• 77 - souk 111)11%12!AUTWIt4 Mere than DieMmo re agt. l !' * MtrYy ' m didm ossswsti • Moe* W o m a, le erlboth mea n and tast p u l, Bright surd pleasant, alweys fair, Where sash lunstt shall rest contented, Grated:l for slush beauty thle. ;lee More then lolly, swelling titles * Mare then fishion's lurks; Mon than Marstli .. , an's glided i llrg' honors, More than thonghCcarrwell dan/Pare-"!' See that homemad e attractive attractive - By surround finteS44 brlght—* Ines, arranged anteend order,Flowes, all their tweet delinht.' I • , a s . Seib to mates inur borne most lovely, Lail in, a mina: Spot, Whore, in ore* esatenunant resting, mitre* forgot. Where • were and trent are waving, — Birds w sing thsdr sweeten song ; Where the pure t lbenghts'inW linger, Confidence and Ipyelndong. Slake your Moms a Second *lan, Imitate her smiling bowers; Let • neat and temple cottage Stand among bright trees and dower*. Thus ashat.likeiptenne-and...whYhrialunims—. . Will mesh blooming roes display I • lice a simple vimeelad arbor Brightens through snob stunum , dam 'Share each hesul li will Yet eonteirket, Seldom within fir to roam Or, if reauslauire, will cherish Memories of that playsuit home. du& u home makes MSS the better, Pure and lasting its Otiatrol ; Bono, with pure and bright surroundings, Leavy Ma imprenou *a soul. FAREWE LLALLEN wv. TO THE PEO LE O LOUISIANA. EXIOnTIOI 011101, SIMITZPOILT, LA., June 2, 1866. j Fstz.ow Cyrus:no—l Sire thought Ti my duty to address you a few words in parting from you, perhaps, f . My. adminis tration as Govenor of Lottlsla= eloses,this day. The war is over, the contest is ended, the soldiers are disbanded and gone to their Tomes, aird - noefTbere le in LtiliGirtruatp positionwhatever to tlie ConstittiWitrind the laws of the United States. Until order shall be established and society with all its safoguards fully restored, I would advise that you form yoursetives into companies sod squads for the purpose 01 protecting your families from outrage and insult, and your property from spoliation. A few bad inca can do much mischief and destroy much property. Within a short while the Culled States authorities will no doubt send you an armed force to any part tittle State where you may require it for yolff protec tion. My countrymen._ we_bart for Aar long years waged a war, whielfwe deemed to be Just in the sight of high heaven. We have . tint been am beet, and wiliest nor the bra vest people in the world, but we have suf feied more, and borne our sufferings with greater fortitude than any people on the tare of Ood's green earth. Now let us show to the World that es we bane fought like men—like men we can make pesos. Let Share be no cots of violence, no heart burn ogo, no intemperate language, but with manly dignkaubmit to the inevitable course of eVerttp: -Neither let there be any repining' after lost property. Let there be no eritnination or recrimination—no mur murs. It will do no good but may do muoh harm. You, who like myself, have lost all (and oh, how mazy there are) must begin life anew. Let us not talk of despair, nor shine about oar misfortunes, but with strong aims knd stout hearts adapt oursel ves to the circumstances which surround' It now rests ILVIL the United States an 'itorities to maks ion once more • conten ded. prosrrous and happy people: They ran within five years restore Louisania to her original wealth and prosperity, and heal ltrv,. terrible wounds that have been inflicted 4 upon her. So gnat& are our reoupliative energies—so rich is our soil A so greet are the resources of the State I Our rulers have it in their power to dry the mourners tears --to make glad the heirts of the poor widow and the orphan—to cause the past in a greatpeasare to be forgotten and to make your evastated.lando '3O bbssom as the rm.' IL my vole e could be heard and heed - i - t. Washington, I would say "spare ibis istra'oted land-"oh, spare this afflicted peep e. In the tame of bleeding humanity they are suffered enough 17 But my coun try en this cannot be, lam one of the pre ecri ed—l must 'go into exile -- I have stood by ou, fought for you and staid with You up to the very last moment, and now I leave you with a heavy heart. The high trust with which you have honored me is this day.. returned. I leave the offipe of Goveimor with clean i i ttuds, and with the Zolusoinu pride of having done my duty. All fhb ,otficere of State and all employees itt its va rious depar i tinents have rendered their final acoounid l and made full and comphste settlements. 1 thank them for teetr uniftlim kindness to me, and *heir patriotic devotion to the several duties assigned them. These accounts are in the hands of Colonel John ht. Sandidge. finvite the olosest,serutiny not only on these papers but all my acts as Governor of Loeleana. My State Stores and Dispensaries and-Manufactories have all been oontltvted in the 'most successful manner. None can tell the vast amount of good they hive done, not only to you, but to the people of.Teass, Arkansas and Mis souri. Fellow agleam, In this the darkest hour of my life, I do not tom? before you as an old man broken down by the storms of, Buda, nor din mine to plead for mercy, at the handil - ef Woos Whom I foughlror four long t eal. No, no, I come In the ed. and Awe( manhood, unconquered, tto~ _1 boric nothing to• regret. I look book With .mourottl pleasure at my, public career, now About to close. As a oitisen, as a soldier, as [statesman, I have done my duty: . Tim soldier's faMll7,- the widow sod thi orphan, the lick and' the tromied, thepoor.and the needy, have/ ell had my espeeial, Care, 4hile the wauts of the soldier 14114-40 .Ibsen have not been forgotten. • I 'hove protested the people from thienorPeohineil• of military power, sad have 31111mrsettaitted a imle of ootton in t he Stale to bi sipisci or impressod. It is partly tai-reolesine .101 these sate, that you ham always' given Me yin, .ontire oon.. fidsna 4. ol,o l x,lasitit4rhave( trio* had se twallAMlLlogir.,ot and - regard as you have so often ebtreft to me. ..... usriilrat t: s4r . ' . !aroma 7., 11 . . , . • . 4 4"--. 7 -- . . . . .."........_.... . - . , ~ / • + • , „*YS . . . . .... . . 4.- . . !I ° 7 llf i .‘. ' L / . . . , t t . .... ' • l i t' i I 1 tr..l-I.Lit , '..."1 111' s"11 s.:11:11 t , ••• 1 ( • 4 mut for this porpis‘ OM ..0 I ili tie 11.• - ........ ..- 4 2 141 14. 111_ 1 0 110 & . , ... . ,• . ..-• .. • • . .. t I • Vo . 10. Refoves return tO yetkritutes,_ imPirove, and plant. Go Co work with a hearty good will, and let your actionsshoir that you are able and willing tb adapt your selves to the net order of things. We want 'no Venicit'here',•where the denies'', of an unhappy Slate shall ever meditate with moody brow, and plot the overthrow. of the govbrnment, and where all shall be dark and dreary—cold sad suspicious. But rtither let Confident,e be restored. If requi red, let each and every one, go forward cheerfully, and take the oath of 'allegiance to that country in whi'ch they expect in fu ture to live, and there 'pursue 'their restpeo tire avocatiois 'with redoubled energy as good, true, and substantial citizens. - I go into nil.• not as did the acient /LT. man, to lead bank foreign armies against my native land—but rather to avoid perse cution, and the crown of martyrdom. I' go to seek repose for my shattered limbs. It is my prayer to God that this country may be blessed with permanent peace, and that real prosperity, general happiness, and lasting contentment may unite all who have elected to live under the flag of a common 'country.. If possible forget the past. Look ---Attt - with - currdtrran. discretion. and you-will -11 vs to bless tim who in parting gives you this lest adsioe. And now, what shalL.l say In parting, to my fair oonniryivoman t ' Ladies of Louis an', I bow to you with tears of greatful af fection. You have always responded most promptly and cheerfully to the call of patri otism and of duty.. You have clothed the soldiers, nursed the sick and wounded, Cheered up the fainthearted, and smoothed, the dying pillow of the warrior patriot. God bless you! ! I can never forget you. In the laud of the exile I shall remember with feelings of gratitude too deep for ut lemma. My countrymen I bid you adieu— Farewell. Sometimes thinlrof him who has sacrificed all for you. 'Perham in better days when the storms of passion and prej udice shall have passed away, we may meet again ; I way then be permitted to return —to mingle with m'y friends, to take them by the band and nforgot my own griefs lo be happy with yod." If this should be de nied me, humbly trust we may all meet in Heaven at left, to part no more. HENRY WATKINS ALLEN, Governu of Louisiana THE RICH MAN'S COUNTRY. Thin has got to be emphatically the rich man's country, where legislation is wholly in his favor and against the poor man. Never was a greater piece of rascality com mitted then bee been done in the case of the Rends which are now In inert Me x. are exempt from taxation, and ay a good lalmsl every six months consequently we see a grrae demand for them by all who are able to invest all their funds Id them. iden are in some cases even selling their real estate'to put their money in them, and thus secure not only a good revenue but avoid all tertian. The poor van is therefore taxed double. He has not only to pay his own taxes, but those which the rich man should pay. He has not only to support himself, but the government and the rich man as well. When the tax gatherer comes round, as he does often now and stays long—one of the bitter fruits of Republican administiation— the rich man returns his iirotty as so much builds, the tax gatherer w tee down "exempt," and passes on to the poor man who has no bonds and so must pay enough for both. We do not believe this will last long. It Is too manifestly and entrageosly unjust to : 111 be continued. The ri' man is continually crying for prOteetion . d the abolition gov ernment is ocinstantil A t ting it to him while more sweat is extorted from the poor man. itt wjtl, be the first husintes of the Democrat lo party tppeft, these liings right. That 'ilarty has alvrays.bacu pre-enarxently the pour man's party, and to that party must he still look for theredress of his wrongs.- 1 Excltangs_ _ XlrlllllllN4lll2lll rfia 144211to:-8lokness and disease se*.m determined to assist In making Kentucky free as soon as possible. They go from camp to camp, marking out their victims as they go along, leaving death to follow and " gather them ill." Freedom le doing its work wall in our midst. With a deoeitful smile upon its ghastly totintetianci, With honeyed words upon its polluted lips, it goes about as if it were a thing unknown end unseen, enticing the poor) ignorant negro away from his humble but happy home—from a master' that is good and kind to him—who watches over him when be Is ill, feeds him, glees hint a home for hie wife and children —provides for them at all times. The negro Is more to be pitied than blamed . Freedom Is es tablishing gravvVide to hide its work it ill over ;be State, and, when his work Is done, then let sickness, disease, ?readout and death nitwit deed " flee Kentuaky I" We understand that during the past twelve months there have been about 1200 leaths &Wong the negroea at Camp Nelsen, Kentucky, idone—one Amara olefins per maid I At that rate how ledg .411 it take to make Kentucky a free Mate i 'And sic pees and &slime are hot idle in our idit. there ere some small, dirty looking Shandom In this city where there are rimless that Wen% (and some more) crammed Into them. Dour:lilf 'the hot weather the stench that bursts atm the doors antrteindows smells worse than a wood. locket's nut. Can any olio suppose that health and happiness can And their way into wok a hole as this? And, in most instances, all thou shanties ate filled with women and children who have to tows of support in the world. Who Is to take care of tits& Lit freedom? Ito I Freedom lisa dos its work In putting them in the fie they ate li. Freedom don'tilOgree to take oare Olken when kw 'Alias the contract with the United ,Stable. Diiroorat BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, - AUGUST 4, 1865. FORD-4TANTON. • ,A Mr. Ford appears to be the owner of a theatre in Washington city, wherein Presi dent Lincoln was assaseittated. being there upon olosed, Mr. Ford attempts tt to open' it some days afterward but was foibidden and prevented. ifs nest Old it for a church, but the purchasers were unable to fulfil their engagement, and the property reverted. Last evening, be tried once more to • but was peremptorily stint up b an order from thelVar Depaftment. . Barad says of Ford's attempt to rcsfatcie his regular7bu 'sines!: "It was- atrattelept•to ooi the blood of the great man. People in Washington' as well as elsewhere felt that that theatre was a deodand3 that it was virtually, if not in fact, involved In the' tirinie committed in it, just as • murderer's weapon, which from time immemorial has been forfeited to the law. The War Department forbade the per formance and olosed the theatre ; and in do ing so it only acted up to the popular thought and though we shall on this subject hear many copperhead howls, the sot will receive the full approval of the people." qatti protutme "Mu•-_popular thought" accords with the above sump, tion ; but there is at least one journal which dares defy "popular" impulses when they ecntravezie law and justice.. ?We had inten ded to let this matter pass without comment, with rimy similar vagaries of the War De partment ; but its plu'mpjustification by the Herald imposes the duty of emphatic dis sent. Under what law, by what right, did Ed win M. Stanton thus deprive John T. Ford of the use of hie privateproperty ? It sure ly, will not be pretended that - an immitient I overruling public danger dictated thiSeore tary'eltigh handed course. We have heard that he apireheitled a riot [U case the 'Cho i stre were opened—so be arbitrarily closed it, in pursuance of a policy to which -aboli tionists of other days were long accustomed without being reconciled. The police fear your property will be injured if you use it; lo—instead of protecting you in okts use— they forbid and prevent your using it at all!' It would take a long and severe training to enlighten us.as to the beauties of.suois le: gal protection. , Mr. Ford, it is said, evinced bad taste or a deficient sense of propriety, in -undertak ing to reopen his theatre within three months after Mr. Lincoln's assassination. Very likely. But in what clause of the Constitu tion, what chapter of the Statutes at Large, do we find the regulations of public or pri vate taste, the enforcement of a due regaid for propriety, mate a duly of the Secretary of Wart If he is to regulate other men's regard for appearances, fur decorum, '43 is to regulate—or educate—his 1 We know nothing of Ford nor of his the atre but what is everywhere current. But suppose be is in debt, and his creditors want their pay—suppose his property heavily mortgaged, and the inktrest eatingdam up— suppose him to hate a theatrical company, on his hands and no means of paying them except from his receipts. His lose by the suspension of his business for eleven or twelve weeks, while Washington was full of idle soldiers just paid off, must already amount to many thousands df diallers: wile is to reimburse it? And by what right is he forcibly deprived of the use of - his prop- I erty, the means of paying his debts, in obe dience to others sense of fitness ? Why should they evince their regard for our late President's memory at his expense rather than their own. 'V We urge these ooneideratioas with na idle conceit of inflttencing the course of Secre tary Stanton. That functionary seems in capable of aomprehendink that our country has, 6r should, any other law than his own arbitrary will. But he cannot reruaio g in office forever ; and when ha retiree we hope to have a restoldlion of the privilege of ha beas corpus and the susremacy of law ) and then we shall hope for a legal scrutiny of some of his many ”fantastio tricks" and an adjudication between them and theimrsonal rights they have ritthlessly violated. Mean time, we only wish it to stand on record that we bold, his assumptions of power utterly unwarranted and without excuse.—Nets York Tribisns. ' si,-. PRuALJNT MISTAYieI.—We • desire to call the attention of our readers to the fol lowing kpriptint mistakes: • it is a mist* to suppose that the etth: scription price of a newspaper is oiear gain to the publisher. It is a mistake to suppose that he gets white paper far nothing. , ' It is • mistake to suppose that It le print ed Without °oat. It is s mistake to suppese be can live bodily by faith. • Ws a mistake to !hippose thst it is an easy thing to please everybody. It ie q militia° to suppose that a paper is not worthbuying which contains oily what we know and believe already. - It is a mistake to suppose tiled, moue due for a paper would be as good to us a year honor as it Is now. ' It le s great niietake to suppose that we could not be thantful for *bat is due Ile and for new subscribers. . —There is great destitution in Georgia and Alabama, and refugees will not 'be re.: fugees will not be' eturned to those States' unless they ein'eltre tom, they will not , be come a ehargirepon' the Government. —Mortimer_ (.Doestiolte") Foliose' to tiOttis In , Atlanta, as the edjtor eta lowspapei: "ST.dIPII AL3lro rannitir. ITNION." :t--We are glad to note that some of those Democratic journals that gave a sup port. to the war, tare spaalaing out boldly in Tatar of a restoration of State Rights, and denounithg all attempt at Compdida lion. The Bowera -Mato Journal, White Plains, N. Y.; Is one of thine papers. In a recent article it forcibly says "Under a consolidatek_exixernment,=a -despotlflin7iiiiiit4 at Washington—call it by what name you may—our people scat tered at the, _ are over such A vast area of territory; might .be tyrannised over for years 'and perhaps for - ages, with perfect impunity. If existing in a more compact body, u.db the, people - of:France, the im pulsive rage of , the numbs might work a sudden change, and lifting the foot of the opprresor from the necks of the down-trod den, lay low desinitia power at a blow: , The above suggestion is well, put, and presents an alarming fact to the American people. We trusf, we shall see the influence of the editor of the Stale Journal, then. in Democratic Conventions, demanding that the Democratic) party should stand by the promise madein'tbe Crittenden Resolution. Will he do so ?—/Vi Y. Day Book. -We at; ',AA -to endorse the policy of Andrew Johnsol without an if or an and. - And yet Antrew Johns* by one act of his administration, in aiding and &listing a military mob In. committing mar dell:, has established his claim toS position by the" side of the world's most cruel and despotic masters. His order to Gen. Han dnk declaring the writ of habeas corpus suspended for the especial purpose of. crowning the tragedy of assassination with the horrors of a quadruple muder, entitles him to the execration of every just man, and had we a congress of brave and true men be would be impeached for the act. PresidentLinooln suspended the operation of the writ generally, President - Johnson, without the appearance of reluctance, for he sided in the execution, suspended the writ for the sole purpose of gratifying the hyena cry of the pulilio for blood. Pilate washed his hands from the blood of the innocent. Johnson voluntarily dipped his in the blood'illr those who were itindoent before the law... 7 pubuqe Herald. W./ARM—An a great many people don't now how to play billiards, we make way for description of the game, from the pen of •• .estiohii," In order that ' they May rerailin' s lU \ igueranoe no longer. He says : A game of bill4rde consists of punching ivory balls about tins., table covered with green cloth, that looks ike half an acre of meadow land with an In •it rubber fence about it. The balls ire pun ed with long woodeb raw...fide, with wax on e little end to save the wood and leather f ,wearing out. You take your ra.crod dI chalk on the table end ;th you lean'' , ver the tablii ; then you aqui t ; then you • t. your leg ; then fiddle little on your le • hand with your ramro • then you punch your ball. If your bit - hits th e other man's ball and some other ball, yove done ' a big thing, anityou poke tip a jot othut tone that are strung on a wig. Thicia all there is in a game of billiards. ,An3 l ibody can punch billiards: I can e and maybe you Pau'—Ex. —Cowie:man Kasbora, of the Pea Moines dietr et, is speech delivered et Lexington, entwiky, on the 10th inst., asserted that there Was not a serious inten tion to -give' the right of suffrage to the negroes in the Southern • Stites. Mr. Kaeson may speak for himself as be has a right to 46, but he does not truthfully interpret the policy of his party when be makes this assertion: There is not a Re: - publican journal in the State of lowa which gives the party a hearty support, that does not advocate, and even insist upon, the extension of the eleotive franchise to no_ gross both Nor& and South. This fact Mfr. %tenon knows, and be ie guilty of an attempt. to deceive 'when be asserts the con trary in Kentuoky. Ivery vote for the miscegenation ticket. witch Gov. Stone heas will be ,a vote 'lot' tbi enfranchisement of negroes, tOid the diofianohioomont of ivbito men.-,Ez• SHEILIDAN DISLOYAL --General Sheridan recently made a visit to in Senior set, Ohio, and . the day before he was to leave, lion. Wm. 4i' Finch., • democratic congressman celled uPiin him,land propelled to drive bim to Lancaster, whkre he would takb the cars. The general at once accept ed the invitation. Tha:,s' ame evening the "loyal" in Somerset heard of the arrange ment, and drtkomed together an tecort and invited the general to go with them. He deolibed, and 4e Lancaster Eagle, speaking of his arrliai there in company with Mr; Fincke, says: ! The ardot of a number of our Union °Miens was dampened, and they earess their indignation that he should be (we i ght in company With a copperhead Congress _ man." _will be preoluded beers long from snaking demonstartione in favor of any of our moat noted generale. Omni and Meade and Hancoolt,,Thomae, Sheridan, d Sherman find their Moat oongenial am lhielatea among oopperheidaP • —Tim "oldest inimilent" of Erie, rn. Wu found the other : 4 4 imbedded in pram of bituminous east abet bad been 'Mi kan for burning. Ii ',tars :a live .frc4 ' that wee ionic 100 a nap 201 *or.; thOkiiiind para. . . 0t..! THE BHERMNIVJOHNSTOI I / ARMIS - • Curiae. Relations—Gestet'al &emir . and Mist Tastita Chasss- I .or. 4incolts Wing , to /if Jefferson Deaf. Escape. • !'Agate," the correspondent of thkOinciii natti Grates, who accomtianyed Chief Jun tie:: Chase in his recent Southern tons makes this-statement .of. on •o enneralllirer man and President. Linooln : Orr FOlrr MACON, N. C. Jane 7.—A cla sped' from General Sherman ( on his? 'way north from Savannah t and forc4l by bad weather to put in at Beaufort) had reached Nowhern while we were there expressinv a very earnest desire to see Chief Justice Chase, and on the return of the entire party General Sherman's vessel was lying at the wharf, opposite the railroad terminus, awaiting us. Nervous and restless ap ever, the General leaked changed (and improved) silica the o!d oampaign in the Southwest. Re was boiling over with pride at the per formance of his army through the winter, and all the more indignant, by consequence, of his arrangement with Johneion. "I fan cied the country wanted peace," he ex claimed. t'lf they don't let. them raise' more -114114 lALZCOLX -WILL/KO TO.-441.- SERF. -DA,V,III = The General Complain - WI, Mid doubtless with some truth if not juitioe, that the Gov ernment had never distinctly explainend to him what policy it desired to have pursued, "I asked Mr. Lincoln explicitly, when I went by to City Point, whether he wanted Me to capture Jeff. Davie, or let him escape, and in reply-he told me a story." rat "story" may now have a historical value, and I give it, therefore, as General Sherman said Mr. Lincoln • told it---premi sing that it was a favorite story with Lin coln, which he told many times. and in 4, Itteeration of many points of public . I'll tell you what I think about taking Jeff. Davis. - Out to Batigiemmon count." there was an old tempmeatice lecturer who was very strict in thedohtrine and practice of total abstinenoe. One day, 'alter a long ride in the hot sun, ho stopped at the house of a friend, who proposed making him a lemonade. As the beverage was being mix-, ed, the friend Insinuatingly asked if he wouldn't like just the least drop of come thing to brace up his nerves after the ex hausting heir and exercise. "No," replied the lecturer; "I couldn't think of it; Pm opposed to it on principle. But," he ad ded, with a longing glance at the black bot tle which stood 'conveniently at band, "if you could manage to put in a - drop unbe knownst to me, I guess it wouldn't hurt me muoh I" "Now, General," Mr. Lineal/I is said to have conch' ,ed, "I'm bound to oppose the °wipe of Teff: Gavle; but if you could manage to him slip out unbeknownst.- like, I guess it wouldn't hurt me much I" "And that," egclaimed General Sherman, "is all I could get out of the Government se to what its policy was concerning the ILel leaders, till Stanton assailed nie for is's escape I" Tn LOYAL LISAOUIRS and other :superla tively poirio . tio Abolitionists seem 'to have already hocome quite indifferent to the memory of Mr. Lincoln. Witness the fol lowing from the New York 'Tribune of Fri day: Sole of the Catafalque. —The Catafalque used on the occasion of the funeral of the Late President Abraham Lincoln, wie lord yesterday, at auction, by Edward Pettinger at the meriting store of M. & A. Myers, No. 628 Broadvtay. The Messrs. Myer s voluntarily tendered their store, and Mr. Pettinger his !services, as the, proceeds of the sale were to be appirg the Union Home and School.' The sale sae poorly at tended. The Catafalque was divided into 115 lots, but owing to the small, numbers present only 80 lids werelisposed of. The rest will be sold . at the Voir to 14 hold at the Union Home and School. The prices brought were, as a rule, not a tenth of the real value. There Was ohe noted exception. An old wooden eagle, worth about $1,26, wareold for $BO. Mrs. Mills Was the lucky purchaser. The whole catafalque cost about slB i ooo.aud Was male by Peter Reim'. It will bring about $1,200, all told. 1 It seems %pat that. a thing which will be of historic 'Aerosol in a few years should receive so • • POLTI'Id AL Pasaottnem--The Newark [N. J.J.Youreal gives Its readers the foliat ing good advice on the subject of political preaching. .Rlnless this style of presetting Ceases, ti oar *arida is, (nay okay it d keep your Wilily away f ro n t . ,oherofies blob persist in ibis' sort of santeement. T eir are some piped ohurehee still left tho gh they are few, and to those ,g 5 and sit inutfortabiy." And to Which We Would.add pug your money Where you dad go and sit with your families under the sound of a Ewe gospel; instead of a etentp speech from the secret' desk. Buough ministers east be fogad to accommodate all our peopis with pure Bible doctrine. It is only • few seams in dark 'sheep's elotilleM"wl‘o - turn their perks into politleal l'instre,mis; and to the congregationi of such, we again repeat, siop their pay ; and you Mil Book banish froln.yont preeenos a great annoyandd, and abate from ebrint . den eculuundty I terrible daisande.—:lis. ' . ',,, _ . . _ - , •-••Oati of the *sale* 41 mill _9414 'of-a largo aadriat ootiinfilo ry L i'dniarlroil Mat it on' doh 'tow Ilan, he *ditto ii load o r • ' aid the-Al ma,'iretnn•thiriroy irietirgbliNg se me."' ; 3, • - N0...29. THE - OLD STORY. My 'heart le chilled and my poleelo low, • But often aad often will mental go, tlito e,htind child loft in* waste of snow— Back to the days , when I loved you co, The beautiful long ago. I sit here dreaselag through wad through!, The blissful memory shared with Pm-- The sweet, sweet days when outgoes wr new,, - Whewitraatrustfutaiityeit erarye—. The geautifal day', but tea. Blest or wretched, fettered wit* Why 'build I eare-bow youriffe may be, ' Or whether you wander by hind' or sea? , I 'only know you are dead Byer and hopelessly, Oh, how Ohm nt day's•deeiine, • Verasited from nit window the entstainingegjuls, To nee from our lattice the lamplight shls%, Type of a message that half divine riaihedi frets your heart to mine. Once more the starlight is silvering all— The roses !liken by the garden wall— The night bird warbles his madrigal— And hear again through the sweet air fall The evening bugle call. But summers will vanish andleare will wane, And bring no light to your window pans,- No gracious sunshine nor patient rain, Can bring dead lore bank to life pin— I call up the put in vain. ffiEMMMMiI And Ibst proves elms- which eoented -rad - , I watch no longer your curtain's fold, w - The window - WY and the nlkbt le dad, And the story forever told. , THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER.' —John C..Breakenrldge has loft Cu - os for England. —Why Le blindnum's..bulf like erePigh7 because it isfeeling for others. . —"Briok" Pomem says ha is willing to go as a substitute now. Terms moderate. • —The President's family, %chiding his two secretaries, number fifteen persons. —"Now, desc r y will bet you anythingehan you can't tell which is the trout of my now bon ne. • —The colored troops al St. Louts have sub scribed seven tiliwend dollars towards the Lin coln. monument infuhington. —The Rocheeim (N. r) trilled stye that the alleged 'conspirators ' } were oondemned by Judge Lynch in epaelettos." —Horson Greet' , 'prom oonolneivety in on able and elaborate article, that the negroes aro as fit for suffrage as he la. A tombstonl cutter contracted the motto "tot bee red in peace," for want of space, and It stood, "Let ber r. i. p." —An Irishman who hung out • striped pet ticoat for a flag, was asked what it meant. "Thy, sure," said he, "it's the imblim of the eonnthry I lova"- -A . New York paper says that many seem to be orgpinion that, unless we go on hanging now that wo hare stopped. shooting, the dignity of tie country will Naar. exchange says the hestenre for palpi tation of the heart ie to leave off hogging and kissing the girls. Haas is the only remedy: we say, "let her palpitate." —ln Richmond no one is allowed to Marry without first taking the oath of allegiance. Such are the orders of. Grandmother Hallock. What next ? Will babies have to take the oath before they can be born? —Plftien thieves were hanged by a VlA lanee Committee at Wan& Walla, Oregon, on the 13th of June. The Committee, at last ac counts, were on the heels of 150 more, with a fair prospect of overhauling them. —A usually quiet and peaceable aititen of New York ode day kit week shot the driver of a fish Mid, who had for several weeks blown a hideous horn under his window every morning, destroying the sleep of the entire neighborhood. —A gentleman,-on hearing a lady praise the eyes of • certain minister, wrote lite follow tag "Inannot praise the doctors eyes— } never sew hie glanoe divine; For when he prays he shuts hie eyes, And when he preaches he abuts mine —A man recently broke ups nifiriace en gagement because the lady did not posses good conversational powers. A_ticked attar. 90111:. meting upon the feet says, "He should have married her, and then refused her a bonnet, to have developed her powers of talk. —ln the Norwegian mines, miners present themselvei en Satanla, evening to the inspee. tor, who, havinii settled accounts with each, wiitei in white chalk upon file black back the man due to him. The man gore to the who also turns him around, and• pap him with. oat saying a word. , During the strike in Paris the English blare kers sent over • donation' of three 'thousand Mutes, to aid their ''brethren" In Trance tocon• thine the strike, ' accompanied, however, by (Argo of three millions worth of hat; l'of their own manufacture to supply the waits of the / French public. —They kill pige by steam A:0 Chicago. A great iron els*, with eyeliners, borks opt the pigs which ere owriting in the pea Weir, and lilts the porkers tic a gibbet near by , and than pharisee them again into eeeldhig water. Ay .the mitehine QRy porolnee lire killed, scalded. soaped, !deaned,,9lt rod hung le rows reedy for eellitifraithca halm, , . —Ara Dem is afloat to the Whet that a peti.. The largest amber of whAlsooldps la the'' lekt rims is on foot hi idlinaelota 'skim that women Is sent oat by Neateaskth Ad New Bodthinl..• '''' • ' be allowed to Toth: whereupon iiNartgollant sd- The punted vidu n rt in the world Is l(34: . '' itor of the PhiladniPida bagelfror =mai "44 -alilio•-*is •-N . ' Is going rather too fist."--Jra.• , Tto bused agraedoot, is Ow Ineadil- L: 11th If tb se as of th e ropfrer ars aeeded. an tirotia Asundit ... _ York..A hipek iii • thy its to do is to put the TOPA tottx imitLa4dfili doitt Adulti. 1,1 • wfro or siolvd Was the word woman, and the iljkie - adMetdil at -e - "t••••'‘i' ..:I^l l- ,. •• ", Ilig ' will chime is hastily. Malin* .old • - fiekoolthathaii4le tha following. - gOoll *614 sll 9 s ' „ ' *lltall. . ',.. ...."- :.t • ~., oath! • wag twlitad 1 1 0 Paiukte'orankty 'Tillie. 01iPP,..... V.L 114 - 11 . 10 " 6 :,... Olkrir.WW„ „, . Mb, d monk of atjAm I timdad /ilk . 71,% 111 1. 1*. ..i. , L ~.. -:',4 ‘'. - 1: ,.. i . .;.3 . A .,.....,... 24. -Atil.4 l .!..... Sun illirrai Fa* .ink.ripv.ithiii* ariioOgong ue; 4sl7l;=riet-, '.'"! •,.**'?,. '. '"""`Z' .- ' -: ni cni panty tandigas, I Aspirg a -Am fagged itooL , li ag *0 , • • •, . ~ .rv.;,--"- ,• .. ;xi um twat *oak f"' I 'asked • • . •-, — , _..,.. ', - '-; ~,• • ‘71 7 • $ - __. ' ..--. ••,••_!M-sti - ly• Z. '''' lid of .MP illioi 0 75 7 !A11if 1 4 1 4 .111 , irtii. ' ".."' ''''!. ". • b at - ' ' ': ; 0 _ " I •P t hlt ;=lVA .'64o,.' ..', L 4 3- . .-7jr . . 7 '"-"^- . -i -- ottrhitri,„ 7-* 't' - • OF •••. - • ' ... :0( .." eitreFpledfibaitiro.'")7: 77 -- ' ...".k ..., •I' •1 . • p;.v.i. ' . ~,.; . ,;'.: -:_._+;,,., . . 1 1 . 1 "1. 141 reioa.o, the early train t to ma for this , imort;t t/tsi hi Me morning. tthrOjr,lithlP4 wript in darkness, _- liar oil *lath* "broken alit by irkilt Mented*thithret„ tie tomcat* tient end ruse of the tuft_ It was a mild, serene midsummeel the sky was winkle! a Blond—the minis were whist. The meom then is the hoe • outlier, hajuskris..,"d Haeetass doom • wittepeolienktatrerdiethedblr kes, presence. JUpiter, two hours Vete , wo e, the herald of the day; the tteladee-jesi Above the horizon shed their Telt litthititer -4 " In the east; Lyra sparked-mmr-the sturith+l Andromeda veiled her newly discoverer , &ilex from the naked eyiln the'senth; the 'steady Pointers; far, beneath the pole, looked seek), op freer* the thspflki,*lho • north to their sovereign: Buck was the gloriouespeothele es I On. tared the • trains As we proceeded, the - gkt perceptible; the intense blue of toe_ say began to softm, the ,smaller stars like Mlle • children went: Arm to rate sistsw-betteee of the Pleiades seen melted together; bus the, bright eatztallistizeut of the wet and north remained nnehanged:' Steadily the wondrous clange went oir,' Hands of an gels, hidden froze-mostsi gym, iki the scenery of tit* heavens ; the glories of night dissolved into the glories of the dawn: " 'The blue sky now turned more softly ply • the.cast began to kindle. Feint streaks of purple soon blushed along the sky ; the whole celestial concave was Sleds with the indowing tides of the morning light., which caw; pouring down from tboveln one greet _, ocean of radiance ; till, at length, as ,we reached the Blue Hills, a flash of purple fire biased ont from the horizon, turning the - rubies sad diamonds. In slew seconds the' irvitrUulibirgates of thii thrown open, sult-thiltrrd of daa,iffnrlft" --- in glories too severe for ike guilt off' ' began his course. Ido tot wonder at alp superstition of the ancisit Magian. "rho, • ' in the morning of the world, went up to the nill tops of Central Asia, and ignorant of the true God, adored the Most glorkins work of His hand. But I anvitilett with amazement when" lam told that in this er< , lightened age, and in the heart-of the Chris tian world, there erepereons who as wit. . MU this daily manifestation of thenCrestor. and. yet say in their hearts, " There Is no - • God."—Rdward Everett. Tax Two Arr,anoricas.—TWOMytt were apprentices in a. carpenter shlp. One de termined to make himself a thorougit work man, the other didn't oars. One of them read and studied, and got books that - Would help him to undeteand the principles ot Me - • trade. He spent his innings at home read, lug. The other liked fun bdst„ • He often went with other boysighave "*.good time," "Comte he often laid to his' slioptuate t "leers your old books . , go *Mids. "irruil l i the Use bf all this reading "U L loa these golden moments,” wee the boy's an. • ewer, "I shall lose what I can never make up." While the boys were still apprentices, an offer of two thousand dollars appeared fit tirewepapers ret , the bestplan fora state use, to . be built in one of the • Zastent atm The studions"boi maw tho advertisentent and determined to try for it. After, me tal study he drew oot.his plans, and sena them to the committee. We suppose that he did not really expeet to pin the prise thut he thought, "there Is nothing like trying." In about a week eftewardn, a gentleman ar rived at tho carpenter's . Atop and asked iron architect by the Dottie of Washington Wil berforce lived thers4 "leo," said the car penter, "no arehiteot, but I have an appren tiotbyname." "Let's see him." The yottil* ma was summoned, and informitd• that his plan watactocradi, and that the Wei thousand dollars were his. The gentleman. then said that the boy must put the bnildb'tg . up ; and his employer wits so mend , puooess, that he willingly gave him hie. time and let him v .. This studioul riur•g , oar' pouter became one oPthe Ind arauteote our ootuitey. He made a fortaino, 4nd __ stands high in the esteem of ever/164i while his fellow apprentice emi hardly teem food for himself and family tly Ilia 40,1 3 b or. AMIAICAX " ONDIR 4 .—The groans/. cataract ie in the world le the if alit of Ma where' the water from the great upper la Ainam,a elver • oT Wive-quarters of &pile in w th, and then. being suddenly eontritettd, pl. gee ore" the rocks, in two adept, to the de bof one hen; tired and seventy f t o d .h. ! , The greatest oars In the we .1 is the Mum_ mothirk ,Rontneky, whe any mks eon _ took voyage on the waters of • enlitermwewM . . river, and (Isiah Ash without oy . The greatest doll hi the mini is the Missle. sippi, four thousand one hundred milminkraglik The lirpst vtliel in the world is the Talley • of tin• MiseisslppL It' contains Ave limited thousand square =ilea, and is ono of the mom • fertile and !profitable olefin& on the glebe. • - The iaxgest lake in the 'wog* Is take sup- rior, which Is truly sh inland sea, Wog , ,fhily kindred and thirty lanes Magi and 0 1411, 3101 10 . mot inef-deep. The limiest natural Wage in the woutd IS - Ike Natitral Bridge over Ceded ilibeb,.ll Vir— ginia. It extends across a *ion - eighty tiokki w idth, end two hundred and Gay feet /a clentlis it the bottom of which the efeekilOws. The green* slue of solhi f lren In toe IrosioLie • , the Imp Mountain id 210610011' Ale tiineilum, fired and My feet blith, all two lanes in air. • . tali. .. 4 • 0 MO