The Altoona tribune. (Altoona, Pa.) 1856-19??, May 18, 1864, Image 1

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    #»rth<; Unfortunate!
Rp uk socxnrr vm
U .
’AT LAST
f TO >
tnkc
LDAV8>
KEE REMEDY.
—AKD—
:ee tejectiok;
fMtfnai Barts. Roots £ leaves.
WWI.I, flu* |mt logits Dinmir
MNfttHßoiflriHi. ««ehj« iMMttu
«f tfcrlOMldofJifliwti«,
tb« fciilcUr. Strfctmre, €t»v«&.
wwmwM intboo*
Matter Wlutetita female*! vberealt Kb*
jmm.lMghlj «o»ocssxated Urm. the (few
jpj tlfamtlUe i» -i« ftctaoo;
k£Mt*ama£ It to flow io*U «f its or e
IprS'tS»m* r«Boriof &S« the tyaUm all
:1m isw iatetU rfmmr
HyflCtiW* ki&ttwMii au all; or .**-'
inbir R«iMlj.x&d ibouU beaMd lu
Uwu medi&i* is ail caoeuof Gonocfatat.
lueOocx
?f; all acaldioc, hmt,. cbonfe*
tbet»«rMa«:asd Mimorn emcmomriM*
pfcmoed wiii atari; mil tbe cbm? yaark
fctfwfca* Biwnedj aad <3»erakae Isjarttna
ttfe» il the aura- ilaw—all isapropcc
'«rgaa# twyMt
j »*(■* kod atreagUi. :
Bia|t£C* irum aay
*if*' *r tnite to i» aud we will anil £ret
► ;B*up»dv, per Wttu. i«r Utm W»
battle or three battler
t» »f «4d(«a cat receipt ef priff
>i*UJ »>M*.
PR f. R BIBWIS
Sole Prsptittat*
S*>. &idtm ty And S*w Tot
THE GREAT
# MEDICINE
(UNWED FROM
. c ■ j
'J Z :
OK EE (JURE!
srwlei,. ape Vr-n Irp—
tarn, and -»T1 oer—caused far
**M*f3l!avjp. CaiTCTI l«Mntirtf.P»iii. ,
n*a» o Tlgiuc. {Vtmatare
1 IslJßreißtSHßc, WAehflwa.
l 3Mja»
- ■
;'*■& MTnfcva.
■fcaaittpl* testable extras mad aa* t*
ft «d St luu.'Ws m«pd in Gsr practice fat
wsSi treated. itbußotiukd la *
: ■ It* cwitfire povm hare baea aafteSeat
m&«i atabbcn c**e,
*awe<f4Red in& tiwr ccoditstwa ezitll
the reach of medica! aid. v« -
iiSp'ai.' the CHIRAK.EE CURE idQ rr
tkiajl ud afitr dl doctor*
caters. gttj a •CxJ'csl&r from aiv 9ni
a*Bj.' <*- wf4t? the Proprietary- wba prili
b*io* ;4«cn!-g the «ame. a fa” trr>atjif la
<«r fcbr** bottles t'Tiiai
all {mH« ->f the srorid.
neta*4e drc£?ist* ererrviierr.
M W.R. XE&WT S 4 00:.
fete Proprietor*.
*o. Lftfnr Sto«M. S«w Tcrk.
ARliua» t 9ll
Eillxlr,
|WfiiGHrS.
Bating elixir !
pPBSSaSSdE OF LIFE.
fseti Tkoibi SxxtAsna. Cartaxm
PaoßUtsnmaißnßtiK.
: JBncir w xfee of Boros dfiaoov>
|i Itimkiß l»«g u fstaity perm
taffof r«rp, irreopecti*'* of mHtlie old;
« fcwig MW«d by tfc» omo! nii—Hiiit
r„ <M by tha prooonnc ed to br one of
■> firm mi in of tin «y».
unOmral Debility.
» BjfbMto in from**.
MWtatSoe cf {baboon. <
rto.tW mpM of ngeeenaierK,
» boCliro rogUoro the monbtniog onrt fall
otthtOflMtico. '
•tbeeatriWof Imftotmry
■ MHatpoavr.
tbt raor to tbe .
tm to only rigor oad robot booltb
. «o»4an uf imotiltt imur g|
' 1 111 lyJl. ■-)"•*
gfr «c Mmttxr of lift. ' ,
la*4r.<hn» bottiM 'timr
i u«4|il rfwnaiT, ta •rnymlrtm ;
&mm rrnjjrhtrr.
v., ,
■ri.'K*. fit SJbertj Street. S«*» Tcrt
iKEE PILLS!
COATED
BEGLXAI&&.
: : '-’i .
Preserver
ANDSAFK-
<te(r»ete*«. ami ikt hmtrmmx
Jbcmnaw V iW JfcofMj AriWi,
(iate tlaw naammu iliimn tbu
taCftS>a*F ate YnaavltelQF
urf Piisft) M> ttr»
pklmm t;Ctearain.| '
■ telWpilDil tei#M,p»i»i’-i«'fa». ■
I»«r <te tef, Hteriaaa. *U*W -te
BBrnassElfe
rxomat, Otrj.txmd*iM .
B>Myt—aiKM]|L,h»». t n ***#•».
Wnagtb forwMfcte»-
ternnc iW<* 4»
Hr teOte mU tefcliafcjy pntest
*re4^«Bl^|sp^-
v ; md.s&4
fe-MAlbiitj StnvC jMv T«i*i
>g9L
Mi'GRW A BERN,
VOL. 9.
<\\ r F THE PER CENT AGE i THE AiL'.ljOU_XA TRIBUNE. with her glory, which k now being fulfilled
»v hitivt VIII'R ■£. «• - - - - - ». c. HEMS, m the republic <if America.
Bi j am. And a* she 5s the only nationality which
Cl-OTHJNTr FKOM FLRSj HAIsER?- |., r „, Ma ., p „aw,#.ori. l >if m h a has constitmionallv established civil and
tI'TTLSIiEB A TUCK, Manufacturers « «■- «!««.*.. .a tb. religious liberty on’ earth, and is now till
i .(.od WMes* toi fo«ii Jeilrn » ; ,ul "‘ " iiw- <-r *l*oolslxll-. ing the world with the wealth'of her sci
wortW ytirit** tin* aitnittm •»» tiw ; j iii?<*rtK»D 2 *i.«r S <So. , , c ,
, M .i-> r.-. t** wiowins tun* iu ' *u-r*-*cr *. ii*iT*u*k. : r j ii f $5O . etice« Uxe beaut*- of her art. the wonders
rfhwinventioiik. and the glory of Ker five
ia-5 •>«■•■ «»i»» u- T ,., . j ) j,. - ««(• * » institutions. she not onlv fills the descrite-
St, To THE BEST. : *• Ki«^»*>“« *«ime
„■ cbm,- • ■ ! jm. and character, but she is smiting the great
li.’w.-i^oarc^<wm fr..» u.. imj^ru-r,<u,d ; ’* - t ' 4,12' j'* : jmageof Despotism to pieces, which prove
vtu-.ii!nrtuTvr>. »cavc iii- j*n put T*“ ~ **i*> 1’ [n 5* S* ' “ er to be the uiouDUla. or government.
'l> ’ *v« *-i{ I’i-iGi'a-' a! & ;>erceßtA«;- : Four - J.-- N **' '■ A*bicll IS to hi! the whole ejtrth With the
.J: -~t •>{ .ur ri.tte. *n»* ; H * if *,«* s ™ - “ £ |® £| ! blessings of liberty : am! that this war is
in- ;n-r-:>atA2r wascii must be jwlded Sy Oar - ' \.
« ii -,>i e-11 k«aiD- Wf retail oor j Aaiuini>traiorf »d<3 sxx««r? Xotk«f 3 T 5 the SmUUVgS ol her pOU'er agaUlSt the whole
liwiijiar «.i r> —:ur price uiLei mcrcknii.- ;«v 1 Merciwut- bj tbr- ,r»»r. thre- 1 v«r. -i* A #;
c..n**, n *ntlr tb%» «bo ioir fA,i ; v .:t. «b.rty chuftpe.: ...... to *>* de>poii>m, un-ier .whutr\er lorui
*.► ,i-{ fijrir •-♦u* a! site v>aue price wbiib otbfir Cialiucrt' ; v«r nß*in«>a* Cardc. pot rxctrrdir-i* liif“ jj JuaV SUpeai*.
I'trjbrire i:t Un- n;» ik-reby *»riag- «ud CJothierK* i »J»J* p*r y«Cr /'• T ‘iq,. , . . *i .
v ,yyf. C»njiminicjitifm* x jK'iitic*’ charvler • i uniividiuf. til tile loth chapter O* tile prxiJilirt'N 'll
llVto»h*.d.#t«i. j a. «!>•■ -»-«• Jeremiah, after giving the prophet a'de
. I nrv\/'hV r 4 Ivn i/AM v^TV~i\\'V A*ive-rttfrnjfcu.t.« not with tiir . .»1 iu»f-r- . * ’
AAU ,lUD*>OIU»i>. . t u, n . .k-.irwJ, Will till forbid apt! cW?«l SOnpllOn Ot the miUTJrt] State ot tlie C im>-
w»i-r • Uiav k.ji.l t»f figure- Vt which trr ! t** the tfcrttic- 1 <j- n T a7 wjrJ #],£. A nu>n^rt t'nitm nnH»»r
iu* .fit ! ooticef «»* «fßt? per iiw tor*x*-ry : nan israei, or uie American iiiiun, under
”lV’a.,v I J'w, ii». f—i,i t.-i i.r ima-rimi*. th*: Tork> <>l,inuirr optics- wtcwUnc o-n lin» «ftj »«» •«!»»" j the similitude of a dismembered girdle, the
i T- i So**™?,, of the world the
..-,i»,«prii-m .A. ♦; <wk t . holv seer Ui p.,v unto those that "would
" Ni :,r - VUrkM Strrtet ‘ MBta ‘ W,,WaL : C llOfitJ t fOfm) . not* hear - ’w ord. that he would " not
SK \V (' ( >Ol >S JJi ty nor spare, nor have mercy, but destroy
j v -‘, r TDUISMS them" For their pride, and tor making cap
•.'PUK untier.-tijned wouid respectfuliv ;n ! i KUtama. 1 ...
I c ~ ... ... ,„• „„ i , , , . , , . of the “ ij.pf s noek. ami closes h\
JL f>rai tpr Cil ■•. At..' I.u CoUtJ- Xl»r fuc-r ttvci****K B]KJU. lijr C«IT eri Co -J -erf lU(.*Oj(it
ir.: ,!isr br rrf««cJ fr-.» ii,- &»,. yW bs hx- . . , hk . hw , n ;. 0 < a, i - iSH i,v.ci.-r.«‘«t..bi £ . s ... 0 ‘ commanding the [>ro[>het. to tell the rulers
}»> *pick 4iJ ' * '■* • , r . ,x . . . 1 ‘ ~ ,
L' f F 4Vn \n VTL’U \i I* ' ■ jtftiT carat* iihTr dimmed xht srni tunowed ’ot toe 1 nilOlpaJltleS, or olat**S Oi UleJSoulh.
r Aljl-< AA D \\ 1A 1 Xjla \jrOV- ; the dreadful doiinv that awaited them tor
j am r ,fi «-.«*» l». i their rebellion against the purest goxern
. i- tc»ci.lr»'. Ihv Mock ie much iaxx» . . ( »
•c .t u;; vGj;-ct. in tin-v rvctiiuj: ; j Oieilt that ever the World.
. ... ~ •> ..lb-1- ,S. .i 1..1 sst i Tbi* to > • »<»<.. -I Ju.. Hus scnllss, ; .. N>utJl jJ )a » | w J, ut
Ihe lies* (.io»h!s aidtl at the h<»we>t l > i’n*e? ; , ; , 0 « v ■»n .} ... i 4. 1
; „ x c » \ v . , , _ , up. and none -nail oL*-n theiu. .iijaali
V -vuitM <it I La: i,f Cal; nnti rill M-i 1 a. I*, if i,..f a•'* rr ‘ ,mV '****7 *1 ; £ „ . * - ~ ~ . .
!, rii- (n»>r tJiAii ijoiisrt- in *p-. II- / ■ <i*r: .-hail be Carried a WAV C!i]>tl\e, all ut It, 11
I '■ <* l] r. ;»uici.u£iiig r-. ,> «• .u.- wub tiuai. 1 shall be whoHv carried a wav captive, llift
h«- c-'Dfi'i'-'.i he exit \&~r iuou'.vmfßt* vitich irilj * ,
1-. V n». of S “ , up vour and behold them that coiue
1. A DIES' PRESS G<X)PS of ev.-r.- description, j " “ uU r’ riU ' j from the North : where L* ti.e flock that
y ■ - s axu, buys w i.stki: wKAi:. Bair i«m ib* brow. w;ts given thee, thy beautiful fl-xdt What
-\A-ilt thou fay when he shall punish thee f
for thou hast tan;rbt them to be captains,
and chiefs over thee: shall not sorrow
take thee, as a woman in travail ? and if
thou say in thine heart. Wherefore, came
these things uj.ui me! For the greatness
of thine iniquity are thy skirts discovered,
and thy heels made bare. Can the Ethi
,, , .. ... .... i opian change his skin, or the leopard Lis
Mu*i Ibaitb k.r rxei, gx-jtmj: hiusl : ‘ . ~ ' 1 t
! spots f inen may you also do good, that
I are accustomed to do evil. Tberetore will
; I scatter thein as the stubble that passeth
! away by the in-! of the wilderness. This
is thy lot. the j.irtion of thy measure from
me. saith tlu- I .r. 1 : betause thou hast for
gotten me. am! Iru-u-d in falsehood. There
fore will I di-coM-r thy -kin- upvm thy
tace. that th\ siaune may appear. I have
seen thine adulteries and thy neighing-.
x, •
s ;
> !
<
P
A %T* \M» l 'Al*?.
HLK\C!iKi' AND LXBLKACHKD MI'LJN ->r U.’
AM* HKAVY liJiILLI SGs. ; Ai»J .fa»wirMui l r l .j Ir -wa »-ii frvm |
s’S*- wiii s-il St-» -vl. K'-rlrd li-jvrfi—? at 5.1 .:*•.« I ,*i. ! h w.';*Axatir spherV—
T\i.i. I'reg'j'd !.:*» ; :
M;* ... i Th«J ua.ru:t- cold aijJ f»r.»ud must >t-i ajv«a*.ri;-u* terror* 1
•r.\k MORAL SKIRTS. Wy * ‘I
t GUuCF-KIES
.1 luiir imiHtß
*uiuv. l-y »invJ aut-uts.- ;! l. :tia
• ->f uu'Mir j»arr-.*jiiu:r.
'*ll Jt&d fXVßibi? Li- *!-*ck. Ur ii«.- fyiTista r f.p
MEUICInV/.L OHEM ICALS I** **?? ,hf *“*■“*«« *- «»-
'I uii io :nrn
* 1 SOAi <k I EL} ■' MEL 3 HUI >HES. !To iLc ro*y only cradle* krt|i. u> tLr of tiw
>-La.k rmr. PAiyjs, ujlx r A i:yisff£& | Wttni;
w rrr i ,- I>rrteflt nwj ; i<co>rit a m^morrcati.
” -IGAUS. j l»f lbv fij>i low cry afei ti>«- La.‘t *»d eirh—of tbr
-rtrp arUei* MtnaUy Ityt j* a Firtt-dast Jjrvo &<*< -‘ p ms ±
PI’UE WIXES AND UQUuKS*
the lewdness of thy whoredom. ami thine ;
abomination# on the hills and in the fields. ;
Woe unto thee. O Jerusalem! wilt thou
not be made elr;;n f When sliall it once
j be?" Jek. xiii. I !*th to. 27th inclusive.
| " The cities of the South shall be shut i
| up." This has been done by a general i
I blockade (id all their ports, from one end ,
j of their vast lerrifory,lo the other. [
I “ And none shall open them." Not he- i
J ing aide to oj*eu them themselves, they ;
MOTIF imfPFTITIftVM i ‘ I have applied to all the great powers of ! ;
-wt cuaiX.tllllUi.v . ; y or fit j Uootla Trilmne. j Europe to assist in breaking up the block- '
A NEW DRY GOODS STORE ’ ;THI2 * j ade, but without success. None shall open
ON VIRGINIA STREET AMERICAS CHURCH OP CHRIST * ti * em untd d,c - v 10 tfie government ; Tkue Ixdepesuexce.—Soon after his
r jnilE UNDERSIGNED WOIT I> KK ' " j and latvs of the United States. : establishment in Philadelphia. Franklin
1 sPEcrrn.LT axxocxce wu* prtik j frr f •> Judah shall be carred a wav captive. ! was offered a jaeca for publication in his
S UU r TYODV c AAn CHAPTEK VII. J all of it. it shall whollv carried awav ! newspaper. Being very busy, he begged
.HlialulNßlil GOODS, i The G«.« ~ captive." As E-ypl was* the first repre'- ! the gentleman would leave it for eonsiderr
COOTiV ftitutiouaJ l.Tbet-1 °° tentative of monurcfaial despotism, so J udah i a, * on - The author called and asked his
- o. hums. eeis 1 - before the fimdi consummation of Amer- 1 ** first representative of monarchial j m^^aTl^MnTh
ginghams MCSLXNfc, etc icsm glory. and the awarding of civil and ' servi^u «e, and in thi* case alludes to South- lam . n T 10 inai 1 it
-J™ Muslims from 33 u> ti w-r rat.i religious freedom to a ransomed world, it i ern slavery, the last rehc of despotism in ; highly scumllous and defamatory. But
t-yuco -- .. ' ' is to be expected: that the oeaius of mon- i America, which 'shall finally be destroyed j being ** * loss, on account of my poverty
to 34 - • ardl 7 wiU summon all her force for the j or awa . T captive, all of it." * j "hejher to reject it or not, I thought I
uloves. hohxht. continued supremacv of empire, and that ) “ Ll ? hl °P - v " ur e . ves an behold them j wou,d P“‘ l1 to this issue—at night, when
rrrrruo.,, „ : her last conflict will' doubtlessbe terrible. ! *•« north” | “J" 0 * bou S ht f *
itt«i i Her death-throes’mav shale dip iliustrimie i Behold an army of a million of well i on w hich, with a mug, 1 supped hear
* fabric 1 dLsciplined soldiers, 'all armed with the most ; *7, and then wrapping myself An .y
—I .««, tr™ * Alto, firmer bafis of strength and gran- I *««% weapon# * { niodern warfare - They i STf* s,e P l *“7 ? n ‘ he ««*
&«■-2M. iMs-ty. r* dear, against which her power will prevail i come to subdue rebellion audio restore con- *dl morning ; wuen another loaf and a
■ Oi- 1 CDDTVri . 1 - no more forevgr. ■ slitutional rectitude over all the revolted ! 111U S of water afforded me a pleasant break
lOUT. OlKUNijr 1864. That a great war wiinld finally t„l-» P | i .Slates, although it cost the blood and treas- ! fast - Now, sir, since I can live very
CIRCFT A P • tetween the g eD P* of Freedom and the I ore of imlf the nation. j comfortably in this manner, why should I
f take nSurefn *•! <* Oppression, Las long been the be- 1 “ Where is the doek that was given thee, I P™*** to P!^ nal «r
lief of civilized man; and from the decla- i thy beautiful fioct ?" No nation under jP® TP® 88 * 011 * or - a I ™®f e ux * ,r J > » B ™B-.
*hs P »hsrf tS ; at J, I, * TV rstnmid Sr® , rations of Divine-Inspiration we are forced i heaven has had such blessings conferred j . ®f caooo res * ** °* 7 oar %n ■ n .
i f !lrt f , - . . • ■ . c . c .u American sage without thinking of Socrates f-nuous Debt asd Credit Accoct. —
HA T ax- ta a to conciusiOD Uiat Uie fast great stniff- upon them as the Mates ot the South now » * . . , , c , , , * , - r .
, xiai> A>D CAPS ttL nL* Ir\ • • r kir * 4*u n j I replv to K.insr Archelaus, who had pressed A eorrespondent of the Northwestern
vJUteiikstMTWAi t cle between Liberty and Despotism is <*b- 1 m rwellion against the Constitution, under i.. - T 7 • . n\ * , . A . - „ .
** ««ka- «ud i^c r cuu- • > -l * , r ; ■. rZr' rj «« tt v 1 him to give up preaching* in the dirty Christian Advocate relates the following
oa to |d«ss* aii |W<r ,mgon in Amcnc^i; lhat it will not close Hue name of a Confederacy. Her climate, rr a e , .f * r I*2 * *t. a- *
■ i untd the vast system of monarchical op- ! soil and situation, for comfort, wealth and : an ltoerapt P^' h
th. iiiaiontTof Tf SHOES,.' pression shall be destroyed, and Eberty, beau tv, exceed the iovelv lands of storied: * m 1 • 1 v, 0 ?) 1 eal, please _ ' f . . c j
fron. car of her trLiph, throve I lore. Her vales of fruitier hills of vines. 13 f a peak, at *At the close of on oneSunday^
i ***? M ru -i j . s. ■: ~,j c i u i c . ? Athens, and water I can get for nothing ” a gentleman, not a churdi zaembef, asked
pri« <*&rin s *d-; mantle of her dear around our continent, i fiel< k °» wrn ' her brakes of cane, her ° V
i ’S ini h 2 Sir* 06 know,ed g e ** S~'T of , °7 f ngl% . ller &f* f , her Yankee Arnold’s left in the SSriJ
■ *1 r«dms her cooling; founts, her n w known in Philadelphia, an it suited hte convenient S
J** V «jd®dipoißlreedfflß j streams, her chrystal nvers, her of dty constructed* an effigy of the preacher often did, as hejnueed that
ANDREW ECKPT the Dower'^rf^| rishtS J nd j gl *S ac,OUs . hari^ r '- ber him, laige as life, and seated him in a cart, way on his circuit, and one day at thl end
KEL ’ S,^ hCT i i .T T t ‘' w ' itha % «fthe year, offered payment for his fi»-
Tobaeco Clears Snoff Pine« JtP #,» ufnw ohow lo thechain* and tortures ; “al -P n "2' make her the garden of Ihe j n g a Janmrn up to the fact of the traitor, quenf entertainment. The gentleman
reirr usurpation, through all her or ld. But the floii of Wessing so pro- him £ people, having hb brought out an account book, XewS
AG K MURAL*a ggORT ME N T u^ W " whei I fuS6,y u » K>,l ? h !P“t^ f name and crime in capital letfeiA The chareedmeals,lodgu«,hortfrieeptng, ele.,
A in iior b V w her I are n ?’ t ' no lon ? ,tu - cart was paraded the whole evening thro’ amounting to near twenty dollars. Though
by the uplifted am ! txonal armies of Um North and West are the gtreetg of thecity, with drumsand fifes surprised, tl.e mhuster saidhe
to her native ; crushing their rebeUious Confederacy to playing the rogue’s march, with other Siad not so much money with hinC but he
jpp ; g for ; atoms, nor will they until the last infamy and was attended hya would call and settle b4»re leaving the cir-
V r 1 ’ < 1 tretSTofbouS Ind I Z* r" ,he Me aDd f Y l u Tast ot P **Sf *•» cuit. “Stop," said Iris host, "le?s exam
\fF.<lC !-IN3TRLM3TIONB GI VES Eto continent while the only rehc that shall finallv hanged for the want of the original, ine the otto side,” and then he showed
ml4*a b k£ M - - remam^of their Soutdietm Cotriederacy shaU and jhcn committed to the W ' Tet him a credit of one dollar for every sermon
St o^J e .H OW - he f . h f r , BU^ tewd P 6o ? l *’ this,is the man on whom the British be- preached in the neighborfmod.ri^Se
~^u„A4.m£r : Lf m °“‘ lUn ’ : and theWTe ° k ° f her deSok i lon . stowed ten thousand pounds sterling, as the: for every blessingaled at the t-h^Md
A COMPLETE’ ASSORTMENT OF ; destrov by War. theoreat imaw Say . h . en , he sklll P nce hi ? *reas* M b and appointed to the a shilling for every prayer ofierjed. In Itbe
£-"A, o«ir« Mod-i
fi | i .*" “UI u our nationaHty shaU punish them It could scarcely be imagined that there .knelt on one knee—for thfefte iT'&t Ss
cbacssm-a (o: tSSL
ttut of
I
AXI* DK».S sHor^
MKN AM) iitA'S AM/
MKN’?* Li'.LF It'iSfc' ■ YL- toiif thaj ru*»i.rf lKwr/-f Tviar “•>. ii \h-
WOMEN'S AM* W>*«.»L liOSl.
U -.'A- a.'jJ Kki CoS'**-?-, Stic ]-f. ir.'
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[tXnEPEXDENT IN EVERYTHING.]
ALTOONA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1864
< tain# :unl as chiefs over thee.” In the
tears tor the spread of human servitude
she, the South, taught oar soldiers to be
i veterans and chieftains over them.
“ And if tfiou say in thy heart, where
fore come tiiese things upon me. For the
greatness of thine iniquity are thv skirts
discovered and thy heels made hare.”
greatness of the Iniquity of the South con
sisted : first, in their oppression, second, in
their treachery, and third, in the most
wicked reliellion that ever cursed the world.
These are the sin# that have brought her
to sorrow and dessolation.
" Can tiie Ethiopian change his skin, or
the leojiard his spots? _ then may you do
good that are accustomed to do evil.” As
much as to say. is color a crime, that it
should he ojipessed forever ! or should the
leopard l*e punished because of his spots!
then may the evil do good.
" Therefore will I scatter them as, the
stubbie that passeth away.” Their strong
fortresses -hall be taken, their huge armies
scattered to the winds, and (heir leaders
destroyed, until their forces, like the stub
ble. disappear forever.
• s T his is thy lot. the (lortioii of thv meas
ures from me, saith the laird ; because thou
hast forgotten me, and trusted in falsehood,
therefore will 1 discover tliy skins, that
thy shame may appear.” Destruction is
the lot and portion of all, both men and
nations, who forget God. especially those
who are detennined to maintain the hoary
system of monarchal bondage- that one por
tion of mankind is born to govern the oth
er without their consent —and no greater
falsehood can curse the South than the de
s)>otic principle in which her aristocracy
have sti long trusted, that wealthy birth
and blood should rule, and that the rich
should own the poor.
" 1 have seen thine adulteries, and thy
neighings. the lewduess of thy whoredoms
and übotainations on the hills and in the
fields.” The eSects of those dreadful sins
are seen in the almost countless number of
amalgamated and illegitimate descendants
that everywhere populate the regions of
the South.
“ Woe unto theeO Jerusalem, wilt thou
not be made clean: wlien shall it once
be 1" Even the Church within her isjr
ders, in its various branches, hits proved
unclean, and become corrupt, and allied
itself to the minions of monarchy and re
i>ellion against the government of Gospel
liberty and restoration, and has refused to
be made clean. " Woe unto thee O Jeru
salem,” or woe unto the wicked Church
of the South. Her members shall perish
by the sword and her ministers be mingled
with her slain. Her churches shall be
come hospitals for her dying and her dead,
and her altars, stained with blood, shall be
come desolate, and mourning and woe shall
till every province, until her whole confed
eracy shall become clensed of treason, re
bellion and anarchy, and her people brought
beneath the starred escutcheon of civil and
religious freedom.
TO HE CONTINUED
The “Poor White Polks” of Virgin!*.
The low origin and degraded position
which has been assigned to the poor peo
ple of Virginia, we have heretofore been
disposed to consider a slander of their ene
mies, and a base reflection on their true
character. little education and much ig
norance we knew prevailed among that
class in the greater part of the State,; but
that their morals were equally debased
we did not believe. But, if the statement
of one of her own dignitaries is true, then
we are mistaken in our estimate of the
moral character of the ‘“poor white folks”
of Virginia. While the “blood” of the
•first families” may possess a peculiar vir
tue and power of refinement and transmis
sion. that of the “poor white folks” is hope
lessly tainted and corrupted, even beyond
ihe |>ower ol aft and nature to cleanse and
rejuvenate. The evidence of this deplor
able degeneracy is not furnished nor man
ufactured bv the detested Yankees, but by
a legitinate son of the “old dominion,”
whose evidence would be received by anv
court of t lie commonwealth. Bishop Mead
in his gossipy but interesting work on the
Old Families of Virginia, says the poor
people of the State sprang from culprits
who were banished to the State, then a pe
nal colony, and immigrants, who, on their
arrival, were sold for a term years for their
passage. The female portion of these peo
ple were invetcrately given to Waring ille
gitimate children ; to such an extent was
th is the that the Church vestrymen,
who had the care and oversight of the
illegitimates, were much perplexed how to
stop this mode of increasing population,
and what to do with the. little Grangers
w hen they arrived. As a matter of course,
among such a community, there was much
immorality. This being the real state of
society, the negroes of the “first families”
always considered themselves better than
the -poor white folks, ’ N as they called them,
and, says the Bishop, “so indeed they are
in many respects.” These, then, are the
men whose pedigree and character are ac
tually below the negro slaves, that are
fighting the battles of tbe rebellion, not,
indeed, to emancipate themselve from a
bondage worse than slavery, bat to sustain
a privileged and aristocratic class, who
would in reality make them what they are
all but in name, white slaves! —Xurtolk
Hevietr.
Thk Dkixkaud’s Sok. —‘Mother, this
bread is very hard. Why don't we
have cake and nice things, as we used to
when we lived in the great bouse ? Oh,
that was such a great house, mamma, and
I did love to live there so. You made;
sweet music there, mamma, with your fin
gers when Pa would sing. Pa used to
laugh then andtake me on bis knee, and
saj-1 was his own dear boy. What makes
Pa sick, Ma t I wish he wasn’t sick —for
i t makes roe afraid when he stamps on the
floor, and says so loud, ‘George go off to
bed ’’ say, when will he get well apd take
me on his knee and love me as he used to 1
But Ma. there is a tear in your eye—let
me wipe it. There another comes ; oh —
another! Did I make you cry these tears,
mamma ?’ ‘Hush, little innocent, you can
not stop your mother’s tears; f<»r they are
the overflowings of a fountain, filled with
blighted hopes, anguish and . misery, she
cannot tell you when your father will love,
for .‘das, he is a drunkard.’
I heard a beautiful boy, scarcely four
years old, lisping this to his mother ; and
I pitied him to my inmost soul. His father
was once rich and happy, and. nearly idol
ized his little son ; but in an evil hoar he
began to sip the intoxicating cup—the ha
bit had grown upon him until the peace of
his family was destroyed, and be a tyrant.
The beautiful house in which they bad
lived, was now exchanged for a miserable
cottage in the suburbs of the city; and lit
tle George doomed to be the companion of
the idle and vicious. x
EDITORS AND
OUR SHODDY
Touchingour soldiery it may be re
marked that ‘the first Families of Fil
adelphy’ are not always as dwww or as
deferent to them as their gallantry, sac
rifices* and manly worth shook} prompt.
A case in point is presented by a corres
pondent. for the accuracy of which be
vouches, and it is as follows:
A short time ago, in oar loyal city of
Philadelphia, a * largely' dressed female,
answering the, description of an F. F.
V., hailed a Vine street car. Just as'
it stopped to take her aboard, a Union'
soldier stepped out of the same car. On
entering several seats were vacant, and
the would-be lady inquired in a very
sharp tone—
“ Where did that soldier sit
, No answer.
Again, bat in a more shrill tone than
at Slit, the same question was put—
' Where did that man sit r
Still no reply from any one of the
passengers, the car going ahead, the ‘lady’
still unseated, when the same question
was fairly spit out between her teeth—
‘ W'Aere did that man nt V .
An honest Hiberrian, quietly seated
near the unhappy female, and no doubt
being desirous of relieving her in some
slight degree, replied— :
4 Faith ma'am, he sit on his end and
he took it away with him.’
What the rest of the occupants of the
car did, Ido not know, but one gentle
man left as speedily as possible, and the
above information through him was too
piquant to be long kept a secret.
Mu. ScHEXCK IX THE MIMSTftY. — A
correspondent in Washington sends for in
sertion in the Phoenix , the following ac
count of ‘‘.l/r. Schenck in the Ministry"
which we quite agree with him ,in think
ing is "altogether to good to be lost
“Every one who has heard Hon. Robert
C. Schenck speak for the first time, in a
case where his feelings were deeply inter-'
esled, knows what a vivid impression his
withering sarcasm and impassioned manner
are calculated to produce upon persons un
accustomed to animated debates.
“An unsophisticated Methodist farmer,
who lived in a distant part of the country,
and whose avocation seldom called him *to
Court,' accidently heard that Mr. Sehenck
was appointed ‘Munster to a coun
try in South America. The terms ‘suw*-
ter,' and ‘preacher of the gospel,’ were .in
separably associated in his mind ; and he
took it for granted that Mr. Schenck had
turned preacher, and had been sent on a
professional ‘mission. -
“With this impression he went home.
‘VI ife,’ he said ‘what do yon think I heard
at Dalton to-day ? That little white
headed lawyer you have heard me speak of
so often, has been converted, and turned
preacher to a heathen nation away down
in South America! If the Devil ever met
his match, I guess he has got him now :
for if grace don’t change him too much,
he will give no rest to the reprobate for
the sole of hla foot until he leaves the
country ”
The Value of Dead Horses. —Some
people will no donbt be astonished to learn
that large fortunes have been made every
year since the commencement of the war,
out of the dead horses of the army of the
Potomac. The popular idea is that when
Rosinate yields up the ghost, she is buried
in some field, or left to moulder into mother
earth in the woods somewhere. Not su.
She has indeed made her last charge and
gnawed her last fence-rail, but there is
from two to four dollars in the old animal
yet. Aeon tract for the purchase of the
dead faorsesof the array of the for
the ensuing year, was let a few weeks ago
to the highest bidder at $1 76 per bead,
delivered at the factory of the contractor.
Last year $60,000 were cleared on the
contract, and this year it is thought $lOO,-
000 can be made on it The ammala viw
at the rate of 50 per day, at die lowest
calculation.
At tbe contractor’s establishment they
are thoroughly dissected. First, tbe shoes
sre, taken and ate usually worth' 50
cents per set Then the hoofs are cat 0$
which bring about two dollars a let. Then
comes the caudal appendage, worth half a
dollar. Then the hide—l don’t know
what that sells for. Then tbe tallow, ifit
be possible to extract tallow from (he armj
horses, which I think extremely doubtful
unless they die Immediately after entering
the service- And fast, hot not leasts' the
shin bones are valuable, being converted
into a variety of articles that many believe
to be composed of pore ivory, such as cane
beads, knife handles, Ac. - ~
«r Two boatman were talkiagai Krigb
ton, England, the other day, when i««e
asked the other if the Prince $ Wales
ever went to Starch. 1 Lord bless you,’
said be, ‘what should he go to caprefa
for! "We, poor are obliged to pray
for ourselves,- but there are easugh to
pray for hiio.’ . v -j |:
•rSome men are like gardens eoeloeed
by rougbsWne walb—unsightly without,
but beautiful within. >
t A-.-
j J
SO. 12
.CT