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TERMS OF PUBLICATION ...The4liattashr.-NER/411)-iRpnblixtre'd welthly an itthrgo shoot containing twenty ight colums and furnished to aubscribers at $1,50 if paid strictly in advance, $1,75 it paid within the year; or $2 in all rases When pay meat in dtgayed until alter the expiration o' the year No subscriptions •received for a loss period than six Months, and noun discontinued until all the arrearages aro paid, unless at the option of the publisher. Papers sent to subicribers living out of Cumberland ca n must be paid for In advance. or ho payment assumed by some responsible person living i. Climbed:lml county. Those terms will be rigidly adhered to in all cases, ADVERTISEIIIENTS Advertisements will lon rimmed 1.00 per square of tWOIVO lines for three insertions. and 25 fl!Ilto for each übsequent insertion. All advertisements of loss than twelve 1111 es rolloi;lered as a square. Ad vertlsetnents in .erted before Marriages slid sleuths 9 sente per Ilne for first insertion. and 4 routs por line for subsequent insertions. Comm Jules t lons ou suldtiets of limited or individual in t... 1.04 will be 'barged 5 eents ietr line. The Proprietor NVIII not be rasp maibla in damages for errors in advertisements. Obituary notices or Marriages not exceeding, live liars, Will be inserted without eliarge. JOB PRINTING Tho Carlisle Herald JOll NUN PISA OFFICE is the Itirgwt and must complete establihsment In the county. Four good Presses, and a general variety of materials united for plain and Fain.) , work of every kind enables its to do Job Printing . at the shortest notice 311d.011 the most reasonable terms. Persons in want of Bilis. Blanks or anything In the ,lobbing line, will flnirit, to their interest to give us a rail. BALTIMORE LOCK HOSPITAL. ESTABLISHED AS A REFUGE FROM QUACKERY THE ONLY PLACE WHERE A CURE CAN BE 011 T INVI) • T)11. JOHNSTON has discovered the most certain, speedy and only effectual remedy in Ih. world fir all private dh.mtses. weakness of the luch or strictures, iff elfous of the 'kidneys and Hod der, involuntary dis,harges, impntuney, eencral drhilb ty, nervousness, dyspepsy. languor, low sph its. confu sion of ideas, palpitation of th • heart, timidity, trim, blings, dimness of sight or giddiness, disea,... of the head, throat. nose or skin, affections of the liver, hums. stomach or bowels—those terrible disorders arising plan the solitary habits 01 youth— t lose renret and solitary practices more, fatal to their vie' ims than the t.,ng of tsy rens to the Mariners of Ulys.es. blighting thtdr most brilliant hopes or anttemstions, rendming in3r. YOUNG VIE a E9,,e1.11y, wile hare heNenc the victims of snlitary Ae, that dreadful and deettuctivo habit which an uu. ally sweeps Le au untimely grave—thousands of Young Men or the most mmkted talents and brilliant Intl who might otherwise have entranced Whaling Senates with the thunders of eloquenedor waked to ecstm.y living lyre, may call wit It full confidence. 7tarlleti persons, or voting mon rontemplating mar riage. being aware or physical eealtness, organic debil ity, cletorinities, speedily cured. Ile who plans himself mill, the rare of Dr. J. may col Lintz 1p ront,de in his honor as a gentleman, and ( . 11fldently rely upon his skill ;Is a physician'. W.E.AIENESS Immediately cured, awl full vigor rest p red. This dis tressing affection—which enders life miserable and ninrriagi3 impossible—is the penalty paid by the viethms of improper Indulgences. Young persons are too apt to commit exce,ses from not being aware at the dreadful c-mstqluem•es that may ensue Now, tr ho that under vtandi the subject will pretend in deny that the power of tworreation is lost sooner by these tilting into hrt proper habits than by the pr cadent t Besides bring do priced the pleasures of healthy offspring, the most serious and destructive sy tnpt oulg to both body :Hui mind misc. The system becomes deranged. the physb 'll toil ment.ll foortions wealtetten, 10,4,4 pro, eative power. nervouu irr{tability. dyspepsia, palpitation of the heart, Indi:te , tion, ercostituttonal deld4try, a wa,,t tog of the frame, rough, ,onsomption,dec . ay and death or.tc„E D.TO 7 SOUTH PIZ-UDE:Lica sr - rank:vv. JA.f.t.ltand side going from Baltimore street, a Nit' doors from the corner. Fall not to otrierre ruminant) number Letters must lie paid and COP tuin a stamp tore Dlpl,,ipah hAng In his °Mee. A. CURE lATARRA.THTED IN TWO DRI/S• No ' , Tsrsiiry r.r NaussouS Drugs.—Dr. Johnston. mom `,er of Ihe tornl College or Surgeons, LinuloriAl rad unto from OM' of tile most eminent Colleges In the ITniled :•In Ira, and the greater part of whose lite has From spent 1m the hospital., of London, Pariv, Philadelphia and skewing o, has ellected some of the most a,tooishing r Lore tit it were ever known; many troubled whit ring ing in the pond nod 1,41 S Whfill asleep. great ;tern oils uess, Isdng :damned at sudden sounds, bashfulness, wit frequent blushing, attended sometimes will, de lan,;enien t I mind, were cured Immediately. TARE PAE.TICULAR NOTICE add resew eI l those who have injured themselves Ly improper Indulgence and solitary habits, which roils Loth body and mind, unfitting them for either bus nubs, et tly, society or marriage These are some of the ..ad and melancholy effects produced by early habits of youth, viz: Weakness of the bark and limbs, pains in the head, dimness of sight, Iribti of muscular power, palpitation of the heart. dyspius hy, nervous irritability. derangement of the digestive functions, itonerid debility,,symptoms of -onsumption. Nlmssrn.u.v.—The fearful effects on the mind are much to be dreaded—loss of memory, confusion of ideas, de pression of spii its, evil torehodings, aversion to society. self" distrust, love of solitude, timidity, &c., are some of the evils produced. Thousands of persons of all ages ran now judge what is the CHOW, of their declining health, losing their vig-, or, becoming weak, pale, nervous and eumeinted. bay log a singular appearance about the eyes, cough and symp toms of consumption. VOUNG r.IEN Who have Injured themselves by a certain practice indulged in when alone, a habit frequently learned nom evil companions, or at inhool, the effects of which are nightly fbi t, even when asleep, and if not cured renders marrhige Impossible, and destroys both mind and body, should apply Immediately, t. What a pity that a 3 oung man, the Lope of his coun try, the darling of Ms parents, should be snatched from all prospects and enjoyments of life, by the consequence of deviatin, from the path of miters and indulging In a certain secret habit.. Such poisons must before eon. teuip,ating 211/I.ItRI/IGE reflect that a sound mind and body ro the lilted In, c o, sar y re qopetes Ln iwnitiote connubial happiness.— Ihdeed, WI thout these, 1.;11 0 journey through life heiednes a weary pilgrimage; the prospect Infurly darkenn to the V low; Chi, mi ud bunnies shadowed .with despair and tilled with thin molanrholy reflection that the happiness of another becomes blighted with our own. DISEASE or IMPRUDENCE. When the misgmidod and imprudent votary of plod. sure nude, that he has imbibed the seeds .1 this fadului disease, it ton often happens that an ill timed sense of shame, or dread of discovery, &tars him from applying to those who, from education and respectability, ran alone buff hood him, delaying till the constitutional symptoms of this horrid disease make limlr appearancel suoh as ulderated sore throat, diseased no., nocturne, pains In the head and Ihnlia,dlmness of sight, deafness. nodes on the shin hones and arms, blotches on the head, face end 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 a whit disease bevomos a horn I object, of commiseration, till death puts a period to his dreadful sufferings, by send ing him to "that Undlscovervd Country from whence no traveller returns." . . . It is a melancholy fact that thousands fall victims to this terrible disease, owing to the unskillfulness of 14. on ant pretenders, who, by the use of that deadly pot so , Mercury, ruin the constitution and mato the ro. el ue of life miserable. * STRANGERS Trust not your lives, or health, to the care of the many unlearned and worthless pretenders, destitute of knowledge, name or character, who copy Dr. Johnbton's a Irertisuments, or style themselves. in the newspapers, regularly educated physicians, incapable of curing, they keep you trilling month after month taking atria filthy and ptisounas compounds, or as long no the smallest fee ran he obtained. and in despair, leave you with ruined health to sigh over your galling disappointment. Dr. Johnston is the only Physician advertising. Ills credentials or diplomas always hang Jolt is office. Ills remedies or treatment are unknown to all others, prepared front a life Rptint.in the great hospitals of Eu rope, the-first-In- the country And - a - mare - extensive private practice than any other physician I - a the world. INDORS!IUILENT 01 0 THE ',Rugg. The many - thotisandiefired - letlits - InstithitcOryear sr , 0, year, end the numerous important Surgical Ope rations performed by Or. Johnston, witnessed by the reporters of the •' Sun," '• Clipper:" , and many other $1 tows, notices of which hove appnare 1 again and again before, the public, hosides his !do luting as a gentleman of. chamcf er and responsibility, is a suflicient guarantee to the tifilicted. tilrAN DISEASES SPEEDILY CURED. Yawns writing should bo particular in dirocting Allalr idlers to this lustDutton, in tho fbilowhatt man- JOHN M. JOHNSTON, M. D.. Of the Baltimore Lock Hospital, Baltimore, Md. May 2,1862—1 y NEW SPRING GOODS T n and now rocivigg a large assortment of Xew and elegant Spring goods, to, which I tospect. the attention of my old frionds and, cyst° mess; and all Want.of liandsotno and cheap toods. Particulars in next weeps paper. I. will sell ay cheap as any storoln the Borough.. Trusteo. - • April 4, 1612. .. fl UM BELTING- 1 . ' • " Ijr.• Juat received a large amsortmenkof all .sizes Gum Belting, Gum Hese, Gum PLoking, &a.; and for dale cheap at the hardware State of june 22, ISM: ' , SAXTON • & Proprietor. (01i2illni Nottr. For tho '• I.o." THE BEAUTIFUL. Through nil the realms of nature Widn The varied forms of beanty glide I see them in the blushing rose As scull In every flower that grows. The creeping hosts, the Insect tribe Still have their beauty and their pride, With piping boast and loudest cry, "Look I lonic ! to see ova Butterfly." In golden series beneath the sea The varied tribes of fishes be ; And every race line there Its Bolles Wit c h bright and many tinted shells, The skies adorned with every hue Of purple, red and azure blue ; With varied colors brightly glow, Yet proudly b e ast thel, Sparkling Bow— Bring all your beauties bright and fair, From earth and ocean sea and air, Ye ne'er ran say " see here a mate" For dark•eyed, charming lovely KATE. asked for iloanly's heavenly form When first she sang Creation's Morn, 1 asked for Eve at Eden's gate They hid me find them both in K ATE. She makes the heaven In whirls she shines, A Ad a II your glories there eumbi noe— -1I or per feet form and matchless grace, The angel mirrored in her face, The sparkling lustre of her eye ; Are stir, UM !Minim.; of our sky. Tier virtnes shine with purer ray, Th., gem of night nr orb of day, While willing flowers fram es pry hand Crown her I rlu l 4 i.FS Ilf all the land Bright Ms thy youth. he thy days, Joy till thy soul with eien-hlog rays, No , :orrnw break lit't•'e early elia::11 While angels shield from every banns Lot lloworo foreverun toy uav 11l Boa: frosh it hl, pry f)prillog doe, angolo , frul the unite unk nom, Shall clone to claim thee an their own. Notiunol 11 ., , , i/i1111.0.1, P. C. A Story for the Little Folks ABOUT AN or,n Mr-PURI' \ot many years ago there lived a very rich man in the south of France. He had been a sea captain, and .by his long voyares to distant parts_of the earth lie had _collected a great deal of property.— Hut now he has grown so old and weal: that he had to sit in an easy chair, and let the little children of the neighborhood crawl up in his lap. . The old man had no childten •of his own. In fact-,-he had -very few near re latives, and they cared nothing about him. But I must say that every time he Asti:3 sick they became kind to him, and went to his house to nurse him. lint they did not love him at all, and I once heard (me of his servants say that , if it were not for his immense wealth, they wouldn't care-a -fig. for -him. They- wan ted him to die. He noticed this as %vell as.his servants did. Of course he could not love his re latives as much as he would, if' they had really 10-vd hiin very dearly, for the old proverb says. " Love begets love." lint it was the old captain's nature to kve , everybody, aml amity it poor man had he relieved of his wimp:, and trade the bal ance of his days as happy as a king's— It was his greatest pleasure to help the needy, and I wish every rich man was as kind asthat old sac-captain was. Every good cause that was presented to him met with success. Ile loved to give. One day he determined that as for his relatives, he would continue to do his duty toward them, but if they inherited all his money after he died, they would spend it as easily as they got it. Ile thought it best to apply it to those objects and persons that a kind Providence threw in his ~ay. On one occasion, while rid ing on horseback along the public road, he meta little ragged boy going to school. lie stopped him, and asked him what his name was, and where he lived, and all about him. His mother, proved to be a very poor widow, who gained her living by gathering sticks. The boy's name was Andrew. MEE Here was some one on whom he could spend his care and kindness lie went, to see Andrew's mother, and gave her a hundred dollars in gold. She was a go. d woman, and knew how to twin it to pro per account. He bought Andrew some new clothes, and sent him to school, and bought all his books and pencils, and writing-paper. The boy improved very fast. He went to Sunday school and church,' and could 'repeat the catechism and the creed. The old captain talked to him frequently about the Saviour, and tried to induce him to give the Lord his heart, and read a chapter or two inn the Bible everyday. Andrew, when he grew up, became a very superior' cabinet-maker: lie was sent for, to go to a distant town to take charge of a large cabinet warehouse. Ile went and hiS profits were so great that ho could send home money to his mother every month. He was industrious, and never failed to pray more than once every day.._ Now,, is it wonderful that the Lord took good care of him ? Ono day there came a letter to him tell-. ing him that his mother was quite sick, and also that the sea-captain was suffer ing so severely that he was not expected to live. . He could not stay away from these two dearest objects of this affections. lle - loved them more than - all the world besides. They had both done so much for him; and he. prayed God to spare their lives until_ he could see_ them once Ito reached home, and found his moth er still living. After staying with her'a while,.aind giving her the nice 'oranges and other thingS he had 'broUght her, ho went off to the old captain's, house to see how he was, or if he was living yet.— When he got.there,”he found it difficult to he admitted. T 4.6111 man's relatives bad Multiplied in number; some of theta ho had not seen himself more than once or twice in .Andrewvas tpld that he could not see: the old nian;:,but when the servants met him, they went and told the" captain. So word out for An...lreW to .I:Te, admitted.: ienedi:' ately. . I= PaiL)mß, slam, tamma imszaLa) And how glad was the sick man to see the •handsome young gentleman before him! He could hardly believe him to have been the little Androw he had met, ragged and hungry, one winter morning, so many years ago, on his way to school.' l He said to him, as he embraced him in his arms: . "Andrew, my dear child, how delight ed I am to see you once more ! The Lord knows that I have done as much for you as if you were my own child. And I believe I love you just as much, too. I have made a will, Andrew, and have not mentioned your name in it. r You must not think it hard. know you will not, for you are neither a spendthrift nor a miser, and the Lord has prospered you so much that you have no need of any - more money. I'll tell you, Andrew, the secret of your success. You commenced when young to pray to God, and to read your Bible, and to love the Sunday school.— The Lord never forsakes such children, when they get oldei., and become men and women." Andrew replied, 'with tchrs in his eyes, that he thanked him fur his great kind , ness, and that he thought it was right for him not to leave him any of his wealth. Well, Andrew,' replied the old captain, ‘ , ll can now die in peace. If you are satisfied with my apparent neglect, I am e uitent You have taught me many a lesson by your good conduct., and I trust you will be a true, devoted man as long long as you live. And I thank my heavenly Father for his kindness in giv ing you to me as a fit objectVor the be- stowinent of my money and affiictions. must die in a few days, perhaps a few liners, and I hope you will visit me as , often as you can before T go hence.'' Andrew divided his time between his sick mother and th,e old sea-captain. A few days afterwdrd - S - the , dying than said to hiin. " You must not think hard'of nay not mentioning your name in my will. You have treasures elsewhere, where neither moth nor rust cloth corrupt, and Where thieves do not break through,and steal." Alas! the time came to die. The old man closed his eyes, never more to open theta again ‘npon this - Tliere was but one person really sorry for his death, and that was Andrew. He did not weep outwardly so much as some of the rela tives, but he felt it more deeply, and his heart was more sorrowful. his mother got better every day, and.finally-she -was well again. When she was almost recov ered, Andrew received one morning a very unpleasant letter: It contained news that his large cabinet warehouse in the town where he had been living was burnt up, ant“ll his srplendid side-bowls and ‘bureaus, and chairs, and sofas, wereburut uy too. The desk in which he kept his papers had been destroyed among the rest. his iron money safe had melted in the great heat, and a I his tudney was gone with it. Poor Andrew! It seemed :Is if everything .was going against him. But ho did - nut complain for one moment, and said to his mother, " My dear mother, the Lord blessed me with friends when I pir was a olittle ragged school-boy, and I know i rie will not forsake me now." It was the strange request -of the old sea-captain that his will should not be opened until the forty-ninth day after his I death. Of course, the relatives were all anxious for the will to be rend, and the all expected good big 'slices out of such ; vast property ' I The morning arrived for the will to be read. The notary was there in time, and about thirty six persons, who all claimed to be relatives of the old captain. They were breathless with exeitmnent and anx icty when the readint , commenced. The substance of it was that ten of the rela tives were left the sum of two thousand dollars apiece, and that the splendid fur niture was to he sold at auction, when they would all have the privilege of buy ing some article or other by way. of keep— sake, for remembering the old captain.— Nothing was left to Andrew, and this pleased them very touch, for they were afraid he would get aline share of the property. The remainder of the thirty- six went away disappointed and angry.— But that the favored ten should only get two thousand dollars apiece was a very strange thing to everybody. The estate was large enough fbr them to have re ceived many thousand dollars a piece at least, and yet they got but a little part of that large estate. The day for the auction arrived. Many of the relatives came to buy the rich fur nitult that had all'been bought in foreign countries at a very high price Andrew was at the sale. He,was now very poor, and as I have said, and had but a few. shillings in his pocket. lie knew not where ho would got any more money front, and his mother would soon be need ing many. things for her own use. The rich furniture .was selling very well. Tho relatives yied with, each other us to who should get 'it. Andrew watched every article, and longed to have money enough to buy something by which to re member the old captain who had been so very kind to him. But everything was too high for ; his slender purno. . The day was wearing on towards night, and the auction der. was selling the old broken furniturp,and old books, and other cast=away ;things that were fbund - stored away in the garret. Among many other objects of no apparent value was an old picture in n rough, worn-out worm-eaten frame. It was covered with dust, and the auctioneer thought it was no use to sell it, us it could not 'bring anything.; He brushed the dust off with his bland kerchief; and.it.alungt filled the room and strangled the people, so tbiOlc Ilad i it col: lected on that' old picture frdrne.. But behold, after it had been carefully dusted, the" painting was a splendid 'portrait of the old sea-captain. It was almest. per feet. Thero_wera'his fat fitce,_his.bright blue'oycS - -his-grey hair, his-broad- -shirt pollur,-his blue coat andbrass buttons— everything showed it to:be a good picture of r,the old wan. tho frame . was very, poor and worthless,. It was of the oldest' wood I. almost ever meet with. CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1862. Nobody ever saw such a good pleture an old frame. - - "Nowi" - said - thc - auctioneer, "whirbideT. for this splendid portrait of the old. 'sea captain ? It is perfect. What ani t of-• fered for the picture ?" The relatives crowded around him, and those who were down stairs came up. When they saw that it was the picture of the old man they did not care foe:it all. Nobody bid anything, andthat - 'sbOwed plainly enough that if those relatives-had cared for the old seacaptain. they would have tried to buy his portrait. - But as it was they did not bid the—first penny. The auctioneer thought 13e would riot be able to sell it at all, but whenj4rew' saw that nobody was going t - ci . bid,any thing, he started it at two . shillings. It was worth at letst eighty dollars;•tnt as Andrew had but.little money, he:.,could not bid any more. Nobody went any higher, and at last the portrait'wtts'StrUck off to him. , Ue was delighted with js . pllr-erias9, there was nothing sold that daylihiekhe would rather have had th4(this: exact portrait of the Lunn who had been (:,,kind to hill]. The next day Andrew determined to put a new frame on his splendid picture. He had a piece of excellen t mahogany and also a few tools in his mother's little cot tage ; and as he was a cabinetmaker, and had worked out many a picture frame, he intended to make just as good a one as it. was in his power to do. His mother said the portrait was perfect:, and told - him to get the irame done as soon as possible, tbr she wanted to hang it up - in their lit tle cottage. - Andrew went to work at the picture, but before doing anything on the new frame, he thought he would take off the old one.. „It- was nailed pretty'strong, but. ho Was cabefuL When he was ripping out thelast board on the back 91' the pic ture, quite a little bundle fell out. Of eoune, thought Andrew, it is an old mouse nest, and ho was just going to throw it out of the window, when - the outside wrapper fell off. What should be in his hands but a great bundle oflank notes b Andrew was astonished. He did now what to think or say. Ile called his mother and showed the bundle to her. They un rolled them and counted them. They amounted altogether to about ninety thou sand dollarsl Indeed- the_ latit one was • this.little note:— - • . "Dear friend, this money belongs to you whoever you may be, I know you love me or you would never have boug4t my portrait, and especially iiis,ttehAti o frame as this. I hope you witdove - 'o'• and your ezuntry,etidAncet- m.itt 14 . ven." ly irk the notel was awi ' l fillo •d 4 . dated only , the day. before the4ltLcaptalln was taken sick, in which all the roll of moneylwas declared 'to be the.property of the purchaser of the picture. I will not tell you how Andrew and his poor mother felt at their good -fortune, but I will Say that tliey neei• beCaMe proud or haughty. Ho spent a large share of his money upon the poor and needy, and always said when he gave a dollar: "'fake good care of it, I gave it to you because it is the Lord's money and I am only steward of it.. The earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof." Andrew prayed eirery day as ho had done before. Is it any wonder, children, that Ile was happy when he came to dio. ? Terrible Story of the Rebellion A correspondent of the New York Times, who dates from Springfield, Missouri, tells the following sad tale of the consequen ces of rebellion : ''The tender mercies of secession are cruel I have just heard the sad story of a widow who has buried two sons and a daughter since the outbreak of rebel lion Her three children all fell by the hand of violence. She lived in the White River• country —a land of hills and of ignorance. In that country, she and her family stood almost alone upon the side of the Nation al Union. II er neighbors were advocates of rebellion, and even before the arrival of our army . in Springfield, all loyal citi zens were warned that they must leave their homes or dic. It was little the poor widow had to leave—a miserable log. barn and a small patch of hill - aide---4ut such as it was, she was preplino. to aban don it, when her son Ilarv4left--heit,.tir search of employment. She packed his bundle with a: heavy heart,: took a silk handkerchief from her neck, gave it to him, and kissed him good bye, -never ex pecting to see him again. _ He had not gone ninny days when her persecution began. Her little boy was one evening bringing in the wood for the fire, when a shot was beard---a bullet struck the log under his arM,, and he dropped it with a scream. 'rho ,ball had just missed his heart. Joy atAis escape from death was henceforth mingled with gloomy•apprehension. • Next, sho, heard of tbe'death of Har vey. fie found a home, and fancying himself secure, was alone at work in the field. The family with WhottOm lived wore absent.—When they returned at noon they • found his dead bedi_iiohe . ,ilouse;,piel'oed - byrn - b - 011eti.- ~ :His:tern cap and other signs wittiessod'O:the Severity of tho struggle, before he yieidoi to his murderer. . • From this time the fanaily-'of Mrs. Willis lived in• constant fear. One. - day a gun was fired at tliencTis - thersat at dinner'. Often they. saw men, prowling about with guns, looking for the young men. Ono man•was bold enough to come into the cal:An.in search of them, At night they hicrin the woolis A nd: adept.—The poor woman- was one ddygitheriugOorn in the garden and William waseetting on -the fence.-- - • - -"Don't sit there, Wilijign; said' his inotiler, - "you are , too,faira mark fur for shot." ' , • William wont:the!ifooi and set .upon the • "William," said bier sister, ",you aro not safe there. Como into the house." Ho obeyed. Ho was sitting between wo - litl'ds, when suddenly another shot rang upon the air, and the widow's sec ond son, Samuel, whont4 she had not no ticed sitting by another door, rose to his feet, staggered a few steps toward his mother, and fell a corpse before her. • never wished any ono in torment be fore,", she said, "but I did wish that the man that killed him was there." Her three oldest sons at once left the cabin and fled over the hills. They are all in the'National army to-day. Samuel's sister was Tied the cold clay and dressed it for the grave. After two days the seces sion neighbors came to bury him. At first the frantic mother refused to let them touch his body. At last she : consented. The clods Were falling upon the coffin, each sound awakening an echo in aching heart, when a whipporwill fluttered down, with its wild molancholly cry, and settled in the open grave. • The note so tdrifled the conscience stricken, superstitious wretches that for a =merit they fled in dismay. Two of her children were now in the tomb. Three had escaped for their lives. The unhappy woman was left with her daughters and three small children, help less and alone. She was obliged to go thirty miles upon horseback to the mill for food, and afterwards return. on foot, leading her horse by the bridle, with the sack of meal upon his back. On her re turn she met her children, about a mile and a half from her own house.—ln her neighbor's yard her two boys, aged ten and twelve years, were digging another grave—the grave of an old man, murder ed in her hbscence, for the crime of loy alty to the Union. Together with a white headed patriot, who tottered with age, they placed the corpse on a board, rolled unprepared for burial and uncoffined, into the shallow pit, and then covered it with earth. Such are the trials of loyal citizens in the border slave States, and wherever rebellion has keen in power. The ;widow now.lescaped for refuge to this city., And here, to , irown her sor rows, in the absence of her three oldest remaining SODS, a druken soldier of the Fifth Kansas Regiment shot her daugh ter Mary, as she,_ was standing in the door of the house. Is it any wonder that this woman's hair is gray, .her forehead full of wrinkles, or that she should say with tremulous -tones, "I feel that I shall not The only thing that sustains me is the love of Christ. Northern people know nothing of the lierrors of wnr.: STRONG CHARACTERS.—Strongth of eaharheter,comiists of twojhipgs,,powq of llhd power of restraint two things therefore, for its existence—strong feelings and strong command wier them. Now it is here we make a great mi%take:, we mistake strong feelings for strong char acter. A man who bears all before him, before whose bursts of fury mime the chiL - d{.en- - of the" hotnelrotild utikez—tenutge he has his will obeyed, and his own way in all thing we call him a strong man ; it is his passions that are strong, he, mastered by them, is weak. You must measure the strength of a man by . the power of the feelings he subdues, not by the power of these which subdue him. -And hefiee, com posure is very often the highest result of strength. Did we never see a man receive flagrant insult and only grow a little pale and then reply quietly ?—That is a man spirituldly strong. Or did we 4ever see a man in anguish stand as if carved out of a solid rock mastering himself ?' Or one bearing a hopeless daily trial remain silent and never tell the world what cankered his home peace ? That is strength Ile who with strong passions remained chaste; he who keenly sensitive with manly pow ers of indignation in him can be provoked and yet restrain himself and forgive--these are the strong men, the spirtivalTheroes. TitE Lowry CLASS —Who aro they ? The toiling millions, the laboring , mon and women, the farmers, the mechanic, the artist, the inventor, the producer? Far from it. These are Natures nobility God's favorites—the -salt of the earth. No matter whether they are high or low in station, rich or poor ht. self conspicuous or humble in position, they are the "upper circle" in the order of Nature, whatever factitious distinction of fashionable socie ty. It is not low—it is the highest duty, privilege, and pleasure for the great men and the wholo•souled women to earth what they possess, to work their way through life, to de the architect of their own fortune Some may remark'the classes we have alluded to are only relatively low, and in fact the middle classes. We insist that they are absolutely the very highest. Is there a Class of beings on earth who may properly be denominated low? If so, it is composed of those who consume with out production, who dissipate their fathers or relatives without laboring or doing any thing themselves. A PRETTY SHARP RETORT.—The young ladies wore riding in an omnibus. One of them with features remarkable for a prominence of nose, exhibited to the other a daguerreptype of herself,- and they wore engaged in discussing its merits, .when an elderly lady got . iri. After awhile..she reached out her gaud, and said . to the lady. With, the picture : 'Please let me look at it ?" 'llcr modest request was' met with an indignant, "It's none of your business," The old lady settled back in her coat very complacently, when the ,aompanion of the one with tho picture asked :- "What do you wish to with it ?" "Oh, nothing," refilled the pfd lady "I only wanted to see how smieessfid the artist has but been suoh a large nose on so small a plate.", „ A UORRESPONDENTICOM the arrriy_oh the lames - RiVbi's4.yt3 that-the 'most at trietive eliaraoter, Who could Visit that region just now, would be•-a -lady, It is so long since `some of the "boys".-have seen one` of the. , opposite sex, that 'they: verily begin to believe that they 'be!prig to the "lout ;:. - One Way to get a "Smile." If half' the cleverness exhibited in pet ty swindling were only diverted to purpo ses of honesty, our list of successful busi ness men would be largely increased. But the poverty that sharpens the wit blunts the moral sense, and rogues glory in their skilful subterfuges : Three ragged, wretched Thpers stood shivering upon a street corner. They had not a penny between them, and neither had drank a drop—within half an hour. They debated the deeply interesting ques tion—how to obtain the next ghss ; after many impracticable suggestions, one of them said : "I have an idea I We'll all go into the next shop and drink." " Drink !" replied his companions, "that's easily said , but who's to pay ?" "Nobody. Do as I tell you. I'll take the responsibility." Following, the speaker's directions, his two companions entered an adjoining turn ruery,.and called foi• whiskey skins. The place was kept by a Dutchman. Aftei he had waited on his customers, and while they were enjoying their orthodox beverage at the counter, in walked toper No 1. " How are ye ?" to the Dutchman i" [low do do ?" said the Dutchman Toper No. 1. glanced suspiciously at topers Nos. 2 and 3, and beckoned the proprietor aside. " Do you know these men ?" lie asked, mysteriously. The Dutchman started. "I know no more as dat dey call for de whiskey skins." " Don't take any money of them," whispered No. 1. " Sir ! I not take money fur the whis key skins !" said the astonished landlord. "No; they are informers " Hey I informers " Yes.; they buy liquor of you so as to inform against you." "Ah ! I understand," said the Dutch man. . . " Dey not eaten me. Tank you, air —You take soutethiu' ?" " I don't object," and toper No. 1 took a swig with his companions. " What's to pay ?" quoth No. 2, put ting his hand into his ethpty pocket. " Noting," said the Dutchman. " Me no sell liquor. Me• keeps it for Thine liens." And., having. smiled the .supposed in formers out oldie door, he manifested his gratitude by generously inviting the supposed anti informer to take a second glass. Of cour:e Ny. 1 did not at all de cline the invitation. RAPIDITY Gli-.IIIOUGU-T DREAMING: —lt would appear as if a whole series of acts, that would-relay occupy a long lapse of time, pass. ideally though the mind in ono instant. We have in dreams no true perception of the lapse of time. The re. lotions of spaCe as well as of time are also annihilated-, s t o t ht-a while almost an etet nity is compressed into a moment infinite pace is tray ersed more swiftly than by real thoughts. There are numerous illustra tions of thiS on record. A gentleman dreams that he has enlisted lot a soldier, joined his regiment., deserted, AV aS appre hended, carried back, tried, condemed to be shot, and at last led out for execution. After all the usual preparations, a gun was I tired, he awoke with the report, and found hat a noise in the adjoining room had at the same moment produced the dream and awakened him. A friend of Dr. Ader crombie dreamed that he had crossed the Atlantic, and spent a fortunue in England. In embarking on his return, he fell into the sea, and awakening in the fright - found that he had not deen asleep ten minutes. THE FLEE. STATES.—Although many families in the free States are mourning over the loss of their cherished idols, the condition of these States themselves pre sent a most gratifying prospect when con trasted with the condition of all the sece ded and most of the Border States. I here is an abundance of everything— plenty to eat, plenty to, wear, and plenty of well paid employment in the free States. No classes feel the war severely but those who have lost their friends in battle and those who own largo estates. Shall this comfort and content—this prosperity and peace— be desfioyed Such a catas trophe Can only happen if the plots and counterplots of the sympathizers with So cession arc permitted to triumph. Who would envy the inhumanity, and base ness of men who not content with wishing God speed to rebels, toil incessantly to reduce the States to the miserable condi tion of the rebellious, devastated, starving, and bankrupt South. DANIEL WEBSTER said : " Small' is the sum that is required to patronize a news paper and amply repaid is its patron, I earn not how humble and unpretending the gazette he takes. It is next to im possible to fill a sheet without putting in to it something that is worthy the sub scription price. Every parent whose - son is away from home at school, should sup ply him with a newspaper. I well re rember what a marked,, difference there was .between those who bad access to newspapers and thoe who hid not. Oth er. things_being-equal,the first. -were al ways superior to-the init. ihdebate, compo sition and general intelligence." Rebel Treatment of our Prisoners. In a recent speeah Gen. Wilcox, who has lately been released from RiOhmond, said: I would be glad to tell you all tho lars of my captivity andoonfinetnent, because they would furnish the best possible evidence of the real character of the vile conspiracy raised against the Unioa: They. have viola ted the plainest and oldest rules of- civilized war over and 'over. ' In the first place, our surgeons taken upon'tholitild were. deprived I I of their surgical instruments and, not permit ted to use thorn in theft:lnto of _pur weuutied.,. They were, reduced to the . position.Caortigiii dressers, in the-hu4d4 - Mc ;of Viir &retie - dead who would be Wounded moil ~ete',,,now t-tkitY coald have, had the care Of ouraurgeone, Thiy, died, net: Only from 'neglect,', but &Cm that rancor of the .oonfed 'aiatdolficerti whigh .piroittetl them treating our-men.. Properly.. J.caritilte.the.iustance of.. f $ll 50 per annum in advance t $2 00 if not paid in advance Lieutenant Maunch, of the First Michigan. whose wounded leg was unattended to for two weeks, and who fell a victim to that neg lect. In no case thatever came Witty knowl edge were any of our surgeons permitted to use their instruments, all the operations be , ing performed by Confederate surgeons and I students of medicine. [From V. - a Christian Advocate and Journal.] Lo,okings in on the War The shorter the introduction the better. always liked the blunt " Brother Jones, this is Brother Brown" much better than the cir cumlocutory style of pretended refinement ; hence it must he sufficient to say that the offi cial business of this correspondent, more than his plenspre, calls him first to one depart ment of the Western army, then another; now a day here, and to-morrow some place else; whether as a major general, or a chap lain-general, or t-urgeon-general, or some thing else, is nut material; and that in this capacity ho often bees and hears things which either amuse, or delight, or pain, or provoke him ; and he proposes to share these emotions with the readers of the Advocate, (the editor consenting theteto,) asking only that for stra tegic reasons, ho may be permitted to do so ificognico.z. PIIOORESS OF EVENTS I spent much of the two months preceding the evacuation of Corinth in the field, sleep ing and eating with the soldiers, though not compelled to . share in either their bridge buil ding or fighting, being relieved by official duties, end inclination no less, from these. I witnessed the patience and endurance of these true men, preaching sometimes for them on Sunday, and often, when called to regiments without a chaplain, improving the light of the moon for night services. More of a civilian than a soldier,' I often criticised the polioy of our generals, end now, three months after the evacuation, I am less reconciled to the policy which allowed them to escape than I was at the moment. But the world moves, and policy changes. I was grieved, in June, wh'en I saw our sol diers guarding the growing corn and the gar dens of the secessioni4ts; but, rill traveling along the same road last week, and seeing the army teams under orders, from the quarter mastiir gathering-roasting earn by the wagon load I concluded that, after all, the policy was not so bail, seeing that it is already chan ged for on 6 More suited to war times. =I . . . . . The readers of the Arbocate know already that the sacredness of the `• institution " has considerably vanished It may be interesting to them to read, as it has been for rue to wit ness, how this operates.. I was last wet* at Luke, a little town on the toad bet Ween Corgi. milt and Tuscumbia, in Mississippi. Two contrabands had come into the lines of the Twenty seventh Illinois and had been sent to work WI the intrenchments. Shortly after the master, living some eighteen miles south id' the cutup, came in atul demanded his negroes ,' under the Constitution." Ile was kindly .informed that the stafe'of Alabama, in which he lived, had suspended that iustrument,. and that it was not iu working order ha that lati tude. At this he raved and did some model Southern cursing. winding up with a clenched fist, and saying vehemently io the colonel, I'll let you know sir ; JO let the Lincoln govern ment know sir, thaMl'm worth 11150,000, Sit, and I've niggers, sir, and cotton, sir, enouglt to support twenty guerillas - for •ti ybar, 'itif , ', and LAI do it, :Ir. My constitutional fights shan't be invaded this away, sir!" Instead of arresting him as is secessionist the colonel gave him a pass out of the lines, and he started home, mad lit the hiss of two negroes, but somewlMCeoniforted that ,be-luid. had a good opportunity to curse a Federal officer, and especially at the prospect of being suitably revenged upon the Lincoln govern ment. But he had not been gone half au hour lbefore one hundred picked men, well armed, : and ten wagons, each drawn by six mules, with a suitable cavalry escort, were seen marching south and in the direction ho had' , taken What time lie reached home I did not I learn, but this detachment brought up at his, lordly marnoon at about the noun of night. Ile had gone to bed When informed by the Mlicer who demanded admittance that, they had come for him, and his cotton and negroes, he began to rave; but certain unmistakable words and actions quieted hint. Ile was put under guard, while the upgroes were awaken ed, and each with his and her Sundayest, suit upon them and a bundle iu their hands, babies and all numbering fifty three, were made ready by daylight for their exodus, tickled, you may well believe, at the prospect, before them. Meanwhile fifty titles of outton were loaded into the ten %wens, and early after daylight Ellis grand cavalcade started for Inks.. It reached there about aP. M. The cotton was unloaded at, the depot and marked " U. ,V , ." and is, ere this, at. Lowell, probably; the negro men were put to work on the fortifica tions, and the wolnen and children distribu ted among the camps as cooks, or given to loyal, citizens. Most of these were, I believe, subsequently returned as unusable material ; but the man who was to do such dreadful things wits sent to Alton, 11l , under the im pression that a cooler climate would conduce to his health. When I left him he was crying like a child, though he was known thereabouts for years as Colonel- Mann. Sic transit ed his gloria, and his negroes and cotton too, and some of his insolence. =I . There is in this western army one General Robert Mitchell, who whilom was a lawyer at Vernon or Mt. Vernon, Ohio, but more recent ly a student of the art military under Gen. Lane, not at West Point, but•iu Kansas. He is now in command of a brigade at juke. His practice is not according to I ho books, and ho may deserve censure. Judge ye. Ho went the other night with a considerable fore°, in cluding his staff, to the house of a planter who. had been frequently in Mitchell's camp as n peddler of onions and other . delicacies, and introduced himself as Gnu. Price and staff of the rebel army cm rouse for Jaointo, where the Federal forces were. The planter was* glad to see him, and gave him . a minute de seription of the position of tho camp, its forti fications and goner& strength, in which ho was assisted by two sons and a nephew. 0013. Mitchell thanked him for this information, and then asked as to the loyality of his neigh bors. The planter detailed the good works of several of them in the rebel clause, dwelling' in pdrtioular on one who had fed a guerilla band, with their horses, only last week, and • had given a fine horse to the captain. though he had, for convenience taken.the oath-to,:tho_ Federal cause. After a few- hours otthisin-- Wresting conversation the parties went to bed. Imagine the surprise of the .old. man , when daylight revealed the presence of a strong gutuld of Federal soldiers around'lds house. Gen. Mitohell apologized as best he could for the' mistakes.ho had •mado. Gib night botore, and took the old man and his boys into camp as candidates'or--A1t9;..111.1 . • -Next night they Waited' on the man who. boarded the guerillas, who was,v . ory indignaut at first in having his 115yality , suspected, .and vory much surprised to find- that his history was' well known. H is: . negroeit and 'cotton were seized. and he'-was sent North. 'lnd dents of this kihd aro frequent The telegraph . doOs.not,tiOte therh, and loyal -- mea-hortily - kn tigtol4) W,061 Moves. •Nort meek.l.Avill4iiii' You BO inething from . Kentucky -locality. • ' Lerinilon,Ky., Aug: 1862, . Txmz waits for no man, but, if - believe Whatsome of:our maiden friciida ,day cif their_age,..w.aita_for NO 38. Soxze.