' rig en for the, Democratic Watchmen, !TVIEkrY. YEARS' AGO. M W 7 PAIN C. HENRY • I wodered.thrimgh Virginia, Tom, And no benentirs kree, Ana all the scene.; of• Tenner prirs Vega emodikinj beak Lenlo; The graieVitere thOkly etrewn ground, Nrar old ref. - mute's dew. Ttie Wee of those doer tVietnle we loved SOW twenty yearn Aril A sitapta better Is all, ffiond Toro, -Thaktnertre theirpinro or rest, Whilitalnes of Myrtle kir,dly (leek The elate upon ea-h breast; Sumo iTteading treat are standing near, 4With branches drooping low, Ta *hada the' graves of elope we loved , .Boale twenty years ago. 119,w Irul t slzht to l' , V; friend T.,:n, Tioednaeunditirith grapro'ergrown, And )(now they're heap'd ou youthfuLhearte That Onee,tbmbhed with our awn. thcraght of Alt the happy' days) • the -Jell' we nae!.l td IlnVw r And wished that we Wore now as gay As twenty years ago.'. • But sh. aims! in vain, ftiond. Torn, Aro all•thnme rrinties now, fihe•lasting trace of morrow's leen .. Ou mopy a youthful brow; Anotaineo rye magma this cruel womb', It grieves me core to know 7b4 I eut•vivo the friend,'" loved - 'Seine twenty years egos' . , A fsw short years and we, friend Tom, , , .1 .14%01 leave title irorld of can, A • - nd on our graves who there, Tom, To attention's tear? but when our thee has come, deter tom,. And loath has laid "chose they'll lay ow near some friend - Of twenty years ago. E . LL.CrONTE, Pi. MISGENE HEIRESS. A Sad and Solemn Story BY A. 111 N 6R, A 171.11011 cn A. ' , TEA f 'mon rown, esq., rest. e. on • s ree , Bu: too, to the tame. tiveec With tb. . hie family, except his &patted dead wife, itebeeky, an only femail 'daughter. 'fili4n Brown is also'a deacon in a fashion able war-church, which situation he obtained on account of having done Mud; service for his country in this war as an army contrac tor. ire was a democrat when the war first broke a out j but number of Boston patriots surrounded Lim o . Sunday evening in his own room, and ofform 'ln.a job of making keveral millions of coats •d trowsers fdr Soldiers, at an immense profl, only "come over." So Simon, a', profi : tr,—" -- kim over," like several bt II thousand more of his kind. Therefore, Sr" Mon, like hem, is one of the "patriots" of the country, and dontlequently believes the noble nigger to be a pure white man, and Only black on account of his oolur. Simon was also " born of poor but re , ectable parents," and whether his father as 'a "weaver" or not, we don't know, but he must have beet; something, or else Simon irouttfli't have been boner However, whether P.imen Lad a father or not, he was consid ered the most patriotic patriot in all llosfon: Ile Was Ikewise charitable, like others of his kind, as any one could see, for he gave every poor woman ho could get to work at the price, 15 cents u-piece for each army garment, which only cleared for himself the "email sum" of $5 on enol‘ a/Adler-coal. lihnon woe also a miseegeuer ; that is he thbugbt "yeller" the most heoutifid color for white children hereafter. Ito often said that 1.10 Irish and Dutch should not asso- Clete with the negfo. Ile therefore was in ibe habit of keeping the blessed contra bands in his house for a week at a time; Ind sometimes he would treat noble Afci; Oxus with memo private whisky, which he Lis offitnnld—tor only, al he belonged to a temperance sociely, And °Loved brown paper when be went out lo keep down the smtill of liqudrg CIIAPTER ii Deacon Drown had only one children, and ehe was an only daughter-16 years old, 12 lands high. Whd Slick hair. Her form`trns Mouldy in the strictest sense 'of the word, and she hada pita* faultless as that of the Greek Slay. Her name It was Rebecky. She was called error ma Rebacky in the Bi idle, which accounts for her being of that bathe. • CITATTER 111 Rebeeky,,llke ber parent father, had got to be a great U ympatby nion titan also likewise; and r q .:. the down:trod Ahicati 11 4 a such tbat shia could pick out,. in the dark, an animal 6f that class from an se. demJiage of Germans and Irish, just by 160 peculiar shrab-like odor, which she bad learned to scent with.a precision equal to a Borg. And several were the noble contra, bands that she would in this . way Wag to er father's, house. • tuArrien iv Old Mrs. Brown stood fast to her ant iont betaotratio faith, and heno6 she woul4ook "nary a drop for no /doh black, dirty, stin kin' niggirs," as, she often expressed her self.; therefore old Brown and the lovely Rebeeky had to-do all the cookitifor the no. greet. • , • (Nora.—Old Mrs. drown was a " sound ege ter.") cif ApTicin. v. I or Old Brown had' already tnado piles of greenbacks, end Often *Obi he take these fllOlll the drawer and proudly shake then' under the beautiful nostrils of his darling Rebeeky,„ Bayliss : These are for thou, my killing, es thy wedding portion, one of those bright days." " All mine ?" gasped Rebooky. All tkuSe," spoke- the father, na ltsr Ally pdt the pile Nick laic, ite hiding-place. 01fAin t # ' "fife) , iaornin' lir in the out," and so old'Etrown.;:tue:neitber them got up to Bee ii4la9ity get out of her downy "tied or gt wee-Iceltbere, dtese r peck up, elide, eigitYrAike• ao* gaw, erandledlly pbt the bundle of greenbacks het cupet•lfitg, eitld eillortfly ogit,'" with all itlau4t a ectt4x l 4.44 , 444:An4eeg ened , twee ;morning train— • . iffgftr had stayed a iNdesttnid,,lfrgwn's as his guCkt, 1101111011111011 aiehr Weal -eiad sotnetintes talkin' to the o,,lielkii ( lli x f„ri q o „likewise talked' to the 1111P0144103-,•:Thca9d woman caught her in tint wood ltlilrN Ifterel Muriel and flogged 011bialiiii, - ;*! , ,saktVl:tebeeky • ea:l s , , • OE ir rwtori rad I Vol. 10. the nigger loved, and they both loved. So thezniiscegencit elope unbeknownst to bet parent and tuoll,er while they loth were snoring liocir regular night's snore. Old Drown Was also opposed to Rebecky marryin' a nigger, alliiouglt lib-tl7ought a plenty of them apparently.) Old Mrs. Brown Tie that morning before oltl.Brown— Slho rio, "its it were," by in stinct. fitie smell, something in her sleep, She awoke. She called for Rebecky, but no Rebecky,'s *oleo could be seen. She eon 'to the chamber of her &welter, but nary Rebeckg mos there. She had flown the fly of love. CTIATTER V}IT. , The S o'clock train for Canada came along. old Brown was the first mit on board. The fooo' tooted its ttiteand *as pff. Old Ittoittn,sot a intuit. He could not sot it any longer; so he rig and 'went forth to the eonduotor. See he: ,• Mr. Conductor, couldn't you let her slidwn leetle faster? in •pursult of an unforfnionte daughter who has eloped." Conductor—" She's Slidia' now as fast as FTTTAI LUM car, for ha was restless and. roilly C1LA.714 IX. The train which brought Deacon Brown had arriled at the bridge of Niagary. Ile setts there likewise. But where was Re.- becky ? She had crossed the bridge and was gone—alas, gone forevernior'e. , (NOTE —The reader should Hero stop and feel bad.) • r 1:1:I Lo would Qg the T(1 About a short year after that eventful morning, (which was but a few weeks ago,) as Deacon Brown was emerging frotn his int hall door, he haw a basket selling in Ir. It had something in it, and as he he seen something squeal. Ito Lie basket to his Wife, who LL sighing for her .lost o railed the kiver, hurried tit hadn't goL daughter Rebeeky, and Exclaimed Lord bless me, if it ain' a nigger one, too, at that!" "Some scoundrel of a nigger has . playing me a nice /rick, indeed," said o Brown, at the highest pitch of mad. , " And here is a note, Rs I live, addressed to you," said the old woniart,•audfslie tore it open and hastily perused Its contents, for she had an instinct what was up, to wit: " hear ranter: Aceinnpanying this note you will find your only grandchild. Aucor ding to your teaching, I eloped with and manned an African, You know the one. lie lived with me but a fortnight, taking with him t4e money gott said was - mine on my wettring-dny. My shame prevented me from returning home lam now living with a while gentleman, but he Would nut ow my child; so I thought I would Bend it to you, as you will want ii — lientes ror you property. hare named it Misgenc Heiress. I will never retain. !loping that mother I am your lost doughty!, - Upon looking at his grandchild, old Brown spasmed. The old woman, wlib Led grit, said it served him right; ho bad no butti ness to bring niggers about the house where there was a young and innocent girl ; gore ad Le had enough of nigger now ; and thnu, lug of the fate of t%re lost darrefftilk the swooned n swoon a/kie, leaving tho 'i,ofaut Illisgene Heiress to aguesl out its squeal. The author, being near at hand, rushed' in and applied his patent "Life-Saver" to the throat of the unfortuqate old man, which restored him to life in a very few _minutes t_tint as Soon as he'd see the baby he'd re-spasm, and cry out " nigger! nig ger ! nigger !!" It was a slight case of "nigger Mt the braiu." The old woman swooned for keeps, leav ittg the old man to nurse Lis own yeller grand-baby; which concludes this sad and dolemn story. [Signed)_ TILE, "I7t.tira IV /ITC ." —The "death watch" (Anobiumstriatum) is a very common —hunks, of our house. Among those who arc unamniainted with the habits of insects, thorn it a common superstition that the strange ticking( ' sound often heard in old houses is a sign of approaching death. The noise, however is caused by a small beetle which during Ito boring Iperations, reit, its, neck and thorax (chest)' together by, which mean this (to soolg'persons) terrible omen is nroduced—a fact which, if mere puerility known, woul,d gave II world of us}- less anxiety and uticasiness. In the Jarvis State these insects do great injury to our furniture and tho area work of old houses which they gnaw contigually; When captor_ od this beetle feigns death, and with th o strangest pertinacity, preferring, it is said, certain .death under a slow fire rather to betray' tha least. sign of vitality. The 'death watch' on account of its' retired habits minutesize Mira dark oolor is very seldom seen,anti,as there axe often, several individu als Working mime time at their °nitrations the ipllla , Beetf/S to proceed sim ultaneously from optedite directions thus adding to the superstitious terror whore with by some person it II regarded. The greatest evil however to be dreaded from it is the injury it. donsthrotiih its o Yetlone in the,wood work of our hduses. tis not ;larger Mau a goateed deo. the nuur , whotrilled . the sin and afteriravls planted his et upon Wyse, tires soil, eSiiimlivettetho crops? —J.- • 'l4.(tyi%•lntsium. I must know whatyot want, sir." If your statement is' satisfac tory you aro allowed to .past up stairs. limo you are met by another bland but portly gentlennin, once a judge of one of our courtr—dow tho confidential businass agent and companion of Mr. Stewart, to whom he devotes all Ma time. lie subjects you to a series of cross questions as rigorous as though you were on a stand at ootirt. Ile keeps you ftoni Seewart if ho can. if he can't, when your (urn comes he ushers y . ou, into a little box, 10 by 20, where ails the autocrat of the New York merchants. no receives you with a blank countenance and a cold eye. llip voice is suppressed, his face inanimate, his air impatient. You hurry through your brittess, and need a strong temptation...id run the gauntlet. again. 1:11:3 Krllur.L Rufus Choate, in an important marine as sault-id-battery-at-sea case, had Dick Bar ton, cilia mato of the clipper ship Challenge on the stand, and badgered him so fee (then( an !tour that at last Dick gut WS salt water and hauled by The wind to bring the Litton lawyer - under his batteries. ;inning of his testimony Dick Lis night was "dark as 'the ,e seven iked,him— ed!" baby ! and CANAIIA EAT, &.(1 ItEttEccA." " What in blazes have you been grinding me Ibis hour fur—to make me ?" "Ile oivil, sir. And now tell me what latitude a9l longitude you crossed the Equator di 1" " Sho ! you are joking." " No, sir! I am in earnest, and I desire you to answer me." ,t . !„tI shunt." • Ah, you refuse me, do you ?" " Yes—l can't." —A great sensation was created at the Opera House, last evening, by the appear ance of two persons in the pargnetto, who were, by con - imon consent, recogniied as -the 'very incarnation, par excellence, of shoddy and petroleum. The-lady's head 4 dress was all ablaze with gold and recious stones. The diamonds . alpit, are imotod e at slo ' ooo while the other vlifuable oir+her cf3als rte s , could not ibe worth mush less than 20,000 more. !ler male essepanien, likewise', was a spectacle fur godcand men. Ills magnificent white satin vest had a small row of buttons, and in every button was a sparkling '• diamond. Cravat and wrisbandd Were likewise set off with gems of the richest zmd rarest" description. No body 50elnall tei know who they were. They sat so near the crehestra that' the Dig Fid dle and the Little Fiddle wore at times quite distracted. Ilarmony was lost In a mazement. Their majesties, as if to altreet all the more attention, left the Academy , at. the, end of the 'fourth act taking care to make almost the entire circuit of the par quell° before shaking its dust from :the Saleslif their fact.—.Nl F. Lelier. . J i• A. HINES, EMI ME BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIOAY, APRIL 14, 1865. A. 1. STEWAR • The New York 'correlpondent of the Ns tot..l,ur,,et says ; • • "The papers are very boxy with A 1' swirl's income—a matter known 'lilyto timself. Ito is rlio solo roaster of All that is bought and sold: Ile tnoza every article . that comes in os' goes iiut of the store. No.. bundle leaves check. Ito selected a shawl for his wife one day, and neglectifig to check it, it could not leave the quailing. No merchant in New York works do many hours, or gives such andividritattenilon to his business. His rooms aro i, his down towfi store.' lie comes dchrn party, hikes his dinner about flop o'clock, .returns,and remains at his work till late at night. lle flndis his pleasure in business. Ile iS as dif ficult to approaoh the (trend Lama. (lo to the store land you will be met at the door by a courteous .gentleman, once an ntfinent merchant, orlfo kept his own eshablishment•t To your question if Mr Stewart i I in, a response comes, " What Is your business:'" " I want to see Mr: Stewart." Yo t can't see him unless I know your husiness." It HEADING OFF A LAWYER MIS At the had said that devil, and raining' Suddenly Mr. Choate "lVai there a tnoou thatil "Yes, sir." ' A , yes! A moon—" - ' 411 1114 " Tos, a full ;noon." "Did you see it' " ' " Not a mite." " Then how do you know there NN as a mon 4" " Nautical , alyailidlk, said so, and I'll Le -1 ed' twenty nes love that sooner'n any lawyer in this " What was the principal lnininary that night, eir 9" " Binnacle lamp aboard the Challenge's " Ah, you are growing sharp, Mr. liar Lon." "Indeed! you are, Chief mate of a clip , por-ablp, an unable to answer so bijuplc (location r Yea is the simplest. (location I ever had asked d , e. Why, I thought every foe! of a 'liner knew there aiu't no latitude on the Equator I" flit shot floored Rufus Choate ! ' logioloturo of Now York haVitUr proposed to remove the oopital from AP3a ay, the Monticello Waldman says seedy every town in that State is a candidate for the honor, and' adds :••• dOn't o ra l et lt„ There is plenty of scallawags and lunatics hero now." , • ' = _ _ . ,-- r —As s four-horso toam, Wended with po#der, Wair passing thiough,' Wilbethans vilkige, Massachusetts, recently; flibliditder ‘" "foist off," instand7 killing' the tea ter and hie team, nntt'dtaktng t complete. *Teak *atou. • . ME -,l - ---y-- "STAXO EIGEttiAND 1714ZON:" VAST AFIVIES AND THEiii NIL-NTS. 4 'there hare bnerrll - ot atialCl" . la , l 'grand rynr . c-ontg In Here is a rOcord el onetucm : Sennaeltei is, loet in tingle night 185,000 by the destroying hn• Tho oily of,Thebao had a hundred gates, omit contd send out of each rte 10,000 fight. lag own and 200 cbarriots ; in nil, 1,000,000 morq,lond ,2;000 ehorriols. The army Of Trerali,-- king. of Ethiopia, conriited of 1,000,000 men, and l .110 char: riots of war. • . Be;r3atris, king of Egypt, %Against his enemies 000,000 men, P. 4,000 cavalry, onkl, 27 scythe-armed charriots ; VA before (Thrist. . . Ifamilear went from C./tillage, and landed near Palermo. Pc lied n fleet of 2,00 hips and :1,000 vessels, and a land force of 50,000 mea. AL tho battle in! which, lie was defeated, 150,000 were slai„. Nintts, the .\asyj•ian king. about 2,:!00 years before Chi•ist, led against the Dtc riang an arm of 1,700,0011 f3ot, -1,700,000 lories and ir;,ouo chaiots arme Semiramis employed 2,000,000 men in building Babylon. She too k,100,000 priq oners at the Indus and sank 1,0011 boots A short time after the taking of Babylon, the for'eos of Cyrus consisted- of 600,4100 foot, 1214,090 horses, and 2,000 chariots armed with scythes. "Army of Cambyses, 60,000 strong, was hurried in the desert sands of Africa by a south wind. When Xerxes arrived at Thermoryl,e, Isis land and sea forces amounted to ^,G1 1,- 310, exclusive, of servants, eunuehs, women, sutlers, etc., in all numbering 5, 28:1,220. So say Herod°tus, rha , arch, and Isocrates. The arm of Artaxerxes before the trattle of eahuxa amounted to about 1,200,0410.. Teu thousand liorges and 100000 f6et fell en the fatal field of Issue. Palen Jarusaletu was taken by Titus, 1 ,1 00 , 0 0 0 fetigikd in•various ways. The army of Tamerlane is said to hays amounted to 1, 000,000, and that of his an tagonist, Ilidjazet, to 1,400,000.,-.Zion4 Hera/tr. ' THE END OF THE WAB, THE BEGIN NING OF DEMOCRATIC ASCEND ENCY. Some of the short-sighted opponents of the Democratic party:' imagine that its existence depends upor the success of the Southern revolution. They forget that it was the in augural ten or that revolution which conorni in the bands of their own parfy the power it had obtained by the votesof a int- I! people of the Union. They M the Southern states semi ameratic Senators were CEIIR 1 taken out of the IJ.,S Democratic1111°1111)(os gut o ,ongress. 'MT orge these facts, they have been able wink a sufficient lumber or fools in. WWI into the belief (hat (be Deinocratic . paily is responsible for,the south. revo lution, to enable them to carry elections iu half a dozen doubtful states. They Forget that the, nor has given them•engiues all powerful for the crushing of their political opponents—a moneyed aristocracy, a sys tem of civil-espionage, a vast army subject to their dictation, and unlimited means for corrupting the pc: , ple. Their three hun-, dred thousand oJlico holders, ea oast, oast, on MI average, able to control a irmr &wen votes, were :done capable of giving than the two millions, one huu.leed thousand votes e Ist fur Lincoln. Thus it a ill be. 80011, the revolution in the South, has enabled them to hold power, whilst, Jr, contra, it has r'revented the Democr- , , , y from attaining it Ilcuce, it is plain that the seance-06' war ends, the better for the Democratic patty. For just so soon as the immense patronage attewlant upon Its prosecution and the ap pliance of force for the use of which the Southern revolution has given the Adminiss tratidn-a plausible excuse, shall have fallen from thehapds of the abolition party, just so soon will that party sink beneath the scorn and hatred of an outraged and well nigh rallied people. Mark our words, the end of the near, is Me be:minim of DemgrAti" aArendl, I, May the God of nations grant (hat that end shall' soon cotrio , ,aa:ettq„ —Some people hope that Lincoln's life will be spared now, in order that the coun try may be saved Mini the disgrace 'of an "incoherent," Vice Presidept. Bat is there Cot a slight chance of improvement in cave that Providence sbOuld will it otherwise? Lincoln, it title, is reported tdbo a sober man, bit it is none the less true, that if he is alWals Bobo: ho is always wrong. So Johnson sober is .folthson wrong; but John son drunk might perctiance, Ve Johnson right. •As proof of this, lit 'his, "Incohe rent" speech in the Senate he talked about the "Constituti." Ile certainly never would have thought of talking of thot doeu- Mind If he had been sober. There is not a word. about ii LinOWS JnAintlifai J 1 .1 1 . a weird ! It is evident therefore, that it di taken }Abolitionist is more likely 'to 1;'o right than a sober one.—Er. - WAyrTi) To STAY.—A young Rnesinn Mkt himself Alto . streets 1(:If raid' II raw days aineei beeline° family wanted him to re turn home. Sooner than leave Parte' ho killed hiuMele. —The Etupreas Eugenia wore aerculy- Aight Luce skirts all at Once, reoptly. " i /113 Brovost 11.trslial Gen. II iik.t committed, YrsteranY, an otttrzege anon puldtc morals which deierves r , .....tfiroS - froni every gvol citizen, awl Censure to ithigli it is justly obnoxious, While we make every allowance for tho exuberance dr feeling resulting from the / intelligence Of the glori ous triumph of our arms, eiendt. extese lion. iliuks, who occupies a high 'awl re sponsible military position uspler the tiov ernnient, for his conduct on this occAshiti , A slight degree, of intoxication, I ion„ or nvhatercr oth'ti teem we might chose. to designate IL by, might ho oveilodkod. But when tho Provost Marshal not only 'intlAbes to such excess as to attract the attention of the whole city to his mad freaks, such us riding on horsebarl2 into' and out of the drinking loom of on i c of the first-Ol.iss liote.ls, Mitt I% lien interfered with by pollee officers in the discharge of their ditty, ordered out a squad nl six.teen sol diers, under command of a lieutenant, 'to arrest those officers, and actually does ar rent them, it 113 impossible, in the oi.,i harge cf our duty, Its a sentinel on the watch tow er of liberty, to overlook the offense. flea. an Walks, the — Provost nu.sliata --- 0.767 a r, yesterday outmsed public decency and morals ift the Monter flleged. Ito rode On horseback Into the Jones' House and out again, and When remonStra led with by police officers, ordered out a .ptilitary squad to eirreel, them. They were arrested, confined in a room, and an apolo gy demanded of them for aft emPting to re strain this redoubtable military chieftain front indulging in the excess he was coin , milling.—lforrvilmiy I 'Won. , SPIIItTV %L 1 4131 Elrosnn.-LThe Porthinders claim that (hey have outwitted Clio 'spirits' connected with a certain Dr. J. 11. Randall, who has been giving manifestations in their city, through a "boy medium," Master henry R. Allen. One of the principal man - ifetnattons at ovary Usgance" was the pull ing of the hair of some person who sat be side the boy, who fill; his hands all the white capon the pdrson in such manner tidal he was assured it was the spirits and, not the boy who pulled his hair. Th went on many evenings, till since ono nicked his air well with lampblack and took the position beside tbo boy for the spiritual r:anifestation of air Tho hair was pulled as usual but lit was found immediately afterwards that everything on winch the boy mocidunt bad laid his hand on was smooched with lampblack. At this revolatioa tho "aennee" broke up abruptly—and the Doctor refunded to the audience the money received for "paste hoards," naively remarking that the boy had played the trick upon him as well as upon othurs. --Barnum has delivered a lecture on " , The Art of Money—tietting." The funds it —anuouneed t —taste—to he—expended in printing the lecture to said it to the soldiers. Of what use could a lecture on the art of money getting be to soldiers. If if. were on I • l of getting their honest Arse from the govern, k it might be of sonic se felt. to the poor fo s. Or if it is dcsit•tcd Co be up to the. moral iiptudnrd of the, Abolition wnr, it oug• . ht to to entitled "the net of stealing spoons and negroes." But that 1 .3 a lecture that should be delivered by Ben Butler, and not by Barnum, We never heard Barnum accused of suchßisiness. .7)/d rude, and soine sixtq ,he lower Ivouso bond —Whnt is now called "the government' , to this country is a sight to behold. The President an obscene joking old rail split ter. yo Vice Prebideut an ignorant, inso lent, drunken sot. Tho' Chief Justice, a man mike is neither a lawyer nor n Christian. Conkrqs, n cabal of fnitagss, tibipmyh,.,aud butaers. Negroes the favored guests in the parlor of the White House. White men more degraded than negroos, in all the chief seats of office. Alas ! poor country i-67,1 Guard. A rit()LIFIO ilArnoN.—Mrs Andrew Alli son, residing in lteaVe — r county, three miles from Ilocktown, last week gave birth to four healthy children. Some twenty months ago Mrs. Allison gave birth tothree dauglderss whom she named Corn, Dorn, and Nora. These seven children, born Within a period of two years, were,'nt last accounts, doing well, as was ono their mottaut. GECRUE W. KEND&LL, formerly' of lbe New Orleans Picarine, 11118 been board from. lle is on Oh tattehe in, Texas, raisin; sheep and oattlo and shooting wild turkeys, wait ing for Pence, troubled somewhat by the In dians, and "waxing on 114grecora years." A BINOLK coPx 03f tote momphig rnpor contains accounts of fifteen murders, robber ies, and incendiary Ora. in ,that. city, all having occurred iu oue day. Muinplals, under abolitiop rule, Is a nio401)olty,lo live A nay by .04 niunivot: Wells bas been in augurated armor of We Sli de of Canis inns—the governmedt of nbloh is tow car ried by the breet i hes pocket of General —A somber of ,rrar olorgyman love been petitioning for a recognition of Odd in the Ovrestitution • Theao eons 44,beiter begin by r,i6eliaring 14 thei t r, pnipitg, Tile Nc,w Jersey Senate rejected the 001Y st itutionar aniefidilienrailbe. abolition of ;layer.) , by a ;WM of twelve . 1p Derl,3l. 11 MILITARY OUTRAGE Few 12=1 Wraufta for ~ SF Deowervite Wok/dal:tn. A TRIBUTE, To , C M....""Y • ( Jates W...I;rENAo. trio dirt; inourr,vu (amp lionylog, Inthllte. on the 20h of /'..broo:try, 18;3. ST n!li r. ICKENAN. ' Jndrn' hinf 1/Psi t/ 1111 ECHO r, 1 he ransom of las foe his fully he gate Far from 1111! kindred, Who lovingly lingerbd, O'er the ineuCry ut him now low in the grnve. How cheerku and dreary, How Ilona-sink and %nary! [pain! How his heard must limo itched with its ohniuent . _ • 'Ms thoughts still recurring To the lilllo,l elluelug Of tehohliug thu home of his chat/loud &gale Unlvailing thy longing"! , Nei Cr more on the dawning Shall the I a or ' ntrertien thy agony .leysles4; and desolate, Kid and itimeonsidato; Oh, pity! teu thousand times 'pit,) fur you 'Mid the hailstorm qf battle, 'Altd the cannon's loud rattle, 'Torero better by far void had been with tho slain For then all the terigtre Of Towtn-lafe horrors Were not added up to thy full list of pain. • As lho youth full of nrotoko and young +ran Id ruin ell remonstrance; .11lay Uod, In Ins justise, Grout you the mercy which coo-tale Marled. Farewell ! wd must sever Tien that wo never :gore, in th 01 world, shall ever renew; Sad, end cruelty. Tiiat this gv eg . ahou Lt.! lor ell In thy cetera was noble sod true linr.rusottn, Mardi. ge, THIS, THAT, AND THE OTHER —A. Vier. Pur.C.I.LIN.NT—Andy Johnson —The noblest question iu the world is —what good eon I do ? —The crocusses aro in bloom in Wash ingi on. So are other "cusses." --Men slip on water wheri it is Croton, and on "kinky when it isn't. --111iltigan has nenrly three million dollars oapitttl invested in salt. works. —The State of Arkansas has been ta- Wen from Gen. Canby's command, and added to Gen. rope's --Oyer thirteen thousand aliens were thrown into Charleaton boron" that city succumbed. —Nine men were' drafted in SW;loya burg, Pn., but only one Oldie wan gp ou t et 'the nine- —lion. JohreP. Hale, oz—Senator from New Hampahire Las been appointed nlinie tor Plettipotentia ' fy to Spain. —By a law of the last Congress, all coins hereafter made are to bear the motto. • "In God we trust." -QUESTION FOR TAIVIES.-16,w Thpoh cloth dire it require to make a sp s trit raiiper, Will Andy Johnson. answer? —Thu oleetion in Connecticut has re peated ne Wlttai in 1110 euueuas of the Black Republic:ono. —Au irreprasultaide taste in dress is th e . ooly buyitmehahlo thing that some letliettbuve about them. —Mr. and Mrs. Brewer, of Wnytte County, Ky., have twenty-two children. This is the most extetteize brewery in the West. —The dresses i !p Paris are out low in the neck this sync ti, that,what remains of the algrp4i4or.si end not worth tikention . iog. . --Then'. aro persons wbfl, 41111 rdiallow eellrigs and deep deriglis, seem to trend the mills of sin sore footed us Spanish tnulos akin: edge of the Cordileras. Singleton brings back intelp gcnee hr.,4here-ia nut the elighlc®t probe Laity of pewee, but, ou the contrary, a con tiunauee of the war. . --There aro now No hundred and thirteen National Banks, and malty apptica tions are pending for conversation from State to National Maul's. . —The cotton plantations along the issinsippi are nearly all abandoned chi spring, because there aro no trlto po them against guerrillas. —So*body told Sydney Smith that the giraffe' at the Zoological,gardbms lhave naught a cold." Fancy." said -he, a "gi raffe with two yards mo o( sore throat." —The "colored people" of Rhode Island fitistulpininated Fdriard tierris, of Woonsocke as their candidly° fur clover nor. Ilope lie may boelcoted --When a mftn Os too much old Boor 'bon into his his% instead of sayifts he is drunk, as berlitoture;-116 is now !Ink to. bo' "Johnsonivid," in compliment 4o 't Andy Johnson at tho inauguration, . .., . , —Quo or ito abolitiqn mere in bid° calls upon its Mends and assodiales to pri,- pare for the _spring eleetions'und strip for the contest. We hope the wor.,en nad,chil dren have+cen removed to tv.afe distance. losses • byAbe,Vnit ed t:itatos last year*o estimated µt 3Q , 000.W0 In rbilatlotiddi . there frfroo bbredred and ninety-four. and the lova, borrodsettum bore, walla million'of dollars. military Wort at Presided'{ lain colies inauguration oonsiste of two svgi meals of the paroled corps, a squadron of cavalry, a tattory o'f,aftfirey, and four com panies of oolored‘trocps, ,,, Watbfallion corregiontletrd - Ao Siiiringnettl Rs p naii,annhys;- ti. Itylleit'ainolayaisaion tm Major! lan - pines a,aluut time, mai ito will en probablt quietl y mustered out, of sersief."" ;di! I • ' -opilosod mocienea for Presidia...44lllMo, VC • AUG avant of sis des4, itt4 ?liGgslhAsAUWeiga.he his succehspr.,, ShiGlcAtitigAgAr i or- 1 ily ;titation as u eessol•itiLiapislii; ould Untlistwo , finftiskilitathl# SE" i?iiit' 4 liho lion hiltsfr eetifirviivritevo *My/4de* afttemi thousand dollitillianti Illisogtesliktmenii; arid sent it tplinflßitilrifilErS6Sibli. A sister. 'iarkiviir - A 1 440 1 1 , madir A rtplinwltonbSpopt Lion, of.At • latalptsGevailig.¢y .'ilitioeW hew ritailimini,hp frosea4 backs',, s .Sll. 1 , • . 0 ; tag. • OEM EMI okidrid AND'ILINTRY •* Debt slayeyt. 4:11!" “strong goverumcnrrcji s believe in the efficiency of n "[lrv) nitionst debt: It' ernbles thetule keep the rnitikeit it wOrlt foe' toe benefit of the few-that Is to tronsfar the contents of thtpoor men's pocket" into their own. NO more ingenious plan could have been Jevised tiy , ,the L'init.saiesot it which now governs this country. or 1h enslavement of t Ito people, ants this ..A11& malted b this iitAismat icor. An opp?rt6; nit). for , hts . purpose la been sought, erg iv no isSklAtc; emsriteeti, Miller Ybb iresibthr No.. 14, preteilv offreCing - inttffs. •. • 'flay rePtirthius whei ''elllafTrilhA6l-1111141 for the eiislatement Of the ~i otir *labs ; I w i1f;714 Uppifus dab!, whose , colossnl proporiions wake tni'llnatil I derwheu contemplatc misery, thi I poverty, the rags, the tdistinstiodlitairiiii, that will nafithilly bulb nin. its than, Bondi are being issued by the' •liousintals of , millions, „We shall yet•atipply , the, reek with (lent, Imo (Ins demand what it imity,, 1 And every bond Is • link in IM, itnn,nlisall, that binds us. Bonds /muluslasery,a‘egais- ; ymoua terms, the words glide from the lips I . Talk *beta , boundless resources, our ability to pay, and • • each calf- England one bonndleas dileonr 7 cos too—lbe alzu never sets upon bar pas- Sessiothl," they say—but does thth at pay,her boundlemi debt?. D o es that toiligate be; burdens oilier over-laic(' and downtrodden masses • This country—everything in baing mortgaged, under the,slrallow pre-4, I ease of phylanthrephy, ter-14e, benefit 'et a shialdy New England frialarsol• _Bonds and mortgages are being gleen on , our bodies and souls. The bonds and the cotton Ito, boon going to Europe eo Creel, of late, t the ocittrat of trade has, been reversed, and gold, iu tho absence of dp- =Li May neh., and t!e., 9,000,000 in July, rOlowfiii: 7-11aailetlinesi will alegrsiaLnt rapidity quite appalling to holders 14 every, deseriii tioi: of protbrv. • But this, ip not the pole cause/ gide cliqe in geld. It is wcli,known tit ta.tet.Spii 7 ., retary of the Treasury has been raising $200,000.000 by the stile of 7, 80 tiondaes they are familiarly celled. A great portion. of 11!3 vast mom of tncney thus obtained, has we sttspent, been• held, instead of being im mediately disbursed by, creditors. game, 4 - 13 Have all b ee n brought to the brink of the • precipice; as it were, by the, sudden anti unexpected induction of the currency. VOW see with einet;empti,the wggtoryanpiLilatioa of aimen' thousa.Ad.m.illioni of value, And. in common with others, await the residt With painful anxiety. r Verily.' "lichee . 44 take unto thentselVes win and fly sing." Some Infatuated 'person, seem to bloom that. speoie may eves (04 : 19. Par,yrithetre greeting Uniiek iltatoplends.„ 398, 1 1bittit *Weser, the lawtsof ettellemy,will hardly be suspended for th e setionimodation pt Ll'elebeade• of 0'14.0 *hemqyhe4PPO4 to hold thmr.., ond.we understand the SetliPt tary of the Treasury takes the, same aleyr or, the matter,,end has, it, is pititl;, invasted SG, 000,000 in them, for 11io purpose s alma ing the decking; ishiCh ctimmeneerlast weak Whim b ?Os euddenly fell frOMloB4 r to 1004 and 10.10's to 80i. A - merehant'or banker is distress, will hardly. atop to' consider whether !I l ls dir.l•Yal ei not, to ISM Iln houscfroni failure, by tkeenle,of any prop erty he may happen to, hold ter temporary' investmenfe. Tile Noticing bettkii POI No-, ped on these bonds; whet his 'neetadvell since our last issue, has bee mainly 4 011 4, by the immense amount of tiondinaiollikby BeeristarT__of_t_kiLTseasury. Unless the is sliduld be a : furtiall isitn - e — oGpaper-Money, there le reason to believe thamice*dettlitie will prove to batamere.ethower, in commix* ison with ate Akin, we sbellatitonsiiMferlt the expiration of the yetart prom. ty, in the eagetrYt will be tlike, 40 -taitim-ceetiailt4M.SrightMWeakeail/ to be issued forthwitit,, as aeon stuccos will Aermit. in the number of aft t, under a specie heels,, and whenCdtit,tb.t. wee merely nominal, the bchndi of ;1 sold as low as 83, haiing fallen 'from 124. lye oAts doily [intigine what ihei, wel4o bring itra iattio when $ ? 0,00,00$ . 006, b i t them &Iva have b*'n issued. ' . *Crge joii! etwirns And ri'cj yetw4fetiere, liberty Alegps now, and the long drearY night of ditapoll ista is Net settifig Aerie& Smoll-Pok In New York. -^•,- ) • fork 014en4r, nal, contains His follow' .. testimony of Dr Stephen jpintimunittees of the' Noir York, and Assombly , on tho Itedlth Bill. certainly a startling picture: ILVthe very type of preennil de 'diseases. We have a safe and sure prtt n entire in thorough varteinatina. -And yet this loathsome disease hs'at this moment sn. 'epidemic hi Now York. In two his ante: tlie inspectors found £l4 catres„ and. 14 E weeks upward of -1,200 ; ind,lt yrits.ootlitut tea that buSanowt one halfsipss,disoovsred. •Ird ninny of the larga,tottant,lkeuttes.l4, eight and ton eases were pund at.theplatue those. They fauna it}tiutr. every orinatilvsble-cort dit ion )endgw4s. • copplo N o d g p qn igot. . h 4 nal in ) Ateof reetlm.,,liTPA,sts in the hacks,on4 . 4o fairy trim ; in_ 4 shop: . fit cigat cutindi shops { in s families o' tailors nial a yealudrear r ir . ti, wore inaklug, Iniublic and riF ' e dittia; a'4l 7 ite-P gold' in my haiiir if list' 6aies &Aim.' 021,04 thpliil ':gtettlis44l " itibir golf wide-spAiled`liftwittikwasit;" - ding Of fatal ease ntlal . rtialil 'tail" AIN& easeh i. roost irhimmr:6lo,filide9llo4l"*" Viers 400 told ; duo: 4.11114 y 4411 sitonditiffbarltaptiiititii to bar *Assad lidltriortloortialr map mekingisi Irony ben Lkid ;cs ekitte,fou 71rQ ay was •thoisixvitat i 44 Miwt!aikhKsal !oat • = EtM=l MEIS MEM I=MMI EMI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers