im . • • MIA• 77'- kliVaii r40 ,, el theiMitist patron who• MwhW ll . , TM Ur Wok litar?Mliblho Et 'nag seirl of 44 r di* fey beast ii*4- • Of hba who Oa MIS* td.ltaiso thy Mb Tb. m a who bitalltitftirsd to Visid the dam, , Bo ht bti nig am 'UM atma of Mb; Th i j ailed tikradasi io.drimo Its Sara away, fled r o sfireami, tad hta obildmm slay. • flow smoothly award Times raj momenta' • - Whils noble gouttelisas *tubed thy lifba' sloW fo carerliblittsimd this , while they watched sod fed, . , No sorrow; Maui Miss with releatioss pain; lAtt pry 4 iwy4lollll4, isuilsaand by woo, Told plums& taloa of its tairesteal flow. widti the amnia pf th• happy mag i , • MOlltiodegose 'oboes of unmossared , Joy, C o otentwoore *bit moved thy yews along • And °hound plasiarea ahamod tby kinim ploy: Thy Imelda flooiod'osi the southern brim, The Joyous symbol of raatrtoUlaar saw . • p re 'heon, oath % s in ideal samba spank_ gabled to howl from evictions goal; lass labor surely wquld be ooneequtnt Of baser 00 to thy tender soul;— The laws of Nature bath Imposed the lark dud sama must ythld It 'ben the Beeeeee.sek. 'Twos Ratan, foam's of the joys of Eve, Betook to win her from the trays of God; Tigfaithless promise ltd could fain deceit., And fawn upon Tier with a traitor's nod; 7 were !lends who did employ this dark device To tear thee from thy. southern paradise. And well they 'eempliehed their Warns! deed, While loud for vengeance oried their brother's blood ; Whiten opposed them, they did well mimed To sink thy peace beneath a tide of blood ; To eat the ties which thee to service bound, Aid weld the *halm of atav'ry firmer round. 3oi om " ~~omq Wjllbd, sett Protection from a sordid, worldly throng, Booed to obey each scorning votii, and eke A Ufa 4 =Wry 'midst a world of wrong; Wong to lotemeneb to an impending yoke, And bow In terror to receive tbo stroke. By tides of bitter sagnish•aehly borne Out on the raging, seething surge of life, By penury goaded through the world forlorn, Chilled with cold frowns, and menaced with the knife, Doomed but to follow where oompulsions load ; To roam encumbered with perpetual maxi. • Cursed by the fiends wko taught thee - disoln . tent; Spurned by the bands which urged thee to the trial ; • haunted by troubles bred by hours mis-spent, And turned from pity with a stem denial— arid men, whose praises once rose unto the sky, Will turn sad leave thee now to-starve and die; Or load thee down with burdens, which thy God Forbids that thou shouldst eve eel or bear, Then kick and goad thee, and ay tho rod, TlOPtirolbid duties drive thee tq despair; Whew*, deep in misery, thou- natistnad An- end, Without complicit, and without a friend. Discouraged by the wprld's cold scoffs and jeers, An object lest 6f . plty than of shame— /locked by the heartless crowd's orlprobtious ware, Add left to wonder with a brigand's name] Till death replace the. In thy native dost, A sad memonto of a nation's trust. BOND-HOLDERS AND BOND-MEN. An expresslop was used in these columns, says the Pressaint's Annus!, and extensively quoted, that former political parties in these Slates bid fair to be merged into the two of Beaddaiders-and liond-seen- _lt is a danger that stares us in the face. The question what is to be done with the enormous debt incurred by the war, is one that will press for a solution. The burden of taxation now imposed Is fearful. Like the superincum bent atmosphere, it presass upon every point' of the surface. .kteryiliing' is taxed and necessitias of life as unsparingly as the idlest luxuries. That, if the people resume their political freedom, they will take means to prevent the formation of a wale of Bond holders, 1 very certain, and the heavy Bond-holders are already taking their mea tiaras.. We have, noticed that, when some scheme shocking to public sentiment is to be brought forward, its- projectors always use the columns of the New York herald for ith'propositlon. Appearing in that buf foon sheet, it passesfor a joke, like old Bennett's proposition to pay off the four or five thousand millions of public debt by private subscriptions. But, by frequent repetition, what was looked on as a dismal joke,becontes familiar to the public ear, and thou that have an interest t 1,410 bad scheme can bagintlis serious d grPn in papers more pretentious to sobriety than Betinetea Herat& 1 It is thus that 'Messieurs the Bond-hold ere put forth in the Herald just now, the proposition to give properly—in other words Government 'Bonds and their holders, ex emption from the control of the popular voting. The it beading of, the paragraphs in the "Gaming Contest between Propirtis end individuals—A Revision of the Cf:nsittinaion .Needed 1" The "individuals ° are the people4--the cosestunsitim. and the "property" is the Government paper! Af ter a due preparation in the way of goner allties about how the soldiers have saved the - Coulltlty—thoseseldiers.hlve an intimation t,ltat they have not saved their own rights and libetiles in the restored, or ratbered re leaded Union. Read this: ' 'Mere Is yet an g er new lune raised by the vast debt WiNwhloh the late way has so heavily hardened the future industry of the oonntry. It, Is the establishment of,' loins fined :}indtotiod. to the control which indlrldaalsa•the gireat mimeo, of ii,ur voters — are Ammeter to be allowed ov6 capital and property. At present it is urged, and with crab, thoit, the cattiAml debt is eo w ide seatterred sad divided up among all ranks wad alailiee of the rotlitcropulapon that no Pear luny boontortainiid of any onmeassful movement looking to .itsrepudiation. For todiy Eib is vdry ; but the, merest tyro in agate knows the tendency of owl -44 to accumulate in a fel( ten Inns Moe Carr we MOO Wady PTO. icd t that tite voters not - holding anj atrial or Controlling interline. in the national debt will: outnumber !hose who do; mortipanteeco one. 1 , 444 sfsttay ss itta I,t thin Inns the lais ‘ Mott must Inaiteb arises What pro tection • to' property in the ion& of the few zgatallt,the granny an/ lailastlii itei•biTisii Wide sof the =C. la ` " . . • / . 41 , A ) `ii .r- . ----;'-' g , h .,,. •„ it . . .. 11 . • i 111 Lett t t iri.'•4 ': ( li t il -- L ' t t 1 tili Vol.' 10, That indeed There 41,_11a sugarcoating to the pill t What " protee: ties" can the " few," who don't pay taxes, have that "the millions" will ribt claim ex emption fpm paying taxePfor, and to, the few 1 What protection gall the few have who are so unfortunate u to have absorbed. the wealth of the country, by a vicious leg islation;egainst ttie "millions" who, by the: legislative guile auk wrong-doing of the few, have beim made poor 1 It is a Tarp pretty issue. It hi one that, milt has not imospect the observation of one class, is not likely to be Overlooked by the other olasis interested. " The , may be doomed to become Bondman; but the Bond-helderi will have to pay pretty dearly for the pleasure of making them such. SOLDERS'READ: At Farmington, Massachusetts, the Re publicans celebrated the 4th of July, in a stile of their own. Wendell Phillips was one of the orators, and, among other things, said : "The negro bears the palm in virtue, gallantry, and patriotism in this war. In every section he has stood by our side and • • uatled.---.lLis-himAtteak-peotectiot for, and his protection is the white ma's safety. I grew sick of any game where the counters are living men. One-third of our standing army is to be of the negro race." -This Ia putting the negro above the.w,hite soldier in virtue, gallantry and patriotism. Phillips also advised the Republican party to organise themselves inimediately }gained President Johnson, becauses be refuses - to go in for 'ne g ro voting, and said—" Let us move immediatelnupon his vlorks." en.klUr , A negro orator was' also at the same meet ing, who said that if the negroes were de nied the privilege of voting, two hundred thousand black soldiers would give us some trouble, and hoped that if the Government", fails to protect the black man we shall.bave the blood and massacres of St, Domingo over again. He himself would go down South, and help them In the work. These tiOntl.' meats were vociferously- applauded by the Republican-audience, —Hon. Emerson Etheridge has been arrested at Columbus, Ky., by a military man, on a: charge of delivering incendiary speeches in Tennessee. The speeches have been delivered since the war is over, and consisted in contending that slavVy is not aboliebed in Tennessee, and that the people of that Stale alone have the right to say whether it shall be Cr low Mr. Etheridge was Clerk of the U. 8. }louse of Represen tatives during the first Congress or Mr. Lincoln's Presidency, and is one of the beet members of the Republican party. Not being orthodox on the nigger lineation, he is served as are all others who refuse to be lieve as the powers-that-be do. —Lebanon Atlvertiaer. —This is a strange worlds While the public man is rapidly settling down to the belief that Mrs. Surratt, recently executed In Washington for complicity in the assassi nation of Mr. Lincoln, was entirely inno cent, the republican papers are shouting gleefully " Lincoln is avenged !" Was the execution for revenge, and was it really necessary !bat an innocent person should be made to suffer the dealh penalty for the sake of vengeance f —Ex. ---A. rascally agent of the "American Protestant Union. Missionary Society" is out. in Clearfield county preaching that the next war is to be between Protagonism and Catholicism. Ile deolared that there was • secret society in Rome' ready to strike at "the proper moment." If a Catholic should go about thb country giving vent to such devilishness bow long would ho be without a coat of tar and [bathers! Those who preaeh war between religious seats have Ito religion—they are devils let loose upon the earth to ourse.—Er. —The Abolition candidate for Gov ernor of Ohio, Gen. Cox, ins model-candi date for that party. He was born In Cana da, regarded as an inefficient officer in the army, and is a eon-la-law of President Fin ney, of Oberlin College. where negroes and Whites walk arm In arm. Cox is evidently a true representative of the Abolition party, and with his British instincts, will doubt less go for - disfranchising the poor white man, iy order to confer the suffrage upon 2io dollar Regrows. „ A UOPPKRICICAD Hots."—New Tort city has furnised 116,000 men for the war, be sides 26,000 three months' men, at II cost for bounties of $9,870,827. • The total military expenditures of the city were over seven teen millions and a half ; and the numblY of men fUrnished to the war:waslet si large tab ' vain number furnish rip England.—Ex. A GOOD Innia—Tlte following "notice" is' posted eonspieuously io l t publication aloe out west: • • "Shut this door—and as Boonas you have dune talking on business, serve your mouth the same way." Bores woulOot do a slow thing to out this out and irate it inside of that:quits.. , In matpufao o towns nd oorporitions in Idassachuset -, Men, women and children. nrencquired to perfbrm eleven bows ear- TiM4 for.* diky labor—one hour more than InWaghstd. hivpinianthropists" of ..the huh," bower ~do not regard this as an .ontrago on •UT at all. • • —.- ---Tbe Melt obrphant is eating hie own had off, • • -the Abolitionists who, to cell him orgttolktoettilay. Who Inuits yite elephant. Don-'t'ill orient at once! BELLEFONTE, •PA., FRIDAY, JULY • 28, 1865. " WAIT TILL. THE .90DIER3 COME HOME?' For the lest two or three yeari it, has been the habit ,Jaeobitt-negro-equality ditors and spouters to try to make it ap pear that the soldiers of ourr armies were very hostile to Democrats and the pemoorat io cause. Walt till the soldiers' come 806e,"-wes a kind of unlawful threat that Shoddyites and plunderers wore constantly holding up before Democrats, intimating by this menace that: the soldiers, after their discharge, were to become cut-tlsoats and assassins, anti that their victims were to be prominent Democrats. The leading Jacobins, who aye as cow ardly as they are dishonest, would rejoice "could , they induce the dischlrged soldiers loins inoendlariecand.nntissra— Such boaduot on the part of our discharged 10h diers, we repeat, ;would have been veryli ceptable to the negr r equality 7 stiy-equality-home patriots. Well, the soldiers are at last coming home ; thousands of them are already here. We have oonvereed with scores of them, and on several oonsions our emictum lute been filled with them. Mix . .iy who !creed with Sherman, and many who served with, Grant, in many hard-Ought battles, are here, some minus an arm, or a leg, but all joyous, because of the end of the war, and because once mom they are permitted to enjoy the society of the loved ones at home and to feel that they have no foe to contend with. Do they oche home Mled with bit terness, and ready to menace Democrats, as the shoddyites hoped ? _No, no. They talk like men of sense, are liberal in their views, and patriotic in their sentiments. To a man they are opposed to negro equality; op posed to ne#ross voting;' opposed to "loyal thieves," and opposed to those Morass. rascals who remained at home to fill contract., and pile up magn(ficent fortunes at the expense of the soldier - and the Governriient. 'These are the men, Ames the measures the soldiers are hostile to ; and mark it, they will let their resentment be felt at the proper time and in the proper way. 'Hereafter they will vote as freemen and as t!ey please. Many of them remarked Vs us we are now out of the army, with no onto threaten us with punishmeht if we refuse to vote the ticket furnished US ; hereafter 'we vote according to eqg Own judgment." That's the way they talk, and they are in earnest. Hun dreds, thousands, aye, tens of thousands, who left home three or four years ago ! rank pant obeli tionists, returned cured. They have seen enough of abolitionism; enough of the doings of the leading men of that traitorous organization. One man who bad been a leading abolitionist In his township, and who has been in the army for more than three years, told us Diet he was fully convinced that the sudden manner in which the slaves were set at liberty was a most terrible calamity to them. He bad wit nessed the suffering that bad followed, and was horrified. Gradual emancipation, he said, might have worked well, but freeing four millions of slaves and turning them loose all at once, thousands of them to per, jab, was a piece of wickedness that no man with / heart in his bottom could endorse. These were the views of a mail of•eeose— •the views of a man who entered the army a bigoted abolitionist, and who returns to his home a full believer in the principles of the Democratic party. Hereafter he will act with anci'votirmith us. "Wait till the soldiers come home." Well, wo have waited patiently, and right glad are we to see the soldiers and to hear them talk. They are with the Democrats, and the only men a/ainst whom we bear them hurl their curses are the loyal thieves" and the ne gro-equality advocates. 'Thank God, the soldiers are again freemen, and cannot be approached by a hireling of the Government, or instructed how to vote. —Carlisle Volun teer. GLOIIII4 Or rill NAXX "Raum."—There is very unnecessary irritability in some minds Jn respect to the' word rebel. Dow any Virginian can share this senditivenese we cannot imagine. Take from. the past history of the Old Dominion, the names and deeds of her rebel sons, and she will have no prouder history than Mune or Michigan, Connecticut or Kansas—a beggarly account of Indian fights and forest feelings in one half of her career, and crops and cotton mills in the other. Her annals are the biographies of rebels'. She oherised few memories save theee of rebels. She has never raised II monunent except to 'a. rebel. Her Rag reproduces on • larger . soale the triumphant tebeL A rebel lies within •tbe hallowed bounds of Mt. Vernon. • A rebel looks down on her noble!it work, from Monticello. A rebel in tenting thronse keeps`watch and ward over iterqpiliel, and tone but rebels are thought woct.hy to line the pedestals of the rebereittifilt Does it becomemher to blush at the name of rebelf—Petersburg News. WHAT THI Prone people want $OllOO, fraternal' relations, tectiPirocal commercial intercourse, a reduction of pub lic' expenditures; a restoration of civil pow er in National and State goyernments. The negro suffrage question, 'which agiiittes the Minds of ndioal politioans, anxious to ride into office and power, will hardly prove a sufficient hobby for their purposes. The people will soon begin to think more •of their UM'S I a the negro, and ill look 'with little treat on this Al* p h Dirt pie abs lori,--Rrodiv Goethe. The'Brl4;port Bandon! fears that the Deomeret* are '" wind's their coils arouild'Preeldent • ,is• "STATE RICINTS AND TIIIPXXAMOTNIOIIf.u. THE OCEAN-TELEGRAPH , .One of the greatest events of the year, will be the second attAnpt to connect the two hemispheres -Ay mein of an ocean tell , °graph cable. On the 29th ult., the last 'Mile sof the cable whioh is to birlaid in the 'Atlantioss (semen between the west coast of Ireland and the northe-east %oast of America, was completed in England in presence of a select Party of scientific gentlemen, after whisth the lait coil was imeiediately tissue (erred- to the Ithge tanks prepared for it on the steamship, "Orhat Eastern." The Lon don' "Deily News," gays that thettreat Eastern will start from Valeiseiallay Ireland, shout the first' of July, and is eiteeked to Arrive on this side of the Atlantirn about two weeks. Messages will be ooninantly bank Berle sion. A smaller vessel will first lay down about twenty miles of the shore end of the cablehen 'an attachment will be made with t ' ain cable and the great steam ship wit start on her grand voyage. The ezlr esitlength of,the cable is 2,609 miles, whioh 11 a:surplus or about 600 mild: to allow for inequalities' in the ocean bed . , tieviationa_froMiLstraight eenrae__,l is one cnd one-eighth of an ineh in diame ter. In the centre are, close together,seven oondpeting wires of copper. Around these wife{ It plated - it starlets of hoeiogehouti lay ers of gotta -pere . ha r about one sixth of as inch in diameter, the whole being cover ed with a wrapper of jute. Outside of this is a mass of ten iron wires closely twisted. Each 'of these wires is separately covered with Manilla yarn, the whole being steeped in a hot compound of gotta porch and telt, which renders them impervious to wa . In the construotion of the are sated 18,01's miles of copper wire, 20,000 pities of insu lating material, 26,000 miles of iron wire, 20,000 miles of jute, and 150,000 miles of of twist of yarn. 'lf these were attached one to the other they would form a line of about 240,000 miles, which would a little more than reach from the Earth to the moots. SXTILAORDINAILY FOUTIVIDIC Olt A CHILD. —Last Monday morning George Smith a boy only seven years old, residing at Pleas antville, N. Y. told hie parents, If they insisted upon sending him to school, that he would throw himself on the Harlem Railroad track, which was near his father's land, and receive such injuries as would compel them to keep hint at home. They thought nothing of the threat and ordered him to school fOrtliwith, supposing he hadf gone until they had learned he bad execu ted his menace. When the 10 o'clock u I mail train passed the village, George laid his left arm upon the Irak, and the oars passed over it, severing nearly the whole of the" hand from the limb. The engineer perceiving him then for the first time, stop ped the train, when the child ran off, and was found with his shattered arm behind his back sitting on a fence whialing"Yan kee Doodle," and pretending nothing had happened. Before he - could be taken home George fainted from pain and lose of blood ; but when restored and a surgeon summon ed, be, refused to take an diabetic agent, buil:Old the medical gentleman to out away. The scalpel was used on the mangled limb, but the little fellow never whimpered or complained. -Not a nerve tremblatl during the operation, which must have been very painful; indeed the boy did not speak until it was over, ;when he remarked with great satisfaction and an, air of triumph : 1 Well lam glitd• I did it ; I oant't be Ant to school for a while anyhow." The child with wonderful coolness, saying be first put his right arm on the track; but reflect ing that when he grew up he would not be able to write well with the leadoff that limb, be pubstituterßia left. His parents are much distressed at the ocourrenoui and ap prehended, if he is 'sent CO school again he 'will destroy himself. The boy's conduct is almost inexplicable, and his fortitude and determination extraordinary for ona of his tender years.—.Exekange. MELANCHOLY DEATH Oi • LITTLE CHILD. —A little daughter of Mr. William Atwood of this place aged about fourteen months, was drowned on Sunday morning last In the garden house attached to his dwelling. Mrs. Atwood had gone up stairs for a few mniutes, to wait upon her husband,-who was just recovering from a serious illness, when the little girl, with her brother about three years old, went out into the garden ; and the first intimation the Amity had of their absence, was the cry of the little r lioy that hie sister had fallen into the p vy. As quickly sa / itocAdble the seat was remoy- Wand the bqdy recovered. Life was not extinct at • tlifs time ; but trom the nature of. the ease it would , have been impossible even then - to restore her, and when the phy sioianti Arrived, a few minutes lifter, all signs of life were gone.—Clistoe "A Corrsannsu• Hots."—,New :York city has Apmisited 116,000 men for the war, be• sides 26,000 three months! men, at • QOM for be'unUes of $9,870,827. ,The total military expenditures-of the pity were over seven- Weario7mons ands half and themunibet of/Man "'furnished to the War was elmodi as large as the antes eionberferfastittl 6p New Ryland: —AA old darker'in Petersburg, meat wait • heard talking onhaedom. He was giviug rubies lo some ofbli , uiolgred ta4- rea," wad said "Stay *idioms maigoAled work, hell lbed sad olodeyau, but mason to tori* fad gus your 4tioodOii:f VP like confedmiiii tioesm,y, iksser• . 700 11it;14 da witardato." , IIP SELLING ~. : UVE IN=N . 1 ENGLAND. ... , Tie people of P syliviter are apt to take it foto granted, because so much noise is madrabout beneralened and philanthro py In New, England, that charity must as suredly have her home amps. Snob im pressions •of the Heir England style, are, however; very erroneous. - "Her worth in connection with that particular virtue its:tiot to be measured by the great amount her people hare Said end the little they have perforthed for the regeneration,of the hea then of i liotera-boologah and the extension of eqdality and itafrage to the Southern Sleeks The pert and only fair way of taking the altitude of the - peopie of that elec tion from a charitable point of view le through the treatment of and provision for ..r, aged, and--helpless—immediately surrounding them, and not only of the gime oomriton blood, but often of the same kith and kin. While in Pennsylvania the poor—both troung and old—are bountifully, atotalmost tenderly, oared for, In almosp every , ,ocriumu -laity, at the public expense. and without any exultant' or compulsory return in the wide difference in their treatment. Instead of comfortable houses In whiqh to protein and support the helpless poor, they have there selectmen, whose duty it hi to taker charge-of all -pampers aull-self them -hut to 'the lowest bidder at auction--so as to pre vent their becoming a public, oharge-,the buyer paying in proportion to the amount of work he thinks he can get out of the un fortunates. If there happens to be one whom no person will buy because of inabil ity to work, such an one is at onto banished out of the comipunity—that Is, be is sent to the place. whence he 134,11/6. This plan Is bighly utilitarian, but is very slightly char itable. It not only shows those who can not help themselves how to do so, but it also compels them id help themselves. No doubt many of the feeble and the aged go under during the process, but what is that to- people who value dollars and °onto more than life ? If the taxes are kept down, and no poor rites to pay, it Matters - hot-to-the able-bodied, scheming, skin-flinty portion of the people whether a few paupers live out their allotted Lime or nut—whether their last days are comfortable or otherwise. From New England the balance of the country receives instruction In charity, in equal rights, in freedom ; never question ing that the primeval fountain of all the virtues gushes from beneath Plymouth , .ok ; and yet white men skid women are dai y sold into hideous slavery at the auc tion Kook for .the "crime" of being poor, or helpless, or aged The balance of the country accepts an true the dictum of the New England "lights' when they declare that negro slavery is " the sum of all vil lainies," never caring to think og inquire what term should be applied to t he Puritan system of white slavery. Men and women I and children are sold all over New England to the lowest bidder, who compels them, by harshness and pkiniehment, to work out their price with a profit to him. Men, wo men, and children-are also confined in In stitutions, likererhalnals, and compelled to labor so that they shall not become a public charge upon the wealthy. Where is the boasted civilisation of New England, before such facts I What right have the reformers of that section to go out of their own com munities to expose the inhumanity of negro slavery ? Poor hous4 were and ander° unknown in the South. The aged and help less there were not cast off because they could not work, but were fed and clothed and attended when tick. In the South whet age - ammo upon those in involuntary servitude they beciamellWeLfree from work. In New England; when age and poverty overtakes • man k he involuntarily becomes a slave. What a difference ! Upon this subject the Journal of Commerce remarks as follows "The custom of sell ing the lot of town pooi , to the lowest. bidder for the year, and authorizing him. to extract the highest possible quantity of work out of the smallest possible ;quantity of food through the medium of the miserable bodies and bones of the paupers, prevails to et le mentable extent in Eastern communities. Nor is this all. A citizen of New York has not the pritilego of being poor in Connecti out or Massachusetts. The Constitution is of no account there in this respect. Woe to the New Yorker who relapses from self governing indePendmice to the oondition of a selectman's ward, an admit of public charity. — Se •munkoti even be permitted to die and be buried where perhaps his Wife and children are hurled. He must be ship jied off to bin attire Elate, lest lie baionte a town charge, anti sone one's rates for the year be thereby inorenied tb the *mount of ten or: ; lmenty cents. It would be, we re peat it; more sensible for the people of New England who are given.to philanthropy lad misanthropy (for. the • loves. of the nelFro slave is the hater of the white slave 0W40), if they would devote some attention to Limit* home slaveries suursorrows. There are ag onies in the poor bonnets, of Ch forth which humanity might well leak to soOthe. For loins years past these institutions have been neglected., Willie the attention otthe people has bean 'Wiled to tbeirsar; bqt 16 is now greatly to / I . l ' 6 . 4 t14.thai1, 4le .o°r houses . upwill ALL Witilnan end Ahlitisen. Albs team soldiers., Mama other previtilen many' ntnetlotinre. would bakes:ries* to low As ill* . tit ishitikeist pop ! . soul in. the illesteiii Simms. Dos, eerey ,014 fond& .‘svatAtisties of Aids. "fake 't Men.' • •-• _ , • PEE 0.• BENI Writtm !Dr ths-Wat ohasaa4 - " JESUS WEPT." IT J. W. •lIILIT Betide the groVeWhere LaSalle elePt — The Savior vaned his We and wept; human brat, ol'orehatied with "lief, • In human tears found lad Miler. 611 I sight lie that, nor heaven nor earth Had witnesseestioe Creation's birth; Nor will, in all the future years, Again behold a God in lean And "Ann wept!" no werda, express Sn math of holy Andernra! The Aiehos; of Redsreption'a , Plan Here bowed his head and wept for bun! The wond'ring Sews looked on with awe, /Won Med 14 the grief they saw ; " Seelmullelavoilithm," whisper they, ',As Jesus views the indult= clay. 0, trembling sinner, filled with fear, Let these sweet words thy courage cheer; And though In ■in ye long have slept; Remember still that "Jesus wept." Fur us, as well as Lasarus deed, He bowed, in grief, His mighty head ; F9ll ll ar~Nk l.oLYSi.nadins...-- Beholdliim in Gethsemane!. And later still, on Calvary's mount, We see Him ope l 'the healing fount To cleanse from sin the guilty race For whets,{o-temeriletosiled-lis fees.- " Behold, Ile loved ns r this is why The Savior name on birth to diet" And thli that Joins wept Beside the grave where Lagar= slept. And we, for whom He met his doom, Arad lit oar * pathway through the tomb, Shall we, than heed/OSS Jew more vile, Forget His love aid scorn His smile? Shell we forget the crimson tide That flowed from opt hie wounded side? 4ryet hear not the anguieh'd cry at rends Hie soul "Sioi ! Zia!" Ah, no I in base a deed as IMO Would rob aged of heavenly bilis, Would from the earth all Joy etpel, And, mod an angel down to, hell I My, rather far, on banded knee, With contrite heart and suppliant plea, We'll bless Ills mercy, crave Hie And hope to meet Him' pp Above BMlefoms, Pa. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER. —Value the friendship in theatons; swarms of insects will surround you tu tho'sunaltiuo. -I:l'Larey, gazing with astonishment at a elephant in a menagerie, asked the keeper 'what kind of • baste is that satin' hay wid his tail r —Jones is • strong believer in gnarnian angels. "If it were not for Qom," 4e lakib " what would keep people kern rolling on' of bed when they are fast sleep?" —Barnum, the showman, bad given notice that be will, in six months, erect a building and oolleet curiosities to equal if not ampoule those destroyed by the late firs In New York. —The Este Observer mays that Mr. A.D. Sherman, of the famous Sherman Oil Well, is reputed to le worth over seven millions of dol lars, and that five years ago he was a poor men. —The Riohmond. delegation that visited President Johnson 'to obtain the removal of the twenty thousand dollar clause in the amnesty proclamation, have returned to Richmond; hav ing failed in their Iniasion. L---A Jaw broker was standing on an 01l tab at an auction held •the other day at Birming him, England, when, in the excitement of "go ing, going, gone I" he stamped the staves lone and disappeared in the oil, or Whitt,: -"4 gallant Colonel mild to a private the other day : "Are you going to this copperhead Adair on the 4th of July l''' "Well," vela the peva* I am going to the white celebration—don't know whatyou mill it." —Bedford Gazette. —ln an abollUon Fourth of July proces sion at Salem, Idammohusetts, were a white girl and a negro man seated side by side in a car labelled—" The Pant, Proem% and Fri, tare." Hope that future" will atiV in Mara • chusetta awhile yet. horee-stealer, while on hie way to the lowa Bride prison, on a steamboat, threw his manaoled handnover the nook of the man who Wee Bearding Mm, and making a-desperate Assn forward, threw himself and the man into the river.- - Both were drowned. —Thio Tribune oonespondest aiMrts, posi tively that spiritual attendants were denied ad mission to Mrs. Surratt on the day of execution until Elemetary Stanton had reeelved from them a prom's; that they would not on the scaffold proolaim their belief I n her itusooonea —lame hes two pestilimees to balance ear; civil war. Thellassahm pima*, which is deal nkt, and- the ()holm, IrMsh 11 asking sad havoc la Turkey and Arabia. Melees than O ty-sinbt tbotsand of thelfilwrims Meoni have hew swept off, sad shwas are Vied with corpses. -- , --Judge Thompson, of putffuprents Court of Pnutsylvanim now ip..-similor at ffhibdieir phis, Ins ordered the release of Coisens,,an dtdittowilhe opinion that ll,te light of th e Pre sident to "almond the writ eq, Arises 0;07.8 only given to him by pikeerseffilating the con , tlnuaneenf war. - • - 4 2 usrlibistiolg" oc:unto ll9 4 tits Mato do,y, !motifs to Washittatots, tow s: *poly alit: tor, &Hotted obi I very leopootrat two oafs U,.toiaa gaup. r 44004/brat Mier awsik‘bitiAir inmi* i.linktlins **go Itti '0** , 4,3 ' a i br Atir ; • yr • • =, r-alaill bah SIPOW.9 coVehiggfog "I"6 "r it**ja t l 47 7 " Cl4 "Ot a ir ig gliK . 4 4,01..:1. 1 1 1 : ghesn Dad =; 4 11 1,07:41 7 i .0 **llia teak .11101411Mi11ew1iii614.3115111,11, SIM =I .• _ • • '?* . . - r y, wet • sadirillidaYiellis • I fretting Itheren,- then vela RditithiffehSt i Wee freighted with an sauna number, el - • . - elegant women, and gay, and Meelp . drettlyd- . . Men. As nintal among the Wor t *se a large proportion 0 Uncle Sam's pots with shoulder straps. There Was no t longer any apprehension of geersinaeor ethertearam-.. den on the void, and after„ petting fairly etnder way, the pubs - 444; (WAN' the" - ' • ' spirit of 'thelevely mar°, addressed teilme-.• selves to the totaVtif. making loop _ Tilessan'Tfyi. It wes tatit.Rdig ere laiire-da-dinekel_Witte...eniegegthe in some way. Oa on ellhe math the ladies' ear waste inefried lady daughter; opposite, lacing aA other child, a eon, and* eolered z ' 4 we belittle they are ell " / ladka"molp. , eritti a baby.. The mother of the ohi .. ldmMi Men beautiful, patron, with sear . kliell eyes, im exuberant health, and rivet:lofts epirite. ' Behind her sat a young lienteeint, kiquett . to kill,' ant seeking a victim. iorsped up an acquaintance with the .nother by • • tendons to the children. It was not long ere be was esseying. to stoke himself .very agreeable to her, and by thritime the sun began to ddeline, one would have thought theytere old familiar 'friends. The Lieu tenant felt that he had made an ftepreechus —Lis elation manifested it. The lady, g of no ,wre.g, ittepectlag po was apparently pleased with her casual . quaintanee. By and by the train app prom:had the tunnel at Muldrough's KilL The gay and festive lieutenant leaned over and whispered something in the ledre ear. It wan noticed that she appearmi as thunder. 'Brush" t and her eyes immediately after dalmernith indignation. A momatth.ducti Whet changes! The smile, It was not of plealiure, but was sinister. It was Unper ceived by the lieutenant. She made him _I reply, which rejolied hint apparently, Ter, much. - For the__underetelliiktt.MAlea of this narrative—this o'er trite fate::-weihest tell the reader what was whispered, Ind what replied. Whispered the Ilettieniint, " I ,mean to kite you when we get into the tunnel!" Replied the lady, "it 'will be dark, who will see ft f" Into earth's-bow els—into - the tunnel ran the sere. . Lady - and colored nurse quickly changed mate, bay lieutenant threw his arms around lady sable, pressed her ekes& to hit, and diet and Parlous rained kisses on her lips. ,Ist few momenta the train carpe out into the. broad daylight—whits lady looked anmed. colored lady bashful, blushing; gay lien ' 1 1 tenant, befogged. "Jane," said the white lady, " what have you been doing I" Re speeded colored lady, " nothing I" " Yee, I .yettliave,'' said the white hub, not inna _ undertone, but in a vctiCe attention of all in the car. "See hoe your cella is 'imp l ied, and your Wallet mashed. ' Jane, poor colored beatify, hung litiriiietd *'moment, the " oblerlitid (dell ebeincere,"' and then turning aronadste th i s ,lbsetstaant,, replied, " TAW isms home end .kleired see is the tunnel f" Loud and long waethe toughs that followed, "amaag the pesiengene. The white lady enjoyed t heojoke amazingly. Lieutempt looked like a sheepittending dog —left the oar and was men no more diming the trip.—/VissAsille Mien. I=EZZE No 28: Tun Max wno Dzartaan Wnraurtlastow rna.—ti was on one of the river eteamore. at dinner, that an amiable matzo/Ay iadj remarked, in the midst of conversation with a grave looking gentleman, on the tmhjeot of temperance; Oh, of all things in the world, I despise a whisky-drinker 1" ' The gentleman dropped his knits and fork, in the ardor of his feelings,'extended his band, and took hers within his own, and with emotion that threatenedtease over the loss of ruined sons, be replied, with filtering voice t " Madam, I respect your sentiments and the heart that dictates them. l,perralkno one to go beyond me in despising whisky drinking, I hare been disgusted on this very boat, and I say it • now before our worthy captain's face. What, I say,•oan %us more disgusting than to see well dressed;, respeotable, and virtuous-looking. young men, whose mothers axe probably even now praying that the tender instruction by which their youth war Illuminated may bring forth precious Pruit In their maturity ; I say, is see young men step up the bar o r this boat, and, rithnutAkax_rd-obeerving eyes, boldly ask !Cr whisky, 'when they know that there is in that very bar the best old... Cognac brandy !" Pesia or ♦ ithortemast.- 1 -An anecdote ie told of rangy, the "mevitallit," and a wailer._ to the followlpg ofroot lie war holding !bah" in Rooknolor. and In wilting along .the cant pito day. oamo Wale & boatman who wan SW4IIIaIM. furiously. klasobing up, kik; oonlhomiud Lim and sbruptink u aaked : • . Sir, do you know where you 11111 Dam 1" The unettspootius mak ipaosently ropliod, tbet he was rig up the ; genii to: the but t , Johnny Seim* , No, ob . , rot( are riot," oietiimiod 'S you ere4olig to belf;daster , "l.l", osnil beet will convey you." • , The boatmen looket it bile scent for e minttb, and .tionietareed memo I, I dip; do Yeti iambi where* • .. I expect laid to beim." "No,air, yeti weir** iitto4lo4o:ti.'• And .04 the setioactortitilkerd liotedik- 1 ; 4 1 Bossy isto his milt aid tailot , kbairdis the murky - mreters, *bets I'o- id boireo,i grownedead not tioilidtsideele relebtAbilell L tebedl idee outs; -.7t" MB !:' MARI El EZI OE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers