THE VOLUNT g. TO HER poet deg , rotr think Jolla, • rot 0000 try Uent think of e, cl; tlle gt eriildron, John, Dori fog Oann, row knolr* Levi the oorn ugkon.the.atalks, John, itad Wowed on / 1, hair • And the go A 1 11 1 4 6, nit the • inn, John, Jot have it. ill fur 'got take rase kali and go, John, Tokit year ran esti go, for DUI ono- &iv* the omen, John, And aloe lowan, hoe. • • 1.1.4411 my trsadeire toll, 'Jobb, ins fan h t it Bittihdr 11111;) wt. counted all his 411 W sad wealth, Hi , own itry r i - iilliirtift Shall wo Ammo tho brovwold hood, J o hn, Tkia bowed on hiontooutti Phan NJ! robe your pm and to, John, !flog . oe'or initial% spin. ._ Thou take pitir gun itud p, &o. Our Woes abort of Writhes, Jan, Thor take this heavy pair; . on and wore then When • girl, • And worked then with great owe. Dias& rpm in every ourner, John, All thems tny mane you nee, th•cold ground they'll warmer teel, theithey wow =We by row. • ' Then take your gun and go, La. And If It be God's Will, lobo, You item ammo blot sole „ I'll our, Bitty Wbon I beer diet you str. Agin. nen we'will take ',moron., John, know this Is the rate, , Ha inn well for your children, Jolla, had imp them all in school. Then take,ybur `an and go, dko. And in the village chunk, John, We will pay wen our knees, , We win pray that (led will Care fol. you If you 'hoard chinos to. freeze. And all who love their country's cense Will love and bless you - too, And Bill end I. will always pray for freedom and for you. -Then take your gun and go, an. Awl now, good-bye to yea, Jobe— tette me In este of Bill ; Yoe know I've atingle loved blm, Ileltplamthistmuseiround me, Jobs, • Aed carats me night sod day, Aud hold me in his arm', dear John, Whoa you are far away. But take your gun and go, Jobn, Taker your gun and go, For Bill eaa drive the oxen, John, dad also use tbehoe. Ye.!--S bed better take my gun Cu.! go: RAMBLES AMONG THE NEGRO CABINS AT WASHINGTON. The following description of the condition of the abolition pets, in tie Capitol of the listion, is detailed in the Washtugion Intel. lgeneer, by an old &then of that city, sod is worthy the attention of the public. It hied to be "alas the poor Indian," but soon it will he the "poor negro," and curses, long and loud will be retailed against the destroy ers of their peace. The colored people of this city are an in ' Madam The War bee poured a great flood of them upon as. With every advancing step of our armies, gathering up great bales of articles that seemed most desirable to them from their own domicile and from the hoksee °Moir Master', they made their way to Washington, the Mecca of their imagine- Ilona, ostler the impression that freedom and plenty were to be attained by reaching • It. They came by tens and by hundreds. The old and the deorepid, the young and helpless, the middle-aged and strong. Ott toot they came, and they bate with them their goods and chattels. Stout gals of twelve, carried the fat, shining babies; lade of all ages balanced upon their heads bask -144 of precinct's for the journey ; buxom field bands bore great bales enflaming of featherbeds, 111 i Baum a dresses, mirrors, and band-bozee, and the roan we're burdened vith an amount of sundries that would make a hulloed. No exertion was exhausted, no obstacle insurmountable. "Owine IQorf, where you all own flaw," was the exultant answer to all Interrogations concerning their destination. They-it:OW little, but they dreamed much of what would be the result of the sudden end unprOvlded for (Mange in their condi tion. It was a leap in the dark ; hut they imagined It a leap from darkness- into light —horn a state of bondage into the glorious audition of freedom; and they n a turally considered that they would be the reciftients of theblessinp that such a change should produce. Alas, alas, for the awakening from this delusion! They found tiitemeelres of lest in Washington, homeless and friendless. They stood upon the wharves and gated and won dered, The great dome of the Capitol, the marble walls of the public buildings, the busy throngs going and coming from their accustomed places of business amazed them. No foul was offered them ; they wore invi ted to ah hospitable homes. They found themselves strangers in a strange land—des titute sod despised ; and pinched by hunger sad - fait with the reaction of stimulated litutgltuplons, they began to grope their way into alleys add by-ways, and stable-lofts lad rude hovels; end so became tweity-itue thousand of them, deditens of the American metropolis. Here they are, still In our midst; they throng our streets, they roll our barrels, they lift ear.balse,they delve inohr gutters. they black oar hoots, they 'nook our food, and Ire cannot shot our eyes to the feet that.' they ugeet, as well u permeate all branches of our society. Some of'tbem prosper, end we find them engaged in the regular ohnn olits Of,lesitlmatte botanist, and enjoying the aoalideisSibt the ebuinitialty ; but the mas 41—AefaioilaPani ua In a ramble among their lidaiesa of domicil, and then *newer.— •/40t demand our early and earnest couswirmi on r The question is put' in • double tense, b oth with Mr.lird to their clondltion.primer,. 43 rulutingto themselves, and with regard to link tiondltion, as relating to the present sad &Wet intelust Of . onr city.' We dad • gnat portion of them In what are denoml hetgirri" generally made of tits cheap set lulaber.-aa4 mimed with felt sad tar. sad 41r4e2. hito apartments , some 12 by 74 641,11iA1141421i5. And rented for $4, $5, eho,wo possess or "cabin." The actual "eh' or fivf "omit Was from $lO to $lOO st ab , (411wity,foxoeediTig the latter sum,) and th e Pro I.ll,loolrpaid have, in many install "; Aikiit, 4014, Otlity in trim:tag (11 ' 14 11" epirKibulablos are co rer4lll Of 44144 4"1 "°ll " of colt 1.10 - ttors: *mom un !valid Ertie i tiiiiiMsedooriln• rgint4aL • ,---.• ,____. , ........._ 9., :iiti he . ~, cit.l.* . NA , . i • Vol. 10. a feature quite uneonimon: A, single room is occupied femily, and in many in-' stances Iwo or three families are crowded into the same apartment. The occupants of these rooms end others in that section of the city have hitherto found emplo3thient in washing for Lincoln and Empry 'ffospitals," In cutting wood for the Quartermaster's De partment, and working for Captain Krouse. Net . . the Marino Hospitil, in a most wretch ed ri — nel, lives an old adored woman, who, beildes paying her rent of five dollars .per mon,th, supports-a family of eight children by washing' In the vicinity of 0 street south, between Fourth and Fifth meet, there is a group of “rows," some of them perched upon posts, (mime _consisting of double rotors of rooms, some eight by,ten feet in 'dimensions, and all with sunken roofs that freely, admit the ram, and all with !loops better 'adapted for ventilation than for keeping small children of from the ground ; and here the price of rant is put it four dollars Lent's row t on 11. street souih, between South Capitol and First • stree , b, contains the only rooms plastered tir furnished with con veniences for choking; but his row on . • tit-siteetetrie-seravettelredt-ww--arry - Hie neighborhood of the brick yards near the arsenal there are a cluster of tenements, and a building need for a church and school-Loupe, erected by the Scotch Presbyterians, Hero rooms are $2 each, and the children of all this section enjoy the privelegee of free day and Sunday schools. Male and female teachers are kept to distant employment, and the station is called a mission. On K, L and M streets 1 coat b t hetWeen ScCrond and Four-end-a-half streets west, is a settlement contacting some thousands of inhabitents, called Fredrice. burg, and Lore the occupants owntbe hoes eat paying one dollar permonth ground rent. They have erected a church , of their own,' And support a colored pastor. Here may be found more evidences of comfort and inde pendence than in any other large settlement of contrabands in the city. They have @hops, sad streets, and little gardens, an seem contented with their :ot. Many their houses have attained an ahilthie of two stet ice, and paint and verandahs orna ment not a few of them. At their church on Sunday there was, a goodly disphiy of broadcloth and crinoline, and they consti tute a 'Met oY aristocracy of color. Further west the !eland is studded with the 811111 C sort of cabin'', and nosh of thl avenue, iu the vicinity of the corrals and tl.aoriginal Contraband camp, all sorts and 1110 , , of thcra cots be found wedged iu ev cry conceivable shape into vacant apnoea and yards and alleys. How such a multitude live and obtain ,clething to a quest:on tor the canonic. They have no conveniences for eoolting or' washing—en old broken wove, out side on the conimon, stitiv.e.i' for several Pint 1toa: le many :usiklie'On a rude fur. I ' nape, built of broken brick, on' the top of which is placed a kettle, tekee the plaice of the stove ; and a lino sti etched out on the common, and watched by the children, tsjl the clothe', dryer All boys and girls, and the old end infirm delve in gutters, among piles of rubbish and cinders, on the wharves, and-in the trail of wood and coal carts, for bits of fuel, which they carry borne in old grain sacks that they have picked tip about the camps. Their clothing in also gathered to a great extent in the name manner. Boys of twelve to eighteen may be seen in uniforms of full grown men. "Soldier clothes" seem to be the,rage, regardless of fit. 'their wages and the offerings of *6.3%1mi-liable supply them with a pare subsistence, and thus they live' from day to day, without knowing from What source to-morrow's , supplies aro to I come. Ike found many of tLem, perhaps the ma jority, anxious to return to the places from whence they came ; but.they are impressed With the idea that, at this season of the year, they would be unable to obtain ens ploymentor the means of subsistence, They realtie the fedi, too, that they aro soon to be comparatively out of employ ment here, and, without rational hope. they look forward upon the dismal prospect or a cold and cheerless winter .45 FINANCIAL MATTERS. r No more the welkin rings with the once famous "pay as you go" of the eccentric John Randolph of Roanoke. That system is superseded by one that proposes to pay at some time in the dim and distantlittetre. A man's mental capacity is measure(' now by his ability to set up a moonshine gbld, silver, coati or petroleum company, and to transfer by that 'means the contents of oth er people's pecketslOto his owd, fa the shortest possible mime and in the most ap proved style. -That "national blessing," the, national debt, Is being increased at a frightfarfate, and it begins to look as if in the end we may have entirely tee much of a good thing. The Secretary of the Treas ury, by his last statement, acknowledges an increase of .1$960,0004900„ within r year. Bo then "did malioionalreports Set afloat by the designing and disldyal," and so much to the disgust d the faithful, that the ex penses of the Government were $8,000,000 day, were not only entirely true, but Were 09144arably within the limits, as it now appears the broveionent has not only added I nearly 48,000,000 a day to its debt, but it has expended several hundred milliops of taxes in addition. Tbose ingenious de+Med of despotiviik 04 national 'hooka, are the natufnl allielfell a national debt, and they keep pace With itS intrease. In the days of I•Preeldent .Thekson, after a long, free, an. 0 - E - o..troNTg, PA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 18,1865. thorough discussion, which lasted-2during the whole term of hie office, 1828 to DIU,' 'it W4B decided by the people that a national bank was a national curse, and the onlykono of those infernal contrivances with which this country has been cursed wits fineltY and forever entombed, as was eupposed at, that time. But our Bourbons, -like those of France, neier learn anything: and, in con sequence, ,we shall witness, at no very dis tant day, if the liberties pf this country are to be prcierved, that battle fought again, attended 'With the sweeping financial pc:rul e-oone which characterized that eventful pe riod. Liberty is taking a nap now, but she will awake by and by, refreshed and orated. The late war has e r nabjed federal ism to steal a march of a celitary on democ racy. The new—which considers - a na-. tional debt a national blellsing, which as , sells t here la more gold in the country now than at the commennement of the war, and. that pnper . thoney is as good as gold—labors innustriously every day in opposition to the high prices extorted, as it says, by' venders of food. It falls Into convulsions as often as it considers the apparently high price of milk, but it sees no offense in " Watering the e • ; - " - iortiartiebTarie — brifii Sic- - lasing the country. And it is also blind to the fact that ,its own charges are at least double what they were before the excessive issue of- paper money. Instead of wasting quarts of ink in abusing the whole fraterni ty of farmers, merchants, and shopkeepers, by stigmatizing them as a pack of unlit inci pled swindlers, monopolists, forestallers and extortionists, why not solve the mystery by candidly admitting what is so clearly indi cated by current prices, that a paper dollar is worth only fifty cents ; and that gold, the financial barometer, would harmonize with that by rising suddenly to 200;if the Sec retary should discontinai his sales.of that commodity through his brokers at the Board The Secretary having possession of more than half of all the gold In the country, is enabled for the present to centre{ its price, and compel it to indicate a condition of things which does not really exist ; but we know of no greater folly than to suppose that, cornparatirefy speaking', ,a handful of furptirsi and merchants can, for any consid erable Veriod cf time, maintain a fictitious price for any of the vast crops of this vast and fertile count ry,ono Single State of which , it his becri estunated,raises enough food to supply the entire population. Advices by the Germania report our 6-20 bonds as hav ing fallen to 70 in London. In the event of a war, br of a financial panic in Europe, our securities m•ght come back in a shower, and produce most deplorable results bore. The oonnequenece of the outbreak of the late war to the Illinois banks, whose notes were based on st:eitliern State bonds, are fresh in the recollection of all. The ire porte continue to he on a liberal scale and largely in excess of the exports. The dit ties received last week at the etudom house exceeded the amount of any former week this year, and reached the large !urn of nearly $3,000,000. Sooner or later pay ity will cone.—A. I'. Freeman's Journal. fIICHMOND ELECTION • The election for 11Iny or, in Richmond, Va., on Tuesday, resulted in are success of N. A. Sturdivant, esq , by four hundred major ity. On the morning of the election the opposition candidate, Mr. Taylor, issued a card placing himself frankly and squarely on the Union platform,• and declaring that he was and ever had been a Union man, dis approving (A secession, and havingrat sym pathy with the rebellion. The Mayor elect in a card on the morning of the election. nye: "I assure each and every voter that when the proper limo comes I can ad will satisfy the authorities, State and Federo, civil anemilitary, that no treason was done by a vete given for rue." ._The interest of the copnetinity wan chiefly con.tentrated upon the contgst for the may orality and the sheriffatity. In reference to the election the Itichtnond Bulletin (1311:. "The election of yesterday sitripty *leans that the people of Virginia, so far, at least es Richmond can be taken as a ripresenta tiTe of that people, turn not with the spirit of the craven and the renegade from opin ions which their kith and kin have died for. "Virginia to-dity may hold her bead ae high ae ever, and if in her history aught of horcl'iliation attaches to her name, it is but that humiliation which might arise from the fear of the lose of thoie dearer privile ges which form a people's power and glory. - "With no interference from the mllitttr, authorities—on •the contrary, with ',, fltif manifestation of an indifference as to the final restlit, which befitted thepiosion of the officers of the United &al i ne mow us —the voters of this * city have 'given expres sion to their feelings and opinions in a man ner which does no ditsredit to the better annals of the State, and ¶ Lich iscaloulitted to dash the hopes of the wild dreamers of radicalism fort their future schemes of in terference in our State polioy. "Let then note this, nod, as they note it, let them remember the tesobirig's of-yeater days'e election, while we eland aside and mark the issue." TIM WAR Dssr.—The editor of the "Fi nancial and Commercial" department of the Nett Yprk Herald says' that "instead of ths4?e thntunind millibmt, -the national debt now appears llkelj to aggregate from four to dve thousand millions." This is prob ably the reason Why the Treasury Depart— ment refused to publish the - amount of the debt on the let ofJoly. lif-c , N44b , w - fq , y , TYN.:l , 4l?;o , b•LVll.f;'rer;)flig THE SITUATION,-IN TENNESSEE. The Nashville Gazette of the 26th ult. contains a fair statement of the eituation in Tenneseee, and what is said of iflomessee is no doubt true of other SoUthern States. It ens . .'We take °cession to say that; in middle Tennessee at least, there Las been no throat or apparent intention of returned rebel sol there to meddle with the election. They are ,behaving with utmost modeitty, and seem fully to recognise the projiriety of taking a .bacicseat' for the present, We have defied the radical press of Nash Ville te, produce the evidence of auy purpose on the part of returned rebel soldiers to . vote 'at the point of their bowle ; kniver,' or to vote at all. oThe announcement that f they (the eonservative candidates) would disre gard the laws of Tennessee' was never made by any of them. 'The determination eapi essed by rebels, whose hands are red with blood, to vote for rebels,' never did wake up the authorities; for there was never any such expression. TLie whole parade of intended fraud and violence in the election has no other foun dation than in the purpose of a radical thine to 'i.e.: f oie -tip'airretert — cor en sing the legal uniorvote, which thi know to bg two to one against them. The frar chin law is unpopular, and so are the men that made it, and so is Govenor Brownlor —unpopular, not with rebels, who ca re nothing about the election, but with all the originvlunoinists, who have not subordina ted the beet interests CT society to their pretty schemes .of self, promotion. But those who resisted the strong tide of seces sion in 1861 have self-ciit rol enough to bide the time of easy, leg triumph over a temporary, perishing fac n. lire decline to accommodate them with a sedition." TUE RICU310)10 ELECTIOL—The New York Tames hale quite certain that (be President will not annul the military annulment of the Richmond city election, while "Druid," Washington correspondent of the New, says positively : " IL is understood that the President bed the matter of the recent elections in Virgin ia under consideration August 3d, and that, his decision thereupon *lithe adverse to the action of the militdl•y authorities. and will sits tain the people in their right to a free and nut ramelled election." Vole shall see. This correspondent odds: "There itcone very important fact in this rear, whi ch 01101 not to he overlooked, and which the President assuredly wi I not over look. The elected candidates were not se cessionists. Each one of them opposed the secomenen‘otVirginia with all bin mightend as long as opit4sitton was of any avail They were all Union men before the ever. They,,, ere forced into tho support of, the Confedersoy by the resisileit, current offub- Ito events." We have scarcely a hope that the Presi dent will correct the treasonable abuse of Power referred to. That a day—even an hour—passed after the knowledge came to him of the revolutionary act of General Tur ner, without a eignallAaeoutive rebuke of the military subordinate, is an argument against the presumption that be will "annul the annulatent" and vindicate the Constitu- Tile SIAMESE' TWINS —A correspondent of the New York Ileralel writes from For tress Monroe, under date of the 8d inetant: "Chang and Eng, the celebrated Siamese twins; came dawn to City Point from Rich mond, en route for the Northern cities for exhibition. It is five years since they were North. Luring the war they have remained at their hame, Mount Airy, Surrey county, North Carolina. Like most of Southern residents during the, war, thv hive suffered loss of property from the depredations of soldiers and ? Southern censcrißtion, and have entergeop:cieir present toile to.,tecii 7 1. pentte kti shattered fortunes. They lite i noilteth i t fifty-fifth year, and in good health. 1 creasing age has told on them somewhat, making more gray their bar, and adding to the wrinkles on their faces. From a ettntersattioh with there I learn - that each has nine children—onntsix eons and three daughters, and the other six daughters and three eons. All the children are perfectly fortriad. Zan contributed aeon to the Con 'federate army; one of them was wounded, and the other was taken prisoner. Both say they loved the old Stars anti Stripes; hut, when their, State needed they considered tt their ditty to go with it. Theyieft 621 the James T. -Brady, Captain Landis, of thajtest Richmond and Baltimore line." —Secretary Marlon, now rn the Prost. dent's Cabinet was Yen years ago a poor. Methodist preacher in Wisconsin. Now he Urea in his own' residence worth $20,000, and in slniost oriental splendor. Recently the papers say three thousand dollars worth of jewelry was Map from his residence, While in the Senate the Repnblicali papers say he drat $5,000 more mileage than he Waal entitled to iteeive. This id the way these Abolition political. reachers make loyalty pay. Parson Bro#nlow will soon have made so touch as Harlan. We have a few Abolition preachers in Centre county who only lack the ability and oppollunip to follow in the footsteps of these loyal pantonit. Nor Ileon---General hie/Mellen returns klB income for bust 'rout less then $1.6001 He couldn't get as rich u some other Gen= eras in the military service. 'lady In Indianapolis oetoroitat itoolde because her hieh,aad re fl ood t),.ialie her to as toeolosia salvial. EMEI - THE COMING ARISTOCRACY. •Tho zoissinn of Chief Jualioe'dhase to the South has termipated,end the country is privileged with a statement of .. hia *burps lions and conclusions. Re has come 'to the oonolusion (reached, prdbaply, by unlimitxd daub in the success of hie efforts and those of his party) that the negroes of the South are destined to„becoate the ruling race, while the whiles are certain to be eradica ted. In loss than a orntury, he declares, thel blacks will have, overcome their late nvister's by •igor, and progressive spirit., and will have establielied, mark you, •an aristocracy of color based upon the sboti • nest) of timir complexions, the irrepressible kink of their heir, and the general, odor which is popularly supposed to be e,mitied from pure-blooded Africans. They will• then elect members of Congress without op position, and we may go beyond the pub lished report of Mr. Chase's conclusions, and predict that they will place a Congo of the most approved Ethiopian make up in the -Presidential chair. What a country this will be fOr white men to live in when it is governed by negroes, represented at St. Jamul and St ; Cloud by negroes_and when the offspring of -white women will approxi.. mate aa near as may be the peculiarities of the "ruling aristocracy." Hew fragrant the dog days will be When Secretary Chase's millenium shall have been crowoerwith a Cuffee bon toe, and offilal Sambos. The "irrepressible conflict," meantime, keeps atop with the peregrinating soul of Old John BroWn. THE APOSTACY OF THE PROTESTANT The following language, whose severity is in exact truthfulness, is from the last nunijier of ibe Free Chrialsan• ComnOnmealth, a strict Presbyterian paper, "conducted by an Assoeittion of Ministers:" The clergy of the Protestant Church are now the most bloodthirsty of any class . of citiaeos. ,They.have been preaching a gos pel of blood and destruotiori for four years. New O'MM of'tbought and forme of demi._ ciation have taken possession of the pulpit, anti have familiarized their hearers with a manner of thought and sentiment which in old times could only be found In the Most abnndcned characters. This is now the height!' of relition—lralseworthy 'seal In a good cause. 'The clergy, as far as the pub lic can judge, are `are bloodthirsty than the generals and the soldiers. Several of the most eminent generals Levi lately shown a commendable, tenderness of life, and to their credit in many instances base . exhibited a magnanimity which belongs to the greatness of character. Lint the clergy, whether in their pulpits or on the platform, when they assemble with their fellow-oiti :gns, still howl for moretloed, and demand reater severity. 'this, too, le done by them at a time when the country could well afford to be merciful, and when the masses of the people, if they were permitted to fol low their better instincts, would be merciful, but the clerical leaders all agree, that Mr. Li nenla was permit led by Divine Providence to be taken away iii the fearful manner of death by - aesasainat ion, because be was too merciful. On this they are perfectly agreed. These clerical leaders differ on points • religious dodtrine, but they all converge from all points of doctrine acid creed, on the meaning and lesson of the President's death. Methodist and Episcopalian, Presbyterian, Old School and New, Baptist and Congre gationalist—all harmonise, and speak with as much confidence as If they had been up in heaven, ~ and Vat; authorized here on earth to proclaim the mind of the Lord. Some of the weaker bretbern, astonished at snob a spectacle of unity among those who disputed with no little rancor, cry out that the millennium is coming, and that it Is even present. In wild fansticlonf they preach this to a gaping people, anti the gap ing people admire—if not the millennium— "the wonderful progressiveness of the prea cher, and his ready proficiency in the spirit of the time!. And thie is *hal we ire compelled to wit ness. It is tiainfnl to the Christain who desires in times of trouble to retain the fear of God in hie heart. And•what shall be the end, of such preachers and - hearers ? It is *titian, that- if 'the blind load the blind, both shall Atiliinto. the ditch. "- -or ---There is ► tight brewing among 'the Abolitionists on ;there& issue of which That branch of the partY'whieb is represented by the New York Paintu 1'.411 to agitate for a reduction of the dollekort imported goods. Thli fi pi opposed, by the /Wogs, Whitt defines its position( in the following decided loniihsgs: "We Gave new once more a Teriff itioi dentglis i'roteetive. We mean to keep it go. It will yielftfolly otnt iiiindied 111t100111 per antinttu 'of revenue.after our country *shall hsre recovered from the convulsions and devastmionsof Oita war ; while it will enable many branobes of manufacture to prosper and expatid Whleh would insaitably go to the vraii.wnder: the priutuCof for. ago oestspetiou and heavy direct taxation. if the Tariff were Altecogdtrileted" on. a Free Trade UAL Wa g 4,e fair, no'ktet then, Ma our wooled ,interesta and •those affiliated or I ,typealltcwith than will <not coriander this priewilion with ikstrpr gle, and 4 40i.nt0.4 $0 bl Jugg44,o:4 !or Asa '4w Alorismis , Ito ilarA,-.4 perfe9tii:s‘ki:ms! l o4lf4l l4 l/' ,4irt2PjFeelb. siabkelksitir'"l."*4 tptlQ in will knotty/4 wbo,lirhy, °lpso to l ie ingAssor." - • KEEP TitEttEART LIOUT AS YOU CAN. _ We have always sheath. j‘kbear— , We have always a soznaing to 1a— We have never to seek ter ewe, When we bare the weihrto get throath I But what though Adversity test ' 'The eourage'and 'rigor of man / They get through misfortune the best Who keep the heart ligg as they eau Thollgh there's always enougb to boar, There is always a something to do i• We have to leek for care, • • ' When we hare the world to get through I If we 'hike not the load from the salad, Out energy's sure to be gone; We must wrestle with dare, r we'll find Two loads *retest; easy than One i To sit ip disconsolate mood • It a poor and profitless plan . ; 'the tree lasart is never subdued, If we keep it light pe we can, . Thilugh there's always enough to bear, There is always a something to do; We have never to' seek for etre, When we have the world to get through Tiertea nothing that sorrow can jialdi, Excepting a harvest of pain; Far better to Cask t Irtutitea field, And bil it and plough at again! The weight that Exertion can move, • The gloom that Decision may span, T'ue manhood within us but prove ! Then keep the heart light as you can, Though there's always knough to bear, Theta is always a something to do ; _Traimva.nnyegla_mit for carry . When we have the world td- get throng • giantess. —Artemas Ward bOttpt a snug country peat in '*Akers. —Tinibobaoeo crop in Missouri and Hen• tacky is suffering. —Thirty-three army chaplains were mas tered out on Tuesday in Washington. .I—A brother of Stonewall Jackson fell overboard near Mobile and was drowned. —A great flre has occurred at Galveston, nipposed to be the work of ap incendiary. man in New York had half his face cot off to cure II cancer. Ilisahavlng is euy. —The rebel General Ewell has gone to re side at hie home in Prince William county, Va. —Two little children left alone by their mother in their house at Chicago were bunted to death. PULPIT No. 31. THIS, THAT AND THE Mak —A a fat take "—the mono of DArnaso's --The Memphis *Annul Nouse swindle amounts to s million aVI • quarter. It went in cotton. —Ford's theatre is to be made Ore -proof fur the rebel arehino-Idsery gory matter—to be deposited therein. —The Denson Leger best *stollen of New York are about to starts brewery of their own, On a capital of $30,000 • —Steps an being taken towards bolding a maw meeting in New York to advocate *be en forcement of the Monroe Doctrine. I oafs Bonaparte is jealous of bee husband because be adskres a young woman with flaxen hair. Ile shouldn't ought to. • h reported tlial the Mexican General Almonte Is coming td Washington, to endeavor to obtain a !emigration of the Govartunsot of —The following is • copy of a letter re ceived by a village school - abler u you are • man Of nonage, I intend to inter my eon in your skull. —Tho city 'railroad company of Now - Or leans bareknow about thirty- two miles of track ip operitliu, uriarde of a hundred oars, and some fire hundred mule in usu. ' .—“De you know," said a ounnfng Yankee to a Jew, . 0 thkt they hang JeWs and janklesee together at Portland ?" "deed, brother; then it', well you and I are not there." ' —A pontraband in Washington city being asked the qkher day how he liked freedom, said, n Oh, very well; but I most lave de right of suffering (suffrage) afore Die real satigned•" —A negro preacher once obeerved at the clots of his sermon u follows . "Aty obstins- Mous bredren, T And it no more use to preach to you den it is for a grasshopper to wear knee bookies." Mn.s !lariat& contemplate placing over her remains, when the Government is through with them, ► stone, with her lud words on the mefrold: N I am imams, bus Gods Aoly 'pinto doss" —.19 e are soldiers, and .appland no mur ders," was the arpreesion of retpiT tamales of the Libby prison, on receiving gie news of the murder of President Lineidt4,-.t The telegraph erroneous/1 attributed to thee the eppSeite sen timent --- , leer' , one is asking "SALT* Con. tent. it Is • dirty little „bent tte NoWfound land, noted prinotpalli for • , .;':4'.lntqattees, untrustworthy people and . Tins higher terminus of tit,Atfeted .. .."f'e Hearts Content. . —There Ts l" loyal" woman in to thug* who says ..Wrs. guts** ought to have boon lwmg ug,by the hoods tufted of the seek. Bad Mts. orratt boon eh* wee kind et a woutan as Willi as the oa* who wade tbo rissask, she doubtless woald have be= willing to puke, asblittion of this kind ether, lest god. —Sow addition:W*4o acrd eritteato . ok .• teat:gay eloottoa t. beve be. teaelned. Trimble hit hies eleoteif id , th ic yl n o, di s t r i a t ; ' Theft la the icakth, 'eat ttkizdabi &Tenth, ell Dentooritte. Of SI Mr*** Rai mmit gel feat* 1 the PIMI-aattittilk diltrlotrateveleotal. The ,iftes dbtrfrli ate —Mist IlaraWßiohads, Nekllac AY .a daughter of Johte maw& of aixdOtOms oeledidli whit liatoaanor. Ittlioadtemethjot Thatedaytkee *Ow plates Oleo Mem ? .•m of fainAt is- ' ;Pelt od "ivtida f aidift, - 4 1 A. altintotat,4a: ' late. 414 ' iligiatr . Tetiabla Ited - WIIIIIIMI be litaltillitioldgai thiOsskilit thwkittaide o l* amidiuitiosati borribollaiiiimasokeat44,l 4triggetaie. ludittibitew fiats ekior "rlrrn"rr• " ' 7 - • -?"--4 _ * " 1411 h I V 4 , , ale .4% 4144 WA* tis• f l or tOpipluf" Of Clea. 161110• 5 4 i 0 ?• 1 4 4 Y • mot ID 14* Wawa *Me 116110111,11111 fr Cot. A. K. lfaLltlttlt botig*in thidani i ikktr 4 . khtimate assocdate nof tha “mat go," he evident(} 'Oars bityuslin and , doforelities a! that.-singular Allartcter tlkaa air mire dm --Kcainsor ---- 7 - boretet, Whatlimt the Nowa .Viattia to ?ley Boswell to. Pima or not, bat we see by aWs bomber of bin piper -the Rsioslas. ' ry-that Tye hO assiiMed the rote of 'Naar' - nay." The . dolonel, in the totttrtttng para• agraph, remorse the bandaga• and shows tirti - dtrikttrg apnocaottroi potttloal detonat44*.---. t 9: MEM General Cameros' withdrew 'fiend the War Department because like Blair, Clip: Eimlth ada (labor, /teem pi:11141y request;cl4l etti JO. Be was appointedb with Bates, Chase, and fiewadd, because be bad aspired to the Chicago nomination ind W 63 It com petitor of Mr. Linboln'a for that honor. Bo GUN did Mr. Libooln know ofpublia who were promittant.merely so politteftMs ' rather than stales/oils that, he (Sabot know, • twb menthe lifter his elation, that Mr: Cluneron had been a. Senator , it torigtese from 1816 to 1848, when Mr. Litiooln'was a reprpsentatiet Ile knew bat little of per. lie men, sore these who iron his heart Or Judgment: by the minium, of their attain. 'mama' In the national councils. He was seldom out of Illinois,' and was 1/biscuit national fame until his memorable emoted. with Vouglae in 1858. Be appointed Mr. I Cameron, therefore, beats. Penneyiraniat • bad presented him for the Presidency, as. "swung that so groat a State would award' its highest honors to its moat 'Worthy obi. son. The ststentent.of the OhleNto if•PPM‘' from the Cablna Seoiuis k not &nisi& to remold my longer with Gen. , McClellan at tichead of the Amy. bit panty f Walleye. and we bawd lee ion that be never made thestattilneld os , • authorised its padioation. That General McClellan and Mr. Cessieren differed at times 'boa spointments we do not doubt; but his portfolio was not surrendered for that reason. Ile withdrew simply becalms rem:twice go hit adminietration had sulasieragest in so imperious a dinuend von Me President from Congress, the mottled 1406 of the olden, and the 'countrY 'generally, that it had to be' obeyed. The leading Non Tork demanded his removal or eltattered govern. meat credit as the penalty for denying - it, sod a Republican Congress lietansie decided in Its hostility to his otinunnenite la ogler— so much so that' even lOW biaretleitnent it. - fOrmally censured him by reminded- foto* malladministration; and he was Ignorant or Ass own resignation *Arta seerstsiy Chassefilesi upon Ann WM a twee Aso dl r. Lineoles, is which he was informed that be wan stotinz ger peoretary of War,. but Molder *4 Russia. Of his successor he had sus issovet edge Until the nomination of Mr. Stanton Ma 'seat to the &nage, together With his OM ail foreign Minister; and his letter of ieeigne- Lion, attersserds . published. to which this_ letter of President Lincoln seemed to be reply, was written some days' after Mi. Lintiolo's letter bad been delivered, and Mr. Cameron bad retiredfroin the Cabinet. The straugoment of the correspondenee was as after thought, and one of Litinolnsi ninny balms for the wounds he wasso often mai; • peUed relnotantly to inflict." • Tsteerstn or sus *iffliPAPIR Praline& -.lt appeal" la beam become r settled mat ter, in the estimation of the public, that it is the duty of those who make and endue& newspapers, to be sling" cheerful and hap. • py under all the variety or civet:mats/we. that ocuspoiei their tarrounding". i their duty alwityit to weirs Smile, though ocoasionally It may be suggestive of retism- grim pleasantry. IL tai matter oftluttAgg-.. readers, think -= that d neWspilei neverbe dull. It inset here peen. whetheb, there it anj ads* or rioter* the i st 011- • lift. IS there ate no gaol sass, •• be manafaetund. If nobody!tEsninisi, . Wa the duty of the editors of tinateni,Mtry4te.. go around pushing people, late *lt: 4.0.1 t wear, that Coroner's intpteit May be held and paragraph' may be feltailtekte ride publio expectation. It a train doesn't , run n" the track and kill sou:Wog- 7 W en expeoted to place obstruation upon the . track and cads. cateatrophles, though Itri. , sone may yawn before 'us if we do. The people must have smash-ups--ledeed Choy will have' smashes, or desounes the netts- • papers as stupid. wortileis affairs; unties thy of public patronage and anppoit. ' is set down as part of Our duly to tele, *Aland in the dipartmettli it Mb suicides, innate* drelinieup, • atften, assaults end tbatterfi.4tee di4 setalt 4 l:. ere, ineidents Ism:Wrong, for des *Apar and firs, for. marsiager for imbheritst, - SecluotiOnef: and all thee MAighty. sets that Lie the wickedness of the, bums, hiirt *sp iv prompt a*d perpetrate; eniii4 if Peek s oarefil sad don't die shiny deep,. it theiritare, so *ardor. or Swami tresepiring, U tO;IOW .bits _the PVVM: it, all eptilleanse iallikeirk 7 - oath's man IntLautz herb of" "4' 404'4- interPtlee „vigitaietelg •'. .1, • !di seaden.-17silisit: DiewMrit. ""'-' ibiAt 4r07t1 mulati:ot wskosto t , is beau tor use ter =t; .astas,Apeori4 ogler& . 4 4bfit 1110,eitt: dbaii was ftesolleit tiVIW itiblfiilllo4lloV Ern In E GE EEO 15E
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers