Il - 43 'En"MVUEM44.- RUE M 44- BT 111011rht IRAIIN-111141.41A In Indleiltribens They hen% tbefelitaga, Add bebbeneitioni 'deb Ilk* dibsgv, Aliassid del Weirs looked beyond The imehee of the herring-pond. Aud , oonldwot, wunalinvor, understand • Wby we en tide eidi ehooid be fee*, And haws no Sing in Doodleland ; Pew people cell, on everi , hand, Tinted hive DO Sing in Doedleland. It wee dlsgeseefol, monst t sold, To see a form without a beiut, • A peopleAalming sovereign right With neMr throne nor amen in eight ; And so they alt . ogetber planned To show, whether we would or no, A King might - reitte Doodlehuid, Thoggit'peopleimid on orbry Third have et"' Ring in Doqllellnd. Tbey tried it first by (nip And joke Upon the rude and common folk, Whose borne-Oun government must go To ruin, in s year tr so, Without the kind end guiding hand, ♦nd strong, to keep the realm from wrong, Of some good Kin/fin Doodleland— Yet poor& said, on every bend, They'd have no King in Doodisland. By war th'ey next the thing essayed, By cannonball. and 'abr. blade; But two optdd play at such a gamei And thug to naught Weir efforts came, We drove the foemen from the land In shame and woe to whence thereame, And bad no King in Doodleland— Still people said, on every hand, They'd ham no Klng_k_Doixllll-aul. - D isoprd' at length they Halted forth, Sent Hatred 'twist the South and North, genii seotion taught to each abhor, Kindled the Baum of civil war, And then, by inner strifr, trepanned, We out aside the glorious pant, And craved a King in Doodieland-- And people then on seep hand, Asked for a Kldg in Doodlelaud. We rots - at morn as troo u ctr l And foug4 t, cud did it bravely there I By noon, our freedom off we threw, To serf. and eyoophante we grew, And.when the night oams o'er the land, 'Mid cheers, and some few honest tears, King Doottle i rigned o'er Doodieland— And people pod on every hand At Doodle. tug of Doodleland - . ' -.The Old Ouard. THE RADICALS AND THE PRESIDENT -THAD. STEVENS TRYING TO DOV ER UP THE BREACH. It Is 'very evident that the Jecobine in Congress begin to set that their revolut ion: my course and opposition to tiob policy of the President is destroying their hold upon the people. The terelopments since the reeeption of the veto message in the Senate, and the President!' masterly speech on Wasbinglon's birthday, has no doubt con vinced them that thief must takes new track, or go under. They esnolit sustain 'them selves biforithet country n a platform in opposition to Andrew •.YoL on, for his course has been such as to seour the ap probation of the great - mess of th people To support the measures of his administra tion and merry out tile polley would destroy all the party schemes of the radicals 7 but, en the other bind,' they tee that if the peo ple ones become eon/inert that the Repub. linens In Congress are arrayed in direct op position to hfr. Johnson, their , encomia in the future is equally hopeless. They have therefore adopted an adroit course to mys tify the public and postpone a direct issue between them atfd the President. until after the fall elections. Wham those elections ars over then they will come out and bid the President defiance, claiming that they have carried all the Northern States on the radical Smelt. The speech of Thad. Stevens in the Rouse of Representatives, on Saturday last, was part of Lie programme It was a bold et tempt, by uttering I deliberate falsehood. to cover up the faot that there is an actual conflict between the Rxeoutlie Ruck the rul log majority in Congress. The Freedmen'■ itareau voto message of the President and his speech from the steps of the White ilouse on the 22d of February defined clear ly the teens between him and Congress.— They reveal the feet that there is a content. But sufficient time has elapsed to show that a large port ion, of the Republican party side with the President in;fhis controversy ; tba there are at beasts sufficie'nt Dumber to d s hol the balance of power and tarn the eleotions in the Northern States against the mat:tale . Stevens therefore comes forward with a plan:Ade story, yet wholly false; andAle livers an amusing harangue, attempting to prove that the President, made no edoh !peach. In his utturl bold style, claiming that he Las a confidential communication, he says, "That speech, which has had con sidorable run, and which has made consid erable impression on the public mind, Was two of the grandest hoaxes that'll - Se ever been perpetrated, and more suoceasfut titan any other, except the moon hosx.!! In gr= der that this faleghblid might have its piop er effect; he adds that "he eponorates the . President front ever hying made- that speeoh, nod then ghee on, charging it with being a coinage of the opposition prase. Tp clinch Well; -further he quotes a statement heretofore made by a New Yorkjournal, and abaraoterizea 4111 as a piton of the same kind of slander. 'Admitting; Loiterer, -that if the people believe that the Presi dent ever utte red that speech the ease would be made out.. "But," continues Ste wens, ..we' knots thtt the Presideul never did utter IL" At if he could not repent the lie too often. 11011 this bold eleatiOneering dodge of the radical older, this malicious coinage will no dolibt doeompllsk _its purposes in many 10 . - colitis', _unless tits President pursues straightforward and independent course. •It is ealenkitedho doubt, kiiaffeet the campaign in Pennsyhunta. It will be sest broadbast through the ruiaritliStriots, aid those who do not 6.tify understand ate clirmunotanoes of Johnson's speech' and how it was made puiplo,*lll table Stevens' version, and set it dovi.eus a,devlco of the opposition to di vide the Republican party. "Here," they will say; "Wil has Stevens' statement tkdt such is time fret. He Was on the ground, gad' mustknow. if he bud beengOnounced by ldr. Johnson he would hive known It." Boob, 'Shamus calculates, will he the effect of thir'sPieolies upon the Sepublimingoarty is PePws.Tilliflaid• WithlL he hapes,to bridge Over ths lamina until after the (telpher Alec !ion. 191,,s4tAging fbts odurae he ,liss in feet pdooialinwl.,to the worldihe ignoriume of lib enrastitusartg.-mum_ as they ark pilf.bte eidapiehia tbe:gftillts Ild'il'oefilardia; or judge between _ • • MEE oj `' ' . '1"11.441 441 1 . 1 I (IL t tlital lon (I, . Vol. 11. truth and falsehood, and, that any, etate—' merit, however false, .thdt he may make will iwallowed as true, It has been ;hover: blars.that the people of -Penneylmola are belliwd the age, but we never witnessed so bold an admission and so direct a declaration or this Cant from one of thtir.own represen tatives before. It is a wonder Stevens con sents .to represent a constituency whioh can be gulled by ;nob trash as be uttered on Saturday. • All this bodes no good to Andrew - John-. son, nor his polior of restoration. It is in tended to deceive the people until the radi eel! _ can carry the fall elections. The President should take, good mire that t h ey do not get him into a position that will strengthen this assertion, but, on the tither hand, boldly meet the issue, and in a man ner that will leave no doubt as to the atti tude of the Jaoobiu faction of Congress.— They ere his foes and the- enemies of the country, and his course should be marked, with^ deeds so positive that the humblest citizen in the most secluded portion of the eouotry will understand it, not excepting the votora whom Thad. Stevens has pro claimed to be so ignorant.—N. Y. Herald. JOHN W. GEARY To the aetoniehment . of many of his own party, and to the chagrin of many more, John W. Geary, who a few weeks ago de— liberately wrote himself down " a Demo— crat," bee been chosen ae thwoandrdate of the Radicals of Pouneylvaittli. for the office of Governor. Kis nomination was flobeeived t}nd most ouniilngly achieved by John Covode and John W. Forney. Very few of the reputa ble leaders of the Republicans bald anything to do with it, tend these few acted only un• der the lead of the two managers aforesaid. The convention which nominated Geary covertly denounced President Johnson for his policy of rebonstruction—openly do• flounced genator Cowan, and asked him to •roeign—and sfrongly sustained the Slovene policy of reconstruction, and commended the course of the radicals in Congress. Mr. (teary Is therefore the oandidate and the willing instrument of those who declare, 1 That negrocs are equal to white men in fact, and ought to be made equal to them in law. and social pitsition. 2. That nowithstanding each Northern State has denied the right of suffrage to negroes; the Southern States shall bo formic] to grant suffrage to the blacks before thej shall resume their rights within the Union. S. That the power to regulate suffrage, and all other concerns of the several States, realties in Congress, and ehall be exercised by that body above and iu defiance of the laws of any State. Against these capital heresies which, if anstained by the pnblie voice, would utterly destroy our present laws and constitutions. the Democrats will make unyielding war. They make their resistance for he sake of their country and their rime. Thy at least will not consent to "equality an fratern ity" with Africans of whole or partial blood —for they believe the Governmeaias made by and for the white race only. So believing, they must oppose John W. Geary, who personates the4e abominable doctrines, with all the energy and force they possess. If he wore as brave as Julius Cmear, which he certainly is not—if ho were is wise 'as Solomon, !Fillet' no one claims for him—and if he possessed every capacity for a governor, which he honestly says he does not posers—we could not support him, for he is the champion of destructive ideas, and the harbinger of anarchy and ruin to our Gommonweafth and to our country. Mare glis seek to 'disclose hie demerits, to expostOld frailties, and to prove his entire nullifies!' for so great an office. In this we propose to take no share. Ills pm lirioal sins, and his present oonnection with or!ry- and Covode, are sufficient—the puppet and . the tool of men like these—the renegade .to big own race, (for Cleary is a white oftio can never be chosen to rule over the citizens of Pennsylvania. Mr. Geary is the negro suffrage radical candidate, and nothing else.—and to this issue Mr. Geary tusinSis trainers and back ers, Coro& and Forte roust be held with. an usailtrinking grasp. He Mya► 4,06 be permitted to hide bimself from this question to thp.Oloutis of Lookout Mountain, nor in the amok* of the numberless battles he bbasti of, bat is which his share was so uncertain. Hie banner is the black flag of negro equality and kdivided Union, and he cannot bo allowed ioftilit out.thip contest on any otherlisto. —Pittsbutvit Post. —A few weeks after mwrriage; the bustind bad some peculiar thoughts when putting en hit:gait clean shirt,as be saw no appearance of a "Washing." He•thereupon .rose earlier than usual one morning and !kindled i fire. Whtu htngink on the kilt , tie, be made a noise on purpose to arouse his easy wife. ithe peeped over the bit:n ets 'and exclaimed : "Sly dear, what ad you doing I" • "lie deliberately responded, "I've put nn my lost clean shirt, and I'm going to wash one now for myself." "Very well," replied Mrs. Easy, "you . bad 4 betterirsiOnti for le, too I" • --We hare togs' raked the 'question, What material make the beet bed comforter? Being inexperienced in snob nratting, We rofer the querlst to the Jedgmeiti of the! Committee of the Hudson CoCinty Fan, who pia it in 'this grtfror "Beet bed cran carter-- Pin Jape ). . . Mill ....4 'IS ....4. ' BELLEFONTE,, 'A., - FRIDAY, MARCH 30,1866. . WHO WERE THE TRAITORS, , As the sun rolls beak Ihe darkness of the' proceeding night, so does God, through events, roll beck upon the cowardly element of abolitionloed 'reptibliceniem, the stamp of falsehood uppn t heir . very assertion., 'Tie buy', brief year since this nation tottered. an the verge of destruction from the imbecility of its managers. The Games of burning printing offices which dared . .to speak the truth have hardly paled into air since it was all'our lift' was worth to say the then President was s tyrant=tbat the party in power deserved the wrath of Pod— that I be-abolitiorrpartY -was-the only- treas onable party of the country; and •thsu • the only true patriots wore the heroic defenders of Democracy and its glorious teachings. Who were the traitors? Who sought to destroy the Uoidn ? . Who warred to maintain it For years We have charged home upon those who sneer at the constitution that they carried on war to deetroy—not to save the Union. " Count up the thousands who died from war causesl Figure up the taxation we have inourred. Look at the result t A million of our brethorn slain. An entire people impover ished. A stupendous load of debt to oarry. Xnd what is the result Simply notbirtg—but tears, ashes and destruction. The war whiob we were told was for the proervation of the Union is ended: • • • The heroin South has aooepted the resull of the onegal contest, and abides by Ilk; decisioreof the bursting shell. Our troops have been disbanded. And now those who called us traitors arise in Congress behind their editorial desks, and have the effrontery to tell us that we as a nation emerge from the war with eleven States out of the Union—that we wipe eur Moody ohopson but a portion of the flag we fought under. While we were fighting they told us a State could not seoede—that the Settles were still in the Union. Then why duos Con gress legislate crier territory not her own? If the war closed and left the Southern States odi., the war was a failure. If the war was'a success, the States are still in. If the Southern States aro out of the Union, what right has Johnson in the Pres Wendel chair? If in the Union, how can Congress keep Southern representatives out? The war is ended—thanks to those who feitght—not to those Who legislated. It i s pronounced a success, If ti success, the Union stamls Ltd it stood before the firing on the star of the West. / f the Union is not restored s .tho mr was a most wicked, cow ardly, siupendous failure, which it will be well not to endorse. llow long will the people listen to the foolisbnese of abolition wrangling The palildnicel element acting under a Hither Law ( higher devil) gave 119 a wur—it gave us debt—it impoveritihed the country and still qnarreis over the corpse ! Thank God for the great events of the past year. Thank Him for putting an end to the great crusade for cotton, niggers and “mementoes." The people are •opening their eyes to the enormity of the offences of ilictee who ruled but to ruin. The war has not•benefitted the country. It did notreslore the Union! It added to_our taxes. IL took away the Means to pay them. Jt destroyed millions upon millions of property. It gave the whites of the north a few mil lions of blacks to Ruppert In addition to thltir own cripples, paupers and criminals made by the war. It has filled the land with Waives, robbers morderete and tax collectors. It has made timbering mon riot it the expense of the people. It hoe made Ike negdo cost uteackre than he once earned. It has ezeapted the weahlkof the nation (row taxation. It sent men to war, pitying them large bounties, and now tarns those who return to po,y theee boungtes and all other expen ses, letting those who remained at home go tree. And all this war-le the result of abolition ism—Gicritanitif straining witlf what. is none of our bases—the result df interfer ing with our neighbors—the result of for getting the faith of our fathers, tappering with the constitution and betraying democ racy: Thank God that limo is not ended. The day will surely come when the -people will curse as men never were before the, false rulers and besoted meddlers who still seek to ruin the country; and - while it will exalt democracy Letiigher position than ever before, will denotsuos as traitors all of that "loyal" class, rho, to gain. private ends, still fight against the Union and 'tarry on their damnable war of hate against a brays, overpottedkpeople, who would be our friend, but cannot have the privilege, except by submitting to degradation at fhp,hande of a mad element of the country which is its greatest curse ; —LaCrow Dtutulerat. —Ras that. ~b ilavet MOTU , Mid." the ..divine Stanton," changed hisiepota, 'too 7" The New York i. pribung elygi ~ Shenton,ll4 become very sweet and ploasant. and chirp no amiably as 0 dote, thented who go to etie him, with the reoolle6l.lol 11362 - mid itie. - ottyprtitio to fi nd, tit} beer tote mildest and, wiceptraotsble of anl; maisr, You may go as near to hitp ie yo ti +44, and to,wlll,..4either erMilAitT'bite.l ty th•flieirrity afraid-of the iserea(ter "a T 4.11131413 AND 10311DiaLAILIktrariOar." WHEN XRE SOUTHERN REPRESENT ATIVES TO BE ADMITTED? We should be very much gratified If we knew exactly what the radicals in Congress required of the South as a condition of the Union.. WWI ought do be re quired'? , Let us look a moment at the cause and re sult of the war. The Southein States held ne gro slaves. The North,opposed to slavery, disregarded the Constitutional rights of the South in attempting to..abolish The South, on ibis account, and to rent secure in her peculiar institution, attempt ed to withdraw from the Unlon... A part o f tbs/360th held that she bad a right to accede with or without cause, but that she had cause. A part. held that she had re . to secede, but had a right to retell for outset slid that she had cause. 'lint the cause •of the trouble wan slavery.. The Constitution protected the South in the enjoyment of It, and she insisted on being left undisturb ed in that protection. The North was not willing for this on account of her hatred of slavery. If there had been no slavery, the North would have had no cause of hostility, and no motive to assail the South, and we might well have lived in peace. The South' did not commence aggression" upon the rioat ; eho - sought quietly to dissolve part nership, and depart from the Arm on aotiount of, inoompatibility of views and feelings n(mombers touohing the domestio affairs of some of the members. The attemptdo with• draw was followed by war. The war was followed by the abolition of slavery. It is abolished, in these United States, f The oauso ofdissension between the two sec tions is permanently removed. This the South admits. Shii failed to get out of the Union. This she admits. The war has bi tablialied that Cie people or the several States, by a great majority, will never con: seat to a peahen} diasoltilion of the Union. and that no State, or combination of States, less than a majority, can hope ever to force their way out of the Union. All this, the South admits, and gracefully says so. She admits the Union is theoretically Indissolu• ble, and can only be dissolved by common coLeent or suceessful insurgent war. She admits that, hence, grievances mast be sub aittea to or redressed Inside of the tiniort,, She agrees to all thiP; and she further agrees, which, from her natural humanity, alto would do. of course, without promising it, to take sultablemire of the negroes that remain with her. Now, being in the Union, and willing to remain in, and share the lot of the Union,why not let her have represen- Astion 1 What harm would they wish to do? , Those States have a right to declare,in Con gress, by representatives, what they want to tiwand to have done. This is what rep resentation is for. Has not Indiana aright to make such a declaration in Congress? Then, why nor the Southern States ? Now, here is where the Republican party has abandoned its President, and taken is-- sue with Lim. Johnson says those ,Statel ought to be represented at once ; 'and that the ono insuperable .obstacle crested by Congress in the test oath ought to be done away with. Congress says not so. We Sr. against our President. A small (magenta-, five portion of the Republican party stands by its President,, ruiuforoed by the Demo crats Added to the test oath objection, lbe red teals say there Lashio the objetttion of 1199- repentance and non-humiliation on the part of the South—there is non-oonfession of crime, and non-asking folk pardon of any body but the President. This is so, and it will,nover be otherwise. Robert Dale Owen said it was the language of insanity to call eight millions of people traitors. The South feels that she had cause for what she did, and that she fought for what she believed was her rights, and she never will feel any other way. Still, she admits she was over poweind, that she committed a great mis take, not to he repeated, and gives herself up to - perpetual union; and, beyond thin: mho will not be subjugated if kept out till doom's day. For what good end is lb South kept out of the Union T—lndianapol Daffy Herald. • BA auto Lows.—A short time ago, every loyal braggart. wanted the President to try Jeff. Davis, and every other "die loyalist." by a military commission. The :loyal" members of our Legislature, some time ago, even went so far, as to offer a resolution ordering tte — Prtsideni to try 2tEr. at one's before a Stanion--Holt, court. .The resolution was again lied up on c g Thursday last, for final pas s e, but was amended so as to strike out t• ilitary ecru mission," and insert ttbeftre the proper Ili— Weal," and thenipaised. '-ttirclose observer will easily discover the %finance of ~ ltxo man Cl the other end pr: the Avenue" in toren' directions, and nowhere •is to: tn license "Ore develp_ped t•lin ...in the Apive instance, and that -toe, in sight ot i ThAd. Siemens' •hems. We hope shot 'tour gosts" will speedily deliver tie q 40,16 etriothe of tacit owl ism. —Cidnirfeid:ff eproltaiart. Ointersti.—..l, gentleman veee4tly . vielteil Oil City, and went to & LoWI tb atop over, night. Said he, "give me the beat voent.,4 the Louse." ' "Certainly," said ' , the landlord. '..ru gyre you the room Th'srion Weed occupied. Waiter, show I,his maa.toomrlor 1)." .° Waiter did as ortitred- , -tound nihe or ten cots, each with h. oitrpet bog therein. Re seised his carpet-his and came back swear: "Landlord, like- t 6 sleep in the f0°! 2 •74%.0.1 1 n0,0 41 : 431 4k 4--d Yore' shient...to sloshing e trith the nisch 4tlidKalr $11 1 1;", •::: ' ME ' To look over the Itepubliosu papers, ous might suppose that the interests 'of the .ountry are about to , perish 'completely, We must have protection, heavy protection.— British goods mutt be, excluded or we are ruined, Woll, where does this cry come from? Yunnan, what, are you making now 1 donating all, do you clear six per oent abbre the oost of your far.n, revenue taxes and othel . expenses? rilettanlos, what are you making ; do you realise six per cent. upon your invest- menu and labor t Can you stand it at present rates, with out fainting by the way t- Then you are well off. We- Judge you are, for we have not heard you ask for pro tection. Well, the manufacanrers--those Cr New England particularly—me about used up. They have been declaring dividends for the past three or four years, only to the amount of from 26 to 40 per cent. and they can't live at that. Think of this, farmers and working men; you who are clearing it most 6 to 10 per cent. Then, again, look at what the nigger. are getting I TwOris taiittein millions of-yeur money to buy pewter spoons and shin bone soup for them, !Ed roast beef and plum padding for the flureon. Now, if,,tou can stand that, certainly you can bear a little more; to lint the Yankee millionaire manufacturer on a level with the protection awarded to the nigger, so don't grumble, don't object ; you are a gen. mous ,people, and can bear another straw or two, to help these poor oriatures who are not able to help themselves. You give freely to lunatic asylums, why not to Yen- Jme who don't know 'what a, pewter slioon loots like.— West Chester Jef fersonian. A BEAUTIFUL EXTRACT. The following is from a lecture, delivered some years ago, by Reverend Jobn Newland Matflit ; --, ..Phistax, fabled bird of antiquity, whim it felt the chill advances of age, built its own funeral urn, and.. fired its pyre by means which nature's instinct taught it. All plumage and its form of beauty be came ashes ; but ever would rise young-- beautiful from the urn of death and cham bers of decay would the fledgling come, With its eyes turned towards the sun, and essaying its darkest velvet wings, sprinkled with gold and fringed with silver, on the 510 1 balmy air, rising a little . till at length. in the full confidence o 7 flight; ii gives a cry of joy. and soon become a glit tering speck in the deep bosom of atrial ocean. Lovelyntoyager of earth, bound on his heavenward journey to the sun! So rises,the_ivirit from , the ruins of the body--the funeral urn which its Maker built and death fires. So towers away to its home the intellectual phceoix, to dip its proud wings in the fountain of everlasting bliss. So 31,011 dear, precious humanity survive from the ashes of a burning world. So, beautiful, shall . the unchanged soaa within the disc of eternity's groat lumi nary, with undazzled eye and unecorehed wings—the Ph mot.' of immortality—token to its rainbow home and cradled on the beating bosom of eternal lovo." • OICLT 0211/1 STATE IS TUE U:tion.—Tbe New York Day Book insists that there is but one State in the Union, and it makes out a very plain case. Hoar It in the fol: lowing : "The present Union, or `New Nation' rather, is onniposad of but one State Do not be startlea,• reader, but it is a solemn and momentous fad, as dame 2arington might say, You are perhaps not aware of It , but maims you reside in Massachusetts you are living out of the United States I 'Just see if we do not prove it. We are told now every day by the Solon, in Washington that, as the Constitution is now `snnended,' knows of no distinctions 4n race or oolor, and as Massaohnsetts Is the only State whose Constitution now oonforms to the Federal Constitution, why It follows that sk Is the only State - in the Union' Ther e ins, as plain as a pike iitaff. Now, why don't tho Massachusetts Senators and Rep resentatives kick the interlopers out 'of Congress ?t What right have. they to be legislating when they are not in the . Union? That's the question that wtiorould like to see admired.' •TO say turn them out by all milting, and let Mastlhohnsetts rule the whole country in names as she now doiw fad." is a singular fact, that the present Congress lublob 'is elamied.ta be espeolally friendly 14 the soldiers, has up 'to tars time passed ,bills squandering millions upon 11:1•• gross, while not one dollar hairbetin atopro pristsi to pay the bounties of those gallant men Slut went into-the - field before bounty laws 'wire passed, though petitions signed by thoUsands have been presented to that boding for snob appropriation. When 'soldiers' votes were needed, the Abolition , lave of thst nisei Was, loudly proclaimed—. it . was a cheap eleottenestitug dolls*. —.Wow the sauna porty,in Congress, give millions to the negro, but not one dollar, to the vet eratilsoldier. Comirient is 'unnecessary.—, Styr years igo, • team to the Okla Staler Perm ,aualatele•Aila seakiachlwesaape. j f days ago be returned and expreaisod_• ia/to oeffier - ogadda term = That istaf. P 1 14 1 4471 Stet le OW *ldle oat al.prltea. be re*PlilfrO HO FOR PROTF-OTION =MEI No. 13; THE WOUNDED VEART. BY O. B. lIROMINIXO. L.- Sweet, thou hart trod on a heart Pau I there's a world fall of 10 ea ; And wanton os file as thou art 1 Must do such things now and then. non only but stopped unaware— Milks no memo ItaPots; And why should a heart have been there In the way of a fair women's foot? It wen not • stone that could trip, Nor was it a thorn that Gould rend t Put pp thy proud under Ilp I 'Tiles merely the heart of • Mood. And yet, paredventure, one day, "Thatt; attar - alone a - the - glue; - - Remarking the bloom gone pway, Where them:tile la its dtaipleakeet wee And seeking around thee in rain Prom hundreds who tattered before, Such a word as, "Oh, nut in the main Do I,hold the less precious, but morel' Tbou'lt sigh, very like, on thy part, "Of all I have known or Gan know, I wish I had only that heart I trod upon ages ago I"—ErmAssepe. THIS. ,THAT AND THE OTHER —Whit mutt wean most at the pooltata I A jaw mutt. —Many—wear au by i• algaw all outalds. • -.—.lnduhro in humor am numb sa you ploomu if it is mot ill-humor. —The prospects .or the Democracy are get: Nog brighter arid brighter ereirday. - —*hen is it dangerous to go Into the fields? When the hedges ate shooting. —ln whit eiramostanees is a woman that wears stays I In straightened elroumstances; —*lion a wife huge her husband It Is gen erally beoanse she wants to "get around him.° .--Itappinees le pig with a greasy tell which every one raw after but nobody. own hold. —Gen. Dunelde bu been nominated for Governor by the Abolition Committer' of Rhode Win& ti —The character of au upright =au la like a pair of boots. - The more you black lt the more It SWIM. —When a young !tidy promises her band to her lover on a bright night, dou l t she make"a star engagement." A dog lying °nil, hearth rug with hie noise to his tall, t• the emblem of economy. malts. both ends meet. —"Mama," said a lad of six, "If a . man is a Mister, is a woman a Afistory ?" We railer grows shots, sonny. —Frank Jordoo, of Bedford county, haa been appointed Chairman of the Repablican State Central Committer. —lt' all the world's a stage, and men and women merely players, where are the 'indigoes and orchestra to come from:• —Why is a lawyer's profession not only le gal, but religious 1' It involves • knowledge of the law and love of the profits. —Six tine plantations were sold by the 'hail to Iberville parish, La., last. week, for what the elaborate machinery originally cost. —A letter has been received from 1.101301111 Scott, unhesitatingly endorsing all that Presi dent Johnson uttered In his speeoh on the 22d. —lt is said that this government has paid $27,559, daring the past month, out of the Ile <wet servloa fund, for the arrest of oonspirators. —ln the eleventh district : ot Shelby county, Tenns•ree. there is only one voter. This is the result of Parson Brownlow's ''Reptibliosn" gov erutnat. —At a concert recently, ea the conolusioh of the song, .Thent's • goad time ermine • country fanner got up and'exclainrd, M. ion couldn't fix the date, could inn. —There are 26 000 negroes between York• town. and Old Point Comfort, ender ltardietifet the Freedmen's Bureau, to whom an issued!' about 00,000 ratihns per mouth. —A man named King, recently confined at Louisrille, Icy., has confessed that he (King,) and not Payne, was the man who attempted to (assassinate S'eoretary Seward, in Apiel last. —A eoter4porary estimates that fifty mil lion dollars a year will be pared to the tax pay ers,by the veto of the llegrr; Bureau BBL That, of Basil; is enough to be thankful for, isn't it? —A lady friend tells Its that the hair eau be made to "crimp" much more readily by rol ling it in stripe of the War York Tribes's. When one of Sumner's speech(, is used, the hair earls like that of the neap,' -3ftlistr. LAGOA, who was oleated mayor of . the oily _of Brio on Friday last, was not a Republican Be was • candidate brespectire of party, and was eleotad oh barium isms alone, although a lisumerat in polftlos. —Tbs Demoeratio gain in Now Hampshire since hut Call. Is two thousand live hundred votes! Last fall . the Republican majority was ?ABM, This spring it is only 5,000." This if glo rious enough for that' bens kited region. —•lienegade Demoonite a to appear b• favoriteeandidate with an o anion. Geary Ism, is, aerteor will be oDi co--robe .as, Toe the mark, shoddy, and vote for bins. He won'tderedve you—if 454. shrt so hip inured to de ea —The iporlei3lisi gag it 41;idee harp on pram held, thirteen internal stripe*, wee red and six whit*. The differetiee between the lre- Aims Ilag bed the United Stater gag 'seaside in ealatitutteg in the forint • harp tar the . thirty six stars, end of pewter the bras Sold. —Rev. Alexander Campbell, the !loather of the seat known' 4111 the f•Diseiples of thiiist,"oad popolerly denopsthated "Qathithenfts Baptista," died, •r. Ay! Ka. at Batkaa.Ts Colophon was se ethiassit witythir, and eae of the greatert eentroveislinists of the so. -4 eettonieril7 tety; the throats 41` the radicals, la Opagress are ;o spore ¢usorous to the Administration that their . .fiatinitimahts pt patriotism were to the urebele'duriag They would likti koladallitisiww3l who appear tbethtst titer teiie itotilts-coursie to de•ahy :$1 1 104S: .c•,i. . • • - . oF &TO Os ON, C. Ni Wirr i f 4 1 42. . o , . 1 ~ , e J ......_, , . • d le. liappeniaLto be neseal.eA l lius,,deith ire: lien. 0 .... yr Itrorgas, I have spoosludadk,,io 1 mind you a few eneanatenda of liisa eaCill..- aooonipsuiling besets.. I aceonapaqled , ties.• elPeallien into; Tenataameoastd,e AL* s purpose of drivtagybanit Chti. Githia'abrig. ads of Federal cavalry. We were at Grew . vine early its tit, "gamin ste. , gise did frfAlift teatheg; 1864. Greeataing, it distant from Buie. Gap (Gen. GliAtun's posltimpla)guttepet miles. The General °stabil/Ird Id* bag: .! quarters at die bone of • lffrs. Willisms e ili , thil town o f Oreen . ille. Ls own brigmin 1. wall seat ) 00 llir:rilitt 144 ih'll War i ß l T'li, ville.to :Foist three Bailee from Wrimig" for the purpoie of *Alice Forte; and% Be. tachmant of Tennessee cavalry, 600 drelfg, 4as ordered usearGet. Itritaferd,ooBlll6ffrl on the road leading to Ball's Gap, and to ticket the s rosd leading towards the enemy This fore* wag not lnereased bemused a lar ger masher-of horses Matia-nit-iseit in that direction. The 'senate', ' betimes i Ofeenvltle and the Gap' is hilly, dad 1011d,1 4 and very poor. ' gen. (Hilda stated ittlair-v. ward, that he numbed information at dust.; statelier affairs about Grtinitills at half Put 1 eine of that night. Hu immediately moist his command in We - direction Of G Rh / - when about Rye tulles from town Le baited rt and-sent a. delaohmeaL through-tke tottedae - and etteee:ded in getting on die tank 1, Bradford% oominand ; La drove Lim (Bred- ford) beak from the road, leaving it open to Greenville. A deist ... aliment of Vier gem: p les of the 18th Tennesss* cavalry wan then ant forward to ohtrge the town. • Tisey met wtk no resistance. The square ea , wLioh M ' W.'s house Is situated (the house and g nds oectupy thiquere) ties - surrounded im ediately ; .;osire et the ; staff being arouse y the couriers, of 'bola - there were three or rat the front gets, rushed out and were oaptured one by ant ' Gen. Morgan attempted tiisectspe through %, thergardarr - flndintirra lb at-dfraedse' out o ff , he concealed 'himself Ong Dora* ' grape vines. Ile Lad no w ee p 6 at all; ‘ Captain Rogers having one of bin tit. • and Mr. Jobpeoo,4. A. G•'s olerh, th e e see. . While the othoers of his staff sad eouriett: were together under guard 'diktat . twenty \ yards. of his oduseelment, .1,4 neommarily beard the. questions asked them sad the threats made against them. The questions Coked themlaere as to his whereabouts—dm threats to makq them tell his place of SOS: oealaent. Elselag that there was no hope of suonsal-, ful concealment, he came out and insipid dered to Capt. Wilcox, Co. G. 18.1 Tenneti- A Res cavalry. He had already both of Geld. M.'s pistols in his p ion. This espied*, sat on his torso (be and fifteen or twenty others bad ridden into the garden, having 7 brCkee down the plant fence to qt in) end • ' oonversed with thei general and us for same • time—shont ten or twenty minutes ; be thee rode off. In a few minutes alter be left, • . man rode up and protested Wpm at Gee. Morgan; the general said t For Gars sets , don't shoot me—l am a prisoner." The gee 'was fired and the general fell. The arado of the gun (a Colt's aripy ride). was within . two feat of Morgan's breast whoa it was din , charged; his clothing and his body were _ blaokeuel with powder. This met Mend's• mounted and threw the general's body , across his horse, in front of thasaddis, and rode about town shouting, "here's you horse thief." When Gen. Gillian gave Ma permission to go Ind attend to' Gen. Mb's body, we found it lying in the road, about " one mile from the place wale be had beam 1 shot. • It was ao covered with mad that we could scarcely reoogeise it. The ball struek the center of the breast about three or four' inches halo* its Junction with the meek, and came out behind the left hip bone. He met his death as he had instills foes a thou• and times before; there was no skrinkinel` —not a quiver of a nervo—Atough as SOW murder in that brawny felon's eye. Zoo._ : tuck, will yet be proud of Jobs Morass— of his dashing life and fogless death. Ind in the "land of suet lead flow. era" long will his deeds be the theme of "song and story." The man who oboe Wm was named Campbell, of Co. G., 18th Ten• nessee cavalry. lie was proo?otal to a lieu tenancy for his bravery on thirOnCeslo4. • At Knoxville the 'staff officers were looked tip in iron '3 "ges, in. a jail, whose window► bad neither glass nor sash. They had net• (her chants of °lodging nor overmans VON blankets. These had all bees taken from. them. Ttioy were permitted to go into prison yard in the day time, and they had s •1 dead line there. We found at Knoxville several.offuleire sad • men of Morgan's command, wheloP. been _ taken two weeks before us. The 7 told us that the soldiers who captured them ,1 1 1 1 411, that they had orders not to take Gee. Moe- gaa alive. • • • •.. After - this it was rumored that the soldiers , of Gen. Morgan's command refused to take - • as prisoners -war, .men belonging to We • 18th Tennearce cavalry. Gen. G Map Mutt a communication, under a flag of trues, to Gen. •Brookiriridge on this subject, 411.1111• plaining that some members a! thealfitit had bloat killed, and stating that Ye supiossofit-4 that it was done, fn rstalhation for Um. oral - ported murder of Gen. Morgan. Mc dated that o . Morgan.hadobisic killed ima fight, d-..inolosed a °oily of a note from Capt. Rogers. of Glen. M.'s staff, lo,assWeni : to ono from him Inquiring into the elrousa- , 1 I stemma of Goo. Morilatei death, (R 9 a'_ . , was then a prisoner in 0•4 1 ,1 1 4 e# 4l ol - hands.) At the bottom ortblewmpleil , llo4,lllitt written :, "A true copy. A. C. t:fGhtp, tidier General." When Gem rtriellefdir afterwards attaohedined routed Gen; them; we Outured his headquarter's, dedromt :rate papers, among 'ens theorlglatill not; of 'apt. Rows, altel , e4inid aulfetien." del to road se the cop's Olio; Goo. cud very tifferent Mtn the temed ,. .. cops. Thus papers ass still da inleteemb Vi r, ""Pl 44 ^ l 046116 5;q 0 k* , ). 4...--The marriage larAfteweeyNlMlG, padergoing O :mega ' AL eikple AptieeMiee47 .l . between the etteple,-is Ilnrptettinee•trielik 4 npe ;Na Lee»yela to he telegiefiiereletei.l hp .b thaaiseiliertGileg 44 - 4 Flo' :Wawa* -AG ttertAeeift !et •' talergill,"l"l"Vsl9l".l4llls4**gt •, :Vv .. 2 I=3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers