1 / 4 4:11Vitircnrmr=triZi' .. "tii.'ont isitoiea lekastourpowrtaborormirlCP4ey , ~ere written some are year aim while be was • re o n t of Neafterl Ahbaliau,' end published to the Nora A lalknite "Tlity were eopled 1.3 the papers here at that time. At tbeineitieet Wail friends of the entity; Nes to wham death Arlon is reads bathe ilitts:-Iresse, we republish tbk poor this weeitos-Lisirest Watorimseq To FRANKLIN OUBST OMUTA fosseniy of B o uffant* Peestairuldth Int now of fit. Paul, •AlittnellOtth 418*(1 . iinee.nire• affsetionately In ,cribed by his Mind and Fortner school-male. 'SMNMM= --- •. • Jos R. 1171111 re • The chnrch bells ate . solemnly ringing, Frick Oat on the stklkY Add Back mswory's _ ear school-boy days EP Lk. . The days when we played _together, Frank, And studied onr lamb o'er; When oar beartiwere u light as a frather,Fraals, Ah,thifiee days ;fern retimime morel Oh, I've never forghtted thy !hoe; Frank,' Ifs liableness haunts me 401; And bring; to my mind thei days, Frank, We spent on Aviation Bat there's been "great ohmage dodo then,Frank, And sates are under the sod; Thige's nothing but boaenin their grares,Frank; Their spirits have gone up to UOD r - Tom Mullen has gone to file lamb, Frank, The light-hearted, pttemps boy; • O the hearts of his friends word in gloont,Frauk, For he was their pride and tbeirJoy ! And I felt as If I could weep, Frank, • When they covered Macon', with clay, And left him slone to sleep, Frank, Till awaked at the Judgement Day. Poor Tom I his hopes were as bright, Fraiil4, As ours, In life's sunny morn; But death rubbed the lamp of its light, Frank, And left us to wisp and to mourn. Ito btu gone, to the "City of God," f ra nk, Fur be ditul, am a Christian dies Who hopoilWiChkren abhve, Frank, 'A home In the starry skies. Let us strive to meet him up There, Frank, And Join with tLe holy choir, In striking the strains of praise, Frank From the strings of a golden lyre. The evil report of his deeds pervades the country as a reproach to our State. Yes, unhappily for Pennsylvania and her great interests the bustard-winged fame of Simon Cameron is national. By months of abject solicitation and corrupt bargaining, he procured a mass of louses, certificates and recantations that imposed him upon Presitlent,Lineoln as the representative man of the Keystone State. That was an evil hour for Pennsylvania. You all re member how he organized the Naval Agen cy in this city, and Teel the, ineffable' 're proach he, thus brought upon our Navy Yard and commercial and other business men. In the Obstree of his impudent and ill-judged harangue he saidl "In the olden time a member of Con rest Philadel phia would have had sufficient influence to have carried his point (the establie)nkent of SOO station at League Island) withoftt.ti dissenting voice." Is that the assertion of a sober man ? and did he vhii; made it. for— get that our Congressmen in tilte olden time in proposing to locate a Government work,, shotfat Philadelphia had not the tvrible reputation of Simon Cameron, the Fagan of the Harrisburg lobby, and ex-Secretary of War, to contend with, and, therefore, had some chance for success! My colleagues and I were leo-happy than they in this respect. SHODDY vs. SHODDY. Oh, list would be holy joy, Frank, tr To meet- n that world above, 'Where 'ploautre without alloy," Frank, We would And`Maim flavior'S love !" • • • w r to • • • I'm sitting here aid Boding., Frank, And I think of the olden Mak; And the Past comes to me like the-4one, Frank, Of a far-off musical chime„ And how has It been - with you, Frank, I n,the years -that , harre-fled- since we Joined in the sportive play, Frank, And laughed with the wildest glee? Are your 'hopes still as gay and bright, Frank, . As they were in the long ago, Whoa we danoed the glad sun-light, Frank, Or slid o'er the (rosin snow ILA sorrow neer wrung your heart, Frank Ilaro your eyes ne'er been dim m ed with tyre? 0, say—does the world seem as bright, Frank, As It did in those golden years? h ! I fear smilinot--fpr Joys, Frank, Like these, must come and go ; AO,l the world with its sorrow and grief, Frank Will chill the young heart's glow. I'm sitting hero end and lone, Frank, Ilut memory, busy still, n bringing to mind the scenes, Frank, On old Aomlturif nCt ATIIR, ALA., SUNDAY, blarch 13, 1859. Kelly .Exeorlates Osmeron-.--" When Thieves fall out Honest Men may get their Mom" PHILADELPIIIA, Augun 14, 1805 . To the Union Mess of the 41h Congressional District: A long and successful career of crime emboldens the guilty. A recent illus tration of this law tifilitatrtitiature impels me to violate my life-long rule of conduct, nod for onturto notice a political slanderer. I do not, however, address you for the pur pose of repelling his innuendoes or false hoods. My life has been passed among you, and If its reoord, familiar to you all, , does not repel them, I have lived in vain. My purpose is simply to pierce the mail of illigoWns geld . in which the slanderer has clothed himself, and give you a glinspee at the loathsome object it protects. ' The papers of Friday announce that Si mon Cameron, of Dauphin county, wa• ser enaded by his friends on the preceding ev ening at the Girard House, in this city, and availed himself of the occasion to villify my colleagues and myself, " the Congress men of Philadelphia," in a Speech to the assemblage: R l I was but a yoi;th when I first heard the name of Simon Cameron, and it 'was as the perpetrator of a great crime. He had been' made agent of the Government to carry a large amount of money, due tikem, to the Winnebago Indians, and had taken advan tage of their ignorance and helplessness to enrich bJmself. Those of you who had then attained to manhood, though you may not, after the lapse of so many 'ears, re vive the burning indignation with which yen regarded the infamous swindler of the oor Indian, will doubtless remember that . stead of paying them the spepie which the I: vett:spent confided to him for that put \ I se, ,he retained it, and gave Went the notes of the Middletown Bank, of whioh be was the owner. At their encampment in . the remote wilderness the...notes were ut terly worehlesei The Indiaris could Oct nee them fitany perpose there, nor carry Wens to Middletown for redemption.. But what was that to Simon Cameron ? Was not their loss his gain, and was he not so much the richer by-every note that failed to come home for redemption, though they did suffer and.sterve I And those of you who are not old enough to remember'all this, now know why this bold, bad man is„sometiMes spo ken-oe by your. seniors as the "groat/ Win nebago,l'and isometlinea as "Old Klokapoo." For wore Wan thirty years I have`watch ed this trwtarous .eartarr of this man, and have taper tretin reason tO abaudtes MI first itaProsidem of his character.. -Whether sat ing with the IDemocuratici-WeVtolf - BoildeS or theftibliesn party, for be has in turn disgraced their all, he has tiever A treil false to his erinriatti liudinots. - fro hie •lindesv-I ored to turn diem all to profitable account. Ills ambition is sordid,' and panders Mlle avarice, emi be imitative! honormby the persuieltei tries es P os°44);l ' 6 17111). lie has no..itanildesee4tOthe'Rposop e, and ie aWare now tit," iliefritOika., , :trlg! spoor& of 'Thitriailitir evening emicnot e'regresteristio of him, for4us Is prone le the use of Meru - k USZZMENai „....41...._,,p, %, ~ • toLl - i; ••. : . •, _ f _i. h ~ ,_4 . - rom* 'LK -k.. - 16 ith 4 . wi a . AlAi r .0 1 .. - . . C I L 1( t ( . 1 U Vol. 10. mente. Hie habit is to paint the stiletto, but to Imploy another hand th drive, it home. Though an active participant ip the politics of his emuntry,.during which Jong period he has.pureued the profits of office, of Jobe, of eontracte,' with eager and tea-e -lm seeidulky, he has never dared to permit hie name to be presented to the people of county or 'State as a candidate for an eleo-' live office. lie crawls to the feet a the ap• rarrttiWg power. lie cares cot: who may be King, so that he may "still be Vicar of Dray," and to that end he chaffers with and corrupts weak and needy members of con ventions and the Legislature of both par• tles. • I need' not recite the diegraceful fadts at tending hiirseveral canvasses for the United States Senate. Their nauseous odor lingers in your nostrils to this hour. In the first he bon* the votes of three Democratic members, and in the last bid twenty thou sand dollars for the one vote which would have elected him. This last transaction was so flagrant that the Legislature was compelled to tan cognizance of it, and if Justice be not lame as well as blind, the law and honor of our State . will yet be Jilt . acia: As I have said, he begged and bargained for the influence which induced Mr. Lincoln to invite Lim to a seat in his Cabinet. It was now fondly Loped, by those who have not sounded the depths ells depravity, that, being old and rich, he would take ad: vantage of so distinguished an opportunity to prove that he could honestly addlidister a trust without turning it to his own profit, er handing the fund over to his creatures to be used on joint account. How sadly these hopes were disappointed is attested by the brevity of his term of office, and the circumstances under which it close In lees than one year from the which Simon Cameron was installed as lfek: rotary of War, Congress, though at t ihat early day it had before it but partial evi dence of his crimes, indignantly drove him from that high office. Two thirds of the ower House were friends of the Adminis tration, and would gladly have sustained each member of it, as,they did its distin guished head. You can imagine how painful It must have been to them to find themselvesseonstrained by duty to proolaim•that the first man the heed of their party was induced to appoint as the successor of John B. Floyd, had ex hibited greater aptitude than he for his worst t Hoke. But it became inevitable, for this old man, notwithstanding his boasted and reputed never rich enough until he has • little more, and, to save, their party and, the country, the friends of the Administra tion in the House bad to proclaim hiti infa my and denounce hia'crintes. Nor was the vote by which they did it a meagre- one. His friends and those who Would most glad ly have averted. this disgrace from our Mate, would rap but about one third of the House against the resolution of condemna tion. The Vote was about two to one against him, laugh I as a Pennsylvanian, not willing to bear witness against the rep resentative of our State, but too well • s- Sad of his guilt to vote against the resolu tion, failed to record my vote. • In this fact, gentleman, you have the e '- eret of .1 this distinguished „statesman's" hostility to me and my friends." Mr. Wel,. born, the postmaster' of 'Philadelphia, said other of hie creatures:dm* offered me his frienffehip and erupport if I would endeavor "to have that resolution expunged. My re ply has invariably been that to stir foul matter would be to Produce a stench. I have, never, in this or aught else, endeav ored to propitiate bim orhis oreatures. No stone may mark the spot where my poor re mains may finally rest., but I van that my children AO be able to vindlitte my name by Pointing to Um fast. that !Milton Cameron and his confidential friends tier, ever hoe. tile to me. . . With grateful regards, ypure, very truly, WM, D,M.ELLIIIf. MOON BOW, who re keening En glish{ coming serest the passage in his Testslnent,, "Wt As.vq pipod unto yea and ye have net danced," rendered it-lbw: "We, Ittkie tent,'Lcet pt you, what's the mat ter you no jump." • • • BEI44EFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMEBR 8, 1865., What Mr. Lincoln's moat Master Gen eral thinks of the Platform of jhe Republican Party of Pennsylvania. On the 26th inst., Hon. Montgomery Blair, the first Poet Master General under Mr. Lincoln, delivered a remarkable speech at'Clarkiville, Montgomery county, Mary land. Re ventilated some thinks greatly to the disadvantage oI Seward, Stanton and other radical leaders ofttku Republican party. He also found time Co review the Republican platform 'adopted by their repent State genyent ion in Pennsylvania.— Justly regarding it as nothing else than an expressioirof the radical views' of the arch agitator end practical amalgamationist.. Thaddeus Stevens, shows clearly how utter. ly unworthy be I. of the support of any right thinking man in the Republican paity. His evidence against it will surely be heed ed. Here is , what he bays of the awful conglomeration of radical absurdities : "According to the programme of the Ste vens resolutions; there are no loyal men in the South taut the enfranchised blacks; the white man who succumbed to the usur pation and obeyed its behest—and this Asery,whiLe-w.• ootrp lad to-daLds- • franchised as disloyal. In logical sequence from this State of facts, the national legis lature is to absorb all legislation, State and national over the whole South. It is to assume absolute power over everything south of_Mason and Dixon's line—and how le it to be exercised Mr. Stevens, forgetting that our govern ment was bound by- the Constitution to protect the people of every State from all domestic violence and usurpation, ati'vell as foreign invasion, and in failing to do - it, might be justly bold to indemnify the loyal people who have suffer* by the rebellion has the hardihood to declare in his resolu tions that the people of the South, en maaae, C infounding the innocent with, the guilty, are bound, but of their substance, to pay the whole national debt inourred by the war. This is somewhat like tying a millstone round the neck of every mania the commu nity and throwing them into the ocean. It o'ertninly overwhelms him in a flood from which hacan hardly swim out with such a weigh t But this, it may be said, is only a life long incumbranee of - generations, which Is making the poor white posterity who have hat I in slave States expiate at the children the sins of their forefathers. Buelesksome men who have donsideralile-atalsstancifi-in land or other estate that. has survived the war may go to work and build up again an ndependence for thetneelves, and their devo ted country, Mr. Stephens has provided an other sweeping resolution, Which cute down at one'blow all such aspirations. The reap lution is that confiscation, like our reaping' machines, shall be driven by the steam en- . gine of our absolute government—absolute over the South—and reduce all fortunes to ten thousand dollars in value. It does not say whether the valuation is to be,Confeder ate paper or greenbacks. But whether it be one or the other, the stubble-field will be little worth gleaning when we shell have firstpxtracted the war debt from the unhap .pyAbjeote of the rebellion. To get a gov ernitent tiufficiontly hardened to execute these decrees, Mr. Stevens appeals to the soldiers, and tells them that no man is ever to be nominated for an office unless ho has served in the field. So they are to be the ispeneers of all the spoils of the etript,the naked children. How little this veteran politician knows the magnanimdus patriot who fought their battles for the liberal ant merciful institutions of our country ! They are the last men in the world to urge to cruelty in cold biped. lima° men when hungry took the bread out of their own haversacks and gave with their canteens to their - impetrate foe. Let them Judge the South, and we are all brothers. lir. Stevens nett promises .themanufac turers unbounded protection If they will only help to strip the South and reduce it to utter ruin. The manufacturers, so far from doing this, will lend it their ',spite', at lust credit, that they may olotho, them and enable them to produce treat material to their operatives and rich markets for the result of their suecessful Industl. Ile ap peals to the holders of the overnment bonds, saying th e plunder of t e South is to pay their debt. ThekirUl reply, we will not kill the goose that lay, the golden egg, But who is to execute the Draconto de crees of Thaddeus and his omnipotent par lament? Who is to squeeze out the taxes from the desolgic South to_pay the whole war debt Wko is to carry out the sweep ing confiscation throughout. all rebeldom and divide the lands am4tig IA loyal people of the South—the negroes The 'resolutions name the Presitent as proper sort of man ; but he ie plainly told that Me scheme of restoring the Union will not do. It is too roscrwater, milk-water— too lenient; and yet Mr. Stevens hay* the rebels reject it. But Thaddeus knows a man who oso do the business, who can conf ine his doomsday book of conquests and confiscations. Who could be hatter fitted for it than the man to whose prodigious en• orgies and exeellefteters it would seem all our mummies ie Vibe ascribed Ile has reaildtion of extonation 19, the platform all to himself, exalting Mm by name, in contras, ttwilb the poor anal made of the rresident, to make him like "Hyperion to a eattr.," :The rest of the Cabinet are thrown in the lump, not named, but is "the colleagues" of' Mr. Stanton. They au worthy gentian:ion that must pies. Now ibis is suit altogether an absurd dill tribution of ports In the e`‘,S.ocutive powor,, "SWAMI RIWIETII AND PIUMILATe MIMIC" consideringihe work Out out for 11. - by Mr. Stevens. He is rtidlcal froth the foot to the crows of his head. Ire is a root and branch map, and could spare nothing of the gov _ernment but the body—ttre-Vongress--and that he would turn Into a revolutionary club. lie *pole a revolution—be wants Mont to stir it up. Who can MI the func tion so well as Mr. Stanton? He went!! a guillotine.. He wants a Sentare, the butch er. to reign on its scaffold and ply its axe. Can any one doubt that Mr. ptatiton would take this part? And if Mr. Stevens would add peculiar bitterness to 'the exeoutibn of the process of , his rivolntinuarx tribunals in waiting the SOU& and harrowing, the feelings of its victims, oould there be a bet ter selection of an agent to pour gall into wounds than kir.;Stanton ?„ THE DiXDOILATS AND Tug EloyntEns.L-The' soldiers in lota have nominated a State ticket in opposition to that of the Repub licans, and the Democrats, after examining into the principle, of the nominees, have excepted and indorsed them as their owu. This is doubling on the Republicans a team which they_will_ find it hard to boat. In foam, as in thttiT3tate, the soldiers have dis covered that all the promises of '.the Re publican party amount to nothing., In WS city the Republicans said that .14 the offices should be given to the soldiert4 but took good care to put none but old l tokoli whose sides are worn with the harne and and Seamed with the, lash of the narty,upcin the ticket . Gene. Owen and Cbills, and Colonel Clarke, were good enough' to meet the hardships -and dangers of the battle field, while Leaguers drank their brandy and„smoked their cigars, and the office holders pocketed their thousand dollars per annum ; good enough to be amused with promises, but not good enough to share the emoluments of office. • This is so well un derstood in our city, that the sailers have btcomo disgusted, and the 'result at the polls will show how ineffectual are the hyp ocritical attempts of the Republicans to coax to the support of their nomineelahe brevet. men just returned from the 'labors and carnage of the field. The truth is, that ;vtlille the AOlipublican party are everywhere trying to overreach the soldier by tricks and deception, the Democrats aro recognising their claims in the most substantial manner. In lowa they have adopted the soldiers' ticket; in this Stale they have plaited two brave soldiers upon the State ticket. In Philadelphia t , ay have nominated three soldiers, Colonel Biddle, Adjutant Weaver and Captain Reilly for lucrativaorioos. So king as the Repub lican party mad use the soldiers to prop their tottering political edifice,-they were loud In promises and Wordy oompliutents. But when the soldiers eskedlor a fulfillment of previous pledges, they wore denied, and banished from the Convention, by d vole that was a virtual inault to them. The Democratic party were the friends of the soldiers of 1776, of 1812, of 1847, and they are the real friends of thisoldiers of 1861. Aid is . shown by the Lotion of the party in Pennsylvania and lowa, and the sol diers will not overlook the fact.- , -Phe Age. 'Ng BLACK. Roane COMIXO Indiana and southern Ohio papers aro com plaining of the vast number of 'Agrees pour ; - ing into those Stales, Every train and boat, since "passes" have boon abolished by Oen. Palmer. brings large re-inforoe men's of these . ,evrarlitY blacks, who, in a few months will become a burden to the tat payers and a pest to the communities upon which they force thentselves. They are led to believe, if they mime north, they will find freedom, 'easy times, plenty of employment, and social and political equal ity. They will be sadly disappointed in their ho pee. —Bob, Harry Smith has oue of the greatest curiosities you ever saw. . • "Don't say 80—what is it r "A tree that never sprouts, and becomes saddler the older it grows." • „Well, that is a curiosity. Whore did he get it I” "14 - dm Oalifornia." "What. M the name of it ? "Axletree—it: once belonged Lo a Califor nia omnibus I" • Scene closes by Bob throwing an Inkstand at a half closed door. A----" Where do you hail from 1" queried a Yankee of a traveller., • liner* do yen rain from ' _..Don't rain' at all," said the astounded Jonathan. "Neither do I hail, ao mind your own business."' A PRWIIIIITIIAN advised bls dzunk9n ser vant to put by his money for a rainy day. In a few weeks the master inquired how much of hie wages ho had saved. "Faith, none at all," said he ; "It rained yesterday, and it all went." is an anomaly of, these remarkable times . ..that our people are now st work with tremendous energy to repair the deal:dation which themselves so recently wronglit in' the South. • GOOD holing is s thing worth oulthriting at this time, but it will, if we only attend to out, own proper adwirs, grow up, and Bonet* antiblossodrant gear fruit without cultivating. , A TOII7III LAD! In Califoin a recently 'broke hor nook eddies resisting an" attempt- of • young )nlys to kiln bor. Wilts furaisAss. fearful warrang to j , oung ladies. . SLANDERS ON THE SOUTH. ,The Springfield; (Mass.) „Wqyabliconin pn artiole--"Fidze Reporta'frorn the &lab" — *moaning that Ato r alpionioukspirit which is now so busy , inverdillg and propagating slanders against the Southern people. It lays: "We can conceive of nothing more cruel,' wickedihan deliberate taisrepresen tafion of' the people of the South, from. whatever motive. It ie difficult to -Itteve Northern men and correspondents of Northern „no4rapapere capablf of such in justice. Ti v O we regret to 14 the offence is by no *tine an' unusual one. Indent' , " it has become so common as to look like a systematic effort for political purposis."— Tbe Republican then goes eh to state what It has learned from reliable sources as to the feeling of the Sbufhern people. Its information Is that. " the intelligent .. influential clagbes comprehend the real sit uation of affairs, and are disposed to eon foripo it, and willing to submit in silence to many wrongs and indignities rather than tio rn obsprocess it in any way the of root , Bin zation : (bat there is no desire to per plot ate slavery Either in form or-subsUtooe; a m tiliblilFelidiffichiloTeld-iTo—m—u-o-NbeTrif jf h e y could be relieved of the influence of some of their impulsive and finatical advisors from the North, such as the Eng lishman Retipath and his associates." - The St. Louis Republican, referring to the apparently systematic efforts that are made in the direction reprobated by ifs Massa , chusetts namesake, says: Such stories as these about the South were rife While the 'eompremiee hor 'oh might have saved the country from the disasters of our civil war, ware pending. Then similar horrors were conjur ed up. Frank Leslie', Illwiralerlpublished a cartoon, showing the hanging at St Charles Missouri, of Rev. Mr. White by a pro-sla very mob. No such, hanging_ took place there—and no- Rev. Mr. White lived there at that time, nor, so far as we oould learn, ever did live there. AL the same time the N. Y. Tribune published a story of a horri ble enormity committed at Bair's Point Mississippi; the enormity consisting of the seizure of a Northern man and heading him up in a barrel which was then trundled into the river-. No such outrage mitred there, as was satisfactorily shown upon the statements of the beet citizens of that place, who published a card utterly denying the troth of the story. Shortly after tlis publication another outrage precisely like it was, upon the authority of a statement in the Tribune,perpetrated on a creek btek in Alabama. There was rya much truth in this story as'in its fellow. The wonder is, that. a genius Inventive enough fop the production of the first lie could not have varied his second one, but choose rather to repeat himself. Ebb he suppose that. his readers wore ready tit believe anything, and would swallow the self-same tale of outrage when multiplied by the easy triok of shif ting the venue to fifty different localities ? The design and object of such stories were apparent. They were like that legend which the fertile brain of the Redpath mentioned above coined, when he played the part of Kansas correspondent ?or New York and other Eastern pript's. They were intended to perforin for the Northern mind what ranoy proposed for the Southern mind, to wit: "Fire it." The object at that time was to rouse against the Southern people a thread, which 'would make the Northern people refuse to dizten to any terms of oompromiee with the South. * * * To any man out of the "ring"—to any man who is not bent on forcing on the South negro suffrpge and negro equality, social se well as political—it is, evident that the Southern people are doing all. that could be expected, and all that could be asked of - them. have - aubmitterd= , they have relinquished all thought of res toring slavery. They desire only to live under_ those State organisations, which cote in 'toward wslh the. Constitution of the United States. They are willing to obey .and support every law of the Union, and in that' respect are as loyal as any people in our brtiad•land. Can we ask Judie ? No. It is foul injustice and outrage to wak more, nobody L asking more. except these plotters against the Derma and best interests of the country which we have stigmatised - with much less force of reprobation than they deserve. No far es concerns these reports of wrong and outrage and sU sorteriat violence and hostility to the Ihttior, and government, as Are being so bUsily simulated in certain of the Northern papers, IL becomes the South ern editors and all her people to be on the alert, and to trace up every one of therm disparaging stories. , Where they are In so many instancics tborare naked lies or more or lists; artful misrepresentations, expose the Itcull and let the honest . and well inten ding people of the North see that they are slandered. In this way :they may pre vent much and perhaps Irreparable' mis chief. - Henry Sorrier, s German pump-ma ker of Harrisburg, (leaking to soil his prop erty was inforthed be must have his wife's consent to 4c:the same. She being unfavor, ably itiapoired to the sale, 611, Saturday ho seised an are and' bait her wAr IL in ahor robin and probably a flitaP . lnannor. then ant hie own threat with a butoher knife and died almost. Indent ' The party wore Opal. elztyleare:wf age end had riot telly /heti attellibty.• Tex seed who Goalless himself . le drielsbisi.fer,hini,lif Veil supplied. IHE WELL NOT WOO AGAIN • 'Twas bat a fiord-a careless word, In pride and passion spoken, But with that word the charm that bound Two loving hearts was broken,_ litelissty wrath kiss parsed away, lint bitter words remain, In 'vain she looke, and weeps and ajghs, He will net woo again. Na 'Other lave may light her'path, No other move his heart; Yet shauglng season' come and go, And End them still apart, her once bright oheeh is paler now, Lis bears a trace of poin, their days are weary, sad, and yet Be will not woo again. They meet as strangers. calm and cold, As calmly, coldly, par{, • And none may guess that tranquil mien, Conceals a tranquil heart. To him'the world has lost its light, • To her all joy, ars vain, Nor hope nor roainorrbring relit:d— na will not woo again. Alas ! that love long tried and warm, Should wither in an hour, Alan I that pride o'er human hearts, •Should wield each fearful power. 0 ! weep thou not for thews who die.. For them all tears aer But weep o'er living imarhs grown oold, Who neser can love again. THE PRINftR AND THE PRESS. Tho Printers ! How I love them ! For what yon'd hardly guises; Love thorn for patient, honed toil, Their fellow MOD to bless They falter not, though oftentimes These poor men go unpaid; And every line thu shoot contains Is sent without our'aid. How ignorant we all ahonld he, Without thew nail the Pres., To furnish for our famished II I A "Literary WM" The Printers and tho Press; "--. God Mem them day by day, Fur ovary high and noble thought They sled around our way. !day wrenths of heavenly love entwine The Press tnvontor's soul, Whitt) k no w redgeepreads from clime; to clime And truth front Nieto pole. 7.-ExcAanyo. THIS, Ta r r AND THE OTHER —"Companions of tho both."—Soap and towels. —R. M. T. Hunter, will soon be relented on • I l A civil court was opened at Warrenton, Va., on Monday. —Now inscription For a dentist's doorplate. 11j2lofudAtrawing. —Widow's wends show that Choy aro in mourning—fur another husband. —.Linton Stephens has Leon granted an in terview, at Fort Warren, with his brothor, Alex ander H. Stephens. -- —Only two rebel 'officers romain on John. non's Island. They are detained because t&ey will not take the oath. —Mn. Partington makes Shakspeare say "Sweet ate tho use's of advertisements." It's so if Shakspeare didn't say it. —Men bestow a world of pain; upon a ship until she is ready for thu ocean, and then, with out a word of oxplanation—let her slide. —A dull lecturer said:—"Fool. aro not all dead yeL" "No," whispered s wag 601 . 0111 the table, "or you wouldn't be here to say. so." —The bonniest, of Watertown, annonneleg • teetotal meeting, said it would be addressed by six females who had never spoken before. —The person who, according to the Scrip tures, "clothed himself with come as 11 with a garment," must have formed a habit of,,ewear ing. —Briggs has a great faculty fat gettlbg things cheap. Thkotbor day be had a beauti ful sot of tooth inserted for next to nothing. Ile kicked a dug. —" You do wrong t Bah on Sandayr," said a clergyman to a lad lie saw ao doing. "Well, air," replied the boy, "it can't be ineich Veto, fur I ain't coteled nothing." 11, —A eat in Titusville _reeentlyzarn birth to litter of fattens, joined together at the hack and lidos In such a manner that when two of them are walking, the °Choi two are on their Liming with their feet etiokilig'up. —By &lentil accidents, since January, 1,300 persons have been killed, 36 burned -to death, mid 800 wounded. There have been 67 Headrests of 'canoes kinds, and $33,000,000 wurty of property has boon destroyed. - 7 ::-..The Augusto (Ga.) Treason" was ens , landed by military authority fur as "obituary notice" that wir displeasing to Mom. Baal Land of the free and bouts - of the brave! , „ Tbe freedom of the Alllerio/111 Press! Bow glorious sad great! —"i publish the bans between this :match end your back," said a sehoolinaste;;li n delin quent pupil. " forbid , thorn." grounds? "The parties are tied agreed. " Bring them together and age," 4.1•1 pedagogue, laying it op. —One of lb" meet cebbrated maithers . of the Park; bar will coundted the other day by a young practitioner„ upon an Aberdare point of law. " I cannot give you .a positive answer, young man," replied the advocate; 4 I hove pleaded once one way, end once the other, and I gained ley,ealt each final" —Tim Doo.- 4 d, tilt la a good thi e l . have In the ;Mulder P have 4e. whiett 1 • ' boo , • Pep. Nola a good' thou! Mow, sad a - Yeasty barker and feeder. , The mai of whom I bought him Odd he lLas thorough trod, hat kit, begins kolave"i'mongtei bolt +shoal hies.„ Ho ts a good watch dog though 41 WI 111001111 at 1111!._ nee ariveMOthrua lacking, pone* theme the .prentlsek like, comes Ada lath the; ititehen and gets behind the store. Meth inaitept :him in' tke ktiuse, *ad be mestotted ath Iththt to get out' rt r TikmAre terns*** oa t sat liii's2 , - hed 'all' S?ii-tdi.se! ia: ?kip' lei tied ' him , a ( 'We bask ot t thliiiiirien, aitillie iiiiiiiira. ' ,764 neighbor ibea A titm ernewbirope, ilAptimlkv, Altimilly.w!sti:••4lkais A y, and he muse. theist NO now he iAc lA rl Ot ! i; 4 :preirlag treat a/Min/01th hi / "- t I li " t l iNit 4' !MP rue cur oat *lag • EMI - The Washirigton eorresponderear IL tt New york !Tenth! has a ratiplArlti terltay's issue, In which some of We habit ual hangers-oi about rkust khy ave ‘ titspe up in peculiarly riot style, diltenied. to the Aspirations of ditibrent Pyortleirybk. olitionietS to the linitrdStattol Situ* gives photographs of Honest. ;oho 'Covedis,, the Conestoga Why Norse Ca.neron, and blustering, bully Bill Kelly ; bat he re- serves_ his richest eutietingloc_thuffiAdint of Forney. Rare is his sketchy' War, headed . ; 101.1:1LI FACZO TORNIT Olt TUlt TRACE. 'Sad but not least of the Keystone del -eget lati, - WitlilffitlMlittep itornafty m 1 - 0 • approaches "Ooonsinoal." Ile has been trying for a long time to.be Senator from' Pennsylvania. Be was attested In old Simon's 5014,991 /9121X1 ,wittAine of old 4 . Simon's bi'igbtcst seluilars. From boy hood he could turn his jacket mere quickly, and turn somersaults more adroitly—al ways aligliting on his feet—than any other of the boys-In that class. He lias 4 bert practising these aorobsUo feats ever since. Reoontly, Juat to exhibit his usefulneav, - versatility and agility, he has been riding a . two horse act with such su'Ocese that no one can swear which, horse he roti for while ho is ..onnosionally." for Mkie, be i 4 "chronically" for Jdbusmr. likes his bread buttered on both sides, and taught by Old Simonoin tossing coppers, always to have shoed him s omit with two , bie . .ads on it., apd 1.0, play the.gadre. • "Howie- I win, tails you lose." • Forney it not tired of the secretaryship to the Senate. It is a oomfortsble office. It pays well ; but he has already two daily newspapers--one id( Philadelphia and one in Washington. RS Maks of establishing one In Richmond and one somewhere out' West. , While Oameron, No. 34. in ltilith Papers -; and although the latter cost mete money, he thinks they give more power. Ile is diffusing himself over a great space , of territory. He hoges t 6 asy some day. "lam monarch of all, t smite,. beta the centre centre all' round to the sea," and all by means of a multiplicity of newspapers over which he, or his alter ego "Oooaaional," will have control. The eireulation.of all of them ' put together, it he had * a dozen different aliases, would not amount to a tithe or the oiroulatlon of the Herald; tuft this bids ' hobby and let him ride it. This will not make him Senator Mom Pennsylvania. • Andy Johnson knows-the man in died be knows the men aboutt him, and intends to make, them stand alone on• his platform before he tenets them. General It artianft, the ReAtilloan can didate for Alter General. a few nights ago, on the occasion of a serenade, 'made a Short speech returning his thanks. On the eye of a great political canvass ono would suppose that the Geneital /meld define his position on all the political - Is/Wee of the day. This be has failed to do; but be lute done tbat.wbioh shows that he le entirely com mitted to the niews of the extreme radloabi on the policy of.rostortag to the Union•the States lately la rebellion. Oa fhb point be stye : "The military - power of the rebellion is orusliedl,- I may say forever, and tie nation looms up *Midst the ruins more mud and powerful than it ever sesatid before. But remember the spirit of rebellion is still alive, and must he ruostearefully_guarded..;.,/int it. ho shorn of all political power, for In that ie concealed all its strength and danger." Of course the South must be "thorn of et ; political power," and the people ruled to Provost Marshals and lidilltiry -CkthistiS- ' sions„ untJer the direction of that gelhat engine of tyranny, the Bureau of Military Justice. -This is the plan of melt nisi as Wendell Phillips, W. Lloyd OarrlsOwit C0.,- who wish to hold the Southern Staten tos conquered proVinees. President Johnsen, wishes to restore poise; to the people Of the Booth as soon as possible. Does Genera! Hartman know that his speech mhos War on the President and his policy f. ' The General Is very careful ntit to touch the negro suffrage questioh, and peenta ttt . give that the widest possible berth. soldier he sgenld be a frank limn; And the people expect hilt to be frank Orb,* not - 'then let -the tuloplo know his views eei tide . question! We are anxious to heir them, nud no doubt the soldiers of the 51st reg talent also want to kiew whether be Is for or:against. Dudes controlling - Ibti oeuerai, out_ with it.,(Vyiestowa . Bs FILANK.--lie frank with the world.. • Frankness is the child of honesty sod ocisr4 ago- 13 4/ just what you moan IA die .aa every "0a5i 41 42 aud Lake_iLfor wsrustodgroyl mesa to do 'atm to right. If a friend sake you a favor you should grata it, etit-is reasonable ; if it is not, toll bum 0+644 lull i why ,Tou cannot. You will Wro4 Mull ~ .. .., wrong yourshlf by etotivocation. of any kin 1 Never do • wrong thingio make a friend ' to keep one; thirmati who 'requires you to ' do so, is dearly purehatak and at i mace.' hoe, Doal kindly and aunty witli'all nier . i,' .: and you will (lad it the volley whioh *liars the boa. Above silly douot appotereo °there ~ what you are vol. 4 yea battoroarrholta . to Mid With any ono, 11•11.blia, sot. 'batiks; of wbat yott complain, , Titers litazortdait. • 1 . garotte experimeaktbaostiat of, again.- to Imi: -. 6lllthino.tot a naa'a v jaae,.. anal ittoatit,; . er beilind h r b - Cto4k. We alionkl livatobatialtt. speak out ur doors, all th 9, Phrase 10. -11114:. I ~ bay and do wbiCota ale tiPiak:ahoubll koh.i-' blown and read by oh teen. ,It it not .;, beat seivinattai at tortoolple Lot ta 4 Mfr. ter at pOot. . . ~ ' e, • New ored'dlebee:=.oll the %Asti, t alki lAA br tOrilleake COW "' lid, With Joel mouth toqt, to WO* ota vat, '11,6 lioistoreliemobt4.4 ta4 31 0!" broadribbotainnotonvokotA4mllllo4l those '444#44416141A11ia1k1it*111i"01t4t110.1441 10104 y atogitt.o49.lo 6 -4#1141041 l' iga * °L 4 1 11 . 14211 ‘,,tti,t . tilefhP4" ; 40111 1 610111111/k or , “ ttLIV!. taTp:, ~' . 7 h: ~ ~. 1~..1_! ~.~ -SHOWS HIS HAND. LEL' N 0 - .1 MC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers