TM'iH""l"ft' flT Kir '-S 3 I BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1861. VOL. 7.-JVO. 35. 1 W?WKv ' V 0 i i THE DAISY. The daisy blossoms on the rocks, Amid the purple heath j It r.lossoms on the river's banks. That threads the glens beneath : 'The eagle, in his pride of place, Beholds it by his nest; And in the mead it cushions soft .The larks descending breast. "Before the cuckoo's earliest Spring Jiis silver circlet knows. "When greening buds begin to swell, And icphyr melts the snows, And when December's breexes howl Along the moorlands bare, And only blooms the Christmas rose, The daisy still is there. Samaritan of flowers! to it All races are alike The Switxer on his glacier height, The-Dutchman on his dyke, The seal-skin vested Esquimaux, - Begirt with icy seas, And, underneath his burning noon, The parasolled Chinese. The emigrant on distant shore, 'Mid scenes and faces strange, Behold it flowering in the sward Where'r bis footsteps range; And when his yearning, home-sick heart Woud bow to its despair, It reads hi eye a. lesson sage That God is everywhere ! Stars pre 'daisies that begem The blue fields of the sky, Beheld by ail, and everywhere, . Bright prototypes on high. Bloom on, then,-unpretending flowers! A"nd to the waverer be An emblem of fit. Paul's content And Stephen's constancy. A TALE FOB THE TIMES. The January sun streamed cheerfully in a cioss the crimson carpet of the snag little room the fire glowed redly in the grate, and the canary, whose cage hung in the window, trill-, od and warbled as joyously as if he was in the hind of cinnamon and spice cloves, instead o the clime of snow and wind. And Mr. Wayne as he buttoued up his overcoat and fitting on his gloves, preparatory to facing the keen out er air, glancing round, very much as though lie would prefer staying with the fire and the canary bird. Just as he resolutely put on bis fur cap, the doer opened and his wife came in one of those bright-eyed rosy-cheeked little woman, whom it is very eisy to spoil, and very dim ult to control. The crimson merino dress she wore was the prettiest possible contrast to her peach blossom cheeks, and the white lace rills at her throat and wrists were more be coDiming I ban the costliest French emboidery could have tecn, -while her tiny buck silk a porn,- nil rtifllea and lace, and coquettish pock -ts, might have been worn for use, but certain ly, had rather an ornamental effect ! "Are you off already, Charlie ?" Mr. Wayne nodded. "To be sure;, puss These are t'mcs when a roan can't watch bis business too closely." Before you go, I want some money," said the lady, reaching up to arrange her hus land's cravat, with rather a conscience-strick tn look. "Money! what for?" "M is. Arnold wishes me to go shopping with Jicr." "But you don't need to buy anything." I know that," said Mrs. Wayne pettishly, "but I want a little money, nevertheless, not to nend, but to carry. What would Mrs Arnold think if I went shopping with an emp ty purse ?" Mr. Wayne whistled ominously, and then shook his head, as he sounded the depths of tis pocket. "I haven't any thing but a fifty dollar bill, -Mattie !" "I will take that, sir!" said Mrs Wayne, de murely. 'Hold on, thongh I shall need that for rent, next week." "Well, you may have it only I want the privilege of carrying it to-day. Don't be so provoking, Charles one would think 1 was a tin Id." 'And you are, in all essentials." said Mr. Wayne, placing the bank-note in her extend ed palm, and giving her a playful kiss as he took his departure. "If you please, ma'am, Mrs. Arnold Is wait ing," said a servant, thrusting her round red face through the open door. "Tell her I'll be down In one moment." Mattie Wayne turned the bill from side to side, and looked thoughtfully at it. Dad she not better place temptation out of her reach, and leave it at home 1 "Nonsense! I shall not spend it" was the next reflection, and Mrs. Wayne placed it in her portemonaie, and ran up stairs to dress. "It's a great bargain, ma'am," said the shopman, stroking down the rich folds of the cistimere shawl as it hung from the shoulders of the lay figure. - "Take it Mattie ! I never saw anything so cheap," whispered Mrs. Arnold. "But I really do not need it at present," hesitated Mrs. Wayne. "Ton can lay it aside until you do ma'am," persisted the clerk. "That is tfie great advan ce of these goods they never go out ' of anion. Think or it a shawl like inis lor twenty dollars! You won't have another such chance for ten years." "How I wish I had not bonght that India wrapper of mine," said Mrs. Arnold, "I cer tainly would have preferred this." "I will take it," said Mrs. Wayne laying 'town her solitary note, and silencing her con WK.r.re with the reflection "Charles can't -'I' seing how cheap it is !" "Vattie, do look at these silks !" exclaimed another lady, who had fust recognized Mrs. aync, "drd you ever 8ee anything with such lstre and so cheap!" Mrs. Wayne's eyes sparkled with true femi nine rapture, as she glanced at the shining o'ds, and from that moment she was a lost joruan, as far as the change from the fifty dollar bill went! Is it fair to bUme her those who cast the first stone who do not snow how strong is the influence at crowded nporiums, cheap goods, and advising friends, of h Wn rea-tn mfee8 them inconsiderate iir ' nei8hbors less lengthy purses, ask I tnate8 vou -ook 80 grave, Mattie T" .n- s Arnold on their way home. 'ujd I look grave T I was only thinking !" unly thinking only recalling the follv and "fraragance of which she bad been guilty ; ri-J feeling for the Erst timet the bitter ttinar femora. Wh.at vould Charles say ? It I was late when he came home, and Mattie had not the courage to make her cortcssiou at once. "How is the business world to-day, Charles?" she asked. He shook his head. "Matters are looking very badly we business men need every cent we can rake and scrape together. And, by the way, Mattie, I am a little sorry you went shop ping to-day. Several men who bad advanced me money, think I am able to pay at once, when they have seen you looking at expensive goods down town. And of course I kuew you were only looking, for " Mattie's face was scarlet. "I have spent the money you gave mc, Charles," said she ; "but " His look of amiizement--almost horror checked her for a moment,' but she went on and related the whole story. "Can you pardon my lolly?" He rose and walked once or twice across tho floor with a disturbed air. "I shall have to do what I never did before . ask the landlord to wait a month for his rent," he said, with grave annoyance. "Oh, Charles, if I had only left that, money at home 1" faltered Mrs. Wayne. "Mattie," said her husband, sitting down beside her, and taking the little hand that trembled so violently,"! thought how it would be when you wanted the money this morning, to make a show. Never be ashamed of an empty purse, my dear, when you have no need for a full one. This is a hard lesson for you, but I shall not think the fifty dollars thrown away if it teaches you prudence. Hereafter, let us never allude to it again !" "I shall not forget it. Charles," said Mat. tie, her bright eyes shining through mist, like a rainbow. She did not and the fifty dollars was the best investment Charles Way ne ever made. As Incident. An incident occurred during the cannonading of Fort Sumter, which lor its peculiarity, deserves particular mention. Ro ger A. Fryor of Virginia, ex-member of Con gress, was one of the second deputation that waited upon Major Anderson, lie was the ve ry embodiment of Southern chivalry. Liter ally dressed to kill, bristling with bowie-knives and revolveis, like a walking arsenal, he ap peared to think himself individually capable of capturing the fort, without any extraneous assistance. Inside of the fort he see-ned to think himself master of everything monarch of all he surveyed and, in keeping with his pretension, seeing upon the table what appear ed to he a glass of brandy, drank it without ceremony. Surgeon Crawford who had wit nessed the feat, approached him and said: Sir, what you have drank is poison it was the iodide of potassium you are a dead man.' The representative of chivalry instantly col lapsed, bowie-knives, revolvers, and all, and passed into the hands of Surgeon Crawford, who, by purgings, pumpings, and pukings, de feated his own prophecy in regard to his fate. Mr. Pryor left Fort Sumter "a wiser, if not a better man." A Brave Texas Girl. Here is a little item from a late Texas paper showing the old pio neer spirit still pervading the wives and daugh ters of the backwoodsman "The party of In dians who passed through Jack Parker and Palo Pnto counties, marking their way with desolation, and striking terror to the stoutest hearts, drew up in front of t lie residence of Mr. Eubanks, and were holding a parley, and no doubt forming a plan to. attack the house. There were no men on the premises at the time. Mrs. Eubanks, her daughter and sever al small children, were alone. The yard was enclosed with pickets, about six feet high. Miss Mary Eubanks, the daughter, with une qualled presence of mind for one so young, seized a shot gun, put on her brother's hat and placed a bench near the picketing, so as to peep over without exposing her body, and then deliberately fired at the party, which stratagem and heroic conduct doubtless saved her own life and the lives of her mother and little brothers and sisters, as the cowardly scamps immediately fled, no doubt believing the house defended by a body of armed men. Men and Monet. The Suffolk Bank of Bos ton offered the State $100,000 and the United States $100,000. Old Massachusetts is pour ing forth men and money to the contest for Freedom as freely as she did in the Revolu tion, when she sent more men into the field than all the Southern States together. Juittle Rhode Island shows the same high spirit. Th Legislature unanimously voted $500,000 for the war, the banks have offered $135,000 to the State, and a single hrm in Providence has offered $100,000. Pennsylvania, too, is doing her duty. Men are plenty, and money is of fered freely. The Philadelphia banks have taken the $500,000 war loan at par, and thrice as much could be had. A Pittsburg bank has offered $100,000 to the State. John Covcde offered $50,000; and a number of citizens of Pittsburg, and in other parts of the State, have offered like sums. So it is iiKall the free States ; men and money are offered freely, and without stint. Wo nnto the traitors of the land, who dare to oppose the freemen of the North, when once fully aroused. A Salty Joke. A good joke is told on a member of one of the volunteer companies which went down to Pensacola. We think it was a Mississippi company, and is said to be a fact. Being accustomed to fresh water, livinz in the interior, and not having been in the Gulf of Mexico before, he was in blissful ig norance of its briny properties. Getting up in the morning, as usual, to perform his daily ablutions, he drew a bucket of water, sat It down near his comrades, and retiring for soap and towel. Returning with the articles, he sonsed into the bucket of water, hands and face. The consequence can . be imasined: Recovering from the shock, and rubbing tin burning eyeballs, ho exclaimed, "I can whip the d d rascal that salted this water ! A man can't draw a bncket of water, and leave it a few moments, without some prank is played on him." Dabbing the water aside, ho left a mid the shouts and jeers of his companions who had been silently watching him. lie soon found out his mistake. A teacher asked a bright little girl, " What country is opposite to its on the globe 7" "Don't know, sir," was the answer. 'Well, now," said the teacher, "if I were to boro a hole thro' tho earth, and you were to go in this end, where would you come out ?" "Out of tho hole, sir," replied .the. pupil, with an air ot triumph. A CURIOUS ST0EY. A New York correspondent of the Buffalo Commercial furnishes that paper with the fol lowing curious and romantic statement, the entire truth of which is vouched for by the writer, who also gives the names of Governor Morgan and the Chief Police as additional guarantees of its correctness: In 185G Thomas Shotwell, a young man of respectable family, and the son of a wealthy manufacturer of Leeds, England, became ac quainted with and married J ulia Tillotson, the only daughter of another rich manufacturer of Sheffield. The union was sanctioned by the paters and maters of both parties, and for a few months the course of true love ran smooth, and preparations were mado by the young people to i set up for themselves, upon the funds expected from their respective "gov ernors ;" but a year after the wedding, the el der Shotwell succumbed to the financial pres sure he became bankrupt and his family worse than beggars. The young wife's fath er, finding his son-in-law penniless, Bet about devising some means to get rid of him, qui etly but effectually. The army- In the East were in want of recruits, so a commission was purchased for young Shotwell, and he was as signed to the Regiment of Horse. Old Til lotson, finding himself free from the incubus of a "poor relation," devised how he should make the separation between his daughter and her husband perpetual. He first procured to be published in the Service Gazette a report of the death of the younger Shotwell. and by a conspiracy with a post officer's clerk in Lon don, succeeded in interception all communi catiou between the youngsters. In less th in a year after the publication of young Shotwell s death; hi supposed widow was induced to marry again, and this time to a worthy and wealthy sea captain named Post, engaged 111 the American trade., whom she ac companied to New York in March last. They had scarcely been there one month when her second husband died, leaving her a fortune of some '12,000. For some reason Mrs. Post remained in this city, and boarded at a well known and fashionable English boarding house on Twenty-fourth street, where wo will leave her to give a history of her first husband fitter his arrival in India. Not being able to obtain any intelligence from his wife, whom he truly and devotedly loved, he gave way to his pas sior.s, and endeavored to drown his griefs in dissipation. The first news he received from his wife was her marriage with Post. A ca reer of dissipation followed this intelligence. and in a drunken brawl he attacked and maim ed a superior brother officer who playfully rallied him on his domestic troubles, for which he was court martialed and sentenced, but upon the circumstances of the case being made to the Governor General, his sentence was suspended, but ho was cashiered and dis missed from the service. He, too, found an asylum in New York, almost simultaneously with his former wife. Having never been schooled to labor, and having no vocation by which to earn a living a stranger in a strange land, outlawed by his own government his case excited the sympathy of Mr. Wight, of the Par!: Hotel, who generously gave him a home until he could be put in a condition to earn for him self a living. He finally was offered and ac cepted a place as porter in a large dry goods house in Dey street, but his continued dissi pation entirely unfitted him tor his business that ha remained but a short time, his dis charge necessarily following. Under tho circumstances it is not strange that he should commit crime ; a forgery of bis employer's name, his arrest and trial therefor, his couviction thereof, and sentence and im prisonment followed in Septemder lust. On the day he left the city for the State prison, he was visited by a reporter of a New York daily, whose acquaintance he had form ed at "the Park," and to whom he intrusted a narrative of his life, and the custody of some objects of curiosity and mementoes of affec tion among them a Bible of a very curious and costly design and workmanship. "That," said he, was a present from Julia on our wedding day. I gave her one precisely like it. Take it keep it for me, and if I should uot survive the term of my imprisonment, send it to my mother in Leeds, with the un dying love of her unhappy son." lie was too agitated to say more, and sobbing a last adieu, was soon on his way to Sing Sing. Up to the time of his final imprisonment he hail no idea but that bis Jisliii," ud he termed her, was the happy wile ot an affectionate husband, en joying life in its fullness in Old England. On New 1 ear's day, the reporter above re ferred to, in going the rounds of "calls," vis ited the boarding house of Mrs. P., on Twenty-fourth street, and while there accidentally saw a Bible upon the centre table, the very copy ot the one intrusted to him by the con vict Shotwell. lie took up the book, opened it, and upon the fly leaf read these words : "Julia, from Thomas, Leeds, England." Here was a mystery, and just such an &be as a reporter delights to contemplate and eluci date. So, calling the landlady to one side, he asked her concerning the ownership of tho book, explaining his curiosity by stating that he possessed one precisely like it, whose his tory was a peculior oue, and as he understood there were but two books of" the same pattern in csiiUiiCe, he desired to know if these were the two exclusives. He was informed that the beck was borrowed from a lady guest for adornment of the centre table for this occa sion ; and what was more, was told that the vvncr vorJd not prolyl Wy o!;jet to an expla nation of the coincidence. Sending up his card he was soon shown into Mrs. P.'s pres ence, and with the characteristic freedom (not impudence) of a reporter, proceeded to ex plain the cause of bis visit to learn the his tory of-tbat Bible, assuriug the lady that his visit was not prompted by an idle curiosity. Mrs. P., without reserve, gave such informa tion as was desired j and in an after conversa tion gave the reporter to understand that her affection for her first husband, whom she still believed to have died in India, was unchanged. The reporter soon left, and it is unnecessary to Ftatc thnt his next calling .plae was at the houso of Mr. B., the agent of a well known European banking firm in this city. The sto ry of the two Bibles was soon told, and of course Mr. B. was deeply interested, lie immediately- called ; upon Mrs. P., and kindly and carefully made known to her the story of her husband's misfortunes, accompanying tho intelligence with a promise, if she desired, it, thnt no pains should bo spared to secure his pardon. What was her answer ? :Noonewbo knows woman's heart can doubt. She did de sire it, and with heroic devotion set about ac complishing it. In company with Mr. B., she visited the victimized merchant, the District Attorney, the Judge of the Court and the ju ry, and telling the story of his and her wrongs, obtained letters from each to the Governor, soliciting the convict's pardon. Armed with these documents, she proceeded to Albany last week, and had an audience with Governor Morgan, the result of which was, that with a lighter heart and her husband's pardon, she took the cars for Sing Sing, and on Monday last had the pleasure of walking out ol the prison doors arm in arm with the husband whom she had long mourned as lost to her forever. The couple, thus strangely re-united, im mediately took passage at New York for Eng land, where they intend to reside hereafter. Old Letters. Never burn kindly letters. It is so pleasant to read them over when the ink is broVrn, the paper yellow with age, and the hands that traced the friendly words lie folded over the heart that prompted them, un der the green sod. Above all, never burn love-letters. To read them in after years is like a resurrection of one's youth. The elder ly spinster finds in fhe impassioned offer she foolishly rejected, twenty 3 ears ago, a foun tain of rejuvenescence. Glancing over it, she realizes that she was once a belle and a beaut3', and beholds her former self in a mir ror much more congenial to her last than the one that comforts her dressing-room. The "window indeed" derives a sweet and sileinn consolation from the letters of the beloved one, who has journeyed before her to the far off" land, from which there comes no messages, and where she hopes one day to join him. No photograph can so vividly recall to the memory of a mother the tenderness and devo tion of the children who have left her at tho call of Heaven, as the epistolary outpouring 01 their htial love. The letter of her true son or daughter to a true mother, is somethii better than an immage of the features ;it is a renex of the winter's soul. Keep all loving letters. Hum onI the harsh and cruel ones and, in burning, forget and forgive them. Choosing Husbands. When a girl marries why do people talk of her choice ? In niuetj nine cases out of a hundred lias she any choice 1 Does not the man, probably the last she would have chosen, select her? A lady writer says : 'I have been married raanj years; the match was considered a good one, suitable in every respect age, position, and fortune. Every oue said I had made a good choice. I loved my husband when I married him, because he had by unwearied assiduity succeeded in gain ing my affections ; but had choice been ni3 privilege, I certainly should not have chosen him. As I look at him in the easy-chair, sleeping before the 3re, a huge dog at his feet, a pipe peering out of tho many pockets ofhU shooting-coat, 1 cannot but think how different he is from what I would have chosen. My first penchant was for a clergyman 5 he was a flatterer, and cared but little for me, though I have not forgotten the pang of his desertion. My next was a law3er, a 3oung man of im mense talent, smoothe, insinuating marners; but he, too, after walking, talking, dancing, and flirting, left me. Either of those would have been my "choice ;" but my present hus band chose me, and, therefore, I married him. Aud this, 1 cannot help thinking, must be the way with halt the married folks of 1113- ac quaintance." , The Despotism of South Carolina. There are no popular elections in South Carolina, to this da. TJie poor whites nave never been permitted to vote ; and even those who have the required property qualification a free hold of filty acres, or. a "town lot" only choose members of the Legislature. The Legislatue elects all the state officers and the Judges, and also appoints the electors who castjthe vote ot the State for President. To keep the pooi whites from all share in the government, it is provided, that no one shall be eligible to a seat in -the Legislature, who does not own five hundred acres of land and ten negroes. This is the leading State in re bellion agiiinst the lree institutions of the counti'3', and these are the principles of gov ernment a few of our heretofore leaders, pro- lessing, but counterfeiting pure Democracy, want to sustain. Discovery of. Ancient Coins in New Or leans. The New Orleans papers report the discover of a collecfion of old coins in an an cient Spanish house in the Second District of that city. The story runs to the effect, that an old negro woman had complained frequent ly to her mistress about an evil spirit which haunted the place, floor, walls and ceiling of the kitchen, to her groat terror and the de struction ot her rest at night. On Sunday night, March 24th, this w oman locked herself in the kitchen, with her little grand-son, and began a search for money, which she natural ly associated with the spirit. She dug under the hearth and discovered a heap of old silver com, the value of which has been estimated by a broker at $1,G7Q. Who buried the mon ey must remain a mystery. Tho money, of course, falls to the lady living in the house. Uses op Scripture Histort. God cer tainly had a purpose in making history and biography tho broad basis of all Scripture. Is it not manifest that, by putting so largeja portion of his Word iuto this narrative form, he thereby sought to attract and interest the youthful mind ? If so, it is well to profit by the indication. It is wise to follow, in our own instructions, the Divine pattern thus set us. Religion never speaks more gracefully than when she speaks by example. It is chiefly through the living voice of example that she speaks to the young in all the Scrip tures To inculcate Bible truths, through Bible characters, whether from the pulpit, the press, or the teacher's chair, is to adopt the Bible's own method of instruction. And certainly it is one which experience proves to be the most effective, as it is the most pleasing. Union Speech of Gen. Wool. General Wool made a patriotic speech at Troy, N. Y., on April 15. Ho closed by saying: "My friends, that flag must be lifted up from the dust info which it has been trampled, and placed in its proper position; and again set floating in triumph to the ' breeze. I pledge yon my heart, my hand, and all ray energies t6 the cause.' The Union shall be maintained. I am prepared to devote my life to the' TTOfk, and to lead you ja the struggle." v THE N0ETH AND THE SOUTH. There are few thoughtful Americans who have not felt for many years that the Gordian knot ot slavery would at some time ir other be cut by the sword, but have hoped that that period might be more distant than time has proved. But it is a remarkable fact that some of our distinguished statesmen have seen the truth more clear', and though, from patriot ic motives, they did not openl3 express their presentments, they signified them to intimate friends in confidential intercourse. In some cases these views have been made public since the death of those who entertained them. A mongst the various instances of this sort we may refer to Col. Benton's observation to a friend, that the vast expense put upon Capitol buildings was with the view that they should early become the propert3 of the Southern Confederacy. Mr. Madison told a friend of his,' who .now relates flic circumstance, that he would live to see the United States rent to pieces by the question of slavery. There is one point in all tbis that cannot be too constantly remembered or too strongly dwelt upon. It is that such an event could not have como at a more opportune moment lor the North. It comes at a moment 01 ex traordinary strength, when an unusual defi ciency of grain abroad, and a great superflui ty of it here, enables us to make large exports of Northern produce. Consequent, w hen a stringent money market checks all imports, and gives us the price ol onr exports in bul lion, these exports having been on Northern account, the specie is the property of the North, and affords us a basis of extraordinary strength for carrying on our operations. Add to this that the probability of another .short crop abroad, and of another abundant one here, gives us a prospect of keeping down exchanges over a long period of time, and of retaining immense quantities of specie in this country to strengthen everv movement. Nor is this all; ty the inevitable laws of trade, what specie is now in the South must come North, and this is a tendeucy which all of Jeff. Davis hnanciering.cannot avert, and, in fact, will only precipitate ; for the rebel Ad ministration, destitute ol mone3, and unable to pay its soldiers and adherents, must at least make a pretence of paying must pay in promises to pay in paper. Now, it is the nature of a bad irrenc3, when supiorted by Government authority, invariably to drive out a good one; and thus the specie reserves of the Southern banks, now carefully hoarded, will be drawn out by Mr. Davis, 011 one pre text or another, and will find their way North to pay for provisions which the Southern States must have, or starve. In fact, a great deal of the specie will be sent North. b3' its present owners, as a mere matter of precau tion, and to get it out of the reach of Mr. Da vis clutches. Five millions are already in the North, for safe keeping in this way. The deficienc3' of money is already felt most a- cutely at the South, and we see it in no way more strikingly indicated than in the absurd sources to which, in their desperate embar rassment, they look for it. At the outset of Secession, South Carolina attempted to raise mone3 in Philadelphia, and was greatly dis appointed at her want of success. The Mont gomer3 Administration fully expected to ob tain large sales for their bonds in Wall street, where they were to have greatly tho prefer ence over those of the United States. Such a thing as their exclusion from the New York Stock Board probably never entered the heads of the rebels as a possible contingency. An equally severe disappointment was caused by the-announcement that a similar .exclusion awaited them in London, where the rules of the Stock Board peremptorily exclude the se curities of all communities which have been guilty of confiscation or repudiation. Foiled right and left, no credit abroad, no money at home, where do they now put their faith I In the expectation of "large loans from British ship-builders." Sane men would never suppose that the English Government would allow its snl jects to aid and abet traitors, and thus bring the two Governments into collision. But snni'y is not a characteristic of the people of the Gulf States at the present moment. tVnothcr element of strength in the North, at this juncture, lies in the new tariff, which will operate, to some extent, as a check to imports, at the same time that its higher rates will place in tho hands of Government an un diminished amount of revenue. At the same time it throws manufacturing business into the bauds of our establishments in preference to those of Europe. How different would have been our condi tion if ibis collision bad come at a moment when the North was suffering under excessive imports, with grain high here and abundant abroad when the South was rich w hen a bad tariff had stimulated imports and checked do mestic manufactures. This is now so far f rom being the case, that there has been for a quar ter of a century no period when the North was better able to go through this trial unflinch ing. And what are its first results ? South ern commerce annihilated banks insolvent, many with only three or four cents in specie to the dollar of circulation that circulation already at fifty per cent, discount, and rapid ly declining public and private credit utter ly annihilated, even tho suspicion of secess ion sufficing to bring down the stock of a Bor der State like Virginia to its present pitiable figure cotton forced, to find new avenues to market, and to pay freights to Northern rail ways threatened, too, with damaging compe tition from new fields of production abroad and substitutes at home, whereas in the North specie is so abundant as to be a drug banks almost everywhere solvent the Government teadered supplies of men and money far be yond i's wants and commerce increasing, so that the arrivals at New York far exceed those ' at any previous time. . , , We are far from wishing to underrate the fearful crisis which is upon us. But we say and jn saying it, we repeat the words of a dis tinguished officer that excepting their sto len arms and their secret conspiracies, no States could be worse prepared' for war than those now in rebellion, and no States, not ha bitual provided with a standing army, in a better condition for war than the Free States of North America. There are twenty-three special mail agents in the Union, about one half of which have been filled by the present Administration. rA young girl' generally loses her' freshness by mingling in fashionable society, as a bright st re a a does by mingling with the sea. TEESIELE CEUELTY. The Montreal papers teem w ith accounts of cruelty shown to prisoners in the jails of Can ada East. Alluding to the Isle-aux Noix Re formatoiy, the Advertiser says : "Poor boys have been flogged there w ith rods cut green from the woods (six dozen each,) until the flesh was ploughed out ol their bodies, literally cut out in pieces, and when the poor sufferers begged lor mercy's sake that the punishment might be inflicted upon their backs, even that was denied them, and the strokes so delivered that they would strike the hardest under the arm and around the breast. The Warden standing by all the while, and repeatedly giv orders to "striktj hard." One poor boy in particular received eight lashes, after he was perfectlv insensible, and remained in a stato of unconsciousness lor twenty-five minutes af ter he was flogged and he was let down on the floor. Another boj has been known to faint three or four different times from exhaustion and cruel treatment. It is also true that per sons have been selected to inflict corporeal punishment upon prisoners, against whom they , were well known to harbor feelings of strong hatred. Others have been confined in dark cells for three months, chained to the walls with ftro feet of chain, and are described as in a state bordering upon insanity. A Noble Horse. Grant Tborburn says: I once saw a horse in the neighlorhood of New York drawing a load otcoal, twelve hun dred weight, in a cart. The lane was very nar row. Tiie driver, some distance behind, was conversing with a neighbor. The horse, on a slow walk, came up to a little child sitting on its hind quarters in the middle of the road, gathering up dust with his little bands, and making mountains out of mole-hills. Tho horse stopped he snielled of the child there was no room to turn off'. With his thick lips he gathered the frock between his teeth, laid him gently on the outside of the wheel track, and went on his way rejoicing. And welt might he rejoice he had done a noble deed." Patent Arms. It is well understood that Colt and others, holding patents from the U nited States, have for a long time past been suppbying th? South with arms of the most ef fective kind. As those men are protected in their manufacture of arms by letters patent granted by the United States, it is the duty of Congress at once to revoke their patents, and make the manufacture of patent arms free to all. Among the first acts of the Congress should be the revocation of the patents of all who have supplied rebels with arms. There are men who would learn a useful lesson by such discipline as that. Let us have a free right for all to make the best aims! Noble. Cornelius Vanderbilt, Esq., is a mong those of the wealthy citizens of New York who have offered to place money, ships, and all they possess at tho disposal of the Federal authorities to sustain the Government in the crisis now upon us. This is not spoken of as anything peculiar, for nearly all are of one mind in New York ; but Mr. V. has prob ably more property that can be made immedi ately serviceable in the contest, and more that is threatened by the system of pirac just set on feet by Jeff. Davis, than perhaps any ocber of onr millionaires, and he proffers it all to up hold the Union and the Constitution. Too near the utDGE. In a village in Pi. cardy, after a long sickness, a farmer's wife fell into a lethargy. Her husband was a wil ling, good man, to believe her out of pain ; and so, according to the ensiom of that coun try, she was wrapped in a sheet and carried out to 1)C bnried. But. as luck would have it, the bearers carried her so near the hedge that the thorns pierced the sheet, and waled the woman from the trance. Some years af ter she died in reality, and as the funeral pass ed along, the husband would every now and then call out "Not too near the hedge ! not to near the hedge, neighbors." Privateerino. Jeff. Davis has issued bis proclamation in response to that of the Presi dent offering commissions ami letters of marque and reprisal to such as may applv for them. Every man caught under his letters ot marque will be liable to be hanged as a pirate. Nev ertheless, our ship owners should be on their guard. Ever port in the confederate States ought to be blockaded forthwith. If there are not national vessels enough to do it, let the Government call lor privateers. Countering tants will cure some diseases. KE.MrcKi.-An immense Union meeting was held at' Louisville on Thursday a-week. Speeches were made bj Mr. Guthrie, former ly Secretary of the Treasury, the venerable Judge Nicholson and others. Resolutions were unanimously passed declaring that tbo' Confederate States had commenced war with the Federal Government ; that Kentucky Is loyal to the Union ; that Secession is a reme dy for no evil; that Kentucky will not take part against the Federal Government, but will maintain a neutral position. A Little History- Cassius M. Clay, Min. ister to Russia, has offered hia services to the Secrctary.of War, either to raise a regiment or to serve as a private soldier in the ranks. Mr. Cameron said to him, "Sir, this is the first in stance in history that ever I heard of where a foreign Minister volunteered to serve in tbo ranks." "Then," said Clay, "let's makes. little buton." A company of 100 volunteer was raised and put under Clay's command. Impessiox Made bt Northern Feeling. The boldly-assumed attitude of the free States, and the extiucfiou of all party lines, carry terror into the ranks of the conspirators ; and many who preached secession a week ago, are now convinced that ft is all wrong. Southern Opinion Prominent Southern, men in Washington openly say that the Con federacy committed a serious mistake in open ing the fire upon Fort Sumter, as it will cause a reaction against them by the conservative, Union, and peace men of the South. It is said that Huntington, the forger, is al lowed to travel pretty much where he pleases, instead of being kept closely in Sing Sing. The other night he was recognized in Laura Keenc's theatre, New York. Of all eactbly music, that which reaches the . farthest into heaven is the beating of a loving Jbeart. i i a - 1 ir : i s ir