JEFFEnsoN" DAVIS? IT 1101.1611111 I. MOll, "To err to Hentale-L' Divine." Moroj for a fallen Aid l The Angel, Peace, bath stilled the mighty storm, But a deep. and restless grlef. Stirs the mute heart and urges the warm Lips to pluttld forlhat bowed defenselessform tt Upon hie eaptive head , [wrath ? Must the strong arm, ot : rengeanee wreak its . ' Aloe I If his hands are red, . Ours are no less so; ,we trod the path Ile trod; we followed where he led I lit We know that bldod bath poured, We know that voices have been stilled, know Among ye *druid inebid Roth made sad havoc, Maths golden glow llath faded from many a warm heart and board! lint have tre n6t tied (strewn And andered too? are not thole dark fields With our unmontunanted dead? _ Told tre not feel the dot* elands overhead, And tho sadden midnight that overtook the noon? And It you call ft sin. The l'ast--are then our Buffeting's leis 1 flat eh, As If itfhad not boon The past appears while we . with grief sod woe /lend for your eaptivo—ho bee cowed to be your toe? • The - little child Aloha for hie couch at night, lifting hie brow In supplication mild; Whispers the honored name; a hallowed glow Suomi to enwrap. him ao hie accent/111os, I The young girl trimming her wreath, Pauses among her , heap of dewy flowers, . And revotently breathes A Prover for the great heart whose weary house No love may soothe, for whom there springs no flowers I The winter head [knell Of the ,heart-hroken sire who has Beard the Of hie first burn dead On the field where hie friend and brother fell ? Bowe while he names the, captive In hie cell I 'Behold I Bittcr with grid and stung with gnawing pain Which never can grow old I And croscd with many a bloody stain, [slain I A nztion's throbbing heart upon the shrine , is And by tho bravo red streams 'nut mingled when the otrifo was hot and high, And by the flushes and the lurid gleams That shot up from our burning houses, end by pleading heart's that - mount towards the 80. And by tboie, memories, Common to us all, for friend or foe, '" .• Yes, by tho dears dear eyes, Hidden forever 'neath the clods that know No bond or barrlor'tnixt the hearts that sleep below. . • xtt By the tenda hearts that grope ly atter the kat, and by the lone Proud souls that yield all earthly hope, By that gad pant o'er which all true hearts moan, "Mercy" we plead for that loved and honored onel EBB Behold 1 Sliahen with turf, ea by the rain n lead, (old, Filled with Bad thole that never can grow Bat wreathed with sweet flowers of eye pathy and grief, A fallen Xationl heart pleads for her fallen Chief! THE END OF FANATICISM Very many newspaper writers profess themselves seriously alarmed by the revo lutionsry Attitude of the Republican party. They tared, to think that the political saw tion of the country now bangs doitbitM upon the utterance of the President. That so shallow an opinion should find such gen eral credit is in itself no favorable foreshow ing for the powers that be. The truth is' that the end of the war brought with it the end Of the party that made it, . It now holds power by succession and not by consent.— Its leaders are stricken dumb and blind by the exigencies of their present position. To deluge the country with debt and blood' was a task as easy as It was congenial...— When the necessities of the Treasury were the only. measure of its authority any dab eter in finance could pay his way. Every gap between end and means was bridged by a note of hand. The determined spirit with which the nation defended its unity and the passionate ardor of war gave support and Immunity to a weak and cruel administra tion. New measures of exasperation - and new levies of men followe d milt other like the thrusts of a weaver's shuttle; The his torian will trace the fatal thread with hor ror. But Mr. &anion's last time is over i tho day of passion is past, and pay day le fast approaching. To reunite the lately belligerent States in the bonds of political fraternity ; to devise an equal syetem of taxation adequato to the payment of the in terest upon cur frightful debt; and to solve the problem of whet .to do with four millions of Ignorant negroes, thrust from their homes and oirtione by the fate of war, incapa ble of 0 llunship anct emancipated from compuleary usefulness—are the questions upon which the Republican party are now sailed to sot; and on every one of the quell; ' tionsthey find themselves split' into conten ding factions. They can only agree *upon measures calculated to gain time by prolon gingitatata of war. The soft pitted fanatics of New England are at their wit's end ;• and the most crafty as well as the most able and thinking , tnen of the party are 0.441; th eir : lines jeer , the President,. inArthop•linder the shadow of his. wing to form a newiolW kid orpnisatlon time - . leel?le.:,Sttempti. laws been Made to dtaititint the imperative demand of the countryby.s; Shwa. change.' "Old Greenbacks" hasslaftad his. seat from the Treasury to a more secure sitting. The chairmanshipailf.the committee of Ways and Means, 'and L : ilia ;iirtual' liadershlp . ot . 'elm roost Impel** . brapeh .or 4 1 4 legislatiire, has been entrusted teetheterioat pre•emlnentr . ly stupid . of the Iteptibilaan iittanolers, The west is to be conciliated ,by. ' ntodifloitlono of the internal 1 revenue 'laws, and eastern manufsolUriirs "remunerated . ' aid pailipered by a tux on cotton. - Were it . not for the awful import to the 'country of the . politioa) oltuation, the spectacle or the . present Con= . grebe, sitting 'tale-mated On; l tbilly,baimobee NA 11 4,!4 4 . bgpr, lii4 4 lPif Pa4itti4l4o4l, amendments whisk will setsvii,be. 'ratified, - would be 10[110117 ridlolllo4 . !:011 felkr,Of 40,4 ill Up011 . i4111; 011 it 111 to' 4te for Prwildsl4 1ch#4 4 ,4 IgtStiyi tkow ..ar.teveti ti save { JaMiltit• • 4140 b :, 1)444' and . b1904* tbrielq atX IMa as Plroilii itudi3•l444* *0 j o PA P.1FF04404444444. etiatt, Jand. spit tbelF-splis. - The altill . V0,1447'''". RII all`POOkirkiedi 1 1 . . ' '' ll o.,• iiio:dic and gii,isittil.bcporftirsoymiso i iCiliquper, 1a g if43 0 41 0119 4-. P,S T V. IO . p• IMl 4 4:o..; l 44 . *PR*Tirb4i _. ...A:111 4 i " 1 0 4 ,l• pomp krawite that t:OlevihwhailP ll4 o 9 44 , 06 it fiii4",4ol/11•14,404::,4 -t*POILII tt041 1 0411,01144 If ,Coo 1F44 on ' "" 1401w14(10-1414441940 4ellendont .. • .. . _. . . . . . , • . 0I , . , Vol. 11. upon the grant of the elective' franchise to negroes, he declared -that he preferred the Southern States should cotitinua to dlsfran ohise4W negroes, and iose the additiottal membO'rs of Congress their negro population would entitle them to under the amendment rather than by "copperhead assistance" ,to attain a majority in Congress. Mr: Stevens would and be wouldn't. Ile loves the ne gro theoretically ; but hp bates the Demo cratic party practically. knows that in 1864 the Democratic party in thetNorthern States counted the startling aggregate of 1,800,000 votes. Mr. Stevens also knows that In 1860 the Southern States polled 800,000 Democratio votes, which added to the vote of the Northern Democra cy leaves the utmost etregth of the Repub lican party in a minority of over 800,000. It is this fatal predominance which purely zee the arm of the Republican pa'rty. They stand aghast before the apparition of a united country. Petty men among them run hither and thither with their tinkering pole suggesting and attempting alterations in the fundamental law which shall make the future life of their party possible; but the patient is past recovery. Until we have another civil war there will be no necessity for another Republican party. The great questions which gave rise to the war are now remitted to the coming statesmen .of our time, •It cab hardly *be said that the war has settled anything. It has brought us face to face with a new ex , periment in the treatment of the African race. It has also put us to the proof of how a burdensome government may be made tolerable to a free people. To wisely solve the questions must tax the courage and ca pacity of our wisest and beat men. The party in power stand confessedly incapable, divided and distracted. ''he opportunity and the responsibility of the future will fall into other and stronger hands. Meantime, we can -well afford to let Sumner strut' and Stevens bluster. They sing an appropriate funeral ehant . over the grave of fanaticism. —Loch haven 'Democrat; • SIR MOUTON SBTO.—The subjoined brief sketoh of Sir Morton Peto, the leading spir it in the Atlantio & Great Western Railroad Company, will be read with interest: Morton Pete comtneneed life a mechanic, li and by dint of bonen industry and enter prise, has gained the title of "The Railway King of the World." He is represented as being a talkative and agreeable person, care ful in his bearing and speech, and a devoted member of the Baptist church. lie heads the railway interest of England,and is large ly interested in several American 'lines, prominent among which is the Atlantio & Great Western. He controls the employ ment of one hundred thousand men, and his speaulatiOns embrace the United States, Canada, Russia, Austria, Italy, Peru, New Zealand and Australia. The laborers on the lines he regulates are said to really out number the fighting British army. He is largely Interested in tho operations of sub terranean Lends* where his workmen are "picking"- night and day, and his - engines rumbling under the foundation of , quiet houses. It is said that in the empire of Austria alone, eight thousand men eat his bacon, and this is but a small portion of kis army of laborers. His late visit to the Uni ted States will likely result in still larger inveatmenta. He is certainly entitled. to the name Railway. Ring, though his habits during his Tick have been of rigid republi can simplioity.--Ex. , . /11011CNOITT OP THU Nich ol, in hie work describing the magnitude of Lord Rosee's celebrated teleseope, says that he has looked into space a distance so tre mendous, so inconceivable, that light, which travels at the rate of 200,000 miles in a sec ond, would require a pitied of 260,000 of solar years, each year containing 82,000,000 of seconds, to pass the intervening gulf be tween our earth slid the remotept point to, which this wonderfully powerful 416;eope has reached. flow utterly Unable is the mind,tO graip, even a fraction' of this im mense period I To. conceive the palling events of a hundred thousand years onlz, an impossibility; to say milUontranTl hun dreds of millicine of years. The min is more , than 90,000,000 of miles distant from the earth, yet a ray of light will traverse this Immense distance in olght.' Minutes. Long sa may seem the distance pitied.in tie short a time, what comparison ean, the mind frame hetween it and the' greater 'distance' - which Dr:- Nichol, and Lord Bosse demonstrated •,. woultrequire every secomi of that time-to present More than 600.090 years COPPVIIIIIADS AT A PZIIIIIIIIM.—Oneof our country exchanges—the ?if/trimaran—calls attention to the.fact that, here in • the city of the Login% in the meat *rest 'railroad nrguinent; of tho 'ootinsel engaged, Bye, Messrs:, Biddle, Wharton, Bleak, Church and Cuyler were thorough out•and•out Dem and but pee, 4r. Checks; ;lithium., a Republlon, nor, would he probably been retained„but for itii early and cons*. ant *greaten for the great corporation be riOreeentf.—.4o. . . To.ynt:ln ilits.--Two l iyounislie Qom satatig thy cell-putiting , toeinowo - They bought a lot of duck from Stephen Weald on credit, and ti Mead bad ,enpind to anion* foir4ein.;„ ,Ititob *aught R reit and won oirrying it roll,-weed Girard :feliarked ' ''' • .- ." -gm you uot , bottor , i,t I 4401 : 11.0 no. far, and tra,:taix ow" 14 !Tell your he nai.fin't anticuree our not*. I'llialie It , without)! , • BELLEFONTE, PA.,' FRIDAY; FEBRUARY 16;1866. SOUTHERN TRIBUTE' TO • GENERAL 'GRANT: - • General grant 'lrwin, Wee us , ip his char acter of a. wise matt _Mid' a conservative statesman. From the moment he over whelmed General Lee with the irresistible force of 'numbers, wielded by hie indomita ble will and untiring perseverance, lie drop ped the character of a,.military conquiror, and all his utterances , have been those of _, I patriot:and a statesman, who saw that the• sword had done its 'appointed work, and the polioy. of conciliation was the duty of the hour. The honorable terms be awarded. to General Leo and his veterans, who 'bad op-: posed him with determined and bloody re sistance, struck a chord of sympathy in the . Southern breast, 'the intonation of which was in exact proportion to the singular rar ity of deeds of generosity' up to that ate from the Federal commanders, Grant was essentially a "Union General." He fought in sincerity and in earnest for the preserva tion Of the "Union"—not as a pretext of ul terior views, Oct as an excuse for slaughter, plunder, confiscation and subjectitin, but as a reality. 'And when the first step in his object bad been accomplished, in dispersing the armies organised to break it up, be proved his sincerity by acts and efforts to bind up the political wounds inflicted by the war, and by immediately dropping the sword to gaze the - olive branch. He- has thus shown his want of sympathy with the radical plirn of continuitig the war In time of peace, and of rejecting.the Union which they had fought for. His conservative tendency and his love of justice and truth have been recently mani fested in the report be made to theresident of the condition of things in the South whence be had just returned. He declared the people sincerely and heartily desiroug, of restoration, and in earnest in their pro.' fessions and vows of allegiance to the Gov ernment of the United States. He told the truth, also, unpalatable to the negro wor shippers, that the "Freedmen" were for the most part, idle and unwilling to enter into labor contracts for the coming year. In this, he has performed a valuable service to the South,. for his testimony will outweigh upon the Northern publio mind, the reports of a thousand Ouch ex pane witnesses as Carl Sebum, MIR_ Covello and .General . Banks. In hie late admirable report of the opera- tions of the great armies under hie command, he gives another proof of the generosity of hie spirit and the broad nationality of his feellngs,, in a grateful passageof tribute to the gallantry of the South. After: doing justice to the equal bravery of the troops of the East and West; who had -fought under his eye, he adds: "Let us bops for perpet ual pence and harmony with the enemy, whose manhood, however mistaken, drew forth sunk herculean deeds of valor I" A man of General Grapt's stamp is inval uable to a country in an epoch like this.— Events may take a shape to open to him even a wider and grander field of patriotic effort than that in which ho has already earned so distinguisod a reputation. Ile Ivnay yet have to marshal parties and . cies as he has heretofore dope battalions and armies. A Democrat in political faith and oduc at ion, and a Conservative in sentiments and principles, who knows but that he la the coming man to rally the hosts of his political persuasion' to• the defence of the rights And liberties guaranteed by the Cone stitution of the Union. The duty of a'great leadership has to develop on some strong patriot. Fortune has placed President Johnson in the gap of freedom, but ho may fail, or try-' log, fall like Leonidas and his little,band at Thermopylin. In either event General Grant possessee the great qualities and rare gifts to fit him to take up the flag of the constitution and bear it in triu'mph. The ouglas Democrat of 1860, the first , soldier of the United States, after fouri years of fiery erdeil p the Idol of the army and the Object of . high esteem AO respeet,ln the South as well as In the North, where could_ the Demeoratio conservatives of the nation find a Worthier leadar, orthe restored United, States, a more honest President t , Al polIC! teal ourrentnnre now running, these tho'te mey become prophecies before three short years Toll sway.—Mobile Regioter d' Adver tiser; December 18,4805. • 1 "WARW.: TuAn."-,The followlog is told of the" Hard-shell" Baptist preachers t Two 'of then:mere in the same palplt to: gather. While opt) WAS presoblug he' hap. paned to say ' , "When Abrahant,built .the ark."' . The one behind hint' strove to oorre'et his blutider by orylng'.'oitt 'gold 4 1.Abrakank warn't,,thor," , • , tint•the speaker rushed ‘olf• heedleali tke Interruption, "and only:took' oaosidon shortly to repeat, still more deoldedly,;•"l eity,' . when dbrahiun built, the dirk,' "And I say„" arlEtipt (,be othei, warm thar." . the Hard-ebell wsui tpo hard toibeAreatrf down In tile, way, and, addeeesthg the pea. ple, exele,thted', With greet indirotlop, ,ptaluthz !or time Or tbeteethout.!%"';,- CoWorn(' psper to reeponsiblefir the following °Mo. Dame upon 4 0 . ±peer,it4lte oten.''who had s vote to Kiri, it be did hits te di hie dwn'telligng. The otnaidetir peited, should lift; the, vow, widob seemed to be. uneray, r onif tho old town comented . He took her by th% horae, sod hoNA-144.$ nail the operation wradotuet Memo yo) bad 4 rots ,4) oitnlthd bee vefy tit•ly ,v oelto4 l . `eti. 404 404144 ti;e , barµ woos the oaf 1" "STATZI .lan 'S 11.1ril 'Why don't the aholitlen paPers Publish Eienepr COWlttell speech in support of the President's 'Restoration Policy? • ' They are opposed to "the President and his policy. - ; Why don't tit . ..abolition papers publish the President's Special Message to the Ben ate' id'regord to the condition of the South t They think it a 4. lfliitti washing' Message, and soy•so. ; , - Why don't' the abolition papers publish Gen. Grant's - Report on the same subject ? They think it a white washing report, and shy so. • , Why don't the abolition papers astir prove of the notion of Congress in giving votes to t . ho negroes in the District of Co- lumbia t , They are at. heart in favor of it—their ptinolples being social and political equality of the negroee with the whitee..—Lebdale: Adoerliaer. AST1102101di0:41. has been no ticed as a curious astronomical foot that in Januarythere.Were two fitllmoons, in Feb ruary there will be none, and in March two. It occasionally happene there are two full moons in one and the some months ; for as the time between one.full moon and the oth er one next following is. shorter than the length of the time of the differentmonths of the year, with the exaeption of February , such an event must occur as often att. a full moon happens to be in the beginning of a month, at such a moment t 5 time enough left for the moon to renat her course of twenty-nine days, twelve hours, forty four minutes, and three seconds in the same month. But that a certain full moon or full moons repeat at,, same day and at the same moment is a rare occurrence. They will be repeated In the course of time, but never witnessed a second time by mortal mem If the time between one full 1110011 aud4iha next following were exactly twenty,- nine days, and our year exactly three hun dred and sixty-five days, your phenomenon would occur every' twenty-nine years; but as the time from one full moon toanother is, as above slated, twenty-nine days, twel e hence, forty-four minutes and three sego and the length of our year three bun and eixiy-tive days, five hours, forty-eig t minutes and forty-eight seconds, the event in question can only occur again after 2,- 661,448 years.—Lcaissille Courier, January 27. LET Him Down EADY.—The manner , in which our military heroes are let down to their original level, on their return home, is something more amusing to the lookers-on than flattering to' the subject. A cage "in point i Gen. Saul. H., went ont in a regi ment from the Badger StiO,zus captain.— Before be left. Os rencleiiPSlm was promo ted to colonel, and (or gallant conduct in the field was brevetted Brigadier. General. On his retirement to civil life be told a friend "they let him down easy." At Wadi ington it.was Oen. H.;-at Madison, Colonel ; at the town where he organized his com pany it was, "How are you, captain 1" and When he got up , to fi . „ where he resides, ev ery boy with freckled nose was do:tiding, "Hallo, Sam I"—Wabash Herald. -, —=-The Cincinnati commircial la reap"- Bible for a sensatlonal„story,in which iris stated that Louisa litaok,'s girl of "sweet sixteen," was'Aulcon dut of haystaolc re cently'in reteriburg; Ohlo,'where she had lived twenty' three days. I.All time she wee without neurishment of'any kind, excepting hay, and some grass that the frost had not %nipped. Once or twice she moistened her Mouth' with snow; 8.9 She was not BO D2llOll, 19011)0illied , sa ' might be supposed,' but she said she had lost a great deal of flesh, as she used to be fleshy." We should think that the calves would flour leh exoeedinglywell upon such 'diet. Where ia Barnum 1' As he could never 11110108 d In getting hold of flayman,let hire' obtain the Way woman.and forthue is made. . 7 • --Three ,yousig conceited wits; as they tho'lthemeelies!, paseseg aloo g klso road near Oxford; • meta grave old geedlesiten,' with whoro they had a- wind to lie rudely nienz s 'Good morrow,' hailer Abraham,"-earn • "Good morilaw;'father Ioao:o;" iald the ' ~G ood morrow, tether Jaaob,'? , paid the "/ sin Polttler Abr,abgis, Low nor geptleipau, Hit'ut Ui son 4f Biala, ! - Irbb, went out , tkisekliis foth- Rya telses; ripreei'are 11(n4 of Mem!" . . ursdo7 'Wet, Was (km day sippoin t t l ed Seoretary Staaton'to - r - fullninti' She cen tres( ffits , , FOrd's Theatre,, lint the contriat remains•inufulatied. It•. is said that the Claims 'Committee hive..blon' considering the quittei'end thatlheY ohjeot Irilhe agree meat, ,IleinSime hdr, 16,Sd has not .resseir ri the money, nor the poessseloh.olltia the atre., ". ' ' youtig tidies' seudnerjs roam, tly dutin'i to examicte4de ip,,lde!ory one' f the moot; Po lolll *P il i ll it P 4 IPIiTOP led , 'Bierj, did Afattin,Latke dio. s nokuod death P •'': • • 4 , 4•No,!!-Itai ibli;P*9oP l .l•s. wa! elgoeulaiinicat4l),Y • huodrod Bpd boy taw booms ors to for takea dolt fit titiold porta Polio ‘lf 9 tio tii• : 16 # 9 1 4Ati!, Lau topilfirt,,,A9oaf.; 6 .9 lo o4l l l; • frfi 44 . 0u•i0d 4004hatio bit Oteplus4 Jus4lllooPol tbont to= seek other , • . IP . . , . , , . . ' ' ; . . • . .• . . ..-.. k . ... • . 1..... .., ''...: •• , . , '.'• '. • i . . • ~, In VN1021.".. WHY? . . One of the last jokes ofthe seasetriti BOLL lle-hip Be refusal to "keep Compeny'? with General Grant. Ii seems thatile Liehteniuit General had a: home-warming the other day, to wliteb lie,htvtted some thousands of pastille, "Without regard to pol itics or to antecedents of any kind. -An odious discrimination ,(we maylremark by the -- way) Man - made - lietwelitr: whites - end blacks, none of the latter , race being on the list of guests.'Let Mr. Sumner leek to this Are new'military dignities, to be heaped on S mss late`wedded tO the` !Alone' pYiiftr. : ' dicesaf cute—who flings epen . his. doors to. fair-skinned traitors and shuts them in the face of loyallreedmen: t This matter IS worth/ of investigation, and we trust that a Congressional Committee. will -Veit on ii" without delay. The Lieutenant . General. probably by way of showing beyendalf dis pute thakhe "Wintet:i'istotid," sent it ticket of invitation to his old acquaintance and quondam ins:iodate in the tented data, B. F.' B. The Beast Perused the document with , wonder., held it atthe angles proper hi bring ha contents within range of Ids strabismal orbs, and read it over at roast six times before he rutty comprehended that it was a genuine paper: He was suspicious that it was some vile sell—a "coppehead,' con-, trivanee, likely, to expose him to the shame Of an affront 10 - the - salootoi of Grant.— Having at length satisfied himself that it was an'arithentio: seiselie; hiendoriett the following reply on it and returned to the Lieutenanitmerat . • - av • I have the honor to receive your card of invitation. I beg to decline as politely as I may, and I would further state that in no e vent would I be willing to hold personal in tercourse with yourself or anymember of your family.- B. BUTLII3. • This in rich—positively creamy. The idea of the Bottle-Imp undertaking to resent with the pen the exposure of Ida failures with the sword is not a strange one. lint people fancied that he meant to prepare an eltilr ratereply to the report of • General Grant— indeed, wo have heard that each a paper, wan actually in the hands a the printer. And now, ir.stcad of the ponderous and crushing document, welte presented. with 'three poor, pitiful, spiteful lines, conceived in precisely as exalted and enlerged ► spirit as the invitation which one little boy gives another to remove • chip frem his hat, or the imputation of canine maternity which is bandied about so freely among the ragged youth of the land, We have an idea; that General Grant will survive this affront and prove as impregnable to the attack of the Beast as he was deaf to the appeals of the same vicioni a animal to be retained at the head of the bottling and corking department of the army at Bermuda Hundred. Mora over, this lucky non-acceptance had one positiia wad substantial advantage attend ant on it—it saved'Mrs. Grant tbepnxiety .of watching bar plate while the Imp was present, and the tabor of counting her spoons after A. had left,—Taa Aoit. !. , 1/ Y'l I IMPUDENCE FROM THE IMP. ,t tirl/110 TOE A BZWZIG—WhiIe the boat was lying at Cincinnati, just ready 16 start for Loutville, a young man came onboard, leading a blushing damsel by the hand, and approaching the clerk,in a suppressed voice: Say," be eaclaimed, "me and my wife hare just got married, and I'm looking for - sicunsuautlutions." Lo kingtor.h . C " ' hastily. inquired the clerk—passing tickets ant to. anoihet , pasaenger. "A birthsthun der and lightning no. I" !wiped the'yonng man," "we Abet tat just got smarr!'id want a plane to stay all night, you know, and—• . • 'TIMIS Or NZWIL-A the broke out Franklin, Pa.,' on the morning f theist inst., which' resulted in the deetrnetioxi of half a million dollars 'worth of.property. • • A tire broke out . among the oil wells on Bennerhoof Run, Venango county, on , the . 81st nitoridch commuulested to elAbt and destroyed properiy, to the amount of $lOO,OOO. . • • Two steamers .en the Mississippi river exploded on the' 80th nit.; th two bundred lives were. loot, and over $BOO,OOO worth of. prop:air destroyed. Thomas. of !Ink explosien was seeing bostix---.M4 —The war tietwein the olcrig of PLile- sad. Forney'nfinvhay c oontb nen with unabated fury. The majority of the clergymen of that'city' lisurtibien dome , (visiting the Sabbath fur. years by preaching politics, and, nit a• consequence, their re—, inonstinnemi Imin not mach eitliat... Here tofore; Foinisrlutsboeil one of tit . * insitei • • Tlio,llloluno'a4 4#/riff& iproiziui ap , thtil au hriAtalloa wia given to 11/0 Ingrate sad colored people of lliolimond on Stoectftylast, at lb° Arrlaaathrot WA Alit 4 B 'o a oolry North to obi** ,aid ;Oaks the place of tho k" and aputohl! si spaisker I_ , . --A Southern mast of Baoufort, South Caronns, is boarding his Ton hood, id !mos 01btri 's day. The " 1 "5 - 40 1400 pr°P"!t7 into flte ofs tua f e *as, elle believes thst s rebel has no rights that a "144 __—••••••••The propiety of Ilia Ufa Elfaistar Pousita: isOffsap. which' at lb. time' ut hla cilloatit'vaa oeialdered iaartigaind ,t'ar I;to land kg valv e , htatliateld'acraputirity datisiti Ike like iw toVajblii.itialig tact larks due far 411,thatrs. - • - -‘? Tr? $ • —R O III 4I . - is swap p• of Vuisinst havebias` 111'144 . '• `atssudioits diseafe, heis'iskitii inocover'.• ^ 120 idbeaule • sp. pan Itkipolitol:4l4. talair PO . ' 0113, 1 11 i bat posallo IC Ls ea*. 9plde, Anew 04016104 P b.' laYleur"., .!• ~! I;r '-if '...' ~ n'. • ILOVF NEVER,BAXEP,S 'Limo ne'Vei 'abort I ' inotiadee4yik' ' ' Bends, o'et" her .dying infant's .bed ; And as she mark s the momenta , „ While death riva p s! on vrith 'flOiselers triad Faint and distressed sho :sits and weep, ,, ; - With heating heart.,. Love never aleeirs I • . . Yet e'en thaisatd yid fetid; ' Forgets the tOmalt; of.• her breast; • Desplte the horrors of the, storm, ' O'erbttritimed_natike strike to. rest,- - Bit o'er -them both 'subtler keeps . file midnight mateh; Lore never sleeps t kroand--46 va--ihe 'angel ban II Swap &kir the oaral*orn- Nana or Midi ; With pitying ayes andhaada ~. , They ratan' the tiatir &gala i Fred tui.the air their pit dams et • ' • • Tita.atcn:ntat &W:in t ; ~a ye no. in, sleeps! ti fA il - - And ar oundL-I4inentli.— . atid • O'er web atid..fingebr, earth and 'Heaven, A higher bends..,,Theallghest natl . . ; • Is answered;, and retie( giran Inlionrs of woe, when fibrin* steeps , • The heart In pain—lle never sleeps 0! Pod of love I our eyee 't , o thee' , Thad . of the world ' s (aloe radiant; tarn And as we yiew, thy Voile, ..; We feel our hearts within ueAliarit Convineetl, that lti theloweet . deepis Of human Ill—port never sleep" I THIS; THAT AND'''THE OTHER, —lt le easy to lay grattebut•:not half Ito 'easy to postmen --.---When le a Inver like a tailor}—When be presses - his auk' - —A thousand laborers haoctbecti engaged to rehuild Charleston: South CaioUna: _ . —lt colt the Fedornl Clovornment hat Yea r 82.183,010;78 to d'o the 'publlo prititini. • ---the new °ening of Tilinioe showe a total population of 2,126,000‘ an in'oreaso of 414,000 in five years, - —The receipts of the railways to Chi. 'cage Ida year were $660,0001 mat% of Pas: salaam 18,000,00 t. • —Warren Newcomb, -of. Nag' York, has given $lO,OOO towards the endowment of Worth.. .ingtori College,•Virginia. • ' • .—;;:Gieneral Woods has ordeied the ilisoon: tinuaneii of the military diatriota in the , DePart-' meat of Misaisalppl.' —The report tha i .Yuaree has fled to ;Texas. is repeated. , It is stated that he brought:it grad deal of sliver with him from Mexico. —War: Det!lative Baker has been found gaiety uf.fainnimpritomon!.h! L 6-031313 broker,- age me. Ho Ilsoquitted of extprtion. , —The war debt of New York Is 000 of Pennsylvania, $'.41,000,0001 New Jersey n0;000,000. The aggregate.war debt of all the Northern States Is $500,000,000. .—;--Undoubtedly women anffer great,wronga, but when we look at the dear oresat4ny, we often think they need to be Tedreseedlufto as much as their wrongs. ' —War and low; art strang e coinpoori,_ War ohdde blood, and love sheds tears; War has swords ' 'and loye:bas delis; I War breaks Iteede,and love breaks hear,ts. Prtiegton, "how ; de h ey find out the dletanee between the earth and nun ?"—."Oh" Mld the' pitinvllopeful, !•tlkey calculate a quarter of thti dist!tnce, and, then multiply by font:" . . • , • • . =Joe and Bill Banton wept to Na y Orleans . with a llat - baat brach:U. Jie writes to Lis er thus-- 4 Nu Orleans,sr , 3—Dear .dad mar kets Is dull and co gbty lo and Bills -A would-be wlt, by/lug Grid stile' jokes without °Stet, at last' exolaluied, !Thy you never laugh who'? I say, a ,good thing.;' Nat IT" retor t ed J errold, 'fittat,try.me, with h rumored lu .Washhigton, that .1f the FFeednian's Bureau bill *filch. has just passed bo Senate, pease; the nestle, the Pieddent restore thoef'habeds * the', bonds: ern States. • .. • • • hi•ta' I re" • 'merohanti morae, oge er with the PrinCh, GrlUsh i : Spaniel' and - PrUeetan. Conaul a, have publiihed irdtest again/It the conduct of the Untted,Stitee troops and MUG& on theitto Grande. ' " ~T ••' . --.'fbaddeus Stevens Mrs made vehement speech against President Johnson, saying. that if klaa.:.ef England, acme centuries age, bad acted as the Prealdent, tuts would , htlubleheadr-:!• 1 . . , —74foni Pannsytianln Reath:men; who, ret f , eeatly vlelted John's ;Omi, near lettarlestop, • • parchaee laid; wore 0 . 141;14 to fly for their Ryas front the negioes, who chairs, the own aiship lb. lilt& • ' . • - 7 -Complaint is made by paper. of N 01144 ngleiut tbr i tat oOnoette glean there, the ))ediee take their"iriehetazl'qitthierelii with theui, ',ad the inatleMew'seduouily iced the flew/Ipso , Pere throughout tht; pertbsienoes. r ti-. —Women' have beei demoted In smug gling whisky from Canada le cane, made Iq the sham of bald*, which , hoid.fpii Or live galions'esehT About thirty women, each with i'beitsishaby of ebL oolts:vere iniptorok In one doy\ibt long inembent oY "ctidigieett lava preptiesii 3 OpOoohoo theifoooonoirnotiota den.. Their nspioa holm oil, boon ontolkod. 4 4iniliore sod 1407 "au bi.• 401 t In rote' - ti ink 1 " r°2.tl ! 4 P 9°,11°,1 t tik ; 4 15 9 9i4M, 14g drawn oat'!" " ' •, , • i" 4 f i d g i k Pittaminp, Naar *O4 from ...Tearteil4l , /400 - et/tattoo ponanitioo... P. P3inlif 3i° Yiledeton's bureau in nOmiiid in, But Toondia4, 'and tint aU the national' triiofii ro47laC 1 I!!loo'drairu .. froul the - m i l*. ::f. G . J I. --do oxolloogi sayi.ft uttainotaado dial it kgnivd dhow" is still kept up annul& Met remake of lir. tiriooin t ''. It fa trait • MI tho' dio44piltkiau, riOtor.ceasp - th‘fr ttglik l 3 ll l. N 'ithlolt slow+ Eta fraud sod corroption &boy "I 4n44l " l i r t a 4 l § l l444 , o ll iikr i; • • --4/tAttootive TIAN' • LtiViroatt, opponttio wpb be soya la a !talk to- an t auc i i, 41 .° 64 . 41111 V" 1,10 ..4 44 . 0 Ittorobau UOO ta Wolf 41114 VIM/tali 0010* OVAtitlite ei Ir.PPTASE`WIP4Krii'II ,sO4 l 1 1 1 ,1-Triruolls ftfiS WiArts to/bist f' , • r• - tfl ; )-1 : WHIP Htlatgy e potHogis SAKAI WAG " iPA U P A P U P 17 ar Pi . I e : The geleenment, ,dineetlygtt, Qeneral C,,1/aket, ceaseoto he a l ktifitistfl, diet% general with this day. . /Sy tbeiernae of an order from tiorTlar DePartemettfitiel fr ooMinission was eaneelled on-th5169405et,..., • and he la nmsteredloptVoft %fatty/ea:A 4t ,abeuld.be borite,itt Mind, however, thshilla - military offio9fa:luiftt4ll l lM . o44ftilifhlifflril ta - reeognitlon as of the military,. servitto Proier, since he did not . reeeire his! titiat of ....A hitgadiar,goneral by, reason:er:oleriA o 4 o 34 ll , Sefoluct in tits hold; nor ol viee l itt,theltrioy..,of ;'promotion" toi ! a,„ ,b,,Tigadieralo„.rmil64 'Work of Stanton, died' iratiorfunitSB Of Bet— who;iasked the 'llitttineilot sAgy, (Orr healthy, poterifig ,hido.,this nhar,epotahlt. •,, conduct oshilst, in;ths,dgaparit,y,,pf,„ , afileitplar7aitaber, i ets,„fOrtho i gomn Teo t. Thia ,dateatire has had bin „ trouble will commence, for he can apleager,.. „'m at fits•,Pwa. bidding, bring to le did, tha t j , strong arm pt lit ' agorarrtra - eat .. topsoLestNl , 'from _the . vermitneo who have beensulicieralrrpaiion an prep., arty from, the unienititittional illegal acts 'Untie trait. . : ?1) " BitkeiladNadititia'so' so °nitro* eiCere [ fronillint;Wailtil ytM rr :I Dive •I'Ve ital.', datCrailY -attepip e p a Ipo President 'Mad kit han'setible itotitil' ngo. ; Thein, :•ediitZeliv tisoutd,' ".) that tbie 'fndeeihdrand wonderful iiniudebee - irrili' , 'Ondoitrigiat, ' ' • not anggeste , by , soma of the Zres dent • ;;Ittulletti Mende." The tti%Deteoilvio" =I 'pale an itkiti fallfire of 1.11.0 esplodage upon - ' t the' mansion; foi it rote idusetiow diSoolterod by. ,11fr.: Johnson, ...wild sent 1013sengek to bring •Itaker iinmed isfelfin h s le presence, - ,The. deteolitta drotiped!ey. t 'Orr, oilier consideration, and repaired;with• haste, to the White •Iltinae,? totally at ! • fate l tna .to the purposeaf his,summons prim, • the President,tlis, some being announoadk:. =I , . the.President_ directed the. he .he ednii!ted;ileiiiiithitanaiiie. air). tivetieheeh! : . . severalientletneri O eR l eagaged ~ Johnson. The later moat unceremonitukli, , 'Ohaiged baker with hie illalnoue eeplonage,.. and infOrtiked him lgatlf he heard:of . Ms'presence in or prowling'sbOut Elie White Ilouse, he' permitted tiny of hiteefeei::. tures to'sneak tiyOund the . Peetnieesr the 6 / 1 "rent Deteatire" should himself lodge in ; some one of the dingy - cells in'the OlitCdp• itol, Where seMany 'had hecutinoireefited upon this simple order bf hitostilf,' '7 without warrant, or the seitlifor •or j ustioe,, " Fr .The "Great,' Detective" was amazed ;at what he heard, and remained epeechiesst.' Toth) the President, Bored • him,. ..UPon the., !. . Piesident's comomed,-Poo, sir,". Baker..., hastily moved ta'Wel.llB. t_l l o. 4 0 9 r iP 1 4 , 44‘7, tore he quite arrived . , there, Mr. .704324 ridded . "Hold, one moment, sir. I.deire. , that . i0,./leerefarY of War and ; tell him' every' word Ita;4; fo'qoi and (shaking his 'ai hint) don!t+,ye# " ever Ichne see, you here aghin . " ' ' The ..great Deteotive" lett 'instatiter, and has obeyed the bat injunation'of the Fred. '' dent. moat' religiously:—Wochiastioa , !forres. • ' pondenre•Rirlimond Examiner. ' No, UNE ion PleVotits-Oft Pte M/P.VA111:: •af the meteoric showere, 1882, obi feyten,, Roberts, who intended making ark earl, start to his Work, - got up in the midst of • ,• `I the display. On going , to hip; door, herearr With amazement the 614 w 4 lit tip'Witit'titt i " . :'' falling Meteors, and hetionoludell:at'ene'e that:the world was :On tire and the ' ' meat had: come. lie'• stood for a t mottient gazing - in at:est:bites 'terror: at' tit r e, &tette; and then with a yell of-horrorliprang'oni of " 4 / the' door; right in 'the amidst of .';) stars and there in his, : eftcirt to dodge them,' :!lt he commenced a . series •otgromul!tnzabling that would have done' hortor.loitTop6 den. , (I 111s . wife,,being ettakened ib.the timi3; seeing Peyton jumping add jekipping. about the.yard, berth:Aleut tollitn,zo gnu* "what In the name of conimoneetise )10MILI ; 4 °4° out that 44noltk' clothes on." pi4 . Paytoi 11 1? 0,a0.... 00, judgement bad Jong heakacaounts be:Would' , have •to settle, made hfie'ligedleso terrestial thiata :Mid wife:' . booming WiarMed: bj barivior, earituig'"' ' oittlotbed;and'running to the deer shrieked the top.of :her,lungs :.•- • • .„ ;' t./ "Peyten,,r say, Peyton,: what; o you tbeatt•t!.: jumping about' thar r l Qome in entlpuoyour..l.ol • troil, BerP , . 'erre:nem:l,ll , 44i the &1 1 ...1*i the use ireueers.When the world's-oa . CAR A Ittortilla Folmar f-:-Catira r ttiathatv • " 4 forget t 2 Not:ii'Mortititi.'noinarorAght . , bit - 1 she loOks•lnte the earner mfilthe. kitchen' 14i 'Where 'you read IdliiasOn Orvance'otral th Mi. , • ,": I .011,,y0u as iet a ,tieii. ' Mothers rarely Whims'' , ? • tuatsolous that tkeir (Indeed are grown ;oat 1 1 of their childhood: They think; Ot•lheia;, •, write of them. as though not full ,fourteen; . ; , yea're, of ego. ~Idls,4quot foresee the'elitlel. , , ' , ; Three, times a ,darBb 0 thipks who are obseut ,from the lohltt, srl lop,se 01.4310 XL Y 4144 41. '. s rarities - Cs 1 1 49 19 9 Y, Just ~ l iave Ai' ow.ee• Toppi. , , ;,. ly; Ibersit: am). if tow/4'4340M 1 94 1 ! . .9 4 4 fort , , the' 41' PLO. 4 A Cried , cb. ll3 4dtt, gesk, ego . , I !!!4 0 4 / 41 ? 0 1 1 7,44 everybody'. 914 iaotillf 1 1 can make, Phi llpapai forgot !Istattel I A ~ , i , e/Aort, eeplenof,. OA. ot, hotteehrtl '4ll*. , 1 44 51'99!i1g or 10 diguNitttifither..49l, , A f is telling beautifu l; . 4 eisessier, Ms: 14the k r , made little goat 'd' I? ' ibt I rlet '" him ee 49 _ I:91 1 ,I 9 9 1 ' ' year fr 9. to 7 0. er es el 04144 W • • , husbaadlo .acrid...' , . , ;'A rothirgertihtlag se ' Lei . lretlieneg 31 pave, or eloelOg,lhe oji of the ehild'after ', 4 death', lleplaye S. grief whose very ' , lniet:s4l-... 1 itisi Is sublime.' But, hitatier:thati the 'death ' 1 . Woks' he the' desteretler 'or le eon 9'4011040 3 '' '' lull:mei 4 rushed hire r fialslool rthelehteel T; + woold hide f9om even tho 'abindeuedi airdl.a n' Ville ''t . . Vi . ,:,, Ilc ••,..'4l i5,.. 1 1 .4 5 1, • .`1114PR14421 Vlllollotlitlivi by ee,htdrorlest .I ,Weiter el fee.os egoitielejf. - pelik ~. '1 , 1194 illiytiqh„ratsmil..kovii L.'s: tfAlgre;;,; , ,f 5i11."1 441 1 1 4... 7 . "1 , IX. 4 Y. , . .1 41;r1 I! IMP .1 10 t' depicting bie*S'A. , kWilitialsel . - .Iq' 4 *4rftbitf4l4lViiehNli, Oliafiff i lii ' ' 13 sti g li iibt4l* ,l 4ool6lo!filtrltihkrii illeigab:'''' l w A'0 4 0)1 Woie' he 'my fief teihhigif 'ale bi ll , X.XXiimileoSeell We MeV* , welellen,li , 4 ispijaVageltiltlitl99 o .9l 99 t 44017 ,• 0 T . 1 ,,t x„No fq:Pi.Z '.1.1" 1'A,,q.. 4 ,:i.411 - ~;,117 1123 OREM