X, si i !; 1 ' n i f it. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1865. VOL. 11.-N0. 34. BY S. J. B0. 1 f: I r I c. r i, TERMS OF THE JOl'UNAL. The RArTSA!" JorRXAL is published on Wed nesday at 52.00 per annum in advance Auter tistments inerted at SI. 50 per square, for three or lew insertions Ten lines (or less) counting a ciaare. For erery additional insertion i0 cents. A deduction will be made to yearly advertiser. -ht$inegsi JHrrctimu TP.VIX BROTHERS, Dealers in Square A Sawed i Lumber. Drj G.ods, Groceries, Flour, Grain, it, Ac, BurnsidePa., Sept. 23, 1963. tREDErTcK LEITZIXGER. Manufacturer of V til kinds of Stone-ware. Clearfield. Pa. Or sr! solicited wholesale or retail. Jan. 1, 1S63 RANS BARRETT, Attorneys at Law. Clear field. Pa. May 13. 1363. j.j.rini. : : : : .: : waltsr Barrett. ROBERT J. WALLACE. Attorney at Law. Clear field. Pa Office in Shaw's new row. Market nreet, opposite Xaogle'a jewelry store May 26. TT F. NArGLE. Watch and Clock Maker, and XX. dealer in Watches, Jewelry. Ac. Room in Graham's row, Market street. Sov. 10- HBUCITER SWOOPE, Attorney at Law. Clear field, Pa. OEct inGrahani's Row. fourdoo s west of Graham A Boynton's store. Nov. 18- ARTSWICE. A 1IUSTON. Dealers in Drags, Medicines. Paints. Oils. Stationary. Perfume tt Fancy Goods, Solions. etc., et-s., Market street. OWfleld, Pa June, 29, 1S64. J P. KRATZER, dealer in Dry Goods. Clotb . Ing. Hardware. Queensware, Groceries. Pro Tliiscsle. Front Street, above the Academy, Cleai field. Pa. April 27. --txt LLIAM F.IRW IX. MarketstreeU Clearfield, Y P Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Mer ebamtise. Hardware, Queensware, Groceries, and family articles generally. Jiov. 10. JOHN GUELICH. Manufacturer of all kinds ol Cabinet-ware. Market street. Clearfield. Pa Ha also makes to order Coffins. short notice, sec attends funerals with a hearse. AprlO.'ii. -pvR M. WOODS, Practicisq Physician, and j Examining Surgeon for Pensions. Office. "South-west corner of Second and Cherry fctref t. Clearfield. Pa. January 21, 1&G3. riW'MAS J. M'CULLOCGn, Attorney at Law. X Clearfield. Pa. Ofiice, east of the ' Clearfield e.B&kk. Deeds and other legal instruments pre pared with promptness and accuracy. July 3. JB M'EX ALLY, Attorneyat Law, Clearfield, Pa. Practice in Clearfield and adjoining eeantias. Office in new brick building of J. Boyn- n, 2d street, one door sooth of Lanich's Hotel. 1) ICUARD MOSSOP, Dealer in Foreign and Do- mestio Dry Goods. Groceries, Flour. Bacon, liqaors. Ae. Room, on Market street, a few doors west ot JaumalOJlee. Clearfield, Pa. Apr27. LARRIMEB, A TEsT, Attorneys at Law.Ciear teld. Pa. Will attend promptly to ail legal and other business entrusted to their care in Clear field and adjoining counties, t August 6. 1S56. "I7af. ALBERT A BROS. Dealers in Dry Goods, C roceriet. Hardware, Queensware. Flour. Baeon, etc Wood! an, Clearfield county. Penn a. Also, extensive dealers in all kinds of sawed lum ber, shingles, and square timber. Orders solici ted. Woodland, Aug. lith. IS53. TEM1 EKA.NfE nOTSE. The subscriber won d respectfully inform the citizens of Clearfield county, that he has rented the -Tipton Hotel.' and will use every endeavor to accommo date thoss who may favor him with their custom. He will try to furnish the table wi:h the best the country e in afford, and will keep hay and feed to aeeomtnv) ate teamsters. Gentlemen don't tn-get Ue'-Tipf.n Hotel." SAMUEL SMITH. Tipton. Pa , May 25, 158t. -IIJIIISKEKS! WHISKERS: Doyou wanj V Whiskers or Moustaches? Our Grecian Compound will force them to jrrow on the smith es! face or chin, or hair on oald heads, in Six Weesg. Prioe, S1.00 Sent by mail anywhere, closelv sealed, on recrtot of price. Address, WARNER A CO.. Box 133, Brooklin. X. York.. March 29th. Ia55. - NOTICE. TREASTRY DEPARTMENT, 1 C ice or the Comptroller of-the CrnRESCY, WAsnissroM. Janruary 3uth, 1S5. J l HEREAS.EY SATISFACTORY EVIDENCE presented to the undersigned, it has been nia e to appear that ' TUE FIRST NATIONAL BASK OF CLEARFIELD," in the Borough. of Clearfield, in the county of Clearfield, and State ? runsylvania, has b.-en duly organized under . l according to the requirements of the Act of ' ucgress, entitled "An Act to provide a National Currency, secured by a pledge of United States t' zli and to provide for the circulation and demption tbeieuf." approved June d, lst4. and has complied with all the provisions ol sail Act required to be complied with befc-re commencing the business of Banking under fail Act ; Now. therefore, I, Hugh McCulloch. Comptrol Jer of the Currency, do hereby certify that -THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK UF. CLEARFIELD,' in tbe Borough of Clearfield, in the coutty of Clearfield, aad State of Pennsylvania, is author lied to commence the business of Banking under the Act aforesaid v. In testimony whereof, witness my ( SEAL, ihand and eal of office, this 30th day of V-NJanuary, A. D. 1S65. HUGH McCULLOCH. Feb. S, 1S55. Comptroller of the Currency. b-a.:n"b: notice. TREASURY DEPARTMENT, Orrtca crras Comptroller or the Cfrrexct, , WASHtTO, March 5th. 1665. ) IT fl E RE AS, B V SATIS FACTO RYE VI t dence presented to the undersigned, it has btenmad to appear that '-THE COUNTY NA TIONAL BANK UF CLEARFILD," in the Bor ongb of Clearfield, in the county of Clearfield an4 State of Pennsvlvania. has been duly organ iied under and according to the requirements of tfce Act of Congress, entitled "An Act to provide National Currency, secured by a plrdjie of I ni U4 States bonds and to provide for the circulat ion and redemption thereof." approved June 3d. and has complied with all the provisions of said Act required to be "complied with beforecommen eing the business of Backing underf aid Act; Now, tberfore, I, Hugh McCulloch. Comptroller f the Currency, d hereby certify that -THE COUNTY NATIONAL BANK OF CLEARFIELD,'' n the -Borough of Clearfield, in the county of Clearfield, and State of Pennsylvania, is author ized to commence the business of Banking under tbe Act aforesaid. v In tettimony whereof, witness my KALhand and seat of ofice. this 21 day of HUG II McCULLOCH. Mir .1Ml oBj(eUw of tsjeCawesey, THE ASSASSINATION. ITS SECRET HISTORY. THE DEVELOPMENTS. Developments are being made hourly, showing the plot to assassinate the Presi dent and Cabinet was planned long ago, and that the conspirators were only waiting for a favorable opportunity to carry out their designs. That the Knights of the Golden Circle were the originators of the conspira cy there is no doubt, and it is also assured that the 4th of March- was fixed for the commission of the deed. The assassination of the President throws light upon much which had been strange in the conduct of Booth during the past win ter, and there is good reason to believe that in murdering Mr. Lincoln he was complying with an obligation of the order of which he was a member, and which obligation has fal len to him by lot. During the past two months he had seem ed to be completely absorbed in some pro ject, which none of his friends could fathom. In the midst of associates he would frequent ly, remain silent; or, if conversing, would talk iu a pointless, way, as if thinking of some great trouble. On the 4th of March his conduct was particularly noticed as being unusually strange. During the morning his nervous actions at tract eil considerable attention a mong his acquaintances, from among whom he suddenly disappeared, and was not seen arain until a friend found 1 im standing on the embankment at the north wing ot the Capitol, near which spot the President would necessarily pass. Booth vas dressed in a slouch suit, with his pants tucked into the tops of his boots, and an old felt hat drawn over his face. His friend hailed him two or three times, receiving no reply, and finally went up to where Booth was standing, when the latter for the first time manifested his recognition of the gentleman, his man ner conveying an iuipresMon that he did not wih to be recognized. As the President passed he turned away with his friend as if disappointed by the absence of some one, and preserved throughout the day a moody silence. On Friday last he was about the National Hotel as usual, and strolled up and down the avenue several times. During one of the strolls he stopped at the Kirkwood House and sent into Vice President John son a card, upon which was written : ""I do not wish to diturb you. Are vou in? J. Wilkes Booth.'' A gentleman of Booti 's acquaintance at this time met him in front of the Kirkwood IIoue, and in the conversation which fol lowed made some allusion to Booth's busi ness, and in a jesting way asked. '"What made hint so gloomy? had he lost another thousand in oil?" Booth replied that he had lost considerably by the freshet ; that he had been hard at work that day, and was about to leave Washington never to return. Just then a boy came out and said to Booth: "Yes, he is in his room." Upon which the gentleman walked on, supposing Booth would enter the hotel. About seven o'clock on Friday evening he came down from his room at the Nation al, and was spoken to by several concerning his paleness, which he said proceeded from indisposition. Just before leaving, he ask ed the clerk if he wa not going to Ford's theatre, and added, l' There icilllesome very fine acting there to-nffht." -. Mr. Sessford. ticket agent at the theatre, noticed Booth as he passed in, and shortly after, the latter entered the restaurant next the theatre and. in a hurried manner, called tor ik Brand ! branli ! Lrftndy!'' rapping at the same time on the bar. The Murderer's Arrangements. The State box occupied by the President was formed by removing the partition be tween two of the upper Boxes, thereby leav ing the two doors opening into the double box thus furuie 1, one of which was locked. In the rear of the box, aud between the walls of the theatre, was a narrow passage with" a door at the entrance leading from the dress circle. During the day Booth had ev idently visited the box, as is shown by the preparations made for the assassination. Behind the door of the passage a hole had been made in the wall, in which at night locth inserted the end of a board as a brace against the dior, thereby precluding any one from fallowing him from the dress cir cle. " The screws were next removed from the lock ot the farther door opening into the double box, the thread of the screw holes broken, and the lock and screws re placed, so that should the inmates of the box fasten the door by which they entered, the other door might be easily pushed open. Judge Olin and others on a visit to the theatre, satisfied themselves by actual ex periment that the' door ostensibly locked could thus be pushed in with the greatest ease. The aperture in the panel of the door, which was thought to have been a bu!let hole, and thus formed a contradictory feature in the chain of evidence, it now ap pears was made with a knife, and was de signed to enable the assassin to survey the position of the occupants of the box previ ous to entering himself. The large arm chair always used by the President at the theatre had been removed from its usual E infirm pnnhUng' the murderer to carry out his design more readilv as he passed through the box. A pocket knife, the one probably with which the hole was cut in the door, was found Ivine on the cushion of the bal ustrade when Mr. Lincoln's party entered the box. . Much of this work of preparation must have been done previously by the assassin, or some confederate knowing the premises, and was probably done during some portion of th day when the theatre, or that portion of it, is unoccupied. It would appear, too, from the ease with which the somewhat difficult jump and rebound was made a leap for- ward and obliquely to the right that it had been practiced previously, at some favorable opportunity by the assassin. : "vThat an Eye-witness sap. Mr. James P. Ferguson, who was pres ent at Ford s oti the night of the assassina tion, makes a statement to the following purport : lie went to the theatre rith a lady on Friday night for the express purpose of see ing General Grant, who was announced to be present Mr. Ferguson saw the Presi dential party enter the box, but of course did not see ths Lieutenant General He, how ever, continued to watch the box, thinking the General might intend to slip quietly in, in order to avoid the demonstrations that would attend his recognition. When the second scene of the third act ot the play was reached, Mr. Ferguson saw (and recognized) John Wilkes Booth mak ing his way along the dress circle to the President's box. Of this box Mr. Fergu son had an excellent view, being seated in the dress circle just opposite to it, next to the private boxes on the other side of the circle. This scat he had purposely chosen to afford his companion a good view of the Lieutenant General, and. for the reasons al ready stated, was narrowly watching the en trance to it. Mr. Ferguson and Booth had met in the afternoon and conversed ; and were well ac quainted with each other, so that the for mer immediately recosmized him. Booth stopped two steps from the door, took off his hat, and holding it m bis Jert nana, lean ed against the wall behind him. In this at titude he remained for half a minute, then, adds Mr. Feriruson, he stepped down one step, put his hands on the door of the little corridor leading to the box, bent his knee against it, the door opened, Booth entered, and was for the time hidden from Mr. Fer guson's sight. Mr. Ferguson watched for his appearance in the box, de-iring to see who in that party the actor could be on such intimate terms with, as to feel warranted in taking such a lifcertv. Whether Booth shut the door of the little corridor or left it open behind him. Mr. Ferguson fears to state positively; but from what he observed of the door, believes he did shut it. The shot was the next thing Mr. F. reme mbers. He saw the s noke, then preceived B-ioth standing upright with both hands raised, but at that moment saw tio weapon or anything else in either. ' Booth then sprang to the front of the box, laid his left hand on the railing in front, was checked an instant evidently, by his coat or pant being caugt t in something, or held back by somebody. (It was- by Major Rat bourn. ) A post in front obstructed the view of Mr. l'erguson, Booth soon changed his po sition, and again was clearly seen by Mr. F. He now had a knife in his right hand, which he also laid upon the railing, as he had al ready his left, and vaulted out As his legs passed between the folds of the flags decorating the box, his spur, which he wore on the richt heel, caught the draper', and brought it down, tearing a strip with it. When he left go the railing he still clutched the shiui ig kirife. He crouched as he fell, railing on one knee, and putting forth both hands to help himself recover an erect posi tion, which he did with the rapidity and ea-y agility of an athelete. Having recovered his equilibrium, Booth strode across the stage to first entrance, pas sing behind the actor on the stage, (Harry Hawk.) When he reached the other side of the stage, just ere he became invisible by passing into the entrance, he lxkedup, and Mr. Ferguson said he heard him say, "I have done it," and then he lost sight of him. Mr. Ferguson visited the theatre, and, with Miss Harris, the lady who was in the box with the President, her father, and Judge Olin, of th Criminal Court, and Judge Carter examined the box. The puz zling hole in the unused door of the box was closely scrutinized by the light of a candle, and was found to possess indubitable marks of hiring been ichittled tcith a knife. The ball extracted from the head of tbe Presi dent is of much larger diameter than the hole. The edsres of the hole show the marks of a knife blade very clearly. When the shot had been fired Miss Har ris rose to her feet to call for water for Mr. Lincoln, and distinctly noticed a bar ot wood placed across the door of the little corridor, one end resting against the wall in to which it was partially let by a cut, or rath er an indentation, seoored in the walL The other end was braced against the opposite side of the door frame. This bar, as the door opens inward, would effectually delay, if not wholly prevent, all ingress into the box from the dress circle, and would also detain the egress of any one in the box. The Bible tite Key to the Heart. If I had a lock of very complicated construc tion and there was only one key that would unlock it, I should feel very sure that key was made by one who understood the con struction of that lock. So when I find that notwithstanding all the windings andmiste ries of iniquity in the human heart, the Bi ble and the BiWe only, is adapted to it throuffhout, and is able to penetrate its most secret recesses, I am constrained to believe that the Bible was made by Him who ''alone knoweth the hearts of the children of men." Webster. "They talk of running old Pete for Pres ident next time," remarked Jenkins to Muczins, in front of the Tremont House, the o her day, with a knowing look. "Pete who?" "Pete Roleum," answered Jenkins, walking off at a rapid pace. A recent rebel letter found in a Southern Post office says: "After the war I don t know which will sound worst to say. I wasm the penitentiary four years or that I belong ed to Wheeler" s Cavalry. THE OLD CASTMAN. About five years ago,or thereabouts, John Ainsly or Pap Ainsly,' as he was fami liarly called was the owner of a hand cart, and earned a living by conveying miscella neous parcels from one section of the city to another, and receiving therefor the reasona ble remuneration ot fifty cents per load. To designate the occupation in the prosiest language possible, he was a hand man, and when not employed, could always be found during working hours at the corner of Montgomery and California streets. His hair and long beard were quite gray, and his limbs feeble ; and if he could not shove as heavy a load through the deep sand or up the steep grade above him, as the stalwart Teuton on. the opposite corner, thereby los ing many a job and many a dollar, all the light loads in the neighborhood fell to his lot, and kind-hearted men not unf requently traveled a square or two out of their way to give an easy job to 'Pap Ainsly.' Four years ago last September, (I recol lect the month, for I had a note of four thousand dollars to pay, and was compelled to do some pretty sharp financiering to meet it,) having two or three dozen volumes to transfer to my lodgings, I gave 'Pap Ainsly' the tack of transportation. Arriving at my room just as he deposited the last armful on the table, and observing that the old man looked considerably fatigued after climbing three flights of stairs two or three times, I invited him to take a glass of brandy a bottle of which I usually kept in my room for medical and soporific purposes. Al though grateful for the invitation, he po litely declined. I urged, but he was inflexi ble. I was astonished. "Do you never drink?" said I. "Very seldom' he replied, dropping in to a chair at my request, and wiping the perspiration from his forehead. "Well, if you drink at all," I insisted, you will not find as fair an excuse in the next twelve months for indulging, for you appear fatigued and scarcely able to stand.'' "To be frank," said the old man, "I don't drink now. I haven't tasted intoxicating liquors for fifteen years, since " "Since when?""! inquired thoughtlessly, observing his hesitation. The oil man told me. Sixteen years a go he was a well-to-do farmer near Syra cuse, New York. He had one child, a daughter. While attending a boarding school in that city, then a girl of fcixteen years of age, she formed an attachment for a young ptrysieian. Acquainting her father of the circumstances, he flatly refused his consent to a union with a man whom he had never seen, and removing her from school, despatched a note to the younggallant, with the somewhat pointed informa ion that his presence in the neighborhood of Ainsly farm would not meet with favor. The reader of course surmises the result, for such a pro ceeding could have but one effect. In less than a month there was an elopement. The father loaded his double-barreled shot gun, and swore vengeance ; but failing to find the fugitives he took to the bottle. His good wife implored him not to give way to despair but he drank the deeper, and ac cused her of encouraging the elopement. In three months the wife died ; and at the expiration of a year, when the young peo ple returned to Syracuse, from Connecticut, where they had remained with the parents of the husband, they learned that the old man had sjld his tana, squandered the pro ceeds, and was almost destitute. Learning of their arrival, Ainsly drank himself into a frenzy, and proceeded to the hotel where they were stopping, attacked the husband, wounding him in the arm by a pistol i-hot, and attempting the life of his daughter who hapily escaped uniujured, through the inter position of persons brought to the spot by the report of the pistoL. Ainsly was arrest ed tried and acquitted on the plea of insanity. The daughter and her husband returned to Connecticut, since which time the father had not heard from them. He was sent to the lunatic avylum, from which he was dis missed after remaining six months. In 1851 he went to California. He had follow ed mining for two years, but finding his strength unequal to the pursuit, he return ed to this city, purchased a hand cart and the rest is known. "Since then," continu ed the old man, bowing his face in his hand in agony, "I have not tasted liquor, nor have I seen my poor child." I regretted that I had been so inquisitive, and expressed to the sufferer the sympathy I really felt for him. After that I seldom passed the corner without looking for 'Pap Ainsly,' and never saw him but to think of the" sad story he had to telL One chilly, drizly day in the December following, a gentleman having purchased a small marble ton table at an auction room opposite, proffered to the old man the job f or carrying it to nts resweuce, uu eiwuwu street. Not wishing to accompany the car rier he had probably selected the face giv ing the best assurence of careful delivery of the purchase. Furnished with the number of the house, the old cartman, after a pretty trying strug gle with the steep ascent of California street, reached his destination, and deposited the ta ble in the hall. Lingering a moment the lady did not surmise the reason, until he politely informed her that her husdand (for such he supposed her to be,) had probably by acci dent omitted to settle for the carriage. "Very well. I will pay you,' said the la dy, steDping into an adjoining room. She returned, and, stating that she had no small coin in the house, haaded the man a twenty dollar piece. . , He could not make change. "Never mind, I will call to-morrow," he said turn ing to go. "No, no !" replied the lady, glanein? pi tyingly at his white locks and trembling limbs. "I will not put you to the trouble," and she handed the coin to Bridget, with instructions to see if she could get it chan ged at one of the stores or markets in the neighborhood. "Step into the parlor until the girl re turns ; the air is chilly, and you must be cold," continued the lady. "Come," the added, as he looked at his attire and hesi tated ; "there is a fire in the grate, aud no one there but the children. " "It is somewhat chilly," replied the old' man, following her into the parlor, and ta king a seat near the fire. "Perhaps I may find some silver in the houe,," said the lady, as she left therooni, "for I fear that Bridget will not succeed in getting that twenty dollar piece changed." "Come I love little children," and the child who had been watching him with cu riosity, ran behind the large arm chair, and hesitatingly approached. "What is your name, my dear?" inquired the cartman. "Maria," replied the little one. "Maria," repeated he, while the great tears gathered m his eyes : I once had a lit tle girl named Maria, and yoa look very much like she did. . "Did you?" inquired the child with seeming interest, " and was her name Maria Eastman, too!" "Merciful God!" exclaimed the old man, starting from the chair, and dropping into it with his head bowed upon his breast. "This connot be, ard yet, why not?" He cought the child in his arms with an eagerness that frightened her, and gazing into her face until he found conviction there, suddenly rose to leave the house. "I can not meet her without betraying myself, and I dare not tell her that I am that drunken father who once attempted to take her life, and perhaps left her husband a cripple,' he groaned as he hurried toward tne door. The little ones were bewildered. "You are not going," said the mother, reappearing, and discovering the old m..n in the act of leav ing the hall. t He stopped and apparently turned his face, but seemed to lack the resolution to do aught else. "He said he had a little Maria once, and that she looked just like me, mother," shouted the child, her eyes sparkling with delight. The knees of the oil cartman trembled, and he leaned against the door for support. The lady sprung toward him, took him by the arm, and attempted to conduct him to a chair. "No, no!" he exclaimed, "not till you tell me that I am forgiven. "Foziven for what?" replied the moth er in aTarm. "Recognize in me your wretched father, and I need not tell you, he faultered. "My poor father !" she cried, throwing her arms around his neck, "all istorgiven all forgotten." All was forgiven, and the husband, when he returned late in the afternoon, was scarcely less rejoiced than his good wife, at the discovery. Whether or not Bridget succeeded in changing the double eagle, I never learned ; but this I do know, it took the honest female all of two months to un ravel the knot into which the domestic fam ily had tied itself during her absence. 'Pap Ainsly' still ke?ps his cart, for mon ey would not induce him to part with it. I peeped into the back yard of Mr. Eastman, one dav- last week, and discovered the old man dragging the favorite vehicle round the inclosure, his four grandchildren piled pro miscuously into it. The Bank of America. This institution is not in Wall street. Its area is co-extensive with that of the land we live in. Geologists differ as to the date when its foundations were laid, and how deep they reach, nobody can tell. The Jiunk of America is its marvelous soil, sur charged with undeveloped deposits. Mil lions of fortunes in the rough lie in its vaults and crvpts, and rock-ribbed strong boxes. All the drafts that enterprise and industry, directed by science, can make upon it for centuries to come, are as cure to be honored as the sun is to shine. No paper currency, however, "redun dant," can represent its reserved capital, for the amount transcends all estimate. Talk of a soil that when tickled with a hoc laughs a flower. That's a trifle. Tickle California with a pick-ax, and she laughs gold. Give Idaho a dig in the ribs with a shovel, and she smiles silver. Probe Pennsylvania with a big auger and she spouts oiL Perforata the earth almost anywhere between Maine and Mexico, and you will get some cheering news, pocket-filling, mineral manifestation. We are incurring an enormous debt, no doubt, but we have only to bore. and dig, and pulverise, to liquidate it. War cannot bankrupt us while we can sink wells at two dollars a foot, that will produce from one hundred to three thousand dollars a day. If we are a little extravagant, who can blame us. with solid fluid treaures cropping out and bubbling up in almost. miraculous profusion in twenty Staces and Territories of the Union ? A fig for Alchemy ! Nature herself is in the act of " project ion." Iler crucibles are full. All ve have to do is to break through tae roof of her grand labora tory, and help yourselves. Nevertheless we would not advise our moneyed readers to invest their all in "un developed oil lands," or in "mining claims," the profits of which are as yet prospective. The general principles we have laid down do not apply universally. Advertising com panies are somewhat to exaggeration ; and though truth is said to have a frog like pro pensity to make her home in the bottom of a well, Sathanas, vile toad as he is, not un frequently takes up his abode theiX. A man of the world may have enough of the world to sink hira ; but he can never have enough to satisfy him. It is an error to think that a long face is essential 'to good morak, or that laughing b an unpardonable crime. What He Thinks of Traitors. On the announcement of the capture of Richmond, in Washington, President John son was called upon by a vat concourse of people, who were rejoicing over the eveDt, when he made the following pointed re marks : "As I have been introduced I will maka one or two remarks, for I feel that no one would be justified in attempting to make an address on such an occasion, when the ex citement is justly at so great a hight. "We are now, my friends, winding up a rebellion, a great effort that has been made by bad men to overthrow the Government of the United States, a government founded upon free principles, and cemented by tha best blood of the Revolution. Cheers. J You must indulge me in making one single remark in connection with myself. At the time that the traitors in the Senate of the United States plotted against the government and entered into a conspiracy more foul, more execrable, and mure odious than that of Cataline against the Romans, I happened to be a member of that body, and, as to loyalty, stood solitary and alone among the Senators from the Southern States. I was then and there called upon to know what I would do with such traitors, and I want to repeat my reply here. 1 said, if we had an Andrew Jackson he would hang them as high as Haitian. As humble as I am and have been, I have pursued but one, undeviating course. All that I have life, limb and property have been put at the disposal of the country in this great struggle. I have been in camp, I have been in the field, I have been everywhere where this great rebellion was ; I have pur sued it until I believe I can see its termina tion. Since the world began, there never has been a rebellion of such gigantio pro- toriions, so infamous in character, so dia iolical in motives, so entirely disregarded Cf the laws of civilized war. It has intro duced the most savage mode of warfare ever practiced upon the earth. "One word more, and I have done. It is this : I am in favor of leniency ; but, in my opinion, evil doers should be punished. Cries of ''That's so." Treason is the highest crime known in the catalogue of crimes ; and for him that is guilty of it for him that is willing to lift his iuopiou hand against the authority of the nation I would say death is too easy a punishment. I Loud Cheers. I My notion is that treason must te made odious, that traitors must bo puni.-hed and impoverished, their social power broken, though they must be made to feel the penalty of their crimes. You, my friends, have traitors in your very midst, and treason needs rebuke and punishment here as well as elsewhere. It is not the men in the field who are the greatest trait tors. It is the men who have encouraged them to iraperd their lives, while they themselves have remained at home expend ing their means and exerting all their pow er to overthrow the Government, Hence I say this "the halter to intelligent, influ ential traitors." Loud cheers. J But to the honest boy, to the deluded man, who has been deceived into the rebel ranks, I would extend leniency. I would say, return to your allegiance, renew your sup port to the Government, and become a good citizen ; but the leaders I would hang. Great cheering. J I hold, too, that wealthy traitors should be made to remunerate those men who have suffered as a consequence of their crimes: Union men who nave lost their property, who have leen driven from their homes, beggara and wanderer's a mong strangers." A Curious Centrfc Table. A Milwaukee mechanic has presented to President Lincoln a handsome centre table, of octagonal form, which is composed of a bout twenty thousand pieces of wood. The top has a beautiful and graceful border, made of black walnut and white holly, about three and a half inches wide. Within this are perfect representations ot our most beau tiful birds, faithful likenesses of Lincoln, Johnson, Grant and Butler, baskets of the rarest flowers and fruits, and other designs in most excellent taste. Six months labor was required to complete it, and it is valued at f 1,000. The same person presented Mrs. Lincoln with a work-stand which he got tip with similar elaborateness. It con tains one thousand pieces, is finished with every conceivable convenience, and cost two months of patient labor. Un'RAVELINO. A man coming home late one niffht, a little more than "half seas o ver," Feeling thirsty, procured a glass of water and drank it. In doing so he swallow ed a small ball of silk that laj in the bottom of the tumbler, the end catching in hi teeth. Feeling something in his mouth and not knowing what it was, he began pulling at the end, and the little ball nnrollmg, he soon had several feet in his hands, heshout at the top of his voice, "Wife ! wife ! I say wife, come down here! I am unraveling 1" Slaxdeo. Some people there are in r ery community who had rather retail slaa- . der from door to door than feast in. a palace. Such unhappily-organizedjcreaturea deserre rather the amplest pity than the slightest censure. The peace and quiet they would destroy in others finally becomes a millstone about their own necks, sinking them into perdition. Our Devil has been dreadfully shocked to read the news reports that Sherman has not only been "hanging about Augusta, "bat has actually been guilty of "attemrnne to strike Charlotte," and "throwine his right wing around Florence." . Poor girls! what a terrible time they must have had ! , Simkins says it is the privilege of hoops to surround the loveliest of thin?, amonj which are girls and whiskey." ; ' ! I (TIT