1 1 1 ri 1 J 1 TY. U. JACGUr, rubllsherO Traili and KigM God and ear CointrjY Two Dollars per Annua. VOLUME 15 BLOOMS B URG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 7, 18G4. NUMBER 46. 1 XIOiiQ; 1 ilJib liiiportant - IRO.V IN.THE BLOOD. It i well known to the medical profes sion that Iron is ihe ri al, Principle or Life Element of the flood. This is derived 'i-hiefly from the food we eat ; bnt if the focd is nrt properly digested, or if, from ' Mny cauuM whatever, the necessary quant tity of iron i not taken into the circulation "or becomes reduced the whole system suf fers. The bad Mood will irritaifflhe heart, will clog op the lung, will stupefy the brain, will obstruct the Iiver,and will send it disease producing element to all parts of the system, and every one w 11 suffer in whatever organ cay be predisposed to dis ease. The great value of , ,: IKON AS A MEDICINE . I well known and acknowledged by - all medical men. The difficulty has been to obtain such a preparation of it as will en . ter the circulation and assimilate at once with the blooil. This point, says Dr. Hayes, Maspahueet Siaie Chemist, has been at tained in the. Peruvian Syrup, by combina tion in a way before unknown. THK PERUVIAN SYRUP a protected Koloiion of the Protoxide of lrji. A new discovery in medicine lhai strike af'e Root ol Diease by supply inv the blow' with its Vital Principle or Lite EIemf.it Iror. . THE PERUVIAN SYRUP ""Cures Di-piwia, Liver Complaint, Drrtpsy, Fdver and Ague, Lo-a of energy, Low Spirits. THE PERUVIAN SYRUP "mfue strength, vior, and new life into the system, ana luihls up an ''Iron Consti tution." . THE PERUVIAN SYRUP Cores " Nervous Atfections, Female Com (lUitit-, Htid all diseases of the Kidneys and BUiitler. THE PERUVIAN SYRUP If a Spnvihc lor all Ji-a-et originating in a bd 'aie ol the blood, or accompanied ?bv Dobdn or a lrw state of tri; i-y:ein. Pamphlets containing certificates of cures and lecommenda'ions from some of the mol err.metil Physicians, Clergymen and other, wilt be sent FREE to any ad dress. V) select a few of the names lo show the character ot the.tetimonials. John E. Williams E-q , President of the Metropolian Bank. N.Y. K-v. Abel Steven, late Editor Christian Alvoi aie & Journal. Rev P. fr.nnrh, Editor N.Y. Chronicle. Kev. John Pierpont, Rev. Warren Burton. Rev. Arthur B. Fuller. Rev. Gurdon Rob bin. Kev. StWano Cobb. Rev. T. Starr K'ng. Rev. Ephrsim Nate, Jr., Rev. Joseph Hadley, R-v. Jonn VV. Olmstead. Lewfs J iin-on, M. D , Roswell Xinney, M. D., j .N K Ken.tall, M D., VV R Gbiehnlm.M D. Fricir D,tna, M. D , Jeremiah Stone, M. T , Jo-e Antonio Sanches. M. D , A. A. Haves. M. D , Abraham Wendell, M. D, J. R. CiultoD. M. 1)., H. E. Kinney, M. D. Preparrd b N L Clark St Co, excla iivel lor J P. DlNSMORK,No. 451 Broad way, Now York. Sol. I by all DrcggisU. nedJitiu' ICustia Satire ! FOUT 1 YEARS EXPERIENCE has ful ly established the superiority ot RED DING'S RUSSIA SALVE Over all other healing preparations , it cure all ktntts ot Sores, Cuts, b'ci'ds, Burn", Boil-, Ulcer-, Sail Rheum. Erysip elas, Sties, Piles, Corns, Sore Lips, Sore Eve. Sic. temoviog (he pain at once, and reducing the most anzry looking swellings and iiiflamaiioii as if by magic. ONLY 25 CENTS A BOX. ' m sale by J. P. DINSMORE, No. 491 R.oa.tway, New York, S W. FOWLE D Co., No. 18 Tremom St. Bootou, and by ' aI Drui-t. AuguM 3, 1864. ly National Foundry. 3iIoomIur, Columbia Co., flne sub-ribjr, proprietor of the above nameJ extensive e?tablihmen!, is uow prepared to receive order for all kinds of machir.ery, for COLLERIES. BLAST FUR NAC ES STATIONARY ENGINES, MILLS THRESHIMG MACHINES, &c.,&c. He is also prepared to make Stoves, all sizes and patterns, Plow-irons, and every thing usually made in first-class Foundries ' His ' ettansi ve facilities and practical workman, wairaht him in receiving the largest contracts op tte most reasonable terms. " v& Grain of all kinds will be taken in exchange for castings. . kjr I his etaDlihment. is located near the Lackawanna Railroad Depoi. PETER BILLMEYER. Bloorasborz, Sept. 9. 1863. OMNIBUS LINE. rflHE undersigned would respectfully an noance to the citizens of Bloomsburg, ana tne poMic generally, that be is running An OMNIBUS LINE rVS-n between this place and C fl2tr the different Rail Road -ixDSL Depois, daily, (Sundays excepted to con nect with the several Trains eoih(; gontb fend West on the Catawissa& Williimtport RailKoad, and with thoe going North and Sooth on the Laci. & Bloomsborg Road. His OMNIBUSES are in good condition, commodious and corafotrable, and charges reasonab'e.' tST Persons wishing to meet or see their friends depart, can be accom modated, upon' reasonable charges, by lea' ' ing timelv notice at any of the Hotels. JACOB L. GIRTON, Propi ietor. Bloomsburg, April 27, 18!4. 5250. . SEVEN OCTAVE $250. K0SEWO0D PIANO-POMES fcROVESTEEN k CO. 499 BROADWAY. NEW. YORK. ' i Offer their new, enlarged Scale .Piano Fortes, wi'h ; all latent , improvements. Thirty year's experience, with ' greatly in created facilities for manufacturing, enable them to sell lor CASH -at onu-ualy low prices. These instruments received the highest award at the world's Fair; ndfor five 6uccei-Mve year at the American In stitute. f. Warranted five years. Tcbms kxt fcASH. Caii or seatl for descriptiv e cucular. Jjne 13, !S5t: 3x.; v ' 8ppci.il Notices- Important Information. Co,'. G. Frieze. keeps constantly on band and for sale, at ihe Recorder's office in Bloomsburg, "The Constitution of the United Stales," and of the "State of Pennsylvania," "in various styles, at prices to suit ; also, sundry other democratic books, documents; and speech es ; together with legal,' note 'and cap pa per, pens, ink and envelopes of all 31 zes and styles , as well as theological, poetical, Historical and miscellaneous books, cheap- 7 IMPORTANT TO LADIES. Tr. Har. vey's Female Pills have never yet failed in removing difficulties arising from obstruc tion or stoppage of nafre, or in restoring the system to perfect health when suffer ing from spinal affections,' prolapsus, Uteri, the wliites, or other weakness of the uter ine organs. The pills are perfectly harn ess on the constitution, and may be taken by the most delicate female without caus rng distress the same lime they act like a charm by etrengihensng, invigorating and restoring the system to a healthy condition and by bringing -on the monthly period with regularity, do matter from what caus es the obstruction may ariee. They should however, HUT be taken during the first three or four mouths of pregnancy, though safe at any other time, as miscarriage would be the result. Each b contains 60 pills. Price 81. Dr. Harvey's Treatise on diseases of Fe males, pregnancy, miscarriage, Barrenness sterility, Reproduction, and abuses of Na ture, and emphatically the ladies' Private Medical Adviser, a pamphlet of 64 pages sent free lo any address. Six cents te quired to pay postage. The Pills and book will be sent by mail when deired, securely sealed, "'and prepaid by J. BRYAN, 11. D. General Ag't. No. 76 Cedar 6treet, New York. C7Sold by all the principal druggists. Nov. 23, 1863 ly. BELL'S SPECIFIC TILLS Warrated in all rases. Can be relied on! Never faia. to cure ! Do not nauseate I Are speedy in action ! No change of diet required ! Do not interfere with business pursuits ! Can be used without detection ! Upward ' of 200 cures the past month one of them . Very severe cases. Over one hundred phy- . and all speak well of theirefficacy, and ap- prove their composition, which is entirely vegetable, and harmless on ihe system 'Hundreds of certificates can be shown. Bell's Specific Pills are the original and only genuine Specific Pill. They are adapted for male and female, old or yoang, and the only reliable remedy lor effecting ' a permamen. and speedy cure in all cases Spermafotrbea, o'r Seminal Weakness, with all its train of cils, such as Urethral and Vaginal Discharges, the whites, nightly or Involuntary Emissions, Incontintnce,t3eni tal Debility and . Irritability Impotence Weakness or loss of Power, nervous. De bility, &c, all of which arise -principally from Sexuel Excesses or self-abuse, or some constitutional derangement, and in capacitates the sufferer from fulfilling the duties of married life. In all sexual dis ease, Gonorrhea, Gleet and Strictures, and in Dieases of the Bladder and Kidneys,' they act as a charm ! Relief is expert- j eoced by taking a single box. ! Sold by all the principal druggists. Price J 81- .... .i Tbey will be sent by mail, securely seal ed, and confidentially, on receipt of the money, by . J. BRYAN, M. D. j No. 76 Cedar street, New York, Consulting Physic'ans for the treatment of Seminal, Urinary, Sexual, and Nervous Diseases, who will send, free to all, the . following valuable work, in sealed en- velope : THE FIFTIETH THOUSfTAD DR BELLTS TREATISE on self-abose, Prema ture decay, impotence and loss of power, sexual diseases, seminal weakness, nightly emissions, genital debility, &c , &c, a pamphlet ol 64 pages, containing impor tant advice to the afflicted, arid which should be read by every sufferer, &s the means of cure in the severest stages is plainly eel forth. Two stamps required to pay postage. Nov. 25, 1863. ly, Persons advanced in life, and feeling the band of lime weighing heavily opoa them, with all its. attendant ills, will rind in the ose ol HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS, an elixir that will instill new life into their veins, restore, in a measure, the ardor and energy of more yoathlul days, build up their shrunken forms, and give health and vigor (o thetr remaining years. : Those who are in the least afflicted with . ."Dyspepsia, Ago, . 1 Larguor, Nausea, ; : . or any other troublesome and dangerocs disease, aris ing from a disordered sm(u, should not hesitate to avail themselves of the benefit derived from tbis great remedy. ? For sate by Druggists and dealers gen erally, everywhere; Aug. Z, 1864. Im ." ' , ;; ESTRAY UORSE. Wa8' left in the public road, 'on the morning of the 9th ult., by some person unknown, near the premises of the onder signed, io Beaver Valley. Columbia coon tr. a DARK BAY HORSE, with three white hoofs, blind in lef eye; and small star on forehead. The owner is requested to come forward.! rove propertypay charg es, and take him away, otherwise lie wiil be sold accordins to law. - ' FRANKLIN L. SHUMA' FtifefVtHey, Ao 3t 1561. 31. 51.50 1 PUBLISHED 1TEBT WCDSS8DAT BT WM. II. JACOBY, Office on Sain St., 3rd Square below SarkeL TERMS: Two Dollars pr annum If paid within six months from the time ot subscri bing: two dollars and fifty, cents if not paid withiii the. year. .No subscription taken for a less period than six months; 00 discon tinuance permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. . Ihe terms of advertising will be as follows: One square, twelve lines, three times, $1 00 Every subsequent insertion, 25 One square, three months, 3 00 I One year,- . .. . ... 8 ,00 -Ctjoue Poetrrj. . . A KISS UPON THE SLY. Let poets sing of Eastern climes,. And golden sunset hours j Of shady nooks And bubbling brooks, Of moon-lit orange bow'ers ; et still to me . More sweet shall be (A joy no wealth can buy), A pair of pouting cherry lips To kiss upon the sly. Oh, let them build their lofty rhyme As e'en so e'er they may ; Bot give me still If so you will Another word to say ; Now hers to all, Tall, fat or small, I vow I'd rather die Than miss the bliss that's in a kiss When taken on the si. Heal Estate as a Resource. Among the 'means adopted by the War interest to "keep op the heart" of tLe peo ple, aud stimulate the flagging zeal lor con quest and devastation, is the effort to make the nation believe that it is not mining it self by enormous expenditure and waste, far in excess of the annual earnings. The shoddy interest, the contractors, the dispen sers of Federal patronage, all play one tune, and the burden of that is. the exhaust less wealth of the country, the increase of property by devastation, and the multipli cation of population by wholesale slaugh ter in tbe field. Like the parasites that sur rounded a prodigal heir whom they have within their toils, they encourage his riots and waste, and threaten vengeance on any who call bis attention to his approaching ruin. They don't want his "credit shaken" until the utmost dollar is squeezed from the deluded victim, when he is kicked into the street with the "admonition r "More fool you." v Some ten days since we pointed out tbe fact that the promises of the Government already exceed the resources of the nation, and that the gulf yawns before os. The . troth of the picture startled public attention, and already the shoddy interest' has rallied to the charge with such energy as it can master. To the crude notions of The Com mercial we have replied, bot numberless other attempts are made to persuade the people that lavish debt is a means of wealth. One of them, in the form of a pamphlet, is pcfled in The Evening Post; which, while winking at the deceptive statements, takes good care not to indorse them. .We will examiue the leading point. The official report of the amount of Federal debt out standing, is as follows : . Increase. June 30, 1862, 514,211,371 June 30, 1863, 1?098,93,I87 $584,581:8I6 June 30, 1864, 1,792,867,840 694,074,653. This does not include the debt, but simply the amount of paper actually ouisianding at each date. The increase is progressive, and at the same rr.tio the amount wiil be 52,600,000.000 July 1865, and 83,500 000, 000 July, 1, 1866. The pamphlet to which we allude assumes that the debt in 1866 will be S3,000,000.000. The population of the Northern States in 1860, per census, was 20,057,356, and the ratio of increase for ten years of the largest immigration ever known was thirty-seven per centum. At the same ratio of increase the population would now be 22,000,000 , but aOO.OOO of the most ac tive mea have been destroyed in tbe war, and the immigration has been much less than before.' Hence the population may now be rated at 21,000,000, and tbe exist ing debt August ninth at S90 per head, or S455 every Northern family $27 30 per annum tax. This is simply the annual in terest on the existing debt. In 186P, if the expenditures are not increased,the debt will be $3,500,000,000; or Sl7d per head, or $8 50 each family, or S51 per annum interest. The expenditures of tbe Federal Govern ment will swell the amount 8102 each fam ily per annum. The London Economist of July 16 contaioa official figures showing the ioterest of the public debt to be 850 per family of five; that of France, 25; and that of Holland, 37. The pamphlet to which we reier makes the United States in terest 85 per head, and undervalues all oth ert in proportion. . Having performed this feat, he proceeds to show what enormous resources there are to pay with-. In the first place, he assumes that if the Union is restored the Southern debt, devastation and losses, will be ignor ed, and the whole Sooth, with its former productions, applied exclusively to Nor thern debt and profits. This is utterly ab surd on. its face. The crowning error of this and similar efforts is, however.to show extravagance to be the true road to wealth, and is expressed in the following lines "Supposing fb9 rebellion t termintte at or before the close of ; 1865, the population of the restored Union (which was 31,500, 000 in 1860) lo be 34,000,000, the debt S3, 000 000,000 and the value of the real and personal property of the seceding States to be somewhat less than tha: prior to 1860 (i. e., 85,000,000,000), then tbe value of the real and personal property of the whole Union would be about 821,579,000,000; I the average wealth per capita 634,52 ; tbe average debt per capita $82.'' Tbe erroneous estimate ol the amounts of debt we have already explained. It wiil I be observed that the whole fabric ol the ar- I : . . . ... . 1 ' .. guiiieni luriiaon ma mecnpi tu uiuuco mo unthinking public to regard tbe income val ue of real estate as a recourse for the pay ment of debt. There is only one possible resource for the payment of taxes, and that is a proportion of the annual production The value of real estate ia only an indica tion of the value of the production ; it can in no way whatever be applied to the pay ment of debt ; of tha anneal production, a very small portion is applicable to the pay ment of debt, because nearly all tbe pro duction is consumed in producing it. The ceuu gives all the Northern personal prop erty, or the surplns of the earnings over consumption, at 82,700,000.000 saved from all sources in two hundred years, when comparatively no Federal taxes were exac ted. If in the last ten years the people had been compelled to pay 8210,000,000, as will be the care in 1866, the amount paid would have been 82.100.000,000, or more than the surplus savings of tbe last fifty years ! Those not accustomed to reflect upon the .operation of taxes are easily misled by tbe sophistry ol The Commercial and other radical papers in relation to tbe value of real estate as a resource. Suppose an em igrant moves West and boys one hundred acres for 8125, and farms it. That land ha bad no valne since tbe flood until he gets .his. first crop from it. In Eve years it will be valued by the State at 81,000, 810 per acre, and the Federal Government will tax the family 8 100. Now it is obvions at once that there is no'potsible means of paying tbe tax but by sale of part of the crops. The farm may be valued atSl,C00 or 8100, 000 it can pay no tax except from its pro ducts. If the crop fails it cannot pay at all. If the taxes increase they can bo met only by reducing tbe quantity consumed by the occupant. The same rale applies to the whole $20,000,000 000 paraded as the val oe of real estate. If an individual wants to sell his farm, he can get its value from a noiber individual. But the aggregate of farms have no value beyond their produce. The same with a Government Stock. It is tased, but ihe tax must come oat of the in terest it bears.. Yon cannot tax to the full amount of the interest and then Doint to the nomidal value of the stock as a further tio'n of Democratic Associations in their im resource. . I mediate vicinity. To such associations the Nevertheless.this 'nwhatthe shoddy inter- i S:ate Committee will send documsnts for est pretend in the case of real estate. As distribution, at any time, on being informed we have said, the census gives all the per- ol the Vost office address of the Chairman sonal property of the North at $2,750,000, ; or Secretary. ( 000. If we assume that the real amount is j preamble. double, 6ay S5,4O0,OOO,00O, and that three- j This Association is formed with a view fourths or 84,000,000,000 have been accu- ! to tte strict and conscientious performance mulated in the last thirty years, or S131, ' of every political duty, as citizens living 000,000 per annum, we shall fi.id that the; under a wise and well ordained Govern average population in that time was 16, ' ment which has descended to us from our 000,000, and consequently that the whole i Revolutionary sires ; and we seek, by free annual savings on this liberal allowance discussion and a frequent interchange of was only 88 per head, and those people views, 10 tecome imbued with the true most now pay 10 per bead interest on the : pirii of the Cor.stitation of Pennsylvania war debt, or Uhj; : and ot the United States and oar rights and Properly nccLmniated. 20 yean, 1 linie under them, as al6o those of onr to IPSO, 000 COO 000 'ruler. Property accumulation per an num, 131,000,000 Property accumulation per Lead per annum, , 8 Interest on debt of 1865, 210,000,000 Interest per head, 10 Thus, with equal powers of production the people must consume S2 per haad less than formerly, and give tbe whole annual surplus to the interest on tbe debt. Bat, says one shnddyiie, the debt is doe al home. Really, suppose one hundred farmes are taxed one hondred dollars each per annum to pay John Shoddy ten thous and dollars per annum on stock obtained for swindling the troops, will that be a great consolation to the farmers who pay It will create an aristocracy at the expense of landed serfs. But two hundred millions of five-twenties are held abroad, sold by Mr. Chase at forty cents per dollar. There is to be paid and sent out of the country in gold : Twenty years intereet, 8240,000 000 Principal, 200,000,000 Total, Amount received and epent in jio nnn nnn i power, 80,000,000 There is the whole ten years product of the whole gold region gone in a flash 1 Is that spent at home 1 Daily Kev$. - -.11..- .- A Bot Killed Br His Mothsb. Mrs. Snyder, wife of Abram Snyder, near Rey noldsville, Jefferson county, Pa., " a few dys since, took a tide and attempted to discharge it at a hawk. Resting the gun on the fence, she snapped it when it failed to explode the cap. She then turned to go iato the home, aud while going examined the cap. As it looked black and smashed, she concluded it must have discharged pre viously. She then pulled tbe cap and threw it away, lading the hammer fall on the tube ; unfortunately, . the percussion powder remained and discharged tbe gun. The ball passed through the head ol ber little son, aged three. years, producing in stant death. i Mr. Sayder was not at - home at the tiaae. . The agony, of , the .parenta can only be imagind. . t J PROGRESS OP THE AGE. LIFE IN 1776. Man to the plow, Wile to tbe cow, Boys to the Barn, And all dues settled. ' LIFE IN 1830 Man becomes a show, Girls at the piano, Boy to Greek and Latin, Wives to silk and ea'.in, - And all hands happy. 'LIFE IN 1859. Men for speculation, ' Wives in fiusieration, The boys are lazy squirts, Girlsin patent skirts, . And everybody giddy. LIFE IN 1861. Niggerheads in power, Bound for civil war, - Moqa and Lincoln law The States to overawe, And most of the people crazy. LIFE IN 1864. r Tariff tax and debt, 600,000 yet, Thieves and pimps and spies, Widows, orphans, sighs, And warfcr the nigger. HOW SHALL IT BE. Elect our little Mac, Bring our nation back, To peace, law and order,' Hoist the shoddy and crew, The chieves and Lincoln too, And stop the dance of death. The Democracy Should Organize. t. .: Not a moment should be bot ia organiz ing the Democratic party, in every town ship, ward or district ia tbe State. In every school district there should be formed a Democratic Association, and the school bouses are good places to meet in. Get your neighbors, whatever may be their po litical creed, tc come in and hear, and even allow them to join decourously in the dis cussions. Take several good, sound Dem ocratic papers in these associations, and thus became acquainted with the move ments of the day, and be enabled to meet your opponents with facts and arguments. To facilitate this important and vitally necessary step, we have drawn up and give below a form ol a Constitution, which may be varied according to the circumstances of the case. The Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee has desired us to ask of every Democratic paper in the State to pub lish this Constitution, and urge the forma For the well ordering of the Association, we agree to and adopt the following regula tions : 1. The Association shall be known and styled the here insert the name agreed upon of hare insert the name of the township, ward, or district in whish it is lo cated 2. Stated meetings "of tbe Asuociation shall be held on the first Saturday evening of every month throughout the year. Spe cial meetings may be called by the Presi dent or by adjournment at any meeting, to a time and place certain. 3. The officers of the Association shall be a President, Vice President, a Secretary acd Treasurer. The two last named offi cers, at the will of the Association, may be given to one person. The duties of the several officers respectively shall be such as usually appertain to such stations. 4. Every person on becoming a member of the Association, shall pay to the Treasu- rer thereof the sum of, and the fur- ther sum of monthly, until otherwise ordered by a vote ol the members. Tbe money thus raised to be devoted to procur ing for the use of the members ot the As sociation such books, pamphlets, or papers as may be ordered by a vote or to such oth er purposes consistent with the objects of the Association, at may be approved of by a vote oitbe members present at any stated or special meeting ; and the money shall be drawn only on orders 6igned by the President, indicating the purpoie of the ap propriation. 5. This Constitution may be amended at any stated or monthly meeting, by a vote of a majority of the members, present. . NAMES OF MEMBERS. Dr. Franklin, when a child, found tbe long graces said by bis father very irksome. One day, after tbe winter' provisions bad been salted, he said, "I thick, father, if yon id grace over the whole cask, once for iji, jtwenid be raet string 0! time." Peace. In the courie of an article on the ques tion of Peace, the Boston W puts the fol lowing pertinent question, and suggests the proper answer: Can there be peace so long as Mr. Lin coln and his set the engineers who , ran now the political machine are at , the heaJ of affairs? Who are uthe ? How often are Democrats pointed to Stanton and Holt and Halleck and Dickenson and now Andy Johnson with the remark Democrats run the machine. Who does not know that they hold their positions on the .lacil bargain to screen the men and the macs urea they have, their whole lives locg, con damned; that they hare to bend aud cringe to the real engineers, that it is a. mockery, an insut, to call their adhesion to Mr. Lin coin that of Democrats. They are Democrats no longer ! They have been powerless but to do tbe ruinous work of carrying out Abo lition measures, and the whole country knows it ; and no Democrat, for a moment will accept one of them as an exponent. The real engineers are well known ; their theories and. their objects. They are the same Abolition setithat every. Democratic National Convection that ever met charac terized and denounced as enemies of the Constitution and tbe Union. One. of them is Charles Sumner, with bis Cosmos theory of the Sooth, as clean as a sheet of white paper, and he a second Locke to write all over it a new law. Where in God's name, is there the first.sign of any hope whatever of peace on this theory ? There ia Henry Wilson; and he has a hundred times over pledged himself to work until the sen shall rise on no roaster and set on no slave. How can he bring on peace? Is not the moral force of bis whole pa6t arrayed in phalanx against him ? There is William H. Seward, who reiterated Rufus King's idea that, as to a citizen's rule .in civil af fairs there is a higher law than the Consti tution, and who sanctions the whole line of Abaham Lincoln's transactions, can he make peace? Who supposes it possible for him to do it? Is he not the accredited father of the irrepressible conflict doctrine? Did Helper, and the John Brown class of small Abolition demagogues, do more than put his volcanic words into acts of blood ? can he. give peace to the country.. But fur ther ; tbe doctrines of Garrison are now the doctrines at the top. Hasjnot this man, for thirty years, literally cursed and swore against the J Union ? Has. he not cenlinaally called it a covenant with death and an agreement with hell This man of peace, with words of blood on bis tongue, has no hand for the rifle to go to the front, but stays behind where oafety is, and urges schemes that turned this land into a holo cast of "blood. Is there a peace element in him or bis theories ? God forbid that he should be an, agency for peace !, Once more and go to the head; Did not Abraham Lin coln annoence that this country must be all lave or all free? With this well known, a party took this man as their candidate, and though adroit and deceptive, and ma king nothing of solemn pledges to others, he has beeu true to this idea trne to Phil lips, Garrison, Wilfon and the Abolition conspirators. As the Chief Magistrate of tbe country, speaking not in accordance with law or the Constitution, bot on his so called military necessity principle, he dares to tell this nation there shall be no peace until his partizan tslk.to get political power is realized, until great communities change their local law, until slavery is dtroyed ! American citizen, bow can there possibly be peace with this class of politicians in power wielding the parse and the sword the vast naval and military power of this nation ? Look for the milk of human kind uess ic the wolf, but do not look for peace so long as Mr. Lincoln ia al the head of affairs. The first step in the direct.on of peace, on the basis of the Constitution and the Union; is to change the National Admins iration. Let every good citizen rouse up his genius to effect this work. It is Ihe on ly path sf honor or to peace. Training Rots. A lady correspondent, who assumes to know-how boys ought to be trained, writes to an exchange as fol lows: "O mothers! hunt out the soft, tender, genial side of your, boys' natures. Make the most of any gentle taste or comely pro pensity. Encourage tbem to love flowers, pictures and all the beautiful things which God has made. Talk with them, read with them, go out with them into the fields and woods, and hallow pleasant scenes with holy memories. A daily ministration to their unfurnished, hungry minds, a daily touch to their unformed taste, shall make them more comely than costly garments. They will ever bear you witness in the character and conduct of your children; but your Isces and embroideries will crum ble to dust. Why don't mothers teach their children more and dress tbent less?" Truth. Truth ia the most potent enemy, the most dreadful foe of Mr. Lincoln's ad ministration, acd will prevail against all his efforts to stifle its clarion tones, that sink like poisoned arrows deep into the coward hearts of the usurpers at Washing ion. Oh a tombstone in a church-yard in Ul eter, England, is the following epitaph "Erected to the memory ot John Phillips, accidentally shot aa a mark bl affection by bis brother." - A Great Charge Taking Place. . The man wh.o does not see that a great reaction is going on in the minds of the people against the present, Administration is either blinded by parti sanism or is an indifferent observer of what is going on about him. The people are sick and tired of the jokes of Abraham Lincoln, and de mand statesmanship. The follies and extravagance of his Ad ministration are such as to disgust many honest men of his own party, who will ei ther vote for Fremont, or join the Democrat ic party, who want a man at tbe head -of the nation who will administer ..the laws impartially, will protect the rights of cit izens, enforce the Monroe doctrine, and seek a speedy peace upon an hocorable basis. That there will be a change, .this fall, in the national administration seems to be a fixed fact. It is rigbt. loo, for it ia on safe, t.p trust such a man as Lincoln, with hundreds of millions of patronage,, with the administration ot the Government for four years longer. If be is re-elected do man bern can tell the fate of our distracted country. Lancaster Intelligencer. Sevsntt fivl Thousand Tons or Human Blood. A writer in the Jefferson Coonty Union, baa made tome calculations relative to tbe number of men killed thus far ia tbe war. and gives the following interesting ilema: There has been enough already slain to encircle our State if their dead bodies were laid in one continuous line. If they were placed incoffias and cord ed, they would count thirty-nine thousand cord"- i. , 0...!! If laid in a wall twenty-fire feet thick and thirty feet high, it would be orer one and ooe-fourtb miles. If fire feet thick and ten feet high the pile would reach across tbe State. t If piled upon a ten acre lot, they would be nearly two hundred feet high. And ii laid upon the ground, they wosld corer erery foot cf soil in Jefferson county. Soventy-five thousand tons of human blood hare been spilled on Dixie soil enough lo turn erery spindle in Lowell, and if the tears were added lo the flood it would turn the machinery of the continent ; and the unavailing sighs would fill erery ocean saiL , . The one half has not yet been told. Tbe millions of wounded and maimed for life most be taken into account in somming up the grand total of erila iocideul to this bloody fanatical wat. And the end is not yet. Dawmno Rcason. Dr. O. Brownson was one of the distinguished speakers at the Fremont ratification meeting, in New Vprk. He said .he voted for Buchanan) in l56, which ho considered a 6ad operation, and in I860 ha voted for Lincoln which be thought was decidedly worse. He then went on to say : 'Now I am ready to support any man who will defeat Abraham Lincoln : Hisses and applause. My first object the one which lies nearest to my heart is to save the integrity of the nation, to save the Un ion and the Constitution, which has rords its strength and its glory. I am ready to support any party or any man Horatio Seymour? yes.or Vallandigham. His ses and cheers ; aye. or Fernando Wood Good, and applause any man who can defeat the re-election of Abraham Lincoln Understand me ; while this is' my first ob ject, to defeat the nominations of the Bal timore Convention "Bully," and ap plause I am ready to join with all bonert all sincere and all earnest Americans or American citizens who will defeat ShodJy or Shoddy 'a defenders.' Every Kaa'i Home his Castle. The following is Lord Chatham's brilliant illustration of the celebrated maxim of En: glish law, that "every man's bouse ia bis castle "The psoreet man may, in his cottage, bid defiance to all the forces of tbe crown. It may be frail ; its root may shake; the wind may blow through it ; the storm may enter ; the rain may eater but the King of England cannot enter; all hi forces dare not cross the threshold of the turned tenement 1" We have no such castles in this "land of the free," under .the best Government the world has ever witnessed. Any man, claiming to act under military orders, may seize his papers, steal bis goods, and the man that dare say, wrong has bean done, is a branded Copperhead, unworthy the choice blessings of free Government. This is the proud lot of Americans to enjoy. White men have no rights that oar Abo lition Administration is bound to respect. 1" The man who wrote the 'four simple lines, beginning with ''Now I lay me dowa to sleep," seemed to do a very little thing. He wrote four lines for his little child. His name has not come down to ua ; but be bas done more for the good of hie race than if he bad commanded the victorions army at Waterloo. The little fires which the good man kindles here and there on the shores of time aever go out, but ever and anon tbey flame up aud throw light on the pil grim's path.. There is hardly anything so fearful, to rny mind.asthe mind reaching down to tbe coming age, and writing itnelf for evil upon tbe minds cf unburn gaaera tioas. Ths. Most Ccrioui Thio A rho ia not curious. - ., 1 1 woman.