I 1 A i r ; Hi i .W.U. JACOB!, miisnerV Truth and Right God and our Country. Two Doilas per Arnica. VOLUME 15. BLOOMS BU KG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 27, 18G3. NUMBER 1. fplf" Ji iilL r-i -r- -7T v ""HI "Tl ITT IN ! i i 1 X t i )) J. STAR OF THE NORTH '" - , I UBLX3HS9 E7S3T TH KDXB3PAT BY r . v. a. niim, dflicc on !Ia!n!5t., Jrd Siiaare below Market. .TEKMS: Tw-o Dollars pnr annum if paid 'within ij; months Irom the time of subscri bing: two-dollars arnl fifty cent if not paid '-.ilhin th year. No subscription taken for a less peiiod than six months; no discon tinuance permitted u n )-i 1 ail arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. - 2 hi terms of tidverljuing will be as follows : One square, twelve lines three limes, St 00 Every su sequent insertion, 25 One square, thee months, . . 3 00 One y ear, 8 00 Cljoice JJoetrn. " From I ht BnTporJile.) Dtmocrat. i' nm JIP1SILE TO OCLE ass. I btive a message, Uncle Ate, For your own private er; As 1 cs.n't ge t to Washington, And as you. won't come here, I'm forced H put it into type, With circ Jin.pfcui'u meek ; As bashful members often print A speech they dare not speak. All head is nigh to bursting, Abe, My very eye-balls ihrob, To see what! pesky work you raak ADoat that li'ile.jnh, Wbicfc. you,! and Bill atid Horace G. Agreed st nice. in. do, In lee than "sixty days" from date, - Some ihiily mouths ago ! W gave ycu heaps of soldiers, Abe, To tieip jou smite the loe ; A str'ng of arriers that would reach From hels to Mexico. We packed them oil with 6paJes to dig, And trusty guns to shaot, With baveracks to j;raee their backs, , Aud lites aud drums to tool. Yoa saw these mighty legions, Abe, And heart) their ma dy tread ; You counteJ rmsis of living men, Prsy can you count the dead? limk o'er the broad' Potomac, Abe, Virgiuia'ii hills along, ' Their waketul ghosts arebeck'ning yon, " Tito hundred thousand strong! .Vave yon severa.1 shillings, Abe, To pay your Mtt'e dues ; , E'touuh to buy a dj:en shirts, And sundry pairs of shoe. 4 We gave yon cai'le, horses, moles, r AoJ waus full a score ; . - And several cannon with a voice Loud as a bull could roar ! - tNow. what I'm after. Uncle Abe, - 1 sirap!v to find out - What yon have .lows with all this 'ere, And what you've been about ! - li unto Csear yon hive giveu . At. that i his concern -Then Mrs. Caesar wants to frnnw ' Wiiai jo j have done with hern 1 1 know f oq're young and handsome,' Abe, And funiiy a1 jour Poll. A peer-exated, groat in J high, A ruler seven loot tall You're big enough if only smart," To manitage all the ganz : And though a little tureen von'll rise, When yoa have jot ihe Jang I , Yon told oi that th Lnso, Abe, " Were rascals lo the core, " Eecs.nse the? made so free a use . '""VOI Ur.cla Samuel's s'ord. I jll sixty Millions in a year ! - Now wasn't it a sin For Democrats to sqnander tha ,Tbe darli ng people' tin ? And are yon not deserving, Abe, Both gratitude and arnb. c For bavin stopped this wickeJ leak In Uncla Samuel's tub 1 The sase who did this wpndrous deed r Is fit for saints to snp ; ' It only cosis two millions more " Taping the vessel op ! Ifod said the Sooth had ruled n.", Abe, Some fifty years in peace. And that ifie time had fully enma When their vile reizn should cca ! .That yoa were boo id to take the helm, The sinking ship to save. And pn: hr on another track """Ani I really think you have! Yo i're ont of look ntjre!r Abe, . The engine's off the track ; Tb boiler's burst, and there yoa are, - A squalling on yonr back I Thfi excise man is at the door, 5 ' Contractors err for pell ; . tYoii're blind and s'upid. deaf mrd lama, y.or t ery well yoaraelf. " Toiir Cabinet feeble, Abe, " And dull as any deoce ; 'And if Ton have an onnce of brains You'll ship them off at once ; 'Send Stanton to th Feje Isles. I' Give Wrelles ani Chase the sack, ,Sw p Hal'ck for a Hotten'ot, ' And send for lit de IIac ! 'I know yot lell os, Uncle Abe, ' 1'his is a mighty war. Aril that the job is ra:her more ; Than what yod bargained for ! Th it yoa have done the best yea could, . . To make the rebel rue it : ' And if yoa knew what next to do, Yoo'd go rijjhtoffand do it ! Now tbat'i the very thing. Abe, That makes this din and clatter ; Yoa don't appear lo "see it,' Abe, s And thai is what's the matter ! The nigsei'a in the wood pile, Abe, , sh is any trout ; t)o tou think the Proclamation, Abe, . Will make the weasel out t . Yon xrant :o free 'lie darkies, Abe Al least so I constroe it ; Th difllcatty seeras to be -' To fi d -ot bow to do it, Tbs way, dear Abe. is mighty dark, And bottiersomo to see ; I fear yoo',!l have to ste.it op, And let the dariiey be. J t-sTI yoa ivhat is Abe, ; : . 1 Tii s folks begin, to think This colored sop is rather stale . For victi a!s or for drink, , bar mothei'8 love Iheir absent sons, Oar wivi-3 their husbands troef . i XjJ' no on cares . rnoaldjr fij, Yot Ccff;r or for joa. : From the Loian county Ohio) Gtzrtte A WONDERFUL VISION. What I here relate, is true. That which I have sern, I have seen ; and that which I know, I know. Let all ihs people read what is here written, and ponder the won derful things I have seen in a vision. For much of that which I have een in a vis-ion, will be seen in the reality by all, in thefnl-ness-of the evil time which is coming and which now U. For a voice hath said, 'that which thou beett, write !' My son our first born the object of otir dearest love and most affectionate care whom we had reared in the ways of virtue, and educated with the view to an honored life, was among the dead at Gettysburg. We brought him home : to that dear hearth by which he had grown from infancy to young manhood; to the hame which lie had left but a few months ago in the glow ol health and the enthusiasm of hope. We had brocgr.t him back, a mangled corpse with a ghat! wound on t is fair trow hardly to be recognized now, even by the loving mother who bad borne him, and who bewailed him with uoceui-ing lamen tation. Dead ! And my honse was filled with the sad faces of neighbors and friends, w ho had known and loved our boy, and who catne now to condole with us in lha iiour ol overwhelming sorrow. He was buried. And I returned to a home which was saddened forever, lo that lamil iurroum, where, in the years that paed, my boy had so olten, lrom his infancy to manhood, sal on my knee, or by my t-iJe How dark it seamed ! How dolorous And sleep had fl ed from ir.e. My eyes, which had relumed to weep, teemed as it they were feared, and blessed slumber came not. All throusih the dreary hours hours i which seemed ages !-of that awful night I . iacei-- iaou'a lI,e uin.ura uu waited and watched, and knew not repose. ! eli Fs'". ch as avar.ee, hatred, re That long night wore away at last and a ! venge, &c. One whom I saw wasdimnu day of fasting ,-ucceeJed; and the dolorous ; "e "Ialuie and appearance, but he held uight came again. As I looked out of the t window to the i k . a i . . ' innoii , nor stars, but brighter and clearer; , . , , ... , . t , , I than mid day, illuminated what seemed a : . , , . , , . . . ! vast plain, upoa whtcn ihe minutest object . . ,. - i , . l ! might b- discerned w i;h a clearness which , r , was wonderful J , , , , , . , . . , . .. , And as I looked, I behe! 1 the coming of . . . . . .1 i i 1 a great hosi. marching to the sorrowful , , t i i .u sound of a mi.nled drum. A? thev came i nearer, and glided past, I remarked that there wa n sound ol icotsteps wliwe they trod. Then I knew they era spectres the shadow ol the, countless dead, fallen in battla. Their garments were soiled and shudder torn. And I obsered, with a which thrilled horribly through me, that the death-wound was iij-ou every form, and that each ghaMly face was the faca of a corpse. Great Gol! here was an arm shot away , J And I looked, and lo I a great aseni and there a gash o: ihe forerwad : a-ain, i e of men, many of whom had s.-rolls and an eyeball burst with a shot.; and yet hot-; and yet again, a temple crushed as by a blow of a tun-barrel. And as the spectre-host glided by. I heard a voice, saying: "Weary, in- deed, wilt thoo be gazing ; for days and days must elapse, marching at this forced march which thou beholdest ere this vast army of ihe dead can pas." I turned away in horror, and prayed that I might be spar ed a spectacle which seemed to freeze the very blood in my veins. But now 1 knew, as I had not known berore, what a multi tude had fallen in battle. When 1 looked again, the vision had changed ; and lo ! in the place of those grizzly shadows, 1 beheld a great pool of blood. It was to large that ships might ride on its crimson billows. And congre gated by ihe hundred thousand, all around, the wide circumference of i s margin, were women, palid and tearful,, each clad in robes of sombre blackness, and having lit tle children by the hands, who wppt inces santly, and gazing into their mothers' faces j and called upon those who could make no response, for their blood was in the pool al their feet. And far beyond this horrible pool my gaze extended to houses made deolate, and families impoverished. I be held these widows in their struggle for bread. I conld see them chilleJ and shiv ering and crouching in scant clothing over wretched embers which imparted no warmth, hot which were all they conM pro core. - And I beheld those orphan chiUren, squalid and wretched, oncared for and un educated, going down into the haunts of vice, swept into the vortex of crime, for the wart of the fa'her's guiding and reslrain kg hand. And I cried oot, in the bitterness o! my heart : "How long, oh Lord, how long?" And what shall we obtain which will repay us for all these horrible sacrifi ces And the voice answered : "Look to the left of the pool which is before thee, and see what thoo beholdest.'' And I looked, and beheld avast grove of trees, which were leafless and dead ; and on the branches of the trees were huddled myriads of onclean birds lazily flapping their wings, and wiping what seemed to be blood from their beaks. And nnderneath was a rooltitnde of men, crying, "blood ! bloodl more blood !'' And the voice said : "These are the Shoddy Contractors, place holders, money-getters, and the ungodly among the priesthood. Listen attentively, that thoo raay'st hear." ... And I heard io load and demoniac shrieks: "Prosecute the war! Down with ihe Peace-makers! No compromise 1 No ad j ustrnent ! No settlement ! The war roost go 6a ! Down with the Constitution -it-is a league with hell ! Curbed be the old Un ion it is a covenant wi'.h death ! Down with Liberty except for negroes ! Arm the black man ! Fire the torch '. Whet the blade,! Bum citie depopulate v ill- ages waste plantations take the bread from famirhing children drive weeping women Irom the roofs that t-hener them! Steal books; steal pictures; 8iU precious plates! God is asleep! There is no hell, neither is there a judgment !' And as I gazed, "I cried out, '-Merciful Heaven, are thee nun or are they devils 1 A hell on earth ? or rather, has not the veil been removed which hide the unseen from this visible world ? Am I not looking upon fiends already damned ? ' And the voice said : "Listen yet again, while the ungodly priests are spraking' Atid I listened, and heard : "A new com mandment give I unto you, that he hate cue another. Turn your plow-share into swords and pruning hooks into spears. Thou t-halt hate thy neighbors. Do not unto otherr!-as you would have them do unto you. Ac cursed be the Peace-makers. Chrsl was the Prince of War. Thou shall lie ; thou shall steal, thou shall Lear false witness against thy neighbor; thou shult kill! Glory to John Brown! Gioryto the row Saviour ! Hobai.nahs to the uti Redeem er." 3at ( could endure the impious blasphe my no longer. Turning away, I tiehild, fiittir.g about, beneath the unclean birds, jet over the heads of Hie demoniac cro.vd, a phantom figure with a long grizzly beard and a rape about his neck. And the voice said : ' The phantom hat thou seest is the spirit which begets the idola'ry. the blasphemy, the Iraud, the ra pine, and the crime which thou hast vtii-ue-ed." And as I looked, I beheld many familiar a Pig oouit unuer ins ami, aim uu uio cuici oi lfae bojk was laBCribeJi S3,id0 p-r an num Avarice was Ins passion, ana ne had bartered his soul for gold. And I be- held an eu'eriy man uh marked features J . and lineament, and iron-gray hair, who ' ' ; with strong speech was goading the Irant'C ,, , . multitude to yet greater excesses. He had J a bartered his soul al the shrine of ambition. And vet another,- younger in appearance, ' ' T , , , with t'eard prematurely white, who had . J . , sold fnniseit lor naugtit. and who pursueu the grizzly phantom, grasping and clutching at what was at last shadowy and unreal. Arid many I beheld who looked sad and gave signs of remorse, and who seemed n,oua lo cscaPe ,ro,n 111,3 Jarnued beings wLo nurrouii l-'u inem. And the v(.n-d said : "Look now to the ; ''f'i "" s lba' whicn lo Be t'eda 'n their hands, and many were tearing ban- j ,n tbeir nanus, and many were tearing Dan- ' "ers. 0. the scrolls, some were inscuDed, ; m golden letters : 'The Constitution;" oth "r, "Christ's sermon on the Mount ;" oth- ! p" "The Golden Rule." O.i the banners I read, "Constitutional Liberty ; The Union t as our fathers made it "Blessed are ihe Peace-makers." 4 Cornpromise--agree with s'owely fell into line ; the two last, Richard thine adversary while ihou art in the way Smith, alias Murphy, from Boston, a har wiih him." I observed that lha eyes of the ness maker, and William Davis, were taken assemblage were turned toward heaven and tieir hands tied behind them, and led over looking up I saw against the sky a bright to a field in Ironj of ot ihe camp. They cross, bearing the inscription which, greet- then marched us over there, and the men of ed the eyes ol the first Christian emperor of the First Louisiana formed on oar right and Rome : "By this sign shalt thou Conquer." . Ju at right angles wiih as, thus forming a And I thought I Leheid the heaveus open-. square open on the sid9 where the two ing, and the spirit descending like a dove. ! prisoners stood guarded by two squads of The shades ol departed statesmen and pa- men. triots, and of murdered mtyrs were hov- j Their eyes were bandaged with handker ering in the air. There were Washington, ; chiefs, and every preparation mad for their Webster, Clay, Jackson, and Douglas ; aud execution. Although we could not believe as thev gazed upon the left, their csunte- nances evinced sorrow and indignation There, loo, were twelve innocent men slain by the monster McNeil and Mnmlord, who was hanged by Butler, the beast, and Boll- meyer, with that smile upon his face, which he wore when dying. And I looked again to the left, and l saw trial as otten s.s any one sought to pet out of the infernal circle, its denizens yelled after him with bit er im - precations of "Traitor," '-Disloyal," and similar epithets; or rushed a'ter with words .... . , or drove ;him back with bayonets et many escaped, with great joy at their de liverance, and met with glad welcome from ihe rapidly increasing hosts on the right. And from the left they incesean'dy called and begged for deserters from the right- But few responded, and they only whn promised an enormous price. And these crawled upon their bellies through mire and filth, from cne assemblage to the ether. And I noticed that their laces instantly be came black, their feet cloven, and their tongues forked and fiery. And the voice said : "What thon behold est at the North, is but a counterpart of what I might show thee at the South. There marchelh a specter host, and there urdleth a poos of blood ; and demons aie there ey ing for carnage and for vengeance and there, too, is a great ho6t, like unto that which thoo seest on the right, begging for Union, for Peace, for Compromise, for Con stitution. But look yet again, and thoo wilt see the terrible judgments which are in store for a people who violate the com mands of the Almighty !" And 1 beheld a brazen sky, and glaring son, and vegetation parched with drouth, and springs whose fountains had failed, channels rocky and dry. And I sav a great j multitude of men, women and children hur-1 rying with parched tongues and feeble fool steps to the great lakes and rivers, to ap- ( peae the demands of thirst. I looked again, aud I beheld another curs, for behold the green fields were smiuen with the frot in the summer time, and yielded not ihe harvests ; and the cat tle were dying by the wayside ; and the fa ces of mothers were wan and bony, and children werecrying for bread, and there was a famine in the land. And I beheld yet another curse. For it grew dark, and I heard the rushing of heavy wings, and lo ! the angel of the Pestilence passed, crying wo! wo ! wo ! to thin peo ple accursed. Andstrongmen fell down and died on the highways; and plague spots came upon every cheek and breast ; and ihere was none to minister to the dying and none to bury the dead, and vultures grew fat and usurped the land. And I heard a loud voice saying : ,iVeo gearxe is mine, saith the Lord !'' And that which I relate, is truth, in its very essence. And 1 have written i: be cause it is truth. And let all the people re ceive it as truth- And I beg and implore all w ho shall read it, to be instructed in the things which it teaches, and to consider well that which they do. Study the Divine CtK.k. Pray vithoul ceasing, lor heavenly guidance. And let those who have been lured by false leaders and ungodly priests, into that infernal convocation, over which the demon spirit of John Drown bears rule, flee, in the name of God, as they would avoid the just curse of heaven, resting neih- er night nor dat, until they have set their teet on ihe hallowed ground whe'eon they stood, when the blessings of Christ rested upoa us all Amen ! Iljrrjr. Ilarror ! ! Horror It I Can the mind conceive any greater deeds of horror than the murder of two Rhode In land, soldiers for refusing to be consolidated with a nigger regiment 1 If the statement be true, the Governor ol Rhode Island owes it to humauity, and the honor of his state to demai d trora the Federal Gversment re paration for the infamous outrage. MOKE HOttROKS OF THK WAR TWO MIDDC IS- LANDtKS SHOT. A correspondent of the Providence Pres writing from Thilbodeauxville, La., Septem ber 12, gives the patticulun of the killing of the two members of the Second Rhode Islai.d Regiment. This regiment was or dered to be consolidated with the ''First Louisiana," which is as we understand it, a negro regiment. But the men disliked the order, and.'did not march to the negro camp; ihey laid down their arms and clustered all to2ether in cne place. Lieut. Col. Robinson, t o( the First Louisiana, carne over on horse- back and repeated the order, but robody rnoved, and a lew answered "'We belong to Rhode Island, aud not to Louisiana." The men theu were threatened that if they uiu noi start iney should oe nrea into, jusi as they stood ail cio?lered together; a regiment stood by, with guns ready to exe- cute the order. Colouel Robinson, a9 he saw only a few move, added, "hurry up, or I'll fire into you." That this, was no idle threat, we found out afterward. The men at ihe time that tkev would shoot th;se men for having simply .tared io shosv that i they were not satisfied with being thus transferred Irom Rhode Island to Louiiana, , and thought that these would be reprieved at the last moment, yet the scene was ter ! rible lhat there was not one whose heart i ! . ... was riot Dealing audiDiy on seeing me j perparations lor the death of two men who j were generally liked in the Regiment. A j quad of men were placed opposite, and at ten paces Irom each prisoner ; the adju'ani spoke to them for some time, asking, I sup pose, the name of their families, When he had finished, the signal -ihe sabre stroke tor me nrsi putoon io tire, was given, ana i Davis fell over back ward, as it seemed lo us killed instantly. At the repetition ol the signal, the second platoon fired, and Smith who had stood immovable, although he had heard his comrade fall, fell, shot through the legs. Both bodies could be seen to move although we thought Davis dead They were finished by the Adjutant and the Orderly Sergeant of Company F, 1st Louisiana, abbroaching them, and firing all the charges of iheir revolvers into them. Davis was a paroled prisoner, somewha1 child'ish, always laughing and merry. Smith, I understand, has left a wife and children behind to morn his untimely death. Both men were universally liked. The New York Post, a Republican Jour nal, in descanting upon the probable eflect of war opon slavery, 6a js : "If Slavery is to be continued in this country - We. WANT THE IRISH and CATHOLICS TO TAKE THE PLACE of the NEGROES, and let the Mors Intclli cent and Mors Virtuous Blacks be liberat ed !" WOMAN'S RESOLUTION. I'll tell you of a fellow, 01 a fellow I have seen, Who is nether white nor yellow, But is altogether green ; And bis name it is not charming, It is only common Rill, And he wishes me to wed him, Rut I hardly think I will. Oh, he whispered ol devotion, Ol devotion pure and deep, And it seemed so very siily, That I almost (ell asleep ; And he thinks it wonid be pleasant, As e journey down the hill, To go hand in hand together, Rut 1 hardly think 1 will. He told me of a cottage, Ol a cottage 'aiong the trees, And dor.'t you think the fellow Tumbled down ii-oi his knee- ; While the tears the creature wasted Were erinugti to nun a mill, And he beed me to accept him, Rut 1 hardly think I ill. He was here lat night to see me, Rut he made so long a stav, I bewn to think the blockhead Never meant to go away ; At tirt I learned to hate him, And I now bate him still. Yet he ures me to wed him, Rat 1 hardly think I Will. I'm sure I would not chnose him, But the very deuce is in it, For he says it I refuse him. Me could not live a mi'iote ; Now you know the ble-ed Bitde Plainly says we must not kill, So I've thought th mutter over, AU 1 rullitr think I will. W1SL AND OTHERWISE. Short vi-its are the best' &s the fly said when he lit on the stove. The dog was h'u tail not for you but for the bread. U there was a Utile bell so attached to the hearts of men ls to ring every time he did what was wrong, this would be a musi cal world. Why is matrimony like a besieged city? Beciuse those who are in it wish to be out, and those who are out wish to be in. A soldier was arrested for stealing a reb el's goose, said he fonn d the bird hissing ot the American Hag, aud arrested it for trea son. The police are after the perpetrator of the following condrum : Why is a lovely young lady like a hinge 1 Because she is some thing to a-dore. 'Was your son egaged before he went to the war ?' asked Mrs. Rugg cl her neigh bor. 'No, but he has had several engagements siuce,' she replied. 'Why don't your lather take a paper?' said a gentleman to a little urchin, whom he caught in the act of pilfering one from his door step. 'Cause he sends me to take it.' Flave said that if men should rise from the ilead and read their epitaphs, some ol them would think they had got into the 'I do rot say that man will steal,' said a witness on trial, 'but if I were a chicken I woulk roost high when he was around.' 'No pains wiU'be spareJ,' as the quack said, when sawing olT a poor fellow's leg to cure him of the rheuma'irn. Many say that trumpet-players are doomed to short lives. We doubt; it we have known men to blow their own trumpets in- I cessantly, and achieve a good troublesome old age. When Gen. Lafayette was in the United . States, two young men were introduced to him. He said to one : 'Are yon married ' Yes sir,' was the reply. 'Hajipy man,' q'loth '.he General. He put the same question io the other, t who replied : '1 am a bachelor.' 'Unlucky dog,' said the General. This is the best essay on matrimony- ex 1 tan'.. An Opimo.v on Mokgan it is related lhat an old woman ventured out in the midst of Morgan and hi men in a little town in Indiana, and inquired of a rebel, who was sitting backward upon his Irame " 'Whar is the gayriller?' D'ye mean John Morgan ?' 'Yaas, jest so, There he is said the reb, pointing to John. Well said the old lady, eyeing him fro-i head to foot, 'We've gol better lookin' horse thieves nor him in Hoosier, an' less said about'em too.' An Awakened, bashful man who was getting into a stage at Norwich, Conn., a few days ago poshed his foot through the hoop skirt of a lady passenger, lr. the course of several ingenious expedients to extricate he only succeeded io putting his other loot through the hoops of another lady. Sinking back in seeming despair he shout ed, ''Hullo, driver, bold on ! - I thocght I was getting into a stage, but I find myself ia a cooper's shop V' How to be Miserable. Sit by the window and look over the way j to your neighbor's excellent mansion which he recently budt and paid lor, and sigh out, "0, that fwere a rich man !"' ; Get angry with your neighbor, and think you have not a friend in the world. Shied a tear or two, and lake a walk in the burial j ground, continually saying lo yourself, i "When shall I be buried here V j Sign a note lor a friend, and never forget tnnr lr i n i ! ntKa atit nvartr limir in the jlatr ! whisper to yourself "I wonder if he will pay the note ? ' Thiiik everybody means to cheat yoa. Closely examine every bill you take, and and doubt its being ginuine, till you have put the owner to a great deal of trouble. Believe every copper cent passed on you is but ha ha'-penny worn smooth, and ex press your doubts about getting rid of it if you should venture to take it. Put confidence in nobody, and believe every man you trade with to be a rogue. Never accomodate if y ou can help it. Never visit the sick or afflicted, and cever give a farthing to a?sist the poor. Bay a cheap as y ou can, and screw down to the lowest mill. Grird the laces and hearts ot the unlonunate BmoJ over your misfortune, your lack of talents, and t elieve at no very distant day you will come lo want. Let the woork ho:i-? be ever in your mind, with all the horrors of distress and poverty. Fj'Io.v the-e recepts strictely, and yoa will be miserable in your heart's couleni if we may so speak sick at heart and at variance with all the world. Nothing will cheer or encourage you , nothing throw a szleam fi t unshir.e or a ray of warmth in to your heart. Profit and Loss As ratJ.eran unscrupulous fellow named Ben was coming down one morning, he met Tom, and stoppe! him. 'I say, Jom,' he said, 'here's a pretty good counterfeit three. If you pass it, I'll divide.' 'Let's see the plaster,' said Tom ; and al ter examining it carefully, put ia his vest pocket, remarking : 'It is an equal division a dollar and a half a piece V 'Ye,' said Ben. 'All richt,' said Tom. And oil he went. A tew minutes afterward, he r lieti v, stepped into ihe store o! his friend Ran, ' and purchased a can of oy sters for a dollar i and a hall, lay ing down the three dollars t for thetn. The cleik looked at the bill rath I er doubtingly ; when his suspicions were ! immediately calmed by Tom, who said : 'There is no use in looking, for I receied ihe note from Ben himself not ten minutes ago. , course ,n c;erK, wi.u mis assurance, forked the dollar and a half in change; wi h ; this deposit and a can of oysters Torn lelt. ' Shortly afterward he met Ben, who a?ksd him if he had passed the note. j 'Oil. yes aai 1 Tern at the same time passing ever the dollar atid and a half to 1 Ben. j That evening, when Ben made up his ; cash account, he was surprised to fin 1 the ', sme e ld counterieit, three in the drawer. Turning to his 'locum tenans, he asked : 'Where did you get this cursed no'e ? ' Didn't yoa know it was counterfeit ?' J 'Why.' aid the clerk, 'Tom give il to me and 1 suspected it was fi'y : but he said he had just received it from y ou, ar.d I took it.' The thing hail penetrated the woolcf Ben With a particular grin he muttered, Sohl!' and charged the can of oy sters to profit and 1 loss account. : A Re-Tailer A newsboy rushed into a ' retail store on Har.over street the other day, and thus accusied the proprietor : 'Say, Mister, do you retail shirts here ?' p 'Yes, my -on we have them to fit you at '. one dollar each very nice ones.' j iOii, blaze 1 I don't want a whole one. Rji I seed on your sign : Shirts retiil end wholesale, and J though: you might re-tail ; mine, lor ii warns il bad ; a dig got hold it, and wouldn't let go if I.d ki I'd hira.' of " BhKK." PoMthor, ot the La Crosse! (Wis.) Demoimt, is responsible lor the fol- never abse-t iLciti-e; ves irom Church. I-jwing : I To praise a woman's complexion before Tha most trusting woman in La Crosse you have washed her face, or her figure b or.e who says she trusts her hu-band will i tore you have taken of! her gown, have his neck broke or be killed in some of j To ihink for yourself, and declare your j drunken sprees There'san angel for you. A gorgeous'y furnished drinking saloon is an illuminated advertisement of the rail - road to hell. Fare as low and timt quicker than by any other route. Tickets ten cents. Coercing Solpieks. The soldiers it; the j army some lime ago proposed lo subscribe for a testimonial to M Clellan. The com-j manding officer of one of the regiments a ! favorite one writes that "we had raised : $78 for the M'Clellan testimonial when or- j ders rame Irom ihe Government to put a j stop to it ; and we refunded the moaey to the solJiers." We alluded io the matter only to show that the soldiers were forbidden by ihe Gov- eminent to contribute lo a voluntary testi- monial of respect and gratitude to their old Commander! Does any one suppose that the admin istration will allow freedom to vote to those soldier to whoroe ibey thus forbid a free expression of sentiment in favor of M Clel-ant Tlie Lost Ship. There has been a storm at sea, and a gI )ant ship, wi h all itsfreight of human souls, has sunk beneath the dark blue waters of trie ocean. Noi a vestige of the storm now remains, but the witers sleep peacefully and calmly, and noi.e would think, wera they gazing upon its unruffled surlace, that the storm-king had ever teighneJ iber Not an hour before the waves were dashing against the vess"l'. side, the white capped l.iMmna I. t .,.! r.r. lw4 ,1 r reverbating thunder rolled along the sky, and the vivid lightening flashed along the horizon. The waves rolled higher and high er, and washed across the vessel's deck. The planks were shivered to atoms, the whits sails were torn asunder, and ihe good ship !ay a wreck upon the waters. There were strong men Dattung wiMi the waves. weak women sinking beneath thi waters. and little childreu borne along on the bo som of the mighty deep. Mothers werv trying to clasp their babes, husbands their wives, brothers their sisters, bu: they were j:n from their protecting arms by ihe Cruel waves. It was but a moment they were separated, and then all sank beneath the waters into one commo i grave. They are sleeping peacefully beneath the coral caves, and the mermaids are chanting iheir re- quium, Oh ! lho-e treacherous waves. How many homes they have left desolate and lonely ! How many hearts they have filled wi h sorrow ! When the lime arrives for ihe i-hip's return friends will te anxiously wailing lo greet friends but ihey will look and long in vain. As the days lenthen into weeks, the weeks into months, and the months into years ihey will cease expect ing, and hope will die from their hearts. Tl.tMj their "vill be anguish, morning and weeping. Prayers mingled with wails will ' ascend to the throne of Heaven, but if it will avail naught. Never again will the lost friends come ; never again will the maidea behold her lover, the wife her husband, the parent their children. There will al ways be a sanctuary within their hearts, cousecreted to the memory of lUe loved, lost aud dear ones who are sleeping the dreamless sleep beneath the wa'er of the ocean. Life and Love. Wha lessons are embodied in thy leach- i iiis ! stern lessoi.s as we in our days of hope and happiness, could never thjuk of encouiiterit g. as we Pt sail under s.inny skies, and our bark glided piea-atttly over smooth water: we did nut dream of ths clcu.li. the storm, and the tempest, that coTie all too sooti and woke us Irom our fond eecitrity. Time, the great monitor of all hear s teaches us to ihe undeniable and stern tru'h' that change is written or, all things; bu, ,he 8ajje,t U deatn. Qh how terrible is the wreck of hearts and homes, when the messenger, resistless anJ unerring ia his march, lakes from our rnidsl the brave ar.d s rong: prayer and tear are of no avail; hle's Jest-on we must all learj, life's burden w e mnsi bear. Who has cot seen some pf their loved ones wrapped in the cold cerements of the grave urn! borne to the innumerable city of the d-a.l ? When remembered lhat in all our wanderings through life we should met them no more, see their kindly beam ing smile, hear their loved tones no more, have we not i'i anguish ot sou!, u'tered the wail of a Heeding heart, let me die, for in all this broal ear'h I have nought to live for ; but we cannot die when we wish io most; we may weep at many a grave be fore we reach our own. Who has not wept over broken hopes atd severed ties ? Who has not seeu, one by one, life's cheri-hel dreams depart, its golden cha'uee turned bitter-iess ; or snatch ing rudely from our gtap the hope and trust of y ear-? Oh. who cannot say, when ail oarhorded hopes are crn-heJ, cur household goods ar scattered ani broken, I would uol live al ways? AEfCRPITICS or Hcviax Life. To salons I vour most sntimmate friend when be is I walking with any great man. To pronounce those the mot pious who opinions in every society you frequent . i To tell a confirmed beauty that she looks much better than she did last season. j I o praise a daughter just come out, a I 'he presence of her haudsorne mother or five and thirty. ao occupy the attention of a large com pany by tlie recital or an occurance interest ing io yourself alone. To expect that your friends will rsrnera ber you after you have thought proper- ta forget them. To cal' for bed chamber candels at twelve o'clock, aud io remark to your friend on a vi-it that you forgot to ask him if h ever look supper. Not to wear a coat when voor iiints ir ; r,,eumali8rn) Mt yQd ihoM b) j ltl0Ugrll dei.ale. ; I What church do you attecd, Mrs. Par- lington ? Oh, any paradox church wher the Gospel is dispecced with ! Gkt ready, boys, old Abe bas called for tbree hundred thousand soldiers. u