”Tradr o - `, 151 - 41!ig I Go, ding 'lls who hail Wao- Ne • * pod • ' I . 0404 3 / 1 a°. 4 ° 41 Our W 0 I tid ll .. Itleectine—oee I our ~,,14 )1.1!14411414". • • oitldtultitit liifill:o4l4f : not of Tiftniat.le t ' . - 0 4taas Go 1 'Ma : j it itod KnOirthat h. many. a weary year rre might yijk or toe I had • goodly Ch er once • ler r ee You • laid him low. • _kaaa's, hchlt d et; f vows tmw noon or • • raie — po yea ' s Tiriassab should - be u, pith" will keep a uelew,hkw Wain quartet' I fought him_ hood to bawd :. Tot, Owe you would amigo his fali s —rio toady; take gout stand. ' Po* o But I war not In my homestead, by this hearth ...hereon I tread ; Plot In sight a these.-.my Sear ones t —for whose safety I hams bled. My daughter, ravish ma down yon owtod,—the same that laid, hiut low ; And If I ne'er Come back again; Tyrollas Sons enow." So forth thr hind together up the glorious Al- Ph* ikti7, Where newly now the kindling cast led on the • • golden day. Therm that mounted with them, as he hose in ' all his Pride, (till siw 'thi stranger toiling on, H r ans ulor r for his guide. • They climbed the Mountain summit; - and behold I the Alpine world • Showed clear and brightlefore them, 'math the milts that upward curled. ' Belcuilhem, calm and happy, lay the valley in her rest, With the chalets in her arms, and with their dwellers on her breast. • •••• Arnidst,the sparkling waters; giant pliamme, scarred and riven; ''" Vast growningLwoods ; and over all, the pure, --blest al, ytiscaveo And, sacred in the sight of Clod, where peace her treasures spread, °array hearth, on orgy lium% the soul of frecioni shed. Both/ookedinibelensellenee done. The Aran ged stayed hie hued. Ilan Euler gently pointed to his ,own beloved land: "'Twu this thy brother threatened; such a wrong might move me well. 'Twu in uteh a cauf!o I struggled :—'tsres for such a fault he fell." The stranger paused; then, turning, looked liens Hitler In the face; The arm that would hare raised the sword fell powerless in Ifs place. "You slew him. Wee it then for this—fur borne and fatherland Forgive me 'Twits a righteous cause. liana Euler, there's my hand." - _Mamoru' L. Ilervey. HISTORY OF JOHN BROWN BE SENATOR NOW PRESIDENT ANDREW JOHN The pulpits generally, and a wiajoiity of Republican papers, now boastingly rejoic) that "the North has vindicated the . cause of John Brown, and wiped out slavery." Nor is this any foolish hr inconsiderate boast; it is strictly true. The policy of the Re- publican party, since it mama into power, has been d faithful carrying out of the work —begun by old John Brown. The adminis- i station of Abraham Lincoln was a John Bretdii raid on the grandest soale ; and it was no more. That is the place it will oc cupy In history. The bloody business is done, and we do not write for the purpose of amending the great crime. We do not seek to raise the' dead. We accept Chef - nein he we find them ; but it is our business to tell the truth about these facts. It is our business to strip off all these bandages of shame, hypoceicies, and lies, and lay bare to the bone this monstrous carcass of frauds and despotism. The record of this party is in' revolution and blood; in the il revolution and blood inaugurated by John ;Brown. It has finished - the raid which that prince of assassins and thieves, John Brov , n, - began. As a part of the history of these times, which we wish to - leave in the col umns of The-Old Ottani, we copy below part of a speech delivered by President Johnsen, in the Senate of the United States, Decem ber 12, 1860. It is a fair-and truthful his tory of the moat important period In the history of Brown, who was one of the chief founders of the Republican party, the in augurator of its policy.. Mr. Johnson was speaking in reply to Senator Doolittle, who had offered, in the Seaste, an apology for . Brown, by declaring that his Ben liattbeen murdered in Kansas, and that he acted in revenge for the wrongs ha had suffered. Id answer to this excuse, • Senator Johnson, the it President of th United States, made the following epee : .. ''lt smiths at we have some new born Christians, who are making John Brown Iheir leader, who are trying to canonize him and make him a great apostle and mar tyr. 'Were Weise the elements of ailleitstien and a Christian martyr ? How do the foots stand In this case ? When was the old man Brown's son killed, and when dld he com mit One atrocities ? Even admitting the trudilleg t .the statement of the - o'o'l4ler from Wisconsin, they are not juatifiable, but when we show that the foots are different, they are less so. The elratunstanoes are stated in the evidence of Mr. Harris, which will be found in a report made by a commit tee of Congress, and repu.blished in , thp Herald of Freedom, of Satisas—a paper hat has at its head for President the name of a Republican, Mr. Chase, of Ohio, add Mr. Banks of Massachusetts, for Flee Presi dent: -• ' The etruumslanoes attending Wm. Sher man's assassination are testified to by James Harris, of Franklin county, Kansas. Mr. Sherman was staying ovir night t the house of Harris, when; on the 24th- o May, at about two o'clock, Captain John rown and party eaves there, 'and after. eking some properly, questioning Harris nd Oth ers, Sherman was asked to' walk tout. Mr. ihrrini . in hie Affidaitt *an: ' Old Brown naked Mr. flheintanta go Out with him, and. Sherman then went. tint With Brown. 1 . I heard nothing more for about fifteen min utes. I Two.; the ' northern army,' as they styled theaseless, Maya* with us until they' beard anarbustett anti then - these'dwo Viet left. Nex'.. saortitttg, ' about tin reeloott,:i found ll'Utiatts !nom men dead, in the Inept near mry hp. '' 'I 'Will lookin for Min: *l4 ' he hall ad '.,: .. .114 T,Tilhought he had beep , ,, , . 1 .,. , ''„ i, . " i Mit, Milliam Sher. i -man f 1 47 VII ; '' 'anfotilt4and examined , .t.t. Mrs. "h t • ..-ermor mitts ms. Sher man's skulLerasnndiklbpara.ht awe places, and setts of hit brains Aran washed Out br the waterusaslitig• iiolieltritO-Sttielts his' breast, and,hip left' eitifali,Jroalpopt 1...::'....tn`r.:k.7=1 . !.. , - . ,',1 -' : -•.. • . - , -- 7 --- , . - - _____ ...___ ___ _ . ,_ . f.1..._f_:..•_ . _ . . . • , . . , , -4 . • /. t • - . ~ • . .. • , • , . •- , •(II '' ..., . - ' ' •. . L i nall ' Lk .. t ill • ,--•-...„ - t ,i l '.. . s . . . Vel s 1 , 4 VCI thin 4 1 ~ , . Mil , a little piece of akin on onside,' ' 4 . , This was the '24th of May, I will read • - "fro, semi piper ittiolgireitra;ci " 4 When the news of the thrnatened siege Of'Ltrwi•ence reaobed John Brolvn, Jr., who wan a member of _the_lopeka Legislature,_ ho organized a company of about sixty mon And parched toward* Lawrence. ArriVing at Palmyra; ho learned of the seeking, of Om town, and thu position of the people. Ile reconnoitered for a time i the vielnity, but finally marched back toward' Ossa watoutie. The night before reaching that place, when only a few miles ivriy;:-they camped for the, night., Old John Brown, wo believe, was with the party, singled cfut, with Mover, seven men. These ho marched to a point, eight , iniles above the mouth Of PottaWatumle creek, and called 'from their beds, 10:their several residences, at the hour of midnight, on the 24th of May , of May, Scaretnit , in P'.. — Doyle, and Drury -Doyle. All were found the nextr mornling, by the rondsitle, or in the highway, some with n gash In their bends and sides, and their throats' cut; others with their skulls split open two places, with holes in their breasts, and their hinds cut off.' " lie seems to have had a great passion for cutting off hands. "No man in Kansas by pretended to de -01,1 Jatar th ORR led ttntraturdrettmt foray which massacred ihose men. Up to that period not a hair of John 'Brown's head, 'Or or hiVeOffil, - hall been Injured 11 , tied pro-slavery party. "It was not until the 10th of August, three montlP after the Pottawatomie mason ore, that the attack was made on Oasawat omie by the pro-slavery forties, and 'Freder ink Brown, a BOA of old John, was killed " To show - all the facts in regard to the massacre of the 24th of May, I will read Le the Senate the affidavit of some of the eye: witnesses of the transaction. Allen Wilkin son was a member of the Kansas Legislature quiet, inoffensive man. His widow, I,ottisa Jane Wilkinson, testified that on the night of the 24th of May, 1856, between the hours of midnight and daybreak, she I thinks, a party of men came to thti house where they were residing, and forcibly oar, Heti her husband 'awayi and they took him in the name of the horthern army,' and that next morning he was found, about one hundred and fifty yards from the house, dead. Mrs, Wilkinson was very ill at the time, of measles, She says further • I begged them to let Mr. Wilkinson stay with me, saying that I was sick and help less, and could not stay by myself. My husband also slaked theta to let him stay with me until he could get, some one to wait on me; told them that. be watuld not run off. but lie would be there the next day., or whenever called for; the old man, who scented to be in command, looked at me, and then around at the /children, and re plied, yeti have neighbors.' I raid so I have, but they aro not here, and I cannot go for them.' Thei,old nun replied, it matters not,' and Ifild him to get ready. usband• wanted to put on his hoots, and get ready, eq as to be protected from the damp and night air, but they would not let him. They then tobk my husband away. * * * * * * After they were gone, I thought I heard my husband's voieo in complaint. * * 'Next morning Mr. Wilkinson's body was found about one hundred and fifty yards from the house, in some dead brush. A lady who saw My husband's body said that there was a gosh on his head anti side. Others said that. he was out. in the throat twioe.' " Mr. Doyle s and his eons were murdered on the same night with Sherman and Wil kinson ; and Mrs. lloyle's deposition gives this account of it : (Here follows several depositions.) " Doyle wrote a" letter to John Brown during hilt imprisonment, showing that she et ill regarded him as Ile murderer of her jusband and ebildren : CUATTANOOcIA, TENN., Novengbrr 29, 1859. t Jour BROWN—Sir : Although vengeance is not mine, I confess that I do feel gratified to hear thiit you were stopped in your fiend tab career at IlarNer's Ferry, with the loss of yourlyto eons. You can now appreciate i my distites in !Can eis,, when you then and there entered my owe at midnight, and arrested my husban and two boys and took them out of the yard, and in cold blood shot them dead in any hearing. You cannot say you did it to free our slaves—we had none, and never expected to own ohs ; but it has only made me a poorvdisconsolate widow, with helpless children. While I fool for your folly, I do hope and trukt you will meet with just reward. Oh, how it pained my heart to hear the dying groans of my husband and children! Italia scrawl givoa you any consolation you afro welcome to it. ' WALIALA DOYLE. N. B.—My son, John Doyle, whosl , life I bogged of you, is now grown up, and is very desirous to be at Charleston :51n the day of your exeeution ; he would certainly be, there if his Means would pentlit'it, that heratight adjust the rope around your neck, if Governor Wise would permit. M. D.' "Three months after William Doyle and his two. eons were murdered, three months after Sherman was murdered, his skull out open in two places, and the stream had washed the blood out of his uranium—three naenthe after that, John Brown's son was killed at Ossawatomie. Then, what becomes of this *misuse T Why this apology for a man like this T Three menthe after In bad committed this fiendish sot; his son lost his life -' 'lt was out, and we forek, roand on,,the road side, fell victims to the in- Isitiable thirst of John Brown [Or , bloOd. ; ; Then it was that those murders were Qom, spitted, that hell entered his heart, not tree his petit, - Then it wag that he shrank from 1 04 disiititiaarie of a human being into those of , a Then it was, if not befoct, that be atomised. kis,oharsoter to a demon who had' lostAild she virtues of a mart. 4.. And yeti talk wbteit sympathy for John Drown! • • • - . 'BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 21, 1865. " John ItroWn stands before the aountrY a murderer: The enormity, thd extraordi nary ferociousness of the father set the son mad. - The blood of these murdered n4ll— unlike that of sacrificed' Abel--,oricd yen rem Thel.Miliffnierns of Ibe earth to him• for Pity, On+ to Heaven for justice; but his iron heart, not soul, refused to yield ; but Heaven, in the• proof's!! Of time, has mCted opt to him justice on the gallows. Justice difiliffi to' "finish sin moves.alow—the slower its pace, the; surer is its blow: it wilt• overtake us If living— it will . ovfitake us .if dfMd. Justice has overtaken its victim, and hi has gone' to eternity w.ith crimsoned hands,•with blood upon lila head. • in which John Drown 'Was taught. Why, sir, John Brown, according to his own ',oh fession, had entertained these ideas for twenty years. John Brown did not go to Hermits to go to aaltool. He went there as a teacher on the 24th of May. At the mid hour of night, from the wife and the sooth er, ho dragged the husband and two sons, and imbrued his hands in their blohd. These - ere the doeliiiiia - thist - EicWinFirgi - e -- its teach. lie did not go there to be taught; but he went there as a teacher. These_were his teachings. imagine the mien and lam entations on the one baud, and the shrieks of the dying and the mutilated en the other. I think sometimes that I hear shrieks so loud, so wild, soselear, that even listening angels stoop from leaven to hear. This is the man for whom an apology is offered. I did the Senator the justice to say that Ile disclaimed all sympathy with Brown. and yet I read what, 'in Mot, was an apology. What furthermore did But Senator say I We have shown, and the fact is not contro erted, that ho murdered five human beings on May 24th. They have shown, in trying to-answer this, that his eon did not receive this ill-treatment froni , Captain Pate until the last day of May. We have showta that . other son wtis-not killed until August 80th. Let us remember these facts, and come to the old man as being a thief and a murderer. I want all these modern fanatics who have adopted John Brown as their Christ and their Cross, to see who their Christ is. The Senator says spill: $t I regret that gebtlernen, in speaking of this man Brown, should be pleased to speak of,,hint its a robber, or a thief, or a vega. hand, in the ordinary sense of the term. Sir, it is the essence of robbery and theft, that the robber or thief who robs or steals, netshould from the ilrgire of gain. Cor taiuly no such charge can,be. made-against this man, as that he was actuated by a lust of gain. Ile acted from far different mo ires. lie sought to give liberty to the en slaved, and lai*elown his life for that pur pose—freely and bravely did he do It.' T h at is, you may steal and commit theft if you do it to aid in thd.cause of the abolition of slavery. Ila 4 we any proof that this is so? What does Mrs. Wilkinson say in her af f idavit? When John Brovrif and his comrades were there on thar24th, when they took Wilkinson out and Murdered him, just before they a lefer.lhey took his property and his only horse. I suppose they needed the bOise to aid in the emanci pation of slaves! Horse stealing is curried On to o..great extent sometimes in a frontier cottfiliy. Mrs. Doyle states they inquired where their horse was, and were told it was out on the prairie. What took place at Harper's Ferry? 'They took Col. Washlng ton's silver and his watch! What does be admit in his own ,conhssion ? That he, du ring the last winter, had• P 1 en, had kid napped, and r#in off eleven ,graves from the 'State of te, Kansas. That is not stealing, though ; I suppose that is not theft, that is not robbery ; and we taigitt not to talk about this old man as stealing in the common aoceplation of ,the term ? What •fit it, I ask the country, I ask the Senate, if it is not stealing, robbery, highway rob bery ? And yet these things are thrown out, perhaps not intended, lbnt they erate as an apology rind excuse in the minds of many for the infamy; the murders, the theiving, the treacherous conduct of this old man LtAwn, who was nothing more than a murderer, a robber, a thief, and 6 traitor. I think, Mr. President,ithat so far as John Brown is concerned, the factswhioh I have presented stand uncontroverted.v The Senator has , failed to touch them. He has not removed'them, but has added strength and additional proof to what I said in ref erence to them. It was not my intention to olinsuma this length of time, and I should not have said a single word on the subjetd if the resolutiOns could have be l .n adopted without disoussion,'and especi.ily so if a reference had riot been made to ohn Brown not beipg a murderer and a this , involving the reputation and character of °me of the citizens of my own State. " There dose seem to be a interposition in this affair. II dared Doyle and his two sons. with w and four helpless childre seemed to be a little tardy; . 1 constantly in pursuit of its vlotl.! a abort time since the man who Doyle and his two sons, fell a T WO two one, at Harper's Ferry say that this was a stroke of s but it was a singular collie:id. Whose hands were red,' oriniso.l blood of a father and two eons, ftl at Harper's Ferry with Lie own It Amos that Divine i'vrovidenee as • rebuke, an illustration will not only overtake its vial.' mete out-justle• in a similar two. ten! iff ed it Bab, as m, inns- "I think, liir. , l.reeideni,tb at I the tend not Of .41tit policY to* ailed attention. Whether it "altrAgE I=aNDII AND =RANA UNION."! signed at all times by thotte who preached it or not, I alinll"not tradertakett.asty, but I will soy that ULF!. effect arta kind df teach ing hart 40011 the result which is so evident; and L Want ttisay_nost,an uespirit. of boast, ing, to my friends Diet and West, North and South, that the time has 'arrived when encroachments on the instittaione of the South .should cease; the time bee arrived wlien we hive well-nigp done making ap peals to you on the subject; but all we ask of you is ,that,, as brothers 'of the same gent Confederacy, ypu will understand knd oarry out the Constitution as it is, add let' us Ceabe this bickering. Let us. cease ,this . agitation, and stand open the Constitution as the common altar, apd, maintain all its guaranteee, and swear by our fat the (led who made ue , that the Comoitution and its guarantees shall be preeerved; and, in doing so, we shall preserve the Union; and, in preserving the Union, we shall have peace and harmony, and the unexampled prosperity which has visited our country will °nation° to go cull IL is fortunate for the cause of truth and 1 justice,. and for the fntme.l rian ofAke_l terrible civil war, that the °erred. history of old John Brown's inauguration ,of the 1 policy af_thatßepublican or_Abttlithinparty, was made by so eminent an authority _as 1 President Johnson ; and-it Is especially - for. tunate that this- record- was- made- in the Senate of the United Stales. It, is a part of the debates of that body, where it stand& uncontradieted and unrefuted: It was an endorsenient of the policy of this raider and murderer, by the North, that startled and aroused the South, and finally drove it into secession; for John Brown's raid roar en dorsed by the North. From almost every church and schoolhouse tbe voice of prayer and lameptation went up to Almighty God, canonizing his name and endorsing his in famy. The whole Republican press lent Its support to this abomination ; and, with en tire consistency, when the New England soldiers marched through this city, they Made it hideous as hell by singing And ithoutingi"John flrouni's soul is marching on." So it is, we have little doubt, marching on, through seas of fire, in company with fiends, theivee and assassins, such as were his eoffi panions and abettors in this life. So it is, generally speaking, marching on to the music of despotism, ignorance, revenge and Ina, 1 that swells up like a gorgon from the bot tomless pit, out of the breath throats of the negro-worshiping mobs I Marching on as a pestilence or contagion, or a thing , . ' horror and death marches on! Behind its march are the wails of widow and the screams ef children, the vpriMplorations of defenCeless old men y and the humiliation of manhood. Before - 1i the insane gibberish and faidastiodebbe of negroes, of both the white and-black complexion, milking night and day hideous with infernal delight.. „bfirching on I alas, poor country ! alas, human nature ! Why do we write these things now? Because we love and would save our country. Because we would bring ' our countrymen of the North to their sen ses, by holding up the John Brown raid as a glass for then' to see their faces in..X We would remind them that. there is both ti God and History, that justice and truth„sooner or later, will whip all the shams and lies out of the records of human events. If the South has foil;? to repent of, we have crimes—crimes which will roll out of their graves and hunt us like demons through the world. Vainly, do we - seek (o assure ourselves, by shutting our eyes and saying, verily, what a good 'people are we! There is An eye that we cannot shut. , There is arm that we cannot stay. Time le an inexorable avenger of all men's wrongs; and time will strip us bare to the bone, and show what a onroasp of frauds and shams we are. We re peat gain, the last tour years of Republi can le have been a stupenduous John prArtn' aid. Logically, constitutionally, they lial;elkeen.ju# t, and nothing more. What we dare te-;s y is. this, that John Brown bad, as runt? Constitution and law for what he did, as the Republican adminis tratibn bad for what it has done. This is what we say, and no leading Rentidican dare attempt to debate the merits of the question.with us before the people. They dare call names; but they dare not debate. We love truth and respect justice above all things. We hold_ nt opinion which we will not gladly submit to the testlif fair argu ment and debate; but these traitors of the John Brown school dare not argue. They carry. all points by singing, situating, and mobbing. Their throats are trumpets, and their brains gongs Slid sounding-boards.— Old award for elitly.t t II A Cab* os ;innaornose...,-The Fish)ln Journarklves the thllowing statement: Mrs. Darius Hall, who resides About a mile west of that village, on 'Wednesday last deserted her husband and childien, and left in, company With a negro by the ua.ne of Wells. She took with her all the money in the house—about s6o—and nearly all her husband's and ohildren's clothing. Mrs. Hall was rathers,,Site-looking.women; and lass heretofore bdrue a good reputation, but has now brought grief and :shame upon a kind, indulgent partner, and tour bright and preuusing children. ThiOnegro, who had bees in that neighborhootAut - a - few weeks, twpresentod himself to he's preach: en, and as puck has officiated, at the Zion Pilgrim (colored) Church at Saterlown. We understind that the guilty pair bare been teased : lo New York, frouriiiienon,ikey had taken passage for Baltimore. if 0: ovidential ova mur oyle left a Justice t it kept and but murdered 01.1111, 16 11 1 do not ro,videnoe. floe. Ile -.with the 11 a vietim IMO 110113. niended it at patio. but Will !nee. are slump ioh I have is been de- be ahead or iiine,",o!krii 7.4. 1 1 r. wstoh bokind you. TEMPERANS - LEKTUB BY J. BILLINGS 'Ben yntinraperste In gal things." MY Fet,t.oir Buxom—Tow are you? How ii your wife and inintereptin faintly? ,object is addressing pi at the piesent junktur, is law impress upon lure mindk the fatal necessity .of tOmperanek—not e - oloosively a .wiiiakee temperance, nor a jaloaka-rum temperans, but' also, that kind ov a temperans which should prompt a man tew go alo,in awl thinks that air disposod to 'bee slippery. Bee yes, temperate in clothes and patient leather. for,votily'l say . unto yn, that a man can git drunk on lbioad cloth and lite buiss, suns as he kali an gin and'nierelassen. era and elten. Dont go in to fitz over a tat terrier bekauze he hnz been bred so fine that yu kant ceo the last three fncbls ov biz tail in a kloudy da without the ads ova looting glass. Dont luv a hose so much that yu have tu giv yure twat for him, and aint never able to tak up the float till it spites. Dont`fall in luv with 'very wuman you se, and knot slope, unless yu hay yure bedrume -fotegrefe-erv-pit' . • , with pewter eyes, and pudding bagge full ov black tow, and dod rats on the back ov their hod; and bi -Means -dont git. on audit a load ov religgitt as will make you round shouldered, before yu git hetf wa tu - heaven. \s, • Thirdly—Bee yee temperate in anger, that eats like a rust—in luv that feeds on the hearts marrow—in ambiehun, that en vys the thrones of the gods—in dospare, that mildews the soul—in hate,lhat beets, and suckles revenge---dn censure, that fol tars and faints not, on the trail ova bruther. Fourthly—Bee yes temperite in polly tricks terbacker, and petroleum—dont vote, chew, nor bore, tow excess, and if yu du strike ile, strike from the shoulders like a 'man, and dant set up for a nabob until awl the stink 07 the grease gite out of your crothes.—N. Y. Mercury. TR. Eterasee EtIONNID AND ROBle Bos sun,--Ifere is a subject for a picture : n pretty country studio, *oven m}..its from Fontiiinbleau, a gentlewoman-Was at work on a sultry day limit „week—dressed as French ladies, who hoPpened to be strikes, usually dress iit- blouse and petticoat. The gentlewounin was Mdle. Rosa Bonheur, and she .was painting cattle and grating ground. Suddenly the door of her studio opened' and 'without announcement of any kind, a bright and charming woman entered the. room, flirew her arm &round Mademoiselle Rose's neck and clusped a ribbon round it, from which depended t o little cross well known in France. The c harming visitor was the Empress Eugenie. Mille. Bonheur had not heard a word of this visit, or ofthii decoration being intend ed for her; and enjoyed a good cry, while the Empress °hotted with her about her palettes, her pencils, and the aelightful tri fles of her art. Certes, the Empress Eugenie knows how to• enhance a graceful hot. by the added grace of doing it well.—Loudon ilthreneum. A POINT OF DER. Ono of the members o he Lower House of the Legishidure of New York, rejoiced in the name of Bless. lie had the honor of representing the ,county of Monroe, and his sagacity as a legislator did not will fo' him the respect of his associates, hM'eceen tricities often ministered to their entertain ment. One day, in the midst of a windy harangue that bad become intolerable for its length and emptiness, a "gassy" mem ber from the metropolis stopped to take a drink of water. Bloss,,sprang to his feet nnd cried: Mr. Apenker, I colt the gentlemen crow New York to order." . The whole assembly WAR etattled and stilled ; the member frourVew Tork stood aghast, with the glass in hie hand, white the Speaker said "The gentleman from Monroe will Please elate Lis point of order." To which Mr. Biome, with ... great, gravity, replied i to , I submit, sir, thiiit Is not in order for a windmill to go by water." It was a shot -beyond wind and water; the verbose orator was confounded, and put himself and glees down together. -- An pld Methodist, very gout at re spo;hich ere not always appropri ate, ough alway well-m.3 4 mA, went one day to.bear sop reacher. The preach er, urally lucid, was titer perplexed, and felt ft himself. Ile *red through the flint part, and then said "Brethren, I have reached the conclusion of my first points" " Thank God I" ejaculated the eli-man, who sat •befOre his" profoundly interested, in * vplee that was heard in every part, of the church. • The last part of that sermon was harder to prisuh than the first. etudenewent into a boiik-ebop, and inquired tot thli proprietor if be had any pocket Testameto in Greek. "In Greek?" echoed our good triend,leeltatingly, be lieve not, air ; but. I have • • lot of elegant ones In znoreeoe.' Irish gentleman at oarde, havin on Inspsetion, found ths pool dellolsorti; elniintrk 44 Heree s' shilling short; it in ' '..1 - :,•', '-d-4-The hotel Itegem*Ainifeir have e , rassiArrittolibek Rittositikessea 41011 doy. e', No. 27. • *kites Ihr thwaVatehhian.] ' • iIkATCH , A ND WAIT. BTI. w, roomy,. I watch - tad wait A ta.aaa her coma;,_ • With maiden coinage, down the Areal , Upon her oheek the role's bloom, The grace of motion in her feet: I watch and wait—for, In her eye, I read what words can never speak, While o'er her race Sweet blushes try A playful game of hide-anti-seek. • I Match sad waft--cad, to my heart,/ A throng of recollections twit, Atiak'elng, with a painful ate The Memory of a buried d A dream that, lo b o Its halu o'er me, like a spell, And then, too beautiful to hurt, It perlshed—leiring but the Once, when my soul was free from And life did s 4 elysian seem, I roamed in fancy all the while Amid the gardens of my dream ; But now, with all my visions fied, I wake to find that life unreal, With all its glories scattered, dead, Mid in my heart a porinilaiteeL -- • 0 ! blessed Hors of other years ! I've watched tnd waited for you long; Hive Waited oft with bittiii fears: And wooed - you WWII Plabt l4 'sonif But yet you come pot, and, in vain, I watch and wait for your return; No silver threads of joy remain To ease my soul's most deep concern. With h In ton Beyond That Somotii dad. The blew Crow, And AU To im Go),1 sive her from an evil fate, And keep her life as pure as snow I witeh and wait, for, in my emit, - Her meet taws wakes en olden tune Inscriked on memory'adeathless scroll, Amid the roses of•the June. BELLZPONTE,• June, 1886. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER. —Gonend Hooker arrived yekterday in New York. —Tho'Rentnoky State election will be he'd on August 7. Memo of Edwin D. Morgan, of Now York, for 188.1-, was $180,050. Several persona in Cinoinnati have been poisoned from eating cheese. —Tte meetings of the Knights of the Gold en Circle have boon suspended until 1870. —Tim people of if: Louis ate discussing a project to erect a bridge across the Mississippi. —Trinity Church, New York; owns real estate and mortgages amounting to $5700,1/00. —W. J. Allen, of Siiourney, lowa, recently murdered his wife whilst asleep, in order to marry a young girl of fifteen. —The Albany Jeered racer& IS the beet thing out—out of jail: The editor perhaps epeake from experience. —Henriques, the ptetty New York adrciar k playing ten-pinsancriimusing herself. at Budd's Lake, Now York, this summer. —A Kansas paper, sneering at the stupidity of a copruporary, sap "The bust thing ho has got olrthis week is a dirty shirt)." A Charles James Jeffries, the r atOtor of "Jeannette and Jegoinoi," a popular sing a doz en years igo,diedireeently in London. - --41eorge F. Robinson, the moldier who sa ved glei life of Secretary Seward, has been given sigevernmene clerkship worth $1,200 a year. --Tim 12i1500 of the late Rear Admiral Du pont, daoihter of Commodore Shabriok, 17. 9- N., is the superiorres of the Convent of Morey, in Worcester. large dog, elbowing evident signs of hydropttobia, was killed in Quincy, 111., July 1, but nonnetil he had bitten alle persons, some very severely. —Three robbers recently murdered it women in Madison county, Ohio. Some persons ap proaching the town where the murder was com mitted killed the robbers. —Senator Sumner has received a petition to the President from throe honored negroes of Charlestown, B. C., asking for their "rights." They want to vote and hold office. —A German emigrant ship was burned on tho banks of Newfoundland on the let instant. Bone hundred of her passengers ink - Miesing and simpered to be lost. About thirty have been eared —About fifty applications per day for pla ces as clerks and messengers are received by the Treasury Department hom disabled - woldiers, but no 'application can be favorably , essponded to, as no vaerwariurwaista —A bachelor editor sensitive in relation to his rights, objects tb MANI& wife through Idfit. that if he would have a 'IOWA', cotempowlos, who habitual l y copy yrithont credit. would refuse tci give him credit tot; the tutbg. --An !opt** greneholad bits girrenho/ii respirator btektob a man byjakdha stook of purl Mr WO thit millet of ao ens vapors and come out all right. s It Will be vier, rabiablo travelers risking Vologno or • Other fragrant aides. —Tli • Ilinr'ltozk geraid sus that.Cilkid Janina. - ARA" • *Pk"' disited P4l &gad • Ifilved, i Itiliabose. DAVIS A 111 : . ... ,• • et '"-- Pbe follireliti its itte' epialenalite -.... , Landon' These In reptile, L the • .d e the tritium' of Davie, est the ilk -Preisideigip Jotnson . 1 th at tt. ' i Molest add hued. belieWe of ." ' 7l . and tbat the - ringleaders . ..o th to should be _punished to the olmo rignii of • :the law." - "- , There is not a. doubt tbeif Kt. I its been guilty of eitinti ofthLst*. ,',••. ' 0 in conducting an aria a . incli . o : ". sed cession of. eertain States frota •If . ation. l i tt this we/ he =7 be •' 6„ ' tii!' • w ~, • , 110 - 11114 - la - g r:‘• , . • was koriittb, and so hems been sue ' itif °lel „whom the Jamison, have unit. .. an consistently iltalgi4ols :10 4i1,0c. : 0 certstnli Sot trondarlai tbat.,tt p p a among whom it astneintitt*Othat,... , body of oithe. had. Wright to disCititie Mr. 1 'actual go . .mint for any govern t , which I might prefer td - it should ~ imp.. .ct idea of the crime of tretirson".4,' or is possibly, tcto much to say that otiose in this respect ought to'he correct ed. Butosot. to mention that Some trice is due to thole who turned treltorts bend* treason was thus preseribea, it is Ympossi blot to deny that Mr. Jaffna= Dash Kish his fellow citizens bad really some of that justifioistion which Presidint Johnsi IN eg eager to eprive thenf . of.'beforelmnd. They believed with, or without reason, in a fight of seoession reserved to the several States of the Union in virtue of Uttar ulti mate sovereignty. They looked at the/. Union as a voluntary Federation of in - pendent States, from which. any Stet so •minded, might lawfully retire, and gen eral prinelple of State rights,though pot pushed to this extent, has en regarded •tt Ariortli\ on in a v ex rso nary Tene oa parts of the Union. Wasb gton had no much pretext for [norm on as this. It wai positively_ carts .that the Americana df Aida dap had title WitsXime; to political independity befond suoh as eooldbedisoov eFed in the timeriiiria of nuMi But the seceding States of the zedth appealed not to any such rights, 'but to written laws and Constitutional 'ordinan ces, and they asserted their claims with perfect political formality. Their a treks- • son" was consummated in the...greenlet and most constitutional manner. Their author ities assembLedin their several Legislatures, declared their Secession from the old Union. formed a new Confederacy, and then pre- pared to , resist what they dettrinated +. the invasion" of their late brother., This may htve,been pa excess 43f their political riglds. • but it is impossible to gainsay the belief Ia • those rights or to exolude it treat cessidsr-4 , alien in measuring the culpability of Moms who sated upon it. Tho question bas nettled now by the sword bitt It was really debatable before. Nor will President Johnson's distinction between designing ringleaders and their misguidedfollowers beer any morn gammas ful application. Probably MY - example has ever occurred in' which each a discrimina tion had leas place. The Americans are not people to be led like sheep, least of all , in the South. There was- no benighted class there to be deluded or cheated into rebellion. The blacks, who would Correa , Toad to such a class, were out of the affair altogether ; titd the war was conducted and maintained exclusively by classes above theclommon. It has also beep assertahuld bL the surest of all teats, that of actual trial. that no portion whatever of the South ern people woo coerced ,into GO rebellion, Absolute unanimity, of course, is a thing impossible, and,, doubtless, as the war pre-. seeded, the hearts of many men failed them ; but it was proved-over and over again .bat the idea of econsiderable Union parighteer borne and overpowered by a wilful and I,.yr &nous majority was a there delusion. The whole South, it cannot be unseal:4od,, hi--4 Its heart in the cause, and the Confederal, Government a:prmed, rather than formed the feelings of the population. Jefferson Davie was the chosen ruler of a people;'but not the ringleader .nf a mob. He was as truly if not as constitutionally, the repo imitative of six millions of Antorisans as Abraham Lindeln was of twenty atillione. Ile had their unflinching impporathiongh four years of• war, and he hae their sympa thies and affections now. Ella Puniehment would be their .punishment, sod his tato may delormiaelhe disposition of therBoutia for generations to come. Practically, however, and viewed rather by • high policy than by abstract logic, the case is removed from the category of tunit.tuimi inal quistions. Who is dill Jeifiroodpivis ? .. `For,she last four years be , has hero the head of a State * compact; and ionertui ' enough to be regarded as a nation,, though, - n'ot powerfullynough to resist the attack of anoiber nation thrice as Populous. , lie htle, , only not been recognised by European Gov. ernmente. because it was thought the tlino • ' for such recognition was not'quit. odme. He was actually recognised in a poetic's: ' -z--- way by President Johnson's own prelacies. sor. Three months ago' Abseils* folteeln was treating en termiihematiting like equal ity with the repreSootatil o o o of 4411 1 7 man. Twelve months ago. or Sivatig time during the war, the President of the pea- - - tederaej might We tuadi kip, elm terms, ... on the single condition of blip/LP/4i* .47 • etituents back Into., the Union, 1314, by . _Sep the Federal telingulaliel the litiguiage . ,_ of sovereigns against rebels,. atidle#lttoted :,, , the struggle in terms at regubkr. war. :fit; 6 . 4 , the .. traleen't of the Oiotreihniito.' : 1M,,,, - much treason than as It ifilsoiyilia - t t.: , .: i it Davis iii. no Iron* At Able 1 4 einf orhealtealdett tans Saysard; rsienbattedAt - , - .; .4. 4 %eat hie 6iltrillt Ifilltillit r::' - - . , . liiiiortrAltiesns kW now atileellbtrirgo'w; ii 441, oi*ltibilloalLegoreetudisenlb lilit'V AL" _ .. . __ . 21
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers