Noland. ANOTHER MILLION MORE ! —(Resolution in Congress.) By DILL A. SMITH' " And the Lord said unto Pharaoh, let my people go,—BIDLE. To arum! to tns! a million moo I—a million mon, or more, To carry food' to starving men, nut opo tho prison door! A million mon for Richmond I—to sot our brothers free., And teach tho barbarous Goth that we've a Christian chivalry. Ho! toiler at the anvil—hol laborer at the plough— Ilel every man who would not wear the mark upon his brow, !Forth, front your desks add- workshops—and, an the lightning, leap On the foul !lends that laugh to scorn our sons In dun goon keep I A. million men aro in the tiold,—a million trusty ILl=l3 nave proved how well our people know to wield their battle. bra n ; A million gallant hearts have gone the Southron's pride to lower, But, we want another million—another million more I The braves who fought at Malvern—who piled Antie tam's livid,— The glory erown'tl of Gettysburg, whose names to fame we yield: Thorn their dreamless sleepth' uuburiod dead of Chick, amanita's plain Call on you to tho roscue,--0, shall It bo In vain? I list the hoploss mother's sigh for tho gentle boy she bore— God she cries, will none deliver?—to my arms the lost restore ? Sister, well in moth thou dost to weep and hoard the scatter'd crumbs, When thy playmate's plaint In hunger-calls from Lib by's charnel conies! And the old grey-headed father, how ho starts from out his sleep, As a pale spectre towards him all tremulous doth creep ; .I' , Twas his own good sword ho girt on him when going to the fray— The same old sword himself had borne In Israel Put man's day And well " the boy" had kept the faith—the trust, to p Fed In him, Since no'or dishonor vullied blade, nor taint Its sheen MIMI But when Burnside, at Froderirkshurg, wan sore re pulsed by Lee, They took the lad a prlsoner—and, this is him you see! Hungry, and weary,and waiting, 0 warder! unbar the gat Let me but breathe the free, pure air, and Inc ready for my fate; But to starve and freeze In a living grave, Ohl 'tie a fearful thing— And only for loving the Union, and holding my coun try king! To arms! to arms! n million mon! a million men, nr =II To carry broad to famish'd men, and burnt their prison door A million men for anywhere, and to ride as the whirl wind rides, Over the bleared and bloated land where Slavery's votive strides O mon! If you have manly scuba; 0 men I If from the duet You would lift up our stricken flag and own that God ERZ nisei In your might, and, as a sod, enguipli this let, rous thing; For only truth Is right I'm sure, and God—not dot il, king 1 A million men for Itlehuton.l! with Grant to lead tho way— So reads the resolution ; it pass? I trust it may ; There's a million wtiatteQ "die.des yet that linger In the sheath— A million, and a million yet, .to leap out at the death I Hal the tiger loves to lap the blood—the panther prowls about— But the heart where genetnus Ores are lit fears never wrong to flout; ..kiiina - th - 6 word 141 spoken—gods l I Hoer - the-xurgimg ranks That will sweep the Beane idols to the Rio Gila's hanks! Bear your hearts then in your hands, men the thi, to act has come . Bare and swift Um avenging angel shouts the death march to the drum ! From a thousand bills our watch fires fling their yie tor-a:whinge out— To horse! to arias! to haver! to ruin, and the rout! Who says nay 1 whose footsteps (Altars et the thought of desperate deeds? When the reaper reaps, he turns aside to kill the not FOlllO weeds! Rend the Upas by the roots, men ! then to our cove rant ark The dove will bear the olive ',Much—the sunlight II ..sh the dark .pfigullxmccialo, GROWLER'S INCOME TAX BY T. S. ARTHUR My neighbor Growler, an excitable man by the way, was particularly excit ed over his "Income Tax,' or, as he called it, his 'War Tax.' Ile had never liked the war—thought it unnecessary and wicked; the wurk of politicans. This fighting of brother against brother was a terrible thing in his eyes. If you asked him who began the war ?—who struck at the nation's life ?—if self-defence were not a duty ?—he would reply with vague generalities, made up of partizan, trickery sentences, which he had learned without comprehending their just significance. Growler came in upon rue the other day, flourishing a square piece of blue writing paper, quite moved from his equanimity. 'There it is ! Just so much robbery ! stand and deliver is the word. Pistols and bayonets I Your money or your life !" I took the piece of paper from his hand AO read ; pIfILADELPIIIA, September, 1863. RICHARD GROWLER, Esq., 'llr. to JOHN M. RILEY,' Collector of Internal Revenue 'or the fourth District of Pennsylvania, O f fice, 427 Chetnut Street. 'For Tax on Income, for the year 1.862, fls per return made to the Assessor of the - Iristriet 1643,21. 'Received payment. 'JOHN M. RILEY, Col.' 'You'r all right,' I said,' smiling. - 'l'd like - to know what you mean, by all right 1' Growler was just a little of fended at my way of treating this very serious matter, serious in his eyes, I mean . 'l've been robbed of, forty•three dollars and twenty one cents,' he dontin- Ind. • '.Do you say that it is all right A minion of the Government has put his hand into my pocket and taken just so" much' of my property. - Is that all right?' The same thing may be set forth in very, different language,' I replied. 'Let me state the ease.' • 'Very well'—state it !" said growler, VOL. 64. A. S. RHEEM, Editor & Proprietor. dumping himself into a chair. and look ing as ill-humored as possible. 'lnstead of being 'robbed,' said I, 'you have been protected in yOur property and person, and guaranteed all the high priv ileges of citizenship, for the paltry sum of fourty three dollars and twenty one cents, as your share of the cost of pro tection.' 'Oh, that's only your way of putting the case,' retorted Growler, dropping a little from his high tong of indignation. 'Let me be more particular in my way of putting the case. Your income is from the rent of property ?' 'Ves.' 'What would it have cost you to de fend that property from the army of Gen Lee, recently driven from our State by national soldiers ?' `Cost we r Growler looked at me in a kind of maze, as though he thought me half in jest ?' 'Exactly ! What would it have cost you ? Lee if unopposed,, would certainly have reached this city, and held it; and if your property had been of use to him, or any of his officers or soldiers, it would have been appropriated without so much as saying—By 'your leave, sir ? Would forty-three dollars and twenty one cents have covered the damage ? Perhaps not Possibly, you might have lost one half to two thirds of all you are worth.' Growler was a trifle bewildered at this way of putting the case. lie looked pus 'You have a store on South wharves ?' said 1. ' 'Yes.' 'What has kept the Alabama or the Florida from running up the Delaware and burning the whole city front? Do you have forts and ships of war for the protection of your property Y If not, who provides them ? They arc provid ed, and you are safe. What is your share of the expense for a whole year?— Just "fatly:llo'oe - dollars and t we nty - otre cents ? It sounds like a jest U ruwler did not answer. So I kept on. `But for our immens armiese in the field, and navy a the water, this rebellion would have succeeded, what then ? thy() you ever pondered the future of this coun try in such an event ? Have you thoulit of your own position ? of the loss or gain to yourself'? How long do you think we would be at peace with England or France, if the nation were dismembered, and a hostile Confederation established on our ;._iouthern border ? 11'ould our war taxes be less than now? Would life and.-property be more secure? have you not an interest in our great army and navy, as well as I and everyot her mem ber of the Union ? Dues nut 3 our safety as well as mine lie in their existence.— Are they not, at this very time, the con servators of' every thing we hob' dear as men and citizens 7 Who equips and pays . this army ? Who builds and furnishes these ships ? Where does the enormous sums of money required conic from ? It is the nation's work—the people aggre gate in power and munificence, and so ir re.sistable in might—unconquerable Have you no heart-swellings of pride in this magnificent exhibition of will and strength ? No part in the nation's glory ? No eager helping hand to stretch forth ? Growler was silent still. 'There was no power in you or the to cheek the wave of destruction that was launched by fratricidal hands against us. It' unresisted by the nation as an aggre gate power, it would have swept in des olation over the whole land. Traitors in our midst and traitors moving in arms a gainst us, would have united to destroy our beautiful fabric of civil li-berty. The government, Which dealt with all good citizens so kindly and gently, that not one in a thousand telt its tauch beyond the weight of a feather, would have been subverted, and who can tell under what iron rule we might have fallen for a time, or how many years of' bloody strife would have elapsed before that civil liberty which ensures the greatest good to tuein• hers would have been again established ? But the wave of destruction was met— nay hurled back upon the enemies who sought our ruin. We yet dwell in safety. Your property is secure. You still gath er your annual income, protected in all your rights and priviliges by the national arm. What does the nation assess to you as your share in the cost of this security ? Half your property ? No—not a farth ing of that property !—Only a small per , centage of your income from that proper ty ! Just forty-three dollars and twenty one cents ! Pardon me for saying it friend Growler, but I am more than half ashamed of you' 'And seeing the way you put the case, I am more than half ashamed of myself,' lie answered, frankly. Why thing your view, this is about the cheapest invest ment I ever made.' 'You certainly get more for your mon ey than in any other line of expenditure. Yesterday I had a letter from an old friend living in the neighborhood of Car• liile: The - rebels took from liim eiX fine horses, worth two hundred dollars a piece; six cows and oxen ; and over two hundred bushels ofgrain. And riot content with plundering him, they burnt down a barn, which cost-him:nearly two thousand dol lars. But for the army raised and equi pped by the nation, in support of which you and I aro taxed so lightly wo might have suffered severely. How much do you think it cost in money kor the pro tection we have enjoyed in this particular instance? 'A - million of dollars perhaps ?' 'Nearer ten millions of ,dollars. Prom the time our army left the Rappahannock, until the battle of Gettysburg, its cost to the government could scarcely have been .less than thd sum mentioned. Of this bv. sum, your proportion cannot be over three or four dollars ; and for that trifle, your property maybe your life was held se cure.' 'No more of that, if you please.' said Growler, showing some annoyance. You are running this thing into the ground. I own up square. I was quarreling with my best friend. I was striking at the band that gave me protection. If my war tax next year should he a hundred dollars instead of forty-three, I will pay it without a murmur.' 'Don't say without a murmur, friend Growler.' 'What then ?' 'Say gladly, as a mean; of safety.' 'Put it as you will, he answered, fold• ing up Collector Riley's receipt, which he still held in his hand, and bowing him self out. Not many days afterwards, I happened to hear some one grumbling in my neigh bor's presence about his income tax.— Growler scarcely waited to hear him through. My lesson was improved in his hands. In significant phrase he pitched into the offender, and read him a lesson so much stronger than mine, that 1 felt myself thrown quite into the shade. `You have been assessed fifty-eight dollars,' he said, in his excited way— tifty-eight dollars !' One would think, l'rum the noise you make about it, that you had been roblud of half you arc worth. Fifty eight dollars for security at home and protectitm abroad ! Fifty eight dollars as your share in the cost of defence against an enemy that, if unopposed,,will desolate our homes and destroy our gov ernment ! Already it inns cost the nation fur your safety, over a - thousand mil lions of dollars ; and you are angry be cause it asks fur your little pant of the expense; Sir, you are not worthy the name of an American citizen !' 'That's hard talk, Growler, and I won't bear it !' said the other. st. true talk, and youll—have. to. bear it !' was retorted. 'Fretting over the wean littlO sum of fifty eight dollars ! Why sir, I know a man who has given la is right arm in the cause ; and another who has given his right leg. Do they grumble f No sir ! ,L never heard a word of complaint front their lips. Thous ands and tens of thousands have given their sons, and wives have given their hmhands —sons and husbands who will never mole return ! They are with the dead. sir, you are dishonoring yourself in the eyes of all men. A grumbler over this paltry war tax for shame I,' L turned off, saying, in toy thought'.- -'So touch good done ! i‘ly !Maimed sinner Las becc.•.•c a preacher of riht eouslies:s.' A TRAVELLER, atitinL from Illinois, states that in rettin , to the place of his destination, he experienced all kinds of goaheadativeness In the first place, he touk a steamboat ; in the second, the rail= road ; in the third, a mail-coach ; the fourth, vial,: on horseback, the fifth, went six miles on foot to Terra Haute ; and was finally rider out of the village on a rail. Ile says he don't know which to prefer, out of the six ; but thinks the latter method is unequestionably the cheapest, though its acebmtuodations are most wretched. A NAVAL AI n.—A person on whom the temperance reformation had produced no effect, entered, in a state of exhilara tion, a temperance grocery in a neigh boring town. ''Mr ," exclaimed lie, "do you keep—any—thing— to take here?" "Yes," replied the merchant, "we have sonic excellent cold NVfltk \ ir ; the best thing in the world to take." •••,, "Wcll,l know it," replied the Bac chante, `•there's no one thing—that's done so much for navigation as that." E late Judge Peace, of the Supreme Court of the State of Ohio was a noted wag. A young lawyer was once making his hist effort befbre hint, and had thrown himself on the wings of his imagination into the seventh heaven, and was seeming ly preparing for a higher ascent, when the Judge struck his rule on the desk two or or three times, exclaiming to the astonish ed orator, "[lola on, hold on, my dear sir; don't go any higher, for you are already out of the jurisdiction of the Court. BREAD WITHOUT BUTTER.—Some fel low enamored of a young lady named Annie Bread, dropped the following from his pocket—we expect : Maus saw a five-pound note lying on the ground but ho knew it was a forged one, and walked on without picking it up. He told Smithers the story, when the latter said ; "Do you know, Diggs, you have committed a very grave offence?" "Why what. have I done ?"—'You have past a forged note, knowing it to be such." WHEN asked how he got out of prison, a witty rogue replied : "I got out of my .cell by ingenuity, ran up stars with agili ty, crawled out of the window in secrecy, slid down the lightning, od with rapidity, walked out of the town with dignity, and am now basking in the sunshine of liber ty , COifE, Bill, it's ten o'clock, and I think we had better be - going, for it's time hon . - est folks were at home." "Well, yes," was the answer, "I must be off, but you needn't hurry home on that account." • A MAN in Orange county was found ono night in a fulling mill, trying to climb the overshot wheel, When asked what he was doing, he said ho was trying to get up to bed, but somehow or other the stairs wouldn't hold still. THE woman who undertook to " scour tho wood,'•' gave up the job, owing to the high price4of soh') and sand:. belles their lovely graces spread, Aud fops around them flutter, I'll be content with Annie Bread, Aud won't have any but her." CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY, JANUARY' 22, 1864. A COLLEGE TALE. In the archives of Bowdoin—meaning by archives, in this case, the garret of Maine Hall—is to be soon lin old and faded flag. On a ground of white is a bristling swine, done in dubious brown. Astride this fierce animal, holding on by the ears, is a full-uniformed military of ficer. Above his head is the awful inscrip tion, "Bowdoin's First I.leat s . Thereby hangs a tale. Deeming that the history of Maine veld be incomplete without recital, we venture, at our -pail, to take up this story of demi gods and heroes. As early as 1820 the students were an nually warned to appear "armed and equ lidped as the law directs." Accordingly, being incorporated into theitown COM - puny, they occasionally improved the good nature of the inhabitants by choosing, un - der their astonished noses, students as chief officers. Besides this, they in dulged, say excellent old Indies with suit able unction, in other "highly unbecom ing and and indecorous tricks." It is credible, also, judging what is past by what is present, that there was no lack of practical jokes. At last, it being rath er too much for the towns-people to en dure, the Legislature passed a bill ex empting students from military duty.- Then did peace, like the dews of' evening, settle once more upon Brunswick. • its citizens rejoiced in warlike dignities.— They became corporals. .and lieutenants and captains, and were happy. Uncon scious innocent-little knowing the future and the bellying cloud of disaster above. But the military spirit was on the in crease throughout the State. Valorous ndividuals 'talked of slaughter, and of glory won on tented field. "Our people must become citizen-soldierti. It is the only safety for a free people—the only bulwark of our free institutions." And the valorous individuals went on as ever, conga e rings and - to conquer:- -As-there-• suit of ail this, iii 1836 it seemed good to the Legislature of-Maine to pass a law requiring students to train. It seemed good to them, also, to tnalse sarcastic re marks, indicative of contempt, which was not wise This act, contrary to cus tom, went into effect soon after it was passed. Of' course there was commotion in college. Stump oratory was rampant. Every man with gift of language and a bility to collect together six others, gave to sentiments of rebellion in firm and determined tones, and backed them by irrefutable arguments. But it is a sin gu ar fact that even irrefutable arguments do not always hold sway in this world, an- ev ,saris t-setFre As l l-essssii.ns. _Every student whs summoned sink or well, pre sent or absent, it made no difference.— Fur the select men were efficient and de termined to sacrifice all things to duty— having an eye likewise to the fines. The eollegians s finding- that -stump -oratory. eanie to little, held a meeting, heard speeches, passed resolutions of a compli mentary nature, and determined to train. From that time it seemed as if college had become a barrack. "Forward, march," "Right and Isft oblique," were the only sounds to be heard. At dinner, instead of' peaceful/request to pass the potatoes, rang the warlike command to march down that detachment of beefsteak, or order out that platoon of potatoes, or squadron or pie. Meantime, active meparation went on bunind the scenes only sometimes, by glancing at the windows, you might see -hideous farina shrinking front sight," and fancy colleges had turned menage ries, and all the animals got loose. At length came on the eventful day. The roll of' war-drums and roar of artil lery heralded and usher_d in the dawn. The rays of the rising sun slanted across the baleful banners flung from the peace ful halls of learning. The village spire, forgetting to point_ heavenward, draped its summit in the folds of a fearful flag, on which you might have read the soul inspiring, toe-disheartening " BELLUM." The sun reached the zenith. From all quarters the motley crowd poured into the college grounds. Every man was a master-piece. The ingenuity of weeks had not been put forth in vain. Some glowered in painted faces. Masks trans formed some into fantastic demons. Gor geous whiskers, putting to shame all the music teachers for miles around, bristled on the cheeks of the " mailed minions" of war. Through huge goggles leered the mocking images of old age, and around sides shaking with laughter wore tied melancholy badges of despair. The head-gear was equally varied. Broad brimmed beavers, smart cocked hats, hats of' every size, shape and fashion, from a clown's bag to a general'inhapeau, topped he ids brimming with wisdom. Pmines of all styles—of old rope, feathers, bro Mes and brushes—waved from tin caps and chapeau de bras. One Peneinian, worthy even of our time, mounted a helmet of bark, from which floated down the ma jestic pine bough=" pintos loquentes Boni per." For arms they bore claymores and oimctcrs, iron or wooden, rusty guns ren - dared -- trustworthy - - by -- padlocks, -- hand - - spikes,-poleaxes, scythes, brooms, baybn ets, spears, ease-knives, and saws. And had the,caloulus been born into the world, that"sublime hstruinent"_.wi.uld have it 7 donned every hand. As for body equip ments, every battle-field from Bannock burn to Queenstown 'seemed to have stripped its dead and furnished its share. No eye ever before behold . stieh motley groups. All,the nations and tribes, from Lapland to Australia, vere mimicked and caricatured to perfection. Thus the-crowd _steed,_ each convulsed with _:laughter at the comical costume of the ether. .And thus. equipped,„.they were marshalled in order of olastos, the Pandan and.Pandow by musical hands'marching in the vani beneath a fl g inscribed, - "The de'll cam •, • BY T. B. REED g*lo4o TERMS :.-$1,50 in Advance, or $2 within the year. fiddlin' through the town." The medical class followed with a banner bearing an armed skeleton, surrounded by the motto, ',/ildfrna est illediesna et praevletit."— The seniors and juniors carried the flag we have already described. The Soph omores were cheered on ' - by the goddess of Victory and Death, with the Motto, "Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori," and the Freshmen by a jackass rampant, and beneath him, "The Sage ASS what made the LAW." Then counntnenced the march. Slow ly swelkd the solemn strains from the Pandean and Pandewdy. Standards wav ed and horns blew most melodiously Welcome worthly the noble commander, who appeared just then to pluck the fade less laurels of that fadeless tiny. He merits particular description, says the an cient chronicler, and so, having materials, we describe him. On his head was a diminutive hat. Over his shoulders drooped the "waving folds" of an ex-tail plume. Wooden goggles bestrode his nose. Behind his back clattered an old hat, a canteen, a tin kettle, a cigar -box, a wooden firelock, and heaven knows what else. His horse was a strange animal, "compound of horse and jackass." Price eight dollars as was afterward discovered, for ho died on the field of glory. Receiving with shouts of applause their hero, who bowed to the very verge of equi librium, the troops marched down Main street, crossed into Back Stand, and pro ceeded. to the place.° I training behind the bank, where now a row of quiet ctotages, each one just like the other, peacefully rear their roofs—their commander amus ing them meantime with comical remarks, pleasant no doubt then, but unapprecia ble at this present. Arrived on the ground, the deep-mouthed cannon thundered them salute. They were then drawn up around their captain to listen to the roll-cull. "At tend," commanded he, "and answer to your names." The whole troop thronged round'the affriglacd . officer. -- "Onc - at - a time," trembled he in terpor-stricken tones. The clerk called the first name. "Here!" "litre!" shouted all the posse in a breath. Next mine. "Ilene!" here!" from all again The colonel, as before, makes - a -- few jocose remarks which can not be smiled at now. At last older was restored, and the roll-call went on. Then began the examination of equipments. They stepped forward, one by one. "Mark him down—no equipments," shouted the captain, grown quite valorous now, find ing no personal injury intended. The spectators nearly split their sides, while. rage was filling the hardened bosom of the man of war. But what could he do, when hia offieers were " , riiiniti , r him like bears at bay ?" Th;s ended, they were ordered to form a line. "We've formed a line. but we can't keep it," mourned the valiant defenders of their country. "Form a line, or match off the - field;" -roared-the- despairing and discom fited captain, biting his lips. Loudly swelled the strains of triumph from Pandean and Pandowdy. Wreath ed with earliest victory and laurelled with latest renown, the conquorors left the field, .their swords unsheathed, their guns un. fired, but their souls lifted heavenward by the glowing consciousness of battle done fur truth and right. So they march ed on, through the verdant streets of Brunswick and the shaded lanes of Top sham, until they reached the college grounds. There, as everywhere, noble tongues were burning to eulogize noble deeds, "Fellow-students and soldiers," began the orator, whose speech has come down to our day ; "fellow-students and soldiers, you hay° earned for yourselves and your country never fading laurels. When dan gers and perils thickened around your de voted country, when her hardy yeoman ry were no longer able to defend her soil and her liberties, you have nobly stepped forth to her rescue. You have doffed your students' gowns and assumed the mailed dress of war. You have exchang ed the badges of literary distinction for the toils and dangers of the battle-field. You have extinguished the midnight lamp and' lit in its plage the fiery torch of Mars. If you have followed Minerva in the flow ery paths of literature; if you have toiled with her up the rugged steeps of science, you have also followed het' in the ranks of war and glory. If you.have twined around your brows the prizes of poetic distinction, you have also encircled your temples with the wreaths of military glory. Yes fellow-students ! side by side we have followed in the career of literary fame, and shoulder to shoulder will we advance in the cause of liberty, law and our country. "Soldiers, you have deserved well of your country, and think not but that she will fully discharge the debt. Students and soldiers, let this be our motto, 'War and science, military glory and literary distinction, now 'land i forever, one and inseparable."' Thus have we endeavored to collect and preserve whatever might be valuable laf a'scene and action—whiett•still-- lingers in dim tradition about the college walls. Of its consequences, it suffices to say that it was the prime cause of that utter con tempt into which general musters have dalt within the bounds of Maine. Ad to its immediate effects, no pen can do it justice, for no pen can bring book the quaint antics of the actors, the jolly laugh ter of staid professors,_or fill again the windows with the giggling groups, or lino the sidewalks with the grinning sover eigns. Two gentlemen fishing—slarp . boy ap pears. ". Well, sir, got any bites . ?-- "Lets of em." "Y-e.s—under yer bat," Race between boy and sundry stones— boy a little ahead. How East Tennessee Has Suffered Under Both Armies. From Col. Taylor's description-' of Burnsido's campaign we make this ex tract " From before Zollikoffer ten miles above Carter Station, Burnside fell bank toward Knoxville, the Confederates cau tiously following. From Buhl's Gap he turned upon them, and drove them across the Watauga, and beyond the Virginia line. Again the Union forces retired and again the Rebels advanced, each ar my supplying itself from the country around. Surging forward . and back, these two armies four times advanced and retrograded, widening at each uidvement the desolation that marked their track. What the Rebels spared the Federals took, and what the Federals left was ap propriated by the Rebels, and robbers, who ibund rallying points and secure hiding places in the mountains that skirt the valleys, came in for their share of the substance of this plundered people, and completed their ruin. Thus our cribs and smoke-houses, our barns and dwellings have been emptied and pillaged Our women and children have been di vested of their wearing apparel, and even the webs of domestic cloth in their looms, 'destined for winter clothing, have been cut out and carried away. Our tanner ies have fared no better. and the limited thnount of leather, which might _have shod a portion of our women and old men, has been seized, and they are left bare footed to struggle through thewinter." THE DREOS OF AFFLICTION " llel'eve me, East Tennessee has drank its lull cup of suffering, and noth ing seems left her but to drain its very dregs. She has sacrificed everything but loyalty and life ; she has endured everything but dishonor and death, and now destitution and famia, followed bard by despair and death are already tremb ling on the threshold of her sad homes; flieir ifOors", to CoMPefe the sacrifice and consummate the suffer . ing But, through all her trials, she has re mained faithful ; persuasions, threats, in sults, arrests, imprisonments, wounds, stripes, privations, punishments, chains and confiscations, gibbets, and military murders, the clash of anus and the ",ter ribleness of armies -w-i.th—laan-n4r all the combined and concentrated 'hor rors of internecine war marshalled on her battle torn bosom, and never corrupted her loyalty, nor driven her a line from her devotion to the Government of our fathers. Unprotected she • was by the Government site loved, interior and iso dise-mnd before,llle could o;tganize she WaS seized and pinioned by a power that uverudc all law, and trampled consti tutional liberty unuer its feet. Choked down under a reign of terror black as the night of the Hobesperian dynasty, her prund neck has felt the heel of despotism more heartless and crushing than the power of an autocracy. Her loyal peo ple, because they could not do otherwise, have submitted, for more than two dread ful years, to a bondage their inmost hearts abhorred—a bondage that fettered the soul, and sealed the lips, and all but closed the door of, hope. We breathed but to live, and lived to pray " Oh Lord, how long?" Advice Gratis to the Slow Coach Family Don't take a newspaper, don't read one of any kind. 1f yuu hear persons discuss ing this or that battle, ask stupidly what it all means. Emulate Rip Van Winkle; steep your senses in mental and mural oblivion, and pay no attention to what is passing about you ; in this way you may save two or three dollars— the price of a news paper—and lose $2OO or $5900 by not being informed about markets, sup ply and demand, a thousand other things as essential to an enterprising luau as light and air. if you have any childeen don't take a paper for them ; tell them " book larniu ain't no 'count." Let them tumble in the highway unwashed, un combed, and in rugs and tatters. if they don't graduate in the State's .prison, it will be through nu fault of yours. if you are a farmer, plow, sow, and reap, us your stupid old father did before you; scoff at agricultural papers, and sneer and deride at progress of all kinds ; then, if you want to succeed in making other people,. think that they are all wrong, and that you alone are sagacious, it must be that the world is curiously a wry, and needs a reforming badly. The sooner you undertake it, the better. By not reading papers, you will succeed; if a farmer, in having the finest crop or knot ty, wormy apples that can be found ; po tatoes that would take the prize at any fair for rot; cabbages that are till leaves and no head ; turnips destroyed in the shoot by worms; hay mouldy and musty-, because you despise a barometer and cut it just as the nierotiry was falling; corn half a crop, because you exhaust te land with it for years and starve nature to Auch_a _pitch _that_ .sha..had. nothing __t!a yield in return ; all these calamities and many more will befall you, because you don't keep pace with the times. You "call it 'herd luck;' but men of oommon sense call your coursely - a name,you nev er heard of—stupidity ; that's 'more 'book larnin.' A man that does'not take a paper' of some kind or another in this time of the world, must expect to be a prey 'to all sorts of, swindlers, a victim to bad man agement, and out of spirits, out of pock et, temper, money,• credit; in short, everything under the sun that tends to make life miserable. The newspaper is the-great educator of the'people after all; so lot us then ''exolaitni ' The Press' .For ever.' A Singular and Affecting ;71, ' , cident. A.Ciecinnati paper says tha n t some three years, ago a household'in the city of Cov ington was thrown into . 'commotion by the sudden disappearance.. of a daughter .twelve years °lnge. ''She was tracked to the ferry boat but whether she had passed safely over or had been' drowned was not disnovered. Patient and anxious waiting brought no tidings of her. 'The frenziCid and unhappy father, although in moderate circumstances, sought the newspaper' f-' flees, and advertised a reward of 1,000 to whoever should.restore his missing ohild. All proved unavailing. Some time after wards the corpse of a young lady, was found in the river near Nevay, Indiana, and hearir b er of it he went there, but it was not Iris daughter. • Time wore on and no tidings came of, the lost child. She was dead to them, but they could not visit her grave. A bout twelve month since the stricken family removed to Mexico and 'took up their abode in a country foreign in lan guage and customs in features and in hab its from that in which they had met with, their great loss. It might wear away their thoughts from sadly ruminating, on the past, and enable them, in region de voted to religious duties, too look more hopefully toward the great future. There they still aro. NO, 4. About a week since a steamer arriving from Memphis was crowded with passen gers who Were upon the guards straining their eyes to gather into one look the mul titudinous objects which throng the pub lic landing. One however, a young girl budding into womanhood, sought the out er rail and looked wistfully over the na ked shore of Covington to where, hid way under a clump of trees, was the cot tage of her childhood, hoping in vain to see the curling smoke announce to her a warm welcome within. Quickly she passed over the ferry, where long since she had disappeared No one noted or knew her and she went without interrup, tion to the door of her father's house.— lt not her knock ; weeds had grown up rank and rough where she had left flowers, and no signs of human life were to be found there. - It was the turn now of the wayward child to weep, and when, by inquiry, she, found how far and almost hopeless she was separated from her parents, she be gan to feel uesolate. Piqued at some chiding or some punishment of her moth er, she had gone upon a steamboat, where a female passenger hired her as a nurse. After a little 'while the war broke out, stopping all intercourse with the Sonth by the river, and, though she.soon found that, untried friends but seldom prove steadfast in trouble, that the harsh: ness of a parent is melting beside that of a stranger, yet she was unable until late ly to return. A kind lady of Covington has given shelter to the wanderer until her return is made known to her parents.. An English writer says :—One day _wheal_ came home from visiting, my old landlady told we that some one had been down begging me to go up to old WPl's house as soon as ever I could—he was in great trouble. I started off at onee, ana found him and his old woman both in tears. I asked what was the matter. " Oh, sir, we've had such a letter from our Jack - in Africa:" 2 , :0w, our Jack. was a ;toldier, and had, by good conduct, risen to the rank of sergeant-major. Ills letter was in a high-flown strain. He had been evidently reading Moore and other poets ; and - to had written when the news of the threatened Chartist riot on the famous 10th of April had jest reached the camp. I cannot re member all his letter, but this passage occurs to me : " BELOVED PARENTS — I have heard of the terrible dangers that threaten my native land. Perhaps ere now it has been devastated by lawless bands of un principled Miscreants • perhaps ere now the humble cot in which I first drew nurture has been committed to ruthless flames. Would I were with you, to pro tect my ancestral hearth ! I cannot be with you; but, beloved parents, my soul hovers over you, as the fabled Howl of the Mohammedan ; and I do all I can, by wish and supplication, to cast an regis around you." Of course I burst out laughing at this high flown letter and their grief. They started at my laugh. „. What, sir, is all right ? We thought summut terrible had surely happened ; we never-heard &uch words afore. ,, 1 assured them all was right, and translated the letter for them, to their atnaziog comfort ; but I can assure you that letter was shown to every neighbor. ns " what our Jack could do," and doubly treasured because they could not compre hend it. Gen• Grant in A Horse Trade • A few Congressmen on the train to-day entered into conversation about the merits of different Generals in our army, in the course of which one of them told the fol. lowing story about Gen. Grant t• - "I knew Ulysses Grant when he was a little boy. We used to go to school toge ther, near Georgetown, Brown county, Ohio. The boys used to plague him dreadfully about a horse trade he once made. When he was about twelve years old, his father sent him a few miles into, the country to buy a horse from a Man, named Ralston. The old man told , Ulysses to offer Rdston fifty dollars st first ,if ho wouldn't take that, to offer fifty-five dollars, and to go as high atittiz! ! , ty dollars if no less would make the chase. The embryotic Majbr4etierat started off with these instructions inipressed --- up of liis mini: - Ile - dialed - upon Hi , . Ralston, and told him he veiFt&• ed to buy the horse. "'How much did your father tellt yOn to givo for him ?' was a very natural-hi quiry from the owner of the steed. ' • "'Why," said Ulysses,:he told me to offer you fifty dollars, and if that wouldn't do, to give you fifty-five, dollars, and if you wouldn't take less than. sixty dollars,• 'to give you that.' "Of oourso sixty dollars was the lowest figure, and-on payment,of_ that amount, the animal became iltd property of the young Napoleon." We - seo an announcement of a, marriage, of a Mr. Greenback. Now look out 'for an issue of legal tenders." Jack's Letter