'-'•? meta Armory. - • Tben w.• • .40 is our town Whose hebbfinne enplaty blob , tor to:triter' lyfd q h renown M rode nip ibr liing Ile tipl t dairy Imola. i. in etas feittierieb "g— -bi edieht rimed. ut liol g if kd iwe lltiti wi rtreat cad entillh I* mit mew Ile loved hit_ Rati o Wiley eras linty, And toweed oho &lay and peace, To Year their yawls attempt the lan A D -1 ape their MU* brood. inerasee. Oro day Was philanthropie rettu— At klet le oh or thilsteelvel announced... Impelled by Pirittut intents, Epos the drehy-birdrnan pounced. Their speaker. Pendell llbMips, said -Prieedrthie eemnsliese'alrens-the East,' When" bran nom moral plane are The home M idol surnamed The Beast !') We* mat by that wrist amnion wealth, .walets ebileM So right to interfere • In other paopkts moral healtb. , -.. An ancient right ithe holds most dear, t' misstest'a brief—brief lit it be : 'Tie worst Massioltesett's wish , That you stAiee them birds set free; Te ear themes •rlle and heathenikh." • . Why role% the mete, glib staring eye', I brie* no Mars--tbe birds aro mine; Your words have gilled sic with surprise; I shall hotleutnith them, In line." . , la rain (lip delegation plead The rights eall Mule to be Craig.- - "Their holism are fields and.trees,”theY said ; But this the birdman mould not see. .• , - whotl fields ma ems!" cried he amazed, A Them bird. we,, all in sages Ore.! ; • Your Alassiebudetts must be erased ; ' treetioutienid saps their deaths," be meld. soon angry words advanced to blows; The delegation proved to strong ; Each cage by force they did unclose— Accomplishing great right—or wrong'. When all the dicky-birdcetere out, These philanthropic wine men bred • Eveu cage the/ found about; Which w2 all-Puritans adm-trett, Thee u the birdman waxed irate, ' As punishment because be rolled, They 110iltld his pictures, gems and plate, Auu for the modern Athens nailed. Meanwhile tie dicky-birds, poor things, Hopped Selplesaly about in nowt; And knowing not the nee of wings, They did not ay in search of teed. Foam diod in corners starred to dcdth—, Many by Min bays Fere killed— Dog eraunched them dozens at a breath -1% ith scores of them coda maws wcro filled by those - who lily keel' their needs, Some were caught and caged once more; Also! they perched on broken reeds; Their mirth and singing days were o'er. Poor birds! Lively raeo is-nearly run--; Squelched by moral thimble-riggsm; Now. reader, ammo this comm.-4 - WA, oredloky-trod. !eke oe.ggertir --QM (heard iteported for the Wotehtnao.) THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. • Proceedings of.a Meeting of the Elec tors and Trustees -of the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania, In Centre County, held Wednesday, -September 6, 1165. Judge Watts, of Carlisle, President of Lbe board of Trustees, called the .meeting io order, when the following persons prestatted credentials as electors : From um reetnericania Elate Agricultural Soctety—A. Boyd Hamilton, President, Har risburg; Frederick Watts. ex• President, Carlisle r B. Morris Ellis, Vice President, Hughesville, Lyon'Mg county ; Joshia Wr 4 ight, Vice President, Washington county. , Ives glePhiladelphia Agricultural Society ..=oWrgerlltigit; Germantown; Craig Bid dle Phfladelphla; James A. MoCres, loom the Ilintingdon County Agricultural Society-6. Miles Green, Barre ; J. Sewell Stewart, Huntingdon; Joshua Greenland, Quartile, From Ms Erie County Agricultural Society —Nathan BHekensderfer, Cbaneaut, Ohio; James Miles, Girard. /Yost the Montgomery County Agricultural .Society—Wllllam IL Holstein, Bridgeport. From the Ageonning aunty Agricultural So tidy—John V. Woodward, Williamsport. From OM Colombia County Agrieuliseral So ciety-441,0;M0 Purcell, Bloomsburg; Ma thias Hartman, Cattawissa; Joseph I'. Con ner, Fewlerrrille. - Prom the Berke County Agricultural Society' —Thomas Penrose, Reading; Jeremiah Mangle, Leesburg. Prowl the Clinton County Agricultural So. eielt--anmpel H. Brown, Cedar Spring ; Alexander Reed, Lock Haven ; Thomas 8. Lingle, Look Haven. Thom Me Centre County Agricultural !Attie y '—Samuel T. fibugert, Bellefonte • J. H. McCoy, Milesburg ; Samuel Van Tries,,Pot ter's Mills. ' When an eleetion took place- for three trustees, dieser'. Watts and Miles acting as tellers, after Consultation, Messrs. Augustus 0. Holster, or Dauphin, Samuel Chadwick, of Allegany, end B. Morris Ellis, of Lyeaur log, were nominated and elected to serve for three years ; when an adjournment was had until one o'clock. - . ' SAME, DAY—Arritnsoog The electors met in anneal meeting,wheit, Oft Motion of Judge Waite, A. Boyd Hamilton walLained to the chair: and, on motion of Mr. Woodward; William 11. Holstein, of ltiontroms7, and 8. Miles Green, of Hun t . , tingalon; were chOlen aeoretarlee. • Dr.. McCoy, of Centre,enbraitted . lowitirithicts watitidepted : Rae's:o44 That a committee be appointed to report /11 preamble and resolutions expressive of the asses of this meeting In Matto:bete tho ori itilirpresset condition, and future prospects of the Agnistdtaral College of Pennsylvania, and sub.le an address to tho industrial classes bare represented, upon the exceeding impor blahs of sustaining the institution. Inttrittppri, the chair app Anted the fol lowing committee: Messrs. J. M. 'McCoy, Of Ceues.e...lamede A. McCrea, of Philadel thin, J. 8. Stewart, of Huntingdon, N. Bliokenederfer, of Eric, John V. Woodward, of blooming, Sylvester Purcell, of Coluni bits, Aiezandeir need, of Clinton, William 11. Noesteje, .of -hiodtgomery, Frederioh Wefts, Of Nab, JnelnslitAht, loWash . ~ lop*, l ud ~Augustrut, O. .iielitsr, ?au thin: 4 -. ' v • •'—' ' ', . I,o4l444,4hgensi.OiAs eettielliteSigle stetelist eddreesed,'in erplanailen of tkitittO 'iegd iskii4gement 9f the college, to t b Y.:*-1 . ~ it d a President. Before the spedserhad essesludeci ilie eolantattee re , tuned eiglAwn.tetirth s ii following MOMS AND NNIIOLDIIONS. *silt; The Agrienintral Coffte of An* 7 . ~ orr i ated and bas been erguk ni I, 00 Mil al opuses to,rentedy..evils odi t st.Of a (Haute for Anne”/ labqr mild- CIO ilieniry icstltatiops.,and to met.ty 't o wanto i m i., tifutioh? or learning . a,.. well Co tw Daum& ", 14 Vol. 10. na our ogrieultncal aocieileg have wholly_ Sailed rii - eTitiTily: Whfrr,,,,, j The Industrial chum/ hove cat:dont the dontfut and govenunent of the Institution which thti hove thus originated end organized Ny receding to then pelves the election genthilly of three truyteca, In the minis° of +which right we aro now avieuibled as electors therefore,- Re.lcil,, That whatever, in the management of the A gricalttiral College of l'ennAylvania,‘ae been terve/11y dune, whatever has been omitted that ahoeld have been done, may, In part,' dt loaat, be juetly attributable to our negligence, and that a cure remedy against the recurrence yablailar evils will be found In our own vigil /ore. !centred, That the Agricultural College of Perinsylyania, conduetedo imeeessfully for nix }}fibre, under great disadvantages and great em barrassment!, in less than one third ofdlie Col= lege building, JIM commended itself to public confidence ROI given evacuee° of ultimate end entire succor. ' iteontred, That the indomitable 'eporgy„unli ring perseverance , ganortaurilrberality v nraftpolf sacrificer, of the tritsteeti, as +ell in prolsing• for ward the' work upon the College and other handing.; and supplling. ti -_funds - re quired, as in securing trinity Coagteetis the grant of land to the FOVOITA gtatexV' n'bich etould pro vide college: for the ben'ellatit agriculture and the nteehnnie arts," reminded them to public confidence and e.d,uclu. /fee,dr••f. That vitally ttnpertnnt as are The Exprrirtoolf,,l And the "Mod( Rain," the rein pletinn ul the college buililiki, the erection of I glu horn, the pre.identfe nut profe:ser.' lieu.- and nerve ary out- hoildinge, were still mom ailiortittaj_ausj the ore Atring on or ppn GI fifty thouomnd dollar., beyond the funds of the iinditution, aro a fell justification of this trounces Against tho imputation of negligence. ft,softed, That the endowment Arising from the investment of tho proceeds of tho Fah) of the Agricultural College land scrip, which can not exceed thirty-revon thousand dollars? your, Is islitolutely required to render tho •Agricultu ral College of Peno.ylvnnia what it Would be, and that the wood eon be more economically and benetTeially expended in ono than in more than i - ono institution. Theore,,f, That the literary and sectarian in efitutions of the State, whose officers and agents bac e, f o r the laid two ,years, been soliciting tho Legiclaturo fur pralines of tho preened!' of tho Agricultural College land scrip, under the teneo that they u•l7/ quonty thetztaoli.eirte dis charge the duties requite - CI, have no just claim thereto; and Qat a grant of the appropriations naked woltlil be a palpahhi violation of the trust ithposed by the act of Congress, and a conse quent forfeiture of the fund. Ite•olreil, l That:the industrial chases ofPenn ,Y.ivallidi,firestitutiug more than three-fourths of ear entire population, ore deeply Interested in the htICCOPS of the Agricultural College of Penn sylvonln, the only literary or scientific institu tion in the State !abject to their - control: And (hot wo therefore pledge ourselves and our con stituents to sustain and protect it thorn the as saults of prejudice upon 000 en( protect it :Ir.:Omit Adie combination of our literary colleges to secure for themselves, res pectively, portions of the proceeds of the lands donated by Congress, and against the further embarrassments of poverty, by- which it has been prevented from. accomplishing what it would otherwise hate accOmplsheil. =rare The Undersigned, committee appullefarby the delegates from the State and County agricultural societies, electors to the Agri cultural College of Pennsylvania, most re speotfullly submit to their constituents, the industrial classes of Pennsylvania, the fol lowing address : The literary colleges of our country fur, nigh - men well qualified to fill LllO learned -professions; but, whether the sons of pro.: fessional men or the suns of agriculturists and mechanics, the students generally leave those institutions of learning with an uLier distaste for manual labor, and wholly Un qualified- for any of the Industrial pursuits of life. This great defect In our, educa tional system has been long felt and sin cerely drplmed. The Pennsylvania State kgricultural So ciety and the several county agricultural i f societies have been product• a of much good. They have introdu , throughout the State, the best imply to and Machi nery, and have greatly - li„ red the pro di:twit/Mess of the Oil. The annual exhi bitions are admirably calculated to arouse the agricultural community-from their leth argy, but they are too ephemeral to fix their attention and guide them by the. light of science, or to protect them from the frauds that are, from time to time, perpetrated upon them. The wants of the age, thus unsupplied by our educational institutions and agricultural societies, seemed to require a permanent institution, in which the sciences bearing upon the practical' duties of life should receive marked and special attention; in Institution In which more limo should be devoted to phys . lott and loss to metaphysic:— morn lii the - homy and less to the dead lan guages than in our ordituu7 literary calle• gas; an industrial college, founded upon the principle that all labor, whether manual or mental, which conduces to man's comfort, is equally honorable ; a college immediately connected with an experimental and -with a model farm, on which this , great truth should be eveloped Jand Illustrated, from day to day, by the Presildent, professors. arid students; an inaLiustion in which the results of the experiments, whether suo aessful or uusuocessful, should be faithfully reeorded in books provided for the purpose, open at all times to visitors and to publica tion for the benefit of the community ; an institution to which ngrlculturists could re- Bolt as well for social intercourse and con sultation - with each other, the president and professors, as for the improvement of their deeds, grams, vegetables and farm stock; en institution so distinguished for the pro ductions of its model farm, for the In:atrial of its orchards and gardens and the beauty of the shrubbery in its campus, 119 to make the students proud of the labor of their, hands; an institution at which the sons of farmers and mechanics could he furnished a thorn h practical, scientific education, at an e k me not incommensurate with the limited ncomes of that class of the eta- I : munity. in an Wert to supply these wants, with a' capital of but fifteen thousand dollars, the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania had its origin. Tbo enterprise, however, So commended Itself to public favor that the. Legislature of Pennsylvania appropriated into hundred thousand dollars; the 'State -spa .cowitj agricultural societies and pri vate individuals contributed seventy-Svc , theutand dollars; and the Congress of the United Stales granted land to the several States which should provide collegesfor the benefit of agricAture and the Mechanio arts, equal to thirty thousand, sores for every senator and vepresentattie in CA glees to which the States were respo'hively entitled; Which grant, amounting to koven hOnarbdittireighty thousand avail, tblisLe gislature df Pennsylvania, on the first de .. Of April, 18011, accepted, and appropriate the nonuol-interest morning therefrom to the Agrimiltaral College of Pennsylvania for the endowment, support, and mainte nance thereof. 1 The trustees 'or the -;Agricultural College of Penn.ylvttniti, thus .upperted and en- 1922 BELLEFONTE, PA:, FRIDAir, SEPTEMBER 15, 1863. couxaged, have secured four hundred - acres of good limestone land, susceptible of 'the very highest degree of improvement, and Lave erected thereon a College. rt, barn, ditching houses fortpresident and professore, and ether necessary buildings, at an expeu diture considerably exceeding, two inaudred thousnutt dollars. These structures far surpass, lit permanence and adaptedneis to the purposes for which they are intended, any agricultural college buildings in the United States. - The completion of the col lege building, within the last year, has fncreased the capacity of the Institution elts aocommildation of students front one to four`lamtleeil I For six •years it has, under great disadvantages, been ,stiocess-' fully conduezed in less than one third of the college building. Tints enlarged, with a president anti corps of profesiers nnsur passed by those of any, Similar institutionin the world, ifie .Agrienitrral College of Ponityylvatia is now presented to the pub lic—now opened for the accommodation of the tons of the industrial classes of our Statc—iow open to add dignity to manual tabor—now open to demonstrate the truth of the motto of one of her literary socie ties that- Labor, guided by Soiende, ap proximates Omnipotence." Will you sustain and protect this Inst itu tine. combatting the long-fostered prejudices of the great majority of our literary men and literary institutions against the connec tionof manual labor with theitnepiLsition of knoWicoge — frili7oh safari it against the combination of literary and sectarian institutions throughout the State. to obtain from the Legislature ate appreliri- Mien to themselves of the proceeds of the lands donated by Congress to endow col, loges; "the leading objoot of Shish is to teach such branches of learning as are ro tated to agriculture and the mechanic arts." under the pretense that they will qualify themselves for the 4isoharge of the trust? Will yotzprz,tect it from the embarrassments of porcrty, under which, front its very or gnLization to this moment, it has been con tinually suffering—that•poiierty which has been a bkr to the establishment of the " riperitortatal forte—that poverty which has prevented the formation and improve ment of the "model form," end the erection of the additional tarn required on the.ex ,porimenttil. farm—/bad poverty, which has prevented the stocking of - the farm with the choicest breeds of horses, cattle, sheep and hogs—that poverty which, but for the i - domitable energy, untiring perseverance, and generous liberality of .the trustees, would have blighted all. it's prospects ? And yet this Institution, thus struggling 'for life,. thus exoused, because of its "Uvula, by all Who know it, for not &my what id ehotdd be, is said, by our literary sectarian institutions, to be "too rich," "too liberally endowed," although not one dollar has been yet realized from the grant. I But suppose the entire land scrip conver ted into money, at eighty cents per acre, the highest price for which it can be sold, 'it Would amount, to but six hundred and twenty four thousand dollars, which, invested at 6 per cent., would produce but thirty seven thousand four hundred and forty dollars annually—an income greatly below that arising from the respective en dowments of Harvard University, Yale and Columbia Colleges, and other mere literary institutions of our country—an income, every dollar ,f which could be most econom ically exp • 'idea yearly,_hz ile__nenesiary current expenses of the Agrictiltural COl - And bow beneficially the entire income derivable from the students could be expen ded, lot the%indehtmlness of the Institution and the remedies for the evils and the sup ply of the wants, to Whith we have just referred, answer. The learned professions have their col leges and schools ; the Presbyterian, Bap tist, Methodist, Bpiseopalialig Lutheran, Catholic, and others, have their denomina tional institutions scattered through Ibe length and breath of the land. The schools of law are conducted by lawyers ; the schools of medicine by doc tors ; the literary seotarlan institutions by the respective denominations, at whose instance they have been incorporated and endowql , The •industrial classes of Pennsylv s ania. constitute thred fourths of our entire popu lation, and yet what. institutions of learning r within thasunds of flie Commonwealth do you goveTh of control? Not one, except the Agricultural* -College" of Pennsylvania. Bees and berg only' is your voice heard through the reprosentalivas of the State and county agricultural societies at every 'remixing annual eleotiob of trustees. You can mould the policy of the Institu tion to advance We interests of the great masses of the community to Which you bob:Mg. Electors of the Trustees, you aro the soy teigas of the Agricutural College of Penn ylvania. - • Over what ether institution can you exert such control ? Nay, over what other insti tution of learning in the State can you,. us a class, exert any control ? And will you suffer thin Agriealtural College, originated, as we have seen, by the Wants and neooslli ties of the age, and thaw far. crippled by poverty, to la 'deprived of endowment maidly secured by its founders and abso lutely necessm to its igiocessi deprival of it, too, by institutions which, we have seen, despise industrial colleges and .only preposaAusleach such bran has of learning as relate to igeicluiture and. the mechanic arts," bocauheihey love "the goodly Baby loofsh garment and the wedge oft gold" which theempot Wey proposition to bring. The pssamble, 1/solutions iind address were unanimously adopted, and three thou sand copies ordered to ho printed for gen• oral' ciroulation. The meeting was then addressed by Mr. Matj.Mister, of Centre, and Mr. Meister, of Dauphin, explaining, in ni clear a manner as possible, all the transactions of the board of trustees in relation to•expeneee. progress and present ooudition„,pf the Institution. The . meeting then adjourned. On behalf of the electors of the Agricul tural College of Pennsylvania, consisting of delegates from Philltaelphio, Montgomery, Dar Dauphin , 'Cumberland, Columbia, Clinton, Huntingdon, Eric, and I.,ycomtng counties, and the Ponn'a Sthte Agricultural Society, the undersigned were regdested to Warta the thanks of said representatives for the kind tindilberal hospitality extended de them by the citizens of Bellefonte and entre county (luring their' visit to the county, including a very agreeable viait.to the coat naives on the summit of the Alle gany mountain, upon the Snoweb railroad. A BOYD HA ILTON, • WNI. If HOL TEEN, . S., MILES-OREEN, "STATE RIGINTS AND TIIDIULAZI VISION." "BRIK" , POWERGY CM-M0310F019. "Brick" Poittetoy, of the La Crgsee(Wle.) bemotral, gives the following as his expe rience in getting nirptitoti Intoiidatett. "Josh Billifigs" can't beat It : PIONWItTOB ON A lINNIAR Night before last, in order td sleep, we placed a piece of 'raw b'eef steak on a plate at dm head of our bed. In the Morning it Wits LI the moaquitos sucked as dry of blood as an old sponge; and:our skin saved at least two thousand. peridrations. All about the room in the morning were rnos quitos,plethorie with blood, loaded till thiy could not Ay, We'killed a few, but thefjob was too aatigninaq, so we left them 'to their feast. Last nigt, In °Nor to get even "Alb the serenading devils, we steeped half tilsound of fresh beef steak in some old rye 'Whisky, and left on a, plate near the bed. IstWog like being hospitably Inclined. Intun min utes prier the light was estingufithed a swarm of these back-biting bill pesters made an advance movement One of lltem cares sed us sweetly on the nose—he eons in his bill—there wage sla_p—atliltned damn—a ruosa.4l4e ! aa — wr hAnft dit n - dpus buraing about the whisky.seaked beef. The entire mosquito family came singing in, and such an oiltfa—good Ford deliver us! But they did not disturb ii with biles—we fell asleep to be awakened in ten minutes by the worst mosquito concert ever editor, mortal, dcviljangel, divine, Dutchman or any other maiy.listened 'to. We raised a light, and the greatest show of the season wan there to be seen. Every mosquito was drunk as a blind fiddler, and such an up roarous night as the long-billed whelps had, never wati•seen before this side of—Selah! The worst antics I Some were playing oirohla on the plate. Ono big fellow, with a belly like Falstaff, full of blood and whisky, was dancing Juba on the Bible, while a fat friend otitis tribe lay on her bank beating the devil's dream on an Invisible iambi:trine with one hind leg ! Two more were wrest ling on the foot-board of the bed, each with his bijl stale filet in the timber. Another was tying the legs of our pante into a bow knot to tie-about the nook of Anna Dickin son, which . hangiwtgainst the washstand. while another red-stOtnaeljed customer was trying to stand on his head in Ole wash bowl. All over the roetil Was drunken' mosqui tow One long bill, gaunt reprosedtative was trying to rain the mucilage bottle full of nelvapaper' bhippinge. Another chap was drilling a hole through a revolver han dle and singing "My Mary Ann," while another Was limping across the window sill in search. of fresh air, to the agonising tune of—tramp—tramp--trattip I Ono little ram of a_skeet was trying to jam the cook out of Ben. Butler's eye with a tooth brush, as hie picture hung in the room beside that of Kidd the pirate and a few other thieves. Another drunken statesman of the mosquito family, reminding us of Zech Chandler, was talking Russian to a lot of drunken compan ions as they lay in a heap on a plate, while another one sat on tho handle of our bowie knife, doubled up with cramp in the stoMnob, and trying to un tie his tail with, his bill, Which • seemed like Lincoln's back bone when Anna Dickinson said It wanted stiffening. Ile eras a aiok looking skeeter, and died in three minutes after we saw him, her, of it, as the 'ease may be. Two others took a bath in the inkstand. Another• one with a bill like the devil's narrative was trying to wind out iVatt.h With a pen-wiper, while another bad just died mho was titling on the rim of a dish in the room trying ohaat—'•Mother some home to die ' Poor skeeter. A nice skeeter, but "l'was a pity ho drank." An *AC' votnran with VI paunch full of 'Wand 'all—blood and whis ky—sat on the table reading Los Miserable,- while his wife Witis-under the stove trying to mend her broken wing With a limpsey tooth pick. Bho,looked disgusted ! Another one combed his hair with a paper of pins, tied a piece of white paper about his nook, pasted a five cent infernal revenue stamp on hie 'rump, and died like a loyal citizen. Jim last words were— " Tell the traitors all around you," ke., Another drunken-Vamp-14d just started' oid, °rite window for Jahn B. flotmln tl! et Atlanta pump.. •A worse behaved set at bpmmcre wo hover saw. = They hpve acted fearful. About. two thousand • lie about. dead, but sadness seemed not to break in upon their hilariousTrioting upon blood and whisky Half a doion of thee sot on our now bat playing draw poker, Wag worm lozenges for checks, while one of the party got clean busted by n , Qi. Aka fifty dollar blind good on a foer i thich didn't fill! lie will be apt to wear cotton socks next winter and keep away from church col lection days. Another one sat mit top of a brandy bottle, reading relater's Call to the Unconverted, while his partuor lies dead et his feet, evidently forced to close doors by he failure of Ketchum & Son, of New York! Six others were trying to bang one that leaks like a Copperhead to the corner of a match safe, but as they were drunk and ho sober, it is not safe for to bet on his being dangled. 'They have caton the beef—drank the blood and, whisky—drilled the plate full ofholes—and on the centre table organised Bun of Molts lotlga, Using a IlVeCont Ado plaster for blanket In the act entitled "The Elevation of Ilan." Another red-bellied leader of tho Miss Keotor family bad a battalion of drunken bummers on the edge of a spittoon watching him jau4n fur overcoat into hie loft oat. lie wits foolish:—foolish enofth fai a briga diii goner:al or a member of Congress. A 7,i't!lidtiii•tr(itn+. little Cads With bleak logs,.erimson stointich and double-jointeci^hill, was vomiting, in a satin slipper, while his wife, a sickly-look ing lady of her tribe, was grukiring at the bed post, thinking it a bologna. Another evidebtly an old maideerat under the sofa milking the cat, while her sister was °retains a pair of woolen drawers into tor waterfall, singing in a onbdued strain: "Come rest in tbin bosom!" , WO lurk lipped far a season ticket—front sent. ' Another one, with a certificate of inar- Tinge over: his head in the filiape of a welA. the size of a candle 'mold, was dancing a fandango With two mosquito idrgius on a watch eryst'al, while a deacon lzz one of their churches sat playing 011. sledge with a cork_ screw, to aee whic'd should go for ik gin ooeittaiL AT, artislio delegate was standing on hie head to a champagne tumbler, one hhud leg run through his under jaw, while with the other he was pointing but the road to Richmond to a lot of sheets still drunker lhan L himael f, which were silting dog•fashiott on the pillow. We should any it was a gay party—quietly so ! --catic-ekheta-eheurfr,-Gotteerter-dog- , • amputations, °reuses, negro funerals, draw poker, sparking, or other amusement there is nothing to be compared to a track of Mos quitoes ou a bender. If you don't believe it, tlx them up with a piece of of beefsteak soaked in whisky, and laugh your sides sore et the antics the drunken warblers cut. THE NEGRO QUESTION NOW IN IS SUE IN PENNSYLVANIA. Negro-voting Abolition leaders are trying to dodge the nigger question, Itt Ibis State, and striving to deceive the white frconiefrof the State into the belief that It is not involved in ode coming October elec tion; and they do this, knowing the con trary to in: the fact. Tholollowing circular from one of their chief men, which is being secretly sent tircadeast oircr the gtate, speaks conclusively on this point : _ .rarirtoa. The notiarsigued respectfully ask tte adoption of tho follow i tag Proposed Amendment-to the iittitod Ste.teS Coustl tutibu. No Stole shall make any distinction in civil rights and privileges mow Me natnrulixed cit izens of the edited Mates residing within its Urals, or among persons hems on Its soil of pa rtial, permanently residitos there, on Oreunt of race, coke, or descent. I ask your attention to the follo‘itti, ns-a means of ensuring government prosperity in our country : Do not trust to Statecnnetmenta to mune the ballot to the disfranchised at the South. Pro-slavery Shiloh will give a vote tb Iho Freedmen to be again recognized as States j and ,when admitted, will take it away and again oppress them. Before any of 'the rebellious Stales are admit- Aitak_gLit, FUNDA.MesTA . L Law of the NATION that no State lull put a ban on any one because of race, •color descent, and the otherwitta defeaseless population of the South wilLhavo the means to Anoka their rights respected. Sign and hare all true friends of Peace and Freedom la sign the petition on•the other sido. When you hate ten names or less, see that the petition is sent to your Representative iu Congress. if you agree pith this, do not lay it aside, expecting. aliens to do your work. towott , M. bAvio. l'hiladelphia. July 186.5 Now, suppose the tiegro-toting amend ment to the Constitution of the _Nulled States, suggested in the above circular, Lo be adopted by the Abolition Congress, it then comes directly to thu Legislature of Pennsylvania, for approval and ratification, and would lie decided by the Senators and members of Assembly Itho are to be elected at our next election. Consequently, the is sue of negro-voting in Pennsylvania, is fully before our people, for thO secret circu lar Amendment al:ldles to all the States. • It. says expressly that "No tiTAtli shall make distinction in oitil rights and privileges" 't on atiteunt of aims, cotton, or desoent"; that is, that the "civil rights and privil ages" of the negro shall, liflevery state, be equal to those of the while milli l, What say our white freemeti,"l-' *botany the 'white soldiers--of Pontaylvania, to this? If they are in favor of Lt, and want to have negroes ae their political equals-- IylY will foto for Hartratitt Campbe ll , tied Pi Abolitionnonatorllil anti assembly -cau a I in.lliatober ; if they are trinatiletki to 1 equals l'it, ' and woulddmie Pinnteylviinie preserved l as'n - white man's State, they will vote ngainat these mon, and for the while man's, I or democratic candidates. ' Such will be ono of the real and important issues id Glauber nett, and the Abolition leaders. know it, but arc aiming to keop the mass of 'the icoters, from so seeing and understand lag i'4. , Ir You CAN"TAND TlllB You CAN STAND Tits? —After all, the Irishman was a phil osopher, who; ftB he was loading up his cart with clay and as he threw tend Ids:cart ohovelltil ' atter ahovelfal cried out to Ills *le, "If you canAlra w that you pan drew thi " until lie haft') heavily laden the tfatt that the horse could not budge it. the men who hare Oiled the coantry for the last four years halo adopted his polioy of piling upon the people" taxes. They hive shad to them salvia, "If the people can eland taxation to keep in the fiel d a powerful army, t] 4 c an stand taxation to support shoddy a ail tors and apoonlatorg, and a 'warm ow 1 petty officers to odlledt Oft Internal Kar -1 onuo, and if they can stand taxation for this purpose, they'•can etanW taaatlon to maintain an aristooratty of bond-holderty and if they can stand tion for this puts pose, they can stand ik taxa tnilltia commutation tax, and if they can stand thii taX, thei'ean stand . * tax to pay big salaries to oarldtate officials." ' Keep this party In power a fetes years ,longer and they will so 14. den, the people with taxes that they Will nab() able to kinlge. 'A Tery ' nioe party certainly.— . ' .Piliabwali PoAt. I ' ' No, 35. hEICIHEIori§ WIFE Wa aro taught to lore ;, from obildhOod's years 'Twos stamped upon toy mind, My earlioat ertieles of faith iVas love for human kind ; Co ifrlO my neighbor ea myself Is christitui-like, they ray; it I love my, neighbor'a lion tan I help it, prey t. Tho Golden Rub Ruloj etrtho to. hood - Where Tor t may be, And de to others on I would that they should ao to Ina ; • And en ono duy, I thought %were well ' If I this 'preOept. trial And Alltsl with goncrogo tboßght° took uoighbot's with C 3 ride. • Dut, ah ! this kind and simpla e . ot ' tiara rise to slanders high; host of Curious toOguos I4salkilea - My nerghbor's wife and I. Wo're taught to Shire with literal hearts Tho blessings that *e prise— smilri with others when they smile, And dry tho,mournor's oyes. And_aben ono day I channel/ to gad My neighbor's wife iu touts, I whispered wont! of spyipathy ' Within her listening ears; drew her trembling form to mine — , And kisseil her toart 1111V+ly ; The act was ROM, and to! (hero was Thu very deuce to ray. Alas ! alas ! 'tis pluming stnlngo— l'us.euro•l can't cob through it: I'm told to love with nll my heart, Then blamed because I do it , Tho precept thit I httirioxl in youth-. IVill cling to me through life ; I'll try to love my neighbor, and ourc I love hie wife. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHEII: I . —Tito comet is only sit Imamd millions of &olio!' off. —Two thousand dollar! worth of violots oro daily sold in Paris. —Tho turpentine crop in 'North Camilno 17 ill to tonsil this Beason. —The blood-hound bripade to be Used against the Minnesota Indians, tio.,t F 416: —ThO Republican papers barn dvappod their motto "Stand by tho Provident."' Alittla git Lin Ifort,rd the other day her , ropo (hi biittdrod tiuma daad. —A moo arid woman havileeti &riveted by the military at Fort stip. posed to bo accomplices of Mouth. —A company boring for oil lest T ook near Crestlino, Ohio, struok a lively artesian flow of minors! water. .WARRINGTON," Boston corresrondent of the Stringtleld Myna/K.oi, calla the Republican candidate for bovornor of Ohio a " poor stick." -n is stated in weres;w that that tiie 'Rus sian Oovernuient intends to divide Poland into ton governments. —Cotton is arriving from the Routh in con shlorable quantities. Lot our motchants pre- pare for a fall in the price of dry goods. —A firoMan on an Albany furry beat was torn to ploaos by,ijiir:Sinidettathrtiog of the on- Om while ho wag 4 ollrhg, John, did Mie. (ikon got the - modicine I ordered 1" "1 nem to ) " reviled Jghii, "I sew crap° on the nor the Heft morning." —llonjotnin Croon, poodmaator at Mystic, Conn., has tayatatonaly diaanneatod, and It is rumored that ha•hae ritindlod ti .ny tannonsolti. tf tdonoy '_____Virtum without talent, la a cant of t+lthunt a error!: It !hay - Mimed thilbtld tilb wearer, but will not enable him to protuot hie friend. —The Carbon Desioeisit Aiggests the name of non. Asa Packer fur the next gubernatorial nomination. Judge rocker is at present tray bling iu Europe. few dart- o ii. man lumped Nicholas Burkhart. WM shot on the street it Put,tortlle, whilo In conversation with some &lauds; and bits since tiled. —The movement for IHo erection of a new botWity out of parte of Venmigo, Wnricn and Crawford, with Tiluevillo as the county seat, le agitated with Considorablo energy. —lf Urighani Young's - lad wives favor their lord with curtain lecture, whig v oh what, must bo the nature of "Youngs Night Thoughts?" • —The pardoti of Lie two itureecebEtiy convicted df murder In tbo Cerlien court, has excited great Indignation In that coinmunity, end Governor Cuttitee aeilon 1$ seierely db. ttouneed. • —]toting Xotabdc#, the Ninv ltork forger and defaudtai, was -ornate& on awnday awaiting in the uppgrjart k ol the thy. Ile beiittenieor left Now Torii. the sow of as+ll+ found on his person, —Thorn is it fatal Iliaonso , taging anima hones ie somo parts of tho Stattk At Apt Mitt in 4 milling of the throat, followed, tOwords ago , iaat Ptigo?, by a totalling of Itip howl and limbs, which proves fatal —Bigorn Douglas aul his brpthor, able M none of the dicsoused statesman. aro students at tho Soorgetown, D. 0., village. net tar is said to bb air original thinker wad' n lent speaker. ! Consirat , .idityi C. Breckinridgo a:pooled to garish iVi /Simla within %Yew days. Ph. ?Omni, Coundisisetio . rid• Oro Southern Con fudaracy in London, and ax-Sonistor of the , Bnititd States, will accompany him. 'general Breokiuridgo's son is now in blew York. —During a recent thundor storm the lbolfry ocito talkied shops at Altoona Wan' iirtick bt • •11rbe lightning -rod inut stilt; and padt of the Buhl passed down the thAl rope lane the shop, conoidekibly ailistkag *mamba or the wofkuton. • .1 —The Waeliingtoe Ofreury"that bu been giving free . eshilitiStas• to 'the nearest'. in . .Ih, Spath , and tha intelligence and wealth :d She &lidera States, for Ole past three aaosabsoutder• the ouperlotendento of that. expert manager,. Cider Chug, bat again outdated to that' chi Where It will exhibit, in the future, tot 0,41; hilt of free nigger', and the ' , tidy made ip reat moral aces " c The fast rider quickest tireti ! TIME is at last setting all things even " The mills. of °ad grind slowly, ' t ist thergrilkl T ugh with p veldts, ith sanctum dalte all !" Not ;many yeittl e sin the 44,04 4- Vmur ty came id fftifer. fei Weed rast ',to be revolutionised ,Effstfeliy Wu to' Its abet- , lilted I . The stagr,o *es to be stood oft d ISTeer pfane, tittrit turd - 911,1,41* - - - freedinn and happiness *eta Ate .Istst-ist •prioupao:. tiro ! Like %i 1 fruit, AtxtlitiOnteliki c ipple4t . The rai resulted in giiing freeliotiVdraire slate to a certain extent. 'the happy stare. left tcr-ecciopetit—Wieh- atete.4eft to dicker with New England cuteness, lives in rags—in dirt—io poverty; to' die by flit thefts/tilde la Mimi and baitack—s'iwsed freedom ! Time flies 1 A arty comes in power. Laws are eared. Power swallowe Juatirci dnd closed the prison doors an Righll 'Tyranny and Linearet wilted band In hand. Incapacity and extrautgalleo look the place et etatesnumeltip and-economy! Spies, bayonets, Mobs military arrest*, mock !dab, and the liberty , of Madness cOopled wick itameanee, supersitiOn„ fanat icism and intoleranoe,•hatre been the char acteristics of 'the pad Amer years'l The bubble burst) • '• - - ' tat' report of se Phitol.shook the ,oarib Tho . passage Of pomi 1?ullet opened s nen ars! . , A footfall on the flap . of a iticalre in 'Washington jarred the continent, agoil into history with his riatiax strodp,Dootlx, %41t his "sic ;ewer tyratinis A hation feit I Next Ao nn affecLiog story in Ile New York Lodger, Me dealt of -Lincoln drew - of totes Jrcw *stag Old yrotpen and itren .spinslers, who weep over well wrought fiction, shed tears whaelhe lamehted Dint:gild died 1 Men mournedeonle in "earnest—more to be in the fashion ! dkler ttirip,fiseter froni the toms than from its vein.' It was Pell the nation mourned so tearlbly 1 li lash 1 All was black—half wee hypocrisy Lincoln passed iatay ! Tcare passed awe I The funeral'cortege.Passed over the land and away ! f.er A 4 Ig, Tho proclamatioha whlbb ant orostbented parlors, hoir haitg In barns or Ih biethory The funeral oar odet eighteen" thousand dollars It wits wild to s dropout the other day, for twill.° hetidred Aellaret—lese - thad atate4blitild bring f Paellig sway I - • - - 4 A nationWnithinttlend to the Wended Lincoln is passing Wray A heme.for Mn.s Lincoln has beemna • illesollitig vie*, Ind the Project hes been abandoned in disgust Love for the negro is passing stray ! 4,0 is the negro The past is l'adlitg DUI! As a child hos too many toys. to keep iE quiet, so bare the American peolide toe mei t!y Centralisation itt the fire. Centralisation of power Taxntion for the poor ! Eseinptiedi for the rich I Suspension of habeas corpse Ignoring of civil tribunals Nelidnal monument ! —Negro saffoge-I- Abolition of slavery Reduction of tho notional debt Horne ftir Win liiriddlni The blotried dectiltie Coming elebtleitsl And all dude 'fill IWO achy, *" Power will not boloostralised midi loot In.' 161 men *lit Inky isles ink 1 pM •bondsi Or their-bonds • • itaheas Orpecwill be trirthrod. • Military *Obesity •••,, 3' Civil tribunals will artist dolt tbeisttitn *lit nal lila by the batuieit aid& • Negro suffrage is toothless itdgl The boleti . tok Mrs, , i4 001 a• *L,4 I vlb& sway add to leas thaa slew !bee hop , walk the street/11 litt cafe; 4 # 1 00. 11 # 14 ouu!nolo'B63di" and' ilutse who *opt, tke:ieret ;- the death of her, Abraham. ,wtzthl licr mayn't, with cord rituals, is she Nslild , beg fklini dour to door from giteeibebi to Bested! And if she wore feed ears dridir by degrees her appeide "roam be is timight. ' in twelve months ? Hot the fidtrs dissolve ! hies the fashions change t ' The nation; like the iltlidigal eon, and ' all the trying hdtlies df the past Wilt peon seem like a nielitatlare, bet beefed % enteelt • df dnpee and vietime 1 • dtatid 'firm and see the vieire diesolY4 thnsee 'Democrat. ''s• 'Us Blum% P o esrrotts. *so rus,h(arifts shah, Illatet,fil#.4.lonar n . entirely alledt tipaa the ,question pf the de to only alluded o ettkiiid that is lu thfillifth resolution, confiscation ot.tbe property of all re:yning more than 4 - 10,000 tri .'to pay .the. &naps , done to folk enigma and to redact) thenational • d v s ki c 4 a ; 'and it tones ri itik pu*was safe to dentsre s . - " props e Eartatiteru wills ann 'hi gobble • erity--no setter hadt iy—thr pay the ;lob' ", dud relieve the ' ohfoUtPlion from their sham be done ; 'but Mite eon not be.koooidplishyl, , then we shall tai the shoddy party first and hresulit ding Wilk Wendell in deal/Pain& titletir for' repudiation. It is quits One, 'OW ars - diready tired of their Oar:cot faisenpified , ' 'toned IntrUPiP. at to . 4444 4 1 1 , hid upon lhs ohougnro, .910 0 . P 1 Peltheirt WOO& 1 lest our people rohattree ,itaf ; testaaftnAtild bus been Itteired ty osatainwei t Iv a n the l eskeg#,444* lerACOB O O74, lllOl . a wore 41EttpulkitPitti4J4.404114.. the ince 01119,117, violating eV otright and "loam Id pk eselfil4liseei lbs lattimlify lyetioe,lty ffeti• - tittli*lfrit Ottais to 104-tbe bishoa et:4i rink 444 1 `le"IftlY'• all the taxes upon the Governments aessw,L ties Which he ithe up the national Mite---: Mil
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers