Eros tha E. D 1 111 oo i gErrd (llLYNople's Prestal woa. . I T 044 y T. 'Aar The am old woods fie de winter time How solemn sod sad the tone ' [chime When the windAsSeeps tbjenghwith a mooning, The gilled atm Onwthier. • • When di% toot its trollied thirst bath tort • For doer of the hidden snl, And the fragile sboot is-stilf with frost; And the NI to Iti eon ta When each gay leaf alit drew, go Lift, • Its shadmi o'er the Basirmer's brow, Ilsth dodo from Its wavy egberu aloft To rest 'loath the starry snow. • INben each With serrated cop, • P re iretthartaiwhere ft grew, Hatt closed Ito ta4ed paellas up, No more tO drink the dew. As, sortowing seem those woods so As they lift their branches beret Theshisoing ix* *ad the riled lithh, To the clasp of the frosty alt. miler- them I i 7.7. . . I lore their tousle W) When whispering ache Elm the woods With topes ut her neknearing spell. • For though the Saha lio iroiee kioih own save sleeps in the silent tree, let the (onset Olathe' with hollow moan Like the Sound Of the ceaseless sea. And the spangistdfrost-work,oold and bright, That glasitss on twig and show, Fee a throne for *sob )of frozen light . With a "diansond . 4l,albsta." Oh, I lore those gross by the atiatinnt kissed, Ac Oiey awing In the silarkiihg AAATlote In the hint old woods to Hot To the Voices stirring tbore. PLeAvArr Pa. Oct. 3, 1865. THE ALMIGHTY'. PQLLAR. UY Thit tkrat PRORQII LireAlai ...W.liiiirtglallii 77 7lllW -77 .7...7....= Ile took It, clutched it in Lis long, skinny fingers, tried its sound against the beXpost, and then OW at it. long and intently with Ills dull leaden eyes. That day, In the hurry of business, Death had struck him, even in the street. lie won hurrying to collect- the last. month's cud-wes--ett-alte.--vere_e_tlin ndeatraklit. %art where his tenants herded like beanie to their kennels—Le was there with his batik book in his baud, when Death laid his hind upon Lint. Ile was carried home to his splendid mausiorn_ Be wokaid upott . & bed with a entin coverlet. The lawyer, the relations and the preacher were sent for. All day long he lay without speech, moving only hie right hand, as though in the act of count ing money. At midnight he spoke. Ile asked fora tioilsr, and they brought out to him, and lean mid gaunt he sat upin his doath•bgd t and clutched it with the grip of d mat A shaded lamp stood on a table near the ell4en bed. Ita light fell faintly around thfi c splendid room, 'where <Adra and car ts's and mirrors, pilken hed and lofty ceil ing, all said, GOLD! WI plainly as human lrpa can say it. Ills hair and eyebrows were white. Hie cheeks sunken, and hie tips thin and sur tequila' be wrinkles that. indicated the passion of Akarioe. As he sat up in his bed with hie neck bared and the silken cov erlet wrapped about his Loki Warne, his white hair al syebrowa 'contrasting with his *sated an wrinped face., he looked liko glinst. And theraiwat life in his leaden eyez—all that life was centred on the Dollar which hi gripped in his clenched fist, ills-wits, a pielsaisiAtaced, matroa4. wo man, WWI seated at the foot of the bed. His sub, a ioithp, Man of ironty-one, dressed in the lastlouob of fashion, sat by the lawyer. The lawyer ant before the table, pen in bas 1 , Lila, gold epectaoles on his nose. There was a bus* parchment spread before "be you think Le trill [nuke e. wilted the son. "Hardly compot mentie yel," watt t he Whispered reply, "Wait. Dell be /*cid after I *MN."' lily dear," said the wife, "had not I better send for a preacher t" She rescind to3k her dying husband by the band, but he did not mind. Ilia eyes were upon the Dollar. lie was a rich matt. Ile owned palates on Waloilt and Chestnut streets, and hovels and courts on the outskirts. Ile had iron ,wines in this State ; copper..ruines on the lakes somewhere; he bad golden interests in California. His pane was bright upon the reoords of twenty banks ; be owned stooks of all kind.; Iterittul half a dozen papers in hie pay. lie knew but one crime—to be in debt tritholit the powir to pay. Ile knew hut one virtue--to get money. That brittle be liNt ' d never forgiven—this virtue ke hidtr forgotten in the long We, of tbirty-fi eunt: •__ To haat down a debttir, to distress a ten ant, to turns few &Ultima thousands by a sharp speculation—these were the main Itehleveinenta oT vie life. He Was a good man—hie name wee on a Silver plate upon the pew-door of a velvet etahloned elturnb• He *at r i benevolent enan—f—for• evet7 thousand a tabir• that be wrung front the tetriatil of hie points, or from the debtors Why, writhed beneath hie heel. he gave ten dollar, to some benevolent Institution. He Was a jest men—the gallows and thie jail Alvaro found id hint a faithful and un swerving advocate. _And now he is a dying men—eee! As he site upon the bed of death, wittrethe Dobai in.bis attached band. 0, holy Dol lar l vbjent of his life-long pursuit, 'what somfort haat then ter Wen wean ltpain of death ? leirgift the detd' Man retrived and 'no tated hie With It wee .strange to me the Mother and son and lawyer muttering, and --sometimes *ratigling—heirlde the bed of death. All„thet:while, the Testator clutched the Dolls! in bia right hand. u - Whiletinf will Sas 'heft made, the pres- Ober came—Men he whet held the pastoral yLargs of. g , hwef i tA bo n dizat r i b saintly Came, on silver puttee. 'm t u whose seats on Sabbath Any. 'mamad beneath the weight, of respectability, broadcloth and actin. H• came and , 13.14)11, pr*cr—ol•••rwilY (0:1*-PritutitAlit :,(11.01ili.l1i-li.lit Vol.lo. and in Ineatiiireil words--'-but never lance did the (laying man" relax his bold on the Dol lar. "Can't yo'n read ma something, say— quick, don't you see I'm 'going ?" tit length said the rich man, turning ,a frightened +yok teeant , thwpreeehew...--- - - - - The preacher, whose cravat was of the whitest, took a book with golden clasps from a marble table. Aud he rend : • "And I arty Unto you is easier for LI camel to go throtigil tire eye of a 'needle than for a.rich man to ewer luhe the King dout.of•Elod," "Who eltid those words—who—who— .whw! fairly shrieked the dying man, sha king the hand which clenched the Dollar at the preacher's head. The preacher hastily turned over the leaf' and did apt reply. "Why did you never tell me of this be fore ? 'Why did you never preach from it is I sat in your church ? Why—why 1" The preacher did not reply, but tUrnhtl over another leaf.. but the dying man would not be quieted. quin t tatTer flyr.st_ffrittl quo thr . cough . the eye sf a needle than for a rich man to ewer into the Kingdom of God,' is it ? Then what's to become of met Am I not rich What tenant did I ever epnre—what debtor did I ever release.? And you stood up . Bun• day after Sunda) , and preached to us, and never said ope word 'about the camel. Not -word nbo it_ vanct..2__ The preacher, in starch of n comdlingi passage, turned rapidly over the lcaVes, and, in Lis confusion, came tbik this plumage, which be rebtd "f lo to now, ye rich man, weep and howl, for your miseries that shall come upon you. Your gold and silver is eankered; and the rust of them shallitte a witness against you, and shall eat your flesh as it were fire; ye have heaped treasore together for the last days. Behold the hire of the laborers who have reaped down your fields, which is of you kept by laud, oneth ; and the cries of thtla which have reaped are entered into the ears of the Lord of Sabbath." "And yet you never preached that to me!" shrieked the (lying man. The preaoher, who bad blundered through the passage from James, which we have quoted, knew not what to say. Ile was perchance terrified by the very look of the dying parishioner. Then the with drew near and strove to confOrt him, and the son :(who bad been reading the will) attempted a word or two of consolation. But with the Polka in hie band be sank into death, talking of stock, of rant, of copper mine and camel, of tenant and debt or, until the breath left his lips. Thus lie died. Whew he was cold, the preacher rose and asked the lawyer whether the deceased had left , nnything to such and such a Charitable society, which bad been engrafted upon tb• preacher's church. And the wife closed his eyes and tried to Wrench the Dollar from his band, but in vain. Re clutched it as though it were the only savior to light him through the taark tam of eternity. 4u the eon sat down with dry eyes and thought of the hundreds of thousands that were now file own. T Nail day there was t horse followed by a train of carriages nearly a mile in length. There ',via a great crowd around an open grave, and an elegant serntoh upon the vir tues of the deceased, by the preacher_ Wire was shuttering of crape badges, and rolling of carriages, and—no retaiir. They left the dead man and returned to the pal aoe„'where eorrow_died even as _the crape was taken from the door-knob:- And in the olive the deal hand WI clutched the Dollar. 11/0011NPUL ACKNOWLIUGMUNT--1 . 1 12 PA ROLIO SOLDIERS OF Tile CONNSDKRAOY TO TOO Lawns*, New ORLOA2tB.—llarikrupt in all but honor, the paroled soldiers of the Con federacreen only tender to the ladies of New Orleans their undying gratitude for the cordial welcome which his greeted their advent In the oity, and pray that God will less the "Ministering angels," who, have lifted from their hearts the dark olinad of gloom and despoutlaney and turned its 2.Bll ver lining" outward, brightened with their stollen. Congregated here only for brief space, they Will soon be widely scattered throughout the laud, perhaps never to meet agate they are returning home with .bligh ted hopes and ruined, fortune's—all but hon or, and the will which can never be con quered lost in the terrible struggle through which they have passed. Many of them will soon be'voinntary exiles from the fair Southern land which gave them birth ; but wherever their wandering fate may lead, they bear with them; among treasured reline of the past, a remembrance ever more dear sodium:wed of the noble women of New Orleans; who have bad courage to believe that misfortune may exist without guilt, and revising to worship the rising tun, have turned aside from the prosperous and the powetful to bestoir their Prayer*, their tears, and their smile's open them. -1311 thousand negtoes of Waslitington City bate signed a petition /taking for silt rage. As fifteen thousand negroes are there supported at Government expense. It is more !ban probable that the amkttious six thousand help to make up that number of ' pnblhA pauper/,'and also that they have more time on.their hands than they know what to do with. A seed hoe would hie.' them to better business. Tlir he; ii~llifr tvigz BELLEFONTE, PA., 'FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1865. RELIGION •6F THE PUIRTANe. A writer in the Christian Witness, review ing the different religious societies of the work!, giros tha following vigorous picture of the religious creed and praotjaiie of the Biel of Puritans: "The PUritline — liTioTen F ngland and set tied at Plymouth, and founded New Eng land, professed to hive Ned from perseim (ion, and sought a place to worship God ac cording tube dictates and rights of con science, awl to christianize tho They ware not settled before they robbed the Indians, enslaved their women and children, sold them Into foreign bondage, and visited the most inhuman and self-de grading cruelties upon till classes wiih whom they came in contact. They plun dered the towns of the natives. They employed and paid as:manias. Bribes Were paid for the assassination of chiefs. They burned hundreds of the natives alive. They roasted at the stoke women and children, and burped them iu heaps. Their ablest and favorite divines declared that the burn lug o !bur hundred Indians lityucn mostly •• ALs..awact_aturn.t. to God, while they admitted that it was aw -1 fill to see their blood running and quench ' inethe violence of the bunting wood; and smell the stench. Mather himself boasted that they died that day sent four huudrad souls tb "They turned upon the Quakett. They lavemaiheart'-iines-for-heariertiver They passed laws against all other sects. They flogged inhumanly women and chil dren. They put them i 9 prison and whipped them daily. They cut off their oars. They bored their tongues with red hot irons. They hung Jneu,'women and - children as witches, and continued it for fifty years. The colonies of - New England were threat ened With absolute estemnination by their fanaticism. . They exiled Baptists and Catholics. They drove women and helpless children, under severest penalties, to seek proteotiou among the savages, i where they were all murdered because tiii;y• differed with them on ques'ions of meti.physical di •inity. Mather, the entire clergy, the gov ernors and legislatures all combined and vied with each .otlierin radical fury and hate. As late as 1740 they enacted the most barbarous laws against sectarianism, and enforced the Saybrook Platform. "And this was all done after the geniuses above named bad written. Chewier 'had three centuries before written' 'the Canter bury Tales. Spencer hod given the world the Fairy Queen and drawn the character of Arthur. A plan whose milling to please the world in an age of almost universal corrup tion, had made Portia to plead like an angel, had drawn the character of Duncan, Mi randa and Antonio; M.issinger had written and Allitov had sung the sublimost epic in 'the world. Bacon had written Norvum Or- L amnarEssex -- Ilatesell; -Raleigh; nnff gernon Sidiatirlind bled on the scaffold or •, the Tower. Magna °barter bad been a law over four hundred years. The Peti lista of Rights had been obtained GftV yeaej before, ana Locke had written On toleration in exile." REMINISCENCE OF 1818-AN AMERI- EEO Not loom since an elderly mad, bent al- most double with age and work, and in garments tatthred and loin, while passing through Rome, New York, stopped at one of the stores and asked for food or money. lie volunteered s ia metal that he was ashaml ed to beg, buttetated as au explanation atill in extenuation, the following as the cause of the necessity. His home was in Sarato ga, and he chanced to be in Canada at the time of the rebellion in that country in 18117. lie was charged with being engaged in the outbreak, was tried and convicted for beihg in complicity With the 'Patriots," and etstiteneed to Van Dieman'a cand for life. Ile says he was not guilty, but that the feeling was so strong ttgainst "Yankees" at the time of hie trial, that it required but slight evidence to convict. He was then some twonty-One or twenty two years of age ; he was taken to that pe nal colony, and there subject to the sever est drudgery and the most inhuman treat ment; he, with other convicts, was compel led to draw the plow and cart like mum, and to labor early and late, and treated Mit much better, if any, than the dumb beasts. Thus were twenty-eighty years of his life passed, never bearing from friends or home, nor allowed to communicate therewith. He, with others, were finally pardoned, and al lowed to reach home as best they could. lie left the country a hale and hearty youth, erect and full of life and vigor; he returns to it after nearly thirty years' ob scene° s deeriped old Men, bent over with age nd work, and with shattered heal and broken constitution The naration h gave of his Iffe there, end the detail! of hi treatment, fully impressed his hearers vritif the truth of his statements, and that he was no imposter. lie was on his way home, not knowing as he wounbi find a being who knew him when a boy.— MN (N. Y.) Her— —The Dennectratingain in five States is abode as hundred thousand voids, this year. This will do to begin with. Anoth er hundred thousand gain next yobs will eject a oonserystive Congress and place the country "all right." • --. 7 aTbe doverameet has recidived,dcs patdhes ft/firming the reports of tbd chol era having broken out at Bouthoryplea. Englimit. .4mA:a **aims 4.7411 trNION." IN OR OUT OF THE UNHIN The State of Virginia le either in or out of the Union If Virgipia is ilt the Union. she is entltded to all the rights whicit. the Constitution of the United Kates guarantees to the several Slates comprising the Union. If she is out of the, Union, phe is entitled to perfect fieedom and independence and hits the right to adopt each rules of Govern ment as may suit herself, IP She is not , tt menlber of the Union she l ls not entitled to al,eet: any one to repiesentler in tie Congress 'of the United States! The administnition of Mr Lincoln made wan•upon the phoplo of the States Which Passed ordinances of semeasion, because , It denied the right of secession, and considert ed all ordinances of secession es mere nil lities—that, in spite'of such ordinances, the States claiming to secede were still in the Union, and under obligations to ley the laws of the United States. If the fidmin istration had recognized the seceding States as being out of the Union, it would Lave acknowledged, by such recognition, that it had no 0)04 to make win. npon the_eidig,,eits , D .Ltim.. St tiv.____T u L ig a e upon the Sin th has no justification save upon the theory that the States claiming to secede were all the time, States in the Union. If this theory be derreot, (and it has been so tiedidetl by the stern arbitrament to Witch the question woe submitted) then the South ern States wore, during the war, 'and still are in -the Maze, ant - evntseptelftly; enTi= tied to all the rights guaranteed by the Constitution to Um several 'States of the Union. This being so, it becomes the duly of every citizen to claim the rights .guaran teed to them by the Cunstitutiod, The only reconstrlotions which 'can be rightfully Ind posed upon the liberties 4 the - people are those embraced in Lhe Constitution of the U. 8., and the laws inpurruaare thereof, not in viola/son thereof. But some say, wo aro a conquered people, we are governed by might, we ore helpless, we are in the power of • those wit() have no regard for the Con stitution, that it is folly to talk about mir Constitutional rights, that wo should meek ly acquiesce in whatever the dominant par ty should do, however violative of our Con stitutional rights. We do not concur with those entertaining •such sentiments. We beliive that we should contend in a proper spirit-the spirit of the people "who know their 1404, end knowing dare maintain" —for all the rights guaranteed to us by the Constitution, and we hive faith that they will he obtained, if the proper course be pursued. They never will be accorded to us if we do not claim them. it people wil ling to surrender their birthright do not do servo to enjoy IL—Stanton Spectator. OWNER OF IMAGINATION Alexander Dumas published in a daily Mitts paper a noret;lttivalstrtho trerotho, prosperous and happy, is assailed. by con sunipsi.n4l. All the gradual symptoms are most trinsilhihgly described, and the greatest, interest was felt for the heroine. Ono day the Marquis de 'arnica called on him. "Dumas," said ho, "you moan to lot your heroine. die?" ',Of course. After nob symptoms as have described, how could sh e lj ?" 'You must clangs the catastrophe." I onirnot." "Yes you must; for on your heroine's o depends my daughter's. Your daughter's? "Tea ; she has all the various symptoms you bare described, and watches mournfully for every number of your novel, reading her own fate in your heroine's. Now, if you make your heroine live, my daughter, whose imagination has been deeply Im pressed, will live too. Come, a life to save is a temptation—" ”Not to be resitited." Dumas changed his last chapters. lii heroine recovered dud was happy. Borne five years afterwards Dumas mot the Mar quid at a party. Dumas!" exolaimed, "let me introduouitott ,te my daughter, she owes her life to yott. There she is!' "That fipe, handsome woman, who looks like Jona' Aro." "Yee. She is married, and has had four children." "And. my novel foumoditions," said bu nuts; and so we are quits." 7 —The following Steals floating around and will be of interest to all those Who have the interest of hfatinichusetts at heart : Die Lewis, the latest apostle of gymnastics, is the principal of what wo may pelispe terra a Hygienic Educational nary for young ladles at Lexington, Maas., near Boet.ott, wherein. Theodore D. Weld is one of his assoilates. Wo bear that, recent closing elm:ideation at this seminary, one of the exercises (it we may so charac terise it) consisted of • careful mealunt meet of the waists of the pupils rospectt ly. and a comparison of. Ihe result In e h instance with a record preserved of a eirtti- . lar measurement at the opening of thd tend, showing an average net gain of 21 inches in circumference sinoe the Ist, of Octobeb hist. 4 'Me it crlit4 like to know if Dr. Dirt Lewis' system of gymnastios Watt in vogue among the Massachusetts jichoalmarms at Port Royal that:caused their waistso expand. The elituate of South Carolina ie more pro pitious than that of Massaohtvelts, howev er, for 2.i inches was nothing compared to the growing lien& 'cif the Port itoial apron strings. This is a momentous matter. bet somebody write to Cooley , fur the fads.— Council Binffa Bulls ---4Votorfullts are going of fro ;o. A RICH MARRIAGE CEREMONY The following doseriptron of a marriage, in Illinois' by it newly appointed Justice of the - Peace,, who jelbniewhal, of a wag, i 5 taken verbatim from a letter written to a friend. r Haying ,b,emi appointed to t. !arable aposish" of Justice of the peak .. ", wad moosted on the 6th of July; bif a sleep looking young man, and, in silvery tones . retreated to Proceed to a neighboring hotel as Mb wished, to enter into the holy bonds bf mptrimetty. Ifere was a "squelcher." I ' had never done anything of the - kind'; had no books or forms ; yet I was determined toile things-up Strang, and in a legal man: nor, '4O I . Fret:ceded to the hotel, bearing in my arms moo of the Revised gtatutes, one ditto Wehoter's Unabridged Dictionary, one copy largo size Bible, a small copy of the Creed and Articles of Faith of the iti:on gregationt. Church, one of l'ope's Essay on Man, and a aectional pet of the map where the victim lived. Having placed the table In the middle of the room, and seated myself ' behind it, I, in trumps topes, called the ease. With that the young min and woman, pith greet' alieity;steppid - dpinfrarO - TMC. 'tilaving sworn them on iii - CXiali - tnirTio answer well and (rely all the questions I was about to ask, I proceeded. L told the young man that, being an entire stranger, I should hare to ask him to .give bail for the costs. Having board this so frequently in court, I thought lb indispensable. lle - answered if - I — astafil The fee` the ceremony, he would deposit it then and there. As I did not know exactly what I did mean, I magnanimously maived 'that portion LT the ceremony. I (hell told him it would ho necessary to give bail to keep the peace. This he said lie was will ing to do when he arrived hole, and I then waived that point also. Having established., to my satisfaction that they wanted to get married, and that they were old enough to enter into that blessed state, I proceeded to lie the knot. asked him if ho was willing to take that wo man to, be his wife: . Ile said he was. 1 told him that I dial not require haste in the answer, that he might reflect for a few min utes if ho wished. I told him she looked like a fine girl, and I bad no doubt she was, but. if the 'sequel proved that lie had been taken in, I. did not want to be held respon sible. I said he must love,lanter, and obey her so long as she lived. Ito must not he "snappy" around the house nor spit tolitie- CD juice on the floor, all of wfuch he prom ised faithfully to heed. "Now," said I, inieorgiAnna (her name was "Georgiamia,), you, hear what Hum phrey says De you accept the invitation to become his wife? Will you be lenient towards hia faults and cherish his virtues ? Will yea ever lie guilty of throwing furnitt cure at his head for slight offences, and will you get. three meals a day wit bout gTuan- Wing . .131ie said she would. I then asked them if they behaved iu the eountiatiiiments and they said the'plid. Having read the creed and articles of fititlit, as aforesaid, I exclaimed; "Humphrey, take. her; she is yours I cannot • withhold my miasma . Georgittuna, when safe iu the anus of your flui..phrey you can defy the scoffs and jeers of the world." I then read a little dram the "Essay on Man," including that passage, "Man wants but little hero below, but wants that little long," slit a- finale to the steno, I ffelit,er ed the folowing exordium: "Go iu peace and sin no more." The generous Humphrey having placed fifty-cent in my unwilling palm, I bade the happy pair tHinal adieu. A Socuttr, wishing to puzide Thales, a \lilesiau, ono of the wisest men of Greece. proposed to hint, in rapid succession, these difficult questions : What is the oldest of all things? i^ . God, because ho always existed. What is the most beautiful? The world; because it is the work of God. What is the greatest of all things? Space, because it eoutains all that is cre ated. What is the quickest of all things? Thought, becatisi in a utombut• it can fly to the ends of the universe. What is the strongest - Necessity, because it makes men face all the dangers of life. What is the most diffioult'? To know thyself. What the most constant of all things I Hope, 'because it mill remaitis With wan after he has lost eserylbincelso. The Phihwarpher replied to them all with• out the least hesitation, Lind with how much propriety the reader can judge for ,himself. J art DAl , lO'B ECITATX-^ll.ll the telegraph Met night there b a statement that Joseph B. Davis, brother of the , ex-Ctnfederate President, has made a demand thertm. toration of his brpt 3 / 4 fir Jefferson's rrdirerty, as well as his own. We are informed by a gentleman who is odtivermnt with the mat ter, that there le 6 great misapprehension hrregard to Jeff. Davls's estate. Joe Avis was-tee owner of both the Barrio/a/mend Briarfield (Jeff. Dana's estate), and also awned all the slaves ou these places except dlie, which .was the Vey Jilt, given by his brother Joe at tie dotdmenoeutent of the Mexinan war. This,was the only slave Mr. Deals ever owned In Ills ' - All ihje talk about the great wealth of Jefferson Davis is from the lips of gentlemen who are not posted in regard to the men of the South, and equally fallacious ija,..the Idea that ho was ever sus extensive slave-mener orL. dealers Mslavint4Oincinnati Enquirer. No. 41.. THE SPIRIT tiC„FRMISM Thbugh tyrants may wand, yet they cannot dentruy tito spirit which freedom contains ; %Mid thu trnnapb, the shout and fiendish-liko joy,. lts vigor it ever retains. It it always present, though it be net seen, Nor its myriad roires beard— bike the.human soul, it may eppiiit abretie, . Though its innermost depths be atlrrat: 'TMVie Orals ltd tepbyr, after' the gale— _ • As tender as a dove to its mate— As dermas the tiger, when roused, to saes% The fuo Whieli has gendered lti hate. It thralls with the farmer on .thelerillb And in thelueuutain bunter's home; It rides With the /taller the billowy main, Aud through the towns and cities mains. When foes deem it buried, it bursts from tomb, Liko an °ne s e, uneagotl, to the sun, Esufting, as when it first sprang from time's omb-- It bounds to the race ixttnuNt run. Vt.'''. bind it with fetters, and toed it will chains, And arra'u that itkinsegrthe Db turd, like the lightning and sir, it disdains To kneel before any but (Al. latiLttitel the tyrants nko_hred hieh curb their ambition o'er men ; 'Tie Glue's prieejese gift, to eatise, It fade, but it rises again. rH A of martyrs its banners bate borne— They were not mortality 'a slam, And falling beneath than, when Galore.] an ton,, Wen their shreds have hallovred their grarr•.:. Oh, liberty f dearer by far than the life Of tnertals, who tread upon earth, Live thou, throb thilletepest, the storm and the strife; In Which thou rust awned at birth. —From the Cuiehugats bayairer. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER. —Handsome—Out Devil. —Coming—The jolly Christmas times. —A kind of angling that doesn't . atVrays take: Finldol for compliments. ,---Ooese;, dull ae they ate, imitate men Notice that if Imo of the Hoch' drinks, Oft roe follow. -4 book juat publialtal in London , Is called ‘•The Art of Bringing. Up Ono'cijitughter lbui• iy, and Making it Pay." —Philadelphia tlllO6 an average of B'l,Boo. 'OOO gallons of Bator daily, principally in Lb manufacture of lager beer. —They tell of a tornado iii Italy which blown train of ears into the Adriatic tsus, and drowned a lot of Ito passongere. —Mr. Brown, married man, of Now Jersey, ie dead. "Mrs. BroWn and an ounce of nrsnnto had 4outething to do with the transaction. —The king of Saxony is a great Dante scholar, and Las become the bead of a Dante society, width will publish a Dante annual. —The radical wing of the Repubileau par ty in New York have Issued a manifesto against the Paesident and the Republican Stale ticket. the western portion of the stare ap ples are selling for about $2.25 per bushel. Chestnuts range from $4.50 to $B.OO per braille. —A Western oditm. published a long leader on hogs. A rival paper in the village upbraids him for obtruding !lid family matters upon to public. -- 1 A young lady in Lonietllle was fatally burned lot week, having gone to deep over her embroidery, whoa the emulleuither burned down or toll over and ignited her dress. -21 young music teacher of St. Lords was killed by his horse, on which ho was mounted, roaring up on his hind feet, and falling over backward upon him, mashing in his/Ann. —John asked Julia ifs& would barn he; "No," said ►ho, "I will dot halo you ;" but be fore John could recover aunt The Ala . : ;4 ,6 archly put In, ''but you may have' mole --The following mune in published in the bet of advertisedletters remaining in the New York I.mM:five: John Oponoaubligratenttlelverabohbithiekee ---The La Crosse Republican, after calling neighboring editor "a traitor, a harlequin, and a Jlin," says, "we do *intend those remarks in the slightest degree as personal or offensive." —A clergyman who lost, his carpet bag with clothing and sermons in Neat Haven, re covered all bul,the sermons animus the baggage of an opera company at Albany. Hocauselivihn arrest el the agent pf the opera company for bob fisuating his sermons. till America, Put," writhe a tiod'of the Emerald Isle to his friend In Ireland, "Oa a fine country to get a living in. All ye have to do id to gut a three-cornered her, and 1111 it with - brick, and carry It to the to of a four story buildiriVand 11; man at the tap does all the 'work." - —lt Is stated that a gpaper fs to be shorted in New York, underAilb auspices of the National ranker's Repress Coupe,lily, ou the plan of the London Tisres. The patrostage earl the National Banks in Ow coedits:7 is said to be already secured, and a e dal pf $2,000,000 to be invested. —A Meriden (Ct.) clergyman presxliod from the text, "Adam, ere tut thou ?" hut Sunday. ithidcd 6 . disoottrae,inisi three parts; first, all men are somewhere; second, spine AM where they ought not to be, and third, unless they mettd their ways they ttin etemtiull ly Bed fittudaeltitirlsere they'd ltailitti hot be. —A" toted Veithti Mittel tbeefluil eabessotti of Now twit, Igeoltoileanb, Neer ;Arco; ittititf cud the New /itlitetal:Rteßob *A • hobble a conyestioa rt , AliruJ, 21.11,, to +Witt& tone end mews to wa4utt f atei bhp lerewhich tea all that we .4 weer, te ,per the imam" dn'the tultazeitiuYeruttfolit,teids stud ;At the debt, twattuetedltt, Ifltttlahtittg Maga. ', .--It Usti singular' ittot alit the shlUbly batAgginuo,eislip hivirsifoklissod -the Republic , ter tie leek four /Ws tuid have ben opou friaddly teem' with Russia, 'bulky and othet'seiutharbatoui nation/4 Lind oa bud tittits. with Chrtatitla palette. ttlitheielee. •lattlete cif 6 0 1 10ulettoe. 009itetif, Istiotl,4o.,couie frpakiles pots, oven so far away se Burnish, but rarely from, the - ehrighteue4 iteeitutatitits of mope. MAIIiSACHUSETTS rno . . • AND Ititft ; • boigest thi bk Speaker of Mg House of Reprasentatilis is 1800, the IlmiNelr. Bossier, of the Iffassrale Ferry district, in Virginia, spoke ese %Watt "When, sir, Hm , heard thb name of a gentlemen celled helots *. Oita day, first on the roll—e great historic name (Mr. Adams =-I 664, beidi reednded of Masse chusetts in her prinider day, in dab .heroiti age of the Republic. 1 have beenriatinded of a historical ineldent conOeoted With the county in which I lies--that cowatteelsOt- , ed by John Brown for his bloody, raiditaliti feel:that I have i right to appeal to the Maasschneetta delegetiete--hare, If.*HleY sat not deaf to thy: stikrof cottatqaplai4.und f they are, I appeal from Mina td tbeli people on this question ; I demand of theta to come up to the rescue of the douatfy now as they did in the good old times of the Revolutionary fathers. The which I,reprebeht and Ate , ' county , where live, that 'county 'Satin fanidtui by the . raid • of Brown, was the first, the very brat in tit the South, to send succor to hfasscohaseiti in Ott, lima ofher pirist neoeseitsl, In bac of the most beautiful spots, in Aims most beautiful county, wirhln...rifie shot of sof residence, at. the base of it lin AMPS g lorious sprin g leaps out info the from beneath the gnarled roots of a din der-riven oak, were assembled oh the 10th of July, 1775, the very first band of South- erit men *lto **rolled to the aid of Kama chosen& They met there then, and their rallying cry was, " a bee line tot Boston." That pesoeful valley—the valley' of the Shenandoih"--had never been pont:led by the footstep% of a fed` for even the Indiaq themselves had, according to tradition,bepe it free from the inooreihne of their enemies iitia ffie — bnitini Aborkgsatts. thnes »bp iirou there then MIN faiStitad the reach of dagger. The hearths of loaf , fathers were threatened with thilintion,' anti the fethers_of those whom/ represent sal:" lied to their 'protection. "Left the pia/Wild tiletaanitt Their Bork• and hoods tabvut a Midi The sickle in the unsbern grain, Their corn belt garnered en the plain, And mustered in -their sanzgledlasie Fur wrongs of relies to neek regimes." "Vim' they mustered around . the eyries I speak of, and from thenoe theymade their 'bee line for Boston.' Belo* tlity*Abilitheii they made a pledge that 'Ali would assemble tbern stty yetkro from that day. It Is my pride and pleasure to remem ber Um( I, though but a child then, was pretend. When the fifty years rolled ' Three aged, feeble, • tottering reerl:-Ant sur vivors of that gloridus band of one hundred and twenty, wens all who were left to keep the trysts and be faithful to the pledge made fifty years before to their companions; the bones of most of whom hied bat ISA bleaching on yotir northern bills. Sfr, I bare often beard froth the last survivor of that band of patriots the Hutidente of their first toasting add their Mardis; how they made •sosno sin hundred miles in thirty days—twenty. Miles a day ;, and how, as they neared the point of their destination; litgahington, who happened to be malting d reeonnoissanee in the ueigbhothtilid, • saw them approaching, and, rebtnitdeing the limey-woolsey battling shirts of old Vir ginia, galloped up to meet and greet them in the damp ; how, when be saw their taw lain, his old companion in arms, Stephen son, who had stood liY bit Mei at Llik threat - Meadows, on Draddobk's final field, and in an Indian eatobaign—who reported himself to his commander as 'from the tight tide of the Potomac'—he sprang frttut his berms and clasped bit old friend and companion lit anus with WWI. hands. lie spokes tip word of welcome, but the eloquence of 44g:ince told what his tongue could not articulate: lie moved along the tanks; shaking Ott hands of each, from man to man, end. all the while, as my infonsityAolti.me;klis.big.„ tears were seen rolling down bit °beaks: "Ay, sir, Wmthitignitt wbot i And Why did the glorious soul of Washington swell with emotion ? Sir, they *efe tears of joy,: anti he wept because ire - trertbut the beats!! of Massachusetts was pnuitioallx. the cause of Virginia ; because he law title her oils setts recognized the greet principles bral:. ved in the contest. These volunteeits had CO4lO spontaneously. They bad earns ,itt response to the weeds of her Henry, that were leaping like live thunder through the land, telling Ihkpeople they must tight, and fight for Massaohusetts. They bad tdritd to rally with Washingetm to defend your fathers' firtaidee i to pr6tect their heated from harm, Well, the visit' has been re= turned. ....John Brown selected , the very *aunty whose citizens went so promptly al•fite aid of thelluith wientliti Bunk dtsaiiid did. u the Most apphoptiale place II this illoitidt ed carte out thd doctrines of 'the irrepreasibio mallet ;' and do ',Sit mentioasti in USsAssza • ate Testerdityr the restA where*, itirisop444l--- wad the rock "over whioh 11orisap l ltmill, kik ~, men hod uutrohefl ,s few Lours, atiktr o /4117 , phensoos's oommkod crossed A tiselyieeer, ?pas lenn»es forth** OP. 3( ' illi /t . **at. • remliascente 6iiidle titli flaairliliti , 1111 . 4917:, len ia our lieirat • *II gitella :, .114Nt'1 ,. of eyes be rent fa Melons' btifilk It . - 6W- elide conflict.? It ill 1 •'. . ' .A, )„,aeel will ~le fte.gM ttue`titilidli • . - . For whet Abe dolt herr. itewbwaisifilifil te" May—when thelretalbfr NM tailletfilsge" and egl'otes AO *Nara elt• OW litttilsti,`-ilkA ' ' be tbrust-bans-the.ititata tit dame % I heitt't' decided Us thdi bloat , wfaiwasowet•4llllWPis swer4,, it flit balite is4OOW- daw.fter us wile ,-,.1 . at tuttnitistti Ablw, thokestia . 4 Meets itltie , , One upeatc .... ~ , , _ •., / , .', ,14 noi c 4, 1 t .. f ., , 1 / 4 ~ :0: ~,,,, . 4 „,„iiiiit Air tobibfft editor skre atat * 4111hint--W— -#l6W•ork lea hismalLintiari , • 414 lira, who.' 4 31411011zi. . •idihritileNowl''' b? 4410 1 1% bb1.,,401. 1 P0017,..diw1tw pa .; limy inell.STO — tioaoki, iplit rying.eue; ,A, _ satyr quite p nitialtir itiltudhatal outi gt it trouble. eamitltib," bitely pc* tit , ' / :ii Tit1ibbt4.04 1 .111411. 100 t, 14 4 • ',.. *PA editor Wilt to Mead fa ap s imaj,, wittitellitiply I w simititte 1111011 illia.. . 111 1)1140 3 ,10Ilt th 0 . 1 .41 0 1 544 .01 4 Id% part/acne Lau ' been paying vadypn So, ihd Statia or_ sactouqi oX4blifemic6l4/A . 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers