HE PILOT 1,4 rtiBLISIIY.D XVEY TUESDAY MORNING EY JAMES W. M'CRORY, (North West Garner of the Public Square,) e •be following rates, front which there will be no deviation,: Single subscription, in advance Within six months Within twelve months No paper will be discontinued unless at the eption o f the Publishers, until all arrearages are paid. No subscriptions will be taken for a less period Ilan six months. Tbo Great AMERICAN TEA COMPAN Y 61 Vesey Street, New York ; Since its organization, has created a new era in the history of Wholesaling Teas in this Country. They have introducel their selections of Teas, and are selling them at not over Two Cents (.02 Cents) per pound above Cost, never deviating from the ONE PRICE asked. Another pecillarity of the company is that their Tea TASTER not only devotes his time to the selec tion of their Teas as to quality, value, and particu lar styles for particular localities of country, but he helps the TEA buyer to choose out of their enormous steels such TEAS as are best adapted to hie peculiar wants, and not only this, but points out to him the best bargains. It is easy to see the incalculable ad.. vantage a TEA BUYER has in this establishment over all others. If he is no judge of TaA, or the MARKET, if his time is valuable, he has all the benefits of a well organized system of doing business, of an immense capital, of the judgment of a professional Tea:Taster, and the knowledge of superior salesmen. • This enables all Tea buyers—no matter if they are thousands of miles from this market—to pur chase on as good terms here as the New York mer chants Parties can order Teas and will be served by us as well as though they came themselves, being sure to get original packages, true weights and tares; sad the Teas are warranted as represented. We issue a Price List of the Company's Teas, which will be sent to all who order it; comprising Young limn, Imperial, Gun powder, Twankay and Skin. Oolong, Souchong, Orange and Hyson Peko, /open Tea of eve y description, colored and uncolored This list has each kind of Tea divided into Four Classes. namely: CARGO, high CARGO, FINE, FINEST, that every one may understand from de scription and the prices annexed that the Company are determined to undersell the whole Tea trade. We guarantee to sell all our Tens at not over TWO CENTS ( .02 Cents) per pound above cost, be lieving this to be attractive to the many who have heretofore been paying Enormous Profits. Great American Tea Company, Importers and Jobbers, Sept. 15, 1863-81o.] No. 51 Vevey St., N. Y. 100 !r l iiPcure A R D for a medicine that Coughs, Influenza, Tickling in the throat, Whooping Cough, or relieve Consumptive Cough, as quick as COE'S COUGH BALSAM. Over Five Thousand. Bottles have been sold in its sage, town, and not a single instance of its failure is kdown. W. have, in our possession, any quantity of cer (item es, /mum of them from EM:lni:Nly PHYSICI ANS, who linve used it in their practice, and given it the preeminence over any other compound. It does not Dry up a Cough, ut loosens it, so as to enable the patient to expec• orate freely. Two or three doses will invariably ure Tickling in the Throat. A half bottle has of en completely cured the moat STUBBORN COUCH. and set, though it Is so sure and speedy in its operation, ilia perfectly harmless, being purely vegetable. It is very agreeable to the taste, and may be adminis arid to children of any age. In cases of CROUP , we will guarantee a cure. if taken in season. No family should be tvithout It is within the reach of all, the price being only 25 Cents. And if an investment and thorough trial does not "back up" the above statement, the money will be refunded. We say this knowing its merits, and feel confident that one trial will secure for it a home in every household. Da not waste away with Coughing, when so small an investment will cure you. It may be bed of Any respectable Druggist in town, who will furnish you with a circular of genuine certificates of cures it has made. C. G. CLARK Rt. CO., Proprietors, New Haven, Ct. At Wholesale, by Johnston, Holloway & Cowden, 28 North Sixth Street., Philadelphia, Pa. For vale by Druggists in city, county, and every where '[Sept. 29, 1863.-6 m. J. W. BARR'S Vammoth Stove and Tinware Store Room, A few doors South of the Diamond, Greencastle, Pa. HE undersigned having purchased Mr. Nead'a 1. entire interest in the 'Tinning business, wishes le inform the public at large, that he has on hand, at his extensive Stove store, COOK, PARLOR AND - NINE-PLATE Stoves. Among them are the Continental, Noble Commonwealth and Charm, which he will sell !heap for cash. The very best quality of Tin, Japaned and Sheet Iron Ware, is great variety. SPO TIITG ref the best. material. for houses, &e., manufactured .sod put up at the shortest notice. All are invited in call at this establishment. as the oroprietor is confident in rendering satisfaction, oth in price and quality of his wares. My price Audi be low! tow ! I tow!!! Save money by purchasing at headquarters. Se— All work warranted. August 23, 1863. J. W. BARB. THE GREAT CAUSE OF HUMAN MISERY. rusl Published in a Sealed Envelope. Price six cents A Lecture on the Nature, Treatment and Radical Cure of Seminal Weakness. or Sper matorrheett, induced from Self-Abuse ; Involuntary Emissions, Impotency, Nervous . Debility, and Im pediments to Marriage generally ; Consumption, Fpilepsy'and Fits ; Mental and Physical Incapacity, RouT. J. CULTBILWBLL, M. D., Author of 'The Green Book," &o. The world-renowned author, in this admirable Lecture, clearly proves from his own experience that 'he awful consequences of Self-abuse may be effec tually removed without medicine, and without dan gerous surgical operations, bettgies, instruments, rings, or cordials, pointing out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual, by which every sufferer, ne matter what his condition may be, may cure him- Pelf cheaply, privately and radically. This lecture will prove a boon to thousands and thousands. Sent under seal, in a plain envelope; to any ad 'tress, en receipt of six cents, or two postage stamps, by addressing the publishers. CHAS. J . C. KLINE k CO.. 171 flowery. New York, Post Office Box, 4686. Jan. 27, .1864.-sep22l.y. ...atettii i ii p 1 ,(,,, 4 1r : . . . g , 4 0 t .. $ i P g A, „ , -...: •_\ _-. _ ..,?,' ' - ,i,',iy,.. •-•: i t. # - , A 'y ~, • ~, ,v 4 k 0 . .y;t.,. , 0 0 %' 0 i ‘ 4 4 i .s . ;; A:t %• Ve lil . ~•--,- ; , - i- • ?.._::: t, . ." , -- ft g . , 0 " ~,.. ,/, , . ~4 , ~,p , 5 ..•:. '_. . ~..:- --...., ~..,i . —.. l w - . -.,,... : . 4 .-_-4. - $1.50 MI 2.00 VO.L-V select poctrp. UNIVERSAL PRAISE. Would that praise was universal, Would that every soul could sing, Praise to God the great Creator, Praise to the Eternal King: Nature, then, and human nature, All combined the world around Nodding hills and smiling 'rallies, Would their Author's praise resound Hail the great. Eternal Father! He whose,sptrit moved upon: The dark face of mighty waters; Hail his well beloved Son! Praise him for the earth and heavens, For his care to ancient Night; All he saw, and the division When he said, "let there be light!" Praise him as the stars of heaven; Loudly as they silent move! Lift the earth to heaven descending, With pure praise as angels' love ! Praise him as the heavenly being, In whose footsteps we have trod ; Songs of praise be universal To the Great Eternal God ! Soo torn. A GIFT BY THE WAY-SIDE. The old farm-house clock has just struck seven, and all over the hills the purple vapors of twilight, were coming down, waking the spicy colors among the sweetfern in the pas tures and the blue wild grapes ripening iu the woods, while whippoowit •sang sadly on the rails of the broken down fence that skirted the ravine, and the katydids chirped shrilly through the morning glory leaves above the window. "Seven o'clock !" echoed Silas Miller, as though he had not been watching that slow creeping minute hand fur the last half hour. "He will soon be here now—my boy will soon be here." What a strong softening of the rugged fea tures, what an unwanted quiver of the harsh voice there was, when he uttered the two sim ple words, 'My boy ;" Yes, it was his boy, who wtts coming back front the smoke of half a score of battle-fields ; no wonder that the thought sent a thrill through his iron nature. His soldier—his hero ! "Surely I ought to hear the stage horn," he said, feverishly pacing up and down the nar row path, where the maple leaves lay like a carpet of pale gold. "Listen Sybil: don't you hear it T" "It is too early yet, lather." The light figure came stealing out to his side, and both came together leaned over the garden gate, gazing into the opal gloom of twilight with wistful searching gaze. She was not prettier than many an other New England girl, yet there was a delecate type of beauty in her face and form that belongs as much to the "frozen North," as its pine for ests and its etiffs of eternal snow. Pale brown hair, aureate tights crossing its surface at times, eyes like the blue larkspur, and lips that had stolen the dewy crimson of the wild rose; in pearls and blue crape Sybil Miller would have been "a beauty ;" in her dress of gray ging ham she was something far better and nobler. Suddenly the old wan started and uttered an instinctive glad cry. "It's he, Sybil; don't you see, beyond the elder bushes! Child, don't hold me back : let me go and meet my boy !" 'No father, you are mistaken ; it is not.— Lawrence is shorter by half a head, and it is not his quick buoyant step," "You're right, Sybil," said Silas Miller, almost petulantly. "Why do those vagrant soldiers go wandering by, giving folks such a start? It was only this morning that a beg gar, disgracing—l won't say wearing the United States uniform, came by, and had the audacity to ask me for money." "Did you give him some." "Give him some!! repeated Silas angrily; "I'd have seen him starving first. I have no patience with these strolling beggars. Here's another specimen of the kind, I suppose. No, my man, you needn't trouble yourself to re cite your pitiful story." For the tall figure, with halting step and coat thickly powdered with dust had paused in front of the gate; and Sybil could just discern dark, piercing eyes and a forehead cu riously traversed by a ©resent shaped scar, ap parently now heeled. "I have nothing for you," said Sila's, sharp ly ; "Yes, yes, I know what you'd say, but it's no use. It you're deserving, the proper au thorities will take care of, you, and if you are not, the county jail is the best,placc for you. Don't about .what.; what ' have. you dune GREENCASTLF_I, PA., TUESDAY, JUI,,Y 26, 1864. with your bounty money and your pay, if you're what you pretend to be—a soldier ?" Even through the twilight Sybil could see a scarlet flush rising to the scarred forehead. "Sir, you are mistaken. I did not beg." "No, you'd prefer to play the bully, I've no doubt. But I'm not a proper subject fur you, so be about your business, my man." The soldier turned silently away, with a step more halting, perhaps, and a head more depressed, and passed slowly into the gather ing dusk. "Father," whispered Sybil, reproachfully, "have you forgotten that our Lawrence, too, is a soldier ?" "No," returned Silas, abruptly, "I remem bered it, and it convinced tue all the more that a man paid and pensioned like our Lawrence has no need to beg on the public highways.' "But father he did not beg." "Because I would not allow it, child. I pay taxes for the support of such as he, and 1 swear I will do it no more." He spoke in the sharp, high-pitched accents of passion, and when he looked around again Sybil was gone. Foot sore and weary, the travel-worn pedes- trian had seated himself down on a mossy boulder by the roadside, when a quick light, ootstep came up a little path leading from the back door of the house through blackberry pastures and mown fields, and a slight figure bent above him. "Do not mind my father's words ; he was angry and unreasonable,' she said hurriedly. "I have little to give, but I want you to take it for the sake of my soldier brother." Before he could speak she had unfastened a blue ribbon with a tiny gold piece suspended from it, and placed it in his hands, and was gliding across the fields like some gray nun in her sombre lined dress. Ile rose as if to fol low and overtake her, but it was too late, and as he bent his head over the gleaming token something very much like a tear-dropped upon its circlet of tiny stars. "And now tell us everything., that has hap pened to you Lawrence. Oh, Lawrence, when I wakened this morning it seemed all a dream that you had come hack again in very truth.' The bronzed handsome young soldier looked smilingly down into the radiant face that nest led against his shoulder, and a serious shadow stole into his eyes. "I can tell you one thing, Sybil, that it come very near being nothing more than a dream once or twice. I have had more hair breath escapes than you know of, little sister. I did not tell you, did I, of that skirmish along the Potomac where I stood face to face with death, too, at the point of Rebel bayonets, when some brave fellow charged down on 'em and saved my life with his own right hand." "Who was it, Lawrence ?" said old Silas, with trembling lips and dilated eyes. "I would give my best wheat field for a chanee to grasp that right hand." "I don't know—l never came across him again. Probably he was in some other regi ment. All that I know is that he had fiery black eyes, and a scar on his forehead, shaped like a Moorish crescent." "And a straight nose and a heavy moustache?" interrupted his sister. "Exactly." "Father," said Sybil turning with sparkling eyes and crimson cheeks to where Silk§ Miller sat "the wandering soldier whom you turned from your door last night, is the man who saved our Lawrence's life." Slias rose up from his chair and took an un easy turn across the room, and back, his iron features working stangely. "It can't be helped now,' he said in a tremu lous voice; "but it's the last soldier ever send with empty hands from this door. The man who saved our Lawrence's life ! 0 Sybil, if I had only listened to your words !" But she never spoke of the lucky piece of gold. She fancied it might seem like ostenta tion, this shy, fastidious wild flower of the hills. "Sybil going to get married among the fine town folks in Boston ! Well, I s'pose I might have expected it, and yet it does seem kind o' hard. 1 sho'd like to see the man who is going to marry Sybil Miller,' soliloquized Silas drop ping the dainty timid letter. "Sit down here, dearest, in the quiet little music room," he said with carressing author ity. "I can't share your sweet eyes and sweeter words with all the world any longer, I must have you all to myself fur awhile ." She looked up with a Lilushing.sruile, then down again. "Well ?" he asked, as she had spoke. "I was wondering, Allen—that scar on your orehead !" "What of it ?" "Why it is such a singular shape—almost half a circle. I never saw but one like it be- EIS "Did you not? And, where was that ?" "A poor ,soldier passed our gate with just such a sear, and—" She paused ; he had quietly taken from an inner receptacle in hie coat a tiny piece of gold with a narrow blue ribbon passed through it. Ile held it smilingly up. "Do you know who gave this to me ?" "Gave it to you, Allen ?" "To me, a footsore, weary wanderer, who had missed his way among your tangled roads.— You fancied me a beggar. It was not so—it was not so. I had money, friends, position, yet I stood sorely in need of work, just then, for my brain was throbbing, my limbs weary, and my scars scarcely healed. That foot march cost me a weary fever. Yet Ido not regret it ; or—" Be took up her hand tenderly into hia, and added : "For although I might have known my Sy bil was beautiful, yet had it not been for that blue-ribboned piece of gold I never should have known how good and true she was." THE MOSS, ROCK, AND THE WATER There is a beautiful harmony and order in Nature, which the more one contemplates the more he admires. We remember calling, a long time ago, upon a friend who is "curious" in matters of mineralogy, and noticed upon table specimens of the wonderful progressive operations of nature. There was delicate moss, some of it yet wearing the color of sum mer; and some had passed beyond the sere and yellow leaf—had apparently been bleach ed. Near the moss, lay the fragment of a porous stone resembling in color and structure, though more compact, the whitened mole. Next to this was a specimen of firm rock; the pores bad filled up; the whole _had indurated ; and there, but two removes from the green moss lay the material of which Ambition rears its monuments, War has defences, and Love her cherished homes. And near all these was placed a glass jar, which contained the agent that had wrought this wonder—pure cold water. It is dumb uow, but the time has been when it had a voice and a song in it, and it went sparkling down over that moss, leaping into life and sparkling into sunlight. It,was indeed a beautiful series, in impres siveness far superior to the most eloquent de. scription. Nature kindly disguises herself everywhere around us, and it is the eye of science alone that detects in the beauty of change nothing but the beauty of death. Do our fair readers think—if we have any —while their pencils glide freely with an "at home," over the polished surface of an India card, that the very surface they admire is com posed of the lunar shields of little warriors, who have fought the fight of life, glittered, like all heroes, their hour in the sunbeam, and laid aside their armor and died? Do they think that little card, that little parallelogram of pearl, is the .cemetery of thousands—that the beauty of death ? And so with the roses that blush iu our path way and cluster around the graves of our dead. Could we but know whence their elenients were derived, did we but think that perhaps the tint that gave beauty to the leaf once colored the cheek of the loved, how different would we regard these children of a Persian sun. It was one of the beautiful and truthful sayings of an eminent naturalist that the ever lasting hills and the firm rocks are but the relics of former life. They are indeed the alto-relievo of things that were. The rotten stone, composed of the cresent shields of little creatures that sported their day and died ; the white chalk rocks, the catacombs of animalcula, with limbs, and pulse, and armor for defence —people, a million of which are comfortably accommodated with a single cubic inch. lr you wish to win a high strung woman, feed her with romance. The more mysterious you can make yourself, the more dearly she will esteem you. Rather than admit that you belong to the useful classes, plead guilty to be ing a brigand. Anything that partakes .of , poetry and .adventure, pleases. the sex with scarcely an Anception. We once.knew alligh wayinan who .lost an :heiress by just acknowl .cqging that Jae was the .sol u a cmdwaiucr. ADVERTISING RATES. Iclvertisements will be iuserted in Ttis PILOT at the fellow ilig rate 3 1 column, one year A of a column, one year f of a column, one year 1 square, twelve months 1 square, six months 1 square, three months I square, (ten lines or less) 3 insertions 1.00 NO 19. Each subsequent insertion... Professional cards, one year . . . A leopard shouldn't be caged. It would be hard that be should be confined to one spot. A beggar's threadbare suit may be a fine court dress—a dress for the court of Heaven. Adam caused our evil ways, and McAdam mended them. The winds and waters have myriad voices, and all of them are solemn. If you undertake to oversee too many jobs, you will overlook a part. A military definition of a kiss would be a report at headquarters. A cherry, ripe and rich, is fragrance and flavor done up in a red wrapper. Fame is but an inscription on a grave; glory be melancholy blazon on a coffin-1i& A common donkey can generally boast more stripes than the zebra. Many love the music of the "winding horn." But a cow has winding horns with no music it them We can best teach the juvenile mind before tis soiled and spoiled. 'Tis sorry writing on a creasy slate If you are suffering from gout or rheumatism any mischievous boy in the street will gladly undertake to break your panes. The schoolmaster's beat is less extensive than the watchman's. It is confined to big schoolhouse. If a man and his horse are both in distress, they can let their griefs meet in a common Centaur . Manly spirits, as it is generally called, is often little else than the froth and foam of hard-mouthed insolence. The poet, if questioned harshly as to his uses, might be unable to render a better apolo gy for his existence than a flower might. Dew ;is an invisible vapor, which, chilled by the cool surfaces of the Bowers, burst into tears over the beauty that must fade. Many persons, like a mocking-bird or a blank wall, say nothing of themselves, but give back imperfeptly the ntorances of others. The world is ; curved rautid about with hea ven. low one can get out of the world with out getting into heaven is to us a physical mystery There is .a great deal ,of fawning in society, in order to be fawned ou again, just as among suckling puppies half awake. That is properly the land of our fathers in which we may veuei;ate the image of their virtues The swallows Are considered temperate, but, after skimming the river, they fly to their nests and "moisten their ,clay." If A stupid speaker has prodigious lungs, he can fill with his iv.oice the largest house—and empty it too. The more we know, the less we say. At death ,a man arriKes at immense knowledge cud doesu',t open his mouth. Life in the spring-titue,is life in all its forms —life with a sweet breath in it, life with a song in it, life with a light in it. Those feud of wine are little fond of the sweet of the nem : those fond ,of learning are no fonder of its must than of its dregs. There wouldil be fewer shipwrecks in society if men remembered that iarge sails are ill adapted to small vessels. The great gulf, in which so many govern ments have perished, east up the fragment, and indefatigable nien refits them. No gocd man ever gave anything without being the more happy for it, unless to the un deserving, nor took anything away without being the less so. Under a ,conquering prince, the people are shadows, lessening and lessening as he mounts in glory, urktil at last they became a thing of nothing IRzporienee is a solimn fowl, that eaekles toftener than she drops real live eggs. Wise men have said a great many foolish things ; and foolish nen, we doubt not, as many wise ones. tittle-or-Not4ings. =3 ~.~~ $70.00 8.5.0 C 20.00 8.00 5.00 4.00 26 6.00