Ntiumdtt4Natchska 'Perri, 0.11411 r 11111211:11Z, - • 3111114Litor. BZWCFONT4'PL FRIDAY 114 . 0RNING, MARCO 4, 1884. Ts War prom *swat thatch Owe of some interest. "fiibitore'sanpedltlol►.iti Merida has failed, and Sealth-after.getlins a fantasies thrashing has Dees Gotta to rotors to Memphis. Mangum forces and rowsklered to be is a precarious Mt. •uotlog, "down in llabsuna." and we would 'not be snprised ie beer• at any time of the capture of the whit% cemented. Gen. Maids It it said 14d,rnede" forWartl ostrreciont, dlreo tlea it is hot staled. Mow soon the "bask bowie of the "reiddlion* will lee Waldo bj welt advanoosi asi lows imam Sande daring the list wwsk some loyalist set may error out Maw sad spare prevents the publlrefion of thsr parr. Ungar§ of any orthes movements. no Bosinty-4b £W We have wracked with bonsiderable interest the moirements of the citizens in certain parte 9f our county during the past two wpeka anrimnat Oink, thatwe have been disappaintrul—sadlydimappoin ted. in maiarof,them. It. hi well known by all, chid every honest man will admit, that this county hasbeen drained amen* ' to fill up the armies to carry on this tat ' Minn crusade, until there is not epough left to do what week nicessity • actually -- rerpt;rtea to hr. _tions__ Lest year thotl4- , ands of bushels ef griin Wasted before it could be pthered; hundreds of tone of hay, rotted in the fieldq, and the interests of the whole population, suffered severe ly onaceount of the scarcity of hands to ' gather In the crops that a bountiful har- Trite had blessed us with ; pet to-day we are stridght forward, honest old farmer', carried away b.) , eLnitooreot, puhscriLing lavishly. of their means to rid the counts , of what feW laboring men is yet left wit iin it. now they expect to till their land,. and do the. work which the welfare of the community demands of them, Wide notknOw. If our-crops suf fered last year for want of gatherers, what can we expect this Year when eight or nine hundred more, working men, have been hired to leave the county? 'Who is there to do the labor, required,simply to Produce-the cereals upon which the peo ple subsist"? Where are -the hands to be found, that will save the ening..har • vest? These are questions which isot ---- tdow - intrresk - thelannetS---futt aro of vital iniportance_to every twit* , woman and child in the country, and should be taken into nonaideration before it is too late to do any sok . 11. t" Maya lenr"lntr ire Ire tet---mte vent this State of affairs. If the mon do not volanteer they will be drafted,. ,nn.i taken from the county . anyiray?" MI true so far as the draft is lumeerted, but why is it necessary that they be "to ken/tom the mosey 7" Three fourths of the miiitioy given ss an ktducement for them to enlist, would pay exemption for every roan that mould be drafted eadrz r•pded'into the service, and thus MA, the men and one fourth of the money *ould be kept in the county. Take fok instance I a township,required to furnish twenty four men. The bounty pahl.in mostp sea to this number would amount to four thousated, and eight Amami dollars, an& in many places to a much greater sand . Let these twenty four men be draf ted, and according io the Percent, for exemptions, calculated by those in an thority; twelve of them would be exempt from physical disabilitor,orTor other cau ses, thus leaving one half whose clomp tions would have !vim paid,woidd :meant, to but tkreithoueands Nu? hmtdretl del lars., leaving a Clear gain of twelvehtrn dred dollars to thepeople of the township, - besides retaining twenty four ;nen as produces., in place of changing them Into co:limners. "Bat" says some howling "loyalist," 'the armies must be filled.' Ai to the neoesoity and good to be aooom- plished bygiving Abraham Livia and his ataxy f ors 50000 more men to be uselessly niuraered• in the vain at tempt to subjugate the people of the South, we think there is abundant count for some pretty large doubts ; but wo do not believe there is any one silly enough to think that tlmarmY can subsist. with out something is produced for it to sub sist on; and how thki is to be accomplish ed whin every laboring man is paid for 'leaving the county; and. our grain left to wart upon the time, ' our - hay to rot in ~the swaths, !laid the whole pulsation of pmrisieers turned into s vast army of cousylgters, some abolition alone • can simgine.. - !t•• !,, • ' —The terms of that excellent Dem ocratm, dulls', the Philadelphia Age, he4eforp furnished at the exceedingly low tate of SO per.anmuil, has been, in creased ,t 0,14. This is modem' intpor ' ativ4stmeeessary in.conuequence of the pries of,ilaPer, Woo, ikiC- - --llowsliamth a japer as Into, with as much readlittrunitter Ax the .Age always sena tains, lien be published even - at that It gure.iserdd-not kiftw.• -The Abt is one of the best Democrat's *inside publish ed. iii the county,, end we shouldlikia to see it hi the hands Oft& every newspaper "lAtiltESimailPtintY• -It+, mreattiltatives of NOW* t is4...a Aboaidathoivilt 6ht Beiltiosors Ail 464116- "41# " 16 4" AbrOiam L l 4ll4 ll 64Wilien woe otbie. serith'omikelawkaientisti:patriot, lip, 034, te . • , - .. . 4triviter por. diltl.6ololl4l6ois, ' •:, . , Alie 44 of a •.: lioverudifirikr 410401411*MMAgiihm- or sa y idideesive ea be Thaw 4... 'le 47.014ii•«5, ..C.iiiii 6 iisipioser 7 • 1 The Idlaleters MUM Methodist Spar - . met in eonfeveneeat-dßeetwea-1 ghei? - , , and stir:, r ,' ~ sk , .. history, that no no .: ,+'lc ' , e 7- " . . 10 t: Mk . to traitor:l. IMP 1.. , .C , - liti .. L 4 dir ioyaityr be Wank . - ... • - •.'. - • Al c iil t a -, X ", A tiir'" 6 ";"." ,- '' - . 4 - t'ri , ' 'st -- '7' I - Anti '' ' 11l y" p , through tbie place on ilth' 'tO geld °older-antic, durit% the hudfoar o>'-five dayi, and, witfi7a very few exceptions,we Must admit,' and a 1 "holy" set of eiigs, if love of negioes, loyalty to Abraham,- and . hypoontey amstitutes that holiness. We will- vea -1 turn the assertion, that opt of the whole' number anion that form that' august assemblage there is net one dozen, who, during the past three yeart, hive preached, prayed athi labored almost incept:R=oy, 0,:o keep up a tsar that has hurried headlong into eternity, moreim , prepared multi, than all of them put to gether have saved dine -tbe day their. first "license " wait granted. We have iintesed to some torten or eight, of these preteailed whim' tors, not Anltcrtthe Me thodist Episcopal Ohurch, , but ef other denominations, pieta - Piing tits peat, year, and with but two exception* beard nothing from the pulpit bat a hypocriti cal prayer, anda bloody, black disq nisi lien' on wet and peaks; atrium* that werehotter calculated to advance Use cause bf the,liend of darkness, than to further the divine teaching of thePrinee of Peace, and prayers that would -better beeome.the sentinels of bell, than the disciples- of- our meek and lowly Sa-, Is ito be %Tendered at,'lhat men who relieve in christianity, have left the - places oppointed for the worship of the Met High, perfectly disgusted by the mockery of those who pretend to bb his chosen disciples? It is to be wondered at that thousands of men have become un-. believer - 1; and are now wandering ilong through life in all theiTivind abomina- , tion of infidelity? Is it to be 'wondered ' at that churches are almost deserted, and religion has become a thing to be scoffed and scornodat, by the unthinking multi tudes, when pulpitsare filled with Men who preach . abolitibmism instead of christianity, and war, instead of peace-- who denounce men that are laboring to restore peace and-prevent' bloodshed, as `trititonelitted for no place - but "hell or the halter" and spit out their venom in the face of every one that believesthat ' Christ taught the doctrine of forgiveness instead or revenge. • , How many members of this "holy bo dy? as our-tnteilini cotemporevy--eees_ proper to term them, bul have disgrae _.._ ed_theirdalling-dellled their pulpits, end desecrated the house of the.Letd• by l-U- I iug to please some low bred political dein agogue ;or by fiewhne wart wait • be cause, a crazy excitement hes taken hold of the . public ford,rerkdoni the shed ding f bloo d and the ibrutal butchery or human beings ~poPular , for the moment? How . -many . amon g them but have prayed that the sword way succeed, and victory perch on our banners, though that victory is won by slaying thow'ande of men in their wick edness, anti hurrying there unprepared into the presence of the *wild Judge?— How many of; them have stood up and clamored for blood I blood ! I blood 111 its place of preaching 'peace on earth and good will to man'—how many that have urged on this bitter strife, in ;doge - of praying that the 'sword might be imp-ten into plough-shares, and the speoirs iato pruning hooks." Few, very few in indeed- • _ LEcui —Having seen so much during the' past three years of all that was new and strange, and having so long been an 'ob server of the crazy actions of the New Endasd yankaes, we thought that noth ing cowing Nom that direction could suprise us. But we confess our aston ishment that the first indications ,of re volt against taxation to support this Abolition war should come from Massa-; chug:lts. Wherels the patriotic Govern or Andrews? And what has become of the boasted greatness the iggro wor sidpers of the State most to blame Par the war, which is now 'upon. us?. We remember that they resisted the war of 1812 and refium4 moh and supplies for this army ; but we' better expected them to desert the crtisade against slave , 1 7. • They hav'e had a little dre"m the town of Gloucester, Masi, and they ask the Congress of the' United States to relieve dune of \taxation., How utterly ab surd ! Yet how much in keeping with the padt history of Massachusetts. We have no doubt of the willingness of our Abol ition Congress to-Arant , the request of theirfrietniii; but how they exert° do it without violating ' the COnstithtion we cannot buaging t attit riquires that ;call duties impels& and excises shall be unifortif" throughout the United thetas:" We sippre they w3l seek flame way to evade it, and if they fail, 'their past history ',wants us in the baliefthathow*pothosiff ttte to* , it. by this time, next week our foidfo h 6 ir "Ariotorrio*irA" for Leywirtwatitoori NNW Itiotigairottheir neadlruot; be at all aidaiunded. The "Gana aidte" . l4lClifilltya beiln entre mollY "LoYaM'ootOr Wilmot tiPlAi',o Unoolo-"klioaltil". and Attotloori' it abotdd happen to be "tb, vie, it would be opprizhilPire the Detwoorley have n item , In -ea* late,jud thb Puritapla th e obi date ILO ditri044.41 1 004 1 44 4 *, lid ash; dual* tbet iiiliittpnw; yet 1111 hole* . itiPot i " but etwenbaoka,: 4404100 11 00WW:0 11, willSboied .filia - ain! , ..060 1 0* VI Wa,tl4o,:etc volirlicas We Ai bli)ll34.4l:ll4,tiliiii."l/6;* • Qeoi l- 4t.ww , ,,e-"`••• PA_ ..777 "ItiChmont How TO TAKIN, Cu.—Ever once Eke commencement of pßisentdetegted . civil. Wife, we havelesusLa;-#O4 deal about taking Bleionond: There is no doubt that Richmond is an important Sint, Mid. Ought be taken. In thie proposi,tion, "iop,Per heads"- and every body else agree, blit how to take it I. the Question we differ upon. - A brilliant eampaitilvtlg *mailed In 1861 ton (fen. MoClelhin, but prime be Informed Mr. Lincoln that he thought thicwought to be conducted decentlyand aoeorg to the:Gotistitutionitfaikd. Anothercampaign teas prepared for Gun. -Burnside and another for Oen. Hooker, and theyboth failed for the simple reason that men.wbb are scoundrels enough.losoll themselves lave neither brains nor. heart emisigh to engage honestly and thirty In war-fare. , The con- ' Sequence was that thousands of otos neigh bors,' Mends and countrymen were minec eimemily eaerilleed... Mourning. went into, every house after the terrible elangbter oe 'hasionedistltimueidtli ^' inder's 'ant Leeks basing° known.,' 'Consternation end won disturbed' every - brink and - the - rest heart 'of the Anierlcan people Inquired, 'What isihe matter 1" We, .among others, were ocaqpied with that samerttiqiiiry, mid only, yestardey,,when on our Vey to Musca tine, did a satisfactory answer occur to us. That answer was simply - this : If the people of the country can take Washington,Rich- Mond will fall. Weihingion js not ih our . possession te-day. It is oontroled by a set taken, or the rebellion put down, the people must rout the sooundrels out of their- eon,- fortable places, and put honest men in, who will administer the government for us,-for the people, for the general benefit, happi HOU and prosperity of the whole country. In conclusion,. we say, take Washington and Richmond wilt fall. • i!!MMERMR!!!! "-W arm e.t at r. noo p ung , t us nto it recklessly, and unnoecessarily, but none that is upon ue, we nro bound by honor, by precedent; by everything else to skald by hint, and help conduct it to a successful ter mination.—.Preietuird Peniorratic Eteduinv._ We have men in our midlit, olaimin to be disciples of Jefferson, who are daily uttering the same detestable sentiment. Because an old imbecile, placed bittesi dent in the presidential chair, surround ed by a lot of puritan fanatics as. advi sers, refuses to settle . tho difficulty that egistx between the people of the differ ent sections of qur country, and to no osompliah soma infamous schemer, plotted by New &gland dimtnicinists years ago, wages a war agiuliti. "Pelt of - our coun trylieu, 'iThichlweidekedneas-aud-orifolty hoegg r o.perrUai in history ;-this cowardly Mint' indivtduals, born but to disgaoe o their c o untry, Jo be Popular for the rue . . ittroPort to that wideb itiey know to ,ho, wrong, - and which they admit was twice cessargy forced upon us. If thin war pitta all itr train of evils—its thousands of murdered Amorlcans—destitute helpleSs widows—`fatherless little cone, and its terrible. waste of homes and propertywas as they ssy, and we believe, inknecessargy commenced; should not those who refus ed to-stay its red hand, bo held to a strict account for all the misery it has entailed upon us. Why then sbd'uld they be supported, or countanaced? Had we not better punish them for their treachery, and hold those who have aid ed them in it eciutll3 responsible. As long Its the people are willing to give of their moans to carry on a war, which, even those who are conducting it, admit to be unconstitutional, they need expect nothing else than what they are now get ting—their friends murdticid, and their property eaten up by taxes. --If any of our readers on visiting Bellefonte should notice a peculiar smirk or smile or the faces of some of out' ex trernely "loyal" citizens, they can ac count for it by' rerabetfng that twenty in four persona have boon fed, who for a ew "greenbacks" , have A PPed between these brave ( ? ) tsupporte .t of Abraham and conniption. ''Their cWardly car casses can rest easy for a short, time, for loyalty . is saved once there, and these big mouthed ranters about "peace mee and "traitors," can howl .on about. the "holiness" of their cause, and the patriotism . that prompts them to give mob a hearty dupport to" the "govern . t without any fear of being called upon - for a few months der to give so-. tut aid to those condating the crusade. Poor, contemptible ltowards * better fitted by nature for lackeY's of "loyalists" than associates and equals of white men. Tho Albany "Staainotne: (HAW)lken) Nays : 'Unless 13oonotary Miami asahwe it a point to . se lect all his assistants from the pennenreri, wo cannot possibly account for the rest nipples of anwitigatiel meats which we *4l* *areas- , et, an&Berse•eiliartioellaw. OUWWIII iIY4/7 day MAW pet of the rotary is arrest ed , either for grand kro.. or fraud. .We protest agaMst ean4nivernerßedrth grace on the .penihnsileit The appol* manta °Carom end Linoo pie ill drawn from the Alnilikinn part , Immo In certain special eneet when, a enumist, Ike, Ben. Butler. Dick /4440,. ohn Clophranepoi-T. C. hore, its = peinßai olizet t re Ihneeitor if ' . ; Jul Po rty of.publie PlMnier. =limn two in Vigo r o nVtre ;o P ut c htr i c t .f tr:% 4l 7= perry, of which the present Abollhlon fee eionla Wm4sloolw4:4l . ..Assoadailly Waved 1 thskpcmemmeepti mem 1 4:01411 be wWiihkedi 'IT • 1.9 alP,Dagbaniete of the, people and making nwp.lifers dirootap Mr , i;4 "•40!heinfoloi , ~- ,Y 4 44 *IL* '0334: •ir 'pr r '. a i w . i~~.~ eanatitat 5cr,4091 tet r Ohio, if not of Amy Verb irere lie iffistitoppositiok - to - 31tersoltire spirit's nd tour ;dour llopubli* systsita. "he dec eive frburckiie bp a rfgAl I h4 Cationly, be sear ched by airs., mversten Whew. , - • To vote is the highest attribthe of sover eignty. The ballot of a °Bison is greater' than,thelieepire of a Icing. The people of the State of Now York, therefore, gu arded sta 'this right with just scrupulous salons , They refuse to [flow us& individeal to vote Whale not twenty-one years Of Why M this? 'Because it is not believed, as a gene* rule, that thermoset and intellee-, taal nature is sufloiently developedliefore that time to act with freedom and inespect of oestrol from ?theirs. The velar =net be it freeman. Before he is twenly-one he is sub he is subject to the control or emarnand of hii parents, and hence leeks that liberty. which fe the vdtatelennent tbateenalltidits a ,sovereign eitisen. Released froci all, restraint he stands forth as a toyer eign--atilberty td read all • , sides, inttlet4v gate all sides, and to judge and decide for ' so impOrtan * t it; it to guard this sac, red right from abffiKiffi Constit Won of our Stile went still further, and declared that no man should be allowiid to offer a vote Who bad not resided in ties State one yaw, and in the country where he offered his vote four montlia. •i:Why • these _provisions? It will bo noticed that according to those elan -Vs-the right to - yote,:evenamoug free a soiereign citizens, IN /impended under cer-, fain contingencies. It is evident Ouit the reasons for thissa - honstitutional restrictions may be found in the foot that a certain ac quaintance with tite public affairs of State as well as with the character of the candi datel offered, are indisimasible to the intel ligent egoeroists of the aloaiive franolise.— Narrealt-stay-pininasittoontsideof theyoun. eLeleilition•distriet. where tie I. .s.— Now, all those conatitutiqvutl a . oaks and laws were enacted in a period of neither and peace, by both parties, when neither of them had any object in, divesting the elec tive trowel/doe of its judicious guards and restrictions, Now, however, in the nOdet : of a gigatt_tio war, when party passion rook the higheld, there comes before the'people a proposition to cliangertire - Conatituthon in order to Snow Soldiers hundreds and. thounande - of miles away from the State, to "„cote, and that, too when it is,icigtinn that the Soldiers cannot, if they would, comply 'With 4 single one of the usual safeguards throw& around the ballot box. first, however; gads moo& to know that these men have lost their sosersigaly, for the thno being, asrsohNers in the army. If these Were citizen soldiers going forth for a fitritionths to dorend their Siete from in- Tilden, the IWO woad be somewhat altered _; but they are regulars enlisted soldiers, un dWatindmindefinthitle Of their own State, and subject to his order. in all respecter. Military and civil government are utterly incomparable, and cannot exist together. The soldiers in the army will do as their axes out a, a buin'dretL. To talk of exorcis ing the *dive ftanohipo--eats eorerniyngiti acn meting a. free ballot, . la to talk non— donee. 'Besides, Lie the State of New York any powqr to nuke a inett,A voter au/aida of her juridifiction!Obere are some things that it is nokeomitetent even for sovereignty to do. A king can exercise ao power outside of his kingdom. lie can confer no rights out of the realm. All that he can do in limited to the extent of his diWitinkout. The people of the State of Now York are exactly in the 0411310 position. if they authorise polls to be opened in a camp, the polls., are there by sufferance, not by virtue, bf any right that New York cranltereise, and_ ifrhy sufferance or permission, then the electionds not con do ot ed by !wander 4he power and authority of the State or. New. Yorks, and is therefore void. The kept.) of klie State of New fork mar vote to hold an election ip Virginia or I.oolwiana, or whererer the army may be, but they will do so under a 'mistaken view of their powers.• l'hey liavern9Volwer *tif ads of the territory of tlidr State. Sover eignty cannot perform impessibilities. God Himself the so r tfreign of all, cannot do any thing incompat le with his own lovereigaty. There can be doubt in any rational mind that. such is the true view of the ease, and we Owens that his Boner, Judge Whitely, of Ohio, in deciding tAtt, soldiers' voting low of that Slate unoonetHutlonal, holds to the saws views. Re says t "Tim right*, ozatgfaolhe• elective franchise is not migratory. The elector does not carry it about him, bq must vote at his place of resi dence or not at all. I ado swore • man doe; not loge his reisidence by temporary absence; but it does not follow that be carries Lb resi dent* or ids civil rights, buteperoble from it, with him wherever be 'may go. Ms - rights, made incident to his veoidence, remain with it when he leaves, to be exercised only on his Ira tarn." . • There is good sense and sound law in these remarks, but in the present state of affairs they wiU probably scatoely be noticed. p thatGor. Seymour knadotta, enteaa wee oetro no greater injiu7 to Iktpubliocin ineti tatlons then Pie eoldier:retink aniendment t o ou r constitution, which is, to come up at • spend election on the-also; March. The merit/ and' deZierite , or' measure---We dangers it invelyte to 014.? State and our con try, cannot and wiii u t knoalmly comddered or decided. No arran e rnenta artunade for the properdistributiOn izt tickets,' end the eleation probablylwill golsyV4tfel*,wltile,if were properly uuderatoo eye.rY Pamoorat and' Amman& beßepnlilleine YOuld Tete against this deliberate pohemis to Win over the rights and li,bertletrof the 'people Of the finite of New York to the "military neet 2 e B " Ines" of either the present or say &tun: Wiehington administratital.....Day Book. turi WHAT IT con...—quvxmow wimp in A Mint W 4 WAHHA/ti MerlisiLliVil ihq. the •war will hero soak at ilq na tion " lama four Mows* *Agra of lis4krgi and that three-10114 of this amonat ; irtil ramata aa n national debt.,t-}Here JA.,a , ..ixim. Aimee! fabulous and 'equivalent to th ud dot koodoo vv.4 1 7 fillcin the 11. . St flea Ai , the oentalltutottnelOt the was.. 4is this • the inuaiyed, ' Mandela' elan-4116 heels Of bsayusad Orem ItiOstunittes ehattureti bp dilleass-AbstWhaq 44 1 41 4 04 of 4ol►gtr'J par44l 4 :' ' tit p ' sm i li' not ' 40#114:114, -and you bail' Ili apvezi,Siste eat** Of w/uit itivM eart tide *Mien to: Ideal* " ' larpivisait *Rot etsi n lnt ier tpr9naUt Illii,"*V. 2 : ll ..fri# l ' ' -- ..riqmo• • - osn Neser . inmy it been my lot. to Witness more real-ANNA, manifested, too, impig olassed - of pronn, mirk Wait of hibitediturinCts 'Sax tihisitandiult up- . on - dielt)dial of thiinoble man, ;celiac:led &s hove drawn uttio Lim the hearts of ivory man, woman and child in thsroommonity. No fiord endurbig modument• tclie firtnee Could be mooted than the fact that he had thus won the a(bottosa of a virtuous and intelligent people, 'who now bewaillim with a grief that willhot nutei them soot) to for let hli courage, his goodness, or his noble, mute soul. • - Van sie aware that hisiterLattaitisat was killed by unbushed gueritlu, on Sunday,. the 14th instant, near Briintsville,.la Vir ginia, four or Ave balls paining thrbegh his body and ene through his ' bead. He wee insteitlY &filth s His body wits at it left is posseesion of the enemy, but was after• vrard:recovered and brought to the ump of Itia,atilliagithent i the - Fifth Rieeries. All published aceounts, and even private letters; . egreo in the state'mant that When his body wen brought into catnp, pale andlifelaes, tbJ men of that • regiment wept like children. One writer states that their grief exceeded anything he ever saw, save, pet.lkaps,'• Chet expiessed for Colonel Stsetone, the former wommaiwileg- atheer-of- elle -regiment,- who woo also greatly beloted. Hafer haannisa Was, utidoubtedly,Ajrnatlavorite with the men, owing to his uniform kindneuand con• Warmth deportMent as an officer and a gen atleMan. On ite arrival in camp, the body was 111111 i to the gmbabnete, propaiatoxy toltabel4 forwarded to hia home in Clearfield . Lt where, it is said, he had sometime previous ly expnesed a wish to be buried, should the chances of. war over lay him .14 . 4 upoii the field of blithe. 'The corpse arrived in Clear field tons .dn Saturdly, the 204 h Instant, where it was tikimin 'Matte by the , Clear field Bar, of whicb body he had been an able and active member, and escorted to the residence of hichmother e mr..cllAßLzß LAlL anal; whe 4 ivis absent in the service. Your correspondent arrived in Clearfield on Sunday morning about Ave o'clock, hav ing traveled all the preceding night, in or der to be present at the funeral, which was advertised to take place on (hit day at two o'clock -On 'arriving, however, we found that the hour of burial had been postponed until two o'clock ondifoiday,_ About nine o'clock, we proceeded to the house where the body lay to look once more upon those noble features, now so cold and immovable in the still enlireeeefdeath. - Poor HARVEY ! thet;* be bly, his once hand acme fare pale as a block of marble. With the exception of being slightly swollen, his appearance Into quite vaititid, and I turned my head away to hide thii loin that Would ,come.to pay tribute to the memory of my friend. And this; thought I, is the herds death— the end of the noble, the gifted, the brave. 0, War! Warl wliat great souls, what warm hearts have been sacrificed upon thy unholy altar I At eon o'clook, the pall-bearers appointed by the Committee of Arrangements, Gamete remove the body to the Court ROIIOC, where it lay in elate the r renfainder of the day to ;gratify the hundreds who desired ' to pay their last regards to the beloved remains. A continual innate of visitors thronged the Court liouse..until evening, whim the -body was again removed to the residence of Mr. L., where it remainedmntil the hoer appoint ed for the funeral on - Monday. On that day atetwo o'clock, the rennin' were again ta ken to the Court HOLUM, where the funeral sermon was preached by a Reverend pane -1 man from ..Itollidnyebnrs, whose name I have forgotten. Rho sermon was from the tete? "Prepare to meet thy God," 110 was solemn and' laitprtleslse t inaiaod more se a warning to ,the living than as an eulogy upon the dead. Never before have I seen such demonstra tions of respect paid to any man. When I tell you that . the Cluartield:Conrt. House is seated for thirteen hundretpwreona, and that, during the delivery of the airmen, it was crowded to its , utmost oapaelt7, while hun dreds were conapelliOrEcieftrain ottreille, you will have somUldes of the love and * teem in which Ide,jlhr lAllllalla was ILO hy the people among,Whout be bad Apse& the greater portion of his manhood. His death wab the all-absorbing topic—nothing 'dee was te4ed of, and all bliejleaU Was 1111111*4- ed to do him honor, lus astounded to see the hdid lie had oa thirpeople's affection*, tad it tint:hod me to seethe's. tokens of love and regard. Where be had been • stronger he was new en idol. But be was such a no ble- wan It was no wonder they OfteMed him, sad it tan 'Weid , of no ono. Owe Irorthily thAul 4 f .. . 11 / 1 1 7' , • a ' — lame• to nudes intfs ion WM; ' Wool earned hint Ws*. saw After , the sermon, the protrusion was Anued, and the,eolewuir COlritiplafted slowly t cn iid !k r tonxiiptati to the sad Strang, 0t 'the „ Dana MAIO Owed . , with mourahil lout , bptheltratte Band. At .insetse4 ere hi the preeeinion;rthd sli moved with a sierionurnin *e .deep feeling or tiudr,,latruit iirou Mei ware that Mindy' retLgb i ; r' Mrived it: the Ititsii;244 tl!eisairriir hodeiappol. twii*Af t lathis 'Of the lie* ii 411 .0 1 04 . 0 6 4' senp4: *WisnisiwistA 11 * f"- 4444 m ati, ore@ 4rnottors-'lo' 4164 11 4 V04 611 . 11 , 11 ",* *AO .00 W ookt r ilook timmitimi,4ol4llipitlyigtorg, A uu m 4 4 4 rgin. 4l6l '...„r"Ot ;...•thecloo• latmotztufri Fib. 24, \WOOL lw loOlided„_te ao was en. tolo thir---moempitnipi !kei!_ ogpi- EMMI in the cabinet end • bad' ip the dead, we, appear to be : fillt — ilEfthqg pewietk the verge of that preeiploe ws owns precipitate es e patioit,we Act lost forever. Let us hope. let us pray thiq o eeuntrymayyet be steppe& 'le (4* career by some strcng, inn stretched fotth wogiagdsgmbefterillyylts Wend from-the burning." • . The demonstnttions of respect to . Major LARentikby the oithens of Clearfield, were , very gratifying to his relatives is this coun ty. The immense outpurlng;:ef the rople was is, unexpected as it.,was gretes,,k then, and they were s muolt• WOW. by the tithers.] tendynews which vie every Where manifested for the memory of the departed ; ere. To the Committee of driApinteel4 the members of the Befr, and to ell Adhere, who assisted lathe kind add 014,00 11111 W !ligament of the retteptiori 'ol: the 'lsV'4,tilk the subsequent fartetvitobseitilete; they the deepest gratitude sittl would return their . sincere thanks. r- Major . l.Aaaneem wee * * pdet, Of eke IfielO and r wooild the Dimes, lininoutii in his, hours of leisure. I have read s main her of his productions, ind find them 'Title But he was always too Medittt to publish anything he wreiti,' Wien, urged, to do so, would reply that th'e.l were not worth publishing. The lines he' wrote for the — Albiiii -lorilady of tiderplioe; led" rdifelk ware published in The TrattAnsaft, without his knowledge, 'bout a year ago, were ditionly produotiott of his that I bare over seen in print, and they were very' beau tiful. I have now in my_possession a little poem of his, written nearly ten ,yeare.ago, which be never Intended should meet' the purpose of thowlng that,,slibough he v oophl fight like a warrior end,die like *.hero, he could- ally; be tender sod pale acs'irotaan. It is addressed 'to a lady and 1a entithkl Another year has glided 14; -' lrecteningrnadbood'ai are decline; Annti - ite - earee. again .1 try To grect thee with a valentintt" Fokwhen In times a twelye4nonth gone, ly heart., whoop warmest throb Is thine, Poural out Its love for thee alone, Oonrossiwg'theo Its ralontlnej I hoped—and fondly trusted..torw— -- - That en) another fear was nano . , Two beano so faithful, fund, and hue datooss, would ba owe. nicotine. - else t howitairk aro human hopes Th•yksrbaio iapitarti No toad tp bliss tha future opei • For thy unhappy raleattae. ' And I, with grief, aitunit each hoar The Sued mai tui,aoitaataltioai Yet we may cull defy thairpewar o-ehahge eat limy*, my. ridanthm LllefbrtinuisiballLut pm* buy lever I While thin' I fully trust in thine, I *wear by alil the Power* above, Then err shalt be my valentine, & iraimetu,s'a Euro 1865. There are a number of other poems Of Major t slant, which, if they could. bo °elected, wbuld,snake a very pleasant little voltam. I intend to make an effort to col lect them, arid, if srtooessful, may favor you with some - more selections. His life was far from being ail sunshine—he had. met with many trials and disappointments, and struggled into ',position only f i breugh- the force of his own brave genius, As a con sequence, hie poems are tinged with a shade of sadness, which, however, rather adds to, than detracts from, thoirbeanty. l/lejor Las titer was a ptrfeet gentleman, it ohivalric soldier, an able Lawyer and a de voted friend. His death is a publio calam ity. Doti have made this letter much longer than I bad intended t and, begging pardon for trespassing uponeo much of "mit space, I remain, . I DIALISTAt WOXIM.--It ii +My Ilren known that the interesting to dssidng lady of the White louse bas save* relations in' the. robot service; aid it Staraharged, in 'th'ej early Stages of the rebellion, that Itha - itit4 to give them iteportant intorniatieri, #hitilt ' ittit to mirieue" Alsmsterilti Innt'eartie: ',We' win* among this' admiral er, Mrs. Linoble Vritti never; fora moment, &aided her Ity'y'- 10 4.4''; but we confess to haitsg on *Oa. upon ute . -13 1 b.lf-)0 1 4. 0 tr:, _lllitttrOttel •or Fernando Wood, a most invette' ettp *heal; and withal "an mlht - A - mannered man al} OM' SOW ti 4 ship .or mat * tAttost;": ell, this "sympathiser I Witlt 'treason". gars a party .the ottutertotr id liaWaOing, • tun, which the lacy of the - t itiliu 44 4 1 and was oats of the mart ' gay - and ' felitaild persoas.(asittendenos. , 141 9*. thio,,hpt 1 her Essiellaney isetuallY 'sent tii Mrs,: ly pod,' bota, the , White Houser Conservatory, ills( cliirr 'lowan peed. toitoie jorims . 7 that Literati °erosion. !At, o,i P ' iitiajcpver. Apac e dty think • th 1 ti,4 5. i not alto* to au Atlolltdoaid:ft Atoll; to, I of , : linooln not palisupop • elatlag ,ar aotpatitioet , a .eith, treaeoo l latt; 4 ,s wing Ott r aatleital poietiiit their:feet.-- terfinVitinia7toßiXiLlsitldstles „ IWO tht OZ. llMllitikitot 4- . 0 nin4 it qttotaittauf, qui laireettiL gate baelateto. _OOO the _neat Abold -1404,► Cislik#lt9Pti• inalaira llll o itA "ittale y a' opautdttaitolhoronsk 1 4' fekata itce :w Otleatal:4reasop •• rfa1.: 4 4111„,, T. Irk i l i aY &Bey xtv-m., ! ge t . (2 .. ... (lc 11 Very truly, your Mend; JOE W. FURtY, hieit the wi Hie al DM •A P t-lian--- 90 1, •h ' ter. ' lie ''44 l A i iii " mod - tinitld' - Itt' h *rif t Putt he - a the' man neededlitatmettpht. ' Limb SW - - 44 Anon nide to , 111,0110#K hi m All • would aim to_ ist I '•ititnittniat maelwrit. I r At . iliaraliiia . 111 . , • 1 hair Mit the least. in •, !ansu-;U• • Is.' from every itiotal tkrt,„it'total ma•ra ',good- • nattired moneteWtotally detoid Olden. up- hila amP l 7. l 9'4 l 4nntiealtdounning, a qng, ~ it Y which b lia,Pai l ire r lit k :W el k 1 04 5 , C - Ir 4 • nese. ' Here, in ... r . „, .... friends. All ' ejliii oolitOtpt. '' -*' . 1 * ,* •• Hie Nnoir' If - .40*w itilliSr kid , A elk my rqatiblinittTwo savetwirts '- held bontiontatiiirit WWI tleePtbe fee* , I titieti afthienti• • laiklikteued : AV. 00, ellimel!it allOnlikUlgedeerAlth: gut 944 1 . .L'eam P s rigfrattfAref.ffethr .... 41,4 a I,..stam repro/kali eition every . • rain Bartlfte Do frbteepialikil . . ItOtt ' e , t '• " wAk tvit . hull , !q , , olligtooslll Rife if ? ',., - it thetttr. .. Allt4 ', - " ',Ns t.' l ' eistlein- ipi c ki n , ,i , c:, ' , 1 AS. . Lincoln litty, - ..1' e 'best Wei-1i feta 416 4 policy„st all." Ipepllad . , .114atellatigg. into oaesse,•-lhat.niduts Id rebpg ler SOP bb' IlibtliPle at an; Chore littlirieWaimittlisl- 11, 'bk."- Mils is etptrAtpreaodillyoer Ark..i 'inn Troterbs .'tie gel, "Ling by Me nntipiff . ditty. ;" "'And his very . simple ; for those rho are emir*, imaktiair athho. end,ahasa, , , • who ire adaptors IstapPilal444o : .•• , '''''' , I ----,--Tketlatin4 , 4440emit-rpe- - -Detmit, Mirliigan, hare pisiteilieinnistletr — Vin Winch they' deelarelltot they will not .. onto for Mr. Lincoln; if he should realm, s tn the titift illation of the Ileptibltoeit limit. ='hey' try that Fremont °vitiator is eget. Ilest mheins‘ but that they irtU naive on alma erldertiM, if the nomination of either; of them &cold appear necessary. • Thermihmlieutlin Mate' t..iimiuera-orthat- Kew itriry 'break ore - • - - Woos, mil:1041E so not norninagon. of Mr. Lincoln In bW.Erletlnyi. ~. A , U ~ M 00 rii XITICD I 10174101:- „OS; . strewn% next fail, witisit_M v to 'She least; if f. bide - becomes a hopeless hepoisidb ty i 4 ibow• vent of division, Mittel{ is entirely legit imate that every man In the party tbetilki have and expresrhis ellidee-of • candidate for the Presidency), it 'is also the pets.* patriotisnrand duty' to be prepared Attimosrit nee' prejudice[ or predileetions. and go heartily for, tins ma whcinfr the majority may designate.—,Deyron Espire. . —A cotemporary ts of the opjnkm tit 'this lteiitiblicen eaters ought to be es, groan." Are they not nigger enough alreilde EFUIirNiVi 6 TVi - - - - EXECUTOIIN . NOTitt. ' • Notice Ls hereby ,gican,, that 1 1 7 4 testamentary on the Estate of lashislbms • late of Notrire tirp, G a nstre emity flebtL,; (peat ail Wain MOrUZI,- Pgrigo aganat the estate se kapaant the ',art it*ArelittiLL ketch lit, 113841-4 m- %V. Noon" , ~ ; , .• , x wow% READY tit A. vr,tv ItiAtS !rug mosr riAirLyn!itaitiosx 11.4.IDSAIrD'ROMANCS • , „ 91? MORGAS , Amu me, salr BY MRS. sA,Wir . acYcilEmpritp.'; Awthor of ' Onittlrin3ri 111 / 1 7 'Romiuiee ortreo Btaso l ni7; EXACT REPRINT OF MOBILE BOVITONi ' 12m0., Cloth; 425 - pages ; use. • WITII OPLA4 DLO Army? 049:,10, 1 - f t f?! 4 l i ii The hero of the ego=ili ie will kleketeif as one of the boldest and most ettereedel Generale .lo the tiontir Thli operations of Illovioen ;pi • Lie mem" for eelons time kept the; Soniketeet ' A constant ante of imalhernenk erhieh'endemil les . • pie lota InersakM of Ohiie, *here kelewne'..enkiter al. s Thte reltline gives • thillth4, t pietere" of Ida firinit m 1 4 4 412 1, Wt. RP Wte 4cooasit of; „ hie escape,. The wP 1: 44 N 4 " , o r it most accoonolished to re the outh, Ito the official report,. iirtiur thitierol mil ittr'rhe trade tire uteithil roMiteriteekit. ' 0-RICIEIAItDSON • P*6118107,, ilroimbniy,"N. T. - BP-Ooptes sent by {adb•lbet'paW ups s». eolpt of pate".• • . ' • • Feb. 211:- 1864.—M0i, , • r•-e -" ' Dealers awl}, yqpsawstil ar tL• , rt. r fed IVash ,D(#4, l Sak, the . Labrie are altdroil to tokild , ' •vT up NT' • IC .1)- . ' • • - ASiptortonx. 1 . ... ~, ,;,,,,,,, r id• r ititif N6;tiesieogaStieft**ll4birn r . - titkratity of tiro Moo Oita* 0.10.,00s• E. . . 1 . , It to orsonias 4 4. to •Fin• m .• ood Oster iioo ilVilolkOsioutimoitity.torlibottio, sa4. rt we. : duelo ,f 0124: Ago; ' pab.)lls. la 4 * ,: a; ''. . :1e,..` ! .,. ,..0 . ." AL • 7° ". ' 7 j S !p o inia,v; • ',wi g It. .. , • ~. ~i,, MUM*. . ' . id., , . umlaut aorminosir - • vim ' " 'llik,tik No Imes se 1` . . t k *taw gaisevaiuP•Abow . . . , ituf"—lii .0 A. 'i. ' ' • liallow • .. ~ . . 4. Otit p, . • .... . '-" • - , . .44 . 1 i5. , . : , i ,:‘,..... : .. 1:1 -,- . ..'. ... ' :•, . - : : - .JP.' 011pophomglem ito( . . , fir ogi. ~. to bum 4: 1 .. ' 1 , -' • ' 114 4 \ On. ' volrftbs ,-- VateArtit i i-velP- MIME ILI 0:. WE I
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