i r n. fl. JACOBY, l ull lister. Truth and Right God and our Conntry. Two Dollars per Annan. BLOOMSBURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY JULY 27, 1864 NUMBER 40. ' VOI.UME15. 0 W1LU; 1 IJio ) ; iKFOtTiJBYlnrOkMAlIOK Col.J G. Viee, keeps constantly on bend nd for sale, at the Reco.'Jer'a office in Bloomnburg, "The Consliiatia'6f tbe United States' and of the ''tat of Pennsylvania." in various eiyfos, at prices to suit ; also, sundry other demeeretic'bodks. documents, and speech es; together with legal, note and cap pa-. por, pent, ink and envelopes of all sizes and y lea j as well aa theological, poetical, 'Historical and miscellaneous book, cheap. Pa. Jacob 'Horlochcr, of New Berlin, "Union coonty. Pa., sent us a few copies of a little tract, written ana published by himself, entitled, '-La Slavery Cokdkmnkd bt thi Sibxk, of Prohibited by the Constitution of tkt ' United States f These tracts are offered for ale at 10 events apiece. They are Wei' worth the morey and a person 'a time to set down and read one of them. The entire little work is enpported by scriptural evi ' fences, and of that character which is hard 'o misunderstand. The Dr. claims to be 'trying to convert the North and South into measure concerning tbe Slavery question y a viewed and upheld y the bible and pro tectedby the Constitution, for which be ha repeatedly been the object of censure and m gre'.t deal ciTabue by both the -Radicals f tiie Smih and the Abolitionists of the North. Any (person wishing to purchase tiis tittle tract can be aecwmrnodated by 'ealiiug at the $Ta office. . IM PORTA NT TO LADIES Har Vy's Female PII hsve never jl failed in 'removing difficiilfe ar!siig from obstruction-, or stoppage of iialvre.nr mi jei-torins ttty'fm to perffpt health when euFt 1ng from spinal sff-rtions, prolpos. Uteri, '! whi', or other weakness of th"3 uter ine crgan. The pill are perfectly harm less on th rnnst'miion, and may be taken by the moat delicate female without caus ing distress the sarrve time rhev act like a I charm by, strengihensng, invigorating, and testoring this ay stem to a healthy condition I and by bringing on the mo'rtttily period ! with regularity, uo matter from whstcaus- , the obatrorttoo way arie. They should : tiowsrsr, NOT be taken during the fi rxt lbe or few months ol pregoaiicy, though feal any oitw lime, as miscarriage would be the result. Keh bex contains 60 pill. Price 81. t Dt, Harvey's Trenttse on discs' of F ' ), urcimancy, miscarriage, Htrrenn-s , KsriJity, BtrovJofiiun, ad abuses of Na ' 'lore, aiiil'erriphs'.iraMy the ladies' Private ledx-al Advir, a pamphlet ot 84 pane til free to any aldreo. Six :en's re quired 10 psy postage. ; ...Tbe Pill and book will be sent by mail wheu desired, wrurely sealed and prepaid y J. BRYAN, 11. D General Ajs'i. Ho. 7 Cedar street, New York. 7 Sold by all the principal druggitt. no. 33, 1803 ly. BELL'S SPFXIFIC KILLS Warra'ed in l rases. Can. be relied on! Never faia to cure I t)o not nauseate I Areepeeily j iu action ! No change of diet ri quired ! j I)o oot interfere wish busineea pursuits ! j ' Can be used withoot detection I Upward Ol UU Cures UIW Jsi uiumn -uuo v m Kin ery severe cases. Over one hundred phy: eirtans hare ued them in their practice, and all speak well of tbeirefficacy, and ap prove their composition, whichis entirely Tegetable, and harmless on the system Hundreds of certificates can be shown. Rtl' Ri-Mcirlc Pill? are the original and .. r i only genuine Specific Pill. They are) adapted for male and female. old or vonng, ' :od the only reliable remedy tor effecting j perroameut and sreedy core in all cases spermatorrhea, or Seminal weaKnes, witn . all its Usui of e ils, eucb as Urethral and ' Vaginat Discharges, the whites, nightly or : Involuhtary Emissions, Incontinence, Oeni lal . Debility and Irritability Impotence Weakness or loss id Power, nervous De bilitf, &cn all of which arise principally ' from -Sexuel Excecsee or self-abuse, or ' eome consti'utiorml derangement, and in "capacitate the sufferer from fulfilling the t duties of married life. In all sexual dis - esses, Gonorrhea, Gleet and Strictures, and In Disease of the Bisdder and Kidneys, ,they'act as a charm l: 'Relief is experi eoced by taking a single box. . i-sSold by all the principal druggists. Price ' - : . They will b sent by mail, securely seal ed, arid confidentially, on receipt of the money, by '. J. BRYAN, hi.' D. , : . No. 76 Cedaf street, New York, ' Consulting Physic'anafor the treatment of feemiaal, Urinary, Sexual, and Nervous Diseaies who will send, free to all, the following valuable work, ia sealed ert- 'velope r ".'. THE FIFTIETH TH0USNAD DR. BELL'S TREATISE on self-abuse, Prema tura decayt impo'tetice. and los of power, sexual diseases seminal weakness, nightly ' -wmisstonsj genital debility, &c , etc., a pamphlet of 64 pages, containing impor tant adyice to tbe kfaicted, and which ' aaoold be read, by every sufferer, as the roeaas of are to "-the severest stages is plainly eel forth, Two stamps required to pay postage. :V : "..' ' """CLANKSl CLANKS ! -BLASK-U DEEDS, SUMMONS, V, EXECUllONSjSUBPOZAS, . " of pfoncr & desirabIeforJns,fo sal Met of the fsuf ofthnNortH ' D.iT!D LOVTENDEIIG, CZOTtilXG STORE. rtratisBBD anar wsDRacTtar ir WM. II. JACOBY, Office on Slain St., ttd Square below 53akct TEKMS: Two Dollars pur annum if paid within six months from the time of subscri bing : two dollars and filty cents if not paid within thfe year. No subscription taken for a less period than six months ; no discon iinosncf permitted unfil all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. Ihtlerfns f adtertising'toill be follows: One. square .'twelve lines three times. SI 00 Kvery subsequent insertion, ...... 25 One squarer three rnbriths, 3 00 One year, ... 8 00 (Zho'xte poetrrj. THE BRAVE AT UOXE. The maid who binds her warrior's sash. With smile that well her pain dissembles, The while beneath her drooping la-h One Marry tear-drop hangs and trembles. Though Heaven alone records the tear, And fame shall never know her s:ory, Her heart has shed a drop as dear As ever dewed the field of glory. Tbe wife who girds her husband's sword, 'Mid little ones who weep or wonder, And bravely speaks the cheering word, What though her heart be rent assunder Doomed nightly in her dreams to hear The ryahs of war aronnd him rattle, Hath shed as sacred blood as e'er Was poured upon the plain of battle ! The mother who conceals her grief,' While to her breast her aon she presses, Then breathes a tew brave words and brief, Kissing the patriot brow she blesses, With no one but her secret God, To know the psin that weighs opon her, Sheds hnly 1ood as e'er the add Ree-ived on Freedom's field of honor ! Katimal Bankruptcy. The t rat n is al Iat beginning to creep out. The newspaper felicitations about the plethora of mon3', and the general pros perity in lhe-e good Lincoln times, are be ing shown up, and'the startling estimate ol Mr. Secretary Chase addressed to Congress jost belor his expulsion Iro.n office, reveals the extent of our ruin. Let every eaan look carefully at thee figures, and remember that they are official! Let him recollect that they were made to Congress; because, as ihe Secretary says, feel myself con strained to do so " VVe gtVe these fignres, which reveal the startling fact that our ex penditure are twice as much a our income aud that both are counted by millions. Fig ores, it ia said, won't lie; and while we "distrust any ar.d every thing coming from this most incompetent and imbecil Gov ernment, we believe that if they err here, the error is that the truth is not fully told. Mr. Chase sets down the revenue of the Government derived from all sources as 8318,000 000. That is the fond which is wrung from us by taxes direct and indirect, by the stamp act, that revival in our day. ol English despotism ; by the income tax, which demands no eight per cent, of our earnings ; by the tax upon industrial and manufacturing arts, which doable the price of everything we eat, drink, or wear. Three hundred and eighteen millions wrung from the country by the most nnjubt and unequal system of taxation ever devised, is all we have with which to pay our expenses. It is an enormous sum ! But :t only represents about one-third of what the people pay : for one-third of what is collected goes to the Revenue Collectors is swallowed up by office holders, or is stolen from the Trea sury by the thieves who inlest that Depart ment. How much of our expenditure does this revenue pay ? Listen to Mr. Chase : "The expenditure of the year cannot be stated with even toletabls accuracy ; but there is nothing in oar experience that will justify the setting of it at lets than 8760, 000,000. It is more likely to reach $300, 000,000, or $$30,000,000. Take the mean sum and deduct that S3 1 8.000.000 of ex pected revenue, and the difference is 3482 -000,000." What does that mean t A de ficit of four hundred, and eighty-two mil lion in one short year. Utter, entire ruin complete and hopeless bankruptcy. Is it wonderful Chase resigned, and left the mod ern Babylon and the delights of his own Seraglio in Ihe; Treasury Department? Now these are not Democratic figorea. The De mocracy have oothiflg to do with tbe debt or the statement, except to be mined with their fellow citizens by tbe awful state of affairs of which it tells. This is the official language of Mr. Lincoln's financier. It most be remembered that this is the story of bat, one yeaf year yet to come. -Think, fellow-citizens, of the past three, and mourn for your country beridden by baffoonS, robbed by knaves, and drenched in blood by fanatics. Bewail your own fates stripped of your bard earnings, im poverished by present taxes, and over har dened with a debt which four generations cat) not pay., A deficit in one year of four hutidred and etghty-wi millions ia an nounced as inevitable. It needs no com ment. With every necessary of life taxed t HI it will bear no more, we .are unable to meet our expeosea even half way. What have we gained for ibis ruin i " Let a dissevered and beligerant country tell the tale. Ask of the bones of our bravest and bM bleaching from Gettysburg to the Gulf of Mexico. Ask of the weeping mothers and wives the half staffing widow and children, whose scanty income will not pro vide the necessaries of life With what success has this vast expenditure of life and money been made ? Yotr may hea tbe answer tonight in the booming of ffbel cannon assaulting Baltimore and threat e"n ing Washiogton. Dpylutvwn Dsm.t lSitr It Sr. Liacula a Baffodn f The" JVicons which uotoriously has deem Vd the nomination of Mr. Lincoln one not fit to be made, now that his nomination Is an accomplished lact, is driven by party discipline to the unwelcome task of extol ling the personal merits of the man whom it despises, arid of laboring, in his interest, to disprove concerning him what it knows ' to be the truih. It is contended to meet the charge that be is a buffoon, by proving i that he ia not "an ape, a hyena, and a jack ; ass," as he ia called by the ribald rebel j press of Richmond. It is satisfied to parry just estimate ol his personal character and deportment by arguing that no such man could have been elected President.. The American people are like him in the stocks whose friends said, "you cannot tor that of fense be put in the stocks." "But I am in the stocks," was the 'reply. We have got a buffoon for. a President, and that is the answer to the argument that "in a democ racy based on popular suffrages" a buffoon cannot be elected President. Argument about our institutions is shut off. Mr. Lin wln i President. Aud we leave the IVi btme to defend American iiistitntions lor having permitted ihe election of Presidents inculpated by itself for much worse crimes than being buffoons. That Mr. Lincoln, by bis own unaided energies, has worked his way up from ob scurity and pennilessness to the highest s'a tion in the land, proves ihe possession of abilities which we have never denied to him. That he is a buffaon to-day, as h9 has always been is what we assert, and what the Tribune has not squarely disproved nor squarely denied. It is exceedingly painful to ns to osesuch plainness of speech concerning one who is the chief magistrate' of this people. It would be indecorous if he were not, as he is, a chief magistrate . seeking re-election br all means ; striving by abuses of mili tary power, by the subversion of freedom of ballot, of the press and of political dis cussion, by the corrupting power of pub lic plunder, by tbe distribution of offices and spoils, by cunning and by intrigue, to grasp for another term the powers with which in three short years he has almost accomplished the independence -of the South, and the subversion of the liberty of the North. If to prove publicly, therefore, now, in this crisis of our politic and ot 'he nation's fortunes, that Mr. Lincoln is a buffoon, i , a person whi makes spon by low jests," wiil prevent any number of v tes. no mat ter how few,from being cast for his re e'ec tion, then that proof is a public duty ; and mere qoestions of decorum must stand aside as trivial and untimely And now for the proof that Mr. Lincoln is a buffoon, we appeal to every man of good 'sense and intelligence whom public or private duties have taken to the White Hoose frequently during the last three years VVe appeal to all ihe gentlemen on the Republican side of the United States Sen ate. - ' We appeal to the one hundred and fifty clergymen who went'in a body to the East Room, in order to present to Mr. Lincoln tbe revolutions of one of tbe largest and most respectable religious denominations. We appeal to the eminent divine who was deputed to make their address, and who has pobliclylfid repeatedly pronounc ed the President's deportment of a "buf foon and a eawk so sickening in its offan siveuess, and so humiliating to his patriot ic pride, as to have mad him quite despair of the fortunes of a republic whose helm ia in such bands. We appeal to the gentlemen on tbe Re publican side of the House of Representa tives. Let the Tribune ask them what is the fact. We appeal to the blackguards there for such there are on that floor, though few whose staple of ialk in theirmidnight orgies is the low and obscene stories daily retail ed to them in the chamber of the chief magistrate. We appeal to the gentlemen who feted Mr. Lincoln here, and escorted him to the clubs, when .he last visited New York. We appeal to tbe eminent Republican who left the room where the future Presi dent was recounting some experiences of his early life rather than that his ears sho'd be defiled with tbe echoes of such filthy ness. . We appeal to the staff officers who gal loped behind the President when he visited the battle-field of Antietarn, and who in creased their distance Ironi him rather than listen longer tr? the lew nigger song o "Picayune Butler," which Mr. Lincoln call ed on Marshal Laraon to sing as he rode among tbe fresh graves and trenches where were baried the tea thousand dead soldiers ot the Republic ! When the testimony of all ihese gentle roec is in, we will bear tbe Tribune defend the Republican party for electing a buffoon to the presidency, and may have something farther to say concerning American institu tions which have permitted the Republican party to elect a buffoon and rain a natidn. N.Y. World. Dr. James P. Wilson, Post Surgeon, at Harrrsburg, and a brother-in-law of Gov ernor Cortin, committed suicide in his room at the Brady House, last week. tr is considered to be cool to take a man's hat with bis name written in it, iraply to eaus yoa want hi fttttograpk. Law and Kanneri on the Road. All of os have ideas more or Isps correct, in regard to the law whiea 'regulates our use ot ihe highways ; and, at any rate, good sense and good nature are usually very sate guides. A few words on the subject, how- aver, may hot be amiss It is commonly said thai every one has a right to Half the road. This is practically true, and comes about in this wise : You and I meet upon the road oor legal rights ; are exactly eqtial, and both have a right to our own several ways without obstruction, so, popularly, we say I own half and you half. The taw steps in to facilitate matters, and directs each to turn towards his right hand. The road should be "worked" wide enough for two teams abreast, then each ! man has a clear title'to a passage on his ; right hand side of the way ; and no one . has a right to obstruct another while on his ' own proper track. This is true whatever , ihn load or tbe team : for if one can drive : such a team that another can pass him bot : with difficulty or not at all, then their rights . I are no lopger equal. This point becomes I very important in winter, for it is no joke to i turn your horse and all into the deep snow while your neighbor goes smoothly along in tbe beaten path. No one has a rigbj so to load his team as not to be able to give up hall the track to whoever demands it. A footman may choo3 the part which pleases him or any portion of his right hand i half the way and the team must yield it to 4 him. This is clearly to in winter, and no man is obliged to step into the snow, for one or two horses. This is tbe law, and' the Court award it. Now for the manners of the road, which, in some instances, vary from the law there- ! of. The first requirement of road manners is goodnatore and an accommodating spirit. Do to others as you would have them do p yoti. Always be willing to yield more than I half the space, then yoti will be pretty sore to be equally" well treated. They who'ex- 1 act inches will have inches exacted of them. if vour neighbor has a heavy load, consult ; his convenience a far as possible ; you ; may sometime be loaded. It ha become a ' practical rule of courtesy to torn out for ' wood and logs, and for other heavy teams ! in winter for they say, "'we often cannot turn out and never safely, so, if yoc want wood, accommodate us ;" which we are very willing to do. Bur remember it was a favor not your right, and you have a re ciprocal duty to perform, one which, I am sorry to observe is not always born in mind When you have unloaded and are rettirnius empty, just recollect that yon had the whole road in the morning, and it is no more than fair thai yoa should be particu larly obliging to those whom yoa meet now and give them their fall share of the path. One word in relation to teams going the same way '; in which case many seem to think there is neither law nor manners. When a team comes up behind you, which desires to proceed faster than you do. the team has a right to a reasonable space and opportunity to pass in in fact to half the road for that purpose and your obstructing him in bis lawiul desire is both bad man ! nrs and bad law. If your load is heavy, do ihe best yoa can. In most cases ihe very least that can be asked is that yoti stop. This is particularly so in winter, when it is a heavy tax on a team to force it into a trot in deep snow made necessary by your continuing at a walk. My remark above in relation to the emptied wood sled ap plies were, and if one wishes to pass yoa, remember that while loaded yoa had the whole road. One remark more, to and for the ladies. First, to them. If oat walking keep in the path never step' into the snefw or mud for j any ordinary team. If yoa meet the team, step into your Ttgb: hand track or part of j the road and all goes on easily. If the team comes op behind, step into your left hand j track ; then, as sleighs are built, the hotse i in the other track, a before. Whereas. . if you continue in your right hand track ihe j horse or the team most travel wholly in the deep snow in order to pass yoa . and the driver will be tempted to scold bi wife as proxy for the female sex generally. I have to say lor the ladies always tarn j out for them. They are entitled to the right band half, and will yon run over them be cause, in their confusion at meeting one of the "l ords of creation," they happen to take their half oot ol the wrong side ? I close this somewhat lengthy dissertation with an appropriate aphorism : Wheel grease is a great lubricator, bat good man ners are a vastly greater one. Ctaremont N. H.) Eagle. 'Had Douglas lived' exclaims a Lin coln newspaper, "he would etill stand where he stood atthejime ol his death." At the time of his death he aaid that when the war should become a war for emanci pation be wonld fly to the assistance of the South. He said that in one of the last speeches he ever made. Wby do not th Abolitionist" resurrect his remains and send thehi to Fori Lafayotte? Accost Belmont, the "chairman of the National Democratic Committee," is a Jew, a Banker, and Agent of the Rothchilds of EuroptWoolyhead paper. . If true better that to be a Jackass, a I Bank and Government, robber and an agent ef blood, dam'.atro and th Davit What Krpnblicani Say of Congreu-RelarBed Barbarism In the C. S. Senate. Tws New England journals, both Repub lican, record the following facts : Fi'om the Springfield Republican. DISQRSCKrCL SCKNCS IN THC SENATE WHAT TVfO OR THREC DRUNKARDS CAN DO. Saturday night's 'session of the Senst was both ridiculous and disgraceful," and the personal force and . vigorous leadership of Mr. Fessenden were sensibly missed. The conduct of the opposition members was generally dignified. Early in the evening Mr. Chandler made a coarse and brutal assault upon the presiding officer, in which be was sustained by Mr. Wilkinson. Neither waa "sober. After a pointed rebuke by the Senate they left the chamber for two hours Later in the evening Mr. Wilkinson retired to the cloak room, but was aroused and got in to participate in the final effort to stave off ac'ion 3n tbe income tax bill. The resolu tion filing ihe day . ot adjournment was taken up at eleven o'clock, and four hours were epent with remarkable success in doing nothing. It was not ontil three o'clock SundaV morning that an adjourn ment was finally effected. DIFGHACBXUL. The New Bedford Mercury says ; "This special telegraphic correspondent of the Boston Advertiter, in giving an ac count of the turbulent scenes in ihe Senate. Sat urd ay night and Sunday morning, when the war income lax as under considera- ; tion, says : 'Mr Chandler objected, because j he could object, and because he was drunk.' j And again; 'Early in the evening Chan- 1 dler made a coarse and brntal assault opon ' the presiding officer, in which he was sos- tained by Wilkinson. Neither was sober.' We make no doubi of the exact truth of these statements. Our readers have heard of such things before ; and some like our. selves, have been witnesses of these dis graceful, drunken exhibition in the U. S. Senate But we sincerely hope the people have not grown so callous as to be insen sible to the disgrace and mischief of such1 conduct, or to pass it over in silence. Not one word'ean be said in apology or extenn ation. When men, the representatives of States, men prefessing great regard for the honor of the Government, a full apprecia tion ot the struggle in which it ia engaged, and solicitude for its success, appear in the Senate chamber, where objects of the gra vest importance, and vitally affecting the poblic weal demand cool, cairn, deliberate judgement and action, dmrtk, and by their maudlin ravings obr-truct or mar legislation, they are to be held up to be transfixed by public scorn, il there be no other punish- mem. With the conduct of Senators al their hotels, we have nothing to do; w leave them to the exercise of their tate and discretion! filling out. their win-cards. But if they appear in the Sena'e chamber (irnnk, then no man or press can refrain from denouncing their conduct 'without sharing the disgrace it not the crim." An Immediate Peace. Our contemporary, the Commet eiil, yester day propounded to us the following pos er : "This, we pereive, is the cry of the Democratic press belonging to the copper head variety, which description embraces our local organ. We would be glad to be informed jun how an "immediate peace" can be cbtained. If ws tan see it, we most certainly shall be for it, as an incalcu lable blessing." Not being in power, it is not the business of the Democracy to propose plans for peace or war; because the party in posses sion of the Government seem determined to prolong hostilities, and not bring them to a termination. Give oa power and we will soon make blood-letting cease at least we would exhaust every effort for its attain ment. The means we woald use are sim ple, but they woul Jbe effective. But the present Administration and its party require uo peace. Have they, since hostilities be- ; gsn. done one single act calculated to ) secure peace ? Have not all tbeir acts, I proclamations and speeches, aimed at the! subjugation of the Southern people, instead of crushing the leading rebels ;and has the Administration, in one single instance, in timated a desire for peace, except opon such term as the Southern people could not, and are not expected to accept ? It they woald free their negroes, as Mr. Lin coin proclaimed, they might return to the Union ; bnt that mountebank knew that each a degrading proposition would only make the rebels more oni'.ed. The mere fact of the Administration refusing to let Alexander Stevens, Vice President of the Southern rebel Confederacy, deliver his message, and it lying afterwards, regard ing the nature of bis intended interview, was and is proof sufficient to show that its policy has been to prolong hostilities and not bring abOat an immediate, or any other sort of speedy peace. We believe that we conld name half a dozen ot men, North and South, who, if permitted, could secure a satisfactory peace in twenty four hoars. We do not mean that their labors wonld be ac ceptable to the leader as extreme ssces sioniem ; but they wonld be to nine-tenths of the people of the entire country. But as long at the two extremes, which predated this conflict, are in power, it is not likely that peace will enter into tbeir deliberation Toe first step towards attaining peaee is the getting rid of oor present imbecile, , deeeit fnl and eoinipt Adtrinicirtltoa. Pittib&t Fife Hundred Thousand Bore. We publish to-day the President's ' Proe tarnation, calling for five hundred thousand more men to wage the Abolitioa war. No one will be startled. The people have been driven to that condition ot recklessness that ignores all emotion We are all aatomatons, without violation, without self-agency, with out apparent consciousness of present mis fortune or 'threatened danger. Tbe one man at Washington touches the springs and the automatons perform. They follow the fife and drum; they march to the battle field ; i hey are swept down by shot and shall ; they are tumbled into graves or crowded into hospitals, and then f'-'e hun dred thousand more puppets " are brought opon the scene, and the tragedy goes oo. Mr. Lincoln's cravjng increase with gorgirg. The herd of ullocki bargained for in the present call exceed in number all those heretofore marked for tbe sham bles. Five hundred thousand additional victims of fanaticism, in the fourth year of the war, and with our valleys already stud ded with graves our hospitals filled with invalids, and oor streets with limbleis men 'the thought demands that we should be hardened to calamity, or human Data re would revolt. Five hundred thousand more workingmen to be be taken from the loom, the anvil, the plow, the . implements that crea-'e a nation's strength 1 Five hundred thousand more to be drained from the channels of industry, where their presence is essential to supply the absolute wants of trade' and to fciva f66d to the millions. Five hundred thousand more, to be torn from their peacable homes, from the arms of their wives and children, who will be left without protectors to beg, or starve, or search (or daily bread in the abodes of vice. Five hundred thousand more, whose im molation will swell the list of -orphans and widows, whose lamentations already ap peal to Heaven and assail the earth with the voices of woe. Many a heart ' will shrink, with foreboding this morning as the eye glances over the cold and piiiless language of that proclamation. Man) a father and husband will look anxiously around at the inquiring faces of his loved ones clustering around the frugal board. How long will be be permitted to commune with thrh in the brief hours of respite from his daily toil ? For the Summer, the delights of home, for the Autumn the terrors of battle, for the Winter, perhaps, the unmarked grave. Meanwhile the sound of revelry at Wash ington mingles with the roar of cannon, the shrieks o! the dying and ihe sobs of the bereaved. Why should the jester mourn with the afflicted, when his parasites are laughing at his ribald jokes ? Weep on, mothers and wives and daughters of our land ; march on and perish, fathers and brothers and pons ; count your hoards, you traffickers in blcod ; weave at tije loorfli of your ambition, you aspiring demagogues, the balance ol justice is in the hands of God and at last will find its level. V. Y. Daily Hews. Tom Wcodi en Jltiilin. Tom Woods of the Onto Patriot always writes to some purpo& Hear bi : MUSLIN- There has been considerable joking upon the words ' raising of musliu," but it has now got so high that words are about play ed out and people who don't want to wnite wah and go naked, will be compelled to raise something elie. Unbleached muslins are selling at 75 cents in New York. During the latter part of last week there was a grand rcsb attthe stores for cotton goods, in tbe fear that there might be still more ex travagant advances. It will oot be long till it will take a poor man two days work to get a piece of muslin. By this time the brains of tbe people should begin to act. The? were paralyzed for a while, bat time enough has elapsed for the thinking sub stance to recover. I ndar the old Demo cratic rule everything was cheap and times were prosperous. War is the cause of bard times and high prices. Stop the war, blot out the debt, and in two years' Democracy can bring back prosperity. If yoa want shirts, vote the Democratic ticket, ti yoa don't vote right, yoa will show you are a shiftless fellov , and your wife will hi pretty much in the tame fit. 'May i leave a tew tracts?" asked a pious' missionary of an elderly lady who re sponded to his knock. "Leave some tracks? certainly yen may," said she, looking at him most benignly over her specs : "leave them with the heels towards the door, if you please." "Why is a printer and a pretty girl alike V MThey both make impressions Now what's the difference between the impressions ?" "Why and one on the heart." ones on paper, Ir there is a prospect that all oor able bodied men have got to go to the war, we had better be edncating our women and girls to be the conductor of oor busines and the managers of oar estates. Xoumi'V Journal. The Patriot & Umcn ha become a very able and interesting paper under the ew management cf tbe gentlemen who have recently taken charge of it. That mast have been a very toogh rooster, that crowed altar beiog boiled two hours, '.and then being pat in pot villi potatoes, IkMedthisflr all oat. j , ..... . . OcrTldantts. We do net onite with most of oor cotem? porarie In imposing the whole, borden of our monetary distress on the shoulders of -Mr. Chste. To bis blunders, indeed, may be ascribed the financial difficulties, in which the administration of the Treasury ia involved, bnt he was driven often into the adoption of hasty and unwise expedients to -procure funds in order to meet the extrava gant and importunate" demands of ihe two war secretaries. ' These gentlemen have shown themselves te be the type f two youngsters reared - in poverty and suddenly elevated to the pos session of immense fortune. Experience proves that the result of such a transition is, that the new heir suddenly plunkO into very variety of magnificent extravagant and vicious indulgence, overreaching an nually the amount of their income, till bank ruptcy overtake them. So it bee been with Messrs. Stanton and Welles. Mr. Chase was but the steward jo apply tbe spendthrifts with the means, re quired by their exorbitant expenditures. To effect this ptject he exerted every scheme his ingenuity could devise lo raise the funds daily required by tbeir importu nate demands. We doubt whether ihe Sec retary of the Treasury had be possessed greater financial'wisdom than he possess ed, conld have succeeded in supplying the reqeisitions of his colleagues, and, saved n from the crisis towards which we are drift ing. The role'of lheireoridaet"seemsJto.i .rjavo spend spend no matter whether on useful qbjects, or not no matter how mncb of the tends we dispense ,may be stolen by contractors or speculators si ill spend. In fact it is auihoritiveiy stated, thaf if the thefts were deJucted, oor debt would be di minished at least one third. But the two Secretaries did not bring into their calcula tions, the necessity of tbe object on which the money was squandered, nor its equita ble valee! Mr. Welles for instance has sup plied neon the QOStl-extrayaganl terms, with a navy six times as.large as we would want arany time, and certainly wholly on- called forin contending against a people having but three ships and now but one and five or six ports to be blockaded ; and these ships procured at an enormity of price, unprecedented in the annals of ptr country. And still be continues rhip build ing at a rale, which compelled the Treas- I ... ;.- nrlnilnir in maal t h m atnun. ury w tiuiij i i i iiui'iii! iw ...VI...W- i ses of the building lunacy of Mr. Welles. It i time for him to reform and restrain his outla)s within the bounds of prudence. The Treasury cari no looger meet hie de mands. It has stretched its credit to tbe very point of explosion : and we fear it will explode.in spite of the skill of the new engineer, bnlee hi assistant are restrain ed in their activity of firing op. We have a foreshadowing of tbe calas trophe in the misfortune that has betalleo New York. That Slate bas refused to pay her foreign creditors their just does in coin. This evidently is a swindle, or in polite terms repudiation. The Governor in order; to save he credit cf the State, proposed that.the amount of interest on the State debt dae in foreign countries should be raised by private subscription, the subscri ber to depend for repayment on the equit able, action of the Legislature at its next session. This scheme failed.and New Yor k refuses to meet her jnst obligations, New York, the richest State in the Union enjoying ample means, and not cumbered with a debt with an interest beyond ber ability to pay, tbas boldly perpetrates re pudiation, what must we anticipate from the Federal Treasury which must necessar ily sopply the reckless extravagances, so glaring both in the array and navy? It has come to its last dollar anJ its credit is exhausted. It maycontinue its printing operations ; but ttti device, while it fam ishes but little aid to the government, will but add to the weight which is crushing the people into destitution. The secretaries seem powerless or onwiying to restrain the extravagances or thefts of thither subordi nate , and we have but one hope of safety from repudiauon.'aod that is in the cessa tion ofth war Comtitutional Union. Mr. Gu'stave Aimard has written a book in which he describes the priests of Chili. The recent ce'tsstrophe al Santiago gives in terest to his descriptions, rie says : "With the exception of the minor gradea the monks are jolly fellows smoking, drinking, ewear'tng.end making love at well as a man of the wor'ltL It is not uncommon to' see in a wine shop a fat monk, with a red face and a cigarette Ja-his month, merrily playing the vihnela; at dance accompani ment to a lovinj couple, whom he will con fess the next morning. Most of tbe monk carry their kuifo in ttreir sleeve, and, in a quarrel, which is a frequent thing in Chili, use it as well, and with as little remorse, aa the first comer. Seen are the people ; and, such are the priests, who form a foarth of population, in the eountry where the great boniin birning took place." Mas. LrjiCOLix' Cab-Riscs. Mr. Lin coln, daring fcer r-cent visit to New YorkT with her son "Tommy," is stated to havs boafcht a splendid set of ear-rings and pin at one of the Broadway jewelry stores,' amounting to three .thousand dollar. Her visit is understood to da? a been entirely tot the purpose of shopping, arid consulting' milliners, maaiaaoufcers, and other ar-un (in the drpertmeat ef rnia!e'doorattin' - s 0