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TERMS OF PUBLICATION The Cmitaxt.e Nan ste Is published weekly on a larg Meet containing twenty eight columns, and - Tarnished to subscribers at $1.50 If paid strictly in advanced $1.75 if paid within the year; or $2 in all rases when ray usout is delayed until after-the expiration of the No subscriptions received - for a less period than bix mouths, and noise discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. Paper, tout to SUbSZriberS living out of Cumberland county ltsust be paid far in advance, or the payment assumed by some responsible person living in Cumberland COMI ty. These terms will be rigidly adhered to •in all vales. AD VE fiTISEIIIEN TS, c , s• Advertisements will be charged . .On per square of 4 . waive lines for three insertions. and 25cents for each tt‘tibsequent Insertion. All atiertiscutents of less than 'twelve lines considered as a square. Advertisements inserted before Marriages and deathr rents per line for first, insertion, and 4 cents per line tar subsequent Insertions. Cominunicatiqns on sub. !Itt,cts of Welted or individual interest will lie charged 6 cents per line. rue Proprietor' will not be responsi ble In damages for errors in advertisements, Obituary notices or Marriages not exceeding five linos, will be Inserted without charge. JOB PRINTING Tho Carlisle Gerald JOB PRINTING OFFICE in the argunt and most complete establishment In the county pour good Presses. and a general variety of material uited for plain and Fanny work of every kind. enables tin to do Jok-Prltiting at the shortest notice anti on the moat reasonable terms. Persons in scant of Bills. - Blanks or anything in the Jobbing will find It to heir interest to Cot) a C Jll. B ALTIDIORE LOCK HOSPITAL. ESTABLISHED AS A RRFUGE 1.T.C))1 QUACKERY THE ONLY PLACE WHERE A CURE CAN DE OUTAIN ED LyJOIINSTON has discovered the in c., t , certain, speedy and only effectual remedy In th.. world fir all private disease, weakness of the hark or limbs, strictures:, tiff adieus of the kidneys and bled der, involuntary dis barges. imp dopey, corral debil ty, nervouquessi tlyspepsy. languor, low spirits. cumin sign of ideas; palpitation of th • heart, timidity, trem bllngs, dimness of sight or giddiness. disease of the head. throat, nose or skin, affections of the liver. lungs. stomach or bewels—those terrible disorders arising from the solitary )obits of youth—those cebret and sMitary practices snore fatal In their victims than the cmg of Ziyrens . to tae Maximus of Ulysses, blighting their most brilliant hopes ur authipatious, rendering marriage, Impossible. YOUNG MEN Especially, who have become the victims of solitary vice, that dreadful end destructive 110111.1- ally sweeps to MI untimely grave thousands of Young Men of the most exalted talents and brilliantintellest. who might otherwise have entranced listening `circus with the thunders of eloquence or waked to ecstasy the living lyre, may call with lull confidence. MARRIAGE. Married persons, or yenning men contemplating mar riage:Awing trefero of physical weakness, organic debil ity, deformities: - &e., speedily cured. lie who places himself under the-care of Dr. S. DIAN' religiously conotie in his honor as a gentleman, mud confidently rely upon'his skill as a physician. ORGANIC IRTBAIMESS Immediately cured. and full via., restored. 'this din tressing affection—which renders lite miserable and marriage Imposwilile—is the penalty paid 19 the of improper luduieencen, VOutig persons are too eh , to commit micesses f ro m no t h c ing aware nil the dreadful consequences that may ensue Now, who that under stand, the subject will pretend to deny that the power of procreation is lost sooner by thoie falling into im proper habits than by the iii Intent ? being In priced the phraFUrec of healthy offspring. the most , serious and destructive symptons to both body and mind anise. The,tystent. l.'olllf , deranged. the physi cal and mental function's u ea , 1•11011. low 0fpr0. , ...th power net, ants irritability. di spepsia, palpitate n on the heart,in•lige-tion, con.ditutional del iitty. a.wrbstx log of the frame, cough, c, to rupt Inn. decay :std dratil. OFIOE NO, 7 SOUTH FREDE.3.ICIE • ' wrilE Left bandiside golhg front Baltim is street, a WA' doors Irvin the corner. Vail,tint to observe name and sandier Letters must he itilltand contain a stamp. The Uue toda liiplowas. hang A CURE lATA.II.7I..ANTED IN TWO' .0 fusrs• No Mercury or Nauseous Druzs Jobt,tnrt. mein, ' Ser of the Ito% al Colleze, of •• urgrons. London i;i• utuattO from one of the must eminent foil. ges In the hilted States, and the greater pert of a hese lire has 1 nen spent in, the hospitals of ',ado.. l'hiladulphM and elsewhere, has effected of the must t•tnaisili ng cure:- that were ever 4: m•w n troUlAird wi , h ring ing in the head and ra, when asleep, great nervous , niece, taflag 1.121,11nd at sudden sound•, bashfulness, with frequent bl ush iu,. ntteurled sometimes smith dm • rangement of mind, were cured immediately. TARS PARTICULAR NOTICE Dr..l whit, aces all these which:tee injured themselves by improper indulgence and solitary habits. which ruin botil body and rabid. unfitting them for either bus news, study, society or marriage These de some of the sad and melancholy effects produced by early hab is of youth, viz: Weakness of the back and limbs pains in the head. dimness of sight, loss of muscular pewee, p.tipitatlon of the heart. dy , span sy,nervous irritability. derangement of the digestive functions, general debility, symptoms of -oosuropeion. Mextral.tv —The feariul effects on the mina are much to be dreaded—loss or morn try, confusion of ideas. de pression of spirits, evil forebodirtgs, aversion to society, self distrust, loco of solitude, timidity, Lie., are some of the evils produced. Thousands of persons of all ages can now judge what is the cause of their declining health. 11.111 g their vig or, becoming weak. pale, nervous and emaciated. ha vi ng a singular appearance about the eyes, cough and symp toms of consumption. VOTING MEN Who have injured themselves by a certain practice indulged In when alone, a habit frequently learned Sem evil companions, or at school, the effects of which are nightly felt, even when nation, and if not cured renders marriage impossible, and destroys both mind and body, should apply immediately, What a pity that a young man. the hope of his roue try, the darling of his parents, should be snatched from all prospects and etd,.yment4 of life, by the rontequeuee of deviatitil from the path of nature and indulging in a certain secret habit. Such persons must before con. tenp:ating MA.URTAGE reflect that a Fnuud mind nod body are the most ne cessary requisites to promote connubial happiness Indeed, without these, the journey through life becomes a weary pilgrimage; the prospect hourly darkens to the view; the mind becomes shadowed with despair and filled with the melancholy reflection that the happluesh of another begotues blighted with our own. DISEASE Or IMPRUDENCE When the misguided and imprudent votary of plea. sure (Inds that he lice imbibed the seeds of this painful disease, it too often happens that en 11l timed sense of shame, or dread of-discovsfyy, - dotars him from applying to those who. from edu c ation and respectability. can alone belt lend him, delaying till the constitutional symptoms of this horrid disease make their appearancel such as ulcerated sore throat, disamod nose, nocturne, pales la the head and limbs, dimness of filch'. deafness, "tadtliefi — On'the -, 'hiti Nines anlt arms, — bliCteteli nit the' head. taco and extremities, progressing with frightful rapidity, till at last the palate of the mouth or the bones of the nose fall In, and the victim of this n wfdl disease becomes n hotel I object of codamisoration, till death puts a period to his dreadful suffering-, by send ing him to " that Undiscovered Country from whpuce o traveller returns." 11 is a nielatudiolY fiat that thousand.; fall *lima tO tins terrible disease, owing to the unshillfulniem of id , vinrept pretenders. who, by the use of that deadly poi. Qgn i Nitacory,Ttlin tbo 9oustitution end make the re• 1.44 1 .1 e of life uncentlile. STRA.NiiERS Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of the kany unlearned and worthless pretenders. dentatuto of nowledge. name or charact..r, who copy Ur. Johnstou'e pivertiantnents, or style themsolv,es, in the newspapers, I.r4ularly ad &atmd physicians. incapable of curing. they keep yin trifling Men th after month taking th4r filthy • and p deonotir.conipounde: or nit longue the smallest fee Fan be obtailea, and in despair, lonvo .you with ruined health to. sigh - over your galling disappointment. Dr. johnstouls tha only Physician advertising. credantinlior Milton - las always bang in his office. ills remedies or trt gtment are unknown to alinthers, i proparod' from' a liroapent in the great hospitalti or En rope, the, first:ln' tho country. spat a more ,taxtunsWo " prlvate'pMetice than any other physician in the world. )IIMORSIFCIIIONT bP Tile PRESS. 'rho many thousands cured- at'thls institution year she, year'-and the numerous important Surgical Ope rations. porMrpted , by Br. Johnston, witnsssed by the reporters of the Sun." "Olipper.t. and many other papers,' notices of wh i ch have appearo i !Main and again before the public, besides hismtnetting• es a gentientat. pf Character and responsibility, lea sufficloulguarantee to the afflicted. , *MIN bisEA.sps SIPTIEDILY CURED . . rumens writing should 'be parlicultir in direetine }heir letierstr, tatis,institutlon, In the following MAU nor : • JUt M . JOIINSTON, M. D... 19If the Baltimore Look hospital, Baltimore, 51d. 'MY 2, 1862—ly' NEW SPRING GOODS . - . - • I, am, now rooiving. a large assortment of 110 , 7 OA olegant Spring gools, to whieh 1 rnsp..et t dily , eall the attiintlon of ray old &hinds and' cuAto more, and all in vita of It'andsetne and cheap'gooda - .Vartienlara in neat minks paper. 1.. will sell us cheap ciiany store in the ilerongh. ' .. ' -•- • '• 1 . • CIIAS: ocruaiy•Tr4stoo. .April , i, 188.,._, _ . „, ' • _ . .. , - ' - :nbciiir , S;•simovis-a-.. , 43/LITE s. „ ..:- '!,.Ogilliiy.'s, - cheap - ca s h stork; Ju , i 6ll‘ resolved an•iisSorttnunt of tiffilteS, 5 Issas, an. C tfroos Clatters. Boots 41:13koci 'of tho b , st, quoin) and batplsoine sqlos. , Art 4 t 1862. Actricta Woctiig. The Captain With His Whiskers As thoy marched through the town with their banners so gdy I ran to the window to hear the band play; I pooped through the blinds so cautiously then, Lost the neighbors should say I was looking at the men Oh I I heard the drums boat, and Iho music so sweet, But my eyes at the ticuo caught a much greeter t!eat; For the troops were the finest I over did see, And the Cnptain with his whiskers took a sly glance at we. (Repeat the last four lines.) %Then we mot nt the ball, I of course thought It right To appear us If we had never mot till that night ; But the knew me nt once, 1 perceived by h s glance And I hung down my bend when he asked me to dance; Ohl he sat by my side at the end of the set, And the sweat words he sold I shall nei Cr forgot: For my heart was enlisted, and I could ,no, free free, As the Captlan with his whisker:: took a sly glance ut me. But he marched from the town, and I see !aim no more, Yet I think of him oft and the whiskers ho v?ore; I dream all the night, apd talk all the day, Of the love of a Captain'who has gone far away; I remember with superabundant delight, When we met in the'street and danced all the night, And keep in mind, how my heart danced with glee, As the Captain with his will -kers took a sly glance al mo. . . But there's hope, f.or a ft lend Ad' ten minutes ago, Said the Captain retu.ned from the War, and T know Will bubo searching for MO with considerable zest, And when I em round, but oh! you know all the rent: Perhaps ho is here—let me look' around the house— Keep still—every one of you—still as a mouse; For If the dear creature Is here, he will be With his whiskers a taking sly gla.,e, at me. ~~~ 1;~~~~13111 t.i711~". BULL RUN RUSSELL TRAINED. scAT HING clt ITIC I ON OR It US MT; It LC ANC . A"I ErR. II CZ -- PORK A LONDON ADD! I.:NCE, BY GEO. ritnavcis TRAIN. The quegtion being—" Was President Lincoln justified in refusing permission to the 'Halos correspondent to embark with the. Federal • army ?" Mr. George Francis Train rose to reply to several speakers, who had taken the negative of the proposition Ile said : Mr Chairman and Gcnilemen—No debate can show vigor unless there are twn sides. To•night. thus far: there has -been but one. littsell is the pot (,)f the petmle, and the rebuke he has received at cVashington has offended,you; henc. , comments have been made to-night too sweeping in their censure, too severe in ttLcir iipplieatiorc for. me - to let then. pass un not iced. et, It is a delicate thing, for a foreigner to attack the household gods of any cation ; but those who know me are aware that 1 generally express my thoughts regard less of the consequences to myself. I shall look at this question entirely through; my own eyes, hear it through my own , ears, scent it with my own nasal organ— [laughter]—taste it with my own tongue; and feel it with my own hands. [Ap plause.] A corporation, it is said, has "no soul to save, or body to kick."— [Laughter.] Ido not expect to find the loaner in the Times correspondent, but I will leave it to you to say, when I have concluded, whether I have net discovered some Secession spot as a resting place for the foot of A Union man. [Laughter and applause.] TILE TIMES A SYSTEMATIC VILIFIER The Times, fur a half century, as the paid organ of the governing classes, has consistently abused and misrepresented anything American. Its policy has been to search the criminal calender for the most obscene and revolting cases of crime, in order to portray them in its columns as the leading characteristics of the American people. Out of a hundred leaders in the American papers, on com merce, education, or politics their might have been one article on crime—that ar ticle was at once seized upon by the Times to prove to Europe, from our own mouths, how demoralized we had become. Vice was always inserted in the leaded type— Virtue was not a characteristic of Repub lics. By constant repetition of these slanders, everything that was vile in the history •of man was stamped upon . the American. Americans are generous as well as just, and—you can iimigine *how mortified they must have been, after the warm-hearted shako of the hand they gave your future king, to B'6o the Times preach day after day against the Union and the law. At. the commencement of the war Mr. Rhssell was sent out to describe tho vie issitodes of the strife. We know him as we 'know-all your writers, and are first to discover their talents. Thackery was known' in every village, end returned to England with money in his pocket to bo told, when he was defeated at Cambridge, that there were only three men on the electoral list who had ever heard ofliin. [Laughter,] Russell reigned supreme as the king of correspondents; mid his graphic descriptions of Crimean and Indian war fare were familiar, to us all. So many errors have been committed to-night-by the speakers who have preceded use, you had better let me give 4 . hasty glance at his - career ; first stating three distinot :negatives. ItU§SELL'S HISTORY-LIKE, DIASTER.rICE MAN Russell is an Irishman; and not. an Eng. lishman. • .[ljear, hear.] • Russell was not the Times' correspcndent in Raki, ; . and you aught toknow . as. ,as-I, t hat—it was poor Howthy and not .:RtiSsell:..who' succeeded Cook in China. 'Nobody Seems to know whether:•:ittiesell ,Was, - -born.. in .181 6, :or`lB2l, Ifut, toidiniting ;at Trin ity, he 'notninenced•writiiig tor. the Times in • .1.843; Living at .a-Sensatiqn • timo, when O'Connell was' the sensation ;lender,: Russell became a sensation letter4riteri Lind,. with the exception, of the short, .riod from 1845 to 1847 i when he was-on PaPMR, H'OR, W,ME waaaszllr gamma. the Chronicle, he has been chief of the Times' staff. In 1850 ho became a bar rister, the literary dodge often practiced to opo'n the door to good society. [Oh !] The gentleman says oh !—but it is noto• rious that he never held a brief, wore a wi g , or gave a legal opinion. He did what Carter Hall, and Make-Peace Thack eray did before him—paid the hundred pound barrister-license to obtain the locus standi of the West End. In 1854 and 1855 he was the tyrant of the army at the Crimea, and, so unfairly did he use the means at his command, there are many officers now in the British army who treat him with the scorn he deserves. His attack upon the commissary department did more to prolong the contest than is generally known. I was told, when at St. Peters burgh after the war, that the Emperor received telegraphic dispatches from London as to the wretched condition of the allied forces, as described by " our own correspondent," which made the Russians more vindictive and more de• tertnined, more obstinate, and stimulated them to make greater exertions to pour down troops to the Crimea. [Hear, hear, and true ] England may thank Russell for the ad ditions to many a Crimean graveyard, and many a ruble home in England hes been made sad by this reckless trader in human reputation, who yesterday came sniveling, like a whipped sci.oolboy, be fore the British people, in a three-column attack upon the American GoVetanient ; siiuply beciuse - that Government has. en forced its orders, not against Mr. Russell only, but against all the correspondents of the world, American as well as European • France, he forgets to mention, was the dear ally of England in the Russian war, yet he was refused permission 'o enter the I French camps, although the allied Gen i crals were acting in concert. [Applause.] The Emperor sent a special order plio• I prohibiting his entrance inside the ranks It was enough ,to see tile Times play into the hands of Russia by slandering the without. libelling the French as well. President Lincoln has I I only followed the action of some other dis tinguished names. Do you think that the British iGovernment would allow array newspaper correspondent, in the employ of any other Government, to criticize any of the movements of the army on the field battle ? [N o ft of c sinle Russell . should ask a..favor of_the President whom a short time ago he ac cused of manslaugter in hanging the slave trader, Gordon. 134, to continue—in IKA3 he was scot to Mosesw to paint the picture of Alexander's coronation, and I will do him the justice to say that' he painted it well [Elicers ] That year his collei L ie dubbed him LL. D. The iicst year he was..in established that lamentable failure, the Arniv and Navy Gazettc.i. And now we come more direaitly to the t questiim in de bate, was the President justified in his expulsion! [Hear, hear.] IN LEAGUE WITH THE REBELLION Received at New York with open arms, introduced at our clubs, and in our lies, he writes his first letter, and libel, declaring that there was no Union feeling, no Union sentiment, no Union army, in the North ; predicting the, entire collapse of our Republic. He went to Wablimg on, where doors opened wide again to give him welcome, and again ho replied with another sneer against the Federal resources. He passed on to Charleston, and ther6 it was that he foUnd the gen tleman, the chivalrous officer, the annoint ed Carolinian : and Abolition Russell fell violently in love with negro slavery and Southern brandy. Froin this point he wrote that Republicanism was dead in the South—the Confederacy wanted a king—and the Prince of Wales was sug• Bested. That noble Prince, who a few months before had been insulted in Rich mond, the only place where he was not well received in the Western world ! Acting' on these letters and his Confed erate conspiraty, Mr. Bunch—the Se cession British Consul at Charleston— Lord John Russell made his first false step in acknowledging the Rebels as bel li,,erents, and it is not the fault of those British spies that the foreign Secretary did not acknowledge the Confederacy Under the sacred cover of diplomatic let ters, it is fair to resume that at this time Ile made his plans to furnish through the Britis'• despatch bags to the Rebel Gen erals the entire plans of the -Northern ar my • [Oh ! add where's your proof?] as well as to keep Yancey and the 13ritish Government thoroughly posted, through the despatches of Lord Lyons to the For• eign Office ; acting the double part of a British informer and a Rebefi:py I [Dis sent and proof, proof.]••• You ask for proof— I refer you to the diplonmiic correspondence, in the month of October, between . Mr. Seward, Mr. Adams rind Lord Lyons, demanding the recall of Mr, Bunch for sending Rebel papers from the- Southern leaders - to their Commissioners here, through Lord Lyon's despatch bag; and the Foreign'. Mr. Seward having tripped up the Brit isliduVernment in this equivocal piece of diplomacy, Lord John Russell afterwards sent his special messenger by every steamer to Washington, and it is a s'ingu• tar factthat Yana y was the first to obtain every information on both -sides of the line the moment- thiff arrangement .was made; [hear, hear,' but to go, on, Russell was next at Fort Pickens, which he false ly predicted would soon be occupied Gen. Bragg; but. recent events have ,proved that Omagh- Gen did Bragg- may boa good dog, General Holdfast is a bet , ter. '[Laughter,] ILE .bncisske Tit*. LINE.. . At New Orleans ho &Cimino& to be disgusted with tho South, and believing thtit he could'reach the Norili before hi, % letters returned, he began abusing those %Om had entertairied him, and iidictileo the riffraff 'that composed the Southerl, ardv His.pieture, however, of the pov eriy Of the English - wilei arid danghtais whose; husbatUls and fathers had been impressed into the Southern army, to- CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 6-, -180. gather with the several British subjects who were imprisoned at New Orleans, created' no such horror in England, as the arrest of one British subject would have done in the North ; but lot me hurry on. At Cairo, he thanked his God that he had left the land of ruffians and gamblers, and was again under the Stars and Stripes. His letters haying come back to Ameri ca, he accused the Southern Post office of having tampered with his correspondence, forgetting that his employers in Printing House Square are• ever ready to cut a truth out of any letter and insert a lie when it answers their purpose. Not en tirely corrupt, still respecting the lessons of the Pilgrims, we still' 'Observe one of the good old Puritan customs of keeping the Sabbath holy. _ BECOMES A PRAIRIE lIUNIER W.hat must be the disgust of the good people of Illinois to find this model church man out in the prairie xith his dogs and gun, disturbing the peaceful services in the little village church on its border, with the report of .fire arms. An ever lasting disgrace upon the English people, as well as an insult to our - own:. He was summoned to the police mart, and out of respect to the church-going nation he represented, as well as disgusted with his ignorance of our religious customs, he was discharged. He returned to Washingtoi in time to desetibe as an eye-witness the battle from which he acknowledges that he was -six miles • distant: - [Laughter.] It has come to piss that he arrived in Washington - some hours in advatico of the disorganized volunteers, which he rid icules, and carves his. facts out of his im agination. He is a word painter, and can paint a truth as well as a lie; but his taste runs in 'the latter vein. Conse quently he sinks truth wherever he can, so that he may the more effectually float the lie with which lie caters to the appetite of English Secession. [Where's your ',Toot' l] RUSSELL AS A PROPHET Mark some of his- •prophesies,--and the proof shall be ample. Did he not say that Burnside's expedition would be a [llear, hear, and yes ] You knoW: that it was a perfect-success.. [Ap• plause ] Did he not say that we had no power of raising an army out of our vol unteers? You know how false has been the assertion. [llear, bear.] Did he not-say that -we had no - riles; - no - artillery, no officers, no generals? You know gen tlemen, that never before was an army so thoroughly equipped. [Hear, hear ] Did •i he not say that it v 7,18 impos4;ble 40, Save the Moder states? And yet Miss&iri, Kentucky, Tennessee and Maryland are all back again; while Virinia and Nort!l, Carolina are knocking at the Union 40. Did hn not-Fay-that the - Itchet - araryiretild make a terrible fight at Manassas ? And yet how rapidly they fled at the advance :Jai: McClellan. [Acta, hear.] Do you want more proof, gentlemen, of this mis erable slanderer's libels ? Take Island i I No 10 ; did he not say there would be no Rebel resistance there ? And yet the cannot have be..n roaring there for weeks . in front; whip- we cut a twelve mile ca nal up to their back door, and bagged their entire army of six thousand men. Did he not say that the An erioan people would not take up the first loan, and the second, and the third 7 [llear, hear.] Did he not say that our people were bank rupt, our Government insolvent, our Treasury empty ? Did he not say that Atum icans would not allow themselves to ho taxed ? And yet, kentlemon, tune has shown that he is not only a Use prophet, but a systematic liar ! [Dissent ] Gentlemen, you must excuse my bad French—[Loud laughter ]—while Icon-' tinue my dissection of this libellous charl atan !—the paid agent to misrepres,nt every thing American. [A. gentleman rose to say that Train's language was unparlimentary, and while the debate was quite free, the epithets used and bitterness displayed by Mr. Train were quite uncalled for.] Mr. Train continued—You know, gen tlemen, that I usually express my own thoughts—not yours. My words are percussion caps, not flint-locks, and I told you on the start that I should brim , re volvers to bear against Mr. Russell and the speakers who defend him, if they put any more fire-crackers in my breeches. [Loud laughter, and hear, hear.] A PROPHET WITLI A GLASS EYE —To continueas M. Russell's ".letters returned to Ainerialriotit , :iridependent press soon discovereoPinsteadV an able. bodied, healthy argument, nothing but false hair, false teeth ' dyed .:NiThiskers glass eye and a woderi leg ;. in other words—stereotyped sham instead of a fine specimen of English honesty. It will be remembered that some time ago_ corres pondents were prohibited from following the army ; this was followed. up by the Government seizure . of the telegraph offices. Liao was discovered a fine 'nest of traitors, andrwho do you suppose was the chief robber. in the band? Why, William Howard Russell the reliable:cor respondent of the London Times—[Ele4r, hoar, and Oh.] WUAT OBSCURED TUE''TIMEeVISION: Tho mystery was at last solved, the se cret cams, out, and the • liostili(y of the Thues---,tho Secession spirit of the Go rern inent—wa3 explained, and the gigan tic plot , discovered; whiCh ; already has filled 'Many a Western :graveyard;_ and has ruined, is ruining, and .will; continue to ruin, thousands in 'England: „The time has arrived for the world tei• understand that the whole action.of the Tiineti, throughT its leaders and ,eciircspendents,' has been to weigh . golden 'sovercips in the soak against huinanlile' and ,humaniniseiy.--i somebody ha,s wade inibionS, rumor points to; Rothschild, and 'Some. distinguished names in political life, as the accomplices of ~the Times in this fiefariousi:plot tell' volvo the English and Americans in 'an , inhuman war ' -that! they : .Inight i:nrikei it ,ew More bundred.,thousandit iu the Stdek ' - ii:xchauge._'..EA voice—" You laVe no right to niake,,ituolt a statement_ without - rreof.!' Cries'of - erderj. • , i RUSSEL AS A STOOK OPATOR Unfortunately, I have tocrinuch proof. Among, the despatches seized by the Go vernment this one was discovered : "Washington. Dec. 27th, half-past two P. M.—frutit W. H. Russell to Samuel Ward, NeW York 'Hotel. Act on this telegram as though you heard good news for you and me." [Hear, hear.] This, you remember, was the crisis of the Trent affair. Russell had just obtained the im portant secret from Lord Lyons that the Rebel Commissioners would be given up, and sent his orders to purchase, right and left, all kinds of stock in the New York market; aro to make the speculrition sure he wrote a letter to the Times that night, to go by the next day's steamer, saying that he knew Mason and Slidell not only would be given up, but, that there was every proSpect of immediate war. Now, I maintain that such acts are sufficient to condemn him at the tribunal of English public opinion, and to fasten upon the - Titues the entire responsibility of the ter rible distress that now exists in the man ufacturing districts, and now agitates the mind of the London laborer and the Lon don poor. It is well known that import ant despatches were suppressed by your Government for three weeks, and that in, portant operations took place upon the Stock txchange through Rothschild's broker. Read the weak reply of the Morning Post to the Morning Star. Tin!, CROwNINCr AST 4SioAr,i.zsilis.9.. In conclusion, I may mention the mean eat and - the last net of Mr. 11U - itself's con• temptible course in America. Well know ing the order of the Department prohib iting all correspondents from following the army, he sneaked on board the Gov ernment transport under the past: pro tection of his American . friend, General I`Glellan; ° find then it was that the Se cretary was obliged:to re•issue the order, never for a moment supposing that any English gentleman would have done su mean a thing. Thu impudence of the man tout-Russell's Russell. Think of him writing to the Secretary of 1 - V :.r to know it' ho (the Secretary) really meant to act on the order that he (the Secretary) is sued !—following it up with an audacity almost beyond. -belief, by writing to the President to know if he permitted his Secretary of War to take any such action To show you the impertinence of the thing, let me suppose a case. Ireland has seceded; I art ive in London as the corrcs londent of the New York Herald; having net Lbrd Clyde in the Crimea, I obtain ed permission to acc,:nipany him to Ire ;intik htei, g first written my lectors Lathe Herald, ridiculing the English army, .English Generals, and English Ministers proving beyond a doubt how impossible fur England lP.recov.er_lteland, At this moment, these- letters having re turned to England, the - Secretary of ‘Var calls Lord Clyde's attention to an order prohibiting correspondents from joining the army.. Imagine my indignantly wait ing upon Lord Palmerston to know if he meant to act on the army order.; and then, if you can, imagine my having the auda city to have penetrated the gloom of 9s-- boine, to see if some higher power couldn't make the Premier rescind his instructions. [Laughter.] I think, gentlemen, I ha;'e succeeded in defending the Administra tion and Mr. Stanton. Russell went to America an Abolitimi% ist; he came back, as most Englishinen do, a pro slaveryman. He went to Ame rica as a gentleman; he returned, after outraging all the rules of good society, to chuckle with his employers over the for tunes that had been made over this stock jobbing operation. I called him a robber =is it not robbery to deprive widows and orphans by frightening them into selling their stocks at ruinous prices? is it not vill iiny to paint a lie so that it shall re serm le truth ? Is it not murder so to disseminate these lies as to prolong a con test at the cost of thousands of lives ? Is it not damnable to speculate in human flesh, placing pounds in the scale against human life ? Is it not criminal, by the repetition of continued falsehoods,to create an animosity between two people that it may be difficult to allay ? He said our mob would not give up Mason and Slidell; b-it when you know he said it in order to speculate uppn the Stock Exchange, you can see what relianCe could have been placed upon the report of the battles that are now taking place. ...He went to Ame rica, bloated with the. coneeit_of-his . oivn importance. The American journalists have tapped him, and his sudden collapse in a well-Merited rebuke to his employers. Under the impulse of champagne and good brandy he can paint a battle scene; but how shallow, /side froba this, how feeble his correspondence, generally ap pears. A DWARF AND A GIANT COAIPARED Do Tocquevillo visited America, and wrote a searching analysis of our install. tions. Russell has hadqnuple time to do the same; but has ho done so ? No.— What has he told the English people of our enormous resources 7,-,our gigantic energy?--our terrible resolution ? What has ho said about our progressive agricul ture.?- Qu: increasing manufacturing strength? Where has he described our progress in Shipbuilding, and in railways; and in telegraph:s? What has he. told tho English people of our educational sys- tems,' Oar- common 'schools, and our cot loges? What mays have bcen written, analyzing our social and. political Pray, in what respect has he'followed the nuble example of Do Toqueville in giving Europe a philosophical treatise on repub 'jean' institutions , . • Gentlemen, l have finished; in sitting down let mMsay that had I been in Wash , ingtom-I *Olll4 Wive 'allowed him to have follawOd the artny—[eheers]—in order to `show how little we, cared for• his contin ued slanders. But I think I have oaid enough to.make you admit that Preaidant Lincoln was quite jastilied in ,not .entirely,. consulting William Howard.Russell.ne,to the _policy of the' more or lass..T . ..lnit c d States of Amerioia. LicarriNp is the wit, ornmture OLD HUNDRED In a rustic old church opposite, while we write, a company of worshippers arc singing the old, old hymn: '. Do thou, 0 God, exalted high!" The air is as old, also—the immortal " Old Hundred." If it be true that Luther composed that tune, and if the.worship of mortals is carried on the wings of a gels to listiv• en, how often he heard the declaration, "They are singing 'Old Hundred' now." The solemn strain carries us back to the times of the Reformers—Luther and his devoted band. He doubtless, was the first to strike the grand old chords in the public sanctuary of his own Germany. Frotn this own stentorian lungs they roll-" ed, vibratim , t' not through vaulted cathe dral roof, but along a grander arch, the eternal heavens. He wrought into each note his own sublime faith, and stamped it with that faith's immortality. Hence it cannot die! Neither man nor angels will let it pass into oblivion. Can you find a tomb in the land where scaled lips lay that have not sung that tune? If they were gray old men, they had heard or sung " Old Hundred." If they were babes, they smiled as their mothers rocked them to sleep, singing ' Old Hundred." Sinner and saint have joined with the endlesli congregation, where it has, with and without the peal ing organ, sounded on sacred air. .The dear little children, looking with wonder in on this strange world, have lisp efit. . 'the sweet young girl whose tombstone told of sixteen summers, msho whose pure and innocent face haunted you with its mild beauty, loved "Old Hundred" and she sung it, closed her eyes and seemed communing, with the angels who were soon to claim her. He whose manhood was devoted to the service of bis God, and who with faltering steps ascended the pulpit stairs with white hand placed over his laboring breast, loved "Old Hundred." And though sometimes his Mips only moved, away - down in his heart, so soon to o.mase its throbs, the holy mel ody was sounding. The dear, white headed lather, with his tremulous voice, how he loved " Old Hundred." Do you see hint now, sitting in the venerable armchair, his arms crossed over the top of his cane, his silvery locks floating off from hi - s'hollow temples, and a tear, per chance, stealing down his furrowed check as the noble strains ring out ? Do you hear that thin, tluiverinm , , faltering sound now bursting forth, now listened fur al most. vain ? If you do out, ; and trout such lips, hallowed — by fourscore year's s rvice in the ,luster's cause. "Old Hundred" sounds indeed a sacred melo dy.. .. You may fill your churches with choirs, with Sabbath prima donnas, whose daring notes emaciate the steeple, and cost al most as much, but give us the spirit-stir ring tones Of the Lutheran hymn, sung by young and old together. Martyrs have hallowed it; it hats gone up from the dy ing beds of the sainte. The old churches, where generation after generation has worshipped, and where manyfsoores of the dear dead have been carried and laid before the altar where they gave them selves to God, seem to breathe of " Old HUndred" from vestibule to tower-top— the very air is haunted with its spirit. Think, for a moment, of the assembled company who have at different times, and in different places, joined in the familiar tune ? Throng upon throng—the stern, the timid, the gentle, the brave, the beau tiful their rapt faces all beaming with the inspiration of the heavenly sounds " Old Hundred !" king of the sacred band of ancient airs, never shall our ears grow weary of hearing, or our tongues of singing thee ! And when we get to hea ven, who knowS but what the first trium phal strain that welcomes us may be— " Do thou, 0 God, exalted high!" WHY is an infant like a dimond ? because it is a dear little thing. A man with a long head is not very apt to be headlong. CAN a man who has been fined by the magistrate again again, be considered a re /ined man. SuttELY that no man may be envied who can eat pork chops for supper, and sleep without a grunt. - DID you ever know a speaker to prom ise " only a few words," and not -utter a great many ? 1r seems singular that the fierce flame in the bosom of .our charming Rebel wo man does not set their cotton on fire. Gentlemen who smoke allege that it makes them calm and complacent:. They toll us the more they fume tho less they fret, " DEACON," said, a minister, after a heavy sermon, '• lam very tired." " In deed, ' rep.ied the deacon, " then you'll know how to pity us." AN honest Hibernian,- upon, reading his physician's bill, replied that ho has no objection to pay him for his mediolue, but his visits ho would return. js the man who has got to the top of. the hill by honesty is ashamed to turn 'about and look at.the.lowly road he has travelled, he deserves to. be takQn by the neck and hurled to the bottom again. A. sailor of great iiianinsions__wha...was: in one of the boats at the siege of. Fort: Donelson, kept down his head When the shot were flying. think over the, ,beli.k,44i' " For shame, hold up l yOur - heaell dereci an oilicer,in ,the stern-7 sir, when there is room for was the; Bbar P • - - Young , man Who applied at a re- , orni tin; station, for enlistment, was asked; " if he could Sloop on the point of a bay corioe;"Arhbri'lelmicuptly,repliod by say ing : "bd could' try it, as ~het had often' slept, on, a:pint ef whiskey, sand the 'kind, they.used .werei he. came from- would kill farther than any shooting Aron he over . $g 50 per R.IIIHAIM to advance ts 2 00 if not paid in advance Law of Newspapers. I. A failure to notify a discontinuanoe at the end of a term will be regarded-aaa" new engagement. 2. If subscribers order a dis Continuance of their newspaper, the publishers may continue to scud them until all arrearageg are paid. 3. If subscribers neglectoto refuse to take their newspapers from the office to which they are sent, they are held re sponsible until they have settled the bills and ordered them discontinued. 4. If subscribers remove to other pla. C2B without informing the publishers and the newspapers are sent to the former direction, they are held responsible. 5. The Courts have decided, that re fusing to take a periodical from the office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is a prima facia evidence of intention- . al FRAUD. 6 The Courts have also repeatedlyide eided that Postmasters who neglect to ier form the duty of giving reasonable no tice as is required by the regulation of the Post Office Department, of the ne glect of a person, to take from the office newspapers addressed to him renders the Post Alasters liable to the publisher for the subscription. ' AMUSING INCIDENT.—An amuBing incident lately occurred in one of_ the American camps between a private,,,Who was acting sentinel near a hospital, and a general. On the approach of the hitter, the former neglected to gise_ the. _nous, tomed salute. ,The general then sharply replied : "Who stands guard here "A chap about my size" answered the private. Chat are your duties Hero ?" General— 'To allow the sic!: to come out and to keep the well in." "Call your Corporal." "You won't catch me doing that. I don't intertd to stand here two hours long' er than usual to please you. , (The senti nel alluded to,a. rule which gives, corpor, als the power when they are unnecessarily called by sentinels, to punish them by two hours extra duty•) The general indignant at these replies hunted up the lieutenant of the guard, and facing the sentinel said. "What instructions do you give your men in saluting your superior officers. The lieutenant saldle, the sentinel; "Have not I told.youlcisaluteyoursupe rior offieers--do you 'tilitlinow that this is your general g" The Sentinel with a lo k of amaze; meat replies; 'lf the Almighty is not better acquain ted with him as a general than I am, be is a lost man, sure." THE NEWSPAYErt.—Thero is no book so cheap as the newspaper; none so in teresting, because it consists of a variety measured out in suitable proportions as td time and quality. Being new every week or day, it invites a habit for reading and affords an agreeable mode of acquiring knowledge so essential to the welfare of the individual and the community. It causes many an hour to pass away plea slintly and profitably which would other wise have been spent in idleness, if not in mischief. Particularly . in a family it is of immense importance, as inculcating a-good taste among children, a fondness for reading and at2the same time impart ing largely of instruction to their minds. We are prepared to say that it is an easy matter at a glance to say whey you see young people, and even children old enough to read, whether their homes are made pleasant and themselves improved by access to good readable papers or not: Let heads of families think of this. A man with a scolding wife, when in quired of in ridation to his ocoupation; said ho kept a hot house. A schoolmaster in Ireland advertises that he will keep Sunday school twice week Tuesdays and Saturdays. The reward of villains is various: some of them are hung, others cropped and branded—others elected to office. Action is a great hygienic principle..-+• Inaction fills more hospitals than energe• tic strife; it is better fur to wear out thku rust out. A gentleman who went off in search of his rights has returned to Louisville, and says the only ones he was likely to find in the Southern Confedoraoy was his fun.- oral rites. WIIY aro two young . laditalisshig each other an emblem of CiTiristianity ? • An. swer,. Because they are doing unto -each other as they would men, should tit) uato them. A young doctor in a new' eettlemeut,, on being asked to contribute towards en closing and ornamenting the pillage cam.' etery, very coolly replied, that if he filled it he thought be should do hie part. , A distinguished divine, on a certain occasion, while 'pre - aching with ''his usual eloquence ~ a nd power, said :-- • "Brethren,' I sometime s illustrate.my , sub.' jeot in this manner and putting• bis handkerchiof to his mks,' • blew a blast• loud enough to wake the seven sleepers. That, was not the 'intended illustration, but sorno of his hearers thought it was. gr:37.l'wo Irishmen were going to 6ra i o ra cannon :;just ftir fun, but botng dun, economical turn of min,d, they did no ,w i sh to lose the ball, 139,:pne took an, iron. Iketilein his hand to cittehlt in, and eta ., ittiiiiing,laitnself in 'front ofd e; loom" !odisqurvxolaimoa- to the : lOU(' whb Steal iliehindlhoiding a lighted torch, • a'totieh ' ilt\ . 'laYi4 llo- ! - • . • , . qiiriarrating the oircurestancee of re-. , 1 debt sulazitMo3onneetient, ther, aperattay . that besiteafbAno deaf t 'dumb d:ancildl bachelor; tinikbprturiate M i an h a . . ..xhib-', n ited evideniies'of ieaanity. , It' it vrat not. 'nearly, time for that' unfortunate roan ; toit. ' commit suieidei we- should like t0....,kn0wi mhen, a man could be placed,io thateprt7;- ,dlenment. t - ' MEE NO 23.