. • I ER KS ' 0 F ;A D V't 11 T'l SI On eai;ia' r .' one' ins'ertion, gl 00 For each ;xubftequent Insertion, 60 For Itle eantll9-Advertlsemenis, 25 00 Leiti‘l'sTolleeil ' " 460 Proiba , lonal Cards nlinont:paper, 100 Ohltiiiirji NOV Lam an Oommu n WA- .. tlciti,.rol*:;ing to matte! Bof pH vAte interests alone, 10 cents par, lino .' JOB PRINTING.—Oar Job Printing Office IA the argost and moat remeltto o,tabllnbmout In the Conn y. Four good Pr.mses, and a goucralvarloty of tnaleriallquited for plain and Fancy work of every kind; malsffies us to do Job Printing at the shottest notice, and on the most reasonable terms. Persona in nrunt,of Bills, Blanks, or anything in the Jobbing line, will find It to their interest to give ue a call. gotta iliVorauution. S. GOVERNMENT President —A:sonny .lonosoS, Vice Presldout —l.. 8. FOSTER, Sacrutary of Stato—WM. fI.SMAnn, sosratury or interior—lce. RADIAN, Secretary of Treasury-11mi McCuttocn, Bestetary 0 f War—limos M. STANTON, ilscretary of Navy—Gtoson foot Master Gonsral—Wm Dtsmsos. • ttorney i4onornt—ismss S. SPEED. tier JUSUCJ of the Unite I Status-6/.olos P. Ocean. At STATE GOVERNMENT. UOTOMOT—ANDION , 0. CLUTIN, 'Socra'ary of stat,—!h.l SLIVER, Surveyor Oen,al—.l aura Bann, XIVIItoF 00110r:11—Is se SLENS.ER, Attorney . oenerulf Wilt. ;11. II co tot nt. Adjutant(Enteral—A I. Stltto Treasurer—llENßY GlOofJthtic of tho t , upromo Cow t—Gto. IV. Wool,- WARD COUNTY' OFFICER'S. PrOSI4IOIII. .I:nnt, II 111,11 AM . Associate .1 udzu s o . Midi :tot Cocklin, lien. Hugh SI OA r District Attorney—J. W. D. Gillelen. PrAll..lo Wry—.:.wool Shiretnetn. Clerk nod Itocorder—Dphrttitn Cornnann, Reglster—tloo W. North. nigh Sheri d - -John Jacobs. County Troasurur—henry Ritter. Coroner—David sulth County Contmlseloners—llenry Karns, .lohr DI toy; Mitchell McClellan, Superintendent of Poor douse—Koury Snyder. Physician to Jon—Dr. W. W. Dale. Physici3u to Poor House—Dr. W. W. Dale. BOROUGH OFFICERS Chief Burgess—John Campbell, Assistant Ii urges'— Cameron, Town C011131.11-1•:iltt 1%. I). thilvien, An drew B. Zeigler, Geo. Wetzt• I. Chas U. lb 11.. r. liar tel n o irm,n, W on t 11 anl—A. K itheem, John Mays, M. Black, 9. I). Ilillm.in. Olerk, ‘lasonliannuer. Borough Treasure,, David Cu, inuan 11411 Constable, Emanuel ari a, It Constables. Last Word, Andrei, 3!ar;lu, Weal Ward, .lames ll' id ner. , AFF.w.nr—W 11l lam Non ker. Atviitor—A. G. Shealer. Tax Collecto.--111,11,‘ Kin), \\ar,l Colleel ors—East - Want, Jae. \\,-1 0 I It Wiiillllll,l Street Comml,,,t, I. l'azi Jui;ici, of ill.. L. :41.Y.1.4:e1 - , D.tvid Sou lb, Abrut. Dolt off, •Imul 1101 comb. Lamp Lighter:..—Alex. Meek. Levi Albert. CHURCHES Vir,it Presbyterian (Mulch. Nertliwe , t en yle of Ce tea Square. Rev. Couea) P. 11 ii,,; reit, -.-:ervu-eN enemy Sunday Morning at 11 o'clock.. 31 and o'clalcu Second Preehylerian I of over and 1 1 111111 Yet 1,1.1,101,1 Itee. .Itoll 11 1' 111111, Services 1411111. once et 11 U UC .1, A. 11., .11.17 Wc,te . lc P. Zvt. st. Job I.:hurt:lt (Prot Eitkettititl) northeast ant_iie of Centre sqii lie. 11,t ( I, tt• .;.• •tor. at II 1. 11 ,t 1•t •i , t , a I` it ISingl Lill , 'lt lir. 11. H.ltH 1.1, 1.0 t I,H 11.1 ill And I.ontlit•r .ti 16,• • r, See vlaea at 11 A nti r l . , 'cloal, 1 1 NI tiOral in 11t111,rinvil a altatiii.. Linn per an I rill t.r t•af Ita,. 1 , •1 • Lilips. i halo, :±urvie , at II nt•ltick A. NI. anti )1. 1 , 1 It. t'll,tl • finesteh it 4t , i 1..1 . 1111.• 111 11H1 and Pitt Strt•itta. l'hnnta. 11. Sin, Paator. B,HVil..lltll.lt. I 1 u'elnek A M.. 111111 1 ,'dock I' M. E. 11 ts , owl R., S. I. BOWolo.n.Etinir) F t Lurch ay 1 o'elorli A. 11 , and t l , , Churchl.l 1;1111 .111,....1 ar \\est St al/UO/31.01 A He, list. Bee . , . Sat it tat at 11 a, in, and. t,iu et. • I'll !iron Pomfret 'mar thee ot. r : 4 1 - 2 4 4.1•• 1,1,y lOLIIvi salt blahs n • CII) , •li. Vt,irrt's at 3 \I Oorlo 1 . 11111 , 11. r c i`outh et and floliordr .',111.•••, al 11 9'l,J OCIS P. 11. • 11.49.—Wiiettinthe n i ,ove aro riti•olt-iittry tile proper Ilert.olli art . I t•Pitit• 1,/,1 t. • to , Lif, us. DICKINSON coLLEGI. Rey. Ilona:an M.Johnsau, Li. Pre,id n and Pru. okoar of Moral Science. R'illixm C. IVllson, A. M Professor of Natural Science and Curator a the Alu-eutn. Rev. I. Boswell, A Prufes.sar of the Greek Had ri orw le Lao SIMI...VA D. A.. M., Prof. sor of Mathenott en. John K. naym In, A. M., Prorevsor of the Latin and French Languages. lion. Jau:.•., Orattam, 1.1, It , PI-oieSSor of LOW. hey. Henry 0. Clie4l.oll, A 13 , Principal or the Grammar :chool. , Johu tlood, As,,,,!ant in the Gear School BOARD o 1 s.iCIIOOL DIRI:CTORS E. COIII,IIIII. l're,hloct, Jam,. • lamil ton, II Saxton, R. C. Wond ward, Henry yen sham. C. ; I II Ili...rich, 13ct'y Ehy. ec, John :I.ltlr, Nice-cog°, Meet on the lot 01 nun day of coin Mouth at F o'clock A. M., at Nducatum CORPORA HUNS CVII.I.T , LM DRP , IT ‘Nrc —Hrt. , l , l..nt. Bon, W. M. 14,t0m Cash ,1 i; H. Plat.ler Tollnrs, W. NI. I'loll., 1 . 1.• r 1 nenger IMr•rtors. ,t 11 If C. -.W., Zuz, .1.111.1 I. .1./. , ..1.11 .1. .111,;. Stu ,rt.. jr. Enter NATI )Ntl. it 51X —PrE , I.I.IO. A.A.nuol llophurn C/1,1111:1 . , Joe. I', lor. ih., li•N -gm,gor"ll.BBl3 Brown. Wit.. Ker, Dunlap, Itioli'd Woods, John C. Brouuoul3n, Julio Bterrott, Sanil Hepburn, hit .•clot CaitIIGRLC , D VkLI.EY RklLßoki, Presl,loot, Frederick Watts: r.ecret.trawl I 6L. ItlddlU: 6.111,... into, 1.,,H traiuw. three times a day. l'Arilsh• A ~ t llllllO atiot, Etstertrd, Carikle r. 111,1, at Our. /1/00 520 P. HI. Thriteh h•:Jnx I: Iht v.,rd. 1.1 In A, VI and 2.42, P. .11. %Sus: ward at A. M., and 2.55 I'. CAnLigLe 0 Vs 'O%O 'Wm en CosyrkNy.—Prr , Fblent, Leon an.l Todd Troasuror, A. L. NIon• Ire; Georg., Wise: Diron•t,rs, F. (V att4. )1. I feet era E. M. Mddlo r Honey 'Saxton. It. C. Woodward, J. W. Pottun, B. Uunlaor and 1). Croft. --0 SOCIETIES Ortnaborhand Stu Lodge No. 197, A. V. M. meets at Marlon Hall on Lilo 2.1 d and Ath Tu..sdnja olery month. BE. John's Lodge N. 260 A. T. M. Meets 3d Thurs day of each month, at Mario. liall. Carlisle Lodge No. ul I. U of U. F. Meets Monday evening, at lruut's buiTlin; Letort Lodge No, 33, I. U ni O. T. Meets every 'irburadsy evening iu II heem'a Call, 33 story•. FIRE COMPANIES Tho Union Fire Compttny wee uritenized In 1789 House in Loather between l'itt and IlAnover. The Cumberland firs Com iniey was Instituted Pub 18, 1800. lloutio lu itaciford, between Main and rem feat. The Good Will Fire Company IVaH instituted in March, 1855. [louse in Pomfret, near Llanover Tho bhnpltu Houk and Ladder Conlimn was Insti to tad in 1869. !Inns° lu l'itt, lair main. nATEs OF roSTAGE. Postage on all lettors of ono half ounce weight or tinder, 3 cants pro }mid, ['mange on the HERALD ulthln the Countg, WitWu the State 13 coats per annum. To any part tho United Statue, 2.0 c"mts Postage on all tram ale.-.t papers. 2 con to ';',er 00000. Advertleml letters to bo charged 100 2. cost of advertising IIIRS• R. A. SMITH'S Photographs, Ambrotypes, lvorytypes Beautiful Albums ! Beautiful Frames! Animas for Ladles and gentlemen, Albums f r Aihses, Mr Children. Pocket Albums for Soldiers and Civilians! Ohoiceat, Albums! Prettiust Albums I Cheapest Albums! FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS) Fresh and New from Now York mid Philadelphia Markets. ' - LF you want satisfactory Pictures and popte attention call at Mrs. It. A. 1 4 mIth's Photo- graphic 'POCitli Bast corner of Hanover ttreot alltd:Markot 8q oar°, opposite the Court !louse and'Post. Office, Carlisle ; Pa. 'Mrs. U. A. Builth well known as Mrs. R'A:lleytiOlds. an d, so well known ao u Daguarrattn Attlet, elves per , minal attention to Ladles and Oontleuion visiting her Gallery, and having the'beid, of Artiste and poll° , at tendants am saltily promise Unit lu no other Gallery tan those who faior her with' a call gut *tures sw abor to here, not oven In New York or Philadelphia, or bloat *ith more klhd and prompt attention. Antbrotypes insorteclin /Bags, .I.ockets, Breast Bine, .&o. Perfect coples - ot Dagnerrotypes and Alnbratypqa Vitae a deceased friends. Where copies' at e detested; 110-11ke pictures may.stili be bad, either fur frames oc or 6146. 'All viogatires preserved 'one year and brders mail or etbeils'lsepromptly attended ' : • December 23,1381--6 f , rUHE FORWARDING AND GRAIN f , bnelpene formerly conducted by Lino, Givler,,4 Co., IS now curried on by July 2?, 1861-ti DR. WM. H. COOK, HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN, Sut,•geon• land ilceouchortr citPICE his resitlenco ip. •Pitt htriot, h olaing taw Moihodlet Church, 019.ir /8" ' T3l7 3 l O ldln g l , a u l n V lLo ° S irl ou C t e ll B -0 . 4 - x i r t, i (7,ii r !i er r. or . Ln u il c o . l4:Fi e unie - of Oralfulo. Yor partloulais ally toL. pep 0 kw? AttlIAV 6 1 IB6', VOL. 65. RHEEM & WEAKLEY, Editors & Proprietors. He tilled the nation's eye and heart, An honored, loved, Wainer name; Liu much a brother that his fame Seemed of our lives a common part. Ms towering figure Sharp and spare, Was with such navous tension strung As Von erell strained, sinew swung, The burden of a people's care. Ills changing fare what pun can draw— Pathetic, l' ndly, droll or etern And with a glance so golcic to learn Thu Inmost truth of all hu saw. Pride found no idle space to spa inn ❑er faneio in bin busy mind; h.•oith or air—could find No just approval till withdrawn. lie no; his Country's—not his a Ho had no w 1.6 but Jot bar weal; Nor for is onset could think or foul But as a laborer tor her throne. Iler 1104 upen the heights of power, Stuln'ess and unessulled to place— To Oils one end his earnest face Wes Lent through every burdened hour TM. roll that 11Itleta from our dull oyua A hurb's worth, Death only lifta ; Willie he io with UN, all bin Ohs Ftod hotte t., question, few to prize But done the hattle—won the strife, hen lerebes,light his vaulted tomb. linked gruu 1hu..11, 11l and CroWnS Memo The Anj.rold brow uulteehed in life. And mots of Whom the world will tnllt agrx hence, luny untiltisg niovti; And only, i quit, u, ',rove 'Flint giant h 3 ye slimired our nallt For Ile to,, :mare what f 'lnns lurk I utan weak hwarts—thclr mission done, Soatclo , ll, lovedones front t h e sun Int he s.,no. hour [Lit crown, their work'. 0.11,10 anti ]o I: Thy pithint t oll II;id ruled ;Jur Vietury's light; our i';;iiiory sic, id. redeemed and bright, N% it I; :1;4 slave ;di all her 5(11. Agnin Southern town 9TIII towers The re,len nr our Pin liollflew : up, 11. n . VI k•tai summer grew Each nlyy nu Iv surress Sias ~11, ',l'd pied f,f L, IL.twit rttne,,l'ark. And sh streets will, tlttec ttlitt,out— tt'de.,l the hr II arrow duent, Arid, In 111 ht,tdttt, nil inll/1 ' Tlllrk rlouds n 1,11.111,1 11 , s,•eui to p re ,, '1 . 1.0 hoot tho , h, quick —then in still Father ,111 13 d , ,so• :Id 11. ti A martyr t raw,. ~ f mon, Ills hi,od is And In Ow gtvkt. 111:1111P Ir,vl thv %.n. n v lu lit..tvorCH OA. • 1111111 ,r• "Ile fell up oL the a II mtrue A tiItEATLIt NU) IceVE THE The Miller's Daughter : Many years ago, the community of a hamlet in the South of France was star tled by a crime rare indeed in their quiet agricultural district. A wealthy farmer was lound dead, at early inoi nisi:2., within one hundlcd yards ref 11 , 6 uwn house Ile had [Weil k (.;d by biIMS administered with a heavy stake, which lay near the b dy, covmed with bh od, and all his pockws had been rift 'd of their contents, including a cm ideruble sue of money. which lie known to have received the preview , cr:dikg for Ironic cheep sold hy in the ncipliburimr market town When the awe ir,(l e:eit, meta created by thi, event ha] little, every exeitiou was mall by theautle,rities to ferret out the perpetrator of the crime. A reward wee offered for the discovery of the murderer, proclamation of which bounty was, made for several successive Sundays at the church door - . At last some disci( sures were wade implicating a young man named Laroche----a rtripling of eighteen years. The person who brought the charge against young Laroche WaB a man by the name of Landry—a stranger in the dis trier, but who had lately been appointed by the for of the manor a; one of the keepers of his game preserves. Landry testified that - he,had seen Laroche cutting a stake from a hedge on the afternoon previous to the murder, and that he had reproved him for it, and taking the i cra k o from him, hi:;; stuck it in the bank of the hedge at a particular t.pot. The stake was the saute one that was found lying near the body of the murdered farmer. Leindry could swear to it, because, after taking it from Laroche, he had nicked it in a peculiar way with his knife. Now it so happened that the murdered farmer had matt ) and influential friends, while Laroche had but few. Therefore Laroche was convicted of the murder, and sentenced .to be hung on a certain day, at a certain places; until which time he was placed fur sakkeeping in the jail of the district—the third floor of a large stone building, the ;lower part of which Was a;mill. • The prison consisted of a single apartment,' lig:hted by one small window at a height of about sixteen feet ft:OM the hoop. 'The side of the building from which the window, looked ran shit!r_ down, toithe water of a dark and drp,riv ori wept lazily by the "mill,' but quiokeoed itepace a little loiter doWn; until it gradually became a rushing tor rent, leaping wildly on to its fall over,ti ,perpendicular ledge of rooks, Bodies parried over this it was said, never were recovered; and it was a fixed notion among the country people that there was a suotional ferce*i_ the whirlpool, by ,"everything, ftilliiig into it ,was; carried down into , theunexplored - abysses earth. . , JOHN OILEASON,: , Ctimb. Co It was- the clay before ,that fixed' for the igeouition of young Laroche, and the : - ( .• VosliaL THE LOST CHIEF `lg IVA:NI:OYU > TIIE ANGEL WINGS priest of the parish, Father . Allard by name, had been loft alone with the pls. over, in order to prepare him, by the consolation of religion, for his approach ing doom. To his words of comfort La roche listened with humility and in silence, until the pied father began to dilate upon his chances of forgiveness in the next world for the terrible crime committed by him Then the prisoner electrified him by declaring his perfect innocence of that crime—a position which lie meant to maintain, he said, with his latest breath. To be brief the youth of the prisoner, his earnest asseverations of innooenee, and a ,wavering doubt of his guilt which had all along troubled Father Allard's mind, so wrought upon that worthy tam that he at last consented to commit him self to a plan for giving the prisoner a chance to escape, if not from death, at least from the ignominy of dying by the hands of the accursed hangman. " If I die by the gallows, most reverend father," said the young man, " a great sorrow will some day fall upon till con cerned in my death. The real murderer is sure to be discovered. sooner or later, and then I shall have been a murdered man, and the just retribution of [leaven will pursue my murderers. Aid Inc to escape rather than risk a great stain upon your conscience. Stand upon this chair which I place upon the table, thus, and then, by mounting upon your shoulders, I Can reach the window, and drop from " But the liver below ?" " I switn like an otter; and, any rate, it is better to be drowned than hanged." Con'..ineed of the young nian'B inno venue, Futl.,cr Allard consentcld to aid him' in his cse.pe. moment iufficcd to Carry n execution. The prisoner gained the window, and disep peared. Parading in a straggling way outside the building, went one of the minor .1:h ices of justice—a stolid peasant wit , . had hien placed there by way of sentry, and who, tit this moment, happenc 1 to be looking h.ward [h. river v‘all of the mill Ili, s i g ht nearly left, him, as he after wards stated, when he sow a wan drop from the jail window, strike on a platform that protruded from a door way in the second story, and rebounding from that. fall into the water with a heavy plunge nappearing at intervals until he was car ried away into the rapids below. The alarm was at once given Village officials rushed to the prison-room, whet. they found Father Allard alone, seated iu the eh ir. pale, and as it just lecoveriwz Iron, the si i ,:ht of some supernatural vis ien. To the tintstions put to him, he t , plied that as he was ;idministeting th , consolations of his holy ullice to the pets orwr, a voi:'e sounded through the apart meat, aecompanit d by the shadow of a 'nighty pulpit' ning , ,on which he 11101111 t ed to the ceiling, of the apat Intent, ut.d was no more seen by him The voice, I.e added, prwoluitned the p isoiter's itino cenee, mid that the real circumstances ul the murder would be made manifest. It was a miracle ; and the good countr, people, ever ready to accept that form of interposition, were easily persuaded to do so on the present occasion. Meantime, Laroche, when he leaped from the window, had forgotten all about the platform. As he fell upon it, he dis placed a suck of grain, which splashed in the dark waters of tile river, appear ing to eyes of the bewildered sentry to be the body of the man who dropped from the prison window. Laroche lay upon the narrow platftirtn, stunned by his heavy fall. Spiride, rho miller's daughter, saw hint fall. There was no one else in the aid' at. the time. She drew him quickly behind the sacks and great heaps of grain on the floor, and having administered to him such restoratives as Ur young exper knee :,'oggested, threw some loose sacks over him, anti told him to lie still That night Spiride and her lover —La roche and she had been lovere' for about six hours only— .made their way to where a bOat lay moored below the falls, and, mu barking in it, were soon curried far be yond the reach of pursuit. It was .sup posed by the affrighted villagers that Spir ide must have been curried front the platform when the body from the window above bud been seen to strike upon it; and as the whirlpool below the torrent had never been known to give up its dead, but little search was made for her, and and her friends, resigned themselves to mourning for her awful fate. Less than six months after this, Landry was 'tried for the murder of a brother keeper, and was convicted and hanged. accordingly. Previous to his execution, however, he made - a•clean breast of it to Father Allard, confeasing that he had murdered the farmer for his money, kill ing him with tlie L '-attike cut from the hedge - ,by young Laroche, which, as he stated, singularly enough, suggested to him the idea of committing the crime. . Two years elapsed, and Father Allard had been promoted to a parish at a dis tance of some fifty , miles from the one of whieh he had ,beep. pastor for so many *STiortly offer his.arrival 4.6x°, his 'du ties led him to take a journey on horse book some miles into the interior of: the 9frbieh he had charge. Part of the road travelled by him wound through ..;.'~~'J.;~~ CARLISLE, FIIIDA,Y, . . a swampy forest region;' and after a ride of several miles, hineatne,to a Sliiggish stream that had formerly been spanned by a bridge, of which nothing but the abutments now remained. The priest turned his horse's head; and rode along t. e bank of the river, hoping to find an'- other bridge, or at least a ford by which he could cross to the further 'side ; nor had he gone fur when he discerned, by hoof marks, a place where cattle seemed to be in the habit of wading through or coming to drink. The water appeared to be shallow, so he urged his unwilling horse into it, and had got about h:dl' way across, when the animal began to plunge and struggle violently, sinking at the same time as if drawn down by some in visible power. Aware, now, that he had fallen into one of those quicksands which are not uncommon in that part of France, the good father knew that to throw him self from his horse would be curtain death, as the water was not deep enough to swim in, and the hungry sand at the bot tom was gaping fur him. held upon his horse, therefore, and shouted fur help. The water was gaining upon him, as the terrified horse sank deeper and deep er in the treacherous stream. Up, up it came, until it reach( d his saddle, arid then his kileS, Ilild lie had given himself up for lost, when distant shouts came in response to his, which were growing feeb ler with each repetition. And now n man bursts his way through the -brush wood on the river bank, and laying his axe upon a tall, slender young tree, cuts it down with lour or live rapid strokes, icaning it so that it falls out upon the water, its toptuust boughs just brushing the sinking horseman in its hill Grasp big time boughs with all his rcnrniuiul li, the priest was diawu to the hauk by the woodsman, fainting_and senseless, however, and with hardly a sparkvisit le of life. Vt. lun Father Allard zecovered con sciousness, he found himself in a small b ut cw a orta bl e room. clog him open eyes, a huxoni young woman '‘'N . ho was bathing his tenipli 5, uttered all exelatua twit Lit joy, wont; hint by tissue.; and now, as his dizzy senses brightened, What Was his surprise to recognize in his at tendt.ot the lost Spiridel Explanation , ensued, and all was wade as clear as day, with. ut recourse to tharvel or miracle. Pre,e.ntiy Laroche, who had been en raged in ext.riesting,the priest's horse . enure in, and the niuuting was an affect ing one between the two, each of 1‘11,,n1 11;1(1 been thu, wontleilully sprinted 1, 3 . idence to save the (idler. Jly consei, nee td clear [tow," said Father Allard. •• heaven i surely par kb.met.l the little tiecluit frame(' by Inc. else wily —'' But lever, nd father," cried LarJclte, intertupt:ng ; therc vva, no tiction In the 6u:d that, 1 W.IA (-at Heil ucvl upon an tinges wttigs, :in l this is thd ttn 4 ( , l that saved toe hwinti ; . 4 ltittglv threw his anus aroun , l his putty wtfo, and hi izgcd Lei to hi, :-.1(16. Poetical justice might now have been wet; satistb d , but hav, a few words lurtl,er to add upon the subject. Laroche, who was now employed a , forester upon au estate, was enabled by the assistance if Father Allard, to return to his native village, where, not long af ter, he obtained an appointment to the very keepership formerly held by the as sassin Landry. The mystery attending his miraculous escape and reappearance gave him an extraordinary influence among the peasantry. Stories lose noth ing by circulation. lie eventually be came a sanctified personage in the ✓coin mwiity and a rudely carved effigy of him is still to be seen in the old chapel of the parish, with a pair of angel's wings hovering over him, and a cross at his head and ireet. Benedict Arnold vs. Robert B. Lee In the midst of the new prospects of the nation, growing out of the fall of the rebellion, we should not overlook the fact that, despite the present sub.. ducd atti,ude of treason, the country swarms with publio enemies, both North and South, who would be glad to arrest its progress, and restore the insurgent section to that infamous predominance through whiol they have always deriVO their political patronage . or power. Ab- ; sorbed us we u'rejust now with grief, and , awed as are:. these malcontents by .441 crime struck in the interest of slavery,i these signs of lingering disaffection come faintly; thrtiugh generosity" and sorrow,.,donatlie, public no*e'flietif Nevertheless, the evil stimulus still:liv,O t and though it defers, just now, with de i:item to the publitt temper, it Wilrily feels t every eligible, aionne, through which .it may, steal; to a. renewed. useend. This seditious inclination first evinced itself among us in simulated lamentations over the horrors of 6t this fratricidalstrife:" and by,songs of ." When this Cruel" Wur is Pver;" As it litiCatee erubolderiod . by the:leniency of the .Govertment, it de'. nouncledTho efforts ot.the' Federal author ities to ieoever its " forts and Placee by the toreo , of aincis,sis despotic' and uncon stitutional '; and at longth it carried ifs opposition to the le4al suspension'of the, habeas corpus and to the iionsciriPtion, al. a .1 ., a• 't ',FT E.: V:i' "..'.(,,f,1 I= =I most to the verge of insurrection. One by .one, but always, temperately end .for• bearingly, the Gavertment met and with stood' these insidious hostilities; and fleetly, favored by God in the overthrow of Lee, it felt it was relieved from dispos ing upon the machinations of the, malcon tents, any more of its concern. Recruiting wa's stopped, conscription countermanded, the public .expenditure resulting to the citizens in taxes was reduced one third; an the nation, through the Executive, benignly opened its bosom to receive back, with as little severity as p ssible, even the wickedest and bloodiest of those who had always been tenderly denominated by, their Northern sympathizers as "our erring Li ethren." But we have seen that., while this tuistaken mercy was : in act, these cherished kinsmen of our Northern traitors resumed their assasin role in its most heinous form, and gave the last Prdaf, in the murder of the President. that, like their accursed_ cause, they are incapable of Christianization, and utterly unworthy of anything but the last rigor of the law. It would seem, however, as if this last infernal revelation of the predominant instincts of slavery and secession bad so shocked the entire count/. that we might safely count, from this time forth, upon a wholesale and cunscientious abandonment, on the part of the previous Northern sympathizers, of the so-called Southern cause. Indeed, suet] is now generally believed, by all spontaneously loyal men, to be the case ; and because it is unwarily so bclieved'do we now detOre to remind the community of the necessity of furtl er vigilance ; and to worn them th at aelassof partizans who could palliate the cold-blooded massacres by F•_rrest, who could make light o. the Ftatvinitm of our captured soldiers, and he willing to see their country reft in twain, rather than have their politied associates humil iated, are net capable of refortuation in a day. Their settled malice is but checked, nut-quelled; and even at the present mo ment the observant reader may dulcet where the still hopeful venom st rs the; gloom of the hour, of' cour"se. no ribald cries are ventufed, no insidious songs are sung, no wilt/tit% homilies are preached for fraternity with murder , but, yielding to the popular impulse, these subtle engineers grasp from the storm one little straw upon which to drive a bar gain with the public grief. They yield lIIVIDScireH unreservedly to the general sorrow ; but, while sailing with the wind, wrest from its unwary current a few ex eeptional praise, in favor of the captured relicl military chief'. They do this, ap parently, nut as a point which they de sire to wake, but us one so ti ious that it should not ho &Mod ; whereupon ley al wen, softened by a noble community of settee., yield a passive sequieseenee in Lee's A Inuits, and thus thoughtlessly con. cede to an artful condi:man/in of the Coil tederate Pleased with the con version of a partisan whom they thought an unconscionable enemy, the loyal lis teners yield to a portion of his }minor, in order to avoid bein4 regarded as lOUs or, 11111'dt:1101/W ; and thus they give access to the entering wedge of a new danger. We do not think we are treating this evident combination to secure an excep tional sympathy fur Lee with too much gravity ur too great suspicion. The rebel military chief has constantly been the chosen hero of that class of Northern men who have been arrayed against the Government; their enthusiasm still cen• tree on him, even as he stands, bedrag gled by defeat; and if they can but keep his sword by, his side, where it was er roneously left by Grant (us though re bellion could be admitted to the privi lege of bearing arms), they will have gained a starting-point by which they may oluim that the insurrection was a legal war, and the nation liable...for the aggro gated debt. But whety the calculation reaches to this length or not, it is certain that the well-engineered movement in applause of Lee unites the sympathy of all who have opposed the Government throughout the war; and way fairly be eotondered, ring the present period of subdued polit. icallaxii`ression, as the last and pending manceuvre of the Confider/de cause. The beptlaroof of this : lies in the fact that Leethas no special merits, or exception al apologiesi,whieh Cam plead for our ad thifiditi br our'pardon,, to. i4ee7.olutlion of,a ; associates, while bola siteeped in the infamy of his great crime more.,cionsptunens y, and "with even, iese, excuse, if possible, than Jefferson The name - Meat,iiieertited'in American history is thSt - Of Benedict Arn01d . ..,, Among their, earliest; lessons our children are taught Witiiit,-;wlth',4,:ahndger; and it 43 - impressed upon their winds, that his nolo: is held in infamy, even by the nation in. whose behalf his treason was perform 'Yet, by all rules of Moral measure; mont, Benedict ..Arnold .was,not ,balf eo tiettlidOus and criminal as,LeM . BenediM, !Arnold was • borne. a Pritish.Objeet,, Mad' MaturetiOnettnhciodunilertlitttooteetiOn. ,HeWaia umplifeigdnfiihiiitieeinddaSiai4. : eourage;'and was thelinost, , distitignialied ,'meat; to Washington, for,his',na lifttry peels= es's; Or all ~ the, 'Generale : of Rovohi:, tioaty MEM . . ... . , . , , , ~..., : - - -. .... . . ~ ~,. . .. .. , ... ~, . - 41 , . servieezi /Lod his brilliant qualitiCs, his claims , for promotion were repeatedly ig noredi or sot aside, in favor of junidr or inferior officers. These wrongs (now ac knoWledged to have been such by all his ' torians( worked upon his proud and re ' vengeful nature, and tempted him to the crime of deserting what bad become his country's cause. In en evil hour he went over to the enemy , but, vile as he was, he had the partial palliation which pro ceeds from injury, and the further self d 'ception, that he was simply returning to his natural allegiance. Robcrt, E. Lee however, has not even thepe poor excuses to j ust if y hi s tren;on. Born under our Constitution, educ ted by the National Government in the task of its defence he —this creature of its nurture and benefi. cence, pampered by wealth, heaped with hollers, covered by privileges, and uncorn ploining of a single wrong—repudiated ,his oath and his duty, through a mere ' hatred'of free institutions, lent his sword to the base pug pose of subduing the Re public in the interest of monarchy. Less talented than Arnold, it can scarcely be said he was truly the winner of a single fight, and his career is stained with atroci- tics which no grace of spurious chivalry can hide. Ills military reputation is the joint product of 0 e errors of our Generals and the hosannas of seditious politicians; and but for Grant's surprising lenity, he would have been captured, bedraggled and crest-fallen before our victorious troops in due penalty !or his miserable. want of management in evacuating Richmond. Ile lived during the first pert of the war as a General, solely through the deep. er inferiurify and criminal allowance of McClellan ; and he never took the initia. live, without. the most egregious failure. ilia fitt,t, Maryland expedition was utterly shipti,4ecked at Antietam ; and he must have been annihilated at Sharpsburg the. s..une night, had not McClellan deliberate ly let him of by an artnisticit of several hi uts At Chaneellorsville he was thor ou:.:,ldy disgraced by [looker turning his position in open daylight—which he long boasted was impregnable —and what ever may he-said of that yet unwritten story of Vet Point cabal and treachery, he was so crippled by the ensuing tight, that he was forced to permit the Federal commander toreturn to his camp across the swollen Rappahannock, without pow' or to molest one of his wagons or his guns. In his second Maryland expedition, lie must have been destroyed had he been pursued, on any one of the three days after his defeat at. Gettysburg ; while at William-port, four days 'hither on, he could have been swept into the raging riv r it) his rear by one assault. and -sent ignominiou..y down the page of histo ry with a troind unworthy of a corporal. Ills resistance to Grant from rho Rana hantiock to the James., wt= simply a ski ri treat within the capacity of any en gineer. and his ear eer terminated by the who:esido capture of himself and artily. through the want of sufficient, mili•ary forecast to time the hour of his march. Here aro no glories for the text of wor ship, except to those bosoms which con ceal a shrine to sonic occult and unlawful deity; while all claims sot up for Lee to our esteem are blotted out by the notorious atrocities which he constantly permitted to be perpetrated upon our captured pris oners. It is vain for his artful worship pers to claim that he could have been ignorant of that gigantic, that unremitting crime. While every man in the country, on both sides of the lines, was daily made acquainted with it, he was toe only man in the country who had the authority to stop it. He needed but the will, and not having shown the will, he is entitled to the same execration fur his prisoners' suf ferings and deaths, as he is for the delib erate murder of those conseriptetUoyalists whose death-warrants he so often signed, because they would not fight against their country. let us hear no more, then, of these mistaken or seditious pleas for Lee. All loyal men owe hatred to the murder ers of their brethren ; and applause for the chief criminal is not only an abandonment of jUstice, but a covert form of treason to the country. It is in this point of view that we now, in a spirit of indignant pro test, direct the attention of the public against the insidious progress of the ap plause for Lee.— Wilkes Spirit of the Times. EDMUND KIRKE ON ROSECRANS.- He sat bolt upright in a rosowOod arm chair, covered with faded brooatelle, and sadly ant at the elbows ; 'and, with a oi gar in'his mouth, and a knife in his hand, was rapidly ,dissecting the letters which lay on the, table before,him.— When my name was mentioned he rose', took ply hand, and gave me a quick, searching ,glance. In that glance--I telt. sounded me, took my iii as tire--as accurately as ilhelad been my tailor—r-an d , with unerring ,dcoisien, fixed -my.exiiet pla,oein the soaie of creation. Eitv ,fifit ,on trtitioo into" Kentucky, frOni high. and. low, black and white, .Bond and free','inilitary !nen and civil , had,(heard,tnithing,^but extrava- . eulogies,',Of ,this and, T. had !camp prepared, to l e disappointed" in but that orie glance theindisorib abic mile that passed over-his Tune and a i!lettain.'atmosphere , •'et power; which seemed to envelope hir a t!' . l ]t i kaii,"m fe6l ' I TERMS:--0,00 in Advance, or $2,50 within the year. ENE that, for once, the popular estimate was the true one. And no one ever came within his influence without being fas cinated' as I was, or without feeling, on the instant, the magnetism of his great na ture. I remained with liosecrans nearly a month, and in that per , ied• saw much of him, meeting him every - day. During all of that time I saw nothing of•the brandy-drinking or opium-eating with Which his enemies have charged him. and I Should have seen it, had it exist ed. In all our intercourse ; I fotlnd him as earnest a patriot., as honest a man, as true and Christian a gentleman as, I think, ever lived I should be false to my convictions of ri;_tht. if I omitted to say. that those who, at such a time as this, have been instrumental in burying his great military talents in a mere civil employment, have 'done immense wrong to the country. It is not our most ex cellent President who has done this lie, I know. thinks of Itosecrans as I do. Nor was he removed because of the re pulse at Chickamaug,a. The Govern ment has exonerated him ft om blame in that affair ; and those best informed have told um that, had the information on which he acted beim correct, we should Navy lost Tennessee' and Kentucky, had lie done differently from what he did.— Time is said to take its revenges ; it also bestows its rewards. It will reward Rose crans, by placing his name among those of the hest and truest men in our history. —Deere in T,nncssee. Personal Habits of Eaward Everet t In his personal habits, Mr. Everett was a model of industry, promptness, and power of easy and rapid execution. He never forgot au appointment, nor neglect ed a duty. In the performance of his literary tusks, he was as punctual as the r isbuz of that sun. Though essentially scholastic in his habits, no man - had a clearer head ur a readier hand in the routine, of practical affairs. With his love of 'el (split 1-elite:tient, he exorcised a devotion to datail, which would sewn marvelous to persons who are not aware how largely this clement enters into the conditions of success, and even of greatness, in every department of life. llis handwriting which he formed when a school boy, and retain ed to old age was ns lucid and beautiful as copperplate. The act of composition cost hue little effort at the time, although the fruit of years of thought and study, and the manual process of writing stamped his most ornate and exquisite productions in deftly up.tn los memory. His manners welt. polished and courtly, though want the .ttbile ;.4raett of natural sy. pathy. llu was 11Cot a ease ut jute or at rung emu t ours, unless he apprehended some rude ictidsion of his fastidious personality lie was alert in resenting a fancied ittjury ur insult or even an 1111t1:01:1ble eritutnw aid the COW [Lents of hostile tongues would sometimes affect him eve!, to tears lie loved the approval of indifferent persons too much for his own happiness, perhaps for his own dignity, although his sensi tiveness to putilio opinion strengthened his habits of self-cow mand,and made him in all the relations of life, a paragon of external propriety. Fie will be regarded us one of the most highly gifted, and ad mirably cultivated won of the present age, but h has left no monument which will furnish an adequate memorial of his genius to future generations.—N. Y. Tri bune. Former Assassinations The murder of President Lincoln has occasioned the hunting up of preoodou is The following are some of them : Irene, Empress consort of Greece, lost her 'power by the death of her husband and the consequent succession of his son, Constantine VI. To displace him, she caused his eyes to be put out, and after wards had him killed by strangulation. William Rufus of England confiscated all the neighboring estates to make a grand hunting park for his own amusement.— Sir Walter el, ono of sufferers, shot him with an arrow, and fled to France. Rienzi, the first Roman Tribune, was killed by a mob. Nassaniello, the popular Viceroy of Naples, was drugged by an artful enemy, and killed by his own people for acts committed in his unnatural condition. • James I/of Scotland, was killed by his nobles, in the presence Of the Queen and ladies of her court, after a fierce struggle. Richard ccour de Lion yfas killed by thO Viscount de 'Limoges in France while parleying under a flag, of truce. floury IV of France, though very worthy and popular., had twanty=eight attempts blade upon his life. Ravaillac killed him: with a dagger, for which the assassin was broken upon the wheel. Kouli Khart,"Ode 'of the — wisest of Per i elan 'moanrchs,"Was killed in his own tent 'by a nephew, with the cohnivance of his I own body'guard. ' Gustavus of ,Sweden ,was -killed" ; by a musket ball., fired - bY.Capt, Ankerstrpotn, - fOrtnerlY ati officer inils army, '• He was . . , . 'hung foi;the 'oritno.. . • fiei'al'aPomp . t; , yore. Made to take'tha life ,oi Gomm 111 of England. One was ‘bis , woman wbo_,Approaehed . him, pre sooting a petition. ' While the, king was, 'leading, it,- she attempted to stab him: She . 4 tidjAidged insane:'''' . ' - ' ', L: Paul I of Russia was strangled with a Silken searrby. his nobles, even his own wife an children beiniprivy to the'plot —one of •theni, Alexander, succeeded to the throne. This was in 1801. MI Five futile attempts "have boon made to murder QuEeri" Victoria, withcint any apparent motive. Four of the persons were arrested 3 two of them were sent to the madhoilee, and two transported. The fifth fired,a pi4tol shot from a crowd while the Queen wee riding with her husband, missed, and escaped. NO. 19. The plots against the life of Napoleon I were numberless, and some of his es capes very narrow; and the present Em peror has been similarly 'threatened and imperilled. For those who aro interested ig liter. erg matters wo have compiled the follow ing list of leading writers with their as sumed signatures. It will be well to preserve it for future reference: tsuil liamilton—Miss Abig4il E. Dodge. Florcnee Percy-24 Elizabeth Ak- Timothy Titeornb—Dr. J. trs,;),nd NV. Savage North—Win S. Nowell. Oipheus C. Kerr.-11mbert H. Newell IS.lrs.Parti[L:toti—B P. Shil.,ber. Artemis Ward—Chas. F Browne. Doesticks, P. 8.-31,miwor Thump IC. N. Pepper—James )lorris. B Padd --J. 11. Williaa,s. Mace Sloper, 0. Leland Josh Billings—lienry W. Show. The Disbanded, Vidouteer—Joseph. Barbour. J cern:a Pipos--Stephen Massett. Ned Buntline—E Z. Q. Judson. Daisy Ilocyard—Myra Daisy McCraw Cuusin May Carleton—Aliss ME Edwund Kirke—j. R. Gilittor'cl. Couutry Parson—A. K. 11. Boyd. Mary Clavers—Mrs C. JI. liirklaud. Currer Bell—Charlotte Bronte. Village Sohoolmin-iter—Chas. M. Dick- MEM Owen Meredith--13u1sver, sun of Icy t ton Bulwer. Barry • oruwall—Wm. Proctor. Author of "John Halifax, Gentle tnan."—Miss Dinah Mullock. 1k Marvel—Donald O. Mitchell. Jenny Juno—Mrs. Jennie Crulay. Fanny Fern—Wife of James 8. Parton, the historian, and sister of N. P. Willis. Potroleurn Nas by —D. R. Lake. d lyndua Laura C. lied dun. QUININE is now the king of medicines, and• while every one regards it a, the west reliable and invaluable of remedies, there are many who think that with quinine and opium they can treat all diseases.— The demand is enormous, and the moro especially if we recall the rapidity with which this younger son of medicine has come into its rights. Into this country bark found its way fur the first tie e late in thesevt nteenth century; and in France it won its entrance into the phlr:ii:lo by curing Louis IV, Own fur him ab a tieUret, reweuy. and un Ihe f:lkosing conditions 00,) livro;, 2,- 000 livros as a pen,ion, and rho tutu of el - ler:dim The eon unntuetirn in' wern French and Etigli.ll phy'.icuens was not then coutpie•o or intimate, and tuaglitucent price 'way ebt dned for Pal let's reanniy. which was only a vinous, tincture of (iudline common y eniplor d En, 4 land. IJULIIi XI V ordered ad• toiss.un into the pharuicupceia. The sources of quiaine are liewecer, pr dually und.r the pressure of the enor mous demand ; end altheue,h the experi ments of the British Government in fOrtning plantations of cinchona trees iu India, have suet with sueccsJ in au impor tant degree, yet the best kinds of quinine bearing trees are said not to have suo ceeded so well as the otbers.—Lomloit Lancet. Maalufacturos of Ireland Ireland now possesses large manufacto ries of machinery especially for linen, for steam engines and of late years, for iron !ships. So much has the eSaraotcr of Irish woolens recently risen, that between 185] and 1863 the number of mills in creased from nine to forty three, or nearly four hundred and sixty-three per cent. The cotton mills in Ireland, Since the American war, have been applied to the manufacture of flax, and the Irish poplin trade has greatly revived. But, by. far the most important branch of Irish 'manu facture is the linen trade. In 1864 there were in Ireland seventy-four spinning mills with six hundred and flity thousand six hundred and thirty-eight spindles, and there was a similar increase in power loom factories. Ten years ago there were seventeen thousand persons employed in the linen trade of Belfast, while in - the posent year there wore twenty-five thou ' sand. Thera has been an enormous in crease in flax 'cultivation, the total value of the crop of the present year being no less than three million, nine hundred and eight-nine bounds. The total value of linens exported from the United Kibg dom has increased from five million, nine one hundred and ninety thousands, three. hundred and forty seven pounds, in 1861 to eight million, four hundred sixty-nine thousand and thirty six pounds in 1863. Why is a petroleum dealer like an epi cure ? Because he livos on the fat of the laud, • Why are some fornines like shipaf Be , eatisd'they are built on the'stneks. • If a pqraon is learning'teanylaaguegai i what should he end The rivaishi of course Why is ?' porionyho never Jaye a rwa- , ger sit bad ada - iiigillit.guinpler lisoauso he is no bstber: Nom de Plume .~~r-ti