TERMS OF PUBLICATION. TRK BEDFORD GAZETTE is published every Fri ,j,v morning by MEYERS A MEKGEL, nt $2.00 per annum. if paid strictly in advance ; $2.50 if paid (fithin fix months; $3.00 if not paid within six m ontbs. All subscription accounts MUST be ultltd annually. So pttper will be sent out of BE STATE unit-.-- paid for IX ADYAJTOE, and all such .obsiTiptions will invariably be discontinued at •BE expiration of the time for which they are All ADt ERTISEMEXTS for a less term than three months TEX CENTS per line for each iu „>riion. Special notices one-half additional All ns of Associations; communications of i mited or individnal interest, and notices of mar ges and deaths exceeding five liner, ten cents Editorial notices fifteen cents per line. \ll legal Notices of every find, and Orphans' , Court and Judicial Sales, are required by lata tub* published in. both papers published in this ' tlscc., All advertising due after first insertion. A liberal discount is made to persons advertising by the quarter, half year, or year, as follows : 3 months. 6 months. 1 year. I *one square - - - $ 1 30 $ 8 t)0 $lO 00 Two squares ... gOO 900 16 00 I Three sqaares - - - 800 12 00 20 00 quarter column - - 14 00 20 00 3a 00 Half column - - - 18 00 2a 00 4a 00 (tee column - - - - 30 00 45 00 80 00 'One square to occupy one inch of space. JOB PRINTING, of every kind, done with I neatness and dispatch. THE GAZETTE OFFICE has ju-t been refitted with a Power Press and new type, and everything in the Printing line can be execu te! in the most artistic manner and at the lowest „tfs —TERMS CASH. Is All letters should be addressd to MEYERS A MENGEL. Publishers. ] at Xau\ IO.SEPH W. TATE, ATTORNEY j r j AT LAW, BEDFORD. PA. Will promptly attend to collections of bounty, back pay, Ac., and all business entrusted to his care in Bedford and adjoining counties. Cash advanced on judgments, notes, military tad other claims. Ha® for sale Town lots in Tatesville, and St.- J'*#ph's on Bedford Railroad. Farms and unim prored land, from one acre to SMIO acres to suit perchasers office nearly opposite the ''Mengel Hotel" and ! Bank of Reed A Sebell. April 1, 1865—1 v J MtWABD F. KERR, ATTORNEY j JLi AT LAW, BEDFORD, PA. Will punctually I and carefully attend to all business entrusted to | bis care. Soldiers'claims for bounty, back pay j kf. speedily collected, Offiee with H. Nicode- j JHIS. Esq.. on Juliana street, nearly opposite the j Banking House of Reed A Sebell April 7, 1865. i K pr KBORROW. | JOHtt LI7TZ. j nu RB () RR O W & LI'T Z, | ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BEDFORD. PA., j bill attend promptly to all business intrusted to their care. Collections made on the shortest no- i tlce They are, also, regularly licensed Claim Agents j and Kill give special attention to the prosecution , of claims against the Government for Pensions, j Back Pay, Bounty. Bounty Lands, Ac. Office on Juliana street, ono door South of the j Mengel House," and nearly opposite the I/iqittrer I office. IMI IN P. REED, ATTORNEY ATI l) LAW, BEDFORD, PA. Respectfully tenders I his services to the public. Office second door North of the Menge! House. Bedford. Aug, 1. IS6I. f I JOHN PALMER, ATTORNEY AT | | LAW, BEDFORD. PA. Will promptly attend j :c all business entrusted to his care. Particular attention paid to the collection of | Military claims. Office on Juliana Street, nearly j opposite the Mengel House. Bedford. Aug. 1. IX6I. nSPY M.ALSIP, ATTORNEY AT L LAW, BEDFORD, PA. Will faithfully and pr .aptly attend to all business entrusted to his care in Bedford and adjoining counties. Military claims, back pay, bounty, Ac., speedily collected. Offiee with Mann A Spang, on Ju'iana street, two doors South of the Mengei House. Jan. 22. 1664. M. KIMMKLL. 1 *■ *'• UMM*M.T9K KIMMELL & LINGENFELTER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BEDFORD, PA.. Have formed a partnership in the practice ot the Law. Office on Juliana street, two doors South of the 'Mengel House."' / i H. SPANG, ATTORNEY AT \JT# LAW, BEDFORD. PA. Will promptly at tend to collections and ali bu-dness entrusted to his care in Bedford and adjoining counties. ! Office on Juliana Street, three doors south of the ! "Mengel H -use." opposite the residence of Mrs. j Tate. May IS, 1H64. ,FV . H KILI-I R. J T Kun. A KEAGY have formed a j partnership in the practice of the law. At tention paid to Pensions. Bounties and Claims gvinst the Government. office on Juliana ,-treet, formerly occupied by H >n. A. King. March 31, 65. fhwsirians and Dentists. I) 11. PENXNYL, M. I)., BIXK>DY I . KI N. Pa., .late surgeon ofith P. V. V.,) ten i"r- his profe-sional services to the people of that ' ttd viciaity. Dec. 22. 65-ly* rjrr w. JA.MISON, M. P.. BLOODY t T ,111 N. Pa., tenders his professional servi •• to the people of that place and vicinity. Office se door west of Kiehard Dangdon s store. Nev. 24. IMy nU. J. Is. MARBOURG, Having pcnnanently located, respectfully tenders j bia professional services to the citizens of Bedford aai vicinity. office on duliaua street, east side, nearly opposite Banking House of Keed .t Schell. Bedford, February 12. lHfit. RB.HICKOK, I J. G. JB., IVEXT I 8 T S , 1 J BEDFORD, PA in the Bank Building, Juliana St. All operations pertaining to Surgical or Me 'lunieal Dentistry carefully performed, and war- ; rsnted TFRMS —CASH Bedford. January t>, 1860. &mkm. ■' 01 Utt, I J. Be SCHF.LL, I) K E I) AX D SC H ELL, I I Banter* and IT KAL ER S I X E X ('H AXG E, BEDFORD. PA., DRAFTS bought and sold, collections made and 111 ey promptly remitted. Deposits solicited. • W. KEEP O E. SHAMXOS 9. BENEDICT HI TP, SHANNON ACO., BAXK LV KRS, BEDFORD, PA. BANK OF DISCOUNT AND DEPOSIT ' ELECTIONS made for the East, West, North 1 s "Ulh. and the general business of Exchange •i sac ted. Notes and Accounts Collected and '■ s.ittanaes promptly made. REAL ESTATE oght and w.ld. " Oct. 20. 1565. DUsrcUancous. hANIEL BORDER, I'LTT STREET. TWO DOORS WEST OF THE BED ' "T> HOTEL, BEDFORD. PA. MATCHMAKER AND DEALER IN JEWEL RY. SPECTACLES. AC. He kettpflon band a stock of fine Gobi and Sii : atenes, Spectacles of Brilliant Double Re lilwwn,, also Scotch Pebble GU*M* Gold ' * ? eh Chains, Breast Pins, Finger Rings best quality of Gold Pen.-. He will supply to order "'J thing i a his line not on hand. >"t W, 1865- UF. IRVINE, . ANDERSON'S ROW, BEDFORD, PA., in Boots, Shoes. Qttecnsware. and \ arie- lrora Country Merchant* re 'Pjctfully solicited. ,ct 20. 1865. DAVII) DEFIBAUGH,Gunsmith, Bedford, Pa. Shop same as formerly occu- P'd by J o h n Border, deceased. Having resumed ''' he is now prepared to fill *1! orders for new at the shortest dotice. Repairing done to or ', r The patronage of the public is respectfully *" :, ' ted. 8 Oct. &, 65. \{ jBEST BEREA GRIND STONES ' " assorted sites, also patent fixtures for same ' Vjt - 16 at HARTLEY'S OLD STAND- ®!)c Ocbforb BY MEYERS & MENGEL. okc Bedford (Sagrtte. . ______ POETRY. Porta namtur, mm fit. "Uncle Toby" ; has outdone himself, in the following lines, and has fully exemplified the truth of the Latin maxim which we have just quoted, " The jsiet is born, not made." U. T's poetry seems to have tcinys, instead of feet; but we presume that is lieeause he wrote upon the sub ject of birds. Voita! The Great Fug'f. BY I NCLE To BY . Author of " Flt • Keystone Kail Road.'' 1 nele Toby feels sad and very wesry. At bis home so lone and dreary, In the shadow of the mountain. Ui.cle Toby hath heard it said. That great men , Stevens, Sumner and Wade. At Washington, the Metropolis of this nation. Are evolving (he greatest wonder of creation By ••reorganizing," depressing and elevating. (Whilst orators arc their praises ••blating Do more than men. ere before have done; They blend all grades and colors into one. The wonder is a mighty Iron raze. In which little birds, and big birds. Black birds, and while birds. Yellow birds, and red birds, And birds of every hue and feather. Meet and mate and dwell On equal social terms together Uncle Toby thinks it only fair, That all^ birds should bask in the sunbeams. Warble in the groves, nestle in the woodlands, And fly through the air But robins should with robins dwell, Black-birds with black-birds their music swell. The eagles in eyries find repose, Wrens in their little homes be free from foes. Ducks in the ponds swim and flutter, Blink at the sun and search in the gutter ; Wild geese seek the western lakes, And hatch their young in the marsbv brakes. Then, fly to distant southern streams, H here sunlight plays with milder beams. Untamed turkeys, in their mountain home. In flocks contented roam ; Barn-yard fowls, when the sun goes down. Are at their roosting places fouud. Fowls and birds of every hue and feather. In separate bands flock together. But to imprison birds and fowls 01 every species in one great rage, Would put dame nature in a rage, Though great men say it would be very nice To put wingless birds in this grand paradise Had -'Uncle Toby" wings with the flock he would not stay, But spread his wings and proudly soar away. Editor, you may print what Uncle has said. For the benefit of Stevens, Sumner and Wade, While they form their plans and do their work, At the "National" and the "Fountain," Uncle Toby will watch them From the shadow of the mountain. OIK LOCAL HISTORY. IlighwH) lliilibcriic wnngfully Httrihu- Oal to fimilh'H Kltu-k BO.VM: heller ol" Ml ess rw. Frnzer ami WixMlsiohot. I'enn; I,rd Onnmore claims Month Western nsvl Tll nin as a part of Virginia: Murder of I.ogan's family: The war re sulting: therefrom averted from Feun- Hylvania [by the wise conduct of the Governor. After the exploit of Smith's Black Boys in capturing Fort Bedford, nu merous highway robberies were com mitted in the county, and as every foot pad blackened his face, all these depre dations w ere, of course, blamed upon Smith's band and the latter finally : hu.* /*•-■*• " * */s 4 en lies to the {>eace and welfare of the j community. It turnedout, afterwards, however, that Smith's men had noth- j ing to do with any of these robberies i ( and that a few daring and crafty seoun-! drels had perpetrated all the mischief j that was done. Their operations, how ever, were of so serious a character, that the citizens did not feel themselves able to check them and the matter was finally laid before the provincial author ities. We find a letter under date of i January 20.177J, from John Frnzer and j George Woods, two of the most promi- j nent men in Bedford, at that time, to , Governor I'enn, which will serve to il- j lustrate the condition of things in this j regard, at the time the letter was writ- j ten : "MAY IT PLEASE YOLK HONOR:— The many robberies that have been committed in the eastern parts of this county oblige us to trouble you with this letter. There are a number of peo ple, who, we suspect, now reside at, or near, Sidelong Hill, that have l>een guilty of several highway robberies, . and have taken from different people, travelling on the public road between this place and Carlisle, considerable sums of money; in particular, a certain James McCashlan, of this place, hath made oath before us, that he has been robbed of twenty pounds and a silver watch. We have already done our en deavor to apprehend the robbers, but have not succeeded, as there can be no positive proof made who they are, on account of their blacking them selves, which renders it impossible for any person robbed to discover or know who are the perpetrators. We, therefore, pray your honor would take this matter intoeonsideration, and grant us such relief as to your honor may seem most reasonable for the safety of the public in general, and in particular for the inhabitants of this county." The affidavit of McCashlan referred to in the letter of Frnzer and Woods, set forth, among other things, that the affiant had reason to suspect that "a cer tain John Gibson and William Paxton," had hands in the robbery. Gibson and Paxton both belonged to Smith's Black Boys, but it appeared, upon investiga tion, that McCashlan suspected them wrongfully, they having had nothing j to do with it. In 1774, Lord Dunmore, Governor of Virginia, underl!bok to establish a claim on the part of that province, to the south-western portion of Pennsylvania, and by his encouragement many per sons were induced to settle upon lands in that part of the province, on war rants granted by Virginia. Among these Virginia settlers was the noted Cresap, who murdered, in a most bar barous manner, the family of the chief, Logan. The brutal crime of Cresap gave ri.se to a bloody Indian war, which threatened to involve Pennsylvania, but the foresight and firmness of its Governor saved the province from the impending danger. By his order the agent of Virginia, who had taken pos session of Fort Pitt, was put under ar rest and the intruders were summarily BEDFORD. PA., FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1866. I expelled. This satisfied Logan and his | followers, that Pennsylvania had noth ing in common with the spirit of ag- I gression that had dealt so wantonly | with the unhappy chief. Bedford eoun | ty, therefore, escaped a scourge which, ; perhaps, would have been more terri ble than even that which desolated her fair valleys in the days of the murder j ousShinghas; and the inhabitants were not again seriously molested by the In dians, until after the breaking out of the war for independence. < o\<;|{|:SN INAI GI HATING A RF.VO -1.1 TION—A WAR OF RACES IN FKOSPF.IT. No person can contemplate the action of Congress without forebodings for the future. Tliis is to us the darkest hour in the history of the country. It is true that we have crushed an extensive and powerful rebellion. The disputed question in regard to the interpretation of the constitution has been appealed to the arbitrament of arms, and set tled. It has been disposed of finally and forever by the removal of the cause of disagreement, in the total abolition of slavery. In this decision the people in the revolted sections have acquiesced, and now come back, asking from the government the privilege of enjoying all the blessings of a restored Union ami the exercise of their legitimate rights under it. At this point they are met by Congress, which defiantly re fuses them admittance; thus, in effect, saying that those States which could not secede by passing ordinances of se cession, which could not sever their connection with the Union by the sword and bayonet, are nevertheless out by the will of Congress. Thus the nation, which has been convulsed by war, and is now longing for peace and reunion, is kept under agitation by a fanatical and revolutionary Congress. Nor is this all. The daily records of the pro ceedings of that body are filled with inflammable torches, which being ap plied to the body politic, are kindling the fire* of another revolution more ex tensive, fierce and relentless than that from which we have just emerged.— The Jacobins in Congress are doing their utmost to bring about a war of races— i the worst of all wars. Instead of pur- ! suing a course of pacification they are trying to stir up strife, and are sowing the seeds which sooner or later, if they continue, will deluge the streets of our Northern cities and the plains of the South with rivers of blood. They will j be scenes of bloodshed to which the in surrections in St. Domingo and Jamai- j ya. with all R" ! -"haiters of horror , furnisn no coiuy.,.. The enemies of this country in Eu rope were constantly predicting during our late war that it made no difference whether the North succeeded on the battlefield or not; the Union was de stroyed and the country could never le united again. The South, they de clared, might he whipped, hut they would never renew their allegiance to the Union. We have already seen how false and erroneous has been this pre diction. Even those who were the loudest in proclaiming it have long since admitted their error. But instead of this evil threatening us we have one still more formidable, pregnant with the most dire results. Towards this weare drifting with an alarming veloc ity. The war for the preservation of the Union has ended. The Chief Mag- istrateof the nation inaugurated a pol- j icy under which the country was rapid ly changing from a warlike attitude to : that of pegce. < )ur gallant soldiers are 1 rapidly returning to their homes and resuming their plaeesaround the family , fireside. J ust at this stage Congress as sembles, and at once arrays itself a- ■ gainst this course of events. Not only is the revolutionary faction which con- j trols that body laboring to arrest this j march of peace, but they are plunging j us into inextricable difficulties. Before j the blood of our soldiers who fell in hat tie is cold, or the grass is green upon their graves, the Jacobins are endeav oring to force a war of races upon the country, and carry desolation to the I very heart of our populous cities and thriving villages. Herewestand, una tiou burdened by an enormous debt, with the tax gatherer at eajh elbow; our commerce, which was nearly driv en from the sea, again trying to resume its place; one section of the country paralyzed by the stern events of war, yet struggling to arise, Phoenix-like, from the allies, and yet Congress actu ally refusing to render assistance, and insisting upon adding fuel to the flame | and holding the country down with t its fanatical grip—all for the purpose of j retaining party supremacy. This is j the picture which is now presented to our view. This is the feast which is now being prepared for us by those whom the people supposed were their | representatives in the National Legis ■ lature. Sad as it is, painful as it may be to look upon, it is, nevertheless, a i solemn and living reality. This revolutionary faction, underthe | lead of their Dantons, Marats and liobespierres in Washington, are insti gating measures and passing laws, up on the pretext of protecting the blacks, that must eventually lead us to a direct conflict between the Anglo-Saxon and African races in this country. Thus, while pretending to be the friend of the negro, Ihey are in reality his ene my, and hastening the day of reaction which will sweep him from our land. The blacks, in their joy over their free dom and their rejoicing over their pro- I posed political rights, little dream of i the volcano which is beneath them, or the fires of destruction which their pre tended friends are kindling around I them. A great noise is made by the i fanatics in Congress alwut distinction | of color; but the very steps which they i are taking is increasing that prejudice : and adding to that feeling which nature has planted in the breast of every man. ; There is a point beyond which thepeo | pie will not be passive lookers-on. To that point we are rapidly being pushed by the modern Jacobins. The people of the North realized but little of the hardships of the recent war. We saw I the tax gatherer approaching our doors; we saw the wives and daughters of those gallant soldiers who fell in battle ; put on the weeds of mourning; we saw the maimed and crippled brought | back from the front; but beyond this it was but a dream. It came and pass ed away like a storm in the winter, leaving here and there a mark indicat ing that something unusual had trans pired. The people in many sections of the South, however, saw more of its solemn realities. Families were brok en up and homes destroyed, all of which was but the legitimate penalty of re bellion and attempts to destroy thegov ernment. But even this hardship and suffering is small, in comparison to that which will follow the conflict that < Congress is forcing upon us. The fa natics of that body are leading us, step by step, into a bloody contest that will extend to every section of the country. Its evil results, its hardships and devas tation, will not be confined to one sec tion, but extend overall localities,east and west, north and south. A war of races opens wide the door for rapine and murder. It affects the highest and the lowest. We have but to refer to the horrible scenes that transpired in St. Domingo at the close of the last century and those of Jamaica but a few months since to realize its horrors and dangers. During our late war all could count upon the enjoyment of life. No person was in danger of the bullet un less he was in front when the contend ing armies stood face to face. But let a war of races be once fully inaugura ted—and at the present rate it will come sooner than we expect—and the assas sin is at the door of every citizen, at his side when he walks the street, and he knows not when he leaves his home in the morning whether those whom he holds dear will be alive when lie returns at night. The contest will be the most fierce in the South; for there the races are more evenly balanced. But it is idle to suppose that we shall escape its dreadful results here. We write thus We see the fires burniKgand Congress engaged in fanning the flames and in creasing the danger. It is impossible to look dispassionately upon their work without seeing the dreadful calamity that will visit us unless measures are taken to arrest its progress. We saw enough in the riots in tiiis city, we have heard enough of the deeds along the valley of the Mississippi, to warn us of the danger ahead. Seeing the whole country standing as it seems to us on the verge of a precipice, we raise our voice of warning, in the hope that even Congress may pause in the storm and see where it is drifting. The conserva tive portion of that body have the strength and power to arrest the evil if they only have the courage. Will they not take hold like men and assist the President in resisting the fanatical tide, and thus earn for themselves the plaudits of their countrymen?— A.)'. II orld. IK> SSVLVAJfIA ISTEBESTS. The burly Senator from Allegheny, whose strength, unlike that of Samson, lies entirely in his boots, has given a vicious kick at the interests of Pennsyl vania, by introducing resolutions in structing the railroad committee of the Senate to pursue a line of policy which would result in diverting to New York and Baltimore a large portion of the trade that now finds its way to Phila delphia. Although our political opin ions are in harmony with the great ma jority of the citizens of the city of New York, and in opposition to the majority in Philadelphia, yet as Pennsylvania™; we can have no sympathy with any blow which may l>e aimed at the pros perity of our own commercial metrop olis. It is not by assisting to build up one great rival a hundred miles east of Philadelphia, and another a hundred miles south of her, that we can best promote the interestsof Pennsylvania. Eighteen or twenty years ago there seemed to l>e great danger that Penn ! sylvania would soon dwindle from her j rank as the second Sate in the Union, Ito that of the third or fourth. Ohioap peared to be overtaking her rapidly, and even far-distant Illinois was loom ing up with alarminf distinctness. The construction of the Pennsylvania Hail Road changed all tiis, by opening an artery through whits the trade of the west has poured e\er since n an un ceasing flood into i'hiladelj ma, The increase of population fti that city and i in the coal region connected with it, and along the line o: the Pennsylvania Rail Road and its bunches, alone has saved this State fnm falling behind Ohio. The resolutions of Senator Big ham are designed to encourage "the construction of a tirough line on the route indicated in tie contract between the Atlantic and (Jnat Western and the Reading Railroad companies," and also "the extension o the Connellsville Railroad eastward in the direction of Baltimore and Washington." Both of these projects a in the main emi nently anti-Pennsylvanian, though un doubtedly calculated to benefit those | sections of the State through which the road mentioned would run. The Connellsville Railroad ought to lie finished, hut not so as to carry its | traffic to cities outside of this State. It should be extended eastward .through Somerset, Bedford and Fulton counties down to Chambersburg, where, con necting with the Cumberland Valley Railroad, it would pourthe trade of the southwestern quarter of the State through Harrisburg and Lancaster to Philadelphia, instead of running it off I to Baltimore and Washington as con templated by Mr. Bigham. The coo-! struction of the Southern Pennsylva- ! nia Railroad would accomplish the ob ject we have in view, and there is good reason to believe that this road will be made without unreasonable delay, if j the present Legislature throws no ob-! staele in its way. The Atlantic and Great Western < 'om pany is a foreign concern altogether. Its capital comes from England and its traffic is intended to go to New York. Sir Morton Peto and other English capitalists with handles to their names, by which they are lifted above ordina ry mortals, have furnished the money; the shrewd and enterprising business men of New York city have laid the plan, and we in Pennsylvania are ex pected to furnish all the stupidity nec essary to enable this combination of English capitalists and New York mer chants to drain our Shite from one end of it to the other. The through route which this compa ny proposes to open is not needed. The ground is very well occupied by the •Philadelphia and Erie Railroad and its branches and connections. But these carry their trade to Philadelphia and set it down at tide water on the soil of ' our own State, and hence they do not subserve the purposes of those who wish to make Pennsylvania tributary to New York. We can lend our sup- I port to no scheme that threatens to ! cripple the trade and commerce of our | own citits/ The interests of Philadel- I phiaandof Pennsylvania are insepara | bly connected. Hand in hand they i walk together, and whoever putsastum ! bling block in the way of the one, puts t it also in the way of the other.—lxin i faster Intelligencer. i:\KKAI, KOINSEAI. General Rousseau, a gallant Kentuck ian who helped to tight down the re- j hellion, and at its close was elected to Congress, made a speech in the House ly conservative grounds. He "(TecTarecl that the Freedmen's Bureau bill under consideration was an outrage on the Constitution, and disgraceful to the A merican Congress, and maintained that under its operations thejudge and jury j could be swept away in Kentucky, and elsewhere, at the mere caprice of an of ficer. He insisted on the admission of loyal Southern men to Congress, and denounced those who advocated the State suicide doctrine as no better than the original Southern secessionists. He looked upon theactionof extreme men in the House as intended to prevent a restoration of the Union, as well as to prevent the blessings of peace as the results of the war. He called upon the House to remain true to the pledge of the resolutions of 1861, that the war was for the Union. To maintain the government, and suppress the rebellion were what hg and his command had fought for. In conclusion, he said that an attempt was being made in the House to dissolve the Union, that the Repub lican party might survive.— Lancaster Intelligencer. DEATH OF A FREE GOVERXMEST. It is a melancholy spectacle to behold a free government die. The world it is true, is filled with the evidences of decay. All nature speaks the voice of dissolution, and the highway of histo ry and of life is strewn with the wrecks which time, the great despoiler, has made. But hope of the future, bright visions of reviving glory are no where denied to the heart of man, save as he gazes upon the downfall of legal liber ty. He listens sorrowfully to the au tumn winds as they sigh through dis mantled forests, but he knows that their breath will be soft and vernal in the spring, and that the dead flowers and the withered foliage will blossom and bloom again. He sees the sky o- vercast with the angry frown of the tempest, hut he knows that the sun will reappear, and the stars, the embla zonry of (tod, cannot perish. Man himself, this strange connecting link between dust and deity, totters wearily onward under the weight of years and pain toward the gaping tomb, but how briefly his mind lingers around that dismal spot. It is filled with tears and grief, and the wiUow and the cypress gather around it with their loving, but mournful embrace. And is this all? Not so. If a man die shall he not live again ? Beyond the grave, in the dis tant Aiden, hope provides an elysium of the soul where the mortal assumes immortality and life becomes an endless splendor. But where, sir, in all the dreary re gions of the past, filled with convul sions, wars and crimes, ran you yoint your finger to the tomb of a free Com monwealth on which the angel of res urrection has ever descended or from whose mouth the stone of despotism has ever been rolled away?— Where, in what age and in what clime, have the ruins of constitutional freedom renew ed their youth and regained their lost VOL. 61.-WHOLE No. 5,335 estate ? By whose strong grip has the dead corpse of a Republic once fallen ever been raised ? The merciful Master who walked upon the waters and bade the winds be still, left no ordained apos tles with power to wrench apart the jaws of national death and release the victims of despotism. The wail of the heart-broken over the dead, is not so sad to me as the realization of this fact. But all history, with a loud, unbroken voice, proclaims it. and the evidence of what the past has been is conclusive to my mind of what the future will lie. Wherever in the domain of human conduct a people once possessed of lib erty, with all power in theirown hands, have surrendered these great gifts ol God at the command of the usurper, they have never afterwards proven themselves worthy to regain the for feited treasure.— D. W. Voorhees. From the Detroit Tribune, Jan. 30. TIIK TKIt'IIIYA IV DETROIT—THE DAXU KS OF EATING POKIi. One case of the epidemic called Trich ina, which has recently excited so much alarm in Berlin, Prussia, has appeared in this city and proved fatal. The vic tim was a young lady, a German, who was taken ill sometime since, and call ed Dr. Herman Keifer to attend her. Dr. Keifer was at first unable to tell! the precise nature of the disease, but finally became convinced that it was of the same nature as the Trichina, which has been known for some years, in Germany, and which arises from the eating of diseased pork. The Trichina Spiralis is a small microscopic worm or animalcule, which was first observed by the distinguished anatomist, Richard Owen, in 1835, and is found in the mus cles and intestines of various animals, especially pigs and rabbits in such e normous quantities that in asingle ounce of pork, 100,(00 of these animalcuhe have been found. By partaking of the meat infected by them they are trans ferred to the human body, causing in tense suffering, followed in many eases by a painful death. Dr. Keifer did his utmost to relieve the intense sufferings of his patient, but his efforts to save her life were unavailing, and she died about a week ago. After her death a post mortem examination was held, which has resulted in proving beyond a doubt that the disease was Trichina. A small portion of flesh, about the size of a pin-head, was examined through the miccrosope, and found to contain large numbers of animalculse, wound round and imbedded in the fibres of the muscle, exactly similar in appearance tfe&r Tssmi^bi that has ever been known in this coun try. Dr. Keifer states that these ani maleuke are not destroyed by smoking or, as a general thing, by frying pork, hut hard and long boiling is necessary to effectually destroy them. MOKE MCiGERINH! Passage of llio "Civil Rights" liill by the Rump Mcut. The Rump Senate on the 2d inst., passed the "Civil Rights" bill, which undertakes to nullify all State laics in re lation to citizenship, and to make negroes equal to the whites in civil and political rights IN ALL THE STATES OF THE U NIOX. The following are the main fea tures of the bill: SEC. 1. That all persons born in the United States not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians not taxed, are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States, without any distinc tion of color, and there shall be no dis crimination in civil rights or immuni ties among the inhabitants of any State or Territory of the United States, on account of race, color or previous con dition of slavery; hut the inhabitants of every race and color, without regard to any previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude, except as a pun ishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall have the same right to make and en force, contract, to sell, be parties and give evidence to, inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold and convey real ana personal property, and to full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of persons and property, and shall be subject to like punishment, pains and penalties, and to none other, any law, statute, ordinance, regulation or custom to the contrary notwithstand ing. Section 2. That any persons who, un der color of any law, statute, ordinance, regulation or custom, shall subject or cause to be subjected any inhabitant of any State or Territory, to the depriva tion of any right, secured or protected by this act, or to different punishment, pains, or penalties on account of such person having at any time been held in a condition of slavery or involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, or by reason of his col or or race, than is prescribed for the punishment of white persons, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be punished by tine not exceeding one thousand dollars, or imprisonment not exceeding one year, or both, in the discretion of the court. The remaining sections define the judicial proceedings to be taken under the bill. The following is the vote upon this outrageous revolutionary act: YEAS.— Messrs: Anthony, Brown, Chandler, Clark, Conness, Cragin, Dix on, Fessenden, Foot, Foster, Grimes, Henderson, Howard, Howe, Kirkwood, Lane, of Ind., Lane, of Kansas, Mor gan, Morrill, Nye, Poland, Poraeroy, Ramsey, Sherman, Sprague, Stewart, Sumner, Trumbull, Wade, Willey, Williams, Wilson and Yates—33. NAYS— Messrs. Buekalew, Cowan, Davis, Guthrie, Hendricks, M'Dougall, Nesmith, Norton, Riddle, Saulsbury, Stockton and Van Winkle—l 2. As heretofore, in all the negro meas ures of the Disunionists, the Democra cy are found voting solidly for the White Race, and for the Union and its perpe tuity. We are glad to see Mr. Cowan (the true Republican) voting with the White Man's party. Mr. Johnson, of Maryland, by proxy, reported his oppo sition to the bill. We have no time nor space for com ment now, and merely say to the Peo ple—Will you tolerate such Rump leg islation and rush our country into a Centralized Despotism? Now is the time to speak and act! Speak and art at once ! CALIFORNIA ITKIOSI TIES. The two objects of natural scenery in California most worthy of mention are the big trees and the Yo Semite Valley. The route to the latter place took us through Mariposa county, past the Fre mont Mariposa mines, where we re mained a day, and to the immediate vi cinity of the grove of big trees known as the Mariposa Grove, but which in reality are situated in Fresno county. These trees are not on a plain, in a grove by themselves, but upon a high moun tain, scattered about in the midst of a vast forest, approachable only on horse back. Some of these rise to a height of nearly or quite three hundred and fifty feet, and have a diameter of over thirty; with trunks so broad that down one of them which lies prostrate five women can walk abreast; with such vitality that the burning out of chambers in them of sufficient size for a tea party, with two or three side rooms for flirta tions, will not destroy them; and they are so numerous that after going about among them till the eye was weary with trying to measure these monsters of vegetation, many remained, some of which seemed larger than any before. In the Yo Semite Valley, at one place an almost perpendicular wall of rock rises for thirty-seven hundred feet; at another a mountain rises a mile high directly out of the valley, and its rocky dome lias never been ascended by man. Here lies the Mirror Lake, reflecting the mountain beyond so perfectly that when the scene is reproduced in a pho tograph, showing both mountain and reflection, you cannot distinguish the one from the other; there is the famous Yo Semite Fall, with its single plunge of sixteen hundred feet; a short distance below is the Bridal Veil Fall, now de scending unbroken its nine hundred feet, and now blown entirely from sight by a breath of wind; while further up the valley, at a point inaccessible ex cept by two miles of scrambling on foot, is the Nevada Fall, surpassing all wa ter falls in beauty, with its descent of seven hundred feet. In some places the purple wild flowers conceal the green grass beneath, and the strawberry flow ; 8 grows M a si*c ! me. The trees rise, perfect and alive to the top, two hundred and fifty feet; and the air is so dry that wo men and children may sleep in a tent, and men under the open sky, and in comfort, by the side of a clear, sweet, calm and bright stream. FREE FARM* FOR NEGROES! I'asmjtf of ihf "I'ri'nlmfn'a Bureau - * Bill by tile Utuip House. The Ruinp House on the 6th instant passed the Senate "Freedmen's Bureau" bill, with a few modifications, by a vote of ayes 136; nays 33: — The Republican members from this State, as usual, voting against the wishes of their white constitu ency and for mere wholesale plundering of the public treasury. The modifications extend the provi sions of the bill to freedmen in all parts of the United States; provide, in case lands granted to negroes under Sher man's field order shall be given up, that other lands shall be set apart for them; and that suitable buildings for asylums and schools shall be erected on such 1. ids as may be thus selected. The following is the vote on the bill: YEAS —Messrs. Alley, Allison, Ames, Anderson, Ashley (Nevada), Ashley (Ohio), Baker, Baldwin, Banks, Barker, Baiter. Beaman, Benjamin, Bid well, Bingham, Blaine, Blow, Boutwell, Brandagee Bromwell, Broomall, Bundy, Clarke (Ohio). Clarke (Kansas), Cobb, Conkling;, Cook, Cultom, Darling, Davis, Dawes, Dumont, Defrees, Delano, Deming, Dixon, Donelly, Driggs. Eekley, Eggleston. Eliot, Famsworth, Farquhar. Ferry, Garfield, Grinnell, tiriswold. Hale, Harding, (111.) Hart, Hayes, Hen derson, Higby, Hill, Holmes, Hooper, Hotchkiss, Hubbard (Iowa), Hubbard (W. Va ), Hubbard, (N. Y.j Hubbard (Conn ) Hubbe'.l (Ohio), James Hum phreys. Ingersoll, Jenckes. Julian. Kasson, Kelley, Kelso, Kctcham, Kuykendall. Laflin, Latham,Law rence (Pa.), Lawrence (0.), Loan, Longyear.Lynch, Marston. Marvin, McClurg, Molndoe.McKee, Mc- Kucr, Mercur, Miller (Pa ), Morrill, Morris, Moulton, Myers, Newell, O'Neill. Orth, Paine, Patterson, Perham. Phelps, Pike, Plants, Pomeroy, Price, Randall (Ky.) Raymond, Bice (Mass.), Rice (Maine). Koliins, Sawyer, Schenck, Schofield, Sbellabarger, Sloan, Smith, Spau'ding, Starr, Stevens, Stillwe'l, Thayer, Francis Thomas, John L. Thomas, Jr., Trowbridge, Upson, Van Aer nam, Van Horn (N. Y ), Van Horn (Mo ), Ward, Warner, Wasbburne (111 ), Washburn (Mass.),Wet ker, Wentwortb, Whaley, Williams, Wilson (Iowa), Wilson (Pa ), Windom aud Woodbridge—Lit) NAVS —Messrs Buyer. Brooks, Chandler, Daw son, Elbridge, Finck, Glossbrenuer, Grider, Hard ing (Ky.), Harris, Hogan, Hubbeli (N. Y.), James M. Humphreys, Kerr, l.eblond, Marsha.l, MoCul lough, Niblack, N icbolson, Noell, Randall (Pa.), Ritter, Rogers, Ross, Rousseau, Shanklin Strouse, Sitgreaves, Taber, Taylor, Thornton, Trimble and Wright—33. A SINGULAR PETRIFACTION.— The editor of the Mt. Carmel (111.) Demo crat hasseenasingularspecimenof pet rification, found in Oregon: "About five inches of the body of a snake in perfect shape, retaining every color of the living serpent, though much more beautiful, since in the trans formation it partakes more at least in appearance of ivory than any other substance. The gentleman who found it informed us that it was lying on a rock in such a natural position that he thought it alive, until he discovered his mistake only when he struck it, thinking to kill it, when it broke in several pieces. Every part was perfect; the eyes were clear, like glass; and the teeth were quite perceptible. We nev er would have believed that nature was such a wonderful artist, if our eyee had not convinced us."