Aft (MP n nn 71 n 'A JAC02Y & SIIU3IAN, I'nMisaers. TRUTH AND RIGHT GOD AND OUR COUNTRY. Two Dollars per Annan In Advance BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3,1866. kew series j VOL. L NO. 32. VOL. XXX I -D SERIES NORT COjL Mm . A DEMOCRAT AM) I IV II II lilt u V JLJLJ'JLjL -U- X - THE DEMOCRAT AND STAR, PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. IN BLOOMSBURG, PA., BY JACOBY 8c SHUMAN. , TERM?. 9? CO in arfvanee. If not paid wnhin EIX MONTHS, 29 rents additional will b rharzed No paper discontinued antil all arrearage. nrapaia except at the opition or the editor. RATES OP ADVERTISING, in LiRst ronrrmrrn a ibciaa. One tqnar one or three Insert Ion. 1 SO bvery subsequent insertion less than 13 50 SP1CC 1m. 2. 3m. 6jc. It. One aqua re. Two squares. Three Four squares. Half rolumn, One column. 2.10 3 00 4.00 R.OO 10 1-0 3.0o 5,oO 6,li0 9,(X 14.00 5.00 700 P.50 I'. l.l0 B.0 JJ.IO 10, pO 14.00 20 00 lO.Oo 1J0O 14 00 (SOU 30 iT U.oO MOO 20,00 30,00 50,00 Exoeotor's and Administrator's Notice 3 OH Aaditor's Notice 2,0 Otbrr adveriisemunta inserted according to special contra rt. Business notices, without advertisement, twentr. cents per line. Transient aiirertifnsf nts payable ia idtanee, all Others due alter the flrnt insertion. IC7 OFFICE-IB Shire's Block, Cornerof M.iin and Iron Street. Address, JACOBY A. SHUKAN. Bloomsburf, Columbia County, Pa. "Maiden Meditation." (iLUJrr4Ttn nox tub Timnna t coxtl-caLii ) By what name in cherished legend, Lingering graceful on the tongue, Dear to Poet s deathless fancy, Hath a maid like thee been sung ? Wert thou : many-beautiful model, Faithful Enid or Elaine, , Steadfast Custance, ineck Griselda, Or pure Una of the plain ? Didst thou, matching it in sweetness, Bear the name of Rosalind ; Wert thou Juliet or Miranda ; Or Castara or Lucind ? Wert thou the soul-bride of Dante The half godded Florentine ? Or that e'arthlicr fair of Florence, Sidney's "heavenly" Geraldiue? Virtue hath no fitter symbol, Innocence no purer shrine. Love no more unselfish temple Than the vestal form of thine. Beauty waited to be perfect, Till, with gracious dignity. Bridegroom Thought with Feeling wedded At the altar of thine eye. Dost thounow recall the Spring time When the sun first ruled the cloud j And Earth, from her death-sleep waking, Put on flowere, and cast her shroud ? Then thy bright hair's golden glory Was to me a maize of light ; Was thy smile a bow of promise, And the pole star of my night. Art thou musing on the Summer, When the year had reached its prime ; . When an Eden spirit tended 0 ' All things in an Eden clime ? Then thy glee first veiled with blushes, Then thy soul first spake in song ; And the warmth of covert glances Loosed my scarcely venturing tongue. Dost thou think upon the Autumnj When fruition crowned too yoar ; When the garners, stored with plenty, Still left plenty everywhere ? Nature then, relieved, from labor, Halted for her veil-won rest ; And thy shortielaying fondness Calmed the tumult of my breast 4 Tear not now the harsh November, Dealing death at every pace ; Be it mine that noc too roughly Shall its winds assail thyface! 0, my dearest hope in Spring-time, O, my fondest summer priue, O, my all, betrothed in Autumn, ' Ere the Winter, be mv pride ! k. n. G, General Grant's i osition. This noble soldier has taken so firm a stand in support of the President, a3 to put to confusion the radicals upon all sides. They threw out their skirmishers, they resorted to artifice and strategem to capture him ; and failing finally in all such feeble efforts, they determined tccarry him by storm, and chose as a convenient opportunity the occasion of his appearance at Cincianati in advance of the Presidential party. They knew he would not give them audience, and it was deter mined, therefore, to surprise him in the theatre whither he had gone for the express purpose of avoiding them. But the General was not to be surprv sod nor overcome so easily, for his eagle-eye is fixed as fastly and witheringly upon the foes of the Constitution and the Union now, as it was when he was seated before Richmond, and the rebuke he gave them at Cincinnati would have disheartened and dismayed any party that had not pledged its life, its for tune and its sacred honor to the dissolution and distraction of its country. The lan guage of the General himself is more forci ble than any comment we could make upon it, and we quote therefore from the Cincin nati papers the account of the scenes which transpired at the theatre, the significance of which cannot be overrated or misunderstood : "General Grant visited Wood's Theatre last night, where he was enthusiastically re ceived. The Enquirer of to-day says of the proceedings : "The boys in blue paraded to the theatre, and Mr. Eggliston and others "sscended the stairs, and 31r. Allen, the man ager, was requested to go and inform Gener- Grant that there was a crowd of citizens the outside who desired to see him. Mr. Allen went into the private box and conve'- the intelligence to the General, who re plied, " I cannot, and will not see tliem Please tell their commander to come to mc." Ilr. Allen communicated with Commander X F. Baker, who marched into the theatre, ad with others, entered General Grant's - rivate box. Without giving Captain Ba ker a moment to say a single word, General Grant approached him and said in a firm "Sift Tarn no politician ; the President of , United State is tny Com ma nder-in- I consider this demonstration in op to the President of the United States, T. t r -,t..T ........ . 1 1 1 ? greatly annoyed at this demonstration. came here to enjoy this theatrical perfor mance. I will be glad to sec you to-morrow when the President arrires." This is indeed more than the General coul have been expected to say, and more than he generally does say upon any subject, lie is emphatically a man of action, and when he appeared at the head of the armies of the Union he did not stop to explain to the reb els that he was about to fight in the Union cause, his presence there was the best expla nation he could give, and the world asked no questions upon that score. And so his voluntary presence at the right hand of the President during his recent tour ; silently endorsing every word he said in defence of his country, was more siirnifi cant than a volume of arguments, and much the best explanation he could make to his countrymen of the position he occupied upon the overruling question of reconstruction. lie was not there in an oincial capacity certainly, and the President could not have obliged him to go, and we can therefore only regard it as a voluntary endorsement upon his part of the policy the President is pur suing to restore our shattered and bleeding country. lhe radicals know too well the weight that the General will carry with him in the ap proaching election, to let him off so easily. They have exhausted their efforts to win him over to the disunion side, they have failed to caJi a word of encouragement from his ips, they cannot point to a single act or his which indicates a chance of separation from the President ; and they have therefore fal- en back upon lying, that never-failing source from which all their most effective ammuni tion is drawn. They have put a speech into General Grant's mouth which they know he cannot contradict in print wituout uemg drawn into a political controversy, and they think the chances are against his undertak ing this, at least until alter the election is over, and then it will matter little to them, for the lie"Vill have borne its fruit, and they are beyond the reach of the shame that would haunt and humiliate conscientious, honest ami honorable men. Democratic State CoMrrrrEE Rooms, "1 823 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, j To the People of Pennsylvania : The Democratic party in its platform of principles, adopted at llarrisburg, on the 5th day of March, 18G6, resolved 1. That the States whereof the people bear true faith to the Constitution and laws. and in order to vindicate the maxim that taxation without representation is tyranny, such representatives should be forthwith ad mitted. 2. That the faith of the republic U pledged to the payment of the national debt, and Congress should pass all laws necessary for that purpose. 3. That the white race alone is entitled to the control of the government of the repub lic, and we are unwilling to grant to negroes the right to vote. Upon this platform we placed our candi date for Governor, and with these principles we confidently look for success in this con test Our opponents in their Convention, held at Harrisburg on the 7th day of March, 1SC6, also, adopted a platform, and nominated a candidate. The principles they ennunciated appear to be lost sight of, aud the proposed constitutional amendment takes their place as the rule of RaJical orthodoxy, and to it their candidate gives his unhesitating sup port. Negro equality and negro suffrage arc the essential elements in that amendment By it the negro is made the equal of the white man in all his "privileges and immunities." The right of Pennsylvania to make laws to regulate the migration of negroes into the State is deuied and she is deprived of her just share of representation in Congress un less her Constitution be amended and the negro allowed to vote. The Radical candidates for Governor and for United States Senator ; their leaders of public sentiment ; their speakers and their newspapers areopen advocatesef this amend ment, aud their practice accords with their profession, for they mingle with the negTO in social intercourse, in political conventions, aud in public processions. - We hojd that the negro is not the equal of the white man, and, whilst we accord to him freedom and protection of person, with the right to enjoyment of the Truits of his labor and aid in intellectual advancement, we af firm that our own racc'fs entitled to control the entire machinery of the government Sustain this amendment and you give the negro the right to aid in governing you ; de feat it, and you maintain 30 ur own right of sovereignty. Every mm icho votes for Geary or for a Radical candulate for Congress, votes as distinctly for negro suffrage and negro cqal ity as if they were printed on his ballot. Democrats op Pennsylvania I Power is no longer against you, but ranges itself upon your side. Opportunities for fraud do not exist Aid comes to you from the ranks of the enemy. No Democrat who voted for McClellan votes against you now ; j'our brethern are aroused from the Lakes to the Delaware. A change of five per cent upon the vote of 18G4 will sweep your oppo nents out of existence. You can count it in every election district in the Commonwealth; and if you will but execute the details of your organization, success is certain. 'Faith in your principles, courage for the contest, and a determination to poll every Conservative vote, are the only requisites to an assured victory. were latety m rebellion are integral parts of the Union, and are entitled to representa tion in Comrress. bv men dulv elected, who The Prospect in Pennsylvania. If there is a faint-hearted Democrat in Columbia County, and we think they are scarce, let him read the following from the Philadelphia Age. This may be regard ed as a truthful and authoritative statement of the condition of the canvass. Let every Democrat read it and go to work with a will : The Work Before Us. A careful ex amination of the political situation in Penn sylvania enables us to speak to-day of the prospects of a democratic and Conservative victory in this Commonwealth with a confi dence that we never before felt in any G uber natorial canvass. Information from nearly every county in the State, furnishes us with the means of talking plainly upon this cheer ing topic. Everywhere the Democratic par ty is thoroughly aroused. It was never more enthusiastic It never worked with more zeal and energy. There is not an election district which shows any lukewarmness or lethargy in the good old cause. From the Delaware to the Allcghenics, from the Mary land line to the New York border, but one spirit animates our political brethern, and there is not a single break in the advancing column. Wherever our candidate goes, he is received by thousands of freemen who have devoted themselves to the great work before us. Iliester Clymcr is recognized as the live champion of Union, Restoration, and Constitutional Liberty. His private char acter is without spot or blemish. His politi cal record is pure and stainless. His earnest eloquence and commanding talents are at tracting to his banner hundreds who never before voted the Democratic ticket, and who now resolved to cast their ballots for the first time for a Democratic candidate. The peo ple want a pure and honest man, as well as an able and accomplished statesman, at the head of affairs in the old Keystone, and, viewing the two candidates and the two plat forms, they are laboring' with unparalleled energy to promote the success of those prin ciples whose triumph will assuredly bring peace and prosperity to the distracted nation. In this crisis of our country's history, it is well that every patriot should work unceas ingly until the great battle is fought and won. No true man should be idle. There are issues involved in this contest which should nerve every one to the solemn task before him. We speak earnestly to-day. Hear us for our cause ! Do not let a vote be lost. If the full Democratic strength is polled, the victory is as certain as that light follows dark ness. This fact is well understood by our opponents, and they are endeavoring to counteract its effect by all the arts and mach inations they enn bring to bear upon the con test They are manufacturing the grossest ilanders against the Democratic nominee. They are putting words into General Grant's mouth that he never used, and, notwith standing his fearful rebuke to the Radical managero, they are attempting, by the most wilful falsehoods, to make the people believe he is in favor of the negro-suffrage candi dates. To our brethren, everywhere, we say to-day, be of good cheer 1 The day of your redeoiption draweth nigh ! All you have to do, is to work for the victory now within your grasp. Union men of Pennsylvania ! Your duty is plain. The whole lesson lies in a single word work ! work 1 .work 1 Clymer Will be Elected. "Clymer will withdraw;" Clymer must withdraw ;" "Clymeris aclog on his party ;" the best posted of the Democratic leaders declare that Clymcr ha3 no chance of elec tion ;'' &c. These are a few of the daily ut terances of Geary organs, with whom the wish is always father to the lie. Mr. Cly mer will not withdraw fur a very good reason that he is the unanimous choice of the Dem ocratic party, whose eveiy vote he will poll on the second iuesdav ot Uctooer. lie is not a clog on the parti, and no Democrat has ever predicted or anticipated defeat for him. On the other hand, the prospect of electing him is unusually bright and flatter ing. Mr. Clymer has been working assiduously and faithfully in all parts of the State, and nowhere has he failed to make a most fa vorable impression and to bring to 1m sup port legions of fresh voters. He has tlie un doubted assurance of largely increased ma jorities in every Democratic county, and of extraordinary changes in his favor vi oppo sition counties I In not a single county in the State will he fail torunbcyoml the Dem ocratic poll of 1864 and lS65,a in several counties niS GAIN'S WILL AMOUNT TO NOT LESS THAN FIVE THOUSAND. These facts are pretty well known to the Gearyites, (whose league organization has enabled them to "count noses,") and that is what the serious matter is with them. They rfiud fewer "noses" in the league rooms than formerly, and, upon inquiry, discover that the absence is permanent These absences run from hundreds to thousands in every county in the Stale, and have caused the most serious alarm among the leaders. Men of intelligence cannot be duped into the sup port of the Disunion majority of the Rump Congress a majority which boldly proclaims disunion as a mean3 to secure the "spoils ;" which voted to force negro suffrage in the District of Columbia ; which passed the Ne gro Rights and Freedmen's Bureau Bills ; and which has declared that all its acts are to secure perpetual supremacy for its party, regardless 01 the welfare of the country. The leaders of the Geary faction see and feel their want of a platform of principles, but cover up the deficiency with abuse of the President and all who are connected with him, in the endeavor to excite uniust preju dices. In their los3 of numbers thev see the fate in store for them, and hence the more A NIGHT WITH WOLVES. Away we went at whirlwind speed over the sheet of glistening snow which covered the whole country for miles around. Four f plendid horses drew our sledge, and we bounded along noiselessly, smoothly, rap idly, like phantoms. - We had some thirty miles to travel; but at the glorious pace we were going, we shoftld aecompli.-h it in three hours. It was now eight o'clock ; we might fairly expect to be at my chateau by a little past eleven'. Away we went 1 The snow flew past us like a vast foaming torrent, while I could almost fancy that we were at rest, so even, almost imperceptible, was our motion. Suddenly one of the traces gave way, and iu an instant all our four horses, young and high-spirited, were kicking and plunging fearfully. ' The broken trace was the least of the damage done ; and when I and Fritz, my servant, scrambled out, and seizing their heads stopped their pranks, we found that they had kicked themselves almost entirely free from the sledge, Had they but done so, and remembering what afterward occurred, I think of the tcr riblatonsequenees and tremble. It took a full hour's work to repair the damage, and even when this was done, we were compelled to go at a comparatively slow pace, for fear that something should agai :i rive way. I lighted a cigar, and well wrapped in furs and cloaks, leaned lazily and luxuriously back, enjoying the gentle, easy motion, and watching the four horse? as they bounded along with the light sledge. On a sudden, however, I noticed that they seemed to afford Fritz more than ordinary trouble. I wa3 aroused from my half dreamy state by hearing him devote them to the infernal gods, in all the mingled dialects of Poland, Germany and Russia, and that f jr a caue which seldom attacks the indignation of the traveller namely, for going too fast In spite of all his exertions they had burst into a furious gallop. He cursed, swore, pulled and tugged in vain. With alarmed eyes and erected ears the eager horses disre garded the utmost efforts of curb and bridle and dragged us forward with a velocity I should have thought impossible. As there was no danger, I was rather amus?d than otherwise at the glorious pace ut which we were goinf . All on a sudden, however, Fritz ceased to swear, and with a hasty ejaculation, loosened the reins, and allowed the horses to tear ahead at their utmost speed without attempt ing to stop them. "The beasts are right, right, by a thou sand devils. I ought to have known it!" "What do you mean?" I asked. He turned in his seat, and said in a low voice, his face pale with emotion : "The wolves 1" I stood up in the sledge and looked back, but for a long time could discover nothing. At last, however I could discern a dark mass in the snow at a great distance. I thought, however, that it was only trees, and laughed at the terror of Fritz, which' even the horses seemed to share. In about ten minutes, however, the terri ble truth burst upon me the dark mass was in motion and approached rapidly. 1 heard, too, a sound in the distance which at first I thought was the whittling of the wind. It was the howling of the hungry and fe rocious pack of wolves on oar track. Closer and closer came ths dark mass ; plainer and plainer the dreadful howls. The terrified horses could hear them now, anl da.diod on with more desperate energy than before. Nearer and nearer they came. We could not only hear their dreadful howls, but even the tramp of their cursed feet, as they gal loped along the frozen snow on our track. The arms we had consisted of two fowling pieces and a brace of pistols. Unfortunately, we had but a very scanty stock of powder and ball, and not more than enough for two or three discharges. " What is to be done ?" I whispered to Frit7. " Fight 1 fight to the last!" ho replied ; " we mud be overtaken. The horses can not hold out much longer. It is yet quite twenty miles to the chateau, and they will be upon us in a few minutes. " Ha !" he cried, suddenly, " I had forgotten there 'is yet a gleam of hope 1" And now he lashed the horses, already at their utmost speed, and evf stabbed them repeatedly with his hunting knife, to urge them on to fresh cxertious. Ahead of us was a small forest, or rather wood. It was distant some two miles, but, owing to the white sheet of snow between, looked much nearer. "If we could only reach it!" he uttered, furiously lashing the horses. The chase continued. I stood ready with my fowling piece to fire immediately when they were M ithin shot The fleetest of the pack dashed ahead of the others, and approached within a few yards of the sledge. Their howls were fear ful. I fired two barrels, and three wolves fell dead or wounded. In an instant these were surrounded by the others, who quickly tore to pieces and devoured their fallen com rades. This obtained us a respite but a very short one ; for in less than a minute nothing remained of the wolves I had shot, but their bones. I again loaded my piece, and again the pack dashed on in pursuit. We had not gained half a mile when they were again up with us. This time they came on more furiously and When they were near enough I again fired, and two wolves fell. This time, however, the devouring of their companions did not take so long, for I had only wounded two. Once again I reloaded the fowling piece, and found that all our ammunition was thereby exhausted. " Do not fire," said Fritz, when I informed him of the fact, " till the last moment re serve your fire for our last chance." " Is there any?" I asked gloomily. " One, and one only. Not far from this, in the woods hence but I do not know how far, perhaps not more than a mile is an old hunting lodge ; if we can reach it we are safe if not we arc lost" On came the wolves and they were many and quite close upon the sledge. Two terrific, great monsters were abso lutely just abreast of us, and were striving to get ahead to the horsc3, who, poor brutes, could hear and see them, and tore away at such a terrible pace that even the swift wolves could not gain upon us. "Fire! fire!" shouted Fritz ; "fire and aim well; for if those brutes reaclvthe horses, we are lost" I fired a barrel at the wolf on my left, and over he went with a bullet through his body. I very nearly missed the second, but fortu nately the ball grazed the bone of his leg, breaking it, and causing him to fall. But several others took their places. " Keep theaioffl keep them off!" shout ed Fritz, "but for one minute, and we are saved. The hut is close by." Frantically he flogged and shouted to the horses, anl desperately they responded to the call. I fired the two barrels of the remaining fowling piece, and then, sticking my pistols in my belt, I shouldered my gun, and stand ing up, struck right and left at the howling pack, which were now rapidly accumulating on our rear. The next moment and we pulled up short at the hut "Fire your pistols right in their faces!" shouted old Fritz. I did so, and had the satisfaction of seeing the howling pack fall back for a minute. This gave Fritz an opportunity of jump ing out and cutting adrift the horses, who immediately galloped off. " Now, sir, now !" he cried, holding open the hut door "haste." Still holding the fowling piece by the bar rel, and swinging it around me, I leaped to the ground. Some of the wolves had dashed off in pur suit of the horses, while others were be tween me and the hut. I struck viciously at the howling brutes and rushed through them to the open door. One monster sprang at my throat, but for tunately, I succeeded in striking him down, and he was content with tearing a piece, with his horrid fangs, from my leg. The next instiut, faint and bleeding, we were safe in the hut, aud Fritz barred and bolted the door, leaving the pack outside. For a moment or two they scratched and gnawed at the door, and then dashed off to join their companions in the chase after the horses. Soon after we heard heart-rending and piercing screams. "Ah, I thought so," said Fritz sadly, "my poor horses! They can stand a great deal ; but when one comes to be torn to pieces by wolves, it's no wonder they cry out." It was not long before the furious pack returned ; for, having devoured the horses, and apparently not half satisfieJ, they sur rounded the hut on all sides, aud nothing could be heard but their horrih'e bowlings. We could hear them scraping, scratching, aud tearing the wood-work of the hut with their teeth. Next they attempted to climb to the roof, and soon some succeeded, for we could hear them crawling about outride. There was no chimney to the hut, but merely an aperture ia the roof fjr the smoke jo escape. The hut in which we had found temiorary safety consisted only of four walls, made of rough but strong slabs of wood. It contained a rude fire-place, anl, fortu nately f jr us, there were still embers smoul dering. There was also a little green bru.-h-wood in the hut, which Fritz hastened to cast in the fire. As it caught and burned up, it gave rise to dense volumes of smoke, which, pouring through the aperture in the roof, effectually kept the wolves at bay. But after a time the smoke began to clear, the green wood was all gone, and the wind, which now was high, blew aside the smoke from the hole in the roof. In a very short time we perceived the gleaming eyes and red mouth, half oren, of a monstrous wolf looking down on us. We struck at him with the butt-ends of our fowling pieces, and soon brought him, stuuncd and bleeding, to our feet. Fiitz took " a piece of burning wood, mounted to the aperture and waved it around. Wolves, like all wild beasts, are in mortal dread of fire, and we soon heard them all scamper off to the roof. All through the long night we heard the howling of the ferocious pack, who had now regularly terrified us ; for, although scared by the fire, they attempted the roof no more, but all remained around the hut. All things have their end, and so at last had this long and dismal night Ths day broke at last, and Fritz, aroused himself, piled on the fire every available bit of wood , he could find. For full three hours after sunrise nothing occurred beyond howling ; but what an awful three houi-3 were they 1 forms of our enemies. Three of the largest wolves had climbed the roof and were look ing down upon us. I fired my fowling piece our last charge of powder. This drove them away, and the dead body of one fell through the aperture, aud into the hut. This, however, procured us but a short respite ; the brutes knew the way ; the sun was now high in the heavens, and the fire-brand was now useless. Soon another and fiercer lot succeeded those we had driven away, and we had now no more powder or shot to drive them back. Clubbing our guns, we struck furiously at them, all the time shouting loudly. Several fell wounded and incapable of injury into the hut, but others at once took their places. The furious monsters, ravenous with hun ger, which the horses and their comrades they had devoured but seemed to whet, glared down upon us from the roof, howling incessantly, and waiting the moment to spring. At last one great brute set the example, and crouching for an instant, sprang right at Fritz, at the same time giving a terrible yell. Fortunately old Fritz was enabled to spring on one side, and the moment the wolf land ed he dashed out his brains with the gun he wielded. Hardly was this accomplished, than .anoth er and another leaped down, and those were followed by still more, which all our efforts could not keep back. Furiously we fought with the desperation of despair, for we had almost given up hope. Several times I felt the fangs of the wolves in my flesh ; but by almost superhuman exertions freed myself, and laying about me right and left, sent the shaggy brutes sprawling under the terrible force of my blows. In vain ; as fast as they fell others came leaping down, and the hut was now alive with the wild, savage beasts. With a short prayer, and nerved with a fierce determina tion, I threw myself in their midst, and giv ing my strength to one last desperate effort, I created fearful havoc among the crowded mass. The cry was still they come. Weary, faint and despairing, I staggered, and was about to fall prostrate on the ground among the horrible sea of glaring eyes, white teeth and red throats which surrounded me, when a loud shout from outside, followed by a rapid and sustained discharge of fire-arms, gave me fresh strength, and once again nerved my arm. At this moment a wolf, leaping from the aperture, alighted on my shoulders, and en deavored to fix his horrid fangs in my throat. I tore him away and flung him on the em bers of the fire, regardless of a dreadful bite I received in the hand. The sparks flew in all direitions, and the darkness of the hut was illuminated by a flame of light as the fire blazed up. The wolves were steadied by this for a mo ment, and in that moment I noticed with joy that no more were ou the roof. Another shout outside, and a still closer discharge, informed U3 that friends were near. Shouting words of encouragement to Fritz, who was terribly torn by the teeth of the brutes, I again attacked them with my little remaining strength. Fritz, too, nobly seconded me, and in half a minute our re maining enemies were killed or disabled. Scarcely had the glaring eyes of the la.ct disappeared, under a furious blow from the butt-end of my gun, than, utterly worn out by the tremendous exertion of the last ten minutes, bleeding from half a dozen places where the wolves had torn my flesh, nature gave way, and I fell forward on a pile of our deal enemies, and fainted. The next moment the door was burst open, and our friends from the chateau, who had come to the rescue, rushed in, and raising the apparently lifeless f jrms of myself and Fritz, bore u-s out into the air, where, laid on the cold snow, we soon recovered con sciousness, and found that we were saved. Thus ended our adventure ; but assuredly, were I to live to be as old as Methusaleh, I shall never forget our night with the wolves. Gossip and Slander. Wc have known a country society which ritliered away all ta nothing under the dry rot of gossip only. Friendships once firm as granite dissolved to jelly and then ran to water, only because of this ; love that promised a future as endur ing as Heaven and as stable as truth, evap orated into morning mist that turned to a day's long tears, only because of this ; and a husband aud his young wife, straining at the hated lase. which in the beginning had been the golden bondage of a God-blessed love, salt mournfully by the side of a grave where all their joy buried because of this. We have seen faith transformed to doubt, hope give place to grim despair, and charity take on itself the feature of black malevo lence, all because of words of scandal, and the magic mutterings of gossip. Great crimes work great wrongs, and the deeper tragedies of human life springs from its lar ger passions ; but woeTul and most melan choly are the uncatalogued tragedies that is sue from gossip and detraction ; most mourn ful the shipwreck ma le of noble natures and lovely life by the bitter winds and dead salt waters of scandal. So easy to say, yet so hard to disapprove throwing on the in nocent all the burden and the strain of dem onstrating their innocence, and punishing them as guilty if unable to pick out the stings they never see, and to silence words they never hear. Gossip and slander are the deadliest aud crudest weapons man has forged for his brother's hurt They Agree. Greeley, through his Tri bune, calls Thurlew Weed, an "infamous .lj :n " 1 W 1 l v. Alk OIO. ilia 111, UIIU 1 f C'-u, Uiiuuu uiu xuuaujr Journal, says Greeley is " an old grey hair Young Ladies. One of the three- social civils of this age is admitted to be the reluctance of our young men to early marriages. They wont marry now, we are told as they used to on 3000 a ' year. Depend upon it, in many cases it is not the odd hundred or two that is wanting it's the attraction. We have lost that joy ous and familiar intercourse between neigh bor's families, where young people's individ ualities had space and opportunity lo devel op themselves, and heart met heart. Odr modish Cupid has overstrung his bow his arrow don't pit home. Young ladies put away the key to their hearts so carefully that no body thinks it worth looking for. Who is to chose the "one" out of the bevy of proper behaved damsels like a row of hollyhocks, differing only in height and shape and color? They all look alike, and walk and dress alike; and for anything that appears to the contra ry, think and feel alike. Why, such achoicd is an act of deliberate intention, matrimony pretense ; very few young men dare to ven ture upon it No wonder they calculate the probable butcher's bills before they take such a plunge as that Don't think I talk like a cynical old bird not to be caught with chaff. I take as the exponenfof what my feelings would be if I were young, and open as I once was to the conviction of bright eyes, my nephew, Jack Hawthorne, not long home from the Crimea, six foot one, inde pendent, hairy as a Skj'c tcrrior, brave as a lion, gentle as a gray hound, and I should say impressive, decidedly. "What I missed most," said he, in his open-hearted, unabashed simplicity, "waa the sight of a woman's face." Whereupon I spoke "I wonder, Jack, you don'tmarry; it would make you a happier man than living half your day3 in the smoking room of a club. Why not pick up a nice girl, and set up the famih.' man at the old manor ?" "Well; so I would," said Jack, interject ively, between the puff of his cigar ; "but there are no girls now they're all young la dies ! Catch me marrying a young lady 1" Midnight Murder. We are again called upon to record another murder another cold-blooded, heartless as sassination. Occurrences of this kind are becoming of terrible frequency in our com munity, and the one we are called upon this morning to record, exceeds in atrocity almost anything we have hitherto been required to notice. In this tragedy the victim was not a man whom we might suppose to have given some provocation for the deed, but a poor, help less woman treading the humblest walks of life, and what is still worse, the mother of six helpless children. On yesterday morn ing, about ten o'clock, the wife of an Irish man named Collins, living near where the ' Nicho'asville Railroad crosses Broadway, and near what is known as the Nicholasvillo Depot heard some one rapping on the door her husband, who has a contract for re pairing the turnpike from this city to Nich olasvillo, was away from home, but was ex pected to return late on the night in question. She very naturally supposed it was her hus band, and without a suspicion of danger proceeded to the door and opened it ; what person or persons were theie n 3 eyes but her own in that instant saw, whoever it was. She was shot by a pistol ball in the ocntre of the forehead, scattering the brains in all directions. A brother-in-law of the murdered woman was in the house at the time, and heard the sh )t, but fays that shooting is so frequent, and with so little regard to the proximity of houses in that neighborhood, that he paid no attention to it No one in the hou"e dreamed of the crime which had been pcrpctratedr until some of the children, when they had arisen in the morning, found tho door open, an 1 their mother lying stirk and dead. No clue has been obtained to the murderer or murderers; but beyond a doubt the crime won the act of some miscreant, who sup posed he had killed the husband instead of the wife, for there is no reason to suppose that there is any one base enough to thus murder a poor helpless woman who had never given offense to any one. Lexington Observer. Gen. Geary. We would suggest to tho Union RenuLlicuH. of William-wort, that it chat laud County to old mother CumltcrlanJ. where he belongs Democrat and Star. My dear sir, if we should adopt 3'our sug gestion wo would not be more correct than heretofore. We have us id our best endeav ors to find out th3 locality where Gen. Geary resides, but we are compelled to admit, that thus far our cxertious have not been crowned with success We have addressed letters to the General in nearly every county in tho State, and failing to receive a reply from him, we addressed one to him in Kansas, which met with no better success. Now, under such circumstances, we are compelled to come to the conclusion that the General does not any longer exist in the fleh io fact, that he is dead. What confirms us more in our conclusions is the fact that the last authentic information wo received from him, was over eighteen months ago on a Southern battle field, and as a great many people lost their lives on such fields it is more than probable that the General lost his. As for General Geary being a candidate for Governor, it is all bo.-h. It is John Cess na, who is the radical candidate for Govern or, and who has assumed the namo of tho deceased General for tho purpose of receiv ing the soldiers' vote. The radical pre.51 for the purpose of carrying out the fraud havo placed the name of Geary at the head of their columns, when all tho evidence -goea to show that General Geary i3 dead. By placing conS lenco in these papers, wo have teen led astray, as well as tho DKM0C2AT AND Star. Union Republican. lge Geary's location from Westmore-