VOLUME 2. For the Citizen, j IBM V G'OIinKNPOX I»EX< T. CAMP LOWELL, Prospect Hill Ya Dear Scr: —Permit me, a representa tive of old Butler county, to give you a brief history of our doings iu "Johney dom." As you are aware of the fact, that we are Heavy Artillery, and, as a matter of couise, are doing Artillery duty c\erj ; day. iu the shape of work, you would I e astonished at the progress we are mak ing on our pieces we turn out every morning for drill. Every man shoulders his piece and goes out to practice on them; T tell you they learn fast. They handle their pieces well. We have a good set of offi cers, tmr Colonel is a fine fellow and is very sociable with his men, but a strict military man and a gentleman with every one that makes his acquaintance: his headquarters are at Vienna,distant K miles on the north Hamshire and Alexandria ltailroad, one batallio.i at Fairfax Court House, one at Vienna, and one here- Major Hear in command and t.. see him you would take him for a private, by the j way he goes around among the men in his command, getting off some el hi dry jokes and Belling us precariously and run- . ning off and laughing at u*. We all like him and will do all we can for him. ! In fact all aur officer" are fine men, eour teous and obliging to the men under them, i Since we arrived in this plaei; we Im\c boon as busy as bees dign'iur idle-pits, building block houses, abbot'ls and Rai ting batteries. There arc four block houses, one at each n irncr of our en-| painpment, and six battenes, when iom pleteJ an I mounted I amcerl.iin we .-an hold our position a-ain-t any number they : may send against, u-. Wc have a l.ue << \ r'.flc-pitf extending all av-un 1 ( imp. an I if it « i in a straightJine it would mea tire over a mile in length, and our abbe!- i tis is the best I ever saw, it extendi ft! around eam,v but outside of rifle-pits the | limbs pointed so as to turn horsemen il j attackeddiy rebel cavalry. Me aregeti ing along fine an Ido our sharp ot pi' - | eting—we are supporte Iby a rei-ini-ut ot ! eavairy, the 13th NowYprk; we are .m | tenle 1 and have plenty tof a f . but no deli- ! caciesand arebctterwithout them. Iln-a is no sickness among our i -ill i.lion •"ml only one or two deaths since we came out we are in a very good place pleiiiy ot good walerand wood and can in a clear day see the Capital from onr camp. — we arc in sight of nine large I'ort* and can see lor miles any way we may look, i axcept towards Drainsvillc, a place noted j fur cut throats and vagabonds. We arc i on the Lecsburg pike, and on the camp I ground ol the old JVuija. Reserve-. 1 have seen where they lay and can see where jtlie rebels lay when our men -lay on one side ol' the l'otoiuae, anil they »-i the otH er. Well we are here now, but hope we may all live to get home again, when peace shall once more spread her mantle over our once smiling and prosperous but n w distracted country. But the old ship has sailed fur over eighty years, and she shall uot go down while Americas sons ure able to keep her afloat. I aui proud of our dear old flag, ''long may it wave, over the land of the Iroc. and may her presence make tyranny tremble and traitors turnpale and Hot dare touch thatensign'a if purity that our forefathers fought to sustain, and which now wc arc trying t> keep from their grasp, and by the strength of willing hands and the help of Him, who rules above, we shall preserve from dishonor; and if eve yy true American will put their shoul ders to the wheel, t]iis rebellion must an 1 shall be put down. By the choice of the people the eh.iir of State is to be filled once more, by one who has piloted her through near four years of war; bo can certainly bring her thiough four years more, aud may his next four years be as peaceful as a well governed family, is the wi-h of every good and true American soldier, aud may peace be restored iu such a maimer that war may never ruin our couutry with its iron will, is the sen timent of the soldiers, no treaty with traitors but unconditional surrender. Y ours Truly, 11. S. SYMIAB. A story i.-> toid of a certain Mrs. Pe troleum whose husband had ouddculy come into possession ol a large fortune, and had e.ected a U >use to eooresp nd to his means. Mrs Petroleum had heard that it was uocea ary to have a •■library," and accordingly sent to a popular book store and ordered oue. A well asorted library of standard works wes scut .up to her house. .Next day, comes dowu uiy lady iu a towering rage at their selection —"Choicest works?" cried slie, as an explanation wa* attempted, "botheryour .choicest works;" they were all different friz-sand colors. I want them all iu J>lye aud to match tuy 1 uiuitu;'C/ I Speech of General Beiy. F. Butler. | At ii I'ubllc Medina Held to Re joice overtUe Hatilleatlon of "the < 'onatilutloiinl Amend incut* Boston, Feb, 4, lHttS, Almost ninety years since, amid the ra diant glories of midsummer, our fathers assembled to congratulate each other upon a declaration of human rights which has since been claimed to be a charter to the white man only. Seventy seven years ago. in mid-winter, Massachusetts debat ed the acceptance of the Constitution ol the United Stato3—the solemn compact of assurance to those rights—the most perfect formo.f Government ever devised by man, but which left qucared for and unnrovided safeguards of freedom and equality of right to all men, irrespective of color. Our fathers believed that the clear interests of the rising Nation would protect it from tins receding weight of Human Slavery. But, a'asl a single Massachusetts invention—the cotton-gin —opposed the present iuterestsof the in dividual to the future good of I lie State, and made the burden—greater than that I of Pilgriiit Christian—seam eternal.— ! From that one defect of Constitutional ; law hits arisen the most gigantic national siu. followed by the most terrible nation | ;iI retribution with which the Divine will : has seen tit to tiflliet the children of men. j 'I lie nation, brought to a sense of justice I by its cli i-ti-ement, we are now met to 0 iiaatulatc ourselves upon the first step taken in supplying this omission of ihe J • ii:e of government of SJ. llclcascd | from all coDsiituti nal obligations to pro tect Slavery, acting upon the fmne of ' Government itself, three-f urths of the 1,; d people of the country will have no 11flic i i\ in erasin.: from their futidauicii i.,l law tuis. the l.;-t blot upon their viv diz.it ion. Amid the joyous scenes of this j irium; h of the liiht which animates the I hearts ol all g> id men. even now aud j here, it may not be unlit to pau-e for a aionieut to consider the duties iiud obli gations under which we find ourselves to I this.chis* as con-, mted and declared by i iio change iu our or.anie law. Living I aside ail prejudice ; g ving up all llieo- I ries; putting away all predilections ; wc I should nppioaeli the .-ul j''ctus one calling ! for prompt, active, and olliciene justice; it lean t to make amends for former long continue 1 wrongs. By the final passage of the Amendment which wo celebrate, cverv slave is made a cii'zei) of the I niled Siiites, euliiled as of light to ev ery lioiitical and le :il imniuuity and 1 1 privilege which belongs to that great I franehi-e. He may well say, v I am an I American citizen." If bo may not proud ; ly proclaim with the apostle, " 1 was free horn," yet he can truly claim as did the chief captain, " Mi h a great sum > b tained 1 this freedom." <>l these rights or either of them, no man, and 110 combi nation or confederation of men, can with justice deprive the negro. As a natiou lie is ol us, ami a part of us; equal in right under the law. To th men of Massachusetts, in this so clear and self evideut proposition, there seems no diffi culty. Since ITS'.), tbo colored man iu Massachusetts, under the laws thereof, j modified only by the laws of the I nitod States, has enjoyed the rights and privil eges of every other citizen of assachu sctts. The child goes to the same school. | The man partakes of the same employ ments. The same learned professions, medicine, the bar, the pulpit, are open to him, and more than all. be carries to the election of his rulers and trainers of the laws, the equal ballot, which soft fulling Like the snow-flake on the sod, Executes the freeman's will As Helming executes the willof God." In other soctionsof the country, themiud warped and twisted by the influence of the systemtof Slavery—whose funeral ob sequies we. are now attending—doei not at once comprehend these truths, and ad mit the force of the inexorable logic of EQUAL RIGHTS. Men otherwise just aud good have been brought to believe, that tiie negro can have no practical rights as a citizen; no claims to be eousidered as an integral part of the inhabitants of the country, and is to be treated as if lie were an alien—nay, more, as if he were a beast and a dangerous beast beside; .cither to be sent out of the Country or to bo herd ed and penned as such in some remote cr unhealthy corner thereof, as not fit to liv uu the soil which gave hiuj birth, and to which he has every right, and is held by every tie and attachment which biuds a nj iu to that portion of caith which he cjdjs home and .country. It him been, j theudbre, proposed to scud him away— ! to herd him iu rice swamps or cotton Isl ands— where alone he may li.-tcu' to the sad music of ihe roar of the oceau surg, uot jiiu'e leleutless and uuceasing to him thaii the Wrongs of his fellow meu ; there | to prevent any white may vr white jpouian iu the miasiuj Uary labor yi iuve ty yiMl " Let us have Faith that Right makes Might; and in that Faith let us, to the end,dare to do our djty as we understand it"— A Lincoln, BUTLER, BUTLER COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY to, 1805. Itim • uneducated, to put him beyond the pale of education; to allow his cljiM never to know the benefit of the common school. .fu!:t released from a worse thau Egyptian bondage, te make him a Colon ist, without the implements of coloniza tion or fostering care on the part of the mother country. To any such illogical and unjust treatment of the negro, itnecd not be said that the people of Massachu setts will never consent. Our material interests, the interests of tlx- country op pose it. l'or two hundred and fifty years at least we have been importing the la - borer, because wc needed labor in this country. The necessity for labor here has caused it to be imported, even to be cmpl yed in the wasteful habits of Sla very. Shall we now, that four millions ef strong hands and willing hearts are made free laborers, productive and profit able, take them from the lands which they have tilled ? From the homes which they have reared? From their hearth stones, as dc ir to them as our roof-tree is to us. and send them away to some for ei:rn land, or shut them up in gome comer of this, where their labor, if not wholly unproductive and lost, ruu t be unprofita- bio ? Off sense of Justice denies it.— They have taken up arras freely mid will ingly in our defenfe, and we hare given them their freedom and rig|its as citizens. What just freedom is it totheui to be pen ned in a corner, or to be shut up in a rice swamp and not bo allowed to see the faces uf their follow citizen*, except it way bo ni a soldier scut as their guard 112 V hat true citizenship is it, to bo deprived of their equal rights, in the land their amis have helped to save from the fiery furnace of Rebellion, and to be put upon such portions of it only as are uot thought to be well habitable by their white fellow soldiers ? What lair division can itbeol (lie heritage acquired in part by their blood, to their white fellow soldier line hundred and sixty acres ot laud, to In be located where he chooses—'• ihe fi nest the sun e'er shone upon"—lohiiuund his heirs forever, while to llie colored sol dier, scarred pevha; s with honorable w 'llll di. but forty acres 'f a i ice-swanip is to 1-e allotcd. or eight hundred leet front ill marsh an a sluggish river, and that a 111--cssory title only ? And yet the dis t nguished (jeuoral who makes this prop osition says " the young and able-bodied iii-:: rui'- are to be encouraged to contribute their share toward maintaining their own freedom and securing their rights as cit izens of the United States." Wliot en i-ouraiieuu nt to enlist io this * hat freedom ? What lights of citizensuip for which to shod one's, even if it is only i black blood ? What wise statesmanship | i Vft yet founded a colony from which the young and able-bodied tney were taken as soldiers? Where the blacksmiths, car penters. and the skilled mechanics were taken from the settlement; and where the respectable heads of families had no inducements held out to them lor leaving the hornet^of their childhood and mak ing new homes in the wilderness, save a possessory title only To forty acres of land uot too mucin ut of water? Under such inducements, uuder such pupilage, with such restrictions, aud with such hopes, even our luir-ly Anglo-Saxon fathers, who lauded at Plymouth, would not have thriv en. How much less, then, is the negro, by our wrongs untaught, uncultivated and without the habit of self-dependence, fit ted thus to take care of himself? The j.nceptsof our holy religion forbid it.— livery benevolent christian in the land has contributed his mite to send the self-sac rificing missionary to redeem the I'agan f'roiu darkness, an 1 yet here it is proposed to erect a heathenuge upon our own soil, into which u<; Christian minister or Sab bath school teacher, upon their high and holy mission, shall penetrate,if it is their good fortune to have a white face. I re peat again: Massachusetts is unalterably <'l>j)ostil to any proposition uf colonization or legregation of the American citizens, made to by this Amendment of the Con stitution. No! We propose.on the oth er haijj. simply to let the tjegro alone; that he shall, in fact, enjoy the right ol selecting his place of labor, the person for whom he will labor, if not for him self; to make his own contract for his la bor; to determine its length and its val ue; to allow him at least the enjoyment of the primordial curse, " liy the sweat of thy face shalttjiou eat bread restrained only by the laws applying to hint, aud to all alike; as the rain t'allcth upon the just and the unjust. We also accept the fact, that by our injustice to him and his race, be is thrown upou the Government, un used to care for himself, uul'urnishcd jrith the means of beginning life anew. And we agree that it is ourduty and the duty of the Government to remedy thi# injus tice, to see to it tjjat lie is taught; that , ho w jjrjulyaiy Jny.fchJ to # state oi' wit- dependence aud independence of others; that ho shall have a fair share of the lands that he and his fathers have wro't upon ; that lie shall be left in the several States where his labor is needed and is productive, and that lie is furnished at first with the mpans of beginning that life which justice, equal l4',vs and equal lights have for the first time cpgncd up to him aud his children forever. Aud ;y|ien this is done, we believe our duty is done, and that thereafte;, so far as Government interference goes, the negro is to be let se verely ALONE. We believe that lie shall work as every man must work, or become a vagabond. We believe he must be taught, us every man must be taught, to be a good citizen. We believe he must be furnished with the means of begin ning life, either with education, habits of self-doppndcnce, or with the fruits of an cestral earnings ; and when these are giv en to him, we have repaired, iu part, the wrong we have done hiui. We may theu hope to receive the pardon of the A - mighty for the sins we aud our fathers have committed toward him. Failing in this, our duty, we may fear still further chastisement from His hand who has sus tained us, as He sustained our fathers, be cause the bitt.er cup of purification and chastisement has not yet been suffered to pass-from our lips. As a nation wo have taken the fiistslep in the right direction. We have bowed to the first principles of eternal justice. If we go forward with no halting tread, taking no ftep back ward, we may look with humble confi dence that hereafter our political sky shall be so healthy and so pure that notliu der storm and torrent will . e sent to clear the national atmosphere, and to wash away with blood the sins of the people. Un less we do justice, how can we hope for justice? Although the punishment for uati ual wrong and national siu i* some times, in wisdom, delayed, aud wickedness seems for a time to e. : ca 1 e punishment,yet although '■The m■ l -of Owl grind slow, but tliey giiijt) excelling •mail." Amid our joyous notes of congratula tory triumph, may we not also pause for a moment to turn our memories to those pioneers in the causcof justice, of whom we can say, Would tliey had lived to s»e this"day!" I need not name them, 'iheir memories arc still green in our hearts, but the names of two flash before ijs—PAKKKU ihe divine, whose lips ever defended the cause of freedom iu this hull; MANN, the teacher, a pioneer of education to an op pressed race. It shall not hereafter be said that Massachusetts is uugaatef ul, for to the latter, at least, we look forward to iho hour when his statue, gracing the front ol our legislative halls, shall do honor to him and to our Commonwealth, The two statues overshadowing the, broad entrance tu ovr Capitol, niakiug together the lull compliment of a Massachusetts statesman. One Conservative, who wise ly expounded the Constitution us it was; the other Progressive, who dared to look forward to the amendment of u material defect of that great iust rumeut whose pas sage now brings liberty and equality ol right to the world. DAWSON'S ALE. —The following is too good to be lost, although it occurred some year ago in Uermantown, in a hotel uot many miics from the railroad. "Will you give me a glass of Ale, i! you please?" asked a rather seedyisli looking person, with an old but well-brush ed coat aud a most too shiny hat. It was produced by the bar-tender, creaming over the etfge of the tumbler. "Thankee." said the recipient, as he placed it to his lips. Having finished it at a swallow, be smacked his lips, and said : "This is very fine ale—very. Whose u it ?" "It is Dawson's ale." "Ah ! Dawson's, eh ? Well, give us another glass of it." It was done; and holding it up to the light and looking through it, tlie eonnois sear said: " 'l'on my word, it is superb ale— superb!—cle.tr as Madeira. 1 must have some more of that. Give me a muff of it." The mug was furnished ; but before putting it to his lips the imbiber said : " Whose ale did you say this was '!" "Dawson's," repeated the bar-tender. The mug was exhausted, and also the vocabulary of praise; audit only remain ed for the appreciative gentleman to say. as lie wiped his mouth and went towards the dour: •'Dawson's ale'is it? I know Dawson very well—l shall see him soon, and will settle with him lor two glasses aud a mug of his incomparable brew ! Gpod paw ning!" —Which is at once the easiest and har dest of occupations ? The musician's; for he plays wlieu he works, and works t nhea lie wrrm wisdom. —Sure way to get up ice-screams— Slippery sidewalks. —When is a hen most likely to hatch? When she is iu earnest (her uest.) —What beams often fall on men's heads without hurting them?— Sunbeams. —-There is more than one link in the chain that cements earth and heaven. —We have already a female doctor, why not jiave a female druggist? Aud if so, why not pall her Ipecaeu Han nah ? —The " youug lady,' 1 who hid the key of our sanctum, pan have at} opportunity of setting up a night with our dpvil, to think over the matter. Pitch in N —e. —-'Marriage," said an unfortunate hus band, "is the oburcjiyard of love." "And you men," replied the not less unpappy wife, "are the grave-diggers." GUEAT SHOCK.—A lady we know was startled the other day, by being told that someone was waiting below for her ' body. Dressmakers should be careful. —An impudent wretch came near get ting his ears boxed at a wedding recep tion, the other day, for wishing the beau tiful youngbr do "Manny happy returns of the day," —An Irish Paper, in reference to the projected construction of a tunnel under the river ut Dublin, says: "A Thames tunnel is about to be constructed under the Liffey." —" Miss," said a fop to a young iady, "»> hat a pity you wasn't a mijror." "Why so?" said the blushing lady. "Do cause you would be such a good-100/ctiig lass." —True superiority of mind exists not until the person possessing it becomes perfectly conscious of his own equality with mankind, and of the fact that his existence lies in the hands of a supreme power. —Never compare thy condition with those above thee; but to secure thy con tent look upou those thousands with whom thou wouldst not, for any interest, change thy fortune and condition. — ; Thcre is this difference between hap piness and wisdom —ho (hat thinks him self the happiest man really is so; but he that thinks himself the wisest man is most generally found to bo the biggest fool. —Dr. Casio having heard Thomas Fuller repeat some verses on a scolding wife, was so del glited with them as to request a copy. "There's no necessity for that," said Fuller, "as you have got flie origional." There ire throe kinds of men in the world—the 'Wills, tbo Wonts, and the Cants.' The furmereffect everything; the others oppose everything. 'I will, builds our railroad# and steamboats; — ■Went'don't believe in experiments and nonsenso; while 'I can't' grows weeds for wheat, and commonly ends his' days in the slow digestion of bankruptcy." —Sorrow and suffering arc the nurses of all real goodness. The process we shrink from. Dut should we if we val ued the results as we ought ? And does not the measure of our shrinking show the measure of our lack of appreciation of the "peaceful fruits of righteousness afterwards ?" —The reason why we recollect what we write better thau what wo read, is because that which we commit to paper must be clear to the mind before it can be properly writ en; and very few can illustrate an idea so clearly to others as it appears to the miod of the origina tor. —Cleanliness is regarded as a cardinal virtue : but there can be such a thing as too clean; with our best trails, during life, there will be some alloy so firmly at tached that the attempt to cleanse perfect ly will wash away many a yirtuo. —Pleasure is a necessary reciprocal; no one feels who does not at the same time give it. To be pleased, oue most please. What pleases you iu others will generally please them iu you. —Sambo lo&t a dog, the tail of which be finally found and recognize 1 lying in the street in front of a sausage-shop, upon which the darkey exclaimed, as he point ed to certain well filled skins hanging iu the window, while he held up Carlo's tail, — " I won't say nuffen agin dat ere sau sage shop, but I know where my dog is —General-.Great, says a Washington corresposdeut, " looks upon the whole af fair of peace negotiations as a farce. He believes that the sword alone can bring the rebels to honora.de terms. The mo men,t that Lee's army is beaten the rebel lion will collapse. A prominent G.eneial, jrhy w iu cou&duwuo of tiuu> XJnuifc Beecher on Furnishing Liquors, A church which listens to such preach ing as the following should not do many wrong things, lleecher is a plain talker and we like the positivoness of his preach ing. Ilere is an instance : I most respectfully, but earnestly, in voke the consideration of those who aje beginning to introduce wine and strong drink into their households, and ask them whether they have lent their ear to fash ion or to God. I have tlio utmost res pcct for a man's liberty, and for the san ctity of the family. I would as soon cut off my right hand as I would become a spy in a man's house, because lie put a bottle oil his table. All I ask is, whether you have given to intemperance the consider ation of aCluistian man, aud not a ban iiitiiil. Have you determined this quts tion in the light of your duty to God and man ? 1 have not a word to say, if you have. I respect your liberty. But if you have drifted into habits of indulgence; if. beeusc you have seen your neighbors do the save thing, you have unthoughtedly, as a curious experiment, and as a thing that seemed to be acknowledged as re spectable, you have allowed intoxicating drinks to creep into your household, is it not well for you to stop ant] make the mat ter a subject of self-examination und of prayer ? I tell you it is not a small thing to bring up a family of children ; and I tell you that to bring up your children to believe that intemperance is a dangerous, lurking, insidious, untamable enemy, is to send them into life much saler than to bring them up in habits of indulgence in intoxicating drinks. And allow me, iu the near presence of the holidays, te make an exhortation and request. I believe that, for the most part, the families of this church and society are not accustomed to spread their board with intoxicating drinks; but recently, at weddings,at social festivities, and at the (Miristfflas and Newy ear's holidays, there is beginning to be a renewal of this dangerous habit. It there is any day of the year oh which you ought to clear your table of all intoxicating drinks, it is the lirst day of Jauuary. It is the worst day in the yaar for a man to begin a bad hab it on. Audit is an unkiridness for you to put them there on that day ; and you know that when young men come into your house, and the sideboard is there, and wines are proffered to them, it will be an exception for one of them to have the moral flrmuesstosay, "I never take them." You know that there are scores of young melt that will drink against their wish, aud against their judgment, because the) are ashamed to make themselves an ex ception to those with whom they arc in company. You know that, by their sym paihies aud kinder feelings, tliey will be dragged into a compliance that is bad for them. And, allow me to speak the truth, it is di graceful to you. You have no bu siness to spread a snare on your table for the young and unwary, catching them unawares. Tlio Wise Ambassador. Wo remember reading, in an old French magazine, accounts of an ambassador from the court of the Emperor Charle magne to that of an Eastern monarch. Dining one day in company with the barbarian king and the groat men of the court, not knowing the regulations and the etiquetteof the East, the ampassador. without dreaming of harm, moved with his hand a dish which had been placed near him on the table.. Now tb# laws of the tyrant repaired that if any guest touched a dish that was brouglii forward, before the king was served, he should stiller the penalty of death; consequently, all eyes were turn ed upon the ambassador of Charlemagne* and there was immediate outcry against him; lor tho courtiers of the tyrant thought to gain hb favor by upholding him in his tyranny. The barbarian king feared to displease so great an ejtnperor as harleniagne, but he feared to transgress his own laws more, and he then told the ambassador that he must suffer death for what he had done. "Great king,"said the Frank, '• I sub mit to uiy fate. The laws of so powerful a monarch should not be broken with im punity. 1 die without a murmur, but, in the name of the great emperor whose servaul 1 am, I beg of your majesty one favor before i die." "'lhou speakest well," replied-the bar barian king. "It is not my will that thou sutler death, but, siuce tho laws re quire it, I give thee the promise of a king, whoso word is late, that whatever thou askest shall be granted. 1 have spo ken." "Theu I am satisfied!" replied the ambassador, proudly; a.ftd he glanced contemptuously at the obsequious cour tiois: "All I ask is thin :—tiivo ms the NUMBER 10 yese of every man who saw pa eo^mii the crime." The tyrant seemed confounded, add his flatterers turned pale; bit his irord had gone forth, and must be kept. The Frank's request must be granted. "It is well!" said the king. "Their eyes shall be plucked out for thee." But when it was who had seen the ambassador move the dish every cour tier was eager to deny that be had seen the act. The servvmti also exclaimed that they had not witnessed it, tjpd' tljo king also declared that ho hipisejf had not. "Then why should I die, great kinfc?'! said the I'rank. "The deed couuotevyi be proved against me!" Ihe king was pleased ; and not only pardoned him, but, acknowledging and praising his cunning and wisdom, sent him home to iiis master loaded with pres ents. A MERCHANT'S STORY.—A member of a large merchantilc firm mo a bit oi bis early experience. Said he, — "I was seventeen years old when I left the country store where I had tended for three years, at;d caiup to Boston in sere!} of a place; anxious, of course, to appeaE to the best advantage, I spent an unusual amount of time aud solicitude upon my toilet, and when it wa? completed I s#i : \eyel my reflection in the glass with no little sati-faction, glancing lastly and most approvingly upon a seal ring which embellished my little finger, and my cane a very pretty affair, which 1 had purcha sed with dircpt reference to thisoccasion My firstday sexperience was encouraging. I traversed street after street; uponeside and down the other, without success. I fancied towards the lost that the clerki all know my business the moment I open ed the door, and thaCt they winked ill naturedly at my discomfiture as I passed out. But nature endowed me with a good degree of per*istency, and the next day I started again. Towards noon I entered a store where an elderly gentleman stood talking with a lady atthedoor. I waited until the visitor had left, aud then stated my errand. " 'No sir/ was the answer, given in a peculiarly crisp and decided manner,— i'ossibly i looked the discouragement I was beginning to feel, for he added, in a kindlier tone, 'Arc you good at takir.g hint ?' • "'I don't know,' I answered, while my faee flushed painfully. "YY hat I wish to say is this,' said ho, smiling at my enibariassme.it, if 1 were iu want ot a c.er.v I would noten gigo a young man who camo seeking employment with a flashy ring upon hi? finger, and swinging a f'ai.cy cane.' '•Tor a moment mortified vanity strug gled against common sense, but sense got lie victory, and I replied with rather a shaky voice, lam afraid—'l 'm very much obliged to you,' aud then boat a hasty re treat. "As »oon as I got out of sight Islipped the rirjg ito my pocket, and, walking rap idly to the Worcester depot, I loft tjio cane in charge of the baggage master un til called 112 ir. It is there now, for aught Ikn ,w. At any rate I never called for it. That altcr.noon I obtained a situation with the firm of which I alii now a part ner Uuw much my unfortunate fi.fCry bad injurce my prospects on the previ ous day I shall Lever know, but I never think of the old gentleman aud his plain dealing without leeling, as I told him at the time, -very much obliged to him " SLEEPING OUT OF DOORS.—A sensi r bio writer to Harper'* Magazine for Sep tember, concerning this matter, says: "I thought I should never get to sleep. I had a bed of cornstalks, but I believed I was roughing it. It was the dreadful ~ xyosure to the night air which worried me, aud not the proximity of hostile ballf and bayonets. And when I was aroused at five in the morning, to detinue the march. 1 actually folt tnor3 fearful of bo iug broken down by \yunt of proper rest than of being shot ia tlio approaching engagement. llow mistaken our mothers were when they warned U3 againgt expo sure to the night air, aud sleeping in damp clothing, and going with wet feet ! Judging from a two years' experience of almost constant field service, I avert that these things are wholesome and restora tive. It does not require a fitr.ong con stitution to stand them; it is sleeping in side which which ougot properly to be called exposure, and whi.ch demands if vigorous yiial.it/; and its the crowning triuuipJ l of civilization that it humanity to do tKiy without extermina tion. I have a creed to deliver Jay on this subject to a misguided and jiuiaouod pU^iiOl