u in '- t!-I . Two Dollas pel. Annua Wh and Right -God and oor Country. VOLUME 15. BLOOM SB URG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY JUNE 1 5, 1864. NUMBER 34 "- ' - ' ' ! i ' . i ', , - ' ; ' r3. JAC03T, A FORTUAE FORALL! . EITHER lm OR WOMEN ,,' NO HUMBUG, but n ENTIRELY NEW thing.; :Oaty three .months h this country, y', N clap-trap operation to gull the public, 4., on' genuine money-making thing ! Head I be Circular of instruction once only, and yon will undersUriil it perfectly. ' A Lady has jasl I written to me that she is making as hiRb. as TWEtY DOLLARS SOME DAYS giving, instructions iu this art. Thousands of Soldiers are tna'kiny ; money rapidly atit. Tt U athing that takes better than? anything, eer .oflered. . .You :can make money with it home or abroad on -neira boats or tailrad ' cars, and, in. the country or city;: ; You Vill be pleased .in . porsuirigTit, not only because it wilt yield J1'" a handsome' income, bat ' also in conse quence of the general admiration wbicb it elicit?. hi pretty much all profit. A mre trifle it necessary, to start with. ; There is scarcely one person oat "of thousands "who evtr pays any attention to advartisemeut of this kind, thinking they re humbugs.. Consequently thbe Who do , tend for.instructioQs will have a, broad fisl'tta make money en. There is a class of person in this world who -would think hat because they have been humbugged oot ol a dollar or so, that everything that a is advertised i a humbug. Consequently tyt irj 1 no mors.' Trie person who sac . -eeeds is' the one that keeps on trying unit, he hit something that pays him. v This art coat its oni thousand dollars nd I expect to make money oat of it and It mhopurchase the art of ms will do the lime. "One Dollar sent to tne will insure he prompt return of a card ef taatroctiona 'in ihe art. Tkt met ey will ? riltirntJ ta tkot net itlisfieJ. 1 . Address ,: WALTER T. T1NSLEY, v : No. I paTk Place, New York. Oct. 21, IS63. 3m. , : . IMPORTANT TO LADIES. Fr. Har- veys Female Pll hare never yet failed In -movirig diffidulils arisi;g from obstruc tion, or stoppage of nature, or to restoring tha system to perfect health when softi Sng from spinal ffleclions, prolapsus, Utri, the utiles, or other weakness of the uter ine erg an. The pilh are perfectly harm less cnTtrre conti:uircn, and may be taken ty the most delicate female without raus. ng dr'! the same time they act like a charm by BlreBgihertsn?, invigorating and restoring; the syhtem 'to -a healthy condition . nd by bringing on ihe monthly period w'th regulafiry, no matter from what caus es the' obstruction may atise. They should feoVev'er, VOibe taken daring the first three or four oiontha ot pregnancy, though af att aoj ot-SrcT. time, as miscarriage would b the reu!t. Each boa contaitis CO pin. Price St. Dr. Harrey's Troiti9 on diseases 'of Fe dales, pregoancy, micatriage, Barrennes-e terility, ReproductioTi, and abuses of Na ture, and emphatically the ladies' Private -liedieal Adviser, a pamphlet of 4 papes sent ftee to" any addrea. "Six ttnta re "Vo'i red to pay postage. ' ,Tb Pillsand book will b sent by mail wben !eir-! securely sealed ami prepaid fcy : ; J. BRYAN,. M.; D. General AVi. : , ; No. Te Cedar street, New fYork. 1 C7Soldby all the principaL dpjggtf.s. ttotlii, 363 ly. y 2 2 r ' , - . " " BELL'SISPECIFIC PILLS-Warrated fnallase9. Can be relied on! Never faia to core! D not i.aoseatel' Ace?py in actio-i ! sNo chunge of diet rf quired ! Do'nOt itnerfere with bbsitsej-s p'iruit ! "pan be ' rtJ without r-detection' !' Upward of 20Dco.res the pat'raontrt one of them rery severe cases. Ove? one hundred phy ' . -ficians tiave; used them in their practice, . aud ail speak well ol theirefScacy, and ap prove their compo;?ttion7 which is entirely eg9fjble,ifnd harmless on tha system lluodieds of certificates can be showo. ' Bell's Specific Pill? are the original and tetily genOtse Specific Pill. '. They' are adapted fo'r 'roale lirrd female. old or yoangj ('arid the only reliable reinsdy for effecting p. perinampat and ueedy cure in alt cases "SperinatorrKeaor Seminal Weakness,1 with all lis; trairi of eils," each " a;. Urethral and ;Vagioal Dt'fccharges, the Whites liisbtly or .Jflclontary:Emi8sions, Incontinence, Gervi tai cDebility I and Irritability Impotence '"Weakness or Joss of ?ovrer, nervous, De bilily fcc-l; all of which- arisa. principally from i;ex ail Excesses cr srf-abasey or m aoaia constitutional derangement, and n- V capacitates the sufferer from fulfilling: the ' duties of married J ifs. fa H sexual dis eases, Gonorrhea, Gleet and Strict uresr aud io D'eaaseY of the Bladder and -Kidneys, ;thej act as a charm ! Relief Is experi enced by takf ng a single box. V - . r ts Sold by all the principal druggieta". Price 4 - - . .V Tha f will be. sent by mail, securely seal ed, and confidentially, ca receipt of the :.aoo9j.fcy : J. BRYAN; M: p. - : !. . , . 4 . No.' 75 Cedar street, New York, ConahiRgPbysic'ans for the treatment of Stfnjihai, Urinary, Sexual, and Nervons ' Draeaes?, who will tend, free to all, the toliosving valuable work, ia sealed en- THK nFTICTII THOUSA D-DR. TiZLVH TREATISE on self-abase, Prema- V tare decy, irnpotesca" and Iocs of power, aexua! dlieases, eminal weakness, nightly : jemi??irns, prenital' debihty, &c, &c, a -pamphlet of 64 pages, -conuiotn impor ' unt sdrics to lis an?wieL and . winch abculJ t? read 'by- efery eolfare. ts -the t---j ,'v,rm in ,!h9 ESTerSSt .fc'RgSS IS " rbi-.lv s -.t for.b Two .slants le.-pirei! to pi v &T&n )W-Mm IOH1.' . ;; WM. II. JACOBY, Office onafaSt., Jrd Sqnarc bctm Har'ket. TERMS : Two DolIaTs pr annum If paid within six months from the lime of subscri bing: two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within the. year. No subscription taken for a less period than Vix months; no diecon tinoarice permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at fhe option of the editor.', " The terms of ' adverlhingfvallbt as follows : , One squtrrs, twelve lines, (h'ree times, SI 00 Every subsequent insertion',;...'. . . 25 Orts square, three months, ; . . .... 3 00 One year, ............ ... 8 00 Choice floetrn. Til C OLD XOEPORil, Thou bkrakgh. With ahonlder'd arms, and cheerful face, - Forward, my comrades, march away ; I have my pipe and yoar embrace ; Step -out I've my discbarge to-day. . Twas wrong to be a soldier still, , When in the service old Tfl grown; Bot you, the lads I taught your drill, Will miss my old famitiir tone. . Conscripti, keep step, keep step, I say; No tears for me march, march away. A bovtsh ensign, freih from school, . Insulted me, I broke hi head ; ! For Jhis they tried me 'tis the rule ; He'tjgetring well ! die instead. With passion and with brandy nerved, . From him I coald not kee p my fit ; Besides, the "Great Man" I have served-. No weeping, comrades. I insist. ' Conscripts, keep step, keep-step, t say; No tears for ma march, inarch away. ? Ctnscripta! you'd scarcely change, tika me, Arm or leg for a cross alone ; Mine was gained long ago, you see, In wars wheTt kings were ove'rthrdwn. For me you'd always pay the shot. When cf our fihta I used to talk ; Glory, "however, have I not ) Step oat, nor sigh, as on we walk. Conscripts, keep step, keep step, I say; No tears lor me march, march away. Robert, my comrade, pray go back, And shepherd turn, your service done See bow'thete trees cast shadows black ; . Bui spring is spring at h6me alone. Ofien for me the .rising day Has given fres?i i charms 6 erery wood: They're mine no more. Come, march away t f i i: w. r - I : - J f CouscripLs, keep step, keep step, I say; No tears for me- march, march away. Who is it, there, who sobs so hard ? Ah ! 'tis the drummer's wife, I know. In Russia one of tbe reargaard I bore her boy through frost and snow. . Al'ike ihe father, child, and wile, Without me, would be 'neath the sod.- I She cannot giv e to me ray Ufa, , i Let her commend mv soul to God. Conscripts, keep step, keepstep, I say; A No tears for me march, march away. Morbleo !my pipe is out, I fear, Not yet 1 So much tbe better then. Now o the square we're coming near; Don't bind ray eyes, I beg, my men. I grieve, good friends, to biire yea thus, Bot roost of all, don't fire too low. My time has come now no more fuss; God keep. you all to beav'a I go. Conscripts, kep step, keepstep, t sa No tears lor me march, march awa- A GOOD STORF. My father was a country lawyer of a.ion- 1 siderable erhinence. , His family was,4d, j but hot wealthy, lu early life he retried one of the co-heiresses of a city banrj by ante uaptial agreement her propy waa strictly secured to any hairs she mfcblhave. She died while I her only child, vs yet an held , . - by mjrjather in trust for my use until I aheuld reach the agD wbico it would come into my possession. . I was left to the care o servants, princi pally, ior my father thogh vary fond of me, wasalwaya, immersei in business, and spent but- tittle tine in the splandid but comfortless horr orer which no mis tress presided , . I could not remain thos. My annt St. Clair relumed rom Enrope when I was about fourteen. She came with her family to Verdhill, by my fathers invitation, to re main until her house in town could be put in order, lor her reception. She saw and was astonished at my wild appearance and hoyendish manners. She quickly decided that her sisrer'a child, and a great heiress, must not be allowed to remain thus, and it was arranged that I should accompany her to the city snter at once opon the. course of instruction mo necessary ;80d to long neg lected. - - - ' Ai tbe age of sixteen oramers my ftont had aocceded in having : rae ''finished" according id the lashionable patient. I was beaatifu!, wUltul, Btterlj ielfish, and a dar otee of the art of flirting. So accomplished I went to my old home, and my aged fath er who welcomed me, with pride and fond ness! A gay party went with me whom I was to make the round cf the watering pla ces with; afier a short visit to my father. The Sabbath before we were to start, we all weatto the old Tillage church. I shall never forget that day. Aa we all. cat silent there waa a alight rustling of leaves, and th ? irnpercepilabls stir that announces a new c;-.er, aad I turned to fas that tha cisrgy rn J3 hd entered noislessly.' Ha was kaee lisg at h!s dislr, his Uhsuei ia the snowy bssdkarehiaPkaUYa ia bia band, bat.whea aftera moment he rose, I saw a paliintel lectual face a grand head covered b light waving bair of golden brown, a tall Wre, finely proportioned, but a little too slit for the indications of .robust health, j was attracted' and interested at. first, butjvhen he commenced to read, the deep mefiioas inflections of his voice ; csmpleti the charm. I listened entranced. A "' From that instant I saw nothing, felhoth ing but his presence, and when the sYvice and the sermon Were ended-aoi he sank down in the last, silent prayjr, it was as if the Bun had been withdrawn front my world, and I left in darkness. ' Mechanically I followed my Trend into the porch. A sudden -shower was gather ing tbe air was chill, tbe bird esigs vere hushed, and all nature wore the ;ray Jiue bo omnious of hr coming convilsions. I bad been unconscious of the clung, but the chill ind had blow'- ia opon ,ne fromclnsron anc solitude ar. open window! as I sit in choch, and! now I shuddered, as taking my father's arrn I hurried homeward. Bafore We reacl.e the house the storm broke, and all bat tt e wiliest pedestrians, were thoroagi drenched. Ere nightfall burning fever 1 ternated with icy chills in my lramenJ the effect of draught and drenching d'1ar ed themselves. , Mr. Fletcher had been invited j m7 Tathertodine with us, but-had reused himselt with the simple remark,"! h,a duties absorbed the entire sat"1 -day. Bat during the week, and after a ttiend had lelt us, he called. I saw in he fittte morning room where reJ npoa a oach and he dined with my fhr. This visit was iollowed by many ortV.nnUl last he dined With us nearly tV day nd spent most evenings in lister? to ray per formance upon the piano-fc8 or io c0" versa) ion with me. . I saw the effects of myharm- 1 kne,f that I was beaatifol, and world declared me brilliant. And I brht every art that I had learned, to lure-hia 'kRt rave youth to my feet. It w triumph to bend Lis loriou intellect a e'' Will, and I liked him, too, like1'' nd moro J as time-that lovely""1" ,,m8 wurw But I am sure no tbt of the future or of the consequences 1 ever intruded , upon me. I had en taught to look upon , life aa a game, a"g hal were not skilfue myselt. And yet I sued, too, fot I was not des titute of syrapy, my heart nbt wholly untouched, er by profound devotion of thissitent,S'raan-with all his leara in and tnnial discipline powerless to keep him f my feet when I listened to his declarant of love, and spoke the words ihat nenaned cs forever. 1 . . -.t l weni'f "'j r . a . . v-t t n m rnnm Dan anerv win mj Ielf; stening, to aome .mot n.rea re- pro,perity. .roach of my conscience, yet repeating .,t was a nj, a mad dream of better that I, .eiressand beauty, with the honors 1 ,hin,s ,hat piang9d this nation into war. o b5l3iood not yet fallen in.o trad.l.on, Tbem8Q.who ,ed the reb.::ion, in sobe? coynot marry a poor country clergyman, . of ;eflectio0j eannot he,iu.e l0 con wh,e sole eetate was his hands and sur (eM lheif insanily. To ,hem U must be plie and the pittance these villagers pa.d enough that the Confederacy they npforthoe wonderfal sermons and al. ,atii,b will never be worth the jy heavy pastoral labors. .'blood thef have wasted, while to And vet I had been struck and pained flondav. that if. Vith the parlor tha; over.prend Uiat noble Uce a. u tent .towara me in .rBwei . Something told me that I bad been tsara . and cold with him, even. while my own heart pleaded with him. Ball stifleJ the silent monitor, and ordered my maid to pre pare for the porney I was atout to under take to join my friends at Newport. The morning I left home my father men tioned, casually, that he bad heard that Mr. Fletcher was very ill. I felt rayeelf grow pale and Cold, but I elifed my emotions, and in a constrsined voice expreed my regret at these tidings, and begged my father to provide the invalid with every heeded luxury from Verdhill, and to inform me in bis letters ol his state. Two years later 1 was in Italy with my husband the husband . of my Aunt St. Clair's choice. I had made a grand match but I was not happy. Diamonds bound an aching brow, and flashed above a throbbing heart. I was cold and unloving to my hus band, and he returned my indifference with scorn. A lew months had brought os to this pass that he lived oul of doors, amidst pleasures ia which I bad no share and which I shrunk from even guessing at, and I went alone into society, a mark in my beaatyi for continental gossip. One night I paw my husband making his way loword me through a crowded saloon. I pressed forward for I felt ihe need cf hi protection Irora advance that were insults, though perhaps not intended as such. He drew my arm in his, did not apeak until wa reached the ante-foom. Then he told me tha: he had been om monad to the bedside of a dyiog country -man, and that be had come from this me I aneholy visit to condact me thithef. He would tell me no more, and when I refused to go, be compelled me, almost by force, to accompaoy bim. t' It was to Mr. Fletcher we were going. We found him in humble lodgings, for be hadpTnihtilast "dollar, ahdwas reduced to die in life midst of poverty and depriva tion. He bad beard of oa, had eeen oa when he crawled forth opon the piazza, and had ycjfnred to send for us in. his ex tremity. He uttered uo reproaches, though be told rae ia hollow accents, that my re rnt'nrf ir! hmah his word of doom ', that ha bad e:rn22!ed witlt hia mortal xtlnesa, sing bet wiihoot bepa. Asi cow :tt b :M ' dying, he desired onlf to look tipon my face, best loved on cirthere he committed his soul to his CreaW. I knew then bow Had loved John Fletch er, and if the eacftfia of my life wo'd have saved his most glady would I hare died that hour. , ; But'God willed otltrwise. I saw my vic tim lallisweetly asle). He held my hand in his; but his laBt imds were not of his crushed , earthly lopes, 'but of those that reached beyond tie rending veil of flesh. I told my hostand alt, as we returned, in the purple Italia twilight,rorn John Fletch er's funeral. Ye had hatel each otner Be fore, but now anew anlagon ism had arisen. Ve felt that "lb fle and hollow bonda that bound us inu be snapped asunder. I Isft bim in Aaplei ard returned alone to Amer Va, thus volntarilf renouncing the station .of wifehoodand cdfnpelling myself toie- r . or 'scandal strove to find canse or this unprecedented act, and made Unci busy with my fair name. Years jave passed since that hour. My father h long been dead, and I should live quite alme at Verdhill, bat for the sweet presen e of a fair young girl John Fletch er's aiiter. I found her a mere infant on tny ritorn, abandoned to poverty by her b'rotler's death, and she has been with me eve 6ince my adopted child. . An inex pressible comfort and consolatidn has she beenjto tne ever. In my care of her I have striven, in otne little measure, to repair the great wrong of my life. And when the terrible blindness, that shuts out all external life from ejes that wept themselves into darkness, fell upon me, she became my r r t. i: f.. tay, and my -euppon. oai ior uer, .mo would be all dreary, and no gleam of pleas ure would light the passage of a sorrowing penitent to tbe grave. the "Old" tuioa. . The New York Journal of Commerce dwells upon the sacrifice of human life during the pastweek, Bud then answers the question. "What shall I do V '.'What mora could human heart desire than a land Buch ai wa8 ours lour years ago? If, indeed, there was mor'?to be wished, it lay before us, and we were advancing with eteaiilast footsteps toward the brightest and roost perfect realization j, of government among men. ' - . . ' "By the blessing of our fathers' God we had prospered, and the nations of tbe earth were filled or filling with the light from our lustrous' pathway. There were errors, dif Acuities, exceptions, as in all things hn man. But there was not in all tbe world a country that was so happy, a people so peaceful and free ; nor was there another country which had not modifications of its : covernment, the reflex influence ol our lib . of feMl lh , nnlarni8hed the old maiesty on- - ' . ., . bene. VllBtlGUi Hiw j ficent and world-blessing liberties, that in deed would be a result worth all that has been given, worth even thealmost priceless blood of thousands of such men as Reno, Reynolds, Sedgwick, and other valiant i dead. We shall never, never make anew Tjmon better than, the old ; n3vcr construct out of the Iragments anything like the original. Let us save not remake. Let us preserve, not to destroy and attempt to rebuild, Let us who are at home, citizens who are to be the recipients of whatever go?d comes.ffom this costly sacrifice, let ua consider what is before n if we throw away all the real ob ject, and thua lose all the benefits of the of fering. Yon cannot transfer the inter.t of a sacrifice once made. This has not been made for a new government It has not been giren for reconstruction. It has not been made for a new country, new tradi lions, new systems, new principle. It is the American Union and Constitution for which these brave men have fallen, and. if we abandon that then indeed lha aactiuce ia all in vain. - "There is somethig then for us to do. Whatever our political connections, H is certainly possible that we may to day think as brethern of one family, and ssek a ground on which we can stand together for the preservation of the old homestead. De siroy that, and whatever palace we may build tm itt site will not be the home we built for the weary nd oppressed, will not echo to the familar voideJ of the past, will not be sanctified with meraorieaof the pray ers and vigils of oor ances tors." CaowDWd a BicHitbx "What did yoo come here after I" inquired Miss .Susan Diaper, of a bachelor friend, who made her a call when the rest ol tne peopie were gone out. "I came to borrow some matches," be meekly replied. " . 'Matches Uhat'a a likely atory. Why don't von make a match tY I' know what yon come for," exclaimed the , delighted Miss, as she crowded the old bachelor into a comet, ' 'yon came to kisr and bag m ahaost to death; bot yoa tWt-w Ithpat yoa are tne aircngsB : - ;t'l I . led The love of country is as natural and , holy an affection aa the love of parents or : self. The tenderest 'recollections of our childhood, the bright hopes of youth, the earnest struggles of mature years with all that we have loved and won and lost there, in, circle around the name of country with a sweet but melancholy 'radiance. In our country is included all that we hold holiest arid dearest parents, brothers, sisters, home, wife, children, and the green graves of our fathers In our country we enjoy a larger self.' Her fame is ours. Her great ness is oors. Her honor is ours. Her glory is ours. She is all ours and our love for her is simply an enlarged, unselfish, gsner. ons eelf love. We love our Isnd "because tt is our own, And scorn to give aught other reason why. It is true, therefore, as Vatlel justly ob serves, that he who tarnishes the glory of a nation does it an irreparable wrong. The j injury is "not'only lhat the nation is lowered j in the eyes of other nations, but that 'it is lowered in its ow'n.eyes. Its people are de prived of one of their chief moral blessings, which is that of being able to delight in tbe unsullied fame and honor of their country. In the degradation of his country every cit izen is degraded, and in her dishonor every citizen is shamed. Yet even this is not the worst. Argne as we may against the doctrine cf the ol J toast (and in "truth it has been made to sanction many crimes), there is still a soft something in our hearts that says: "Oor Country, right or wrong !" And were it possible for human nfcto re to be always well balanced so that this should mean the love of coun try in spite of every loss of glory, and in spite ol every blot on her fair fame, the sen timent would be deserving of all accepta tion. But in the nature ot nines it means much more than this. What we should de nonnce as infamy in an indinerent person, in the object of our love, fwe first endure, then pity, then embrace." And hence the public morals be debauched this very love of country, which in the design of kind t rovidence is meant to purify and raise the aspirations of the people, is trans formed into an inurement of degradation. Whatever be the morals of a country in its corporate capacity will infallibly be the morals ot its citizens, and whoever lowers or exalts the tone of public virtue, at tbe same time plants the seeds of good or ill in every family within its borders. Till within the past three jeara tie peo ple of this country gloried in her, both be cause she was their country, and because ber fame waa still unspotted with reproach. How have we been robbed of this our best inheritance by the unscrupulous mountebanks who, since then, have con trolled our destinies ! What are the main points of our public morals under Mr. Lin coln's Administration ? First. Gross buffoonery end heartless ness, illustrated by the President cf the United States himself. The man who has been joking amid tbe derolation of the land, and who could whistle negro airs among the onburiad corpses of his butchered coun trymen, is hardly fit to bo the representa tive and model of twenty millicas of peo ple. Yet his vile-example has been sedu lously followed. Congress has become as foul in language as a brothel ; and we dare say that never in tbe history of this Repub lic was liccntiousnesf, levity of speech:and callousness to human suffering as rife among us as to-day. A common sajing lately has been this : "Why, Grant has certainly not lost more thn forty thousand men, and we can soon make cp that I" Tbe people now can talk with apathy of forty thoasand graves, because tbey can supply material to fill as many more. Second. BraggadoCid With cowardly sub serviency to foreign powers. We have bul lied England ' and made mean ecologies therefor. We have bullied all the world on the Monroe doctrine, and then taken off our hats to France with every sentiment of kind neis when she trod it under foot. Nay, we have carried our subserviency to foreign powers to the extent of shameless treach- ery. ve have delivered our neip;ess rei ugees into the jaws of certain death. A fu gitive from the distractions of unhappy Mexico has been eurreadered to Cottinas, by whom be was mercilessly ahot, end in this city of New York, a subject of the Crown of Spain has been arrested in defi ance of all law and humanity, end without known accusation, without even tbe decent form of trial, amnggled aboard a loreign ship and Carried to the lender mercies of the Governor of Cnba, from this glorious "reloge of ihe oppressed of the earth." Third. Utter falsity in every act of Gov ernment officials. The iuppretsh t!ri and suggtstio falsi are resplendent virtues when compared with the astounding lies perpe trated by this) Administration. From Mr. Lincoln's deceptive Inaugural Address down to Mr. Seward' use of a clumsy forgery to dupe a aister nation, the whole public bu siness of the country has been carried, on through one iafernal tissue of mendacity. Fourth. Wild rapacity tn parasitea and agents' of the Government. Republicans declare that in the Treasury Department there is shameless profligacy, and that in the Navy there ia no bound to the robbery knd peculation. Aa to the Army, tt is only too true that New Orleans under the Hay- nau of America waa not much worse in this respect than scores of other places. The salary of public' ofEcer haj come to be with many a mere perquisite). , Their una pay is derive freia thafv' lore of Coontfy. And fifth, we r.eed but mention theaow- I lawlessness ot tne Aoministrs.ion. i.on,g , ag0 We knew their purpose to destroy what . . they declared to be a covenant with death , and an agreement with hell. We were pre- ( as pared to hear them say, as they do say, that ; of the Constitution has been abrogated. A but lawless war, a lawless enrrency, a lawless ' conscription, lawless arrests, law'leVs 'eiz-1 ores and imprisonments, lawless confica- ! lions, lawless elections and lawless inter- i ferer.ee with elections, lawless proclima- j titrt fan rl ihn full lPtArtion of an unlimited Right of lawlessness theee are the fruits of an Administration which commenced it reign on an cnconstituticnal a'ni law 'ess platform. Such is the atmosphere of public mora! which pollutes our own lives, and our chil dren's ! Such are the foul impurities our children are to learn to tolerate, defend, ap prove, if they are to retain the priceless boon of love of country I If the reign of this fell Administration shou'd be pro'onged or foar years more, farewell forever to ihe virtue of America. Buffoonery and gross ness, braggadocio, treaefcery and meanness. falsity, rapacity, and lawlessness will be established in the nature cf the people, and sustained there till the magnitude of crime destroys in them tbe heaven born love of country. SjBpaUiiier Senlezetd. J N. Boucher, a noted Secesh citizen, hat iut been sentenced to one year in I-ort Del aware, tor aiainz iuisb j.hzio .mum m t:-- T : M : passing into the rebel army. HajAifigfan Letter wruer. But a few weeks ago President Lincoln committed the very sarno crime for wbVch Rnnrhar had been found cuilty and sen- tenced to prison for one year. By a writ ten Termlt and under a flag of truce fiom the President himself, Mrs. White, a sister of Mrs. Lincoln. fwho was a notorious reb el sympathizer andspy.and whose husband is a General in the rebel army,) was seat home, to Georgia, in ealety. The Atlanta (Georgia) papers announced her arrival in that city.and congratulated their readers on ihe "success cf her mission." She took with her from the north six large trunks, filled with rebel uniforms, percussion caps, medicines, surgical instruments, and other matters calculated to give "aid and comfort to the enemy." These articles, amounting to some 510,000, she had with her at Presi dent Lincoln's bouse, and he must hare known all about them, and that her hus band was a rebel General. Tbe uniform Mrs. White purchased for her husband, the Georgia papers say, is the most elegant and costly one in the Confederate army. Mrs. W. also took with her St,000 in gold, prob ably a loan from her siner, Mr. Lincoln. And yet ibis rebel spy (Mrs. White,) was passed through the lines by Mr. Lincoln's written order ! If Boucher, then, is to sdf fer a year's imprisonment "for aiding Miss Lizzie Murrav (a spvl in passing inio the rebel army," we itisist that Justice requirea that the same sentsnce be passed upon Abraham Lincoln for aiding Mrs. J. Todd White "in passing into tbe rerel army.r This would be fair, right and proper. r.Atr. P.miT in nATTi.c A corresnon- deat of the TJwral American, published at .pproach from beyond. Twombley raised Utica, N. V., gives the following remedy lor his right band the figure raised hie , clover bloat in cattle : left. . "As soon as it is discovered that tbe crea .Vho's there !" roared Twombley, be inre is bloated, approach it gently, take it j g-inning l0 be frightened. The object made by the horns, thsn lei another person open . nQ rep;j. Twombley raised his boot in a the mouth by taking hold ot ize lower jaw, back of tbe teeth and seize and draw out tbe tongue ; now let go of tbe creatora's rinrnn. mnd hold it bv the toncoe : it will uo doubt struggle considerably, but it can eas- ily be held, as the tongue is very rough, and the animal will not pun mocri it tne tongse is held firm. 1 will guarantee that any one whs has never tried it will be peS fectly astonished at the amount of gas end air which will badischsrged from the stom ach. If the bloat des not go down in t few minutes let go the tongue, and repeat the operation again in five or ten mtnuies. 1 have never known this to fail of curing the most dangerous bloat in from twenty minutes to ball an hour." Tut Iron mountain of Missouri is exact ly in ihe geographical centre of the United States. It is an almost solid mass of spec ular iron ore, rising from a level plain S60 rf tm hate covers 500 acres. The ore! contains 67 per cent, of iron, and yields one ton of pig for two iods of ore. U cosia about 50 cents a ton to quarry ; little if any blasting is required. One hundred and ten bushels of charcoal make a ton of iron. A Yankee editor lately closed a leader in this unhappy strain uTbe sheriff s offi cer is waiting for us in the cfther room, so we bate no opportunity to be pathetic j we are wanted and roust go. Delinquent subscribers you have much to answer for! Heaven may forgive you, bot we oever can." A pretty girl ef our acquaintance saj that nO one falls in love with her nle they are "dreadful wicked'' or "awful pious." Is ihere no young roan between thas two extremes that would like to try bi4 luck. "If yod wish to appear agreeable) id so ciety," sayi T allayf and, "yen raait eonierif to be taught 'rnafly tbiaga wbieh yoa tirdvr already ft hat Is Arabia Arabia is not what Americans habitn conceive it to be, a mere sandy desert sands generally are, traversed by bf half starved horsemen, with two sacried cities, and a port which A American frigate can reduce to reason bj bomoardment. It is a vast, though secltt- a ded peninsula, with an 'area cf 100,000 iqv miles greater than that ol Europe west, of the Vistula gre-ter that is, than the tsrri- lories of four of the five powers, with Ger- many, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Scandana via, Poland and Italy adiied thereto. . This enormous region", so far frm being a mere sandy plain, is traversed by high raagas ;f.-r mountains filled with broad plateaus; many , ol them as wide as European kingdoms, and full ot magnificeut, though dreary. and . awe-inspiring scerieVy. The highest Arab y tribes aud the point is one too often for-, g0ttentre mountaineers, share in the . fervid imagination., the brooJing and mel- ; aneholy thought, which have in all ages distinguished men bred on the higher re gions cf the earth. Eve the aridity ot tne soil of Arabia; thdugh graat, is a political fact, seriously exaggerated, partly because f the districts nearest to civilization are the , , worst, partly because travellers select the , winter for explorations a time when even the Tertile plain of 'upper Italy looks hide-i ; ously desolate : bot chiefly because ihe Ea-,. . ropean mind baa a difficulty realizing; . territorial vastness or comprehending how .. enormous nay be the aggregate of p tchef . of cultivation pra1 over a peninsula like), , Arabia. When some two years ago, the, r Governor of Aden, was permitted to visit Labej, he, filled, like a'.r&hri Englishmen, with the ''idea" orArabia, waa startled to find himself only a few miles foe his otu . crackling cindera .midst pleasant cr:i lands and smiling villages ia which dwelt a population showing every eign of pro- . perityexd cont-nl. There are thousands.,, of such spots in Arabia, to which the eter- , nal boundary of the desert blinds all but, the keenest observers. tJ :Xl- Kr.T womllryl Slstake. Mr. Twombley had drani bn: six glasses pf braDdy and water, when, being a man of discretion, be returned heme at the rea- ; sonable hour 1 a. m., and went coberly m bed. Mm. thomaS Twombley was toe well accustomed to be much disturbed by the trifling noise he made oa retiring; but : when she discovered that he had hie bom on, she requested him to Temove them, or keep his feel out of the bci. "My dear," said Twombley, in an apoi Cgelic tone, "skese me. How I came to forget my boots I can't conceive, for Pra just as sober as ever I was in my life !" Mr. Twombley sat on tbe side of the bed, and made an effort to pull of his right boot.' The attempt was successful, though it ' brousht hira to the fioor. Oa regaiaing hi (eet; Mr. Twombley though he saw tha doer open. As he was eure he shut the coor on coming in, he was astonished, and dark as it was in the room he couldn't be mis taken, be lelt certain. Mr. Twombley dag gered towards tha door to close it ; when he ' nill saw a creater eorprise, ne saw a recline attitude the figure deaed mm by shaking a similar object. . "By the Lor 1 ' cried Twombley, ' i ll nna oui vuo jou to j.u bubos.. j--- - ; . jjg hn jlej tn8 D00t f aii at the head of hia j TOJSterj0l object, when crash I went the( big looking-gl a, which Twombiej aaa mistaken for the door. . hrr Thbt Tata th. TacTB t-iWashirig-tcn said the triumph of a eciioaal 'Ptlf would bring dlJuniou did he not tell ih truth ! ' , Webster said the triumph of abolitionism would bring disunion did not Webster tell the truth ! Henry Clay said the iriumph of abolition ism would bring disiriion did not Clsy tall Ihe trafi Madison, Monroe, Wright, Pieree, Doo alas, and every oiker democratic itatesrna'n predicted that the triumph of abolititn'wnv would bring disunion and civil war aia they not tell the truth 1 LnsRMo By too much learning wanv a man has been made mad but never or-e from the wnt ot it. Hence, em would" draw an argument against leatnirg ; but 4 well might the adantage ef tlaatn ba tail ed in question, beace, wtea raised, tod high, an explosion sometimes takes place. An Irishman en flrd a Teasel when ahe' waa on the point rf laundering, beiBg de sired to come on deck as a?'l waa gotn down, replied that ha bed no wish to ge oil deck :o "see hima:f drawnsd." Bob, bow is your awee'aart ct'Psr alobg ! "Pretty well 1 goesa ; ! saye I needen 'trail any mora." : ,. . . , . . A youag girl fossa her freshness by minalicsr with fahioaaale octty, aa a bright auearri5" doe by rainglinf with lh . . .. - - ?-'f . ea- - . ' A lady raceritly faiaai arffTrfpp parry, ati t&d4No f tutsl,calJii