattern, crawling on his bally in all the dust and slime of that political arent, whre venemous asps are content to) wriggle. How Affairs are Managed. Lesi than a year ago a boy imbecile in mind arrived at the port of Philadelphia, from Europe, and was brought to Wil liamsport, where his parents reside. Sev eral months ago hs strayed from the resi dence ot his parents, and by some means found his way to Philadelphia, where tho substitute sharks got hold of him, and got a board of enrollment to accept him as a substitute no doubt paying the members of the board a portion of the substitute money. The boy was given eighty dol lars as his share, and-during the first night after his acceptance the money was stolen from his pocket in all probability by the very men who g-ave it to him. After be ing sent td camp where, of course, his conduct was nothing more nor less than tliat of a partial idiot ho was frequently flogged, and several times officers (who cou'd see, if they had brains enough to see anything but huh money, what kind of a boy he was,) presented a pistol to hi head and treatened to blow bis brains out a threat which, if executed would hav covered the guilt of all concerned, and perhaps will yet be executed, for that pur pose. A few days ago this boy was pro vided with a free pass from camp to Wil liamsport and back again, and given ticket for Curtin and Aguew, with instructions how to obtain their acceptance at ths polls, and a threat that he would be shot if he did not vote them, and cent home to follow out these crders of his officers, not withstanding he is a minor, a foreigner of " le3 than one year's residence, and hi mental incapacity. The whole transaction the acceptance of him as a substitute; the theft of the paltry sum paid to bJmt his admission to a military camp as a sol dier, the abuse he suffered while in camp, and sending him home to poll an illegal vote for Curtin and Agnew forms a chap ter in human depravity too monstrous for contemplation. If anybody doubts this narrative of revolting' facts, he can easily hare b ioubts dispelled. We have the name arr residence of the boy, and any one intervw. osted can lesi it for himself . ) Iycrtmxnz fiftlu 1 9-t j