" . . . . . AR OF THE JACOB! I'ublishers. TRUTH AND RIGHT GOD AND OUR COUNTRY. BLOGMSBURG, COLUMBIA CO., VA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13,1867. VOL. XXX-loL" scn,cs SEW SLR 1BIA DEMOCRAT AND ST i TATEMENT OF Till FINANCES OP THE C'ountj- of Columbia, from llic 1st tlay of Jan. ISGtt, to the 1st day or Jan. 1S07. I Tlis Auditors elected to petl'e anil adjust th pub ! "count of Col mi bm County, respectfully beg i-n :o leport lh.it they have i-xaininrd ihe game J nun tlii" tirol tiny of Jun. A.D. ane thousand eight Hundred anil suty-slx. to ma nrst any or Jan. A.IJ one thousand eisht hundred anil sixty-seven, and respectfully lay before lh" Honorable Judges of tlia I . (Mill of Common fleas or suid County, the follow- njr statement anil report. agreeably to the '2.M -rc turn, of tlic Art at teneral Aasembly of .ibis Com liion wraith, pa .-nod the 4lli day of April. Al. 1S34; . JOHN J. 8TU.E.. Treasurer of Columbia County, in ajcoum vum saiu ccumy. DR. 18CG, Jan. 1st. To amount outstanding for 18ti5. and previous years : j347 SI Amount lash received of Daniel M'llenrv. Jnta Treasurer, a per Auditor's frport, do cash received of Daniel M'llenry, late- Treasurer, for soni.ry taxi' Feb. 5, rash of (Samuel Kelchner, rf llriar Creek township, for keeping Cathe rine, dull Feb cash of H. J. Reader, for plink, Jeb'.ftt cash of William Uwlun, lund re deemed, ' April 35 rasa of Joseph Mosteller, for briik. Way 10 cash of Sauinol Snyder. Sheriff1, riwliaciii suit ol the County rn. Wm. JStetter, collector of Coiiyny limit tnwnsh jo. S34 CI 131-2 St i f 0 u 7 SO 2 CO 2 73 15 40 June to anion 1. 1 of County tax a.ises4cd lor Irtiti, June 22 cash of George Ilidlay, laud re- . - deemed, Aug. cash received for taxes on sealed and unsealed landa rulurned. Kept. 4 cash of Samuel Kelchner, of Briar Crick lwp.lor keeping Catharine ult. Oct. To ani't ten day assessment in Uor. of Kerwick, Dec. ID Jury let s and fines of Jesse Coleuiuu .I'rotboiiolary. To rash of dog tax fund paid asses- 1 4'i 4C1U 44 77 40 10 c0 170 00 sort for.lMMi, SO (Ml Aaunaiit outstanding, balance, V0 lio T suudry taxes, t;99 O'J ' 5 J--01U 57 CR. By amount nntrtaniling (or JdGG and pra- ' Tious yesr. $53.15 4 By exonorations allowed coldKtnrs Iti4 X Ily Uomuiissions loon 50 i y ami f County orders redeemed. 17703 4 I By Treasurer's tunnim-iou 4 uii $l5J0i 3i at lour ler cent. . or. no ly balance due county, -Vi 7 82-MII9 57 JOIIM J. STILES. Treasnrer 01 Columbia Coumy, in accvuul wild the tax on dog. DH. Am't outstanding for 1-5 and pierieus y'rs, $-?!9 OP T un.-e-i-eil for ld-4, J5.VJ 50 du Ticujurtr, 515 51 $iOJ4 01 $1-17 00 10:1 00 10 i: 1335 75 CR. Amount outstanding and unc 'II'TteJ, ' r;xinerations allowe.l collector, Coinmissiou, - r-h-e d.Tiiinjre, orders redeemeil. - Paid as'rs f r aeiueul of iio ax lor the year l-'l'0, Treasurer's commission on $1412 75 H) 00 70 3 V EXPENDITURES. ,"U' AUDITORS' AND CLERK'S PAY. A mount paid Auditor's and Clerk. $id 00 to Wirt nudum. Prothlonotary anj ilegiater'a acsouiu, 15 0-1 o3 00 05 43 S25 00 ft HI (HI .1275 00 ASSESSORS' PAY. Am't paid assessors for spring assessment, DPJD0E CONTRACTS. Am't paid David Savage, bride in Ben Km, W. A. Kile, l-'ishif.ccreck v M - m gugarloal", F. L- t'human Frauklm, $3550 00 $".0 (4 44 i 51 lb '2 .15 74 74 515 -M il'o l 40 50 D RIDGE HEPAII.S. Am't paid John Herner. llsvid Savage, 'Aaron Kester for plank " F. Ilartuinii F tunnel Applecian M. C Woodward John Eysr m , I'hilip Crawford for stone John Mordan " William liver Josiali 11. t'urinan nundry persons Moutfouiery Colo 73 CO il 34 :l 50 1M 00 307 6'2 00 Mi K55cO 01 "BLANK BOOK?,. Am't paid for blank books for FfU.oiiolary and Re inter COUNTY BUILDINGS. Am't paid sundry persons lrf materials far $253 CO mssed and wor to ' $045 94 for repairs at Cou't House and during tlie year blc. rtvy Jail 130 11 . ' ' $773 07 CLhA NIN or COURT HOUSE. Amount pa a to sundry persons $10 00 C MTPI0NER ATTOR NEY; Am't to W. vVirt Coniniisioiiets Attorney $"i0 CO COURT CRIER. Am't to Moses- Coffman for the year ieiH $57 50 CONSTABLE'S RETURNS. .m't to lbs Several Constables during year $IC7 43 COMMONWEALTH'S COSTS. Am't dmiJ to sundry oerons 407 3J COMMISSIONERS AND CLERK. Am'l naid T. J. Vnnderslice C'ouiuiission.'r 258 00 ; Allen Mann " 2'm! 0.1 , Joha P Fowler " 00 Montoniery Cole " 24 (Kl K.:. Frnlt Clrk 6sl 00 .. (' .. expenses tJ liartisburz lii 00 UcO 00 t DISTRICT ATTORNEY, Am't paid F.. " M'tle late District Attorney W. M.TrausS 1'4 00 153 M S47 00 ELECTION EXPENSES. Aui'l paid sundry persona for spring election 304 CO - . iir ruur uousc and general election 734 75 1130 35 ' FUEL Am't for eoal and wood for Court House aad FOX 'AND WILD CAT SCALPS. Amount to sundry persons 20 INCIDENTAL EXPENSES. Am't of staptonery Ire., for court. INSURANCE. Anil to Lycoming Mutual Insurance Co. INQUESTS. Ami to S. O. Quirk Esq.. on O. Walters to Wm. M. Hoastand on TI109 Divine to J. B. Case M.U. examining body of tain net Warance at iu'i'iest 45 00 25 76 10 37 10 3ti 5 00 1 73 JURORS WAGES AND MILEAGE. Am't to Jurors at the several courts during the year . , MEDICAL SERVICES. 'Am't paid to Dr. F. C. Uarrisio, attendance on prisoners . PROTIIONOTARY, Amount paid Jesse Coleman Preth'y .PRINTING. 1099 24 2 59 m 00. Amount to- W. . Jscoby to J. 5 tanilers fo L. 1- Tate . to P. Johu 1P0 00 145 IM U 00 o 10 34dUO 3 50 POSTAGE. , Amoual paid D." A. Beckley, P M. PENITENTIARY. ; Amt E.S. Penitentiary, supporting convicU, ,422 91 Amt (Slate Luaal ic .Hospital for tJS support of Caliianue Suit 157 95 ! ' '. ' : . ' ' . j " i 5 3M 88 ROAD AND BRIDGE VIEWS. Am i Eucdry periods Toad and brid'S views 150 00 K0AD "DAMAGES. ' S do J. W. Eck, Rriarrreck Township, do ' P. A. Bowman do do d Andrew Fr-iM do do do V. B. bobbins Greenwood twp, 375 Ml l.V DO 15 00 D M 00 SHERIFF'S "BILL. Ain't paid Samuel ayder for boarding prisoners do conveying Nathaniel Terry to t lie House of rpftiiru and Isaac Wi'd to thr E, 3. Tenitenimry do conveying Ahrah-tui Pealer to the K. a. i'enilenliary 5T0 00 P0 00 70 Oil 734 00 SHEEP DAMAGE. Aui't paid to sundry p'rsunn to wit . Jlloom towuship Kenton do (irirwoo1 do Hi iartrcex do Centre ito 44 Oil CO 00 1.17 00 i:t'. o 1!5 50 Ki-'hinKcrees; do M 50 t"i 50 Jacksou do do do do do l. do du do do e-i on 4i INI 'Jli l Maitison M in Ml flt-a.-ranl Montour Oraife . I'iue llMnlork Pugarloaf Kcolt rC 50 '.'i oil 5d no 4i i' 50 till IHI 104 i ll 1570 75 IS Cl 87 oa U310 f.3 750G 01 STATE 110 AD. Ain't paid Inyins out JM.-ue Road thornsh Co lumbia and Luzerne Counties TIP STAVES. Am't paid at the serral courts TAXES REFUNDED. Am't of road, schiM4, poor anil countv taxes refunded by the several towuship Am't nf orders issued for the year 16CG Deiiui t a m't of beep orders issued fur Hie yenr 1'irt 1576 71 tuxes refuudej to towiivliips l.U) Actual exp.-nses for yar 13'iti 15"04 liO We the undersixned Aiditor 'of Columbia county. beinz duly elected to adjut and grille the accounts ol the Treasurer an! Coinuiissiouers. do cert ily tiia- we met at the ntlire or the I'o umissioners in llloomst hurg. and carefully examined the accounts and voueliT of the same from the 1st day 01 January. A.I. IrilMi. to the lei day of January, lJt7. and find them correct as sitt tortli in th ; foreionii slaleiiieut. and we find a balance due Columbia County of two thousand eigh hundred and eighty-two dollars and seventy six cenU, (J i-M5 70) from JOilN J.di'lLKS, t reasurer l sai l e untv. I.ivt-u umler our handthi4 eighth ! iv "( Janu.i'V. A .1) , one thousand eiQt bWidred and sixty-sevou. Attest. UAMEL I.EK. Clerk UAMKL SHVUBE ) I.. II. n l! PERT. County Auditots. JOHN P. HA NOV. S We ill. uiidi!rsisned. CouiinisM.iiier? of Columbia ( i)'iiily, do Ceitiiy that the foreeo'ng is a rurrert statement of the accounts ol said 'Jouuly forllio Year l&is. Witness our bauds, Jan.?. lt"o7. Attet. WM. KKlLK8ArM.Ci.rtt. . AI.UN .VI AW. J. F. FOWL Ell. ICoiuui'rs. MONT. COLE. Approved by lift Court. F-i 4. IdtiT. 1RAM PE1U. ( ... .,,. I'. K. UEttbLUN. Ass. Judges. Comiii'tioner's fnrire. BijOmsbur", Feb. 6. 107. J auy JJow jjost, Jioic jiesiorcu. TT T . T r ft f Jnsl Published, a new edition of Da. CITI.VERWF.I.L'S Celebrated Essay on the rad ieal cure (without medirineji.f Speruiaton lioea, Sem inal Wenknes. Involuntary r"enunal Losses. Impn tenry Mental and Physical Inrapacity, Impediment to Marriage, etc. ;sl-o Con -uni.tiou, Lpili psy. and Fits induced by celf-ludulgence or Sexual eilruvu ganre. (TT Priee, in a sealed envelope, only 6 cents. The celebrated author it this adinirab'e essay clearly demonstrates, troni a thirty years' sucees lul practiee, ihst the alanrine rnsequ:ui-es of self ahuse. may be radical'y cured without the dang cl ous use of internal medicine er the application of the kn'le pointing ont a mode of cure at onee sim ple, certain, anr. ell"eitu:i!, by nieaiis of which every utferer. no iifiacr what his condition may b... may cure himself cheaply, privately, and radically. HJP Tln- lecture siiou'd b: in the bauds of every yontli a;.d every man in the land. Sent, un Jer a eal, in a plain envelope, to any ad. dres. ptiil ytid, on receipt of six ceuis, or Imu post S'Uuida. Address tbo publishers. t:il A3 J. C. KMNE 4c CO, 127 Rowery, New York, PostOtfic: b x, 45c0. Dec, ID, I M ai. "TMBKIJ ! LUMBKIl ! ! 'pilli II LOO l -J K C R ( l.Olr!ERlNG COMPANY. 1 would respectfully iuturui the public that they have lUe.r PLANING MILL now in operation wi'.li an extensive assortment ol and are now prepared to supply alt orders at short notice and at Ibe lowest prices for cash, 1 heir j fcorliueril ol lumber consists of While Sinc i'lanL, rSoai(!, Flooring, Snriace -Hoards, idiii, flciialock I'laiil. landed or unplaned. to tuit purchaaeis Franw- Bluff. Joiie and .si antli:.g of al sizes. Their I'lauing .VI ill and LiMiiher Yard is situatej it the UailrOad Depot, very conveniently for shippinc lu nbor by lb carg". 1 hey are constantly iiianutm tnriiic lumber nf u II kinds, and persons who desire lumber of every de scription will do well to ex inline their st'H:k before purchasing elsewhere. They are determined and em inently prepared to sell as cheap as the cheapest. 1 he y ajro desire 10 iiiloriii the public and especially those w no wish to purchase hi 'I -stud that they have one Mill specially prepared to cut limbers of almost evary size and length required. Tnose wishing to builil or contractors fur building, cau save money, by giving us a t all. The undersigned would also announce that they are prepared to do all kind of repairing of Machinery, sueh as Threshing .Machines. Mowers, Kenpers and all kinds of agricultural iuipleutculs, uj.ou reasona ble terms. Address, F. C. EYER. Sec'y. Rlooiusburg, Sept. t'J, lHf6. Uloomsbiirg . Pa. LWEMCUS' OFFICES. D'EPINEUIL & EVANS, Civil Engineers and Patent Solicitors. No. 4:15 WAI.NlT STREET-, rii.LADtLriiii. PATENTS solicited Consultations on Eusinecrin g Draughting and Sketches. Models and Machinery f a'l kinds madk and skil'ully attended to. Specinl attention given to REJECTED CASES and INTER FERENCES. Authentic Copies of all Documents from Patent Office procured. . . N n. save yourselves useless trouble ana trav eling expenses as there is no artuai need for person al Interview with us. All business will! tli':sc uni ces can be transacted in writing. For further in for. unit inn direct as above, witU stamp enclosed for Cir cular with relerences. April 18, ldtid. ly, J W. N JEW HAIR DRESSING SALOON... A New Hair Cutting, Shaving, and Dying Saloon. bas been opened in the rear of Hunsbergcr's Tobac co Ptore, Rloomsburg. where all kinds of work in the bartering line will be neatly and promptly at tended to Being on Me same sidi fT the street with alllbn Hotels, there is no need of crossing th street. through the m id, to ret to the shop. IJair work manufactured to oraer. i.aaies wisntng their hair dressed in Water fat', or otherwise, with or without crimp, will b attended to by a lady, in separate apartments. Zj Remember the place , Mam atret, rear or Qunsberger's Tobacco tjtore. Nov.Sd, le66. JUMBER ! LUMBER ! A new Lumber Yard in Jlloomxliury,. TUB undersigned would respectfully inform those in wint of lumber that be continues to manufac ture and keeps on baade good .supply of building aud fencing ui.teri.it, at his residence, a short dis lanee norla of the depot, which he offers for sale, at ren-ona&ia rates. . . JACOU cChUYLCll. Blooniyburg, June 20. I8G6. ICU I ITCH ! ITCil! :. SCRATCH ! SCRATCH T SCHATCH ! WH EATON'S OINTMENT U ill Cure The Itcli iu IS Hours. Also cures FALT RHEUM. Uls'ERS. CHIL BLAINS, and all ERUPTIONS OF THE SKI. VrJe, 50 crnts. For sale by all Drurrists. By sending GO cents to WEEKS 4k fOTTEtt Joi A reals, 17 Wash ington street, Boston, it will bo forwarded by snail. mm THE DEMOCRAT AND STAR, PUBLTSITKD EVERY WEDNESDAY, IN BLO0MSBURG, PA., BY JACOBY &SHUMAN. TERM.', f5 00 in advance. If not paid within SIX MONTHS'. 5 cent additional 'will be charged. No paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid except at the op'ion of the editors. IKK LtWES COMSTITOTK A SbOARS. I One square 'ne or three Insertions $1 50 t-very subsequent insertion les tnan 13 50 BFACK. J. ii. 3t. Cm, It. One square. S.ro I 3 00 4.00 I 6.00 10.00 Two squares, 3. Oo ' 5.o0 I'i.iK) 0.00 14.00 Three 5,0 t 7.00 f?.50 j P'.OO 1H.00 Foursquares, ti.ru H.00 10,iio M.oo 20.00 Halt eolumii, to.llo I 15.00 14.00 I Id 00 30 00 One column. 15, CO l(?00 20,00 ' 30.00 50,0,j Exerntor'a and Administrator's Notice. ... Auditor's Notice.. .3.00 '5.50 Other advertisements inserted aeeordins to suecia contra -I. Business notices, without advertisement, twentv. ccr Is per line. Transient advertisements pa vahte in adtance all others do alter the first insertion. VZr" Or MCE In Sbive's Ulock. Corner of M.iin and Iron Streets. Address. . JACOB Y 4l S HUM AN. Uloomsbiirg, Columbia County, Pa THE TWO AIOUCS. As LifeVunending column pours, Two marshalled hosts are seen, Two armies oti the trampled shores That Death flows black, between. One marches to the drum-beat's roll, The wide-mouthed clarion's bray, And bears upon a crimson scroll, "Our story is today." One moves in silence by the stream, t 1111 saa, yet watehlul eyes, Calm as the paticut planet's gleam That walks the clouded &kies. Along its front no sabres shine, No "blood-red pennons wave ; I hs banners bear the single line, "Our duty is to save. For those no death-bed's lingering shade; At Honor's trumpet-call, With knitted brow and lifted blade In G lory's arms they full. For these no clashing falchions bright, No stirring battle-cry ; The bloodless stabber calls by night Echo answers, "Here am 1 1" For these the sculptor's laurelled bust, The builder's marble piles, "The anthems pealing o'er their dust Through long cathedral aLles. For these the blossom-sprinkled turf That floods the lonely graves, When Spring rolls in her sea-green surf In flowery-foaming waves. Two paths lead upward from below, And angels wait above, Wbo count each burning life-drop's flow, Each falling tear of love. Though from the hero's bleeding breast Her pulses freedom drew, Though the white lilies in her crest Sprang from that scarlet dew Vk hile valor's haughty champions wait Till all their scars are shown, Love walksunchallenged through the gate, To sit beside the throue ! Voltaire cn 7TlanIagre. Voltaire said : "The more married men you have the fewer crimes there will le. Marriage renders a man more virtuous and unmarried man is but half a perfect being, and it requires the other half to make things right, and it cacnot be expected that in this imperfect state he can keep the straight path of rectitude no more than a boat with one oar, or a. bird with one wing can keep a straight course. In nine cases out of ten where married men become drunkards, or where they com mit crimes against the peace of the commu nity, the foundation of these acta was laid while in a single state, or w here the wife ii?, ad .is sometimes the case, an unsuitable match. Marriage changes the cuneiit of man's feelings and gives him a centre for his thoughts, his affections and his acts. Here in a home for the entire man and the counsel the affections, the example, and the inter est of his "better-hair' keep him from erra tic courses, and from falling into a thousand temptations to which he would otherwise be exposed. Therefore the friend to marriage is the friend to society an4 hLj country." - 4- 4- - - - An Extraordinary Incident. An Irishman, named Sheridan, who had served in the Federal army, and who was returned as dead in the battle of Bull Run (in which he received no less than twelve wounds) managed to recover, and at the close of the war returned to this country and entered the service of the Royal Humane Society. After performing prodigies of valor the other day, in finally attempting to rescue another boy, he himself got under the ice and was under water for several minutes. On recovering his body it was pronounced to be lifeless, and eent away with other corpses to the dead house. And j et for the second time Sheridan came back to life and is now as well as ever. A Hint. A city editor, who is a bache lor having said in his last issue that he really wL-lied he had a son, so that he could dress him up in the fashions, was called upon the next day by-his adorable, to whom he had been paying his addresses for the last two years, who asked him if he really said that. "Ceitiinly I did, my dear." "Well, Jim my," said she, ' Why Jon' t you make ar ranjemaits for ont ?" Our friend wilted. l$- "Tell the truth and shame the devil " I know lots of people vqo can shame the devil easy eouff but the tother thing both ers them. Josh BilUng$. SST" The first part of married life is the Bhine of the honeymoon ; the rest, too often a i:i:HA.iKiiLi: tiiio. An Kn-rlislimaii's Idea or Jacli moii, sLincoIii, and Johnson. Among llie articles in BlaclctcooiT a Marj azine, for November, is one under the Lead of "Three PreiJenta of the United States," which is just now exciting much attention in this country. The scope of the article will be best understood by reference to its opening paragraph, which is as follows: By a remarkable coincidence, the greatest dangers and difficulties of the American Union have always lcfallen it during the incumbency of the Presidential office by men of humble origin, defective education and unpolished manners. It has also hap pened that these men have belied the fears of the timid, and surpassed the expecta tions of the hopeful, by the extraordinary ability they displayed, and the combined wisdom and audacity with which they steer ed the ship of State through difficulties and dangers which might have overpowered the statesmanship of leaders with more cultivat ed minds and less resolute convictions. These men were Andrew Jackson, who be gan life fatherless and penniless, glad to do the meanest "chores" about a farm for bare tmbsistenca ; Abraham Lincoln, a boatman and splitter of logs ; and Andrew Johnson, a journeyman tailor in a third-rate country town. Jackson, throughout the whole of his loug and brilliant career, never managed to attain education enough to write a gram matical sentence, and never read but one book besides the Bible, and that was the "Vicar of Wakefield." By dint of innate energy and indomitable will, he rose from the lowest to the highest estate, and was successively day-laborer, pcdler, soldier, law yer, shopkeeper, merchant, planter, judge, senator, general and President of the Re public. Abraham Lincoln rose by similar means to the same height, and was also la borer, petty trader, lawyer, member of the House of Representatives, and President. I .ike Jackson, he" had few advantages of education ; read no books but law books and the' Bible, except "Joe Miller's Jests" and ".Jvsop's Fables." He was blunt of speech and ungainly in appearance; but by sheer pertinacity of purpose and simple-minded honesty he carried to victory the greatest cause in which an American statesman was ever engaged. Andrew Johnson, who now occupies the perilous seat left vacant fur him by the assassin's pistol, is a man in every way as remarkable as Jackson or Lincoln for the stubborn and victorious will which he has displayed, for the natural gifts which have enabled him to act a leading part in the history of his country, and for the tre mendous difficulty of the task which he has to perform unless the lip bit that now shines so brilliantly is to be darkened before its noon, and he, one of the greatest of the Presidents, is to be remembered amon? the least." The author prefaces his idea of .Tack.con a man whose memory is revered by all true Americans by the remark that "personal and intellectual culture are of little or no advantage to an American politician ;" aud that "provided they have courage, a clea purpose, and the 'gift of gab,' without which latter all other gifts are of no avail, the pol iticians of America have little need for schol arship. ' This has been more especially the case during the last thirty-five years, during which the disruption of the Union has al ways been more or less a question in dispute to embitter controversy, and to force the strongest minds to take up position either for or against it." He says the first six Presidents of the United States were all statesmen by training and capacity, and gen tlemen by manners and cast of thought ; that none of them by his personal character inspired much popular affection, but all commanded respect for their talents and public services ; and that with John Quincy Adams, the sixth President, the line of gen tlemen and scholars was interrupted, and with that of Andrew Jackson, the seventh, that of the illiterate pioneers and working men commenced. Having given his esti mate of the American politicians and Pres idents, we now give this Englishman's idea of Jacksdu, Lincoln and Johnson in his own language, not however, without protesting against the gross injustice of his judgment upon the private character and habits of this remarkable trio : - - JACKSOX, the seventh President of the Republic a profane swearer, a drunkard, aud a' bully, yet a brave soldier, an able commauder, an upright magistrate, and, when in the high est place, a consummate statesman. He was accustomed to a border life ; he had fought the British in his early youth, the wild Indians in his prime, and again, in ma ture age, he had stiuggled against and de feated the British at New Orleans. In ad dition to all this public battle, he had done an immensity of private fighting. He was scarcely three months together out of a duel or a street brawl. He had deliberately killed one man for speaking disrespectfully of his wife ; had quarreled with his best friends, and transformed them into his bitter ene mies. He was always armed and ready for the fray He carried his life in the hollow of his hand, ready to risk it all times against the meanest foes for the smallest offences. Though he. became a laVyer, he never knew anything but the commonest rudiments of the profession ; yet he knew enough to be constantly employed in the simple but nu merous causes of dispute that arose between the quarrelsome backwoodsmen among whom his lot was cast As a tradesman he was shrewd and sagacious. eJ familiarly and affectionately named from his toughness of character, had three hates (in addition to the private ones, which were in numerable) and a sh.gle love. Hesitated debt, paper money, and the United States Bank; and he loved, with a love unaltera ble and unchangeable, with a love such as only an Airorican can understand, the union of the States ; the union that was to make the Republic the first power in the world, to spread itself over the whole continent, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the Arctic sea to the Isthmus of Panama and dearest and most ardently wished for con summation of all, that was to domineer over Great Britain, and press it down into the second or third rank by an irresistible pre ponderance. He had fought and bled for it against foreign foes ; he was equally ready to fight and bleed for it against domestic enemies. How he conquered his favorite aversion, the bank, and toppled it to the ground, never to rise again how he kept himself and the country out of debt and how desperately he fought the battle of hard money against paper, need not here bo re counted. But how he struggled against dis union, and gave it a blow from which it never recovered until the election of Abra ham Lincoln, twenty-eight years afterwards, is part of our puriose to narrate for the better comprehension of the tragic history which is still enacting before our eyes, and of which no one can foretell tho catastro phe. LINCOLN. When secession at last was accomplished, under circumstances far too recent and too well-known to need re-capirufation, the South was prepared at most points, the North at none ; and a man was at the head of affair?, who, on a hasty or sujerficial judgment, might have been pronounced singularly in efficient and unsuitcd for the task of coer cion which cruel fate had thrust upon him. Iiike his great predecessor, Jackson, he was a man of the people, without culture or mariners. Unlike Jackson, however, he had the instincts, if not the education, of a gen tleman was no rowdy, no drunkard no pro fane swearer; but a plain, honest, quiet, quaint, good man, with no strong will, but with a very strong sense of duty. Jackon cared little either for free trade or protection, but he cared very much for the Union. In like manner, Abraham Lincoln cared very little for the negro and his freedom, though he disliked slavery ; but he cared greatly and with his whole heart and soul for the Union. eak and irresolute as to the! means to be pursued, ho was steady and faithful to the end in view. Sometimes doubtful of the result, he was never doubt ful of his duty. In his character there was no malice, no animo-ity, no arrore penrr. To his mind the South did not appear as it di 1 to some of the people about him a wicked rebel, to be scourged, to be decimat ed, le exterminated, if need were ; but a beloved brother who had gone astray, ar.d to be brought back into the right path by concession on all points that did not involve the one great and fundamental principle of the integrity of the republic. In the darkest days of the deadly strug gle, when few Northern men ventured to hope for ultimate success when the best attainable boundary between North and South was almost the only result that the clearest-headed and most sanguine men an ticipated Mr. Lincoln, half despairing, half hopeful, but wholly resolute, saw nothing for it except, to use his own homely phraseolo gy, tu "keep pegging away," trusting to Providence to shape the ends, however man might rongji-hew them. He would let the South maintain slavery without extending it into new regions, until the Southern pro pie were wise enough to let it go, provided onry that the South would remain in the Union. He would excuse everything, for give everything, condone everything, if it would but rehoist the starry banner of the i reunited republic. Even .when the fierce passions engendered by the struggle grew fiercer and more envenomed, and permeated, all classes and ranks of the' people down to the women and children, he was calm, equa ble, patient, and merciful as before, lie admitted the strong logic of the Southern arguments for secession, without admiring it He felt, icrhaps, that the treason of Jeffer son Pavis, like that of (Jeorge Washington, might be justified by success, and so cease to be treason. He was a border man him self, and knew what the Southern people were what hat blood what determination, what enthusiasm, what heroism was in them ; and he never despised the foe that in his heart, if all the truth was known, he loved rather than hated, and whom, most certainly, he admired for many noble qualities. Pushed on and backed up by the will of the people, without any will of his own, except the willingness to restore the Union at any price, he marched from dogma to dogma, from doctrine to doctrine, from principle to : principle, by external rather than internal impulses; ami with a sad heart that he should have to do, even under the pressure of over powering State necessity, anything .incon sistent with the Constitution which Wash-' ington and Jefferson had made, and which i Abraham Lincoln had sworn to uphold. Andrew Jackson put down nullification ; Abraham Lincoln did not put down seces sion. What one did by the force of his own will, the other did by the force of the will of the people. The one was the fiery horse, acting by his own volition ; the other was but the inert carriage drawn by the stalwart muscle of the crowd.' Jackson did well, but Lincoln did better. .Jackson accomplished career, he even dreamed of. That he woul merely circumscribe slavery within its exist ing limits, and who was conscientiously of the opinion that if every negro in America left America and went back to the native Africa of his fathers and grandfathers, it would le better for America and better for the negro should by the stroke of his pen by the war power, and contrary to the spirit and letter of the Constitution abolish sla very, was a result of tho struggle that, in the first two years of its fury, he was the last man in the Union to imagine. Yet so it was. The weak man became strong by the irresistible strength of events. In Jack son's time the love of the Union in the North was but a latent feeling; in Lincoln's time it was an irresistible force, and, lashed into fury by the passions of the war, would have preferred the utter desolation of the Southern States their conversion into the original wilderness and the extermination or banishment of their whole population rather than Fee them, by their own exertions or the aid of a foreign State, erected into an independent Confederacy. This good and merciful man was good and merciful to the end. Even when the South was on the point of collapse when its hope of foreign recognition had long since died away when its armies were reduced to the minimum of hope as well as of numbers when, in ming led pride and despair, it refused to arm the negroes, "referring conquest by its white brothers to independence to be purchased by the aid of black soldiers Mr. Lincoln was ready and anxious to grant honorable terms of surrcuder. In the flush of victory there was much that he could have done that no other man could have attempted.' He could have issued a general amnesty ; he could have declared the Unio'ri restored in fact and in theory, on the sole condition that his mil itary proclamation for the abolition of sla very should be adopted by every Southern State as the basis of a legal enactment. But this great and happy result was not to be attained. The pb-tol of a fanatic deprived the Southern people of a friend, and the Northern eople a man after their own hearts, who, through good and ill fortune, had fought their fight with an humble, a contrite,' irnd an honest spirit, and given the victories for which they had hungered and thirsted for four miserable years. JOHNSON. It was then that a new man stepped tpon the scene, a man .whom the North little trusted, and whom it had only elected to the Vice Presidency because his name lent a littla popularity in those Border States of Kentucky, Maryland, Tennessee, and Mis souri, which had not quite so much faith in the negro and his cause was felt by the North and West. The new comer was more remarkable than Abraham Lincoln or An drew Jacksou, reninrkable as they both were, and was called to the highest office under circumstances, public as well as pri vate, that were peculiarly unfavorable. The murder of Lincoln had exasperated the pub lic mind to a pitch of frenzy never before known in America. When all men's hearts wore opening to the ideas of reconciliation and peace, a dastardly assassin converted all the feelings into hatred and revenge. And the Vice President elected not for his own sake: but to carry the election with greater triumph for Mr. Lincoln becarr the Presi dent of a party to which he had been op posed all his life on every public question except that of the inviolability and perpe tuity of the Union. Not so much of a rowdy as Jackson, and far mo:e of a rowdy than Liir.aln, be bad some qualities in which he was superior to thein both. Like them he had studied the law to fit himself to political life; but, un like them, he was s thorough lawyer and excellent speaker. He possessed all the in domitable will and energy of Jackson, bnt was free from truculence and ferocity. Though his early education was deficient, he had in later li'le turned bis leisure to such account as to make himself familiar with the master pieces of English literature. : Jackson might be content with the Bible and the "Vicar of Wakefield." and Lincoln with the Bible and "Joe Miller," but An drew Johnson had a largo thirst for knowl edge; and though he did not constantly in terlard his speeches with trite poetical quo tations, like some of the so called orna ments of the Senate Chamber, his reading was as extensive as theirs. In his unfortu nate speech as Vice President he was cohe rent enough to declare a principle which, as President, he afterwards made the corner stone of his policy the principle that a sovereign State, such as his native Tennes see, could not commit treason, that a State might be tV facto, but could never be theor etically, out of the Union. He reiterated the assertion with marked emphasis of tone and manner, few if any of his hearers im aginngat the time the importance which either the speaker or the principle was so speedily to assume, and what transcendent issue of peace or war, prosperity or ruin, were involved in it. . The war was all but over when he spoke. When he was called to fill the perilous seat which an act of martyrdom had left vacant, the Confederacy had collapsed, and its brave but luckless President was flying for his life toward Texas, with a hope which, if it had been realizedl might have changed the fortunes of the North American conti nentthat if he could reach this vast and not easily to be. conquered territory, he might have . prolonged the war for twenty yearsT Jacksotl's task was but child's play .v i- . Jackson and Line to pre vent the . -. nity ot tree mn 9nA V . , . flnir , ... n to hruid th aatioi "A . I 'thout the era . u.-.f.. mar irotu u , formed the duty well and !m T with comparative facility y . all but superhuman difnc,11 couragement". Upon Johniou d , J more gigantic woric.. w nen ban Chief Magistrate, it might almc that political ohaoB had j;mtr war had destroyed viuea ior me negroi.w-v the land with blood, 2... Jv exasperated animositieproH luight have been the gated consumed countless milli ken a father, a son, or uwij uou!ctioiu, jaia low t i 1 1 i j nameless graves and trenches i N iamiues, pauperized tne rich aily r1 r tury the civilization of the fairest hjrN republic. It is true that the naGonia- V pie stood on the hill top, a goodly stm.., . to be seen and admired of men ; jt manjNj of its main pillars were broken, strern upon A the ground, blaekened with the fcrch of I destruction, or reddeired, with the llood of ' f unhappy thousands who had been etched ( beneath their fall. How was Andre Jon'h- ; son, the poor plebeian, to restore these broken columns to their places? How was', he to efface the bitter memories of conquest, j and reconcile the victim to the victor How ; was he to draw North and South iota that . partnership of interest and affection without which the Union would be bnt XnoTlT. X - name for cruel domination on the one sifc1 w t and humiliating Bubrfi:solc?n on the other V ' The task indeed was herculean, and mdeecL not only honesty, courage, devotion, and n-ijlnm Voir rnrn n-r.ru 1 f"nrtarf in i:aTS undertook, it. The honesty, th( the wisdom, an! the devotion wer Andrew Johnson. It remains to b whether the good fortune will attend .Horn Siif ! Against A letter from New York, in the .'hiladd- phia Lnlycr, says : Another batch of suits for the recovery damages hers been instituted against Geryrft Butler in the Supreme Court "Chambers. -I The plaint ifls are in some cases citizens 01 New Oilcans, and in others citizens of Yir- , ginia, and all claim to be snd have been loyal j men. The most serious of these complaints . COCiv ! seek AlUL v or suits are based upon the allegation tbsV-" f General Butler had, by virtue of his power, in New "Orleans, compelled a Mr. Iloni well to transfer the steamer Carlotta, worth $60,000, to himself personally for $40,000, in a currency worth but $28,000, had, through his agent, sent this vesel on a private Ten turc for his own advantage, T?hteri jt was. insinuated was to supply the rebels with oui-! nine, &c., and then, through his agent, had chartered it to the Government for $3,5'"per day, and had ultimately "run her under", near the end of. he war, and obtained for her $40,000. It is claimed, therefore, that -in no sense could it be said that this had been s done under authority from the President or Congress. General Butler's counsel contend that these acts were done in accordance with. Government authority, and moves, there fore, that they be transferred to a Federal court for adjudication. The court promised! a decision in a day or two. Henry J. Raymond says : Vlt is evident that the Democratic party grows worse, (.in stead of better." This is the very highest praise which it is possible for any mortal to bestow on the Democratic party. For what is vice, in Raymond's mind, is virtue in the estimation of right, thinking men. If the Democratic party is getting worse in his eyes, it is because it is returning to the faith, and principles of our fathers. A Compliment. The Erie Dispatch, the loyal organ of that county, in closing a pa thetic appeal in reference to the 'election of Senator, and warning the loyal members of. the Senate and House against voting for Cameron, said: "Give us afool, like Geary, -but for God's sr-ke do not give us a. knave." How the man :s going to get the knave off his hands, is not for us to advise ; but we hall see. We would not be surprised if he would dulike Fcrney tike the fenace iohls bosom. IFaF-Wheri. an Irish , priest rebuked his parishioner for drunkenness, and told him that whenever he entered an alehouse to drink his guardian angel stood weeping r the door. And if he had sixpence beM bo in himself, was Pat's reply. The Rev. Joel Lindsley, who, a' .few months rgo, whrpjed his child to death for not saying its prayers, was on Saturday con victed in the Orlean (N. Y.) county court of manslaughter. The excitememtthretaghont the count.?, against the wretch is wonder ful. - 1 An old citizen of Lock port lately called upon a clergymen, also aq old man, and paid him his marriage fee. . He was too poor in pocket to pay when married, hough rich in love. J Within a jwi iod cf less than forty years, upwards of fifty-one thousand miles of steam railroads have been constructed in the Uni ted States at an aggregate cotst of $1,502, 564,000. The amount of Government and oth- V v.. 'A 1 M AMI . mi r fr of poets -e, to any part of the United 8ates.