GI 4 . 011f01111 led.- liieeetirew v irLica. , . • corn% listen all, whih•X Mete ifilaweieeetly Uhl Mao a &now dews In Maher, 1gz0„ digging of a well. tolltlYq_d pied he 'diligand'didved, An idee dug in esile • $ egiw <teeth he, 'Wee etiNe dieing glrlied In Malmo r . . 'And eitlllindug ntid delved swei,lol (!. And etill the well wee dry ' 1 The ealy water to be'fboad Waite therarmee's eye. Air by the breaking of tha baiik " That it:Unbind fro lie staticn,_ AWbuddenty - kbx hoof ilia ibialiii --- - Of !stun liquldktlon i .. And Doi his atioili ivb4 'banning fast, \And be 1114 d ied , no doubt, But that pet when the earth caved in, lie iiiiPirOitto ha outl _ . ~ . • . .. "Alt* I—J. hive a happy thought r • gialth 4f 4 Aim winked -titan— • 'To dig ipmirthis•oartud well I T sees pretty plan : • • ‘e "I'llllde one straight, end when my 'wife And ie•J‘my neighbors know. It bat'. hapianed to tay digging here, Thorn think thit I'm below 1.• "And Mb t 4; aye my pendent lite, They . 'll dig the' well no dont*, E'en deepeetheus 'imam dug at ISt, f• 'Were they Mid Ale out I" And so la hid him lb the Inuit Through all the hungry day, , To hide the digging of hie well In this deoeithil riay. Dot list what grief and &anus hotel The false, ungratlifill IbAL t Tho *hilt lit slowly watches} to coo l'he working of his plan : . • The noighbdls Ali *III one itfoortl Unto each other said s "With such a weigit of earth above, And then the wife,_ffliktloldu ears, . - All needless cost teosare„ 644, "Since the Lord bath Willed it so, iron let it be his,goseel" THE MONMOUTH REBELLION IN 1685 The student of Bog Ugh [deo!, .will 1(4 rememaiel• the bloody b;utality with t • which the suppression of this rebellion wee followed up by the relentless monarch who bad attained a success of which he showed hurlBoif so onwor , th y,. The celebrated Jef f. eye, then Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench, Web sent to hold what hits ever since been known as the ...the tloody hesitee" in the counties which bad been the principal seat of the rebellion. The trews actions wb b occurred, and the moral tea t urea of tlia Chia Jmonster and aetor therein have been photographed for our ben . cflt by the glowing pen of Macauley. They furn , ish a lesson ant a warning to all those who would imitate bicatrooitics. Among the victims of his ferocious oi•u hlty was a poor woman named Alice Lisle, whose fate will Bevil to Illustrate the tem per and workings of unbridled power at the time. It will not be *Mout its Interest Nike Will it Woman of most respectable connections; and of a most kind and boner &est disposition._ She had given shelter and sustenance to two persons who had ta• ken some part lb the rebellion, though she roltouity denied having any "knewledge of their criminality at the time. For that of frose she was now put upon the trial before this terrible judge. .• it was no eery matter," says-the histo rian, "In such a ease to obtain a verdict for the crown: The Witnesses prevaricated —the jury, consisting of the principal gen tlemen of Hampshire, shrank from the thought of. sending a fellow creature to the stake for oonduct which seemed deserving rather o+ -praise than of blame. Jeffreys teas beside himself with fury. This was the first case of treason on the oircult, and there seemed a strong probability that hie .prey would escape him." r Teprevent this he gave looSe rein to his diabolical nature. He called into requisi tvm all the influences of his_ position, and all the terror of his unlimited paper. The proprieties of the oueasiod were wholly dis regarded. The rules of taw and the &Wee of his high aloe were alike openly ciolatod. witnesses were brow-beaten into.unintended Fialemenle; jurors were terrified into so quieseencie in what they utterly disapproved. the defects of the testimony were suppliedH by the fury of the Judge. 'The woman was known to be a Preabyte- lien. • .•I tell you," said the Judge, on the Ilia', "there Is not one - of these lying, Rely cling, canting Presbyterians but in one way or another-had aimed in the rebellion : — Presbytery has all manner of-villainy iu it. I * Show me a Presbyterian, and I will show yOu a lying kmive." The historian proceeds to state: "He summed up in the came style, de claimed during an hour against whigs and dissenters, and reminded the jury that the prisoner's husband tad borne a rtaft in the death i bf Charlet the Pirst...-a fact which ilia not proven by' scat testimony, and which, if it had been proven, would have been utterly irrelevant Of time issue. The jury retired, and tensible(' long In consul tation, The Judge grew impatient. • lie Could not conceive, he said, how, in so plain a ease, they could ever have left the box. H e lent a nuassenger to toll them that if they did not instantly r'eturil he weird ad journ the conrt and look them up all night. Thus put to the torture they came, bat came to say they doubted Whether the charge hid beta Anglo, ynt. Je ff reys et-. postulated walk th e n! vehemently, and, after another consultation. Mar gave a reluctant verdict of °bitty. — "On the felio*lng 11/11rninifsentin'oe vial broboceiek„lmtriee gave clireetiopc , that Alice Lisle eibouhl be burned Wee that very alternate. 'We weal of barbarity moved t he pity and,indiguation even of that blase whicti was 0191,1 devoted Lo the crown. , Ilia clergy of Vf.ftiehimiet.`CathMiral regeonetra,, tellwith the Chief Jistioe, Who, brutal ne he eraii' *ltji OFtalatiropikikls3.llllL ii qnnr 4 41 on iiiiiil3,llslaVOitrrWine ochmtY so much e41"16444 thee ellarOwt.r. ',lltOcitmented to Put dlrlit - cOttkik o re'gfir. ;bola; that time i t :, 26 . ,r d a. it ercytt::. 14 : ai i) e lk ; sought .1'" cd. I ' l o '' - • iireeded for her. ' Avir -4 etunenetritoserrsernb. victory—had inoremeed -- , -co2:33,o=iMelaimmot . . . .....: ... . 1 , • , . -. ~ . ii; ..-4, I •'' t ', 'Ca i . : : f.. — li , ' . , . „op --.,.. ~ •.—• • - - - . t`4t rlt i, 4 - liziht 1' • .. ", „.,... . .. ;i- . 11•11•14mormlo.torr. .$ IA . -....... . .......... --- -...-..--......-..„ .- ... ..............----- --... f ~ c ....) r....: 7 ; . • ..).,: 1,1. .• - - r. ' i fe gr . 7 T 'i..fll/.. % - _.... r• .„ , , .. .. . i .1 . • 'at, . • - ' •-. i ( . 1 :.. L Y , ' ~. i ~, ." r • ... ~ _ .. I_ , ~. . 1 .; „ • ................_ - .......... ' '. . I°. : 1F....1.-.' a • • • . d ." : '. I .: , . ' A ' rte* • • : . (.'-::\ .41. ~.,i,fill, 'ilk - , 9' I t , : . 1 1::;: ' '') .':.....aL1C5'441140164:441.11:11114:17:14:44104.,0.444,,::41.1044i".14:.*:,„:;AMW-71/Iti -.: .1 - ..titer-11. t i. --- ": 11111 t ent .( t ' lt .1.1 1 ' ( 1 ' k • i .. • 4,•AL , . - 't , . . . . , . hibita an teoreaCe. itetj ekrOcloull act{ , ',I , , • • • , . . , , -- both more netifeticir ' acid' ittlYAlti r • 4-,a ~, , , . ~ 1.4•-« . . - — . „ • _. _ ' ...,,,.. character. Wei. e6M.Y1001114169.11046110111111-,'" Vol. 100 IMME!MM:=I I hie fiAtirat- otrtnt - anti - Wtftnlrlirirtia -4 1' been bribed to take the compassionate side, Spoke in her favor. Clarendon, the king's brother-la-law, pleaded her cause. But all was in vain, The utmost that could be-oh tamped was that her eimitettee should be*Com muted from burning to- beheading. She was put to death 'on a "taffeta In the market -plena of l'initheeter., 'land illiderlveht her fate with airettb eoUrage. ll • Fortunately we lies in an age and coun try where atroeftlei of thieeharattlir are unkne_yri r -where this'll& Is supreme,''and where this rights of triery oitizep are in the ory tinder the protectl'On of !sprain' gliaran ties of written Monatitutiona. Still ii may prove intbrealtig altd Obi Wholly tinprofita ble to cant a glance at the condition of things in Great Britain near two hundrlid yearn age, with airiew of realizing the pro gress which has nen made in the establish ment if well regulated popular liberty be tweed that day aid this. How horriblw ..La t " does such tyranny appear' Sven after the lapse of centuries. The numbet of mrebele whom Jeffreys banged while on this circuit was three hun dred and twenty, Some historians place it a more thanl'int - illeWitigure. Ile boast ed that he-had banged more traitors than all hie predecessors since the conquest. Certain it is that the number eXecitted in one county ao:lit one month greatly ex ceeded that if all the pelittent offenders who have been executed in the island of Great Britain since the revolution of 1088 But!' cruelty never secures safety. The slumbers of retributive justice, though seemingly sound, are rarely ot long cootin ounce. In lees Huth four years from the exhibition of these atrocities, their brutal perpetrator was made to experieh it o all the horror he had eyer inspired in the most timid, heightened by the eurieradded poign aTic, of oonscious gill the disguise of a fugitive, begrimmed, •th dust and ashes, he was dragged from his loathsome conceal ment, and pursued by tllousands, who were only -prevented by, two regiments ,of militia from the execution of 'summary vengeance which would have been eminently just, how ever utiawful, and who oould not be pre vented from brandishing their bludgeons and bellowing their curses. The gtiilty wretch, after being made to taste more than the undying bitterness of death, was at 'length lodged in the tower, where be ended his life in unspeakable ignominy and horror, a warning to all his imitators In acts of bru tal tytany, And what was the fate of that cold and merciless monarch, who, if he had not in etigatmi theMi atrocities, had permitted them to be perpetrated undisturbed, and who expected to reap the benefits resulting from their infliction ? A little more than three years alter the judioial murders which he had VA prevented, and had therefore oountenauced, and which he supposed were to strikeisuch terror into disloyalty that treason would never again diithrb the quiet of his reign, found r him a fugitive and it wanderer on the earth for life. ilk very cruelties, which he supposed would Isring peace preoipitat,itl hie over tbfois, inctileating the great it hinh power has been so loth to learn; that the attachment of the people, resulting from benefits oonferred, is the only unfailing sup port of any government, and that the dread which is produced by Sanguinary druelty is a pfiner which crumbles beneath its own weight. History is philosophy kaobing by example. THE MONUMENT BUSINESS There are greirefforts just now in pro. , grass to erect a aianameat to the memos") , of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United Stales. There are also, ki vatiotil pasta ot i the country exertions being" mode to raise a fund for the benefit of Mrs." Lin -, cola. George WashingtorCs tomb at Mount Vbr non in built of lirick. It is hie. decayed and neglected condition. A distinguished states man, and:one of America's greatest orators, traveled four or five years througli. the length and breadth of the lend, peddling to chant° atidletifieS a taint° on Washington, for the purpose of procuring funds wherewith to redeem Mount Vernon' from "the. :fitnlalism of neglect, and to do whit the Obvernment was too mean ff, propose-t-purehase that estate for the benefit of-ihe nation. -And yet the fund raised in time of our greateet prostrerlty, in time of peace, in time when even the negro was a secondary considera tion to the welters of the country, was not sufficient to tmeornplish the purpose. Pa triotism,' in preserving to the country the ratios of him who filet made us a nation, was at • dieeount, tears before, this prop-. cation to make Mount Vermin A itational property, the itor'ner stone of a monument in memory of George ly out hingt oft, _t 0 be raised by popular subsoviptimwohrs laid in Washington Square. teary doWtributor sup posed the monument would be at ones corn- Mime tbstk three decades have palm ed since then. The corner stone is oier grown, and in the' new genqration which has arisen but feW know even the site of *het earner dtarie. The funds raise are ndw in the hands of Goraoe honey, jr., tind,others, and iunount, with the aolututu tiled interest, to nearly, if not .quite, one 'Mildred *mood, dollars. Yet with all thireapital in . hand, end ready for use, the monument ditini et 'bd . ittised. Washington, the founder . .or4b• fe forgotten. A new thud hrttete being rased for • lAn• coin thenunteittlyini4 :thilittnte style of . committee who raised that for the erection of the one in Washineorraquare, BELLEFONTA-PAILMAY.,- AUG ST 11; 1865. Lincoln's beef inent ° 7 - nent is jn the history of„ his presidential career. His tory will perpetuate his name according to. his true deserts. In after time, when the nation is rester/II Lotto normal condition of peace and prosperity, and when the national monument at Washington is finished ;..when the monument in Washington Square in this bity ib eidbled, then and net nit then let us devote - our siurphis fuhds La the inerease of our monumental adottnnents of Washington's suceessois. Let us first honor * those who gave us our odentry, and after that those whbtiid their intlibet tdvpreserbe The estate 'of - Abraham Lincoln amount!' to seventy-five thousand dollars. The ie tdreet upon that sum at ills rate of Rion five' pet: oenL would be thine thousand Bee hun dred dollars—knough, in all consoienee, td suppoft Mrs. Lineoln and. likenfamllitspelp fortably, and more than they ever had be fore he became our Chief Migidtrale. tat Ward committees, County ebtaihitteee, ehd State tleintitlitees MT calling upon all the pee le to contribute their mite to raise a radii for "the aupport of the family of the martyred President." I. not this to the. 10054. gilt 01 _ Especially, when it is botisidisied that tlpte: out the length and breadth of Mb land there are thousands tif widows elld'orphene of those killed ih the war, *he _ire penni lens and in want of the common necessaries of life. Not only are these mourners for the dead to be remembered, bet the thou; saints Of returned soldiers, crippled and rendered physically useless for life, who aro now among us looking in vain for succor and substaiitial-aid from the 'Loyal League' and Ileptibilean philanthropists and negro philists, wile have Urged' on this contest with,euch steadfast vindictiveness. ' Take the funds gathered for a monument to Abraham. Lincoln, and the funds now being collected for the benefitand support of Mrs. Lincoln, and appropriate them to the finding of homes, and the absolute ne cessities of lifeforthe widows and orphans of soldiers, and for the maimed and helpless survivors of the war; use those funds for their benefit, and for the erection of a na tional asylum, which shall not only be such in name, but in reality a borne for our disa bled veterans, and, our word for it, ti:.ere will be enough raised to answer all the pur poses of a testimonial of 'the nation's grati tude, Finish the national monument at thil CILF . ital ; finish the monumentcriVashingtor in this city; provide for the widows and:or phansA the soldiers of the war, and relieve the ucceArties of the legless, armless, and scarred veterans who have returned to us, and then it will be lime to talk of the crea tion of a monument to Abraham Linodln, and e.f. a fund for the support of Mt. ooln.—Phila. Mercury. Nonni 'train:me:L-I%e New Ilamp ablreLegislature, at its recent Widen, pass ed an Act which provides that all incomes from property not taxed, shall seeded be 20 per cent. The object of this law is to oodlit pal those who have invested their money in Government+, securities to , bear a portion StiState, Omidt,i , and kfttnidipal taxatiod. TO measure *On strenuously opposed by ' the shoddy Abolitionists, bat was finally carried by a union or Democrats avid cent seryativn Republicans: l4 H is a measure of dimple and evenhandedjdatioe which to be adopted by every State in the Union. As matters stand there is, a large class, beet Able to afford' it) who do not dthltribute d dollar, so far de,their.personal properly is concerned, toward the support of o ur bottle governments, and what is still more unfair tkby are receving a large interest 'from the (Unarm! Government all of which has to be extraoted from the pockets of the worf-. log and industrial classes of the community. There is solkething radically wrong id our system of taxation, and the sooner the bur then is equalized so as to bear alike upon all—the high` add the low, the rich and the poor—the better It will be for everyboby, bondholdera of the Government included. We hope the next Legislature of our own Stste will follow the example of'New Hamp shire, and ceilitter the shoddy aristocracy to disgorge n Portionl of their 'means to as to lighten Me burthens upon Lite =WO of our peOple.—Lanc. Intel. A BLACK Rairou's Black Republican is a newspaper in N i x °ries , • • edited brottionlered who it would seem, from the following, does not think that the regeneration of %le brethren is to be twoomplished by "rotiiig bad tax paying " th° Colored man and the white man ounn44ire together in this'oe#try ; they must, andivin have to,heparate % unless the Congress of the nation will -l air° them a pleas by theniselves, for as it rtas for Abra ham and Lot, so it is with us, and the sooner we seek a home for our rising generatictlf, the better it will bo for no. pdr anal tiestinY, so Sir as I Mid dimly. see, is that in three hundred years' It *lll be a rare thing to see - a ooloweit man In this oountry. Like the Indian, our rime is der' tined to become eitinot•in this coulatry, un less we move to ourselves. Woman hotsewhippsd her kinsband In the stieets of Warren, Rhode Island, lest weep. The man mo4ly submitted to toti or fi ft y blows, but flowed opposition w in his eon followed up the mother by beAftherlng his dad 4ith an umbrella. It Is not stated what of hose the whipped men bad committed. wild bellialo weighing 2,600 pounds was kilted ear Dep Mottnek46wai * few &re arx - a il'Akirl! =aim own raminaisinrs,orv , r THE BURNIALITIOF THE PACATINA OF THE:RHINt :114 FEBRUARY 1689, BY oftntft * r outs Atift THE . BURNING or THE SHENANDOAH VAI,IEY IN OCTOBER 18 . 64, BY OR DER OF GENERAL GRANT. • . . The burning of the, Palatinate continued without a parallel in the ward of Christen dom for one htindrotandaeveitydive years, when the 'Valley of the Shenandoah was in• like manner delivered to the flames. For acociunt of. tie burning et the Palatine we refer fo the first Volume of Voltaire's Age of AV l i . ' ry The King, eye Voltaire, had determined ho make a desert of the Palatinate. The I - objebt was to prevent his enemies from subsieting in IL__ Aomorilinter, "in 1689 'Oremeroame to the army an orderfrom Louis, signed ionvois, to rednee eVerythilg to ashes. The French 9enerale, who were bound to obey, gave notice, in the heart of winter, to the °Mittens of all its °Mee, 'so flourishing and so well repaired, to the in habitants of the villages and to +the owners of fifty oleateatis, that,they must leave their by fire and- eviord. Men end women, tivv agediand' the infants. departed in haste. One portion wandered Ia the field, another fled to neighlioiing countries; whilst the soldier, who always.exceeds his orders-in rigor, and 'who never executes them with Clemency, turnt and ;sacked the country. They commeneed with Manhiem and .Heid elberg, the residence otthe Eleotors. Their palaces were destroyed like the houses of other citizens. "Europe was horrified. The officers who executed the order were ashamed of being the instruments of such cruelties. They threw book the blame on the Marquis of Louvious, who had begonia more inhuman by that hardness of heart which. a long ministry produces. lie bad indeed, coup dolled the measure ; but Louie was the Inas, ter and need not bare followed hie counsel. If the King had witnessed this epeot.sole, he would himself have nth:lgo: s i te d th e ga me s. Ile signed the destruction of a whole ociun— try from ILe reoesseti of 114 palace of Ver 'sailles and in the toidif. of pleasures, because he saw only in this order his own power and the unfortunate right of With but had he been nearer the shade, he would have Aeeti oily. its horrors, The other nations which until this period, .had only blamed his ambition whilst admiring him self, now exclaimed against his cruelty and even blamed his policy, because if his enti rules should penetrate into his states, as he had done into theirs, they wdlild re• due% his cities to ashes." Vette', in his Law of Nations; speaks of this atrocioue s crdoitY as it desnryes. lie Says "in the last century the French rav aged and burnt the Palatinate. All Europe resounded with invectives against ouch a mode of waging wan it was inevnain tbat the Court atterePt to Palliate their &induct by alleging that this was done only with a View to cover their own frontier. That was an end to which the ravaging of the Palatinate contributed tont cod the *hole proceeding exhibit n ping to the eyes of mankind but the revenge nd cruel ty of a beliglity and unfeeling minister." The King's conscience smote hint all the remaining days of his life for having con sented to this, burning,•tand the, time of Lettvious, who had counselled it, 'although the gebatest War niidistei• of Modern Hale, &flees dardot may be eicepted, had, eier' since been held in eireoration. St. Simon relates that some time after ward, Louvois havihg determined to burn the city of - Troves. but aware of the Ring's scruples of conscienoe, issued the order without previously Consulting 'him, the minister thee taklttg upon himself thb sole :sponsitility for the deed. When informed of it, Louis literally drove Louvoie from his presence, exclaiming as he retreated, "Dispatch a courier instantly with a coun ter order and see that be arrives in time, for know that your head shell answer fbr it if a single house should be burnt." - dietary, Ufa said. alvtayi repeats; itself : but it it tt). be dericiied that. this ehould hate been done, after nearly two centuries, ill free and enlightened America. Lient,Gen. Grant, from his heedquarteref near Rich mond, ordered General Sheridan to devas tate the riot, beautiful and extensive Valley or the Shenandoah. , Ifs thiternaride him: "Do alLthe damage you can to the railroad and crops. Carry 'off stock of every descrip tion and negroel, 40 as to prevent further planting. If die *or is to last another year, let the Shenandoah . 1 / a lley remain barren waists." It does not appear, that either the Preillident or Secretary of War consented to this barbarous order; and we sincerely hope that they did not, for the character of the (*wary. Lien. Sheridan, drake the Orerloh °koala Who devastated tre Palatinate,-ts ,net ashamed of being he in,strument by these (weenies. Thettenetrali appears to be the 'fact; judging from the toes of-hie Report from Woodstock to Gen. Grant, of the 7th, of October, 10 6 . 4 - * ln this he says t 01 eammenced moving back from Port Ellpub-' no, Miring GraWford, BridgeWater'ihed liarrlsonburg iiiettardity learning.. flirt grain and forage In advance af these'pointif had previously been destroyed. Is. mow's* book to this point, the oldie Country from Blue Ridge tithe North Mountain hair been made 'untenable for a rebel strosY. I hate destroyed over two thodolani - barne with wittahluty •icacifkikeitig frnpltanehta:; over Iseventrmills filled with iteser , .44 wheat ; have driven in front of the army over four- herds. of Steak,. and. hero WWI sled ?sauna to the troops riot less than three 606100 sheep.' This 11estruotion embrs des the Liart4: Valley spa - Dile Pert italici se weil dii lle Maio valley. iieutenikul John it.' Meigs, my Engineer ()Dicer, was murdered beyond Harrisonburg, near Day ton. For thitratroeious Sot all the boliees Within in arid 4f ire miles . were burnt:" Over two thettiand barns Allied with wheat and farniiiog ittiplements, end' over leventy miifb filled with tloWeer and wheat destroyiiii and, the whole' valley between the, Blue Ridge and the North Mountain, bonsisting of i number of rich. end well' cultivatid t,e a barren waste!" And this under the plea of military necessity 1. Let Ws imagine, if we can, the destitution and distress of many of there poor peOple, suddenly deprived' of present subsistence, and without hope for the future. Their farming implements haling been destroyed, they can neither sow nor plant for the next harvest: Their homes have been made des olate, and like the inhabitants of tub Pala-, tinetti one portion of th9ni kid wander among their own. ruined fields, whilst the I other has sought'an asylpm in netghborkiii filtitteerethereurawr ef-thenirmnstd ogarity% The dOestation made by Oenettli dan pot war as conducted for a long period between obrilixed nation!). it bas terniabed his victories. Although the re= bellion has been causeless and unjust, this does not justify a departure from the hu mane principles introduoed into the laws of war and prietioedlielween civilized belll 7 gereNta fort' nearly two oenturies r and by none pooro liberalt3 , inan by our own Gov ernm 11e hate sevt Llht VI'lt0; m writino eighty y ears after the destriietion the Palatinate, lays Europe resounded with invectives against such a mode of waging war." ,What will be the opinion of the civilized world tigioty years or eve d ten yeara hence, coneerning the destruction of the Shenandoah Valley ? Nay, what will be our own opinion after passion shall hare subsided and reason resumed her may f " RZOOPIIITHIJOTION.—The bid prouwrb, that it is easy to pull down, but bard to pull up, is ping unrifled by the National Admidis trek& The fauglieil party it represents worked industriously for nearly forty peeve to break up the Union. Thy suooeeded at last by pushing a conflict of technical Riese into a civil war. In that War they preVall ed over inferior fitimbeil And resources. The hanquifihed party have laid down their arms and socePted peace. The natural oln sequence of that serrlifidnr Shotild d ißEto ratltn of thtl rebellious States "In *Mu quo onto helium," without azipiterference of the Federal authorities. But the dominant party in the Government will not allow the States of the South to swing back - voluntarily into - ttritir 2- old — relatitleir tii the Central Government; lied id their efforts td "reconstritet" the Union, on a new founda tion that shall be accordant to their peculiar views and wishes, they are likely to prevent the reestablish meet of the old Union, se well as the eteatlegi of any other that *AI be sat isfactory an* enduring. it is peageitly cer tain that the politicians now in power at Washington, never would have been able to perferm the *ork of those *ise and just melt who founded the prevent Government, stotd what r they are hot comrdtent to have origi nally formed, they surely are Mit qualified to ithprove. Theiefore,,ille Idol limy do in 'the business of l'recodstriotion," as they call it, the better it will be for all oondeiti-• 0 • Tun REASON you tell me why the " rept:Wilmot; of wealth are so anxious to have -the riegrois vote t" dr mairse we could. At is well known that the Democrats., as soon se they get into power, intend to Tax Bonds, thereby compelling the rich Bondholders to pay their portion of the Taxes, instead of heaping,it upon the poor men and fanners as is now the case. By gifidg the negro a vote they expect to eonlrol things so as to always run in their own men. IL ie UAW farmere and everybody else should begin to enquire as to the rea son why they are taxed No boson, and tie oprivileglNl clue olvtiya oidatiti-N4ANN. Newswer.., —lt is, perhaps, not pnongli known to our readers, that a plea of blatlorpsper crumpled togethols co, make 14 firm, and jpe► vrefiesi, wilt take luk,maotsualosacy. Rub the spot bard Plthe -ireltod Raper, when It Instal:My psappoars ; and .the was, mark from the , operatics may be Jamedistali id moved bj ruktdstg the table With a cloth. eorreppondent of the New, York &tam revives the story ot,iiitantpa'n milk; nation—on the grown" of peeled ree,t_and ill health. Yee , the poor, dea — efetioir., very .siph.." ,f.Kottglit,tlu4"rei-ievontr at. edit), And thenpsais An.owinfiy. „ , . .. rltssi--A em !t . Is nplalally , ptited.that ihi; t mortal* o f 64 next oeisiitirm *ib , O iittilhern eosin an o iltii'ittpOtilio side ; or,' e, but toile yeitd,, hni'iotifitilo . moni i ID VS per asuii. of ihia pepditif:foiiiiii iii*: tiolooola :,for ikeiLieficfettoii. 4 • --.—fileatetunit-Coronei Wed: N. Iffidfoid, oi Irtojciiiiitaiiietv oYTndl an e,, is peribitierby the unttedetair wow • Ail Jaw stone, mad the reply woe : " It eoeti aothiNg *tiers you• ere geleg." • No. 30. ' THEfoIIGED STRANGER. tromErr O TIM wAR • .--- _ : "1 awl with Brant —the etranger,iaiti said the farmer: "Bay Bo tame; - -, B u g re st tbsabers at ray sottais poteho For thy foot are Irma sad sore:: was with Grant."—the stranger tald s a id the farmer; "may, Do more_ I piitb ee sit st mj fiminti booed, ' • And est of ioy, humble don. - • onow dares my boy-44 soldier boy, Of the old Ninth Army Corpo-- warring be,tialin him irdllnatly smoke of battle's roast - "I know him'not. l. aid the aiiid man. "And as I remarked before, I was with Grant,"—"Nay, nioy, I know," Said the lamer, "Say no mote "lie fell in battle—T me. algal Thotedst smooth the tidings Nay : speak the truth, whidbevoir It be, Though it road My bosom's owe. . .Itow feel he—with hie face to the foie, Upholding tha-dar he bore? 0, ray not that my boy diagramed The uniform that he wore I" "I cannot tell," said the sliced MIL at way with' raaa r 4e Botha three years beferalbe war. 't Then the fernier spake,htm never a ♦ord But boat with his net full sore, That aged hum irbo_had morited-ttir grant Some three years before the war! THIS, THAT AND THE•OTHER. —President Johnson i t sgaht lowan. —Thirty Laplanders it 6 arrived in St. Paul to settle in Minnesota. —A church iu Petersturg, risinia, was destroyed by lightnlng on Eltindaylast.„ —Judah P. Tien amid and fritb) Smftb have arrived at Havana. Seven Texas railroads, about 400 allies, are in rumbles order. —Ex-Governor Byron Mame, of Rhode Island, is dead. —The telegraph wires between Charier...on! and Sareankb are being rapidly rebuilt. —The reports efrebeforaements being sent to the Union troops in Texas are dotilild. toiAl plihila koof the Vu_lted Aisles set July 31 was $3,7157,258:2C3.30. new name for the .01410apital PrmoMe ttle Manias House.' . 25,0b0 dbgro6s telt kentuolry agg aiotiodthis Ohio *tweak on iasak. Palate' PIP"- —The ieolplie of South beolifia ate repro sent ad as simosintaiiiiinousli opposed is liege° -At bun account; ttfa tlreal.:4oLar6, *lth the Atlantic Wirt, du to linia left Valetas on July UM. . —The Confederate General Rigihezd Tay lor has had an Interview with Jefferson Davis at Fortress Mohioe. —The sales of oonfiscated lands *five» to have t thee 1.11/ieb At ne26oilslll6, Picard*, have been suspended. —Tt Is said there was but one man who wasn't Fpo iled by being lionised—he was a Jew and his name was DAusiel. —ilia publication of the Mien Bowser, at Sallibury, N. -0., hoe been suspended by,tbe tbilitary authdthlie. —Wan, of Abdersonville ilotoriety. ted to be the only prisoner of war now held by the government. A womanutiid tier jute:der were found "clopped to dei!tb" in their bed in Oakland, bonneotiont, yeettitday morning. ." - --.Attesotie *Rid sap when he heats Qt, song, •tothe where itv loin life tithulitag t " he don't go, tie don't think *aid th tight. Stateniest that Searetati Stanton has regulated the Estieber Shirts' Tee Darts shall wear per week, Oohs* be official!) , de nied. '--:-.Tirtrpastles of dmigtitati have • hes& attacked by the Indians in boloritio. potties of the fannies-hem -apposed it essions points on the South Platte river. —The Public &wad WWI that, Shelia IL' Esker, quite • young boy, was dtoWSIOd to Turkey river at Clarmoot t Saturday last, by the upsetting of a boat. —The principle of law /aid down by old Chief Julia, Hale may be maiaao4 in our day: "If a eourt-menial Oda a Mop to_ death, to dme °tram', the °Moe» itteglinti at iiigr thse --John IV iiirlarri . P4ol4 papers le the eerily 'or the Pbtomja, b wirth s.loo,ooer, sWels'eldi- of itiolmor the Bieced.liatitesol Itaqk, 'Astruisbasud Brahma llui• • r —lst. amid thyrewi l4 dillibillit issiicao- Went ROPPVGiat 11 41IntAlitfflagiOc u ntaillteldit pemonsAi t Mte ipOsieripPol4 %lin 2,ollNiesAi the $OOO4 tif 41 004,b4* power railer:o4 Nitaillattlow te,do _To Mission to grootoOlt!Sq la" VALI, Atigithitzep Siva° Betittiktyt hp#:riseffol44 IL, zdturar,setsampilgoli fis it NO Vonsoilloi soli 'Wiry* si, .1i * nraoe . ....,... , .--, •• - and de:Ow:the ntor4 alfariltdiWz. ''' I , . :doll why brother burlest* a wajenq . brollter, i. agn i iot. , ,,e , ~ v !" . ,,Abliit „ ,. , . f il g t d. ittinots`4 nits& Ore Pisf WI fr om, e _ natusa..4,Sties , ~ favorite igotidesses; and! Peidinteni '• le -.I translated' to •,elirtb. - She a 7, Mt n, '' ' • , •.. ,• r: 041 tj:fteE . 4 i A where glut troll* Yi4 - .1 1 51M.p•rt,- - wife and sister, astrotheratt seiptitieterth v ' t unfelt., is MOM pirsiloreata reorois i Alnithmre all armiedltre uotte3llMone#44,'!,f the fcr,h,-.: Of.thilAtfilitiAkti.poliittitheinti , L. , ilea& - Ibis o iVothottes date re! t4O ll VP. , I moottotomed 14 deplore the ogeeta of inilli,k r: tory life open their subordmateilk-ilro 'leer of' ' . inuniod blittliet4 ahli general debauchery, . amongst moo who i w(! eft. on fejt. Pi ''7 t' peaceful pursuits of , ball* .4,, ,gr i iiio.,,, , ,q• 4 . ic....1444014.11.419,..„4„mkrw,i„F.i, c ,,,, fill and, ,exemplary Chiron& vi„ :,„: ~ ,,h,,,, It le not our, purrs* here te lotitunte,,, , ,. that the man of the_eamit 1; aeoistiarily , likely to prove the worst{semlptir of society : on the contrary, where g he has been 'fhb- Jacked a proper direlpl&e, be nearbotioL-71 proved, but it. Is the gineral .rtes of wafts} i 0 exciting bad emotions to writtelt itardflir , '-' , Those who remain at hoot,' are planed *to- . , nor'; this intluenee of the Ouner feellnm, and. l become ales more 0t:nif00te4,,,,,, Five ....„ altitides,we ItearOfti:ii oommitiolooetd snort.' °oaten* dr ' - ilie - rwitisintiOif,Wfigi the al. ~ o s ~ .l'-ii4tlii 444 . ' whidli titir' exalting's ,frinte er n * ' ''"' ' are' tided. ifidiety sititit; 4",,t o e (t ' e. will, right itself inAhls" s taktter, but thi '`: steps to be taken by our•eivil gttiorlibuti ' cannot be too soon adopted. - do °Mtwara • ' prevention hi' worth a pound of eviri, iliti ` it is unelitie td loot the stable ',door after' the horse has been stolen. The obvious- duties of the of the 'Olio Way * • • is to sterols.' renewed 'vigilance, to Ihroit 2 • additiltial guards around, the Ottperigr and • person of the cities°, sod by air eitemipla • of high public morality autitideloy to duty, : : . to r , resesure the good and deter the efforts . °She vicious.—Dahhaore,Sago. ' • . liEl TAXING UNITED STATES STOCKS: The right of Stales, Counties;, Cities, and boroughs to tax United aftelaceeesmitien le becoming a question of greet import's:We te • ite..-al*est_ upon- wheat' the iir*elei ilk Govergleilt tire beginnist te. rq *ice crushing effect.. The State *Apr tiamp-, shire bas already led the "way : hy.placinka tax of twentjlve per omit : Apr' Me 070 ' 04 1 . • derived from Fetteral bowys tw oi c w i ll not be lout until ilia lisiiersities of the people will force the Legislature of every 'tithe? State in the Union td adopt a siddlir tr./14. Udbita ilia la &de, 11,4111 not be many months or years, If the present state of things datinnee, ' 'Mill it will be next to' blindest% 'tit. eta* NlqiOratldtin if f Iddr Titillate to borrow i dbilir,' except ni rain• ous rates of interestl-anOth additon,:the -whole burthen of the lottelyptvernienth villl , devolve upon the tuidltibic and s kiitPililit ' glasses #b b ate at As a* to pay, while the "Imlay erof artiioeradW bond-hadenl of the General Goftwhinent,^Who are revel- ing in all the comfort" andluxerita of life et tho expense of their Indust:ions neigh hors, go soot free. There, is grosi , .and • flagrant injustice in all 4ltie. 41. AinisHl.- ' working mechanic Mai veil ti.; iti t Atitlie4 i . valued dt eggtheiisatul Albin, forlithioit A., , he iai to ply Stmt, oeurty,Ohy Burin, .41 end School taxes, amounting ,irk qt. gate .to i bonsiderahle recii fililli li , i o ~,.... neighbor, with one hundred ,thoruntlud % istra of Uncle San's . toOlide 'add no real estate, - in lot required iO Pet a" 0611(14 oat 1 Such inequality and ttaralls,o l klri: .. Within ill hilletl' dr ilio; giii ari it the'iti: • pease of tie poor mad; hi' Monahan"' ill'a ' Sepublioete . goverunient, and was . tinier contemplated , by the trines drcitir Old- Aitutiou. Is ihoolir.optai- the orisililf thii 'emus to thelerlorn and helpless liondltion hi Adak they Will *sr, sobli be visite& At they ire net ahead" litida.l blob and foot ' to this tpor had dangerous despotieun,un- . lees they indiedy the evil at the ballot-box'- s. . fiLitor roksnonvnjOit be sadnood in favor of isxl64 oo4thimont above willintesiefiAitiitient:' ?emir 'tfi tble viii iniplortitat it:Steel • btif;' psfori to eikaiffibE 4titisertgfriiito diiftingv befornt .;, al=l9===ractils:,i.'• : _ 1 3 , 914%, ,jPnrr)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers