Xl3r IPI7. 3131423. r. VOLUME XVIII .2=oErriculLia. THE NOMI OP MAT. All nature now is smiling, Sweet birds are singing gay; And fragrant dolma are flinging Their purfume on our way, An things assume a brighter hue Within this month of flowers: And time beneath his healing wing, Shelters the youthful hours. The birds me sweetly warbling, Proclaiming May is born; A man's glad heart is praising The beauty of the morn. 7tcngs with gladness A soul enlivening lay, And balmy, grateful breezes . Has the merry month of May The flowers fair are raising Each gold and scented head, And sweet and blooming roses Spring from the leafy bed; And everything appeareth Around us and above, filled with the gentle spirits Of faith, of Hope, and love, The happy birds are stinging Their sweet and joyous notes; They warble all melodiously, From out their tiny throats; Lott echoes are replying, ° . And gm they die away, Theebirsls-ance-more-resumert.. And still prolong the lay. The queen of night shall_ fold thee And perfumed air shall hold thee In its delicious charms. ..And all shall ring_in_gladness - TA — Foul enlivening lay, • To praise the month of flowers, The merry rnenth'of May. SING, MAMA -SING BY HARRY CORNWALL Sing, maiden,sing! • Mouths were made for singing; Listen—Songs thou'lt hest Through the wide world ringing; Songs from all the Lids, Songs from winds and ishowers, Songs from seas and streams, Even from sweet flowers. ' Hearest thon' the rain. How it gently fullethl Nearest thou the bird Who from forest eallethl 'dearest thou the bee O'er tt e sunflower ringing? Sett ut. - Tin — at en, now— Shouldst not•thou be singing? Ilearest thou the breeze Round the rose-bui sighing? And the small sweet rose Love to love replying? So shouldst thou reply To the prayer we're bringing; So that bud, thy mouth, • • Shouldat burst forth in singing! pl y * 0- 0 11 1 1 dir410‘:`1111,44111 HOW HE CAME TO BE MARRI- It may be funny but I've done it. I've got a rib and a-baby. Shadows departed— oyster stews, brandy cocktails, olger,.boies, boot jacks, absconding •shirt buttons, whist and demijon. Shadows present—hoop skirts, band boxes, ribbons, garters, long stockings, juvenile dresses, tin trumpets, little willow chairs, cradles; bibs, pap, sugar teats, pare goric, hiv,elyrup, rhubarb, sena, salts, squills, and doe or bills. Shadows future—more pound br.bies, more hive syrup, etc., etc.— I'll just tellyou how I got caught. •I was almost the darndest, most tea• custard bash ful fellow you ever did see, it was kinder in my line to be taken with the shakes ever • •, saw -c= pretty gal approaching me, and I'd cross the street any time rather than face one;"twaan't because . 1 didn't like the crit ters, for if I was behind the fence 'Coking through a knot-hole I couldn't look at; one long enough. Well, my sister Lib gave a party one night, and I stayed away from home because I was too bashfull to face the music. 1 hung around the house whistling "Old Dail Tucker," dancino 4 " to. keep my feet warm ; watching the heads bobbing up and down behind the window currins, and wish ing the thundering party would break up so I conkl get to any room, I smoked up a bunch of cigars, and as it was getting late and mighty uncomfortable, I concluded to shin up the door post. No sooner said than done, and I soon put myself snug in bed. "Now," says I, 'let her lip ! Dance till your wind gives out r' And cuddling un der the-quilts, Morpheus grabbed me. I was dreaming of soft shell crabs and stow ed tripe, rind was having a good time when somebody knocked at the door and woke Mo up. "Rap"-again. I laid low. "Rap, rap, rap !" Then I heard a whispering, and 1 knew there was a whole raft •of gals outside. "Rap" iap !" Then Lib sings out. "Jack, are you in there ?" "Yes,"'says I. 'Then came a roar of laughter { "het us in," sap she. • - . • A. 3rEilekk4te NeOliNroisstroeir's and 121.e41:1fficoxi.. WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 26,1865. "I won't," says I, •'°can't yea let a fellow alone r. • "Are you a-bed ?" says she. • "I am," say's I. . "Get out,' .says she. "I won't," says I. Then 'came another laugh. By thunder ! I began to get riled. "Get out, 'you petticoated 'morel:wows !" I cried; "can't you get a beau without hauling a fellow out of bed ? I won't go home with you—l won't—so you may clear out ?" And, throwing a boot at the door, I felt better. But presently oh! mortal buttonl— I beard a still, small voice, very much like sister Lib's and it said: "Jack,lmell have to get up for all the girl's things are there!" Oh, Lord, what a pickle! Think of me in bed', all covered with shawls, muffs, bonnet and cloaks, and twenty girls outside the." •• .a. - 1 to think I should have pancaked on the spot. As it was I rolled out among the bonnet-ware and ribbons in a hurry. Smash! went the nery in every direction. I had to dress in the dark—for there was a crack in the door, and the girls will peep—and the way I fum bled about was death on straw hats. The critical moment came. ' opened the door, and found myself right atnong the women. "Oh, my Leghorn!" cries one. "My dear, darling, winter velvet!" cries another, and they pitched in—they pulled me this . way and that, toxed my ears, and one bright.ey ed little piece Sal her name was— put her arms right around my neck, and kiss ed me right on my lips. Human -nature couldn't stand that, and I gave , her as good as'she sent. It was the first time I ever got the taste; and it was powerful good. I be lieve I could have kissed that gal from 'Tull bus Censer to the Fourth otellul. ac" - raid she, "we are sorry to disturb you, but won't you see me borne?" "Yes," said I, "Iwill," --I-did ' .AcifiV-if - id=had-a-n - otheack at tr. gate, too. After that we took's kinder tur. tle.doving after each other, both of us sigh ing-like a barrel of new cider,-when we were - aWay — from each other. 'Twas at the close of a glorious summer day—the sun was set. ting behind a distant hen-roost—the bull frogs were commencing their evening songs and polly-wogs, in their native mud-puddles, were preparing themselves for the shades of night—and Sal and myself sat upon an anti quated back-log listening to the music of nature, such as treetonds, roosters, and grunt. ing pigs, and now and then the music of a distant jackass was wafted to our ears by the gentle zephyrs that sighed among the mul. len stalks, and came heavy laden with the de licious odor of hen roosts and pig styes.— Thelast lingering rays of the setting sun, glancing from the buttons of a solitary horse man, shone through a knothole in a hog pen 1,1111 in Sal's face, dying her hair an orange peel hue, and showing off my threadbare coat to a bad advantage—one of my arms was around Sal's waist, my hand resting on the small of her back—she was toying with my aburn locks of jet black hue—she was al most gone and I was ditto.' She looked like --a--grassfropper - dyiw-tcht — th - C - h i coups, and I felt like a mud-turtle choked with a cod fish ball. "Sal," says I, in a voice as musical as the notes of a dying swain, will you have me ?" She turned her eyes heavenward, clasped me by the . hand, had an attack of the heaves and blind staggers, and with a sigh that drew her shoe-strings to her palate, said "Yes !", . _ She gave clear out, then, and squatted in my lap, she corkscrewed and curflumixed and rolled in. I hugged her till I broke my sus pender, and her breath smelt of onions she eat two weeks before. Well, to make a long, story short, she set the day, and we practised for four weeks ev ery night how we would walk into the-room to be married, till we got AO we would walk as graceful as a couple of Muscovy ducks.— The night the company and the minister came, the signal was given, and arm in arm we marched through the crowded hall, we were just entering the parlor door, when own I went kerslap on' the oilcloth, pulling Sal after me. Some cussed fellow had drop ped a banana skin on the floor, and it floored me; It split an awful hole in my cassimeres right under my dresseoat tail. It was to late to'back out, so clapping my hand over it we marched in and were spliced, and taking a scat I watched the kissing the bride o'er tion. Ny groomsman was tight, and he kissed Mr till, I jumped up to take a slice, when, oh, horror, a little six year old imp had crawled behind me and pulled my shirt through the hole in my pants,lhad pinned it to the chair, and in jumping up I displayed to the admiring gaze of the astonished mul titude, a trifle more white muslin than was pleasant. `T h e women giggled. the men roared, and I.got mad, but was finally put to bed, and there all my troubles ended. Good night. There are women who cannot grow old— iomen who, without any special effort, re main always young and always attractive.— The number is smaller than it should be, but there is still a sufficient number to mark the wide difference between this class and the other. The secret of this perpetual youth lies not in beauty, for some women possess it who are not at all handsome; nor in dress, for they are frequently careless in that res pect, so far as the mere arbitrary dictates of fashion are concerned; nor in hexing, nothing to do, for these very young women 'are al ways busy as bees, and it is very well known that idleness will fret people into old age, and ugliness faster, than• overwork. The charm, we imagine, lies in a sunny temper— nettber more nor less—the blessed gift of al ways looking on the bright side of' life, and of stretching the 'mantle of charity over eve rybody's faults and failings. A SAD -HISTORY ' We yesterday met a young and interest. ing girl at the house of an soquaintanee, who told us du tale of wrong and suffering that would furnish material for a good sized nov.. One year sgo this young lady left her bon* in Pennsylvania—a home- where all the luxuries of life were at her command. 'Her parents were indulgent, and she, an only child, was loved by them with all the true p r arental'affection. No wish of hers remain ed ungratified, for she was the idol• of those parents, and . the light of the home made des nlate. by an' not which will forever cast its shadow on her heart. In Febrgary, 1864, she, became acquaint ed with a - Mormonpreacher, who painted to ber in glowing terms the glories of Utah and the Mormon religion. lie told her_of-th-r Afuk-valleys - oill'fali — fortified on all sides by giant mountains, whose peaks, 'burnished by eternal snows, looke'd down upon the•val leys of perpetual green, peopled by' God's own chosen kindred, who were free as the mountain torrents that leaps the rooks of lof ty Timpanogos range. He told__hcr_of_the eontent and peace reigning among the saints, and assured her that he Mormons were God's own peculiar people, and so worked upon her imagiriation that she finally consented to leave friends, family, and endearments of home, and ga with him to the Valley of the Saints. Arriving at Chicago, he forced her lo mar ry him, the ceremony being performed by a mock priest, without record or license. On last April she left Wyoming, Nebraska, with a Mermen train, for the lan.of promise, and finally_ arrived in the city of Saints. Here she found that her husband had -four other wives, who regarded her with no tender e motionsr-but—hettped—abuse--and—con 'newly upon her head. After a few months_her-liege-lord toldle - r= he__ - Ifird_coneruded - tos - et er o another, who had taken a great fancy to her; that his oth er wives were jealous, and declared that _his last wife should_notilive-with—v ger. She declared she would die before she would thus be put away and forced. to live as the wife of a man. with whom she hid no acquaintance, and bad seen but once in her life. Her husband told her it was Brigb ham's order, and she must do so or lose her life. Determined not to be thus sacrifteed she started to run away with the intention of makino. b her way to Camp Breckinridge, in Cedar Valley, then garrisoned'by United States troops, and claim protection there.— She started on foot and after traveling about ten miles, was caught and brought back, placed in a dungeon, or rather a cellar, and was thus kept for a month, with just enough food to sustain life, The man whom sh re fused to live with frequently visited her, and besought her to change her resolution in or der to save her life. Through force of circumstances she at last yielded, and was duly installed in his family, as the sixth wife. Here she found, as before, the jealousness and quarrels arising were intolerable, and she tigain_deterolix , o escape or die in ,the Attempt. This time she succeeded in reaching the headquarters of General Conner, to whom she told her tale of suffering. The General sent her through to the States with a Government train bound for Fort icearney, which place she reached in due time. She leaves this city to-nikht, a repentant, sorrowful child for her home in Pennsylva nia—that home which she was persuaded to desert "through the misrepresentation and wiles of a crafty scoundrel. What joy and gladness will well up from thu beads of those parents, when they again behold the one they believed lost to them forever. - We drop the veil. Reader, this is not an isolated case, but an every-day occurrence in this busy sin ful world.---[St. Joseph Herald. Brownlow on Isham G• Harris. The Legislature of Tennessee having au thorized the Governor to offer a reward of $5,000 for the capture of Ex-Gov. Isham G. Harris, 13rownlow has issued a character istiz proclamation to that effect. His de scription of Harris is especially pointed: "This culprit Harris is about 5 feet 10 in elms high, weighs about 145 lbs. and is a bout 55 years of age. His complexion is sallow—his eyes dark and penetrating—a per feet index to the heart of a thitor—with the -scowl-a-rid-frown-of - A deuro - n — res mg upon tis brow. The study of mischief and the prac tice of crime have brought upon h:m prema ture baldness and a gray head. With brazen-faced impudence he talks loudly and boastingly about the overthrow of the Yankee army, and entertains no doubt but What the South' will achieve her inde pendence. He chews tobacco rapidly, and Is inordinately fond of liquor. In Iris 'nor.' al structure he is an unscrupulous man— steeped to the nose and chin in personal and political profligacy—now about lost to all sense of honor and shame—with a heart reck less of social duty, and fatally bent on mis chief. ' If captured, he will be found lurking in the Rebel . strongholds of Mississippi, barna or Georgia, and in female society, alleg- ing, with the sheep-faced modesty of a vir tuous man,, that it is not a wholesome state of public sentiment or taste that forbids an' indiscriminate mixing together of marries men and women,---If captured, the fugitive must be delivered to me alive, to the end that juitice may be done him here, upon the theatre of his former villainous deeds." It will be remembered that the news of Lee's intended elacuation of Richmond; and. \ the necessity Of his taking immediate.flight, was made know to Jeff Davis in church.— It is a remarkabl coincidence that the con gregation at the t me wore singing the hymn., .0117 where shall r st be tound.', Edward Bates On Mi. Lincoln The following tribute - to Mr. Lino°le from es-Attorney Gen, Bates, dppears'in the St. Louis papers; "ST Louis, April 29,1865. "To 0. D. Filley, Esq., and the othei Gentlemen, his Associateic "Sin--When I received the loiter with which you lately honored me, I felt a strong inclination to comply with your request 'to deliver an oration upon the character and public services of Abraham Lincoln, at such time and place as might snit my conveni ence.' But I could not be unmindful of the peculiar difficulties of the subject, especially to one who had been closely associated with President Lincoln for nearly the whole of his first term, and in the most trying times of our country's history. If you had desired to hear_Stat• n_nua_in-regar- acter of Mr. Lincoln, the task would haie been easy, and to de a labor of love; for I think I know and appreciate that chain - der,- in its beautiful simplicity of truth and kind ness, and in its' strength, and - goodness. I ' knew him for many pare, on terms of the most pleasant social courtesy. Our commu nity of opinion upon political questions drew us more closely together, and produced a mu tual feeling of respect and confidence, which has never been shaken: I could dwell with delight upon the' beatitifultraits of his char acter, both of heart and mind; for I can con fidently declare that I never associated with a more bland and 'amiable gentleman, and have never known a man of quicker percep tion or higher appreciation of truth and jus ' tice. I have-known many men more learn.; ed in books than Mr. Lin'coln•_but_not—one -whose-mind - could more read ily perceive ,the truth of a fact or a principle, or more clear ly state it 'in language, or more certainly 'rove it h logical anzument "But, my friends, you ask for a_n_oration,- 1 not-on-his-charactenly-i—but—ala-oinTliii puilic services! How can that great subject be, justly and discriminately, compressed in to the narrow s owe of an_oPafion-?-I.—dare- notuadaitaVe — a. task so arduous in itself, and so delicate in the bands of one of his own political family. His public services are in terwoven with the fabrio o f our history for the last four years, an epoch abounding with the most startling facts, a period in which the events of ages are crowded into Joon the. ica - iii — lon- "He was wise and good; and let it suffice, that, by his wisdom and virtue, he has sav ed the nation. He has quelled the most for midable insurrection that ever rose against a good Government and a free and happy peo ple. Oh! that it had pleased God to spare his life, for the good of a suffering nation, until he could accomplish his glorious pur pose, to rehabilitate the shattered Union, to restore to the people peace, order and law, and to give to the guilty and ruined States integral members of the nation) repose and safety, with the hope of returning pros perity and wealth. pray you, my friends, excuse me. A side from the reason above assigned, the state of my health forbids my compliance I)uring the last half of winteraulall-sprinos r my throat and lungs that I dare not attempt to speak in p üblic "With the greatest respect, I remain, gen-. tlemen, gratefully your friend, • EDWARD BATES." • Be Just—A Warning. We often wonder, while seated in our Bxlo room, poring over a pile of exchanges in the endeavor to cull something wherewith to tickle the fancy or benefit our readers, that the ghosts of grim, worn-out, emaciate seedy, dilapidated, ragged and torn, cadaver ous, consumptioa generative, and death on the pale horse looking editors don't appear at the bedside of those who have cheated tha printer ,out of his justly entitled dues, and with scissors in one hand--pen in the other, cranium surmounted by au immense paste pot, frighten the poor devils into the pay ment of arrears. But, no; such. men are hardened; their hearts are callous, and you might as well attempt to feed a wild cat with butter through the medium bf a hot awl, as to attempt to get their share of payment for the nights of toil, wasted energies, and a lease on an early grave, given hy,the poor devil of a printer for their amusement an& benefit. A noted criminal once said that his first step in erithe was cheating a printer, and we believe him. Take heed, ye della- iireataue — ktvw not:upon the brink ye stand. Ere it's too late, turn upon, your course, aad ye may yet be lappy, and become infiuen• tint members of sooiety. Be just—think what a life of wretchedness and remorse yan will shun. Think of your wives and little ones, who would blush with shame, if you persist in your.course, which can only lead to 'a life of wretchedness and disgrace, awl • when remorse will finally sieze upon you— what then?, Perhaps a- violent end, a iob for the Coroner!, And you will be pointed out by the good, the gifted and the virtuous to the using generation as a terrible exam ple. Pause! ere tosi late, we beseech you.— Our blank receipts are printed, and we'll shout jubilantly to attend to your case, awl be the means of saving you from destruction ; D.elays are dangerous. Terms of paper same as heretofore; advertisements inserted o.n reasonable terms. Job•work executed neat. ly for cash. Let us sing: • How happy are they 'Who the printer do pay, And settle for a year or more Tongue cannot express The joy of the press, etc , etc. —2ll . arin (Cut) Journal. Decora, a famous, Winnebago chief, died recently at Lincoln, Wis. aged_one-bundred and thirty three years. Be .oded the Uni. ted States in the Black Ilawk war i and , was rewarded by Gen. Jackson with a small Uni.n. ted States 11ag. Bo kept it as long as he lived and now it waves over Ili,. grave. . The qipture of Jiff The announeetnent• of the surprise and capture of Jeff. Davis at Irwinsville, its Ir win county,Georgia is received by the peo ple with iiiifeigfied satisfaction. The pub lie had looked foiward to •this event with a considefable degree of 'confidence, the disp'o cal of his pursuers• being such that escape was next to impossible. It would , seem that be had parted' company with Breekinridge, Benjamin, and the bodyguard of two thou sand men •in order to make a detour that would divert suspicion from his , movements... What a contrast between the hunted run away. of to-day and the •pioud, cold, imperi ous despot of the past! A little while' ago, the head and front of a daring,' defiant, and r.,owerful army of 'treason, and next a wan derin? fu . • ~.ith—a— p rieUTret upon his cad. Only lately he sternly refused all of fers of peace upon the only basis which the. President•of the United Staies was author ized to extend, only lately lie 'breathed out threats and Menace, and hurled Scorn and provocation against his countrymen who ad hered to loyalty and duty. Now he is a prisoner in our hands after vainly trying to flee from the wrath to come. Deserted in his need by those whom he betrayed, he .finds truly that the way of the transgressor ' is hard. His Dame is execrated by none in the North more heartily than by his own people, Their detestation of his treachery and his baseness, and their disgust and con tempt occasioned by -his perfidious bank rob beries and his cowardly mode of sneaking away, are increasing every day. This hatred will grow the greater tha_more his-inrimaucl becomes and understood. Yet even in the guise of an arrested fugi tive, of a runaway repudiated by his own!fol lowers, of a suppliant craving the mercy of his Won-there-1n igh t-be-atuelt-iniltecase-o fJ -Davis-tcrwinour_commiseratiout Jef. - Terson Davis in his wife's clothes is not a - auffteiebtly - elevate - d - Ch - aracter-to attract our regard and admiratio_n—A-man-detected - iis - female - garb cannotbe accepted as a genuine type of. the hero, or a fair exponent of the manliness we invariably associate with our model of heroism. 'Dress makes .tho man, the want of it the fellow,' but not female dress. Pathos thus exemplified is only a sub ject for the comic papers. The step from the sublime to the ridiculous comes properly within the domains of Chativari. Jeff. might have laced a world in frowns with compos ure but a world convulsed with laughter is enaugh to extinguish any one of half his sen sibility. Small things frequently lead to great events. Rome was saved - by the cack ling of geese and Jeff Davis was betrayed by his boots. The petticoats were not long, e nough to cover his pedal investments, and the incongruity between female crinoline and masculine boots was made apparent. Poor Jefl.! How will he survive . his ignominy ? American. Geneial Lee There is to-day among the loyal peoplo of the North a great deal of romantic and sick ly feeling ja favor /e must s e called the Virginia Gentle man, the Christian Soldier, and the hero who did not want to rebel. We have not a , parti cle of sympathy with this sentimentality, nor a drop of patience with those who inffnlge it. Gen. Lee tras.an educated army officer, in the service of the United States, at the time of the outbreak of the rebellion. He saw no good and sufficient reason for the re bellion, and against his better judgment, de aerted the army and the country and joined the enemy because the State from which he hailed had rebelled. If the private soldier who deserts the ranks deserves to be shot, Gen Lee deserves to hang higher than Ha man. If Jeff Davis deserves to be hung for rebellion when he thought there was good reason for it, why should not Lee be hung for rebellion. when he acknowledged there was no good reason for it? : In our opinion, Jeff Davis is wore to be excused than Lee. Besides, the Christian qualities which have been attributed to Gs bee, do not exist,— In his communication with Grant in reference to the surrender of the rebel army, be tried a trick of words which'any where else would be called lying. He was severe and almost 'heartless in tha treatment of his own soldiers, at one time throwing three hundred veterans into Castle Thunder in irons because they asked a second time for a twenty days' fur lough. He knew that our prisoners in his -Itands-were - rotting and stTrving at .13e1 e s e, Andersonville, Saulsbury, a n d elsewhere, and it was in his power to relieve them, yet be allowed this to go on increasing to the , end, and never uttered a word against its is ' humanity and infamy. John Minor Botta saw no teason_for the rebellion, and yet did not wish to take part against his native State. 'Did be therefore tale part against his country? No. He withdrew entirely, and remained, if not ac tively yet passively, loyal. Gen Lee also saw no reason for rebellion and yet did not wish to take part against .his native State— He therefore became . a deserter and a trail, tor, and led a hundred thousand won a-. gainst the life of the nation.—Lancaster Gazette, When Dr. Johnson. asked the widow Por ter to be his wife, he told her candidly that be was of mean extraction, that he bad na money, and that he'd had an uncle banged. The widow replied that she cared nothing for his parentage, that . she had no money herself, and though she hed not bad a rela tive hanged, she had fifty who deserved. hanging. ISo they made a match of it. A man who _avoids_rnatrimong on account - orihTs — citres ot. we.ided: life is compared to. one who would ainputato a leg to save his toes from corns. • You will never repeat for 'being patien;p end saber. 55.00 reti Kindnelis of 'Mr 'Lincoln. Thelollosiing incident, clipped from' au exchange, illustrates-the' kindness of heart and the tenderness of our late President.-- In November lair, a small, delicate boy 'pa tiently vitiited with the anxious erovid which had gathered in the room of the •President. He was noticed by Mr. Lincoln, who said, "Come here; my boy. and tell the What you Want." • The boy, 'trembling and abashed, stepped forward'and placed his hand upon the arm of the chair iu which the' PreSident "was seated, and said: Mr. 'President. I have been a drummer in a regiment for two years and my Colonel got angry with me and turned me off; I was ta ken sick, and have been a long time in the hospital This is the first day I have been out. I came to seelfyou cannot du some thing for me: Our exchange continues: The President looked kindly and tenderly at him, and asked had he lived. Be - replied that be had no 'Mime. "Where is your father ?" said the President. "Ile died in the army," answered the -_boy. "Where is your mother ?'' "My mother is dead al so, I have no . father, no mother, •no broth ers, no sisters'," and, bursting into tears. dm boy said, "and nofriends. Nobody cares for me." The scene was very affecting. Mr. Lincoln's eyes filled with tears, and he said to him: "Can't you sell newspapers ?" "No," said the boy, "I am too weak, matt the sur geon of the hospital told um I must leave; and I have no money, and no friends, and no place togo "The scene was indesoribahly tender and af fezting, and the President immediately drew from his drawer a card, on which he 'wrote his wishes, that the officers shotild care (in his - own affectionateiang_uagel "for-am:: When the card was handed to the drum mer boy, a smile lit up his face, all wet with tears and_h_e_returned-fully - convinCe - dfhat he had at least one good and true friend in Abraham Lincoln. About Sleep There are two kinds of sleep,—the com plete and incomplete. Complete sleep is a temporary metaphysical death, though not an organic one. The heart and lungs per farm their dikes with their accustomed reg ularity. It is characterised by a torpor of the organs of the brain, of the external sen ses, and of voluntary motions. Incomplete .sleep is the activity of one or more of the cerebrain organs, while the oth ers are in repose; this occasions dreaming. Sleep is variously affected by health and disease. Man in time of health sleeps tran quilly. He 'arises in the morning, refresh ed and prepared to go forth to his daily la bor. New strength is given him, languor is • gone; and all the faculties, both mental and corporeal_ are recruited. Bat the sleep of disease is far different. It is short and un freshing ; disturbed by fearful sights and frightful dreams. Stupor and sleep are different, though sup. posed-by-some-tir-bm I,youoymons. In both there is insensibility; but it is easy to waken person from sleep, while it is sometimes Al most impossible to arouse one from stupor. It is ftequently the case in sickness that the person lies for several days in stupor, totally insensible. Though sleep be natural, and necessary to the languid, mental and corporeal faculties, yet is frequently brought on by some exter nal cause. Heat prodfices sleep. We wit, ness it in the summer season: it is common to see the laborer devoting an hour in the heat of the day to sleep. .A heated church and dull sermon are almost sure to . bring sleep. The heat of the church might be re sisted, but the sermon is irresistable. Its monotany falls in leaden accents on the ear, and soon subdues the most powerful atten tion. Variety, whether in sight or sound, prevents sleep; while excessive monotony of all kinds is apt to induce it. Excessive cold, as well as heat, produces sleep. A person without sufficient clothing on his bed will find it difficult to sleep at night; but it is a fact that sleep is, produced beore death when freezing takes place. The Rebel Women in Richmond. A correspondent of the Washington Chron icle says: "Of the women in Richmond I might write volumes. They have much to answer for. They have b_een. severPty_mia, lei by the press and pulpit. They have crediied the falsehoodsof the one and been seduced by the religious glosses of the other. The Confederate cause got to be identified with 'Their domestic peace and their religions connections,,and it is a rending of the heart. strings to see it full. They have lost no op portunity to stimulate the pride and flagging hopes of the sterner sex, "I hate the Yan kees," said a young girl amid her compar:. ions. "If I ever have any children,. even though Lee is beaten, I will bring them up in eternal hatred of those who have subdued us." "Our hostility," said another "is in vincible;.l shall never do anything but hate those who have deprived us otour rights; I should never have• been willing to yield if it bad not been yield or starve, and life is sweet.", Bat the most violent bear testimo ny to the good conduct of our troops, and the universal acknowledgement was that they codld hardly believe their ovmeyes, the Yan kees had behaved so much better than they expected." The youth. with a turn for figures, had five eggs, to boil, and being told to give theta throe;minutes each., boiled Omni a quarter'of° as hour altogether, 'Jeff Davis is May,lB6l—`A II ie want is to bo let alone.' Jeff Davis in May, 1865 'All I want is ; to be let alone.' . ',/....".. ~ . --..IIMP••••.•.--....-•0••••••. --fle who.suns after la shadow Hass weari, some rime: - ' ';',... . ...... i l y l 150