- 1 " Li; ill L'i - D. JACOBr, PnMlsbcrO Trulij and I.Jfflit-------Gdd and oor'Cobntrj. 'I v. Two Dollas per Annca 'VOLUME 15. bloqmsburg. Columbia county, pX. Wednesday june & 1864. NUMBER 33 'ij ,: J A xtout ur e ro si all: EITHER 2im f OR . v tMO humbug, bui an'ENtiRELY new (jffiti oe 'Marti St. ird Sqnare beow Blarktt; iJOg. Only three .month in this conntrr.l, .ti-uiic.' r...i ...Ji.-... v.4 txj I .... -ii r.inuo . l v u luuai 3 jJ.r milium n paiu ,no citp-lrap operation to go.ll the public, . within six months from the time of subscri ber a-genuine money making thing ! Read bin?; two dollars and fifty cents if not paid. ribe'Circarar or ins tract ion once only and ' w'tnn the, year. No subscription taken for jbn will understand it perfectly; , A Lady f. period ;thaWix months ; no d.scon it- . - ' , 3 ' 7 tinuar.ce permitted until all arrearages are Has just written to me thai- she is making . naiil: nnless at the ontion of the eJilor. ;athish m TWENTY. -'DOLLARS SOil E 'DAYtjl giiinj instructions in thia art. fcousanda of Soldiers are. 'miltlrj money 'rapidly at it. It'ia a- thin that takes better rtiaa ;,aayihioj ever offered' You-can "make money with it' ho me or - abroad on rteam boats on railroad' car, and "in ' the eoontry of Jitr'. Yoa will .be pleaded-in 'pnrsning ijj'not only becH?e it will, jiald !ibandome income, but afso in-coti6e-'buence of the general admiration Vhi'ch it elicits, h is pretty much !I profit. A 4 'mere triHe i'necesar'y ioiart with.- ..Thera is scarcely one person oat of Hhouaands who ev'er paya any attention' to "advertisements of ihivkiuJ, iliinking ihey V ' sre hnrnDngs. Coftseqnenily those who do end for instructions : will have a broad "SIJ to makn mony fn. There is a class oi persons in this world tvho- wou! J think! hat because they he been humbugged out of a dolhr or so, 'that everything that ha advertised ia a humbug. 'Consequently nl trj no more. , tne pereoir wno sue 'vends is the one that keep on frying unil, he hita something that pays him., This art cot me oni thousand 'dollars and I execf to make teoney out of it and "all who purchase the art of me will ' do the 'same. One-Dollar sent to, we wif! insure be prompt return of a card of itimriu;tion 'i n -to e-' a rt . The iron . t&Ul le relumed ' to t&ottnot satufUJ. ' .' ; Address j , WALTER T. TINSLEY,' No. Vrark Place, New York. . 'Oct. 21, 1S5X 3rh. ' ' 1 i. 5 'IMPORTANT TO tADlES.-rr. Har. "ey's Female Pill have never yet failed In Amoving drfiiculiies arising from obstruc lion, cr stoppage of natvre. or, m restoring 'the fystera to perfect health whatisoffi ing from fipuvaT affections, prolapnus, Uteri, Hb whiles, or other WHakHea of tne uter ine organs. I The pills are perfectly harni Ifssbn the consthniiorr, anilmay be taken' . ty" the raost'delicate fniale 'without caus ing distress the same time they aet like a 'charro byTeireagi'hynsnir, in1goraiinor an j " Tastorin the ' system to a hVallhy condition aaiLbybnuifingr on tbe monthly .period with rrgnjari'.yj 'no rhaWTroin' what caus es the obstruction may a'ne". They; should "tiqweveri JfOTbe tilen" during the first 1 h e 3 o r f o n r ni o n rh"s o I p r e g n a n c y , t h o u hr af(S at " any' Whet ' rira'caa' miscarriage Vcul J be'th'e resutuTV " ..... , Each tor, con'tains. 60 pill,. Price Si. , .. Dr. Harvey's Treatise on disease 6 . Fe toles;ffreofiancy,lr.i3Ci'ria!ie, Barrennes Vterility, Reprodoclion, and abuses of Na 'tnre, and emphatically the"' ladies' Private Medical Adviser,' a pamphlet of 'glpages ie'nl fiee to any addra. . Six: ceuta re- 'quired to pay post aje. - .; '. ; The Pills and book 'wltT be' sent by mail Vsben jtfesird, scurlT ?eaT3tf,nil prepaid by ' ji BRYANv 'M. bGeneraf A't. j X- ' Ko. 7f Cedar Wreef, New York. : CT'SoId by all he principal druggists. No. 23, 1863 y. :-' ' i BELL'S SPFXIFIC-U'ILI Warrated fn all rases. "Can be'retied rn!. NeVer faia to cure l .'td not nauseate L' Are speedy 5n aetion .No cbanoe of diet required t)o not interfere with business pursuits ! Can be bjed witnbdt drtjeciion I" Upward of 200 cures the asi' month one .of them Very severe cases Over one hundred phy sicians have oecHhem-in their practice, and all speak well of fheirefneacy, and ap- j brove heir composition: which is entirely r . !. . -- :. ' " b.miiiiS a ni.l hirm no liiA strRtemt , 3 t i "c ". c . . Hundreds of certificates can be shows. . system -Eell's Soecific PjM are the orismaf an tool.' 'genuine"- PpVc.-lc' Pill. . 'Tbey, are adapted for male and lernaleold or jontig, -arid the oaly: reliable remedy for .'effecting b permament and speedy cute in all cases rperrnatorrbea, or Seminal Weakness with all its train of e'il, each .as. Urethral and Vaginal -Discharges, the whites, Bightly or IOToluntary Emissions, tncontintHcej Geni Tal Debility . and ; IrritabiRty T Impotence Veaknef or Icrs tf Power, nervons De fciiity; &c-, all of Wblcb arise principally Trija Sexuel Excesses'pr self-abase, or tctne cwistitutiotiaLdeningement, and n - Iti.pac'uates the sufferet foro- fulfilling the t!utis of married lifel In AVC sexu.lt. dis ,. .'feasts, Gonorrhea, fefeet and Strict ores, and 'ia Diseases of the Bladder aod. Kidneys, .ihey act as a.charrn! ; Relief i U experi .feaced by taking sr single bx.- - ' Sold by all the principal dH.2g.st9. Price .ti. . " :r - nt,rjy malti eeccrety:eal- ed, and oafideniiaUvj en - receipt of the tcpaey; byl'-V-V--..- , J. SR.YANVM. XX. - : ' - ffj; 76 Cedaf srraet, New York, Consa'.tinsr, PbysicTtnsrdr the treatment, of Seminal, "Uffnary. Sexual, and Nervous ' ;Dieaees. who will send,4 free to all," the K IcIIawr-tS'tralBable 'Work'ia fesaTad en- "v r.-TIIK FIFTIETH THOUSAND DR. BELL'S TREATISE on seli abase, Prerna isradecay, irnpotenceancf loei. of power, sac'sl ihtzse terslnal weaknesSj nightly eis'ion?, genital .debility, &C, &(j.a .fi'f'st of 84 pag33, co'Gtataioj jmpef "latJt advice, to, the. afHicted and. which !:C3'J fc read by every sufferer-- as ( the f;ic;r? of cure in . tha , ssrerest &tage3Iis y s.-t for:h, Tw0 "riaapi retired o PUBLISHED 1TIBT WBDNX8PAT BY ' Avar.' ii. TirinRVJ ..'V r 2kt terms of adverlisivz he as follows: One square, twelve lines. three times, SI 00 Every, subsequent insertion,'. ... . 25 One square, three months, . . ... . 3 00 One year, . . . V. . . 8. 06 " TELEtt JONES. ' I know a man named Peleg Jonas, He voted for Abe Lincoln ; ' 1 Ar.S when this war broke out, he said iThere musn't be no blioking. ' , .'Load your guns and squint your ayes, . ." . Finger on your triggers ; . - -HaMgjthe "rebels" op sky high, : ' Emancipate the nhgersi . . " , - , 4 ' ' J J . He said the Union we must saver If it made creation holler ; And that iKa 'PresMeut shnnid hav'o Every man aiid'eVeiy dollar. He joined the Union League, and bought ' . A flag for his son David, And prayed that in another world -No Democrat be sav ed. He said the war was jnst, and should Be poshed With 'Tim and vigor, ' . . . And any man agin the war . , Was'meanar than a niggar. ' . , , : : " -t And yet this Peleg Janes would. stay -t A mrng bis pig and cattle,"' - .r' Whileother men took up taeir'gaaa And marched away to battle., , , But when the draft was made in town, ' - Poor Peleg he got drafted ; And when we told the patriot cuss, ' ' It scared him almost half dead. Then Peles'ii'erft right offand sold - To Smith of Podunk Hollers, . One horse, eight steers ten. Durham cows, Aud got three hundred dollar. And then he paid the Marshall off,' But said it was not right, yr, " ' That such good -patriut. folks ai ha; . Should either pay or fihtsir. And this earn man, named Peleg Jones, t He voted for Abe Lincoln-; ' - ; And when this war broke out, be said ' - ! There masa't be no blinking. , . . r Load your guns and squint your 'eyes,. .. . Finger on your trigger ; .... .- t , Hfcng the rebels all sky high, - : : .Emancipate the niggers. Jchn Cfarke izl Ills Fortune. Never mind the bouse, John ; we've got one of our own," whispered John - Clarke's wife. She was a brigbi little thing, only twenty ! years old. And how brightly and tiewitch- inglj she shone 1 a star amid the eombre company. . - "But what ia the world has be left me !" mntt'ered John Clatke. 1 believe he bated me I believe they all hate rae' Hush, my .dear 1" said bis wife. ; j "I bequeath to John Clarke, my dearly beloved nephew," rdad the grim attorney,, "ats a.rewprd lot his firmness in resisting temptation daring the - last two y ears, and his determination to improve in all accep- J table things, my one horse chaise, which i stood.in my barn mere than twenty-five . years requesting thai he .will repair it or cause it to be repaired in a suitable man- . ner." , j I ' Fi" were Dresent tittered, and alt seemed to en- That was all. .Some ef the people who V3v the confusion of the poor yoanz man I - ,-, 1 , . , ...... . ' .. . . sively ; poor little Jenny fairly cried "To think," she said to: -herself, "how bard he has tried to be good, and that ia all be thought of' hi"! ' ' . "Wish yoo joy !" said the red-headed - . ....... youth, with a broad grin, as bs came out of the room. . :r :.'u . .. John sprang op to coller the fellow beta little white hand laid oa his arm . restrained biro. .. ' ';. . .-;' V ' I ;"Let thlm triumph, John," ('woa't hurt yon," said Jenny with" her 'sunny smile ; "pray don't notice them for ray sake.", . - "Served him right," said susan Spriggs, the neice of the old man' jiist dead, and' to ?wbom he had left a good deil of his mon ey j "Served him' rigbt for marrying, that .ignorant goose of ,a jenny. . Braiier. I up- posed be speculated' good deal on the old man's generosity." ' To which' ihe added jo a whijper. that only bef owrf heart beard: "he might have had ane; he had the chance; andTI loved bim better than one else bet- ter than that pretty little simpleton, Jenny Brazier.'; ", "'" ' .J.'..' " "T . , i ;Nowwe shall see,hotT , deep bii good ness is," said a makiea aaai "He became rery pious just bfcause' be1 expected a) for- Httna from mypoor dead broth er bulwe rnostsee bow much of a change there is in John Clarke be.; always .a- an imp; of wiokednesa." . ' . -) 'J ' ( i Well, 1 think Jdltn Clarke wift haVe to jse contented whahi!;.lritle cottage,' ifaid ;the father of Aaa Sprigss to good el4 Joe 'Heap. . f - " 1 " . "Velf, I think beU cOntsar;1 if be;ftm't i La onzht tobs. with that linla iswel cf a Pshaw ! you're all cray about, that gal," said Spriggs4 , uVVhy,'Bhe ain'" to beconj. pared; tb 'my iSu8an.', Susan plays oa the forty piano like sixty; aud msnagea'a house firstrale." t v - : 'Bless yob neighbor priggs, I'd rather have that innocent, blooming face to s mi le af me whan I wake3 ' op-of mornings than all the forty piano gals." . ; i "I'd like to know what yotf mean !" claimed Mrl Spriggs, firing cp. ' ' VJust what J ay," replied good old Joe, coolly. . . t - ' ",, ' . 'Well, that John Clarke'Il die on the gal lows yet, mark ray words' said Mr. Spriggs. spitefully, .. ; ; "That John; Clarke will make one of our best men yet' replied Joe, complacently. !Doabl it','! said Mr. Spriggs. "Yes, may: be you. do' said. ice; fand that's a prelty way to bnild cp a: fellow, ain't it, wher he is trying bis beat - No ! John Clarke I won't be a good man if you can help it. : People that cry mad dog are plaguey willing to stone the animal while he's running ; and if he in't triad 'they're' sure to drive him "so. Why don't you. step up to, him ami say, 'John, I'm glad you're going right now,'arl4 I've got faith in you,; and if you want any. help, why come to me and I'll aseist you I;' That's the way to do the business, Mr. Spriggs." Well, I hope you'll do it, that's all," re plied "Spriggs; 6u!kily. . "1 hope Lsball, and I'm bound to do so, if I have the chance. "Fact is, he's got such a smart Vitt la wife that be don't really need any help." v " ' ' "Nd i l V a pity then that brother, Jacob left htm thai one horse. chaise." ''You needn't laugh at thai ;' old Jacob never did anything. without a meaning to it. That old chaise may help him te be great yet. tact is,;l think myself, it Jaco; trad left him money it might have been the ruin of .him. .Less things; than; a.-oee horse chaise have made a man's fortune." - , . ; "Well I'm' glad you think so reach of bim f 1 don't' said Spriggs. s ' ! " "No," muttered Joe,s his neighbor iorn ed away ; "-but if he had married your raw boned darter that plays on the forty plan ner, he'd been all right."' ..'' WA one-brse chaise,' said Spriggs,faugh iug "Avhat a fdrtono And so it went from raoo:h to mouth. None of the relatives some of them al ready rich bad offered the poorest man among them, (the- owner of a onehorse chaise,) any of the beqneathment left to bim Tr her but tbey bad. rather rejoiced in his disappointment : y, . . ' The train is, everybody prophesied that John. Clarkea poor, rnotherless boy, would come te ruin aud they wanted ihe prophe cy to provo !a true one. He had, in his youth, been -wild and wayward, and' some what profTYjrate in the early Tears of his manhood';' buf his' old uncle had' encour- t I aged him to reform held but hopes to which, he bad hitherto been a stranger and the love of, the sweet young Jenny Brazier completed, as it seemed, bis relormation. . Jenny never appeared as lovely , as she did on that unfortunate day of the reading of (he will, after they bad returned to the poor little fcdase that was Jenny's owoi - "No tnaer, John," she said cheerlolly, y0a will rise in spite of them. Wouldn't ei ihem think. I was in the least discoor aged ; that would please them' too weir. We are doing fine now ; and you know, if they cut the railroad through onr bit of land, .he money .'will set ns up quite comfortably, tsnVour home a happy one, if it is small And oh, John, by-and-by.". . , : A eloqeett blush a glance toward bar workbaket, out of which peeped the most delicate needlework, told the story that ever-new story of. innocence, beauty and belplessneis. ; For once. John Clarke stopped the cos- "P moam. neiu u. ne.u up u.aU- fnllv worked ateadilr at his- trade, and . . . . . ' . every step seemea a eor? aavance ana iu upward one. . Baby was. jnst six months old, when the Railway Company paid into John Clarke's hand a very handsome atrlh for the privi lege of cutting a railway through his little field. ';!:-' ' , . : 'A handsome baby; a beautiful and in dastrions wife, and a good round 4uin from the railway company," thought John, with bo bbnesf exultation "well, lhii liv ins I i ",J6hn,'8aid his wife, rising work, "look there !" from her He did, and savr the bid one horse chaise dragged by a stalwart laborer.,'; v "Mastef says as bow the old bain is go ing J.o be pujled down, sa be sent the sbay," said the laborer. , . i .j'. Thank ;hiini for nothing," said John, bit terly, but a glance at bis wife redrored ' the evilapiritandii batter One smiled oat of his eyes. . '- ' r-hli 1 ' 11 ' '"Jxihn, jfod can apare a littla moriey to bate Xhfi old, cbaUe done up, caat yoo ? Yoa'oflght to,' according; lo the will' aaid Jenny. -" ; 5 - - ' ; -' : Thw old trash' mxuteretl John1.' . ! "But jvoacould; a( .least tell it for wtat the repairs would cost," said Jenny ia her winning way. '"r "Yea,"! Pappose I caild," aaid Johd. ; "Theo l'd haWlit.-dona," 6aid ienoy, " and, bless rn e, I'd keep too ; you've got 'a good horse, andTajrljaTe the old, chaise .tnada qQiti': stylish lor baby and I to ride in n "Well VI! end er i Ho sum's to-raor-Ww,. Aad$3'wliat hVll- do; it foi iatd John'. i "Look here I Mr. Hosmer wants you to, come over to his shop 1" shouted the wheel wright's apprentice, on the, following day, at the top of bis iurrgs. ''Old Joe Hemp's there, and say he's right down 'glad. It's 'hundreds, and hundreds and hun" ( ' ' "Stop boy what does he mean' Jenny V 'cried John, putting lbe baby in the cradle, face downwards. '.- s. ! "My patience, 'John ! just look-at that child precious darling ! I'm Sure I don't krow, John. I'd go. over aud see,',' said Jenny. . -.,?;.-;-' ' s "Taint any Ton, ! tell you,"said the boy, while John hutried on . his coal and h at ; "my gracious ! you'll say it aiu't fun, when yon come to eee all them gold things, and the papers." ' i This added wings to John's feet, and in a moment he stood breathless in the wheel wright's shop. . ,.t ' "Wish you joy, my fine feller," cried Joe Hemp. '"''.,'',, Look here ! what?ll yon take for that old chaise 7 I'll give you four hundred," cried the old wheel wright In great glee. . "Four hundred !" repeated John Clarke, aghast. . ' '' "Yes, jnst look at it !' You're a rich man, sir, and I'm glad of it ! You deserve to be," said the wheelwright, shaking John's hand heartily. . ! ' What do jou Bnppose was the consterna tion, delight, gratitude tho wild, wild joy that filled the heart pf Clarke when he found the old chaise lined with gold and bank notes ! I mean the cushions, the linings, arid every where 'they could be placed with out danger or injury. PoorJohn or ralherTich John his head was nearly turned. It required atl the bal ance of Jenny's nice equipoise : of chfcrac ter to keep lijs ecstatic brain from spinning like a humming top. Now he could build i.two houses like his undo had bequeathed to his red-headed cousin, who had .wished 'i. him joy when the will was read the dear old uncle ! .Vhata genuine sorrow he felt as he thought of the many times he had heaped reproached upon his memory! Imagine, if you can, dear reader, the pe culiar feelings of thosekind friends who had prophesied , that John Clarke would coma 'to grief.. 1 - - , '; At first, old Joe Hemp proposed to take the old chaise just'as it was linings strip ped, bits of cloth hanging and proclaim with a trumpet the glad tidings to the whole village, taking especial pains to stop before the house of Mr. Spriggs, and blowing loud enough to drown all the forty pia'nds in the universe, 'bnt was TOied down by John's kind little wife. "La I they'll all know of it soon enough!' she said, kissing the baby; "I wouldn't hurt their feelings. ',' '. They did know of it, and a few years af terwards that all agreed that John Clarke had really turned out to be a good man. So much for the old one-horse chaise. The Restlt or Low Wages roa Work woman. The practical result of low wages of seamstresses and work-woman was il lustrated by an incident which came to .our knowledge last night. 'Ayoung girl, neatly though plainly dressed, svas ' arested by a police officer for improperly soliciting men upon the street. When taken to the station. house she admitted the charge, but said sbe was compelled to adopt that course of' life or starve. She came from Vermont, with her mother and sifter, because they could find no employment there. Since their removal the mother has been sick, and their support had devolved upon this girl, who worked in a shep on Essex street, and received ten cents for making thirteen coat button -holes. Work as hard as she might, she could not earn enough 10 support the family, and to .was compelled to add to hers earnings by . going .'on the street. She told her story plainly, but with an apparent feeling" that she was justified by the necessities Other facia known to the police corroborated her story, and there is no doubt that she was driven to a life of shame. Such faets show that there is still work for philanthropist a and reformers at home, even in Boston. Boston Post. The Starke county Democrat published at Clinton Ohio, says : "A preacher-in this city, last Sabbath, took for his text tbo 14th, verse of the 12th chapter of Hebrews. It reads as folldwa:. "Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which'' no man shall see the Lord." ' : ' The revemed gentleman read this text from the Terse as follows : -., "Follow holiness, without iskich na mari chatt see the Lord'" v ' , . The words, "peoje with all men," were not acceptable, And hence were omitted." .; So it seems that the Abolition preacher are geinglo take the same liberty with the Wofd of God that old Aba does with the Constitution. 7 ; . : . -. ' Tp( Republican party , haa. rio'w . fanr grand pTllers oawhich' it' rests, to wit Emancipatibn ;' J . ' , ' Confiscation; : . Extermination'; - j; 1; Miicegenailoh j - ' ; " : ' Abraham Lincoln has torn a young - wo man by the name of PpUoek, fromi her par ents in Allegheny caunty, Maryland, and seat her to tae-Peons'ylvauia, Western Peni tentiary to be -incarcerated, a. cenvaon Howard, Bit Style as a Writer.; ;: We select the following extracts from a fetter in the Brooklyn Eagle of last week, purporting to have been written by Howard, "of the Times," from Fort Lafayette. The letter is an excellent imitation of the style in which the great'Dead Beat," his fanci ful nom de guerre, was want to tickle the lit erary palates of the readers ef the Eagle : Cell 5,31 1, Second Tier, 7 Fort Lafayette, May 24. J . Dear Eaclk : In the language of the "magnificent" Vestvali, "I am here," I think I shall stay here, at least till I get out. Perhaps you was surprised at my sodden departure. So was I. . But I received a pressing invitation from General Dix to come down here: which I did'nt feel at liberty to decline, so I did'nt. Bob Murray brought the invitation. Bob Murray is United States marshal, and he marshelled me the way I should go ; so I thought it best to go it. Bob is a nice , roan ; but I would'nt re commend you to cultivate his acquain tance. You may have heard of Fort Lafayette, it is a great resort of friends of the adminis trationover the left. THE LOCATION , . of Fort Lafay ette is in the water between the Atlantic ocean and West Point. ; It is a good site for a marine residence; but 1 have'm seen any mariues here. It is inaccessible on all sides, except the inside. Its out accessibility is what I most object to. ' " ;' ' THE WAT TOO GET IW is curious, and may interest, your readers who have'nt been here.- You can't go by railroad, or steamboat, or horse and buggy. The entrance is effected in a highly military rnauner, invented, I believe, by General "Dix, or of some other man. You go to Fort Hamilton, Which isjost over the way. . . A 1,250 pound shell with the inside out is provided tor the purpose. You get in the shell. ' it ia then put in a 2:40 inch mortar and rammed down cn a barrel of powder. The mortar is touched off and up yon go. Yon keep going up about fifty miles. You then come down and land right in the mid dle of Fort Lafayette. The artilleryarlist has attained great pre cision in the range, and you light exactly in the centre of a hollow square of military people drawn up to receive yoo. TOE 6ENSATI02Y ' ' " ' ... as the shell goss up is peculiar. ' When you have reached an. altitude of forty-nine miles, eight furlongs, the view is magnificent. - You have a a bird's eye view of Bath, Coney island and New Jersey. . ' I made a sketch of a.', I'll send it to you. Perhaps you think this is a slranjg way of getting iato the fort, but it is'nt a circum stance to THE WAT OF GETTING OUT, which 1 have'nt discovered yet. When I do I'll let you know. The people who keep the fort are of the military persuasion, it is their forte. They moiIy wear guns or sword, and do every thing in a military way, when is not a civil way, though they have been very civil to me. The fort is a substantial building, there is no apprehension of burglars. Sensible people would rather break out than . break into it. . As a hotel it is not equal to the Mansion House, though the terms are more reasona ble. Tb9y don?t charge any board. The only charge military people are given to is to charge bayonets. The bill of fare is wholesome, bet lacks variety. There is TOO MCCH PORI. The bill of fare, however, is' varied. We have pork and crackers for breakfast. Crackers and pork for dinner, and Pork with crackers for tea. I think we shall have a change .next week, as the commandant has cent an order to Now York tor a barrel of pork. When you write to ma inclose a bunch of radishes in the letter. : THE SPCtETT of the fort is select. Ttiey are mostly peo ple of Southern complexion; who have been recommended here for the benefit ol their health." They don't generally see it. There is no fernal society here. Nor no Union Leagues. . Nor no Philharmonic concerts. Otherwise it'a pleasant. The Tiew is ' enchanting. Lovely water scapes spread before the vision on every aide. As I said before, the situation is ma rine ultra marine, and gives mo the blues as I gate upon it.' , ' There is no post-offica in the fort, and correspondence is limited. Perhaps you'd like to know how 1 sent this letter. A pig eon flew into urn fort to-day aad I attached the letter to his tail.' If you get U it will tell the tale of its delivery. , Tho pigeon is a carrier-pi geonj and you may get him a situation as a leiter-carriar under Postmaster Lincoln." - - i : Somebody may inquire - 'war 1 CAME heks. ' I'll tell yoo confidentially. : The govr'-nment is making extensions to its mansion at Fort ' Hamilton ; likewise at :Fon Richmond",' on' Staten Island." ' They wanted a reliable parson to look'aftsT'the architects, to sae.that they did'nt pocket the bricks. Fort Lafay ette' is half way between,1 and je-shnVleif tfiiVyoa eta see '.both'" forts what is , A meeting of the cabinet was called ' at the Wiiite Honse. ecretary Manton Intro- ; duced ihe subject. t . The President said it reminded him of a story he once beard in Illinois. A mas who lived in Sangamon county, in conver sation with a medical student, said, he did'nt believe in vaccinav.cn. Says . bs, ' It don't do a child a bit of good I had a child vaccinated once, and in three days after it fell out of a window and broke its neck." . , The cabinet saw the point at once, and laughed so loud that they woke up Secre tary Welles. Secretary Seward ra;:g hi little bell, and sent. for General Dix. General," said William H., "how is For! Lafayette?" "Our flag is there," said the general, with military promptness. , "Is there a reliable man to be found in the Department of the Ea.t f" said Wil liam H. "If there is'nt," thundered the General, "I'll shoot him on the spot." "Who is he ?" asked the Secretary. "His name is Dead Beat," nayu the Gen eral. "Send him to Fort Lafayette." So I came. , f : I am eiill here. , Yours, In rstirsment, Dead Beat. Sew Regime New Jalien. Are the people mad ? In the name of Heaven, we ask our fellow countrymen are they mad has reason departed from the land 1 Do men ask themselves the objects of this terrible war ? . Why our fellow citi zens are driven to the slaughter pen like bullocks why our rivers are tinged with blood our soil saturated with human' gere our country sounding with , the wails cf widowed women and helpless children We say, do our people ever, ever ask these questions 1 We are told the war is to preserve f&e Government to uphold the majesty of tht Constitution to preserve the Union. What Government ? What Constitution? What Union ? ' "The Government of our fathers," the hTPocrilical office-holders say. Never was there a more wicked falsehood. Did' the Government of our fathers demand the erec lion ot hornu bastiles over the land, in which to incarcerate free white citizens b3 cacse of their political opinions? Did the Government of our fathers demand the de struction of the liberty of speech, the free dom of the press and literty of conscience the great franchises it was intended to protect ? Did that Government authorize the assumption of despotic powers by the agents of the people in order to enslave freemen ? Did our forefathers ever con template by their Government that such creatures as Butler and other military sat raps should have and exercise unlimited power and control over the lives, liberty, and property of free white citizens should leil a freeman how he should pray when he should speak what he should wear and what he should say and unless be obey ed, he should be manacled like a felon, burled into a dungeon, or shot down like a beast ? Never, never. It is a base slander upon the founders of our Government a loul aspersion upon our ancestors to say that they ever formed such a Government. Yet these are the powers now claimed and exercised by Abraham Lincoln and his mil itary satrap throughout the land. These are the powers which they ask Onr fellow- countrymen to let them exercise, upon the false statement that they are necessary to support the Government of enr fathers. Are you mad, that you will longer heed such wilful misrepresentations ? "The Constitution ot our fathers," these wicked and hypocritical rulers say. Yes. The tyrant at Washington says he has regard high regard for that instrument and in his last fronuncimento issued to 000 of his employees in Kentucky oner.Iy admits thai hs has violated that sacred chart of our liberties, and this under pretense of preserving the nation. The Constitution of our fathers. Yes. Who re is the blessed instrument ? it has been torn to tatters by the ruthless destroy ers now in power, and its shreds are scorn fully irampled under foot and spit upon. Why, a leader of the party now in power Mr. Collamer of Yerraont admitted the other day in the Senate chamber, that the Constitution was now never mentioned but in terms of contempt and derision. It has been denounced by the political friends cf the Federal tyrant," as "a covenant with hell," and but a little while back one of them boasted publicly that it bad been com mitted to the flames, and' thai he rejoiced at it. Away; then, with sueh a false preteaia as this, that the war Is carried on to preserve, protect, and defend tbe Constitution, when the Commander-in chief of the Federal ar my and navy thus boastfully proclaims that he has violated the sacred chart, and his friends are trampling it andsr foot! For "the Union" these same wicked rul ers will say. The "Union of our Fathers?" not at all. A Union of peace, harmony, aad love ?, No they scornfully answer. What kind of a Union, the a, are they fig hi inc for ? ; The answer is wiittea Ii blood. ; 'A. Union of baiea1 Union 0! strile-a at once, and is just the place to see going on. ' ' ' ' Union of discord a Union pinned together I by swords and bayonets a Union in which such men asvphillips, Greeley & Co., areV to be tne masters a Union in wnico feder is al bayonets, shoulder strapped tyrants, De -gro Governors, negro Judges, shoddy lords, -and miscegenation minions are to rttls. j' Have not their leaders already predates-, ed their pnrposes'npon the housetops and in the' valleys on the battle field tand"jia" the chnrches--in. their speeches and in thaTr newspapers with muskets and bayonets, and all the dread implements of death f I it not now adjudged; treasonable . by the minions of Federal lyranuy- to talk about the restoration of the "Union as it was"' the Union of our fathers? Are not men imprisoned and banished for daring to otter . a wcnl in behalf of the old Union of States? Ha not the leader of the Federal party an- nounced on the floor.of Congress that the old Union was dead dead dead? Yet with shameless effrontery these de stroyers ol the old Union men who foe years, long years, have made .it their bosi- , pess to denounce it as "an alliance . with the devil," still tell you, countrymen, that this war is for the Union" and that chief ' hypocrit of all, the President, calls npon the people to pray for the Uoioo. What false hood and hypocrisy. Not the war is not for tbe Government of onr fclbsrs it is not for tbe Constitation of our fathers it is not for the Union 'of oar fathers. It is a war carried on to destroy that Government that Constitution that.' Union. It is a war warded te overthrow -the old Government, and upon its rain to erect a despotiim. . Acts speak louder thao words. What means Ben Bailer by. starling a newspaper at Norfolk and dubbing itThe"Nsw Rc- ' -gime." The word "Regime" is of French .' origin. It signifies rule, system, govern . meat or kingdom. Does not this show kingdom. what this shouldsr-sirapped military tyrant is waging war for ? " ' - Upon the flags which be places In the hands of his soldiers, are inscribed . the old -watchwords of onr country, "This is for . them." This is to animate their hearts and . strengthen their arms to the performance of valorous deeds. Bat bis newspaper is not -for the old GoTernment. Not it. It sees for n a "New Regime." It shows the purpose ef 1 the lea-Jtrs. A new kingdom a saw gar- ? era ment Lincoln or some other despot to role, or, perhaps. Bailer himself. What mears the name of the Fremont journal just started in this city, The New Nation. Does this show that the war ia--' waged for the Government, the Constitution, ? the Union of oar fathers ? Oat upon such, falsehoods . . , Again do wa askoor countrymen to pause . and ask, is this bloody war waged for the old Government, or is it not for a "new re- gime,'' a new kingdom, a new nation ? ' ; Look at Bauer's papers; look at Fre- -mom's ; hear what Lincoln and his friend . have to say, aud then answer ? Again we ask yon if yon are willisg to waga war to overthrow the Government el your father ; to waste millions of lives and ' treasure for such an end ? N. Y. Day -Book. Goid represents Democracy: greenbacks. Republicanism. The one is going op the other going down. Democracy, like gold, will survive the crash which is inevitable, while greenbacks will turn to valueless rags. The Republican party will follow the fate, of it? greenbacks to dust and ashes, Let who will say "peace to its ashes," we shall never pronounce the sicrsd word peact over' the haled remains of such a party. Gen. Rossncrans is in a fair, way to make.,' himself an infamous at St. Louis as did Bnrn-uJrs at Cincinnati orSchenck at Balti more. He has issued an order threatening to suspend tbe civil courts unlessthe judges shall administer the laws in a manner to suit himself. ' ' Fred. Douglas, in his speech in Hartford a few nights sintje, said, 'Sidr. Lincoln is an honest man I bet not my man for the presi dency ; that Mr. Lincoln is to slow, lack stamina, has not kept his word to the bUc&" sclJiers. Does he keep it to anybody eUe. A woman being enjoined to try the effect ol kindness on her husband and being told it would heap coals cf fire on hi head re plied that she had tried "billia' watr" and it didn't do a bit ol good. The W'oreesier Palladium Republican-- ' says, "There is a deep feeling amsng th people agaiesi perpetuating the order, of ' things that has bad prevalence the last three years in tbe conduct of the war." A soldier shot and killed a batcher last,, week in Memphis and then tried 10 escape froiu the guard, atiJ was in larn shot dead' himself. A gaad qaesticn for a debating sesietyi. Which is the rrost deliibtfal operation' VTo kit a a lair wuMan on a dark night, or : dark woman on a feir night ?" r .p A live frog wit lately taken from a solid, rock near JoMistovm. . It is to ba seat to the Pittsburg or Philadelphia Sanitary Fair. A-pbykia of Massachusetts assert thai, an attack of scarlet lerer xay;be prtre&K ed by weaxlsz . A- Ux4 trijB;abot the j neck. ff-5 , . It 1.: