iltetti ratty. TII.E.kOTHERS OF 1883 They call for "able•bodled men." Now there's our Roger, strong and stout; lle'd beat his comrades out and out ,fin feats of strength and skill—what than t What than ?—why only this; you see He's made of just that sort of stuff They want on battle-fields; enough! What choke was loft for him and mo Bn, when he asked mo yesterwoek, " Your blossifig, mother I"—did I hoed The gr ,at sob at my heart, or need Another word ;hat ho should speak 1 Should I sit down and mope and croon, • And hug my selflelinces, and cry Not mu, my first .horn I"—no, not I I Thank heaven, x pipe a nobler tune. And yet, I love him like my lifp, This stalwart, handsome lad of mine I I warrant me, he'll take the shine ,„ qff half who follow drum and fife I New God forgive me, how I pratol . Ah,,but the siOrlitat will loop out Whatever folds we wrap about' Oar foolish hearts, or soon or late. No doubt weakness—mothcr•llp Extolling its 11WIl flesh and blood; A trick of weakly Womanhood That,tro should seourgo with thong and whip No dunbt—and yet I should not dare Lny nn unloved, cheap offering • Upon my country's phrine, nor bring Aught bUt was noble, sweet and fair. And so I bring my boy L-too glad That ho is worthy, and that I, Who bore bins once In agony, Such glorious recompense have had Talcs him, my country! ho is true, And b r ave, nod good; his deeds shall tell More than my foolish words—'tin well F God's love be with the lad and you. God's love and care—and when be comet Back from the War, and through the street The crazy people flock to meet Sly time, with great shout l, and drums. _ And silver trumpets'britying loud, And silken banners ) starry gay "ruin be to ine no prouder day Than this; nay, nay, nor half so proud - Xi • . 4 • And if--Ciod help me—if, instead, They flash this word from some red field: ❑is brave, sweet soul, that would not yield; Lettpolf.upward, and they wrote him,' DYAD"' I'll turn my white face to the ... l , mM,, Ilear niii7h.. as best I may • Fur Rogor's sake, and only say, "Ile knoweth best who knoweth all." And when the' neighbors come to weep, Eitylng " alas, thii bitter blow )" answer, nay, dear friends, not so, Better my Roger's hero—s:eep And nobler far such lot, than his Who dare not strike with heart and hand For Freedom and dear Fatherland Where death's dark missiles crash and whia END And Roger's mother has no tear EM bitter as her tears notild be If, from tho battles of the Free, her son shrank back irlth craven fear pimitautong. ARNOLD AND I I thought the earth 1104 no...happier woman than I. The desire of my heart had been accomplished. It was the first thing I had ever wanted ,which I had not found ready at my grasp. Perhaps it was the inure dearly prized for the dif ficulty I had experienced in obtaining it; but I did not then think so. In fact, 1 be.ieve I had scarcely th ugh t at all, except that I was happy, and I satig and danced through the wide halls and spacious chambers of my ancestral home as joyous as a bird the livelong day. Everything seemed beautiful to me, even the diin west of those dim rooms, and the quaint formalities of the ancient gardens with their borders of box and coarse flaunting flowers. Ah 1 well, I suppose most of us have, at some period, lived a brief space surrounded by that roseate halo with which love clothes us, and through which the earth seems vivid with light and beauty. Ah 1 if the en chanted time could but last forever, what a long joy and - gladness li:e would be I Arnold looked upon me as I yielded to the wild enthusiasm of my happiness— half in wonder, , htilf in amusement. His was one of those Om deep natures that seldom make external demonstration of emotion of any kind. Ile would smile gravely, sometimes almost sadly, as he turned away from my mad frolils to shut himself into the library where he spent so many quiet hours with those silent friends—the books of which I was almost jealous. I would pout when he did this, then, child-like, creep to him to be com forted, and nestling by his side, learn from the caressing touch of his hand upon my hair, as niy head rested upon his knee, how deeply and truly he loved me. Words were not needed, then, to tell me that I was beloved and cherished ; would that I might have kept that faith pure and warm all the days of my lite I Once I believed that nothing could shake it. I had bean married half a year when Aunt Cornelia came to pay me her first visit. It was with this aunt, Mrs. Bushe that I had lived previous to my marriage. My mother died when I was so young that I scarcely remember her, and Aunt Cornelia had supplied her place to me as well as it was possible for one of her na ture to do. She was a very worldly wo man, fond of display and proud of all the adventitious circumstances that enohan ced her . personal Value in society. The gliardianship of a young niece, who was a wealthy heiress, was one of these. It made her important in the eyes of the world, and as I' was not more trouble some than other children, spite of the in dulgence I received, I think she enjoyed it thoroughly. She certainly was kind to me, and 1 loved her truly; though I never confidedin her entirely as I think I might have done in my own dear moth er bad she lived. She was decidedly and , warmly opposed to my marriage with Arnold. She had, in truth, exerted all her powers of per- VOL. 63. A. K. RHEEM, Editor & Proprietor suasion and authority to prevent the ac quaintance. Arnold was a lion that win ter—my second winter in society,—and I, in common with nearly every person I knew, was desirous of becoming acquaint ed with him. Aunt Cornelia resisted this desire as long as possible. She would not permit him to be presented to her, and it had been her will, understood by all her acquaintances, that no one should be introduced to me whom she had not at first approved. But despite all these precautions, accident at last brought about the desired acquaintance. It did not progress rapidly, however. Aunt Cornelia knew how to repulse all advances, to discountenance all'attempts at intimacy, though in truth, Arnold did not make any. Courted and flattered as he was, it -was strange that her haughty manner did not render Lim entirely neg lectful of us, who certainly had few claims to his notice. But he still called upon us at rare intervals ; still made a point of greeting us at all the houses where we -met him ; and often overtook us when we were abroad. But the grave calm of manner would, I think, have dispelled all fears from the mind of any but the chaperon of an heiress. Arnold had made himself famous, but lie had not made himself rich ; he had illustrated his name, but it was a name of humble origin and antecedents. That was the secret of Aunt Cornelia's aver sion to him. But, as for me, I cared nothing for wealth nor a flourishing fam ily tree. I had been attracted to Arnold by the popular enthusiasm that heralded and surrounded him. I had persisted in seeking his acquaintance as much from perversity as aught else ; but had learned to love him for himself. When, most unexpectedly, he offered, me his hand, I accepted it at once, not awaiting my aunt's consent though of course;[ re ferred him to her for her sanction of the engagement. I was just past my twenty first birthday, and, somewhat elate with my new freedom. But here commenced the struggle. Iti,lasted through months. Aunt Cornelia's manner was such, the opiniOns she expressed to A - rnold's sen sitive honor, that lie withdrew his suit, and for a time we were both plunged into despair. I ,cannot, even now, refer with out a pang to those months of sorrow and. grieving.. Even the perfect joy that fl lows could not blot out their dark memory My story would be too long were I to narrate all the causes that led to Arnold's recall. It is sufficient to say • that on my twenty-second birth-day we were mar ried, and went at once to reside at the stately hall whe - rei had been born, and which had been the habitation of my an cestors through several generations. paid little heed to the business lirepara tions for this event., being utterly ab sorbed in my new happiness, and did not then know that Arnold had firmly insist od that - iny entire wealiTi FTioiild be yet tied upon myself, putting it out of his power to control even the smallest por tion of the income. Though he had al lowed his heart to triumph by renewing his offer, he could not forget that suspi cion had once been cast upon his motives. This fact my aunt did not see fit to mention to me. I thought, if I could be said to have considered the matter at all, that in giving myself to Arnold I had en dowed him with all my worldly gdods.— I consulted him, always, in the disposal of my income and the arrangement of my affairs; indeed, I tried to induce him to relieve me of all care and responsibility in regard to the latter. But I contin ually observed in him a strange reticence which I attributed to his scholarly hab• its. lie was ever ready with counsel and advice, but held himself' aloof from actu al participation in the cares which the possession= of so large a property entailed upon me. Aunt Cornelia found me harrassed with some of these when she came to me Amid them much of the light joyousness of my early wedded days had disappeared. My aunt averred that I had positively grown old ; that I was greatly changed, and fur the worse. And Arnold looked unhappy, and examined me with his tender searching glance that always seemed to penetrate my secret thoughts. But, strangely enough, as I thought, he did not attempt to lighten my burdens. He was as kind as before ; but held him self apart from me in this respect. For the first tine, under Aunt Cornelia's pity ing glances, I fancied this a wrong to me. I never dreamed that my husband was all the time longing to relieve me of my cares, but was withheld from inter ference by those delicate scruples of hon or, which I could so well save under stood, had their cause been apparent to Aunt Cornelia—she is dead now—and I would not too severely asperse her memo ry—fanned the little.flarng of disaffection she had kindled. In her quiet, musing manner, in half completed sentences, she "wonlered" at the selfishness of men, and once or twice commenced some anec dote of unhappiness in married life, aris ing from a fortune hunting husband's neglect of and indifference to the woman with whose hand he had obtained all the advantages of wealth, without any of its burdens and, responsibilities. She would break off in •confusion and turn to other topics with a deprecating manner that pointed the sting her previous words had inflicted. I try to believe that she - was herself deceived—but aft.r all I have suffered—we have suffered—it is not easy to forgive and to feel that there wore no malice in-her words. And so the breach was made—small at . first, ,but widening rapidly. Arnold with • drew ever More and more to the solitude of his chosen pursuits. And I went about with • a fierce scorn and anger smouldering in my bosom, ready to burst 1 ~ ..''. '. ' - ' , 410 , -,-,, ~,,_ ~__.:.:.,..:;., ~.._,.. v . ilx oil 1 , t, ,, 1.0 .v out into the hot flame of passionate re proaches against him , whenever. I. was unusually tired or overburdened. I do not acquit Arnold of all blame.— There should have been perfect confidence between us. Impetuous as 1 was, I was not insensible to reason, and there my hshuand fell into the very error which causes nine-tenths of the silent misery of the married' He did not explain the motives of the conduct.which he saw was puzzling me. He did not act upon the supposition that I might yield to, even if I did not approve, his reasons for assum ing none of the burdens of my life. Ile believed that I knew that he had shut himself out of all partici l er tion in my for tune. To him that fact, arid the other that.he had been accused of seeking my fortune rather than my heart, were suffi cient reasons for his reticence. He was utterly mistaken in this, for lie had bound himself sacredly to share with rue, and care for me, by his marriage vows. Had lie explained, all still might have been happy. But he did not. lie grew daily grave, stern, silent, and I cherished ever in my heart the hateful fires of anger, burning upon the very altar where the flame of love had been kindled. And so the sad and painful alienation increased. Two years only from our marriage had passed when we were living as strangers beneath the same roof, meeting when compelled to meet with repressed aversion, parting to our several avneations with no pretence of regret. Such at least were my feel ings. A few months of this silent wretched ness passed, and then, in some sudden outburst of scorn and wrath, I uttered words that my loshand could not forgive. I told hint that 1 had long been convin ced that his sole object in marrying me was to obtain a luxurious home ; where, at my expense, he could live in the idle ness he craved. Ile looked at me sternly for . a in iii are, Ace e - d aliou Oro speak; tlieii a softer expression crossed his features, and he turned from rue in silence and left the room. We did not meet again. Ile went out an hour or two after. The next morning his• servant brought me a note; dated at a neighboring hotel, which 'in formed me that he had left my house for ever. " I have long feltit a humiliation al most beyond endurance to dwell there," he wrote . "I have remained, Marian, on ly because, in spite of an alienation, you were my wife, and as such I was bound to protect you from the animadVersions and harsh judgments of the world. Your words yesterday have however, render ed a longer stay impossible You are aware, I suppose, that Mrs. Bushe express ed similar suspicious when I first sought you as my wife. Iler words touched my honor itr so sensitive a point that 1 at once withdrew my suit. Under what eireum anees if waSielieWed'T - ten you But, before 1-became your husband, 1 ex ecuted papers which expressly shut me out from any participation in your wealth, even from the disposal of any portion of your queenly income. I have lived in your house, but my personal expenditures have been drawn from my own private resources. lam indebte to you fur the food 1 have eaten, fur the shelter of your roof--nothing more. Even- that obliga tion to one who had ceased to love me, has long been humiliating Most gladly would I have relieved you of all care, and acted as a Stewart of all your property, but having been subjected to the suspicion of seeking to enrich myself by means of my marriage, I could not bring myself in to any contact with your business affairs without seeming to give grounds for that suspicion. Of this however, I doubt not you have all along been fully aware, and I will not dwell upon it. " Marian, I sought you because I loved you. How I love you—how well and truly—you will never know. That sweet, brief dream of love and bliss is past. How I wished that you bad been poor as my self; then, perhaps, we might have been happy. Marian, my chief regret, I think even now, is that you have been made miserable. I so wanted to wake you happy, to walk beside you in secret se- Curity, catching the reflection of your smiles, wiping away the tears that must sometimes hill, for grief I could not pre vent; butalways peaceful in sunshine or storm. But that.hope is dead. Forget me, Marian, if you can. Forgive me for the sorrow I:have caused you. Let me be as if I were not. I will trouble you no more. •' And now farewell! 11av you be happy, joyous ; free, as before - I crossed your path!" " ARNOLD." They said that I fell ill. I know not how the day passed. I have no memory of the time that intervened between the brilliant summer morning on which I read this letter, -iirthez solitude of my room, amid a whirl of contending feelings, and the d rear, gray N ovember afternoon when I seemed to wake from a long dream of anguish and struggle to a life"as harsh and cold as void of all grace and beauty. Long ere that Arnold had quietly de parted. While I lay in the swoon that followed the reading of that letter, his servant had removed all his person - al ef fects' from the house. That very after noon, ho, Arnold accompanied only by his man, set off upon those foreign travels which extended over several years. I came book- to health to find myself utter ly alone. I had spurned the joy arid .blessing of life, All its brightness had departed—henceforth I must,dwell in the dark shadow. Aa .usual, the world—that sapient judge—was wrong. - It blamed Arnold; it pronounced me, a long suffering martyr, him a false, tyrannical husband. It whis pered of wealth •squandered in vile plea- CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 8, 1863. sures, of confidence abused, of a wife's angelic patience scorned and tried to the utmost, and 'more hinted of a com panion in that sudden flight This was part of my punishment, a bitter part. Never had I appreciated the lofty excellences of Arnold's character as now, when he was, as I believed, lost to me forever. I resolved to make myself worthy ofri,lim— to become such a woman as, with his high standard of goodness, lie might have approved. And to this endeavor I bent all my energies. Aunt Cornelia offered me her society, but I refused to receive her as an inmate; I felt that to her 1 owed much,of my misery. I could forgive, but her pres ence would have been too painful to me. Nevertheless, when she lay upon her death-bed, a few years later, I went to her, and in loving ser. ice remained by her side till the close t I can at least say honestly that I thinkrher intentions to ward me were not unkind. She was mor-_ tified by her defeat, and felt disposed to revenge herself upon Arnold, little dream ing of the misery she was bringing upon me. "I never saw a braver man. Nothing disturbs his imperturbable calm. He is grand, serene, and still in the midst of the rush and carnage of battle, as well as in ordinary concerns of life. Ile seems like a man who has said to Fate, 'Send what thou wilt, already I have suffered the worst (hat can befall me.' remember Will at--" May I ask whom you are speaking of?" said another officer, joining the groupe that stood near inc on the deck of the ferry boat. "Certainly. Of Captain Arnold Ifar dingo, of the Twenty-first Pennsylvania. I am told he entered the ranks, and in three weeks he was at the head of his company. Ile ought not to stop there" "1 know him well," replied the ques. Goner. "Ile has been promoted, but not to an - e'arthly command. t camn - froid• Washington yesterday, and, while I wait ed for my dispatches at the War office, word came of skirmish hack of Williams burg, in which lie was killed. It was a glorious affair, and he did wonders—Good Heavens, madam ! are you ill ? Let me take you to a seat." A mist had come over the brightness of the day. I should have fallen had not that kind-faced officer supported me. ,Presently I could look up and see him striving to keep back the cruwd that would have pressed round- we "Is it true ?" I asked, almost in a whisper, as lie bent to lisren. "Is Arnold dead?, lie was toy husilnd." "Too true, I fear," he answered.— "You must have heard of it soon ; but can you forgive inc i 4 this sudden shock? lle died gloriously. 1, who knew him well—l am in die same regiment grieve for him deeply, but find consolation in that fiw t. d'iM - I\ITS'. rariltirgC -- dati - P be' of any service to you ? Ilere is my card— Lieutenant Elliot, Twenty-first Pennsyl vania Volunteers. May I call upon and receive any directions you will like to send? I return to the regiment to . morrow." "I will go myself," I said, hastily, "if you will kindly direct the upon the jour ney." An uncontrollable yearning to seek him, to bring him hack, even in death, to the home that should have been his'all these years, seized use. I determined to go, and was ready to accompany Lieutenant Elliot when he came for we in the IDOln ing. 1 need not dwell upon the events of that sad journey. Owing to various cir cumstances, almost a week elapsed before we reached the camp of the Twenty•lirst, and found ourselves at the enteranee of the temporary hospitals of the brigade. "I will take you to the surgeon at once, said Lieutenant Elliot. There will be men in the hospital who were with Hard' inge, and can tell you all about him— how he died, and if he were buried on the field." "Captain Hardinge?" said the surgeon. Oh, I'm sure he was not buried upon the field—quite sure ; indeed I think he has not been buried yet. Captain step this way a moment, if you please," he cried door beside him. "Per haps ytM can tell this lady something a bout Capt. Ilardinge." There was a twinkle in the good man's eye, and I turned in surprise toward the tall figure slowly entering. Ah ? too well I knew that pale face, that bent and fee ble form, strangely altered as they were. Years and suffering, and wounds, and hardships had done their worst, but it was Arnold himself who stood before me, the grave calm all gone out of the deep eyes and the noble features. With glad cry I sprang up, rushed to his outstretch ed arniqithen, before they could clasp me, retreated in an agony of shame and hu• miliation I)l1 are not welcome him—l who had driven Lim from his home, who had been no true wife. But presently the deep sweet tones of that voice I had loved so well, fell upon my ear. I looked up to find myself alone with-ArnoldtO be clasped, with all his feeble power, to the heart that still beat for one. To hear mingled vows of love and pardon and thanksgiving; to know that the sad past was forgotten and aton ed for, and that the days-of my heart's widowhoidd were , ended. I brought him home, a wreck, indeed, of his former self. But, oh t how sweet the task to nurse him into new life and . strength I that blessed my reward in knowing that 1 , was once more trusted and beloved! My night of sorrow was past—and joy came with the morning ! oar Pat Doolan, an Inkerman, bowed his head to a cannon ball which whizzed ,pact him, six inahes °above his bearskin 'Faith,' says Pat, "ono never loses any thing by politeness.". • IMEME .. , - .. C I . I . . • . . . .. 5 111 , 6 tj 4 0 N . a,,,...00 = TERMS :--$1,50 in Advance, or .3 . 2 within the year. PAY AS YOU GO " Owe no man anything," ,was the in junction of a certain apostle, but we pre fer the motto of John Randolph, " pay as you go." We must owe men all the courteSies and kindnesses which belong to and grace humanity; it is an obliga , tion of our nature; therefore the apostle was notsufficiently definite, but Randolph hit the nail on the head, when he con fined his maxim to pecuniary debts, which men, under the present order of things, are liable to incur. He touched with a true philosophy one of the com monest and greatest of society evils. We take it for granted, that as a general rule, pecuniary debts are contracted to be paid sooner or later. As a general rule their burthen is least the sooner they are paid. Interest, usury, dependence, lawsuits, and costs of all kinds that hang over standing and legitimate debts, add, if we could but get at their total for a single year iri this country, millions of dollars to the original obligations. Friendships are bro ken over debts, forgeries and murders are committed on their account, and how ever considered, they are a source of an noyance, and evil and that continually. They break in everywhere upon the har monious relations of individuals and of society; they blunt sensitiveness tb per sonal independence, and in no respect do they advance the general well being. As debts are incurred to be paid, and as the saving all lies on the side of the earlier payment, why- not manage to pay as we go and thus avoid all debts, ,duris, broken friendships, writs, constable's and court costs ? We buy this or that, and we propose to pay in a week, a month, three months, and some the common rule of credit riot running beyond six months, for which credit wo have to pay advance prices and interests, and why should we not, even at sonic sacrifice, continue to get so far the start of custom, as to. pass by this perpetual credit system, and from that point, beginning the world anew arid even, keep even by paying as we go ? It would be infinitely cheaper, better, and more independent for us all. If we can. ever pay, why not pay at once— , now ? It will be no easier when interest is added to principal. The rich have no excuse for not paying as they go, though to, their shame, they are oftenest the ones to decree misery and ruin by the credit they use, or rather abuse, in their intercourse with the world. They, by withholding the honest dues of the labor er, the mechanic, the Merchant and the professional man, who are all poor com paratively, force these glasses into indebt, edness until communities become a tang. led net, whose threads of affiliation are standing accounts, 'notes bonds and mort gages, suits at law, judgments and exe cutions. If those who are able to pay as they go, would be just and pay thus, the credit system, which now makes one half soeiety dependent. 4 arid - illtves, would' be mainly swept away. The middle man and the poor man are driven to the wall by the system ; they can be punished under obligation, with impunity; but the man of means, the rich man, who dares to remind him of debt ? Ile will pay when lie gets ready.—Albet4 Knicker bocker. TILE BREAKING OF AN Eoo.—A young couple had passed the first few weeks of their marriage at the house of a friend. Having at length occupied their new home, they were taking their first breakfast, when the following scene took place: The young husband was innocently opening a boiled egg in an egg cup. The bride observed'that he was breaking the shell at what she thought the wrong end. " How strange it looks" said she, "to see you break your egg at the small end, my dear ! No one else does so; it looks so odd." " Oh, I think it is quite as _good, in fact, better than breaking it at the large ond, my love; for when you break the large end the egg runs over the top," re plied the husband. " But it looks very odd when no ono else does so," rejoined the wife. " Well, now, I really do think Rls . not a nice way you have got of eating an egg. That dipping strips of bread and butter into an egg certainly is not tidy. But Ido not object to your doing as you please, if you will let me break my egg at the small end," retorted the hus band. " I am sure my way is not so bad as eating fruit•pie with a knife, as you do, instead of using a fork, and you always eat the syrup as if you were not accus tomed to have such things. You really do not see how very bad it looks, or I am sure you would not do so," added the wife. " The syrup is made to be eaten with the pie; and why should I send it away on the plate ?" asked the husband. "No well bred persons..ever clear their plates as if they were starved," said the bride, With a contemptuous oast of her head. " Well, then, I am not a well-bred person," replied the husband, angrily. " But you must be, if we are to live comfortably together," was the sharp an swer of the fastidious lady. "We11,..1 must break My egg at - the small end; so it does not signify ; and I must also oat the syrup." "Then I will not have either fruit-pie or eggs at the table." ".But,l will have them," petulantly exclaimed tho' husband. "Then I wish I had not married you," oried the young with, bursting into tears. " Arid so do I," added the now incensed husband, as ho rose.and walked out of• the "room. This domestic quarrel was followed by others equally trifling in their origin, and ==2 disgrticeful in their character, until the silly couplesmade themselves so disagreea ble, that they separated. • SIAMESE FEMALE SOLDIERS The following description of the King of Siam's femae military body guard, though not entirely new, is interesting from its minuteness. It appears in the Moniteur de l' Armee : "A. battalion of the King's Guard consists of four hundred women, chosen among the handsomest and most robust girls in the country. They received ex cellent pay and their discipline is perfect. They are admitted to serve at the age of thirteen, and are placed in the army of reserve at twenty five. From that period they no longer serve about the King's person, but are employed to guard the Royal palaces and Crown lands. On en tering the army they make a vow of chas tity, frcm which there is no exemption unless any of them should attract the King's attention and be admitted among his legitimate wives. The King's choice seldom falls on the most beautiful, but on the most skilled in military exercis es. " The hope of such reward animates them with extraordinary zeal for military instruction, and Europeans are astonished at the martial appearance of that battal ion, as well as its skill in mateuvering, and its excellent discipline. The cos tape the women were is very rich.— Their full dress is composed' of a white woollen robe, embroidered with gold.— The cloth is extremely fine, and descends as far as the knee; it is covered with a light coat of mail and a gilt cuirass.— The arms are free, and the head is cov ered with a gilt casque. When wearing this dress on state occasions their only weapen is a lance, which they handle with wonderful dexterity With their undress they aro armed with a musket. batia lion posed of four companies, and each company of one hun dred women commanded by a captain of their sex. Should the captain die, the company is drilled for three days by the King, who appoints one of the most com petent to succeed to the command. " The battalion has been commanded for the last five years by a wornan who saved the king's life at a tiger hunt, by her courage and skill. She possesses great influence at court, and' is much re, , ) speeted by those under her command.— She has the same establishment as a mettber of the royal family, and - ten ele phants aro placed at her service. The king never undertakes an expedition without being accompanied by his female guard, nor does he ever hunt, or even ride out, without an escort of the same guard, who are devotedly attached to his person. Each individual has five ne greshes attached to her service, and hav ing thllaAlo -domestic. occupation, devote herself exclusively to the duties of her profession. There is a parade ground near the city where one company is sta tioned for two days every week to exercise themselves in the use of the lance, the pistol, the musket and the rifle. " The king attends once a month, at those:exercises, accompanied by his broth er, who shares in some degree the sover ign power, and distributes' prizes to the most deserving. These rewards consist of bracelets and other valuable jewelry, to which the girls and their families at tach great importance. Those so hon ored fill the offices of sergeant and corpo ral. Punishment is very rare in this corps, and when it is inflicted it consists of a suspension from service for a period not exceeding three months. But duels are much more frequent. They must be sanctioned, however, by the female cap tain, and be fought with swords in the presence of the entire company. When the death of one of the parties ensues, the deceased receives a' 'magnificent funeral, and the high priest pronounces a pane gyric aoclaring that the deceased by her valor has merited eternal rest in the abode of the blest. The survivor receives the congratulations of her corripanions ; but as a measure of discipline, she is sen tenced to pass two months away from her company in fasting and prayer. The military organization of this battalion is so perfect that the entire army endeavors to imitate it." Birds in Battle. The baffle of Murfreesboro was in a wooden, thinly, settled country. The wild animals of the forest were frightened by the storm of shot and the roar of the great guns. The men were lying behind a crest waiting. A brace of frantic wild turkeys, so paralized with:fright that they were incapable of flying, ran between the lines and endeayorcd to hide among the men. But the phrensy among the turkeys was not so touching as the exquisite tright,of the birds and rabbits. When the rear of the battle rushed through the cedar thickets, flocks of little birds flat• tered and circled above the'field in a state of utter bewilderment, and scores of rab bits fled for protection to our men lying dawn in line'on the left, nestling under their coats and creeping under their legs in a state of utter distraction. They hopped over the field liko . toads, and as perfectly, tamed by fright as, household pets. Many officers witnessed it, re marking it as one of the most eprious spectacles ever witnessed upon tho battle field. lam. Hans, who is judge of morals as well as money, says that being tender to another man's wife is not a legal tender.' We accept his opinion—though we have no interest in the question. Envy is unquestionably a high compli ment, but a most ungracious one. airefELFAr 4.lses. fClleivink - faetap ; deri*cd - iretn car , sot sources ofinfornlation, are inipertatit in the considerately of , the•Ocgtiory how to get rid of the worms: , A pair of 'blackbirds destroy in a sin gle day about GOO worms, and over 1000 insects have been found in the ()raw of some birds. „~. ~ , Baron Von Tschudi, the well-known ' , Swiss Naturalist, says, " without birds, successful ,agriculture is impossible."— They annihilate in a few months a great , er number of destructive insects than htt man hands can accomplish in the saran number of years. Among the most use ful birds for this_purpose may be classed the Swallovr, Vren, Robin Redbreast, Titmouse, Sparrow, Finch. Tschudi tested Titmouse upon 'rose bushes of his neighbor, and rid qze same in a few hours of innumerable rice. A Robin Redbreast ,killed in, the neighbor hood of 8000 flies in an hour. A pair of Night Swallows destroyed in fifteen minutes an immense swarm of gnats. A pair of Wrens flew thirty-six times in an hour with insects in their bills to their nest—certainly good compensation for the few cherries which they pluck from the trees. The generality of small birds carry to their young ones during the feeding period nothing but insects, worms, snails, .spiders, &c. Sufficient interest should be manifested by all to prevent the discharge of fire-arms in the vicinity of orchards, vineyards and flower gardens, as thereby the useful birds be- COllle, frightened. NO. 31,, A Sad Exemplification: [From the lialtimpre American, :Irma 20.] Our citizens had yesterday a sad exempli fication on our streets of the significance of that term—" poor white trash "—as applied to the privates in the ranks of the rebellion, a body of some sixteen hundred captured by General Grant having arrivA !vire to he em barked for some other point. Let it be noted„ that the term "poor white trash" oriyinakir in Dixie ONO" and is therefore as much a coinage to be accredited to the cotton lords of the Itammood and Rhea school as is that other of term, "mudsills f " which they also have the credit of having set afloat. But who that glanced along the ranks of this woefully ragged and pineLd assortment of rebel troops—this characteristic represen tation of the "chivalry" come to grief—and did not feel and know that they were no more accountable or responsible for the origin and continuance of a godless rebellion than were the horses they may have bestrode whilst in the military service of the magnates at Rich mond. Countenances utterly vacant ;'eyes lighted by no intelligence no education no anything that stamps men as thinking, re sponsible human beings in a crisis such as that gotten up by the Southern politicians, they_were..,seento_be, .at a_ glance s as only those tools in the hands of designing men to pull down a government depending on the intelligence of the people, for the purpose of erecting a military ;despotism, such as now holds them in its iron grasp, upon the ruins. Incapable of reading or writing even, as the bulk of them in this case—being from M.ssis sippi—were, they were of that class mention ed by Gregg., of South Carolina, as measura bly a nuisance to the planters anti their ne groes—a class of which South Carolina could boast the possession of about one hundred and fifty thousand before the war commenc ed, out of a white population of about three hundred thousand. Looking upon this woe begone and miser able procession of the captured, the idea was more than ever strongly impressed upon the t oughtful mind that the South 'Rust be' res cued from itself, These men were tirevictims of their leaders, the tools of politicians p and the class to which they belong in the' South will never know freedom more until the pow er of their tyrants is effectually broken. Let it nerve anew every arm to deal effective blows in their behalf, in behalf of that sys ..feM of Free governmefit th - ey are mado - ttliW sail. Only when the Slave Oligarchy is overthrown will these men cease to be its victims. The Politics of Major General Grant It is alike unpatriotic and ungracious to be higgling as to what may have been the polities of any of our brave generals in the field, who have been nobly fighting for the re public. With truly loyal and patriotic men it makes no difference as to what party a soldier may have belonged to before the re bellion. Rushing to the defence of his Gov ernment and his country, risking his life on the battle field, he challenges the respect and, the gratitude of the good citizens. Yet we find that certain Copperhead newspapers, that preach peace and denounce the war, have the unparalleled audacity to claim certain successful generals as "Democrats," using the term in their own sense. Some papers sympathizing with the Rebels, having claim ed our fellow-citizen, Major Gem Grant, as a •'Demo r.it," it may be proper for us to say a word touching his politics, speaking by the best authority. Being in the army up to within a few years before the war broke out, and being a military man, he never cast a vote in his life- In 1860 he was friendly to the success of the late Judge Douglas, though he often ex pressed himself as having great confidence, in the honesty and patriotism of Mr. Lincoln. His father, the venerable Jesse R. Grant, now residing in Covingtm, Kentucky, is a staunch Republican, and voted for Lincoln and Hamlin. His brother, Mr. 0. B. Grant now in charge of the business house in this city in which the General was engaged - be fore entering the servtce, is one of our most active and efficient Republicans and Union men. The General himself is now a thor ough and devoted supporter of the Adminis tration and its whole policy, without qualifi cation or evasion. In 1862 he was one of the signers to the call on Mr. Washburne to again- become the Republican and Union candidate for Congress for-this Congression al District. He looks with horror upon the "peace party" of the north, which is iostitu• tins a "fire in the rear" of gste gallant army which he has led to victory and glory. All his friend and supporters in this city are Republicans or war Democrats, while the Copperheads are cordially hostile to him. In the late splendid celebration here, got up in his honor, as the hero of the Mississippi and the capturer of Vicksburg, the 'leading ".Democriits" utterly refused to - participate in it; and while the dwellings of our loyal people blazed in magnificent. illumination, the houses of the others mentioned were closed in darkness and were as black as. midnight. To those interested we may therefore hay, that the present political status of General-Gi'ant is not a matter of doubt. " Well, how do you like the looks of the varmint?" said. a Southwest to a Downeastern, who was gazing witli found eyed wonder, and evidntly for the first time, at aluge alligator,-with whie , opened jaws, on the muddy banks of the Missis sippi. "Wal," replied the Yankee, "he ain't wat yeou may call a hansiim critter, but he's got a great deal of openness whe'he smiles ~ If men will amuse tho tho world, it will forgive them for cheating it. [From the Galena Daily Advertiser.] II