Attectria Notticy. Where are the Copperheads. •Klo look Upon the battle.fluld, Where the shot and shell fly fast—. Where Freedom's stirring battle cry Is beard upon the blast ; Go where the lifted sabres flash And fall on traitor crests, Where Southern bayonets are dint With blood from Northren breasts; Go search amid the loyal ranks— Among the glorious dead— Among them all you will net find A •Ingle Copperhead. Go search the gunboat's bloody deck When the dread conflict's done; The traitor's banner In the dust, And silenced every gun ; While o'er the hard.swon rampart floats Our flag, yet ohl what pain, 'Neat& that dear flag slurs morning light tow many have been sinful Among the heroes of the fight, The living and the dead— Jo search among them—there is not A single Copperhead. Go search the crowded hospital, Whore ghastly wounds are seen, Which tell through what a struggle fierce Those noble men have boon; But look upon their faces, lo They smile through all their pain; The scars they bear wore nobly won— Their Minor has no stain, Soft hands aro mins'tring—kind words Aro heard around each bed; Some soothe, some suffer, all are true— There is no Copperhead. tio where the look can scarce conceal. the treason of the heart, And where the heart would willingly Defend the traitor's part. Whore Seymour, Wood and Vortices ore Doomed patriotic man; Go where they wish Vallandigham Were side [tick again ; Go where desertion is no crime— Where loyalty is dead— Where and disasters give no pain ; There is the Copperhead. Oo where foul scorn is heaped upon Our noble boys, who - go To stand a wall of lire between Us and our traitor foe— Go where bold Grant's revilers are— Where Burnside Is delitined; Ware-lizaks and-Butler—noble namesl— In scorn alone are named : Oo where true patriotic pride, Honor, and Truth aro dead— Where our success beings but despair; There Is the Copperhead. LOVE LINES "COME TO ME!" To they heavou,of tho arms ; To thy bosom's hiddon chorine; To the kisses of thy mouth, SVeater - thali'the 'balmy Southi To the sunshine of tliY smile, Which an angel might beguile— My love, come I With a fondness unoxpressua. To fold theo to my throlang breast: To press th,r_ruddy, parting lips, And taste tr. noctar Cupid sips; To lot my words, my eyce each touch Tell thee "I love Ilum"-0, how much! Swuet lovo 1 emu° I As halts tho carrier dors, his home— nest of love—to thee I come. On thy fair boson) I will rest For thare alone ran I bo blest— There throbs for me a woman's heart Of whish no other ha■ a part. Dear one, I come I amino Meet me, smiling, at the door ; Welcome me as e'er before; Bless mo with thine earosst oyes, Beaming brightnoss like the skies— A gift I bring then—royal, rare— * crown - of torn Ibriltoo to - wesr; ---- ' My own sweet wife) ~~~~~~~l~~ze;~a3~. THE REREL SPY. The other day I meta friend who was formerly one of the Red Devils. During the oonvers,ation which ensued he asked me whether I remembered Pill who deserted the regiment at Fortress -Monroe. " A slender, dark-eyed young fellow, was he not ?" "The same," replied my friend. "We became chums from the first moment we met at Fort Schuyler; and•if you will give me your attention a few moments you shall hear how he came to desert the regiment, and a few other facts that will surprise you." " By all means," said I, "let me hear the story." " Well," began my friend, "one day we were sitting in the shadow of a pine tfee near our encampment at Fortress Monroe, when my chum commenced to speak of a beautiful girl in the village of Hampton, whom he was in the habit of visiting occasionally. " She is a beauty l' he exclaimed, en thusiastically ; 'and Jack,' he added, lay ing his hand upon my arm, 'you shall go with me to see her." At first I objected, pleading as an ex cuse the modesty and bashfulness I al ways experienced in the presence of the fair sox. " But she isn't fair,' said he; 'she is a quadroon.' "Whew do you think of going ?' I asked. " To-night.' " But we'll have to "run the guard." '-That's nothing,' answered Hill , 'we can easily manage that.' "So at ength I promised my chum that I would accompany him to the vil lage of Hampton to see the beautiful quad roon. ' ‘" Wien night came, and we started . upon our nocturnal expedition, we bad no difficulty in passing our line of sentinels; for by some means or other Bill has sue leeeded in obtaining the countersign. " This task was accomplished, we now 'Made our way to the river beach, and af ter we had walked a short &term; my • chum passed-near- a rock- that-jutted- over • :the water, and showed me a small skiff moored beneath its shadow-. We. were soon seated in the skiff, which flew swift ly over, the waves before the, vigorous strokes of our paddles. In a 'few mo ments:we reached the place of our, desti nation—a small, dilapidated building which . stood a few yards back from the epot:_ where we _landed. There was"- small archway beneath the house, which atvidently led into the 'cellar, 'and it was• to this quarter that the steps of•tuy oh,utp • Were ',directed. •PaSsing through •the archway,.we found ourselves in total dark ness; but Bill.shouted 'Conic on.!' and so followed,. although I -stumbled several, times igaitiStsome etaptypasliff i qnd one? came very nearly being precipitated over a barrel. " It's all right !' shouted Bill. "Come on !" " What the deuce tempted you to seek an entrance this way ?" I inquired.— "There is a good stoop on the outside of the house, for I saw it." " It's the shortest route," answered my chum. "Hero we are—hero aro the eel- lar steps," he continued, catching me by the arm, pulling me towards him. "We were soon at the top of the'steps, when Bill knocked at a door in front of us.— A musical voice said 'Coin° in!' and we entered a small, neatly furnished room, in which were seated an old negress and my friend's quadroon. "The latter was indeed a _beautiful creature, with long bright hair that de scended below her waist, and eyes as dark and soft as a summer midnight. She seemed very glad to see us—Bill in par ticular, around whose neck she threw her arms, kissing him with all the warmth and fervor of her Southern nature, while he was not at all backward in returning the compliment. The old negress ruse and left the room; and I was just com ing to the conclusion that it would be a good plan for me to'do the same, when the unmistakeable tramp of horses hoofs approaching at a gallop saluted my ears and drew me to the window. Looking out in to -the -nigh - I Caught—sight .otT-.a. number of grey uniformed horsemen com ing towards the house at a pace which must bring them to the door in a few nutrients. "The moon, which had hitherto been obscured by clouds, was now shining brightly, revealing every outline of the approaching figures. They were rebel cavalrymen. '' Bill,' ,Loxe!aimed, 'come here !' MEM "There was no answer, and without urning around T again called - his name. "Still there was no reply. " I turned impatiently, and perceived that both himself and the quadroon had deserted the apartment ! " I shouted his name aloud, but there was no response; at that moment a gust of wind swept through a broken pane of glass and,blew out the candle, leaving me in totaldarkness, MEE " Again I stepped to the window and ooked out. The horsemen had halted a MEE few yards from the house, and were dis• mounting. Presently 1 saw three, of them advance to the stoop, and the chit- tering of their sabres and the noise of their heavy boots as they asc , nded the steps. I could also hear some of them coming up from the cellar; so there was now left to rue but one way of retreat from the appartment, the same by which the old negress had made her exit. As )._ . passed through the doorway, 1 stum bled against the bOttoin Of 'a staircase.— This I immediately commenced to ascend as noiselessly and us swiftly as possible. "Arriving at the top, I discovered a door which I pushed open without ceremony, and found myself in a small apartment half lighted by the rays of a lamp which streamed into it from another room con nected with this one by a door which had been left open. The murmur of voices, coining from the other apartment, fell upon my ear. I looked through the open doorway, and behold a sight which sur prised me. Seated upon a sofa at one end of the room were three figures. One was my chum Bill—, with his arm a• round the waist of quadroon, and her head upon his Shoulder; while the other was a tall figure in the uniform of a rebel lieutenant of cavalry. " So Magruder doesn't want the village burnt yet?" remarked Bill, as lie stroked his whiskers. 'There's an excellent op portunity to do it, if ho does; for the pickets arc very small around Hampton at present.' " 1 know that, captain,' answered the lieutenant, 'but Magruder will wait until he sees how long the d—d Yankees are going to stay. If he sees a prospect of them going into winter quarters here, you may depend upon it he'll burn the town?" " I shall keep my eyes about me,' said Bill, 'and report matters as usual." " But when are you going to rejoin us, captain ?" inquired the rebel. " As soon us Magrucer thinks fit, an swered Bill, though to tell the truth I'm about tired of playing the spy. It was a deuced good idea of his—my going to New York and enlisting in the Fifth Zouaves—ha ! hal. ha! Captain S—, ofthe rebel service; a Red Devil.' "At that moment Bill happened to turn his head toward the door. Our eyes met and he sprang to his feet with an ex3laniation. Ac the same moment the lieutenant rose and drew his sword. " You have overheard us?" said Bill. 4 4 Ay, traitor every word," I answered. " I might have forseen this," said Hill, in a tone of chagrin, "but that whiskey of yours" he added, turning to the lieuten ant, "made inc careless.' " lie shall .not leave this house alive," exclaimed the lieutenant, drawing a pis tol from his belt and pointed it at my head. " But I had picked up a chair as he drew forth the weapon, and now ,with the quickness of lightening I hurled it at his face. The pistol - was discharged, but the contents whistled harmlessly over, my head. I darted from the room, rushed down stairs, and nerving myself for .a desperate venture, dashed across the apartment below, in the direction of the collar stairs. The room was filled - with rebel cavalrymen, but my sudden ap pearance so astounded them that 'they made no attempt to arrest my progress.— By the tithe I had reached the cellar, however, they had, recovered from their sruprise, and as I sped onward I heard the report of two or three carbines behind mo i lollowed.,by the whiz of bullets as they flow pfiSt my OM,. The oezt mo- VOL. 63. A. S. RHEEM, Editor & Propr etor. meat I bad passed through the archway into the open air, and with two or three bounds reached the skiff. Unfortunately, by the ebbing of the tide, it was now high and dry upon the beach. rseized the stern with both hands and by a great effort of strength succeeded in launching it. But the time occupied in this ma numvre enabled the formost of my pur suers to gaits .upon me. With his piece clubbed and elevated on high to deal me a powerful blow, be came on. But while he was yet a few yards distant I stooped and quickly unfastened the rope of the skiff from the stone to which it was tied. Liking the heavy piece of rock, I sud denly rose upright and hu led it with all my force at the head of my pursuer. " It. struck him on the temple, and he dropped to the beach like a lug " The skiff was now drifting away from me , but I darted into tic water, and be ing an excellent swimmer, soon succeed ed in reaching it. I clambered into it, and then looked toward the beach.— Cavalrymen were drawn up in line, with their pieces pointed toward me. " Fire !' exclaimed a voice which I recognized as that or the lieutenant. " Before the sharp report of -the car bines rang out upon the air, I dropped quickly to the bottom of the skiff, and the storm of lead passed over MC and flew hissing into the water beyond. 110%9 sprang- to' teyfeet; . erid with a shout of defiance seized the only oar the boat contained, and adopting the sculling process, sent the light vessel shouting through the water like a rocket. Assisted by the tide, the skiff flew over the waters so rapidly that before the men could re load 1 was out. of range. " Huhr an hour afterwards I arrived safely in camp, and was just in time to take my place in the ranks, for, having heard the firing, and supposing, that 9Akl' picket was attacked, the officers had tir &red the won unc:cr arms. A message from the front; however, :oust soon have convinced them that this was not the ease; and the men were allowed to 'break ranks" and disperse to their quarters. - " Well, Coin ," continued my .friend, ''this isn't the end of the matter; for I saw Bill again at the battle of Big Beth el. You probably remembered that, du ring the fight a troop of rebel cavalry at tempted to make a dash upon us, out were driven back ?" 1 answered in the affirmative, and my friend continued : " At the . head of that troop rode Bill or more properly speaking, the rebel cap tain. I saw him as plainly as I now see you. But it w a s only for an instant.— Ile tumbled frolii his horse the next -too moot, with his head torn from his shoul ders by a shot from one of odr brass pieces. AylitL_Avon,.fiZ;. ing the captain fall, drew a pistol, aimed it at his own heart and fired The horse becoming unmanageable, galloped into our lines, dragging the rebel after him, the foot of the dead soldier having become entangled iu the stirrups as he fell. .As the steed dashed wildly about the field the rebel's foot became disengaged from the stirrup, and he fell to the earth a few - yards from the spot where I was stand ing. his jacket had become disarranged and torn around the breast, revealing to my astonished gaze the beautiful but blood-stained bosom of a female. I ad vanced and +oohed down upon the corpse, closely scrutinizing the features. The face was familiar. Once seen it could never be forgotten. It was the face of the captain's mistress, the lovely quad roon l" GIVE [TIM education is the great buckler and shield of liberty, well developed industry is equally the buckler and shield of in.:ividual indepen dence. As an unfailing resource in life give your son, equal milli a gaud educa tion a honest trade. Better any trade than none, though there is ample room for adoption of every inclination in this respect. Learned professions and spec ulative employments may fail a man ; but an honest handicraft trade seldom or nev er—if its possessor chooses to exercise it. Let him feel, too that honest labor crafts are honorable and noble. The men of trades—the real creator of 'whatever is most essential to the necessities and wel fare of mankind, cannot be dispensed with. They, above all others, in what ever repute they have been held by their most fastidious fellows, must work at the oar of human progress, or all is lust.— But few brown handed trade workers think of this, or appreciate the real pow er and position they compass Give your son a trade, no matter what fortune he may have. A Voucumn.—A man once went to purchase a horse of a Quaker. "Will he draw?" asked the buyer. "Thee will be pleased to see him draw, friend." answered Nehemiah, The bar gain was closed, and the limner tried his horse, but be would not stir. Ile return. cd : ''rho horse will not draw an inch.!' "1' did not tell thee be would draw, friend," said the Quaker, "I only ie marked thee would be pleased to see hilt) draw, and so should I, but he never would gratify the in that respect." 73fs_A persorkeomplaimalto Dr. Frank. lin or having been insulted by one who called him a scoundrel, " Ab," replied the doeter, " and what did you call him?" " Why," said he, " I called him a scoun drel, too." " Well," resumed Franklin, " I presume you both spoke the truth." Why islife the riddle of all . riddles? Because we must all give it up, m.Never do that in prosperity where of you hay repent in adversity. CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6,186 g. The English Criticism on Presi- The following ably-wkitten and interest ing criticism on the character of Presi dent LINCOLN appeared in the Liverpool Post, of October 1. It will be seen that it was immediately suggested, or called forth, by- Mr. LINCOLN'e letter to Mr. IlAcKtirr, the celebrated actor : Perhaps no leader in a great contest ever stood so little chance of being a sub ject of hero worship as Abraham Liuooln, the President of the. United States. That he was once a rail-splitter would be pur -1 doned if it could be proved that he were now a " swell." But there is nothing of the swell about " Old Abe." Every vis itor that goes to Washington has some thing disrespectful to say of his very long legs, and consequently very long •panta leons; of his shambling figure; of' his awkward speech, and doubly awkward si lence ; of his general unfitness in appear ance and manners to mix in high society. Those who only know him from his exer citations in print conceive but a little bet ter opinion of him. His grammar is de cidedly self-taught and, perhaps, not quite remembered ; his style uu style at all; his arguments seem sometimes to have been written rather 011 the principle of Samson, makino• r' sport for the Philistines, than as at till adopted to advance his cause ; and some of his metaphors are voted decided parl;27 die crowd V. to'roytint pretenders to taste, who never admired a saying that was not timed with vulgarity, and Never sail one that could be suspect ed of nip/• or originalit,y. When the enemies of the North have. nothing else to say they deride the President, and when they feel the point of his homely jokes, they bitterly denounce him as a sort of Nero fiddling away to a ribald tune, while the empire, he rules is in flames .uf_civa_war.._.Searcely _any_one.. has a good word to say for him; and even his own party in the States seem too ready to remain silent about his merits, and to base their defence of the adwinis• (ration on any grounds rather than con fidence in its head. wnrshipper of human heroes i n iglu pos,aly travel a great -deal /arch er an,/ /arc much Morse for an idol than in :±clecting this same lanky American— the personfithation of free-soil principles —the representative of the idea that sla very, without being forcibly interfered with, must not be allowed, to spread it self' ever the North American continent —and the impersomatiorrietrtso i of the vic tory of that idea—a victory, which, as it were, stands on the defensive, against those who would turn it into a defeat. Abso lute truth, stern resolutior i -clear-insight, solemn faithfulness, courage that canm,t be dashed—these are qualities that go a iongrmiy...to ake_up a—Auto, ..whate.ver side the possessor of them may take in any lawful conflict. And it would not be easy to dispute Mr. Lincoln's claim to all these. Ile has never given up a good servant or a sound principle. He has never shut his eyes to filets, or remained in ignorance of them. Ile has nerer hes itated t o d o hi s work, or faltered in do ing it. No resolution has remained in nuinbus with him because it was a strong one. No measure, has been adopted merely because " something must b done." The exigencies of a fanatical war have never betrayed him into fanati cism, and the sharp stings of satire have never drawn from him an exclamation of ill humor, or even an imprudent rejoin der. Der.nd upon it, the whole history of the war proves that this quiet, unpretend ing, awkward wan is on the whole a fit ter subject fur respect than ridicule even as a public wan, leaving altogether aside the consideration—pee a favorite one in England—that he haS raised himself lit turally from nothing. But it is not from the history of the war that we draw to day an illustration of this e. nspicuous man's honest, generous, and thoughtful character. We derive it from what little private life he has had while he has been at the wheel—where he must have been a very lxion—of the great American ship. Last winter or spring—Mr. Lincoln dues nut well remember• which—he went to the theatre and saw Hackett, an excel lent actor, as few even in England need to be told. Some time after, Mr. Hack ett sent the President i boa with a com plimentary note But, having something wore serious in hand, Mr. Lincoln omit ted for sonic time to use the player after his own honor, and did not acknowledge the present. At length, however, in Au gust the acknowledgement was sent. Now let us see in what terms Mr. Lincoln, the rough, uneducated, empty•minded Presi dent, as sonic think him, addressed the ac• tor whose Falstaff, after delighting tens of thousands, had chanced to be played be fore him.: EXECUTIVE MANSION. Washington, August 17, 1863. My Dear Sir —fiontlis ago, I should have acknowledged the receipt of your honk and accompanying kin] note, and I now have to beg your pardon for not having done so. For one of my age 1 have seen very little of the drama. The first presentation of Falstaff' I ever caw was yours hero last winter or spring Perhaps the, best oomph ment I can pay is tocSay, as I truly Min, I am very anxious to 'gee . of it again. Some Sbakspeare's plays I have never read, while others I have gone over perhaps as frequent ly as any proleSsional reader. Among the latter are Lear, Richard 111, Henry VIII, Hamlet and especially Macbeth I think none equals Macbeth. It. is wunderful.— Unlikn,you gentleman of the profession, I think Ike soliloquy in Hamlet, oommencing. "Oh my offence is pink," surpasses that cotnudoneing, "To he or not to be." But par don this 80101 attempt at criticism. I should like to hear you pronounce the • opouiug speech of Richard 111. IVill you not. scsou_visk Washington again I If you do please call. and let nto make your persona aoquaintano : Yours truly. A. LINCOLN. Now ! to us this letter speaks for itself dent Lincoln. TERMS :--$1,50 in Advance, or $2 within the year as favorably as any letter over spoke.— Its simplicity and candor are as fresh and delightful as new mown hay. Only fan cy a statesman, a .Presidext, confessing thus frankly that he had never read Shakspeare through ! flow many Brit ish hf. P's would have confessed it 7 And yet how many of thorn there are who would have to own as much if they were put to it? We meet around intellectual or quasi-intellectual dinner tables. We talk as familliarly of Shelly as of sherry. We ttffeet to languish at the thought of Pas cal, and chuckle hypocritically over a ref erence to Montaigne. We laugh consum edly at a quotation from Juvenal if the quoter looks humorous, and pretend to be otherwise occupied if the expression of his countenance is not very readable. Wu talk as familiarly of Rabelais as o. last week's Punch ; comment on the transcendentalism of " Satter Resartes" without the faintest idea of the tenor of the book ; and narrowly, escape denounc ing Thdtuas Carlyle downright, under the impression that he is Richard Carlile, the infidel who outraged the orthodoxy of our fathers and mother. There is no more abundant source of shame and pretension than the affectation in society of being well road in the "works which no gen tlen-an's library should bo without."— Depend upon it, there is touch good truth and honesty in any man, and espe cially in a public man;Whn admires and respects Shakspeare, and voluntarily sap he has not read all his works. But wo are more pleased still with Mr. Lincoln for having read several of the plays many times over. It is far better for a man to rear? one play twenty times, because he loves it, than to read twenty plays once because they constitute the au thor's works and must be gone through. There is much indication of character, too, e atio of_favorites.Lear,"_.. "Richard III," " Henry • VI II," "Ham let," and " Macbeth," would not be a had libtairy for any man who would make himself - really master-of them, and for a ruler of men, who, at the same timei is a. lover of human nature and a quaint hu morist, they may well prove a continual feast. The choice of " Macbeth" as prin cipal favorite, and the preference of thO less popular of hamlet's soliloquies, also indicate that incisive use of his own wits, which is one of the surest indications of a man of power. Long may Me. Lincoln be able to find solace and enjoyment thus pleasantly and profitably, and may he never lack moral courage and graceful courtesy to do hon or to those who, by illustrating the great damatists, do almost all that is done el -fectually to- keep them popularly alive.— In Mr. Hackett's ease the honor is doub ly due, as many of our readers aro aware. unctions. Faistahr, but a thoroughly estimable man, Ouse an opulent merchant, and after wards unfortunate, he went on the stage, and paid every creditor in full out of the new fortune he had made in his new av ocation. lie is an honor to a noble pro fession, the credit of which is too often inadequately sustained ; and his distin guished correspondent is a man whose simple truth and cultivated intelligence will not forever be concealed by the un courtliness of his manners. A contrast Was wanted to the suave deceitfulness and emptiness of James Buchanan, and one was found in Abraham Lincrle. HON, BIDDY IMPARTED A FLAVOR TO TILE COFFEE.—The wife of our friend being in delicate health, it was resolved that a girl should be procured to do the housework, that the lady might have an opportunity to reoover health and spirits. Atter visiting the intelligence office for two or three mornings, a fine, buxom lass of about twenty years of age, but six months Mtn " the owld sod," was select ed, and instructed as to the duties that would be expected of her. " Now then," says the lady, " pour the gruund coffee into the pot, then pour in the hot water, and, after a few minutes' boiling, put in one half an egg, so," and the lady elucidated such demonstration by illustration. " You understand, don't you ?" says the lady. " Indeed I do, mum," was the response " Bile the coffee, grind in the water, and dhrop in the half of an egg. Isn't that it, mum ? _ " All right," replied the lady: "Now, then, to-morrow we'll see how well you remember." To-morrow morning came, and the cof fee was as good as could be expected.— The third morning came, and, to the as tonishment of our friend and wife the coffee was undrinkable and nauseating even the odor of it was sickening. Brid get was called, and questioned as follows " Bridget, did you first put the ground coffee in the pot ?" " Indade I did mum." " Did you then put in the hot water?" " Sure I did." " How long did you lot it boil ?" " Five minutes, mum." " What did you do, then ?" " I put in an egg mum." ~ " Just 'as I showed you the other morn ing." " Well, to tell the truth, mum," says Bridget, gi.ing her garments a twitch with her brawny band," to toll the truth, I would not put in the half of the ego., as ye towlci me; but, the egg was a bad one and t. thought ye wouldn't mind kaping the half of it, so I dhtopped in the 'cruller as it was !" Arothatic coffee, that. We should call it infantile chicken soup. TitE dedrer oats become the more horses are licked. Dobbs.says a shilling of raw-hide will give , as much power to his grey mare as twenty-five cents worth 'of corn, Dobbs is becoming a philoso -11PC: ARTEMUS Olst THE DRAFT ARTENIUS WARD (Mr. Chas. F. Browne) has issued the following circular : As the undersigned has been led to fear that the law regulating the Draft was not wholly understood, notwithstand ing the numerous explanatory circulars that have been issued from the national capital of late, he hereby issues a circular of his own I and, if he shall succeed in making this favorite measure more clear to a discerning public, he will feel that he has not lived in vain : I. A young man who is drafted and in advertently goes to Canada, where he be comes embroiled with a robust 'English party, who knocks him round so as to dis able him for life, the same occurring in a_ licensed bar-room, on British soil, such young men cannot receive a pension on auet,unt-of said injuries from the United States Government, nor cah his heirs or creditors. 11. No drafted man, in going to the ap pointed rendezvous, will be permitted to go round by way of Canada on account of the roads being better that way, or be cause his "Uncle William" Jives there. Any gentleman living in Ireland, who was never in this country, is not lia ble to the draft, nor are our forefathers. This latter statement is made for the ben efit or those enrolling officers who, have acted on the - supposition that the able bodied Male population of a place includ ed dead gentlemen in the cemeteries. . The term of' enlistment is 'for three years, but any man who may have been drafted in two places has a right to go for six years, whether the war lasts that length of time or not—a right this Depart ment hopes he will insist on. V. The only sons of a poor widow, whose husband is in Caliihrnia, are not exempt ; kut, the man who_owns stock .in the Vermont Central Railroad is. So, also, are incessant lunatics, habitual lect ur7rs, persons who were born with wood en legs or false teeth, blind men, (unless they will acknowledge that they 'Tan see it.")and people who deliberately voted for John Tyler. A. W. WOMAN A CIVILIZER.-If God were to take the sun, and moon, and stars, out of the heavens, the chances of husbandry would be what, if God were to take wom an out of life, would be the chances for re finement and civilization. Woman carries civilization in her heart. It springs from her. her power and influence mark the civilization of any country. A man that lives in a community where he has the privilege of a woman's society, and is subject to woman's influence, is almost of necessity refined, more than he is aware of; and when men are removed from the _gen ial..in fluen ce.-of v i rtuo ..wo manhood-, the very best degenerate, or feel the de, privation. There is something wanting in the air when you get west of the Al legheny mountains on a sultry day of summer. The air cast of the mountain is supplied with a sort of pabulum front the salt water of the ocean, by which one is sustained in the sultriest days of mid summer. Now, what this salt is to the air, that is woman's influence to the vir tue of a community. You breathe it without knowing it. All you know is that you are Made stronger and better.— And a man is not half a man unless wo man helps hint to be I One of the mis chiefs of camp life is that women are re moved from it. The men may not know what it is that lets them down to a lower state of feeling, or what that subtle influence was that kept them up to a higher state of refinement, but is the ab sence of woman in the one case, and it was the presence of woman in the other. Woman is a light which God has set be fore man to show him which way to go, and blessed is he who has sense enough to follow it. ms„Experimonts have shown that a man's finger nails grow their complete length in four mouths and a half. A man living seventy years, renews his nails one hundred and eighty-six times. Allowing each nail to be half an inch long, he has grown seven feet and nine inohes of finger nail on each finger, and on fingers and thumbs, an aggregate of seventy•seven feet and six i'ehes. AN Irishman, who was troubled with the toothaohe, determined to have an old offender extracted ' but their being no dentist near, heiesol ved to do Vle job him self: whereupon he fillled the excavation with powder, but being afraid to touch 'it off, he put a slow match to it, and then run to get out of the way. A Miss Joy was present at a party re cently, and in the course of the evening some one used the quotation, "A thing of beauty is a joy forever," when she ex claimed, "I'm glad I'm not a beauty, for I shouldn't like to be a Joy forever." • ises_A man's wife often gives him all the moral strength ho has. She is at once his rib - land backbori-ef tc - r"Gooa morning, Mr. Jenkins!— Where have you kept yourself this long time " Kept myself ! I don't keep myself— I board on credit I" WHY is an orderly 'schoolmaster like a latter C ? Because he makes lasses into classes. We should never be afraid oreap . ress-, ing those sentiments which our expe. rience prove to be true. It must be a happy thought to a lover that his . blood; and that of. his sweetheart, mingle in the same-,mosguito.. He that accuses all mankind of Cor ruption ought to reineinhiir that he is sure to oonviet only one. gew Picias of Vallandighth Trott- BOIL. The following letter, according to tbo Cincinnati papers, were recently cap tured in Tennessee, among the baggage of a rebel officer pEnit COLONEL : Your kind .noteand invitation of yesterday was this morning handed me by 'your brother-in-law, who will hand you thia,in return. It would give me much pleasure to visit you and your command before leaving the Con federacy, but it is now impossible to do so, as I have made arrangements to start this A. M. with the earliest train for Wil mington. NO. 44. You surmise correctly when you say that you believe me to be the friend of the South in her struggle for freedom My feelings have been publicly expressed in my own country, in that quotation from Lord Chatham—" My lords, you cannot conquer America. There is not a drop of Puritan blood in my veins:- I hate, despise, and defy the tyranical Government which has sent me among you, for my opinion's sake, and shall nev er give it my support in its crusade upon your institutions. But you arc mistaken when you say there are but few such in the United States, North. Thousands are there who would speak out but fbr the military despotism that strangles, them Although the contest has been, and will continue to be, a bloody one, you have but to persevere, and the victory will surely be yours. You must strike home. The thfensive policy lengthens the contest. The shortest road to peaces is the boldest ane. You can have your own terms by gaining the battle on your enemy's soil. Accept my kind regard for your por., sonal welfare, and sincere thanks for your kind wishes in my behalf, and hop ing and praying for the ultimate cause in which you are lighting, believe me, as: ever, your friend, C. L. VALLANDIMIAM Col. D. I). Inshall, Bth Ala. Vols. Resources of the South East Tennessee is a mineral region, one of the very best adapted for manufacturing pur• poses in the United States—coal, iron, copper, lead, zinc, and some other metals are pro duced in the mountain ranges, and all the most valuable in inexhaustible quantities.- 1 roil Is made and sold at $lO per ton, and for several . y ears 'lmmense quantities of . copper . have been mined at Ducktown and carried to, the Atlantic, notwithstanding the great dil;bt• culttes of transportation. Indeed, the mous• twins bordering on North Carolina and Ten nessee arc full of copper, and will, no doubt, prove the best copper region of this country. Gold is probably plenty in these mountains, but it far less important than coal, iron, cop per, and zinc, all of which, with stone and! lumber of the hest quality, may be found there in any quantity.• Such a country as. this ought to be converted to the use of men by labor, capital, and enterprise. But what can be done.in a country gr)und by a slave aristocracy ? That country was settled before Ohio ; but the whole State has not more than one-third the white people e 4 Ohio ! Nothing could be done, with all those vast, countless 'blessings of God—a free gitt to man—while man himself denied hie own rights, and 'refused his own inheritance.— Su me capitalists set to work at Ducktown, dug up great quantities of copper, and set the steam of history. in Motion ; b it, unluckily, they did not think that Slavery and Rebellion. were great virtues, and where are they ? And where is Duck town? The property is con.- .fiacated,-the- mines-gone to•-ruin;•and-the lo hururs scattered. * * If the future of peace ever returns to that unhappy country, there will be both a revolu tion and a renova ion. Tennessee has no ptssible interest in Slavery. Whatever might be said for Slavery on the Gulf, nothing can. be said for it iu Tennessee. It is a healtlar,, grain pru liming country, where the labor of ono white luau is worth that of two negroes. The slaves aro not so numerous but what they can be spared without inconveuience.— obably half of them are free now, since mats army occupies two.thirds of the State, and liberates as it goes. Tennessee, left to itself, will. become a free Stale, and wheigit is,. it will be one of the richest and most produc tive States in any part of the world. The mountains of the East will glow with manufac turing industry, the fields of the Middle will teem with grain, and the plains of the West, will whiten with cotton Loyal in heart, gal lant in spirit, the land of Jackson will vindi cate its right to stand among the most noble of States. —N. Y. Tunes. A VETERAN OBSERVER. Somebody tole Douglas Jerrold tkal George Robins, the auctioneer, was dead, "and of course,". added the gentleman "his business will go the devil." "Oh, then he'll get it again," replied the wit. GOOD EYESIGIIIT.—The lion and the horse disputed one day as to whose eye sight was the best. The lion saw, on dark night, a white hair in milk ; the horse saw a black hair in pitoh. So the horse won. A french journal has arranged a mar tinge between Queen Victoria and her late husband's uncle, Ferdinand of Port ugal. There is something decidedly Frenehy in the arrangement. An eminent medical man has just dis covered the true cause of a patient's sour disposition on one particular day. Th• poor creature so afflicted, had, it appears, early that morning turned in bed. An illiterate farmer, wishing to enter some animals at an agricultural exhibi. tion, wrote to the. secretary as follows Also enter ►no for the best jackass. I av sure of taking the premium. A Train. picture of uespair is a pig' reaching through a hole in the fence to get a cabbage that lies only a few inches beyond his reach. " Do you want your audience atten tive 2" said Dr. Ennuons ; then give them something to attend to. Rents are enormous, as the poor fellow said when he looked' at his coat. . . Flaslr talk=Scientifio discussions AT' bent lightning. Censure is a tax which those who filli eminent positions must expect to,p,ay,. The swell of the ocean -is said to be a, dandy tuidship`tuan. Many officers are engaged, ia, recruit,. ing—their health ; , puns The mist. that vapors roman significance.. The new, .Apaarioau hird---TwO' hun dred pound Parrot. „ 'The prince, of• Wulea smokes a briar ? wood. pipe,, ud deetntp..tp•enjoy HINTS TO EMIGRANTS, 13=1