II Witttoo for the Democrat'. Watchman.] WHAT IS LIFE? ST On. W. CRAM What is 114 its hoperand pleasures, We should pr i isittlie boon so high? What its transports, what its U*l6ll/0 4 4 Clinging to, we fear to die? Ask the wretch, whose doom is sorrow, Cloth'd in rags and rsek'd with pain, Coilid be hine hie, oholte to-morrow, Would he live life o'er sisin Vlslotto of the grareisettne him, What bayohd he knoweth.not, Doubt* and darkness coming o'er him, Would he choose his present lot ? 4ak the rich man, bury tolling, , O'er•and o'er, 4iaatorea of wealth, Pear forever in his dwiliing, Ttoubletiheart and waning health, Fleoing, when no man pursueth, Starting, when no one is nigh- Tiretis hoof what he doeth,---- - 'Would he lire, or would he die? narrass'a though - hole, and weary, . Straight the starer he would give Questioner, Lb:grave is dreary. Bright the sunshine—tit ma Aye:" from the palace, richly furnished, Full of tinselly and show, Plates of gold and silver. bilrnisheil, .Lirrors that tefloct thorglon, To the mean, neglected hovels Where the stirring peasant dwells. Where his wife'end cblldren'grovel, Loud the note of sorrow swells. Etill, with beads that beat in angniah, Still with leeriah, aching brow, We had rather lie* and languish, Than to death and darkness bow. llserk the myst'ry—who fen read It? Who can tell us why 'tis so? Man of .Kitowledge, much we nee(Tt; Let the words of wisdom flow. 'What is life, Its hopes and ploasurea, We should prise the boon so high ? What its s transports, what its treasures, Clinging to, We fear to tile Borrisburg, HAVE THE STATES A RIGHT TO THEIR OWN .REVENUE? We propose to remark upon some of the leading points of argument hearing upon the issue of the taxation of capital invested iu United Sates sectir:ties; The question which first and most strong ly presents Itself is, has the Federal Gov ernment any power.to prohibit a State from taxing the property of its own citizens its own support! Or,tin other words,,Ntia a State any right to its dim revenues ? For reasons which seem to us perfectly conclu sive, we take the poslton that a State has the right to its own revenues, and, conse quently., that the Federal Government can— not deprive it of those revenues. TheStateitmxlsted prier re - the 'ftirmal ioti of he Federal- Gonettitt4ion, •and se inch they were governatents, to all intents and purposes. It is a pniversally admitted principle, which we need not stop to etre , that government has the power and the right to levy and collet' taxes upon all the property of all its Mlken, for its own sup port; and this power, together with every other attribute of sovereiguty, was posses , - od and esereised by the Slates within their respective limits, in common with all other legitimate nations,previous to the formation of our present Constitution. 4The tenth nrtielc of the amendment.' to the Constitnlion, prorated nt the flrgt see elan of the firo ., t Vedetal Congress rea.ls as follows : "The power+ not delegated to the Coiled Stittee by the, Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the Suttee, are resettred to the Uttes rerpeet ively, or to the people." in no pluce does die Conntittition confer upon Congres%the power to exempt from Slate and Municipal taxation the property of the citizens of the diffel•ent Stales ; in no place do the States surrender thejight which they originally bad to their esti% rue ileum,. Hence it mitio,,ftilleer, tinder the eectiou shove tpioted, that the power of taxation was "reserved to the States respec tirely," and mill remains in the States. What, then, is the true bearing of the act of Congress exempting the capital inves ted in United States bonds from taxation, and what does it amount to ? Simply this The States being possessed of the power to raise their own revenues by the levy and collection of taxes upon the property of their awn citizens, and revenue being as essential to the existence of a government as the vital air to the existence of an indi vidital, it is perfectly evident that a blow etruok at thin great right of the States is rt blow - at the very existence of the States. if •the Federal Government may deprive the States of one portion of their revenues, it May deprive Meta of another portion. If It may exempt from State and municipal tatatiOh the property of one class of citi zens of the State, It may exempt the prop erty of all classes, and thee the States lttq utterly overthrown. , .4 We diLnot deny the right of the Federal Uovernmentlo its own revenues, but we go deny its power to out off the revenues of a Ititri.ta. It may enforce payment of its'own demands, but it cannot lawfully cut the throats of the States. There is more in this thing than the mere consideration of dollars and cents; or even third its gross inequality and hijdetibe to in dividuals. It involves the very existence of the States, and of all our republican In attliitiond. This infamous aet'iff Congress by which the States are forbidden to raise their revenues finn robe class of their ed ges., ig elm inauguration of a system Which, if lefiwpaidily oorketed, will result in Fadical change of - opr form of government, thi utter ovorthroy pt , the State", and the centralization of all antheribein one abso lute and Irresponsible head.. But the peo ple are moving in the matter everywhere, and,orring 'in the ,right direction. Thank God, the warnings' of Washington in his famwell /Admits, WO of Jefferson in his in augural address and lest, message, are not entirely forgollen.—Posefec iacksonian. ==To prevent the kitchen. door from creaking, keep aawned ..girk-whoee been some to we her in the evening. U he Prinstrk tit -{kil;:tir Vol. 11. yoli , WON't, BUT YOU MUST. 'Mr. Republican, this way, if you please, sir. We do not mean the caudid, indepen dent man, but he who is under the party lash. Ten years ago you cried . out for retrenah =int and - reform. You declared you would not support men, so extravagant u the Dent °orate. • Time passed. Your party obtained pow er. Hs corruption and extraVakanee cur peened all precedent. Your political masters oraokea their lash over you, and you justified extravagance and apologized for corruption. Yon declared the Soutb was a bill of ex pense, and we vilittld be better without her, and paraded your faith by carrying sixteen atm' Sage, in honor of the siXteen northern 43tates. Your masters cried Union, and you shutt led; "It must bo preserved." • Your masters now say the Union shall not be restored until the South embraces the sentiments ot New England. You embraoe the doctrine, and declare there is no hurry abOilt restoring the Union. Your master's called the Democrats "Un- lon-savers." You naught up the sound, and 'hissed it from your throats. Your master', called the Donn:Wats "trai tors." Yop halloed it Prom 1441 -top and valley. Your masters declared that slavery ahould not be interfered bith. ltuu became ae strong pro-slavery men as the Democrats. Your masters said Slavery shoulereinain unmolested where it existed, but should not be curried into the territories. You applauded the doctrine, and declared it just and right. Your masters said slavery must be abol ished. - You cried loud against "the actureed in 01i1 at ion." Your masters said the nett-des were an inferior race, and should not be plaoed on an equality with the whites. •Yob addueod strong - arguments to prove that the negroes should tiever hale the right - GI - sate or hold office. Your masters declare the bloats equal to the-whites— You curse all who dare to insinuate that God sweated bee race inferier.to another. Your masters protested friendship fur the poor man. You gore eloquent egehlat the oppres alone of the rich. Your masters exempted the bonds held by rich men from taxation. You swallowed their opinion, and pro nounced it good. Your masters told you thin you belonged to the decency party. You strutted iu style, and sneered at the hard fisted sons of toil. Your masters now any you are no better thou negroea. Ton how In humble anbmission to their decree, wallow in the African mire, and de clare it good. Yon arc the slave of corrupt men. An invlrtintent used by knaves to promote sel fish ends. You have no principle—no sta bility—no minds of your own. Like the weathercock, you torn as the winds of your masters blow upon you. We respect a political opponent who acts independently and seeks to do right. The man who, like an old fiddle, can be made to pia, any tune, we despise. If you . arc in favor of the burdens of governynent being as equally dlstriAtted as its blessings, say so, and set aosibrffigly. If fou consider yourself better than:a nigger, speak out, and act, for the interest of wbite men. Don't wait for the whip to crack offer your backs to drive you into the party tra- COP. Act the wen, Act independently: It will beget respect..—llohnes County l'aentetc Rdwerd B. Ketchum, the forger, was sentenced, on Saturday, in New York, by Recorder Hoffman, to four years and six months imprisonment in the State .prison. A strong party of influential friends have already gone on to Albany to solicit a par don, and it is whispered that the new year will not be very old befow Rdwerd is him self again. The Albany Argus says that Romeo 0 reely, George Opdyke,Devid Dud ley FlekLand William E. Dodge wore in the 1 city a few days since, to urge upon Govern or Fenton the pardon of young Ketchum They were, fortified by letters from Chief Justice - Chase end others prominent in na tional politics. After this it will be no wonder if great crimes should rapidly in crease and small ones degrease. Rogues will not now so much endeaver -to escape 'detection and trial as to &told stealing in small quantities.• If they can Meal big it will be all right—sympathy—good family `respectability—high thoughts—genius— Pardon! Bpt, woe to the little thieves! Stealing little things is vulgar, but "appro priating" half k million or a million is grand t iilliodly has dignified that with a place , at the right hind of "the goddess Loyalty." With what mathematical preoi sion the Recorder has ciphered out 'the de greeil of,puniehleent I PriciseW y four years and six months C---Patriet Union, Discrres OF ADINIkITISIXO.—The editor of ittilenton has baba adverti sing for a boy some timapast as an apprest. Um itt hie ,offlee. His persistence has '7t last, been rewarded. Ile has one that weighs nine pounds. The boy will-not do any of the cheats this winter, .we presume. except the milking.—Caseopelis Venfocral. BELLEFONTIp,I'A., FRIDAY, JAITARY 12,18664 THE SOUTHERN SPIRIT. . We like the manliness of the - following article, from the Nail Era, of. Atlanta, Georgia: We made sacrifices In the Soulli air the sake of the revolution, 'which we honestly believed Would result in establish ing a wiser and more adValiced principle of political civilisation than that inaugurated and xnaintaiped by the American Perhops, we thought too well of the pro gress our oeuntryaien had made in the art of self-government. Perhaps, we erred' in thinking that the glorious era had arrived when two nations, great -- , • 4 Frosperous and happy, could exist 'aide by side, bound to gether hi conimon incestral n traditions 'and emulating eacii other in the sublime offices of extending the sway of American Broth- , 'oilseed over the emitinenC If so, we erred In illustrious Company. Our plans have toilet?. With the plans, our purposes have perished. We return to 'the Union. We acknoWledge theyplea, If we made sacri fices for a providential war, we are ready to make sacrifices for a providential peace. If we were men then, we are men now, the same men, though different as to aim awl end ; performing at that time what seemed a duty in separating from the Union and performing at this time that which equally heats a duty' in coming back, into the Union. Would any sane man desire us to go farther? Would any magnanimous man wish us to criminate ourselves in this course pursued? If we misconceived the resul tant effeettrof eighteen oenturles of 'Chris tian civilisation ; if we over-estimated the axiomatic, truths of the Declaration of Inde pendence no less than the reserved rights of the States, as those States stood related to the Constitution and co-related to one another; then, certainly„ hafe paid deafly enough for our Met Ifftiniiretationa of the spirit of the age, and- dearly enough tdo, for our ideal devotion to the. preroga-' lives of American Freemen. Suob is the attitude of the South towards the past. Such, too, is.her position towards the present. In each, she is truthful and honest. In each,she is truly and thorobghly herself and net another's. If she "is °net, down" she is not. "destroyed." If she is ',hastened, she is not, and eminot he hutuil- Under this bead the New York Daybook says, ff any person desires to know just W much he is paying for the negro, let biat,iteep an account of his zu2chases for ,hrh — f - kis a an stri e balende between fitted. If she has lost her property, her altars. If the ranks tif her living sons are sadly thinned, she will cherish the meM ory of her illustrious -dead. With ouch a past, with such a present, we are ready to meet Ole future Providesre may ordain. The future does not frighten ul. It slit sery has gone, 1111t1 gone forever, we should think it disgraceful to admit that our ener gy, and enterprise, and skill had likewise departed. We can be mendohanks to Prey idenoe, without being slaveholders. Insti tutions never make men. Men make insti tutions. The larger-part of human institu tions might perish to-day, and on to-morrow mankind would rise.from their ruins to es tablish the structural forms of opinion and policy in other and grander shapes. If the cavaliers of the South have deseendod to the grave, full of years and full of honors, they have fulfilled their destiny and yielded to thednexorable dedree of "duet to dust." One day our "Ivanhoe" will be written. One day our ltichtrds and Itebeccas will be better understood and appreoiated. One day il indiee will be demo to their motives and aspirations, if, forsooth, their brave impulses and lofty aims hurried thew too fast and too far. But, meanwhile, the aged Puritan is permitted to Slii4eive the dead Cavalier. We have no fault 'to find wi the edict. We prefer his having time for repentance and tears. If Cain auruived Abel, acid if the wandering Jew outlived St. Pe ter, ware content to see the moral of this lesson brought home to the men of this generation. CARRY O'LANUS ON RECENT POII7TI , • CAL EVENTS. [From the Brooklyn (N, Y. Iga:eel : colored citizen has come to gri9f in Connecticut. lie may ride in railroad oars or crowd white trash in the jury -box, but Connecticut save he cant vote. Sympathise with Sambo, at the same timb t congrayate Connecticut. Which: shows my impartiality, rl have no prejudice against citizens of African desoent. American citizens can have any deseent they iike, As to color, it itt a matter of taste. Some may prefer " Wearing of the Green." Rome uNty prefer blank. •For my part give me the Red, White and Bide. Boma phogle base their objections to the African on the "scent" rather than the .desoent," Samba' may tot be as fragrant as the Egyp tian Lotus, which Clebpatra is understood to have perfumed -hdr handkerolyaf with whet she went down to the Nile to meet Mr. o .' Anthony. [N. B.—•I hare this from the Artist who executed llooley's drop certain.] But this is 4ftie county and'everybody has a right to select their own perfume. I object to being led by the •politically or otherwise. .• I insist on giving the African fair play. Being..a.man, and somebody's brother, he has a right to self-Goverment. Let him go off, somewhere and govern himself. Be needn't be particular where he goes to, so long se he goes. -There are some . • .nntriesr where hist Complexion if faahlOn able ; where he oau lay off in perpetol •aiairrs min iIIIDERAZ trznow.,, sunshine, and tiro inhabitants are not troub led with tailor'S bills. If he has est his mind, on the ballot-box be can. go to Massultasette, where his su periority to the white man is recognized. Particularly in War, time, when the privi lege of doini all the fighting will be db 1301.- fully accorded td blot • But einuid the Africsn depart,, what ; would become of the Republican party No. 9 Court street would soon be miter: tised to let to w small family without chil dren. ' , Boss 'Gale *Quid have to turn hli atten— tion to dome honest pursuit for a living. Brother Tilton would have `to hire handopit and peddlitl the procieds of his tin gredding. Plymouth Church woild pcbbably be turn into a religious edifice. Comthissioner Spooner would dry up, and make an intorething fossil for a' glass case in the Historical Society's collection. Just think, my boy, what Would have been the consequences if Noah hail signed the ple4o before he came out of the Ark ; or hie son Ilam known better than to laugh at the rtight old navigator, tensile° he for got to draw on the bedclothes when he went to sleep off his drunk. Then there would have been no colored person—and no Republican party. No re bellion. No drafts. No National debt. .No income Tax. This shows the necessity for onoouraging the Temperance movement. I wonder Gough never used the African as a frightful example of the ultimate re sults of intemperance. Ile can use this illustration in his next MEE It ought to bo a very effective argument with tile Ame'icon 'tropic. Think of Noah and imagine an African at the bottom of every tumbler. THE COST OF THE NEGRO. • .. qaustsLiduhkAaummo. articles could have been bought for previ one to the War. That balance will repre sent the exact oost of the negro to him. For illustration that paper gives a bill for muslin for family use purchased recently, and contrasts it with one made for the arti cles previous to the war as follow; Mr. D. to To 34 yds Canton flannel, 4.7 , c • . $l4 60 To 43 yards muslin, 450 . • .19 35 Before the war these godds would have eoetit fUIIOWS: MI yds Canton flannel, lie 43 yds maim, lOic, Cost before the war Cost since the war. Cost. of the negro $26 00 While this is„ the amount of money oh- . streaked from the pockets of the consuming Classes through the agency of the war, in one way or another, yet it must be remem bered that it finds its way into the hands of the manufacturing and capital classes. For Instance, it.ia said that the New Eng land mills make a profit on all light goods of one dogor upon every pound of cotton used. The stocks of all these nignufacturing Com panies are double and tiorle their par rates. The Newburyport herald states that the James Steam Mill of ihat oily, with a cepi-' tak of $250,000, has during the past foci' years paid $412,600 to its stockholders! The same journal states that should cotton mds fall fifty per cent. lower thau they new are, they will make ,profits never dreamed of until since the wersomenced. should ever be borne in mind that the ehrewd Yankee Congressmen had no sooner driven'the southern states out of Congress in 1861,.than they proceeded at. once to pees the blackest tariff ever put on the statute' book,-and they seethed datintelned to 'keep them out for fear it will be repealed. They Aught the South to "free" the 007 gro With one hand, and filled their po ets by monopolies with the other . do amain up the cost, it is imipssible to say how much has gone bare the pockets of the mo nopolists, but It makes but little difference to thq man that has it to pay. The cost of negro is now a constituent element in every purchase. lie exists in every yard of mus lin, in every pound of flour, in every beef steak, in every potato and every pound of butter the poor man buys—in his coat, hall pantaloons and shirt I There is no article which is not advanced in ptiee to allow the negro to 101 l in idleness and cotton lords to revel in their one hundred per l cent. profits. The poor mats ekes out a scanty substance in thertimement house and the shanty—kbe farmer deprives his 'tinily of books and newspapers, And brine up his children In ignorance, because their sweat is distilled tom their broww . to Pifj , the taxes which Make Sambo a vagrant and the Isaias monopolist and millionaire. • Spool:nen' of Niagara oratory are rather stale, but here ht a bit,.iriated by a trustworthy authority as mahout*, 'which has not been in print before : ••Where, is glurope masplired with 4,Merica t !towbar 1 Where o p England? . !towbar? They ea England the taistiess of the sae but, whet makes the sea „ The Mississippi liJer makes it. And %niers got to do Istotstm the bitssissippi Into the Alaminoth loyeamd the Batilbk nary will bl ilotliderftig-in the mud A FEW QUESTIONS 'FOR. FANATICS , Is slavery abolished as an Institution in !the United States? If so, how wee it done ,unless the amendment to the Constitution of the United States to that effebt was rati fied by Statewin the Union t Was the proAlaihation of Piesideat Lin coln, abolishing siaVery; at, any binding foice nnieserbinding on Mites subject to the powers of the General Government of the Union! If so, bow could the:) , be subject to the General, Government uniesh they *ere in the Union If the Confederate Stake were out of the Union, and not subject to its Constitution and laws, but to their government establish-, cdt.ially had they itot, power to create a debt which mortgaged the land and proper ty of its inhabitante, and which, being held by foreign nation', at least so far, beOt,le a debt not to be repudiated either by its own subjects or by the cation conquering it iq force of arms lied the Confederacy succeeded in aece• ding from the Union, and acooMplishing the object of their rebellion, and subse quently bad we, through purchase or an nexation, United, sliould we not have been obliged to assume its debts as well as Its territory T If so, under a peaceful annexa tion, are ire not equally liable through con quest, if those States were out of the Union and a distinct people with an esjahlished government Can any legislation by Congress, any ex pressions in any of the proclamations or measures of President Lincoln, any state ment in'any of .our diplomatic correspon- dence, any orders from our Generals in the field, he produced. which for a moment can be - construed into an admission on our part that that! States were not subject to - the requirements of the Constitution? Then why delay to consummate the pur pose of the war, to reestablish the Union under the Constitution, and again unitedly Rress forward toward the accomplishment of the proud destiny contemplated by the founders of the Republics—Boston Pool. CORBY O'LAN US Many people laugh at the idea or being antra t — Z a doi's feelings, ae if It were the height of absurdity ; and yet it is a foot to pain, shame, and mortification, as any bran being. See, when a dog is spoken harshly to, what a universal droop seems to come over him. Ins head and ears sink, his tail. drops and slinks between hie legs, and his whole air seethe to say„"l wish I could sink into the earth to hide myself." Prinee's.yoting master, without knowing it, was the means of inflicting a mosPrilerri hie mortification on him at one time. It was very hot weather, and Prince, being a shaggy dog, lay panting, and lolling his tongue out, apparently suffering from the heat. ' 133 95 $3 38 4 61 declare," said young Master George, "1 do believe Prince"Vroiild be more ors fortable for being etared. And so forth with he took him and began dirdding him of his coat. Prinoe.took it all very obedi— ently ; but when he; appeared with hit] us usual attire, every one saluted him with roars of laughter, and Pripoe was dreadfully mortified. lie broke away from his rat4lter, and scampered off home at a desperate inure, ran down thb cellar and disappeared from view. Ills young Master 'was quite •". tressed that Prince took the matter so to heart; he followed him in vain, calling, "Prince Prince!" No Prince appeared. Ile lighted a candle, and searched the cel lar, and found the poovereiture cowering away in the darkest nook under the stairs. Prince was not to be orforled r. he slunk deeper and deeper nod deeper into the dark ness, and orduched on the ground When he saw his muster, end far d 10iii time refused even to take food. Tho futußy all vieiteit and condoled - with him, and finally his sorrows were somewhat abated ; but be would not bo persuaded to leave the cellar for nearly a week. Perhaps by that time he. indulged the hope that his hair was be ginning to grow 'again, and all were care ful nst, to destroy the illusion by any jests or, comments on his appearande.—Mrs. 97 89 • i i• I 33 05 " RATEITL INOPPOZTONE.—The massacre in Jamaica by the Negroes happened rather inopportunaly for' llitcliause of Negro Suff rage in the South . . ft is a crushing argu ment against it: If there are snob things as spacial, pz2videnees, that iheurrecition must . have ban a special prcildenott, de signed' to admonish our people not to_be,in too great:haste in elevathig the Negroes of the BonllC.to a political Oquapq 'with the Whites. • —There was &heavy leo freshet on the West Branch of the Susquehanna last week. It is estimatod.that over "event* Ave mil lion feet of saw legs passed Williamsport in one day—the heaviest 'loss ever 'austained by Lumber-men in that seoLion:- "My brethren," said Swift. in a sermon, "Menage throe kinds of prole, namely, of birth,• of Idaho * of intalleot. I shall not speak of the latter, none of you being liar Me to Wait abominable see him On hie 01dies, CO," said Mrs. Jenkins, as she sac Mr. Jenkins cork sereving his way home, just its the shades of twilightleefe creeping over the btadsespe It to the °Aston of the doetar that the law ergetehia Wang by-Amadei, orbits the bawyor_Wikalio the doable. sets its by aga . gr A DOG'S FEELINGS. -=- - The Fenian State Convention of Ohio has declared for Roberts and Sweeney. $ll n ohmic") Wenshive 1 —Secretary Stanton's friend; in Weskit's torry that he is going out of ,the Osbinet. No. 2. Ega Written for ehe Domoorstio Watoiunan.l LINES •3'O BELLA. A pair 0r mild bias eyes are thine, Their magi o power I may ant tell, Yet, 'round my heart they still eiltwilia, With golden chains, sweet friendattip's spell Within their beauteous depths i see Lore and purity,,benven,born, That lends s sweetness unto thee, Like Sunshine to a summer morn. In glooiny hour* I MIME of thou ; • While musing o'er the faded put, That angel form I still oan see, Though far apart our lots be out. The memory of those eyes to-night, , Of those blue eyes, so fond, so dear, Is graven on my !matt as bright ds when thy form wort ever near. Within those love-lit orbs I tract , Unchanging love and raitti sublime; Andbeauty of soul shines in thy taco, Untarnished by the hand of time. Like sunbeams is my memory lire The happy hours I've spent with thee; "Those days, now past, some sadness give; Tot live, in memory, dear to me. gasetl hitotrosa oyes ot thine, And thought I Jaw some sadness there; But thought thy heart too pure a shrine To - cloud with sombre hues of care. Thy soul, with wealth of feeling, seems To shine through those dear eyes of blue; May thy whole life be one sweet Vesta Of inuoconco pure and virtue true. O. W. I. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER. ----There le no ianik thing as an cony chair nit a disoontented man. —Why 4i a miser like swotted timber'? Because ho never gives. —Put no faith in • now promise baud on the breach of an old ono. —Those who hoed not God's writ we often forbad to heed the sheriff's. a burden is leisure to a mind un prepared for Its enjoyment. --Why are some fortune's like ships? Be cause they are built on stocks. Why are people who stutter pot to be relied on? Beestue they are always breaking their I= --It a lady Is asked how many rings she has, mho fan say with truth there's sk4) and to thom• , _Artomas Ward eV that his hair raison bles lovers on the eve of separation. It Lollard to part. —Secretary Stanton and Judge lion hove both declined to deliver the eulogy on President LIZIOOIII. --Any is the tooth-ache like an unanswera ble argument? Because it makes people hold Sheitjkw. —Business is declining in New Orleane and stoat hare been sold. for lees than the bricks Walt worth. —Steam communication is about to be re opened between New Orleans and Aspinwall via Havanna. —William C. McCarthy, Republican, has been elected Mayor of Pittsburg by a majority of forty votes. hue tient a modal to the Em• • ass Eugenie, in recognition of tier visits to the cholera hospitals. —The Fenian Congrossihas not, as yet, re stored harmony in Ponies. Roberto ham refused to recognize its legality. --a-It is elated that Senator Doolittle has boon offered the • portfolio of the Interior De pertinent, but has declined. , —During the war 0,000 persons were con fined in the military prisons at Washington. Of those 4,500 were State prisoners. ...—Four companies of regular eatalry, sere• lug in Cumberland, Md., have been ordered to report for duty in North Carolina. —Arkansas is reported to be in a deplore• blo condition:' Life and property aro insecure, and portions of the State are threatened with famine. —The order mustering out general officer's is expected to be issued before the 15th instant. It is thOught Unit silty generals will be dis charged. —Darin the year 1665 the Pension De partment admitted 40,262 pension claim, Mid rejected 12,262. These are still 84,200 claims to be considered. binidredi honot Moo, whose term had expired, were to 'ail from Vera Crus on the 20th'ult. Their places were expected to be filled by arrivals. —Captain Semmes is Mill cronaned hi the navy yard at Washington. He is strongly , guarded, and Is not allowed latermoutse with. any one but his counsel. . —.—Governor Corry;of Nubia, has been inau gurated. Ins inatuputil professes to approve of the President's policy, mid at the min time az goes in &mg. of "ogre buffrage. —The iecand aanivescary aqua tochlor lat. Archbishop Unglue was eidehritted re Wednes day at St. Pet:rider Cathedral, he Ram Toth, Archbishop MoOloshy ---Brent hielar General R. G. Tyler hap lo sued an order ntergius the nattier 6f Dolower* and the theaern Shore of ltferylind intit,ate mllltatj , blateiot of Pennsylvania. —The Milian !Waist/or at Washington)* submittal' to our govertose4 a protest bone ea Chalon Prooldeut agslaoa tMs witrieswit of Span troth% hhe Clam pelvateoso anPlistak Governor Andrew, ot . .Yeesteinuete, limed hhaeolt r ot velodletory to the iterieti ohnsotia lesidetere. Hie urpd awe new and various other SONNOSIS IMS:aptAyllif to thr loath. • MO* Ta ovicat THE ABHI.II "throw eentr3tenee t•the devil matt slats! by your party," Will the advice Vaal. Me te= gaVe his friends in the Pennsylvania Legialatuhe, ,ken, in 18$8, he tried to form upon that J3tete a ,einority taverner. It Is writhing that Stereos is notlig iipon the mime pribeiple now. Ifs says, in' his un blushing speech againit admitting ttM southern members of ffonspetra that IF ll l — to kerfi &obi out in order to se ' tiiiitrife — aiteentrantijof - Stevens knows fall well tbat_tf the liorrik and the South can once more get together. they will govern the eountry ark Wes gbh. tamed %afore 'the war atottrrred, end hence he strains every nerve to keep the Unica broken up. 'Ma St makes Bale or as pretence that he act! from any motives otia , er Matt strictly politioal or party ones..-% bases may do so, but be prefers to go di reotlyte the point, the preservation of the Abolition party in power; mad this Markle lone by the vassalage ittetilavery of eight milllocaeli whit, melt ! Ile demands the recognition of negro suffrage, although the • `North almost unanimiarsly rejects It. He deolsrlis that that is not a reznablican [ors of government alters nogroes are denied any of the rights of white men, thus 'arm ing that Washington; Jefferson. Mattoon, and all the world called "a republican got. • ernment" for the past eighty years, was all a lambing r Jfirabils ditto/ That we should' have been compelled to Bee to dear Thad. Stevens and Charles, dumper tell us what a "republican government" is It is really dreadful to think of. But so it Is-Sooner and Wilson, Thad. Sieves. and Colfax are now the statesman! America But the most astounding spectacle ii, perhaps, the fact that there is probably an man on the Poor of Congress so'l °. eau suet cesefully reply' to the argument as presdn. ted by Stevens and Sumner. Hone, at least have as yet tried. If "slavery" is wrong, why are not Stevens and Sumner eight? Who is there able to tell ? Speak eat, yp marvellously wise men wits think that iii gro subordination is inootopatible with trine freedom and liberty. Speak out, ye model Democrats, who think and my that the 'Abolitionists have done a - good thing to bringing.upon tie °study Ikb equality of the mem c Ibt simple truth is, that there leno . pos- Bible way under heaven to answer Btltveue and iiitmuer except to take the ground of the inequality and diferunee of the' rails. Upon the ground of the unity Of the rases / they have - alt.the argument and all the . phila osophy with them, and there is no more chance of evading the oonehesions they ar rive at, than there is of dads's* a 'husk of lightning. All the arguments published in a thousand'aewspapers, if. they did nit touch ibis point, and all the speeches deliv ered by ten ihoUtiand.urator,. with the do, quenee of Cicero, Demosthenes, Cif ind" *.- Webster osaittinedi, would have no more eifeirt than a pain? Whistle la a hurricane, ' 6 " 00 * 6 o 4.lalati.=3=liteilii ling and titling, blowing their trumpets and Oldness gongs, talkie% ranting, Deffing, blowing, and doing everything and any thing but to coote - to Usenet's:. They ought to understand that this Abolition part' rests open a broad and mighty foundation —a fain one, it true-.but,„ at the tame time, one that has been accepted by the great intellectual, meal end religious forme of modern society. It wet only the other day that en editor from Michigan, who was trying to be a •uoneerrative Democrat," informed ne with greet gravity that he be,: tiered all the distinetiousbetween the mese were art(ficiat—the result of climate, and othlT cause. l We told him that he might 'to be an Abelitionist at ones I far if the ztegro's color, hair, and mental inferiority were the result of climate, or wrongs that had been infiioted'upon them then the Abe; litionists were right in trying to nude the* and bring the persecuted and defortstaate rade beak ...to its normal condition. Now, when such profound ignorance as this man " exhibited is found among men calling them soiree Democrats, what can be expeoted of the members of the , Abolition ptartyl those whp are daily and hourly taught by their organs of publie opinion,. the! all men 'of all races are entitled to equal rights I There is bet one way to meet this gump tion. and that is to deny the equality or upity of the rms.. It Is not necessary to bother ottrbMffirse to how they same to, or 'where noFroes spralg freak- , whether from Cain" Or Abel, or Nam or Cbus—ill this argument is childish, puerileand irrel evant.. It is enough for us to commence with tho unanswerable feet that the negro is a negro, just as much so as a be... is a horse, or an or an ox. or as o*l an'owl. If he io a different being front • white mas t It follows he tenet oesupy - srelifireetposition in society ; and that is all there Is of the argument. After having got your untie. niet to that paint; yell inue veil well afford, to let him extricate himself if he. can. Let him define what t his alerted position should be—how he woultriiiittpt the dell laws to meet those differences. Once let the argu teent be narrowed down to' this point, and the great fonadatigcs falsehood upon which - the entire Abolition superstructure resit trill tumble down in one grand heap, at once Until we come to this, all attempts toyrer,-,, throw the Abolition party willend in dials inns Boot. . , . —Major General Howard biota -gob the Superintendent of the Free Negro Burson at Richmond to haslet epos =sickle the fot:- mer owners responsible for the ear* of des titute freedmen. Genera Howard Judos that " the name of any penal. refttsing to obey this .Order shall be pronely 'epode' .to hit at faelostoa s so that he may iq the ease p;;eoa the P%Mitlatit , for kis &SIM Wks is to 'sit book WI; Ito.. to so* to work or be outdo tp lijd to bbißollrist Leics. ilis Witte i sod If sliO *ea refuses to wor4 grid WATS Oh evilest of dub, Aso, we possoote, bb : meat Of *poetise; blsosolf are to be Wks* si*ity . hosrlds. Ws to tha - Arisfes of dice parfikt" 01(04 41,40 - dialer (add* y, "tratrO pet ' i • bit* from marl Pod,' 'I