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VOL! f M1K 7.~"~ '^?TATnTT'^i,A XI > . M'.W JKILSEY, TltlTUSiUV. Jb'.NB 13, IStil. NUMliEI! 3.
«-a wkj — ■» * j For the ■•<*«** Wave." | ' HOKE. Home — thou art » po-f. vl.loo Horn of K>n*w. hope and 4e*«» Not of earth but rtltoro elyst*1 • Where th- pore-ore Mre«-*,,olr Not this house where !■»»'»««». I Not there fore.. Ire*'"*1 «UnH— ( Who on earth 1. 1|*<» """ended With hi. dweUWf *** W» »®« ' I In toy bom f" awelttag, a. i wont* <° *da ,ru. , i U the pra#*® w** '"V dwelling, j , Whlllwr weary traveller* go, | ■ Lo! tb*'""' w>"> I'lnloh wroty, ! | fla^foe real al-rtwd no wore, j { II U*1 o rr water, wo.tr «nil dreary tu the ark wllh oprii door. 1 i j/r li find glees rest to all the living, Hint ami he«.t of every name, , < Worthy less the Maker*, gtelng, i , Am I alteirtd the wmrt ■*, j Home— where .hall my land hearj meet thee, I Warn and hy tbr rude world tost I , I Mn.t I vainly .till entreat thee, As une reprobate and lost I Nat where wrvtern plain, surround me— , ( Not where Orient meet, the shoreNot where frosts and eold winds bound me. I Can I hope to meet thee more. I Home— not mine the broad eajwiulao (If the country ami Us seal, Halis— none wait In city m-uision | To Invite my coming feet. Roaring ocean, gentle billows, Voire, of the deep blue sc*. Tell me If thy breast e'er pillows Weary w andrrer. like mel ; | Lot the storm -eUKld o'er thee swaying Tells me thm» art all unreal, ! ChWresy fevt in longer staying I Un thy margin to he blest. ( Volret whlsjier to my spirit— "garth Isr thee hath not a Home-, Nothing here shall thou Inherit, Pilgrim stranger hllhrt come. None un earth have sn abiding, , Yet hs streagthrneil on thy road. Since Jehovah's lave is hiding Thy True life with Christ lo Cod." Cape Island, May, I8SI. D— J »hmnaaksr-*.-ww. Prom the New York Tribune. lichhqsd. The indications from the Ktjti^f war ; portend an advance upon Richmond nt ( an early day. Virginia, l»y her treacli- ) eroui course, is plucking down retribu- J , lion upon her *enerahle head. This j j haughty commonwealth is proud of her ( capital city. It is to Iter what Paris is ( to Prance, and the Holy City of Be- j bares to the Hindoos. The invasion of | the "racred soil" of the Ancieut Do- ( » a minion by legions of the Union, who ^ hare even dared to thrust plebeian picks ( and spades into the bosom of "the | mother of Presidents," has thrilled her { with rage and grief. To add t0 this j desecration, by pitching the tents of , "the "barbarians" in her street*, and ■ converting liet capitol into barracks, ( and may lie stalling the hones of their { cavalry in its halls, a* Cromwell stabled ^ h:s Puritan troopers in the ChapterHouse of York Minster; quartering the ( Fire Zouaves, or the Garibaldi Guards, ( or oven Billy Wilson's merry men, in ^ the dainty mansions of Iter F. F. Y.s, ( would .k helm her in mortification ami ( shame, surpassing that which tho pal- ( raers of old felt because Jerusalem was ( occupied by the Turks and Saracens. f With her doom staring her in the face ( h is but sorry consolation lo tell her it ( * *• might have keen averted. Tho storm of war new sweeping her northern bor- f der from the Chesapeake to the Ohio, f and which will gather strength as it - moves southward till it pours its fury up- ( on her capital, would have passed her j by bad she not preferred hypocrisy to j truthfulness, chicane to candor, rebel, j Hon to loyalty, and a treacherous alii- _ mice with the poverty-stricken and- des- , potic States on the Golf, to an honorn- ( ble onion with the prosperous, Free-La- ( bor Commonwealths of the North , f Six weeks ego Baltimore and the eas- f tern counties in Maryisnd rose in rebel- j lion end threw themselves in ttfe pith of < Federal troops, rusbiug to the defense of . their capital. The loyal State*, long j slumbering under repeated insults, j awoke, and rising like a lion on his ( t haunches, gave one roar of indignation ( and one flash of their ryes, when Balli- j , more and its abettors cowered, put on - 1 the rtmlilenre of loyalty, and with low l , waiter i tig lot the tornado pass oh to the j t
I Potomac, where Virginia iii its mStlnt.s * • and folly arrested it, aod t* now vainly ; ! trying to beat it back. It will sweep, . her soil like a thunder-storm, j Next to Charleston, there is no city ! ! in the Itebel States whoso occupancy ; the Union forces would strike more j dreild to the hearts of the traitors, and j j so encourage the loyal-citizens of the j South, and so elate the masses of the | : States, as that of Richmond. For j years it has been a den or conspirators, j | plotting the destruction of the Hepub- ! lie. Affecting (o act with more calm [ ncss and candor, with more deliberation ; ! aud judgment, with more dignity and j j discretion, than its impulsive, fiery PalI'matto sister, it ha* really been more 1 guilty and frr more despicable than she ; ; lircnuse, while committing the same I offenses against the public weal, it ha* 1 assumed an air of virtue and innocence, I attempting to cloak in*idi..ns treason under the guise of patriotic devotion to the doctrine* of the fathers of the Republic. In a word, and not to put too i line a point upon it, Richmond has been ; striving to do the dirtiest and most dej grading work of the conspiracy; ' in n 1 dignified nnd courtly manner. She has I the Robert Macairc. of the plot, putting oil mock nirs and AsHabhy" gen- , teel costume, aud"affectTSg to" despise ' the Jacques Strops of the Gulf Stat:*, while in (act being the real leader of the conspirators. Mr. Jeff. Davis has summoned his f Congress of Confederate Rebel* to mcbt in Richmond on *oine day in July, j Ere that time, we trust it* Capitol will be the headquarters of the Commander- 1 in-Chief of the Federal forces. From Forney's "Pre." death 07 senator dodo las. Nothing could have shed a deeper gloom over the nation llian the sud in-, lelflgcncc of thedeuthof Hoi*. Stkphf.n j j A. Douclss, who expired nt Chicago I yesterday morning- Of all the great | men whom our country ha* produced, none had acquired a deeper hold upon Lite confidence and affections of a large body of the American people, nnd few have rendercdahem more important scr- [ vice, nnd won a more enduring nnd imperishable renown. Hi* wonderful ca-J reer is so well known, nnd the spherg'of his influence was bo widely extended, that his friends and foe* are alike 'familiar with his history ; uud even those ■ who did not fully agree with li t opin- j ions, are not only ready to admire the ability aud lioldnrss with which he defended idem, but to admit that ho deployed throughout his whole lire u spirit cf patriotism, and of unselfish devotion the welfare of his country, which has ; rarelly been equalled. Gifted by nature ! with remarkable powers of endurance j aud extraordinary intellectual endowments he possessed more of the ale- j mcnts <f real greatness than auy of bis j eotemporwies, and fn a long aeries of1 struggles of the most intense and cxci- ' ting character, hs gave in each new conflict new proof* of hi* fut-scelng sagacity, indomitable energy, and superior talents. Some men are born to greatness, some achieve it, othera lmve . it thrust upon them, — he belonged lo > the second of these classes ; and around : his brows their never clustered a single laurel leaf that was rot fairly earned. I Rapid as was bis advancement in pub- 1 lie life, he never acquired a position . that lit had not richly deserved, and* be never filled oue in which he did not dir- j charge bis fall duty and satisfy every ! reasonable expectation of bis conslitu- ' cuts. For » long period, although the j immediate representative in the United Senate of Illinois, be has been, fact, the recoguized exponent of an ' portion of his countrymen, who ; in losing him, feel that their most tras- 1 ted leader has departed,, ana that they | must look in vain (or any one to fill the | i vast gap which Ilia loss has mode in the | ' national council*. He ha* gone from »Hi«ug its at a time when hundred* of; thousands of tbosa wiio heretofore doubt- '
sf rd the wisdom or questioned tho pulu-y r of iit* eoorse had found in the present p position of the nation, and in the promptness with which, in the hour of |r ( lis extremest peril, he had ignored all f mere partizan considerations, and c : promptly stepped lorward to encourage I r anil support the Administration in the s ! energetic measures which were absoluteb ly necessary to rescue the Government r from destruction, ample cause to change , their preconceived opinions, and to unite - with his roost devoted adherents in lavishing praises upon him. All fell that, i j in the approaching session of theAmerI j ican Congress, to be convened nt a time - when difficulties ttflpreccdented in our 9 history environ us, bis suggestion* s. would be of infinite importance ; aud. - that, whether his advice was implicitly 9 followed or not, the ideas of so acute , and pentraiiug n mind could not fail lo i exert n most happy influence in direci ting the future action of the nation — - 1 The bold and Independent position he > has always hitherto assumed in discussi ing and dealing with great questions, as - they arose, strengthened this conviction * i among men of all parties. s This is no time to speak of old p»liti- , ml issues and divisions, but so fur ns - , they mny he presumed to have any exis- • (euce. it is. of course, evident tliat StN — , i iiKN A. Douglas was the representab tivo of the^udy relic of the old Dciuo- ! cratic party which, in the free States, s \ could possibly have regained political t power and vitality. The largo body of . men who in 1860 sustained him as n I , Presidential candidate, not withstanding • i the treacherous defection of the South- ; crn wing of their party, which presaged their treasonable assault upon the Union, almost idolized him, -and, had In: r j lived, his name would always have been • a tower of strength, nround which they could have rallied wl.h terrific force. — j How deeply they mourn his loss, nnd t thoroughly their hearts are b- wed down , with agony at a moment like this, no i tongue can tell and no pen describe. — L- 1 They feel that the logic of even ts has det inonstratcd so clearly the wisdom and - the patriotism of the theories of which - he was so indomitable an advocate thai/ ■>."he who runs may read " Thoroughly f ! impressed with the dangers that men- , need the Union from the continual agi- - tation of the slavery question, they beII lievod that the great dcctrine of popu- - : lar sovereignty, fairly carried out, was 11 : the only possible means of peaeeubly • averting it, 'and. hnd the late Adminis- - t rut ton bees true to its pledges, and t listened to his advice and remonstrance's , our coon try would to-day probably not be s tho scene of- a fearful war. But. although 8 j hound hy many t:cs of friendship, interest, | b and intimate sneral and political associa- : lion with the Booth, when the storm or • j treason fairly burst upon the land, he did " i not doubt or hesitate for a moim-ht as to 8 j his trap doty, but with a magnanimity f i which none arw more ready and eagnr'tn ■ ; applaud than hi* Republican antagonist* in the lata Presidential contest, he-was among , the first to nssare hi* sorcesafnl rival of hi* snpport in all measure* essential to tjm sal } vaiiou of the Union, and to urg... »ll alj most saperhnman eloquence, hlk political 5 friend* and associates to rally with entha- , ' : siattie zeal nroond tho standard of their ' ' ; country. Partly through this advice, and j s ; partly through the patriotic spirit which I . animated them, tens, aye hundred* of thou- 1 . | sands of lhe*a men will be found battling j , ' in the front ranks in the national cause.— ( I And thus Mb. Uovolah, contending | through life to nobly uphold the bannerol j the Union and the Constitution, ha*, dying, j ^ | bequeathed lo hi* COtfUtrjinen raansrl ! " ; which will inspire many a laitbfol heart. s and nerve many a strong arm in this terri- j 1 bte conflict which it impending. , ! While those who thoroughly endorsed , ! his coo*** may feel- peculiarly grieved by 3 ! his death, all foynl citiaens, without distirte ! thtn of parly, will mnoni his demist as th* I most serious calamity thkl could have bap- ^ j pencd, and a wail of lamentation will go 8 | up from one end of the Union to the mh«r. 8 i each n* ha« never heenjiearii, save when | 8 men like \Vj«iii>imis,JlBTUbos, Jjcssus. ; 'jCuaY. and U »;h»t»;k passed Ihrungh the - pi i rtnls of time into the realms of eternity.
. ..Jiy-t.,™:!.!,. . .'1 j.r.i... ...i.,! v. ,ij. or lie-*.. ii a< one of the noblest ot Amen- i A SDKKEH CAKTAION. There is Nome mi»up|ireiii'-»sion in the , pubp.c mind as to the Ability of North | ero troops to make a campaign m the i warm latitudes during' the hot .vjaVAn. | , 'It i* generally KU|rposed that our troopa i < will have to remain perfectly quiescent • i throughout the summer Solstice, and 1 lions upon the borders of the Southern i , rebellious States. This mnv be the pal- ; f , icy of the General Government, but it j , i ■ by no means n necessity arising from | , obstacle* inherent and insurmountable ' t "bii'iiuse oP iTiu'secttOH of country I row-, ' , which the troop* are drawn. Modern 1 ( liisUiryjbiimi.iuilv proves llmt soldiers i ' from i he North bare performed during i deed* in the hottest weather, and in one ; , instance these achievement* we're not of f u character to increase- American pride. 1 , , It was in August, 1814, that the llrit- ' t .ish burned Washington. The rebels I | Suujh would, no dviubt, be rejoiced, i i could tliey* boast of the same perlor- 1 ' t iiiitiiee before the Fourth of July. I Scott's cnuipaigne in Mexico common- , ' ccd in March, 1847, tho weather even ( rit that lime being very libl aViiT suItrynT j Vera Cruz. The battle nf Coiitrcras , aud Cherrubusco were fought in Ati- ; . I gu.it, and that of Chrptillcpec in Sep- j i |. tembcr. To revert again to our Brit- ' iili cousins. How nobly, through the f , heuts and mularia of an Fast India cli- j mate they subdued aud crushed the Se- ! 1 I poy rebellion. Tliese instances ore . j enough to warrant the belief that the , ruggedness of Northern skies does not j | inevitably unlit the men born under \ , ' them, for effective' service in summer i .climates. 1 .■■■i 1 i BY AUTHORITY. I LAWS OF'NEW' JERSEY. ! I An act a r i ziiigTr-biajiJ/r lire purpose* ! <m »a/ to rtpel invasion unJ suppress in- t '< ^^rsurreetion, anJ appropriating the same, j l ' and providing for she payment thereof. 1. Be it enacted by the donate and (Jen- j ' ' eral Assembly of ihe Stale-of New Jersey, i ' ■ That it shall be lawful for thu governor and ' - treasurer of this stale, whenever it shall, in | the opinion of the governor, be expedient l so to do. to borrow such rain* of money on 1 , Uie credit of this stale as shall appear lo ' the governor lo be necessary for the pur- j I ■ pose of paying or debt ni- ■ ready incurred, or which may hereafter be ' incurred, incident to the snpprereion of the - • rebellion now exieling against tho governj inant or th.- United States, or for the pur1 | pose of repelling any iuvasiuu of this *t*te: j. provided, that the mm* of money so to be j I borrowed shall not exceed the sum of two i ( millions of dollars. 'I. And be it enacted. That lo secure ^ the payment of the loan authorized hy this ( act, the governor. nnd treasurer ore hereby , authorized to is* m aud negotiate tho bond* j of this llCate for an amount not 'exceeding- ; in the whole Abe sain or iwn millions of : dollars ; which bonds shall bear interest I ; at the rate of six per rentnm pvr annum, payable at thn first day 9f Jsnr nary, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, I j and on the first days of January, and Jhly ( ! of each year thereafter, and shall he or thk _ denomination of ono hundred, three hnn- ^ | drvd, five' hnndred. and one thousand dol- ; lars, as the governor and treasurer shall t dotermine ; and of the amount of bond* isI mo- I not more that one hundred thousand i dollars of principal shall be made payable 1 I I in any ono year, and such payments shall f j be made on the first day nf January In such [ . J year, bat no part of the said principal shall j | be payable Irefore tho first of January, j ; j eighteen hundred and sixty-Gve, and no , j. j bonds shall be made payable at a later ' dAte'than th* first day of January, eighf ; teen hundred aud eighty five ; and tho prin- . j eipal und-inlereil of said bonds shall b« s i made payable at tho chic* of Trenton and . Jkrwr Ciry. nnd they shall Im executed tiy < , I s'l. idling the seal of the Stale, attested by . I the secretary of statu, signed by the pover-j f I nor. anil conniersigned by tire treasurer*! '. ami tbey ?ba 14 buvo attwebed thereto iu- ^
; out tj due, which warrants »h«ll be unmber- " i aod sig^W by the treasurer; and the ■ raid hoii.!' shall each be numbered, un-^ u ■ registry of this number, denomination, date j .of issuing, and time of payment shall bo made by thu trea-nrer, in a book for the pnrsftd the lUtervst warrant*, as pain, shall ' cancelled by tire tn-asarcr, and pasted, in order of dale, in a book kept for that . pur; se ; and tho bonds as paid, *hall lw v, caiic/'iled and cnrefuliy tiled away by tho / . d loan M ■bin'. ... «,f • that donvmiuation J •he be i sued, payable i ih" pun-baser or to hi* order, wiihont int warrant* allached, and ahall be duljy . regUitcreil in c book kept for that purpose a: d ba trairefer^blu only in person op by power of attorney, on the book* ibf thu | treasurer ; and nil bond* anthorir.ed fi>y this net siiall ire exempt from tuxuliun. I 3 And Ire it ennrled. That lire yioney treasury of Uw slat a. and the same is life- j n; pVopr.aied to the purposes ret forth f' in the first f:i>n hereof, and shall bo J t drawn therefrom on tho wurrants of tho/ goverirer. couuu-reigneJ by tho -Secrctarjf Of State. \ 4. And be it rrr.cted. That the drbd : herofar authorlzcil yhall be paid by a tax to V . be annually l.-' ied and coHctteiT in (ha \ u ni e manner the county, township and 1 i city taxes in this state aro now or hereafter I may bit levied and collected ; and tho quota of said tax to be raised in each county | shall, at the next annual session of the leginlalufe. ond aitnnally thereafter, be np- | portioned by the legislature among thn ! several counties ; and to that ond, tbo.-col- ' of each county shall, on' or befoio tho first day of November nest, and on cr , before the first day of Noven'.ber in each year thereafter, forward to tho treasurer cf the state lire ubstract of tho ralne of taxateal and personal property in 'each township or ward, provided for by tho thir- . tconth section of tho act entitled "A sup- ' ple.tient to the Act untitled 'an act concerning taxes,"* which supplement wan api prereil March the third, eighteen hundred i und fifty-four. 5. And bo it enacted, .That there shall | assessed^ levied and collected on thwin- | habitants of tins slato, and on their taxable real and persoua! property, a tax of one bundred thousand dollirs, which is . hereby appropriated aud -hall be applied ' to lite payment of inch interest ns shall have acrrned on the said loan ati the first ! day of January, eighteen hundred an I six-ty-two ; nun my surplus thereof remaining i nfter tlio paymot t of the said interest shall' j lie applied to constituting a sinking fond toward* thn payment of the principal of said loan ; and the rkiil tax .-hall be npportinned union -j the several cmqnies by tho governor; secretary of state uud treu.-urer. in pioportion to tin) mnonnt of thff taxable real and personal estate in' eatd) county, us shown by the last abstract thereof; J madoonl by tho board* of assessors of the j scvaral conn tilts, at directed by law; and it shall bo the duly of the secretary- of stale to transmit to the county collector of each county a statement of lint amount of said tax- apportioned to said ciibnty. and - the raid county collector shall lay said - stutement' before the assossor* of tho town: ships of thrir several counties at their next uietding. to apportion-tli* township taxes, and said assensors shall ihesenpen proceed to asses* sold tax ancordinu to law. * g. And b« it enacted. That this act shall take effect immediately. Approved May 10. i8g1. After all the boosting of tho rebels, theif' * Cuufedorfftn Loan" hat not been taken,Witness the following notice from tbo Jackson Misilppian."w« ere authorized by thd Trt«a*nrer of the Coufvderatw Slates to re-open the , books for subscription to the confederate ! loan. The local commissioners in tho difT- | erent counties are reqnestud lo solicit -»d- | dii innal suhscrtptfoua. wo appeal to pa- | Iriotic citisens to come forward nnd invest i in this most dosirahln stock. 'c'oute on.-,-i come nil.' James 1>. Stewart. m. i), Huynws. k. ii. Bart, Uflntral CumuiisXlucere " Those books Will probably U* ' reopened ' frequently. The valuable service* ol Floyd have been' i secured % the Rebels, who hate made him * (ietiereb Tliey must look sharply after .j their arm *7 unless the - x-SecreUry has tare. l ed bis propensities #ince he ran awa;. iioin' , i the Uuiud titntvs tsuvt-rtmeut. j ' ■] :

