BY FRED'K L. BAKER. Tint alrobolit A highly Concentrated Vegetable Extract. A I'LJRE TONIC. blt. ItOOPLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS PREPARED BY DR, C, M, JACKSON, PHIL'A, PA, WI,LL effectually cure Liver Complaint, tlyispepaiii,'Jaundice, chronic or nervous DebilitAdisedieS of the Kidneyi; and bad dis- Sasettallallig from.a disordered Liver or Stom ach. Sultan Constipation, inward Piles, fol. fleas or blood to the head, acidity of the Stom ach, Nauiett, - Hearthurn, dfigust for food, lei- Molitor -weight in the stomach, sour Eructations, riti t king or fluttering at the pit of Lie Stomach, s Miming of the Bead, hurried and difficult th4lithing, fluttering at the freatt, choking or suffocating sensations' when in a lying posture, dimness of ~V ision,. dots or webs before the Sight, fever and dull pain in the Head, defi ciency of Perspiration, yellowness of the Skin anti Eyea Akan the Siue Beek, Cheat, Limbs, Ste.l. , budden .11ushos of Heat, burning in' the Fleidti constant imaginings of Evil,. and grief, depretasion, of Spirits. And will . positively prevent . YelloW Fever; Billious Fever 4c.— TheylcOntain no Alchohol or bad Whisky.— They, wild. CURE the above diseases in ninety-' nine cases out of a hundred. The proprietors have thousands of letters 'train' the Most eminent Clergymen. Lawyms, Physicians, and Citizens, testifying of their own pers.mal knowledge, to beneficial el feels and Medical virtues of these Bitters. Do you want something to strengthen you Do you,want , a good apperte ? i o you want to build up your constitution Do you want to feel well t, Do you want to get rid of Ner vousness? Do you want energy Do you want to sleep well 1 Do you want a brisk and vigorous feeling :1 if you do, use Huo FLA N German lfittei a. PARTICULAR NOTWE.--There are many preparations Sold under the name ol' Bitters, put up in quart buttes, compOuuded . W the cheapest whisky or common ruin, costing from .20 to 40 cents per gallon, the taste disguised by Anise or Coriander Seed. This class of bitters bus caused and will con tinue. to cause, as long as they can be sold, hundreds to the the death of ,the drunkard.— by their use the sysieni is kept eoutinually tinder the influence of an:11°1101M stimulants of the worst kind, the oesue fur liquor is cheated .pod Sept. up, and the Issalt is all the horrors Attendant upon a driaikurit's hie and death. For those who desire unit will have a Liquor nittOrti, we PUblish the foiloviing receipt Get sue bottle et Hoollunii's haters and mix with three quarts uf good Mandy or whisky, and the result will he a 'preparation that will far, excel in medicinal virtues and true excellence any of Site numerous Liquor Bitters in 'the market, and will cost much less. You will have ell the virtues of lioulland's Bitters in etinnection With a good article of liquor, at a mime less price than these inferior proputu- Colas will cost you. rlxer.siTiori sou:antis ! We cull the atten tion Of alt having mations or filends in the Arnty, to 'the tail Out ,'.Moorland's German hitters" Will cum nine-tenths of life diseases induced by exposuies uud tifiVlLliDl.9 incident dattip 'ln the lists, published almost ditty id tlienewspapere, uu the'arrival of the sicit, it %la be noticed thuta very large pro portion, sugerieg, arum tienatty.l Every case of lhal Lind can ou readily cured, by, nualland's (niters. Diseases result ng„ from disurddis of the digestiVe 'organs are speedily removed:. We have no .hesnation 'in stating that, if these linters were freely used. Mining our soldmis, liumireds, of lives might lee saved - that otherwise 'will be lost. We call the particular at LCD lion to the fol lowing remarkable and well, authenticate, cure of one of the nation's heroes, wiiose Tile to use hislatigliage; 'has been saved by the Bitters :" pit.pr4.ett.ta,: A ugust .23d, , I SO:, Messrs. Jpizes .evrtfas.--itiell, gentleman, Your fladfland's'tleriatin Itittera have saved my life. There is no mistake in this. is4otich!- ' ed for by numbers °fitly comrades, 'home of Whose names are appended, and.who are fully, cognizant it all the cir cumstances uf my, case. am, and have been for the Mit four years, a member of ,Shermaes celebrated battery, and under the immediate command of Cap, fain 8.. B. Ayres. Through the exposure la tecdant upon my arduous duties, I wasattack in NhVelnber last tvo) Inliamation of /fie I ega, and was fur seventy- two days, in the; hoshital: This was followed by great heightened by an attack of dysentery,. 1 was. then rettioved final the White !louse, and: sent tri,thia city on board the st eame r "s late of Maiti'c," Irian which I. landed on the 25M, .ofjund.' Slate, tbat time I have been About ; ass low as any, one could and still retaah a spark of vitality. ,For a week or more. I Ives bearcel r able to sivailow anything, and if_ did force • a inersk/ down, .it was immediately thrown up again. I could not even keep a glass of water op . 'Life tumid notlost under these .eircurnstaneeav and, , accordirigly, the physi , - .c hum who hadboen working thithfully,lhough, unshecesafully. to rescue 'me from the grasp. of the dread Archer,. frankly told me they, could do no more. for me, and advised me to ace a clergyman,' and to make such disposi-:r lion of my litnitel funds as -best suited An acquaintance who .visited me at the hospi tal, Mr. :Frederick Steinbron, of Sixth below. Arch street, advised nle,its a forlorn hope; to try your. Hitters, and kindly procured a bottle. From the .time 1 commenced taking tnem the gloomy shado sl of death reeeded,.arid how, thank God for at, - getting better. Tho' have taken but two bottles, I have gained ten pounds, and 1 feel 'sangttine'of being per= mitted.te rejoin my wife and daughter, fronf whom I have heard nothing for 'eighteen months: fer, gentlemen,l am a toyer Virgin= ran,-from the vicinity“of Proht Royal. To your invaluable 13itteral °We' the certainty. of life which has taken the placo of vague fears —to your Bitters will I owe the glourious pri vilege of again clasping to My bosom those who ttre,.dearest to me in life. Vert liely:Youret ISAAC MA LorrE: We fully concur in the truth of the above statement, as we had despaired of seeing, our comrade, Mr.'Mblone, restored to health. Jahn Caddleback, Ist New York flattery. George A. p.cklikr, co,. C., flth Maine. Lewis Cheiralier; New York. I. E. Sitencer, Is Artillery, Battery F. J. B..Fasewell,.oo. B, 3ti Vermont. Henry B. Serome, Co. B. do. Henry T. Mundrinald, Co. C. 6th Maine. Johrr F. Ward, .00. E. Pith Maine. Nathaniel B. lhomaa, Co. F., 95th Penn John Jenkins, Co. B. 106th Penn. Beware otcounterfeits ! See that the sig.- mature of "C. M. Jackson," is on the wrapper of each bottle. Price per bottle 75 cents, or half dozen' fur S 4 00. Should your nearest druggist not have the article, do not be put oil by ,an of the intoxi cating preparations that maY be ,offered in its place, but send to us, and 'We will forward, securely packed, by exoress. Ptincipcti Office and Manufactory, No. 631 Anon STREET. ~TONES ,&" EVANS, (Successors toT: M. Jackson & Co ,) 41Proprtctors. ' ,nd Dealers in For sale by Druggists eye town in the United J .to #'111;111 lan liubevabent 'tlenns,lllllauia *rural : gebottb. to . Volitits, `literature, c,griculture, gaps of 112 e pall', gad aintelligente, &c. • :. gilaixtittan Is PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, AT onenotrar a—iivezr ; Varafft in abbanzt • OFFICE: C CRULS Row. `Front Street, five ' C doors below Flury's Hotel. TERMS, One Dollar a year, payable in ad vance, and ifsubseriptiors he not paid within six months $1.25 will be chalted; but if de layed until the expiration of the year, $1.50 will be charged. . , ADVERTISING RATES: One square (12 lines, or less) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents fcr each subSeqUent insertion. Pro fessional and Business raids, of six lines or less at $3 per aunum. Notices 111 the reading. col u inn s, fire cents a-line. It larriagesand Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE hut for any additional lines, tive,cents a . 1 A liberal deduction made to yearly and half yearly advertisers. . Ilxving recentled added a large lbt of new Job and Lard type, Cots; llorders,,&c., to the Job Office Tile 4aristtian,? 7 ;which will insure the fine execution of all kinds of Jos & CA RD P. RINTING, from the smallest Card to the largest Poster, at prices to_,suit the War times. BRAVE BOYS ARE TIM Heavily falls the rain, Wild are the breezes to-night; But 'ueath the roof, the hoursas ' theyfly, Are happy and calm, and bright. Gathering round our fireside, Tho' it be summer time, We sit and talk or brother's abrciad, Forgetting tie midnight chime. Brave boys are they Crone at their country's call ; Ahd yet, and yet, we cannot forget, That many brave boys must fall. Under the homestead roof, Nestled so oozy and warm, While soldierssleup, with little or naught. To shelter them from the storm. Resting on grassy couches, Fillow'd on hillocks damp; 01 martial fare, how little we know, • Till brothers are in the camp: Brave boys, &c. Thinking no less of them, Loving our country the more, We sent them forth to light for the flag Their fathers before them bore. Though the great tear drops started, This was onr parting trust: "God bless you. boYs ! we'll weleothe you home, When rebels are in the dust." Brave boys, &o. May the brieht wings. of love, • Guard them where ever they roam ; • The time has cdme'when lolrothera must fight, • And sisters must pray at home. Oh ! the dread 'field of battle Soon to be strewn with grave's I 11 brothers fall, then bury them where Our,banner in triumph•waves.- Brave boys, &c. . TUE UNION. ... • .. - • The Union ! Tbe Union! • The hope - of the free! ' rlnwe'er we may differ, In this we agree: Our glorious banner NO traiter,shall mar, By effacing a utripe, • • Or destroying a star. Division ? No never! The Union forever ! And cursed be the 'hund That our country wonld,.sever Tha Union ! 'The Union ! 'Twas purchased wish blood ! • Side bY side, to secure it, Our forefathers stood : Frtint the North to the Soak, Thro' the length of the land, Ran the war dry which 'suro'rnon'd That patriot band.' Division, &c: The Union! The Union! Its heavenly light, Cheers the henrts of the nations Who grope in the night ; And athwart the wild ocean Falls, gilding the tides, A path to the country Wh ere 'fre:edom' abides, , •Division, &c. The Union ! The Union ! ' TEC God we rpOse i . • We confide in the. , poFer , :. . : - That vanquished our. foes. . The God of our fathers,- (...... 0, still may Fie be The strength of the Unicin, _ The hope of the feee. 'Division, &e. -......- ' 40' A young man advertises in • a New Jersey paper, for a situation as son in-law in a respectable family. Would have no objection, he says, to going a short distance into the country. cr The London Court Journal 're awe that a young English lady ofsev„- enty summers and a good deal of money has just given her virgin hand to her butler, a lad of thirty-eight. Gr. It is announced that sleeping pews have been invented for churches after the manner of sleeping.cars for ) railroads. In some churches they might not be much oat of place. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1863. CHORUS' , For The Mariettian. . BEFORE AND AFTER; or, Fivo Phases of Married Life. By Grantellus CHAP'TE'R VIII [AN UNPONGENIAL PLIASE-4fter.l "And canst thou not accord thy heart In unison with WhoSe langnagelthouatone hast heard, Thou only carist , Bad 'Mr. and Mrs. Thomew, imme diately after the solemnization of their nuptials, with more of that wisdom which is from abOVe, and less of that impulsiveness which is from below-- with more mutual concession, and, less ObStinate- identity of individualidm— endeavored to harmonize and unite into one purpose their Partially discordant natures, it would have been better for their own present, and perhaps future happiness, as well as fur the welfare of their posterity. But most unfortunate ly, this was not the case; and in every subsequent year of their lives, from habits of thought, taste and' pursuit, they became more unlike each other, and consequently more uncongenial as ; and although neither of them would for a moment have thought 'of doing external violence to' their mar riage obligations, yet it seemed obvious that they did not truly lov - e each other —that is, not spiritually or mentally— or were greatly mistaken in the nature of such a sentiment, and the duties it enjoins. Two or three little things con nected with the mental status of Thoniew became manifest to her bus baud, which were not calculated to en. hence her, in his esteem, although they I may not have been regarded. in that eyes. of the world as detrimental to her char acter as a wife 'and a woman: .Mr. Thornew discovered - that his wife had:no taste for literature, it she .had not a, positive aversion for books,of any kind and for the sentiments which they ,con taiued. He also discovered that,she, could scarcely write, her own name, and that in her, ,eorrespondence with him during his absence,- she CI a d employed .an arnenuensis.' This individual, wiihOut the knowledge or consent of Mr. Thom ew, course' had read all of his 'confi dential epistles'to Dliss Doliman, a con; tiugency.iii Allele intercourse' of which - , he was altogether unconscious; Tor he had.supposed she had been actively en-' gaged in the cultivation'' of her mind; notwithstanding the peculiar quality of her' supposed `literary productions,. and the singular effect they had upob him, whilst in correspondence 'with her. Now Thocnew, from his boyhood up, had he'en•rather diffident, and aboVe all things in the world, he would not have had his love-lettera — exposed to any other perusal than that of the one, he loved ; and therefore when he made this discovery, he Melt. that the, sanctity, of. his social domain had been madely in vaded. Although this .circumstance produced an irritating, effect on ,his. mind, yet he, endeavored as speedily, as . possible to regard it as a disagreeable„ bygone. Still, Mrs. Thomew was not so much to blame, for she really did not. know any ,betandnot, ter, could perhaps, , do any better ; for, like. many, others in the world she had reached womanhood without having become sensible of her intellectual' deficiencies,' ab'd. when she at last did see•them, she' Was too proud or.too timid to acknowledge her igno rance, by making an effort to improve' her mental cond.tion. But there is no knowing what improvement she 'might have been capable: of; or' even have taken a' delight in, had Mi. Thotneat hiniself.gentltykiodly, and lovingly, vol unteeredlo become her instructor ; but no,,iacting 4 altogether Under a disap pointed youthful impetubsity, hiS con duct was only cidculated to impress,up on lier'mitia "the idea 'that she was even pore deficient than she really, 4111; 'h'er inSudiai'ous course, by way of retaliation, she made many serious lThinders.' Mrs.' ThhitieW had 'Made 'the c r idus canfessina, after her marriage, that had not Mr. Thomew returned just when be did, she wOuld have considered her engagement with him broken, and would have acted accordingly_; and what was duito,asi inexcusable, she foolishly persisted denying her age, or at leait in;co.ncealia:g it. •Although these things, mauifested,nq criminality on the,part of Mrs. Thomew, but were rather to be'' regarded as the evidences of the false training which sbe had received from her bosom friends, if not from her pa. rents; and also of a want of energy to pursue a pioper course, and avail her self of the educational opportunities of her girlhood ; yet, to a mind constitu. ted as, Mr. Thomew's was,- which, :at a late-period had , become sensible of the existence of a higher world than the mere world of sensuous feeling—a mind just then .in' the effOrt to elevate itself above the boilings of the moral and dn. tellectual chaos in which it feund itself; and without those- fixed and judicious principles of actiom.which, under other circumstances, might have eharaterized the,inan of maturer years ;. to hint:them at this, critical period; these things :un duly magnified themselves, and• unhaP pily produced a'line of conduct that was only calculated to .widen: a breach be tween ;them ; the existence of which, was not visible, to, the .material- world by'which. they .were surrounded. Mrs; Thomew was incorrigable, and immova: bly , fixed, in her ways—perhaps because she could not • be otherwise—and Mr. Thomew had neither the penetration nor'the patience- to even make an effort to discover the necessary means, to cor rect what.ought to haverbeen corrected, and to concede, or conform to, what his wife might herself feel disposed to cor rect, after. she had .once come into the proper state of knowledge and convic tion. Mr. Thomew,: .partly. to gratify that hunger for knowledge which had not been sufficiently fed in his youth, and partly to fill up a'romantie vacuum in his heart, which, from .the illiteracy of his wife, she could. not, or would not make the least intelligent effort to fill —now devoted himself entirely to books, and kindred pursuits, whenever he could command*the time not necessarily em ployed in earning the means to provide for his family ; and, perhaps in a. reck less--state of literary intoxication he may have deiroted`many hoiars in profit less pursuits, that would have been of more Practical utility, if they had been devoted to his lamilY, in furdishing them with that early training Which ought to come from a mother, but which is never thelesa obligatory also upen a father; this is the interne/ of the status of Mr. and Mrs. Thoinew;' externally—with the ex ception of an occasional misunderstand ing, and, consequent 'ill-advised expres sion of sentiments,—there, was nothing, for the world, or the civil law, to take cognizance of. They were both iedus trious, chaste, and frugal; both, bad en deared themselves to others fortheexcel lence' of their characters, and their order ly bearing ; but still there was.not a sin gle thing under the sue ,in, which they seemed to have a mutual, iiteresi and sympathy, and as Mr. Thomew on every subsequent opportunity increased his stock of books and devoted his time to them, 'Ws/ Thames , seemed to cencerve the'greater borrar and aversian'to'them, perhaps in some ineaSure justly too—for they deprived , her of many hours of social intercourse with her hus band, that must have: made him as un congenial to her as she could possibly" be to him.-' They may have- been aptly compared to a pigeon and a thick united in a marriage union, both good and use ful animals in their, way, but delighting in elemeuts,diverse and uncongenial to each , other. Mr, Thomew's greatest delight-in life,woald have been to have a'Wife to whom he,. could have poured out hissoul in a mutual correspondence, when he was necessarily absent from her; ; and to have read and-sympathixed • with him - in his humble literary pro ductions; but alas ! he never had the least evidence that she had even read a dingle line that he bad' even written, or that she had bad the least apprecia tion of• its-Merits or its demerits, if she had read 'it. • KuOwing, intelligent, and disinterest ed christian Writers and philosophers, have damonstrated it as their Opinion, a hundred times over; that more .than two-thirds of the married world are living together in an uncongenial bond age ; and that through, this cause it is, that many men and women run into acts and lives of connubial infidelity, forpi cations and adulteries, and into the shameless and profane systems of polyg amy and open concubinage. The dan ger .of falling into such habits 'of life from this cause seems tol be enhanced by the. habitual indifference, in;_conduct and, bearing, between such married peo: ple ;. and du , their saying, doing, and acting-thing's, that before marriage they would not let each 'other know or see for a world of wealth - ; because such linowledge," they:feared would work'an alientitiOn, era ferfeiture of s'elf-respect, and the respect of each other. The little' personal attentions, the dignified intercourse, and the orderly manifesta tions, of affection, that were necessary to win a wife or a . ..husband' before mar riage, 'ought to be continued afterwards, and rather increasedAthan diminished, to the end of life. If these things were - necessary to,utrin the affections of each other, they are surely•of infin itely •a higher value in:retaining ,them ; for what, in married' life, can be more melancholly and more disastrous to the happiness of the married parties, than the consciousness that they have for feited the love and esteem of each oth er? So cold, barren and bleak, does such a, life of wedlock become, and so exceedingly grievous to be hourne, and withal .so aggravating sometimes, that itis .not to. be wondered. at, that men and women plunge into :deeper evils in the false hope of findingfrelief. But, it is to be bourne in mind, that no degree . , of uncongeniality, and no act of itittda: ity or wilful neglect on the pari of one of the married pair; can at 'all work a justification; 'et even a pretence, for a similar act bytthe other. Party, although it may constitute a great provocation for such a retaliatory course of condUct, In this behalf, the unalterable injlinc- Lion of ScriPture, that, 'The soul that sinneth', it shall die;" is in its most 'ur..- qualified sense applicable, and the fear fulconsequences to human destiny which 1 it conveys, had better be heeded before the' overt act 'is committed. Notwith standing the youthful:moral destitution of both Mr. and Mrs. ThomeW,—hut. especially the former—thdre-' iieetned , still:to be some of the grains of early insemination remaining in their minds, and these few grains became sufficiently, developed afterwards, to protect' them against the external assaults of sin and evil. Not that they may not have been, guilty of many acts of indiscretion, or of sins of omission; but as to acts or sins of commission from these, they bad, through the providences of God, contrived to keeP theinselves intact..L- In many respects they were .. a praise worthy, pair, and it waShe'dOulit. a mat ter much regrettedby both of them., 'in their.hours of sober reflection, that they could not become more, of a, one, ' as to• Mental and spiritual association and conjunction. But, there cannot be a perfect, assimilation in married life with out mutual concession, and mutual con cession is impossible-where , there is not , the unlikeness,; yet.the perfect: equality of the sexes acknowledged. In their earlier wedded life and experience, Mr. and Mrs. Thotnew utterly failed to ap preciate this philOsophy, and' therefore instead of becoining blended•in internal sympathies and aflinitiei, they became disintegrated,. and yet when They at tempted to analyze their feelings, and` to imagine a state of final seperation bet Ween them, tikeY becanie overwhelm:, ed with melancholli; and deplored the very idea of seperation. , The congenial and intimate friends of Mrs. Thomew, were not ,the congenial and intimate friends of, Mr. Thomew, and vice versa ; but the friends of both . were among the honest. and tlie decent, although they were not, all among, the rich and intelligent. Indeed neither of this worthy pair placed any particular value on , rich associates, for their cir cumstances were always 'too' much straightened , to make such associations at all agreeable. BUt Mr. Thomew had' a morbid horrorlor ignorance and illit eracy; and perhaps Mrs. Thoffiew had too strong - a.n 'affinity 'for them; and these peculiar, temperaments suggested different walks of life, and different ob jects of taste, of beauty, and of instruc tion to both of them. Although,they never conversed much together, .yet there was a sort .of mutual congest, if they, but saw each other pursuing their, diverse and irreconcilable occupations, and they were really , discOntentedAf one or the "other was•absent.for any time,.withoht some sort•of- as explana tory intercommunication ` . .BUt with all this,. they DO more-understood each oth er, and - had no more mental •delight 'iri in the same social' and intellectual ele merit, titer' a hen and a duck can have in the same natural or material element,; and as before remarked, something like a duck , and a hen, they pursued the bent of their own .persopal inclinations, and finallylearued'to endure that which it became evident they could never cure. The addition, periodically, of children to the domestic circle of the 'rhomew's, although it may have served as a cement ' to the compact between them,—and, al- though these, little responsibilities may ; have been the unconscious mediums of natural affection betiveen them; ''int they gid 'not much lessen the uncim 0- 1 nial qualities of their respective . ' minds, for, unfortunately, they differed. eritirisly in regard to what were their, dnties, -116 parents, towards their children. With all, his mental attainments,.Mr. Thoinew did not appear to have ,a prop-. er, living conception of his duty to `love, support and protect" his wife, ac VOL. 10.-NO. 13. cording to the spirit of his marriage ob ligations—perhaps, because he did not conceive that his Wile's opposite or perverse character was a thing which he could reasonably be expected to love, or'perhaps he was cherishing an ideal of feMale excellence, that never could be realized in ticis world. If this I was 'he case with Hr. Thomew, it e'er"- Utility was not leas the case:with lire. Thomew; for she did not appear to I have the least 'Conception of her obliga tion •to "lode; horrer"ridd 'Obey" her hus band in anything pertaining to 'his tastes„abilities, or - jUdgmerit, enless it first received the endOrsem'ent of some of "her friends,' who'ere generally as Illiterate •as herself. This characteristie of the mother, was u'nh transmit, ted to the children, together With tha imperioesbess end strong seltwill or the father ; and thus they beenini3 by inher= itance, so obstinate and Seff-Willed, that J. the acquired inculcations of a "divided' house," could aftervvards,onlyexercise a partial influence : over, them., These, things,viere not strikingly visible to the outer world,- by which Mr. land Mrs. Thomew were, surrounded„ if. they were seen, by that world ; at all ; but.never-, theless they had ,n,,real existence, al though both these people, otherwise, performed externally- their duties to their farnifY and'society; in'sich a Milt rieil as 'tn.elicit t lit approbation of their friends'and' neighbors. Thrbugh many' long years "this State of thingi continued in the tinnily of Mr.Thorlielo;sometimes greatlk to the an n °yeti 66 '`f the hither and husband, but' infinitely' more bur densome to the' Mother and ;wife, be cause not haying Cultivated her mind in early life, at a. later period, lier vvhthe . time became absorbed in a continuous round ofdomestic labor As is`ustiallY : the ease, under such circumstances, the labors of the family were bat illy divid; ad ; for somehow, Mrs. Thomei's de- . , . fective system, left the brunt of its practical operation upon her own head and hands. Nobody could do anything good enough for,her, and therefore, en-, ) tirely overrating her own skill and_abily, ties, and undevestinating, that of her; children, they never were taught , how thing should be done, and of ,course,' they in turn did not.care much when it. was done, if done at-all. And yet with all these disadvantages the Thomeive had many worthy traits of characteir,l and notvrithstaneing the'fixed 'hnc'onge [delay of mind, taste and temper, in the parents, they had lived so long together as man and wife, and had'been so faith ful and single in their connubial rela tions, that they finally by a sort of tacit understanding "agreed to disagree," and. lived on in the spheres of a seperate in dividuality, although they, never far a, moment dreamed of confining themselves to a seperate "bed and board." When the children at length, through " line upon line and precept upon precept," not only at home,—but more especially , through the teachers to whom they had . been consigned—had come to ender ; stand their true relations.to society, and the 'duties and responsibilities devolving , upon them, they begarne useful and or derly citizens ; but, it was not the less perceptible to themselves as well as to, the ruore'philosophically penetrating•of • their friends, that the strong hereditary biases transmitted to thew . by their pa. rents,—iu consequence of the, unconge: niality of heir temperameirts--inipo.sed upon them many disadvantages and temptation struggles, that they might, under racire favorable auspices, liaie been, in a measure,' free frorri: MY: and ' Mrs. TEtomew lived many years to ether as exainidary "man and wife," final* noPing,' klaht if it was best that they shbuld i 'be one in thb endogen woullibring it to pass ;" but believing. after all, that "the fellowship of Congo nial Christian minds" alone, • "is like NI that above," and with this view, the were at last "gathered to their. fathera.l- ar "My wife," said a wag, ,the other last night," "came near calling me honey last night." " Indeed,, how • was ;that ?", "Why, she called me old beeswax." 'The female soldiers, 'discovered in the disguise of regular iunforms, are said to be, good lighters.," The women who.,wear the, breeches, always, were. lir' The Charlestonians have long been add to fiEo z eating, and Gen, 4 44 4 1°11 1 94 ,conoluded to give them; a • • ' Vir 1 e are not fighting the Sonthern States or any States. . We are fighting the rebels. - all.' er Nothing, in oar opinion, reaches, The "inner man," like mellow peache_.