THE FIRST VIOLET Who that le loved knows Out the tedtler tale, Which !lowan rereel when lip. are co; to tell 1 Wheee.youth.haa panted not, dreaming in the Where the rich rlodele dwell. Lo ' where they shrink along the lonely brake, Under the lifeless Inelaucholly tree, Not yet the roblkeings, nor glides the snake. Nnr wild thyme lures the bee. Yet et their night and Scent entranced and thril led, All June seems gulden In, the April rk lee, HOW WWII the day era yearn thr, till fulfilled! 0, distant pareili.e. Dear land to which desire (ores er Time dash eo Present to the grems allow, eny, in the lined eternal shall we seise At lest the Beeting now? Dream not of •Is to collie, of that. unlytown, Whither hope wander. (um he without • elue;) 110, their Into witchery to the Ilowere—thino Ymnh•in (Noir voidh renew %varlet,. et...labor when the eroen of gold - bored and het loot at gllttetlng In the greop, I/o thy hnortlo glad the num/ than thou/ of old 'ole wlthenol ot the el•op. Tuna these the h tn.l LJ Ir pa:Stool—it lIAM then That thou wort 'telt —thy coffers area lie! Alas. peter fool, joy is the !wealth 1.1 men And beer their pot ert v. voinrf:l); . il ninbition,wilint hart than denired Empire and power , 0 wonderer, tempest tee• red' 'the-c 1;;)re wererthhie, when life's gny spring inspired 'thy s•uil wish gloriet lust It the Bowery charm thee to the jorunol prime, When ever the slam milt fancy traced the I hart- Thou , hunt anger. power in that bleored time Thy real human heart! Berk, hark, nom the tread I.f loteliful fort! Mark! the bough, rustling r aunt the lusting warn. - Let air vein with one ilonr fiftieth he sweet, Korth rev with Arlo deer fore' el find flower, 111,4 tote, the hours steel To prank the world In Summer's pomp ,tfhue— /Int what •hall flaunt beneath a rterrer sun Worth what we tome in you, ()ft by Is flower, len( in some lose.' book We murk the lineo •111.1 dorm us snot. Thy Isle, results tbs bit hest, ies ,,,, e _bsek, re Dead vi..lel+ mark the place hoaq, SEEEE II OF C. CHA,UNCY BURR, E'SQ. (I. the 4610,6'1 the e.tootry, 'told the polite.. ol the Dem root. ty 11.1orrrnt el, et partir tko Roth eolt., or. ..sba I. “ereamte Po bin, cot V. rearb,we 11% thrho.it FELLOW l'lrtit ins : will.' I trust pardon me for not uitempting to field lan guage to ezpreos tins grottitole nl thus dr monotrotoin 11 no nit unlike the kmil of vlemonstnitions been itt the habit of witnessing for the da•t the or six years, that you will not be astonished if I appear a little enulleirtn•se.l I dislike to speak of eyelet!, because. to a great struggle for con - +t hh. ~., I -4thew-y,.-I—eolisider...a persormlity lost lieeides it is' not stiveny; the rose ;list a 111311 wino mantle un miffed null iinpregunble kinder tine fire of into enemies no equinily wvll Imltineed under the flattery of his friend. But, gentlemen do not Plllll.Oll. that I take thls detnonstra nnoll for flattery 1 - pi are tint Ibe class of linen to mealce flittiery even if 1 were the kind of min to Inc influenced by it The •elass of mon 1 see before toe ides liternily and too fatefully p net and mien,' of nor country to feel anything but the profound est earnestness null suseerity in the action of public men, and in the drift of public events 'fits laboring population dins al wnys the greatest interest nit stake itt any country Tine rich are In the 'titbit of flunking klm.ionelves the chief figure every ,_ there, andl7frbelte•ing that nil laws and . public measitre• ought to be fashioned for the increase and protection of their wealth Afill 1111 i has been entirely the scope' of Legislation in our - couutry for the last sir years especially. It inn gresi dclneion For the rich hove really less at slake in the country than the poor The Intimring poor are neeesnartly as 11111011 ni port of the country, to which they belong, ins the t 11. 0 ,3, the rivers, tine lakes and the 1111 Inca. anti nro quite no inseparable from it These all go with th.e country, whether it goes up or down ThVriela ore, to a certain extent, independent of the country If tine country Is ruined tine amount of their wealth may be less, but still /hey have line means to get out of u, Mill 10 settle themselves Inn safer and more prosperous regions But the poor must remote and perish Tine rich can say, ••I Lore great inferesis here, I have per rents, profits and capital " But the poor can any, hate greater interests stilt, for I have wife and enildren, and all I hold dear, .Lich most remain to share the fate of the country, whatever it may be ', Ruin the conntry, and the millions of laboring men must remain, they mad their familien, to go into denqintr together Itnin'the country, and the few rich may gather up n their hoarded gains and put ofl with their families, for some other spot, where they tinny null enjoy the blessings of peace, and , plenty 'Rain the country, dud t lussandlithin ....of laboring'people want for bread. Ruin the country and tine rich will riot it luxury. Which, then,ehns the greatest Interest at cake ant this country, the rich man, full of -wind and impudence, or the-honest, labor. log, poor man, full of anxiety nod despair for the fate of his wife and babes Who asks this Intention! It is noswered by a thousand vows of reason and Juntice, that 'tine coimiry belongs fairly to all the citi tens ;but if you Insist °tittleSs distinctions, • then It pre eminently belongs to the labor ' ing poor, who have no other iblieritaftee but it. prosperity. If they will insist on claws disanotione, then we say the couatiy betook, pre.entinenily (0 the laboring poor, 'n nod it is their right and their duty to see that its fate does not pass beyond their po• lidos) control. The Blank Republican pa p pera, fbr the le,at year and a half, have been throwing out feeler. in relation".to cutting the poor riff from dm right of voting . I want to deprive no citizen of the right of voting, hot if the right of franchise Is to be abridged, I declare that. justice and safety leniend that it eliould be cut off at the rich r.r.; end of the line. In the grid place the few are at that end of the line, while the many, the millions, ere at the peor end. The really great, seared and indefeasible inter este Sr. mostly , •t the poor end of the line There lie the homes of the land with all their prides' treasures. Abridge the right of tabchlse there, and youlace, with one blow, struck down the misses of this country to the wretched place of their ails- woe In the old world. Besides, no noun try ever lost its prooperity and its liberty ',O by the connivance of the poor. No, neves I '!, Instance where s country has fallen, it bee been in consequence of the luxury, the ag -- grunions, the corruption and the tyranity of the rich. In every instance of a coun try's ruin, It was the work of • few tick, and nowhere of the poor many. But the ' Black Republicans, feel that the plan of narrowing thelranattise, so as to exolude th4,hite poor, was, for the present, ins practioable, have hit upon the scheme of negro suffrage, as offset to the poor white matt'slote., They know that the negro Is • mots blind animal tool in the hands of -the party holding aim. Their negro bureau EMI .41i.e, ..I (.I . l . 4urriitit: ''-tqqAtihnio, YOL. XI end negeo , suffrage together in /limply a Yankee patent invention. and may be cal led a Black Republican voting machine.— It in a fact which will not lie disputed that the very rancale who are now plottivfn fere ' negro muffing°, have alwayn hero. in their heart, opposed to the euffrage of the poor white 'man. Negro eliffrage to simply in trick to take power from the white Messer, and keeplt in the bands of the few Puri tanie denpotn, who have no real political capital in this country, except to the poor barbarian negio A year ago this month, a Republican editor, whom I have know for minty yenrs, plainly told rue that the result ail., war would be that the negro vote would oUeot the Irish and tiermno rots of this . einitry. I replied that, when the Irish 'end Clemens dlecovereil that they were fighting to reduce themselves and oth er white men, to the status of Degrees, I had no ilottl,they would feel profoundly grateful to the party which lind so abused their confldenee.• In thin great shame and disgrace of negro equality the poor labor ing white nine is thereat sufferer. It is by the nide of the Inhering white twin that the negro is to stand as the equal. and not by the sole of the nolo p , litir.J.. who Planes hum there. It is theneocial plan 4 the white leboring mon 101 l is to be Africatti soil, on.l not the parlors and saloons of the rich lou will remember, fellow•ettlitells, that when about three years ago l assilrled that one of the object. of the we: was ne gro equality, I won den inneed'as “an Ono my to the flovernment ' It is not pleasant to renal those der of violence awl of MA MI stupidity. lint your call upon tile to-night to evidence that you consider my position ns being ein dicateol by the present attUulle of the coun try .tio,siny friends, without the least spir it of lionstMg, I may soy that every one of the issues , i , made against the war in vindi cate.' hy its results, and by the no longer disguised 11-capon 01 the Black Republican patty I appeal to you toenight whether I 41 not speak the truth when I tole Yen the ay . 'for not (or the nutm,btit for'llie negro, and to re•olutionive and overthrow the free government of our country ? [Toil 41:41, you .dul—]_Thcreason I opposed the war woe flint I Mon satisfied with and hired die reiq voluntary system of government of our fa thers it041 . 410,1 , 111eti the bloody European, toy stem of force which the War was meant, to , establish Now,my frtetiols,aner the results of the, war are before the country, tell me which Olin of my positions during the war lia•el to recant [Not one, hot one ] No, you tiny well not one But I 410 not allude to the matter for the purpose of proving that I ant not very liable to make mistakes, but for the purpose of reimpreesing upon your minds those great and sacred princi ples of government in which our liberty and our safety alone retail.. I nee soother way to save our country but to return fully to Op old lenolmerks To lie a free, happy end prosperous people as we were, waniust retrace every et ep we have taken since the negro party came into power If there is a single act of theirs touching the clutraote r of Government Aim is not wrong,that is not a violation of the Constitution and spirit of the I:pion:VOW:Mr it • I challenge the editors nail orators of that party to point out a single one of their party' measures whirr I cannot show to be a violation of the Constitution and a crime against liberty [Sonic one in the audience sold they saved the Union ] No; they have not saved the I. mon And President Johnson himself say, that they are determined the Union Anil not he mired That is just the fight between the Peesidentand the Black Repub lican party The party is coneielent,it has not changed its course a hair It is con tetuling nowter just what it was fighting for diming lie war—for the overt brow of the Union and foi:a centralised American des pot ism. Do you call this abomination a Union, which is held together by the bloody point of the bayonet, end where one half in plotting to keep its bloody heel permanent ly upon the necks of the other half If 'lmre is any man in this crowd who is fool enough or knave enough to call this accurs ed product of the Abolition war a Union. I viant hint to stand out there, so that I may see how lie leeks Why,if thin abom ination, as it now Melds, is a Union, then hell may be set up for a place of.,•irkue and happiness' I will go furlher and asy, if there is any world a worse hell than this, then I pity the condition of the Mantilla. publicans hereafter. lives, howling for a drop of water to cooPiitis burning tongue, was to be envied in contralti. Read their newspapers! head their speeches in Con gress ! ...Nay, raid the prayers of their cler gymen! And where, out of Belsehub's kingdom, was there ever such an infernal spirit before ! Ilatred,spite,malice,re•enge, all larded with such Incomprehensible ly ing ! And this to be nailed a Unton—o. free, ' !nippy, united couutry , ! God have mercy upon on if we are such fools as to think so! Look to the once proud and honored Capi tel of your country, and behold it now,after this Abolittiowar, degraded to a bandy den of negross, absolutely unfit fur the residence of deoseiii men and women. The elishiona l in the galleries and seloonbrollthe Capitol are actually swarming with vermin,the nat ural product of the "wards of the nation," as the negroes are poetically called,and the morals and politics of the leading members are as laity an the cushions! Only last week one of the Congressional mouth-pleees of the negro party declared that "they would never consent that Congress should put liberty to sleep upon any Progrusteari bed made by the fathers, much less strangle it in the cast off garments of its own child hood." What does this mean? Why, in plain language, that the government made by our fathers was a Procrustean bed for the inglorious sleep of litierti, and that the negro party has stripped the government of its original 'clothing and determined that it shall pig put on'again. This same cob fenced traitor,Patterson of New Hampshire, calls the principles of the Constkutiop of the United Slates "musty precedents," and says they hold them in" healthy contempt." Snob is the present language and attitude of Congress. Apd this, my fellow citizens, is the - same party, and these are the same principles that I combatted during the wv. During the whole war these traitors were aiming it the very thing they are doing now. It was for this that the war was Mangum -114 and carried on ; and It was for that I denounced It as nindinfli. not only against the American principles of government, but against, Christian *lnitiation. It was GM war of coriquest and plunder. The party which enrribtl it on, as al ill represented in Congress, now admits it to have been a war a conquest, and they are so far front deny ing it In here bees a war of pltZnder, that they tire still, after the war is ended, in venting all kind of schemes and eveuseti to Continue the plunder of the Southern peo ple Their thirst for plunder is not yet en- ' tinted. Their cannibal appetite for blood is not yet appenseil And, if I speak of plan der, fellow citizenn, you lines had a good taste of the genius of the negro party in dila respect for I see here before ate many, who had to mortgage your little homesteads to buy substitutes to feed the insatiate devil of Abolitionism. Once you owned a peaceful home, which you had gained by your own daily toil: but Black Republienteem laid% 'its mailed %aid upon yonr shoulder and snid : "Come! your money or your life! either go putt-self lo he alto! Tit for the glo ry of negroes, or mortgage your homes and get money to buy those who are willing to be shot in your Mend !" This was the only alternative the flack Republican party gave the poor of this country This party has mortgaged not only your homesteads, but line mortgaged yidir muscle and the sweat of your brow, to pay a debt heaped up in murdering and plundering tire Southern people Well, gentlemen, I take no mor . , pride in seeing the Southern people plus. tiered than I should in Boeing the Northern people plundered It is true that I war born here in the North, but flirt Alsserlera tion renders me,if possible, still more keen ly sensitive to the mortification and allathe of witnessing the spirit of conqueel,phender and despotism that lets disgraced the place of my birth. If I leave my children no oil, er inherktanee. I shall at least proudly leave them tine name of a rather who, in a tinte of great corruption, tyranny add brplal insan ity, never for a single hour cohered his in tegrity to bend berore the furious storm -- If I have suffered peiereut ion in this clause, I sin proud of it If the place where I was born is stained with a great wrong. I am the more ashamed of it I look upon these Abolition tyrants with ati great n horror and hatred an the proud and sit moue man does upon the despoiler of his 110111 e. Nor lave 1 may mote intention of ever abandoning toy opposition to all their abominable deeds anti principles than I should here of letting go a eroundrel whetted violated the 'ninon of toy home To acquiesce in the results ti this war, as they now stand, is to acquiesce in despot tent—is to give up tli . o land of our birth to the ravages of the fellatio, and the foot of ode spoiler! Is to turn our barks upon the graves of our ancestors, and to be cone e traitor lavery principle that Justly bears the name of liberty Ampliesee in thts abominable, ibis negroired despotism! Sod Almighty forbid it! Sooner untY the land,be divested d its human population, mid become the home only of the cockatrice, ofThe owl and the bittern! Sooner all this wild waste, with a sublime prayer hovering above the desolation, that God would repeo plc it with a race of men me reworthy of the_ fair inheritance than we should be, if we did acquiesce in this despotism! To tie fellow•citisens,' is to consent that /ha whitrilabbring malt lillolllkl be brought down to kriequnlity with the negro Thin in what it means. And it means more, it means that the white tattering man shall be taxed to death to feed and clothe hit newly ahristened black brother, in idleness aTiis expenses of the ...groat' bureau for the current year-will not be a Mill under fifteen millions of dollars And what is thin negro bureau! Why it is simply the negre's new notater. You have suffered the negro to be taken from his lawful master, and given to a bureau of Yankees, spiritual ist, free lovers, and fanatical vagabonds generally. Practically the negro is not as free under the control of the bureau ae he was under the control of his lawful master. The great difference in his condition is, that formerly he supported himself, and now you have to support him and the horde of offlohil scoundrels who are appointed to take charge of him. literally and phisicnlly poor Collie is a thousand fold worse off than he wan before. Indeed, before, he was best off of any negro on the face of the 'earth Now he is the worst. Be iayerish- Mg at the rote of fifteen per cent annually The poor Creature has been freed to death. Why will not the wretches, who have coin passed bin ruin, and the rum of our coon try, inflict the same bleening aeon them selves! Why do such men an Thad Ste• revs, Sumner, Ben. Wade, Stanton, and the legion of .J,h devilfish spirits live! We will not seek to fathim the royeteries of de em° Providence: stump s,tWi earthquake. break not heaven's "WM Igo, Why then a Borgia or a Catalina?" Let them live ; but let us reserve the eternal right to despise and denounce them. In proportion as we love our country we must take care that the bloody, the brutal, the despotic deeds of the Abolition war, are not permitted to be precedents for the fu ture. ;All that has been done in this new maph'of despotism 4 must be undone To say that we cannot sinwTin this thread of des l'potism, is to say that our country can nev er be free and happy again. Who says that t Who says that white men roust sit ,liown content to be only the eolith of ne- Degrees Who says that the land of CA logien, of Jefferson, of Madison, of Pa*lok Henry, and of Lee, shall become the land of Thad. Stevens, Sumner, Ben. Butler, and old John Brown? Who says that the im mortal Revolution for white Men and liber ty, in 1776, shall be obscured or washed out by a revolution for negroes and despot ism in 1868? Not you, fellow-sit inns; for if there were a drop of such craven blood 'in` your vein, you 'would not have done me the honor of this too battering demonstra tion. Your presence here is a proof that, in your imUtioal principles, you are white men, and that you are determined that the Chi'vemment shall be p d "for the benflt of white men and their posterity for ever." Your presence here is proof that you will stand for the Union as It was, and for the Constitution as it was, before either was tinkered by the traitorous hand of Black Republicanism. 'he, Union /our fathers made—thd is your *dorm, ind it Is mine. We stood togethei upon this plat form during the war in oppoaßion to the Abolition, traitare Who were seeking to over throw the great American principle of eon sent, and to establish •the old ttlimotie European prinoiple of throe We are Dem innate of the same school es the wise and patriotic founders of our Government. We ..sTATz summit AND iwzmuLL =nom." BELLEFONTE PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 22: 1866 fellow-cilisenn. arc Democrats, without lite Republican improvements. During the whole of that black 011.1 bloody time bellleeD • 11111 1 yearn of 1861 and ISM', we I stood upon precisely the same plat foria,of principles the Democratic poet) , hod stood upon all the".rmy Dom 1798 lo ISila If others F ol s off that platform, we did not. If Jefferson and the foamier, of the .Unia'n were right, we acre righ:, If the iminor tol platform of principle, known as the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. on which the Democratic party was brought into ezintence, were right in 1798. they were right in 181.0. They are right now and they will be right forever They in volve the fundamental organic principles of our government. If they 1111.19 been over thrown, their overthrow in a crime, and we must treat it in a crime To acquieeco in a crime is to ho a party to it after the fact If we are honest in wishing the cnion our fathers mod , restored, we mum reinin In the principles on widen our fathers based it The Democratic temple of self govern Men( and liberty can never be made to stand upon the foundntions of Bleck Re-' publican despotism Add every Block Re public•n stoneKr plonk put in thevfounda Dons for the Dein 'erotic edifice will be 11 source of weakness and danger \i t` have nom moue strange enrupaigns We have several times nemn a queer lookingvng brought on to the p:ditical course with a Der»ocrat to body and n Bleck Republican head and init, but we hove never known a great rare to be won by .0011 an animal We prolinbly never shall I say (hi., 1101 from any admiration of mere party 1111111 e, hut front a profound con3im ion of the •Ir tiles of Democratic principles Tr th publican party ohoold change its re•olit tionary character and adopt Democratic principles, I shoot,' folic)* the princildes whatever name they bore Ile the othei hand, should the Democrat Td party serum off from its principles I should not follow it I .111 not one alto would necept mere party 1111leee, by the sacrific.• of 1111 1 p.lll - of Democratic liberty SlleCe, I 1 mieli ground is the nio+t Illinois, defeat • That nano of shallow politirians, Unit - .half a loaf is better thrill Ile doe, _well enough for beggars nod mendicants. but it is n shame In the mouth of a man. Liberty is not a , it is one and indivisible. .11 is like virtue, and can not be halved end minrierei and snatched al and smittered about inrreginents. It slant stood or full, nn-n whole The linen who is willing to accept li if a loaf of liter ty deserresnerer to be free, If the init ial principle did exist in halves, then I, tn, for fighting for both halves nt once, nail for never giving tip the entiffict until we are eithei dead In victorious' Now, fe11... citizens, let our simple plot form continue to be. The Union our fathers made' the Union an it masa dhe glorious old Union 1 the Union is ithout one of them, Black Re publican improvements' II will take time to work our torn and bleeding country nll the wny back to dint glorious first estate, but if ne are faithful we shall reach 11 At ally rate, 'hot must he our platform On no other can the Democratic party ever be unitedandvictorions The man who talks of acquiescing in ofilds.Black Re publican revolution is a traitor to Democ racy and liberty, and is already linlf nay over to Tlotd. Steyen and old John Brown Let not the crayon wretch call himself a Democrat, but lei him nt least have the de cency of Judea, and "go to his own place!" Fellow-citisene, again l thank you for this ninnifentotion of your confidence mid re spec) At the close of gr Burr's remarks, three deafening rounds of applause were given for the speaker and for President Johnson, andlp Union as it wa. WAR WITH ENGLAND ("edam newspapers of the i• sensation" order, such as the Sew Yoh Iler,ild, are making n loud noise over the morn sion of Vermont" by it party of British troops in pursuit of a small body of retreat. ing Emanuel If their stories are to be reed hest the relations of England and America have been so seriously disturbed that a bloody war by land and by,ses may hare to be fought before a settlement can be effect ed. The II(rald assumes that the people of the Unired4lates bare found so much pleas ure "Uhl happiness In the expenditure of blood and deashre as to be eager to rush into a new war before the debr.B of the old one has been cleared away. , It therefore en gaciously counsels President Johnson, as the surreal, if not the only way to make him self popular enough to defeat the Radicals, to plunge into a war with England We attach very little importance to this alleged " invasion of Vermont," notwith standing the " sworn statements" of Iwo or threvitisens of Vermont and Mansachu sett% The only army officer of the United States who has as yet made a report on that subject, (Col. Livingston,) of the opinion that the British troops dit not cross the line,jhough they came up to-it in hot purl. mit of a party of retreating Fenian'. But even if, in the excitement of the ehaseT• small party of British troops had run over the line, that would furnish no groutelfor the sacrifice of • single life in a war between lie United States and England. The gov ernment of the latter would promptly disci vow the act, and, if we demanded it, tunish the officer in command of 'the " irniadl4" party ; and that, socordinit to the rules that govern the intercourse of all civilised na. Gone, would end the matter. If, after such disavowal and reparation,we assumed a bel licose tone towards Great Britain,we should justly incur the censure of all obristendow. Lancaster Intelligencer. —The traveling, correspondent of the New York ritess,(Republiaan) says " Beau foricl3. C., is nearly Yankeidied,one half of thii present residents hailing 'from Maw ,ohusetts and other New England littates. h — He adds that under the character of friends 'to the negroes, theuNew Englanders have in stilled much antagonism into the mind, of the negroes against their old masters ; (list many of those "friends," who went down there seversl years ago penniless, are now I going home with plenty of money, haring plundered the negroes an,then left them at the mercy of the masters.whom they taught the Meeks to insult and hate. lie ends the flOutheramegroes thriftless, extra4gant,le sy, and, as a general thing,extremily worth- ---A Palate—The Fenian movement CZ A WIDOW'S, SOLILOQUY Ilhw dreary' Shiver in heart and trem ble in body Row cold the world is! Therein no nub, no hope, /or lily life lien buried beneath thesod of a warmer moon '„,try than this Once I hail a happy borne Once I was ti loied wife Th - e morn. the noon and the night cnnie i mill with it name a kiss of lore—p strong arm-a et reng heart frenli blossom fronyhe bide or hope IThe birds song in the trees 7 tho rivulet went laughing on its way—rite grain nod ded to groin and the grain nodded back to they grass—the flowers climbed pp the hu lks no my children clambered up into my lop or romped with their father no he rolled 'in the floor in play with his pets tiller the work of.the day wait done for , And I sang as I worked.. 'And I wax hap. py in my loves and my hopes. We labored and proxpergd. The fields grew in sire=- our home became more beautiful- my boys grew to be young men and my heart swell ed with pride as I looked trpon 4 the home and loveieones We earned more than was required to support us—tire rattle lowed in the plod tree —the horses stamped in the stables—the chickens chased each other in the yard-- Mir cellar and pantry were full—'here 1111 groin in the horn and strong bonds Jo loth ittst er more • Theist e and the dr too To save the In'inunn ' Our fling nns eil Our cumin) alas in iintiger f —Oor trh erlLres were in peril! .011 :merciful (inn, linw my lielrt rebelled against the inunittvnl strife' I listened no glib ionguem—l was 101 l li) spec inns ['lender, thnt the ruion was in d Lager—in was Ii(11111..P.1 into my brain Isifin the pulpit —it wa• prayed into mr hs .o trilled 111011 or boo-1 was to Irate I hose linfi never harmed nie or Mille —I grew wild ° lknil helped in buckle One .4, , rd rat my 1.411t.1 .rile and filled the kin ifignek for Iffy Ann, Th. horrid pie and a/Pm. \len with gbh longar Rnid 11, 'nen KO -11111 t h rllo.ll w l t hgltb tongue. •rut The life 1111:1 inn Al OM 31,V/11Pd the song of line bird, 'ri. long Ilma,ar Mae I raw ped by—harsa, tent the air4ms Itu,band, Irbrntn - hrut-had berrrpttinwid on my Isamu, —whore arm, land 11l love Marin t,.1 Ole my cull whore life wan my lute. went tent, in prr/enre the 1 I orrpt In or-iny room I wept and prayed My pillow was wei with tears— my Leon grew end—the Recoiled like powder—lire days were so luny uighi• were no full of horrid dream. The horrpf fife and diem ' They' drowned the song or my lor.h— they made toy heart wild The lightening Nee.ned like Hombre of ho)iineta! The thunder wae y but the echo of Worming shells ! The hulTow wind wa; the groaning of 'holm who were dear to me —who wereinilen from my newt io pyre,. (he 1:01. : I prayed ' BM my 1114118. et' was off hi the army. or al the Ittetiingn / ' Bat tear.. would not ,till nit !aching I nuked ihone who en!iectl my 104.1 neg.) . —but they were 100 bile, COllOl mg money In 1711.11P1' 111‘ Gone Dead' Alone I knew ti ! 1 dreamed u ! The news CU. hut never husband—never a son'— One died in the hospital, with no' one to care for hun my hmba whose lips no oft were pressed to mine—whose Le in h►d been mr obese to mine • y hart/owl who knew me and who I knot, no well—he died where my tome could not enfold bun— where my kiss could nut give life—where my hand could not smoothie bock the hair from his Orbend " (th, the horroffyne and drum' And flon he died—he eras' killed on 'to battle field A borsiing shell tore his head open, that head I so vrtell petted and looked upon with pride. It tore away the lips I had so often kissed And he fell 013 the lay as still as death, side by side with the ones I was taught to hnle— the ones who were our natural enemies , And the trou shod foot of a' cavalry horse went crashing through the beatt of my dead boy, as ho lay dead on that bloody field' That bean which held my image— that heart which was lost to me forever. On, floe ! How I wept—and prayed ! I gave them to my country They were sent forth by me—l helped prepare them,for the sacrifice —I raw them go—l heariktlir aterri . and drum—they said my country eantiej— I believed and sent them forth. And they said 'twee well—that they died to preserve the Union! Now they tell. Me the Paton ts not. Farr od! Then why was I robbed of my trees, tires! The ones who wanted my loved ones are still here--but they say the Well to preserve the Union was • failure. I am but a woman—l know not much of politics —I know I am a widow—that my loved ones are goo K—that the lax gatherer is taking all that we earned before the war— that I am called upon to pay taxes, expen iie and eves inteyestemeney to support the bondholders who were enriched by the blood of my loved one., and to he, itlAt. and morning the echo of horri d and drum, and to ask myself and others what• we, what you or Llave gain ed by giving our loved ones to the sacrifice which we ire told divided, instessiforresto red the Union? lam • poor widow—l do nut, Tide'. Mond politico, but I want same one to tell me what Ihave gained, and why I must bear all the taxation at I hare borne the sorrow I Tee germs PLBooll.—The returns of the nettle plague sill show a gratifying decrease in the number of atoms reported, For 40 week ending Mop 12, the infest return, the number of oases was 1912, whilst the return for the previous week was 2007. The total number of animals att.eked thus far, have been 280,668,0 f whom but 81,688 recovered. s etel \m In Ireland, the e plague I. confined to Down county, d t ere ere are very few As most vigor s measures are be ing taken to eradicate it, the hope is very anfidently expressed that Ireland will soon be reported free from the disease. . AN UNEXPECTED, REBELLION Bradford county the loot place in the world where we would expect to find clic satiopiation on the party of Republicans will; the lethal of the I/mulllen Rump an nivilllngton N ilmot him . 11tece reigned supreme far year., and the handful of Dem ocrats of that county who earnestly (ante,. ded for tOts doetrmex of the father., were frequently lien . tt:tilty a majority of Nur thotetan.l We are grently pleased t; . , see that Truth is asnerting its power, e4ll in the bCnight ed.coUttly of Bradford t meeting of tnem tiers 4 of the Republican party, favprable to the policy of President Jlitlitubt;l, w i alt lately held at Towanda This ' itti;eirni derives its 'pipet.tree as much front the character of the actors in it, as front the numbers who attended, and the enthuainsm that pervaded it The President wan col Allen McKean. a atm of lion Samuel Mckean, formerly Ustitett States Senator front Pennsylvania, Col. McKean has been an influential mem ber of the Republican party front tine lane of its birth lle has heen the Prothonots• ry of the county, ontkinember of the Lege , Intnre tmong the other prominent part, etpants nn the proceedings, we notice W Smith, es.' and llon Ilenry W Tracy, who wits twice elected to the Legislature of the Minnie. and was the late Republican member of c oug rmet ft om the Bradford l• We clip the following resn'in inn front the proceedings Throb rd./flint in the opinion or 11114 meeting neillier of the einivenuotis which lin•e assembled nt Harrisburg MIA plated nn nomination, efllltiklibllCS for Gui,”lor or the runinionwenlth of l'ennnylesinin• lance sun needed In nominoting n enndidnio whose Fmliiicnt ironed. anirceilen t v. and prevent surrounding will jusllfy the loyal men. who approve and tonvnin the Preindent. m giv ing either of them ni prevent la lienrty sup port Therefore they recommend the Cili- I•tvg of n convention 01 the friend:l of the I'r. stdent In plat in nomination. n enll4lltinfe for (inventor of this commininealth WllOlll I hey atin'tniire cheerfully and coniti•teittly viippor In pursuance of 11t1.4 revolution Senatorial and Representntive tle'egrites were tafpom• toll° A C0111e11110(1 10 111111111111111 n thud Call tlitlaw-tor.lifircitior- The melting alma de clared that they were ••tintillt rattly opposed to compromising with traitors by.haitering niniveysal amnesty.' for 'universal suf frsge,'" and appointed a committee t o 0 , Inblish a Johnson paper in Towanda Vig• ilence committees weiPalso presided for to act in every district of the comity We have seen nothing lately more sign, ficatil than the proceedings of this meeting It is m vault for the Ilianuionists to antler take to convince thinking people 011.0,01 c war was fought to keep them in poner, nod not for the Union. lit hen such n meeting. committed of such men, is held in Bradford eminty. It meet, something The Union men h 6 the Republican party, find there iv no place for them in the Rump lied by Sum ner and Stevens They are everywhere on ate revolt, and ' will fight it out on that line," till the present Disunion leadeas.rd Washington are driven from power —Johns town llernorrat \Vito Snsu. Do 'MAO Vaasa!—Somebody must do the voting in the South. Who shall it be • asks a cotemporart Shall it be white men or negroal The Democracy are in favor of leaving the control of the whole country hr the hands of the white race . their opponents would transfer a forge por lion of it to the ndtmgeuu•nl of the ignorant blacks Which policy shall pre•ril • ft is fin the peoille to -eay_at the coming elec t lens We think we know what will be the answer of the hottest masses of the Ninth flaring annilithited t he •'rebelhan ,they will not show therusele,l +to CON' Ird lv as to fear these whoop they hire beaten in battle They will trust the white race of the South, and affiliate with them rather than it II II the IrSIIOeIIIII and degraded toga ate whom the war has set fh ee The Republican leaders eau der er rolleeted m making this govern mem half black. The decent white men of theNorth..sll utterly refuse to countenance any such infamous design, and will pet the seal of condemnation on tire men who by their votes in Congress knee shown them selvErs ready to force it upon the country. The revue is fairly made up and the ;WI cols cannot blind the masses by biller up peals to Ow predjuilice that existed against the -rebels.' That thing is about played out No man is so ignorant as not to know that the Soot him States must very speedily be come in all respects a constituent part of the Uovernment of the United States. The question, whi.,shalfrule, and do the voting? What says itonuey lvouia! The second Tuesday of October will tell. Shall the riding race be black or white ? Each voter most answer for himself.—Ex. Tuts NHORo.—it is a sewed political science, we believe, that the reproductive nese or increase of a people is a sure and unerring evidence of their social condition. According to this nettled theory, the slaves of the South have bestra a beti de condition then any other class of that unfortunate MOO. Statistics of - the last census prove thin fact. The free blacks in the No . rthern States decreased, within the ten-years that intervened between the last and the form er census nearly eighty per cent. in number not•ithstauding the great influx of runaway mimes from the Southern States. The free blaffits of the Spurtretereased about the same as'thefree blacks iu the North decreas ed, making a difference of sitteen per cent.; whilst the slaves increased hoeney-four per rent, in numbers at the same. What the next census will skate on this subject can easily be inferred from the tales of woe and miseey, into which .these unfortunate people have been thrown by a set of unprin .eipled office seekers. Thousands are now perishing daily under the rule of Yankee freedom.--/ffi. —A'talOsastern girl named Short,long lov ed a certain big Mr. Little, little thinking that Little loved a little lass named Long. To make a long story short, Little proposed to LSD", and Short longed to be even with Little's abort comings. So Short, meemig Long. threatened to marry Little luefore. long. which caused Little tp marry Long. Query—Did tall Short lovebig Little less bemuse Little loved Long. olden} Shure& In the Unita Slates Stands Dena naitheeld, Ye. It was !milt In the reign of Charles the Phut. ho- Mean 1830 and 1836. The materials were importet fret the mother country, NO. 25 DEARESTZCOME KISS ME A IVr•tern /adv. pil.li•larA • pohlO enFrolnen 12111 ttfleared, me. itty lip• one yet And my bow. •till p ettlA the I trip of thy arm . The *11.11) through egvh , thrt.htng run:• • •/ Ul , l 441' I Aro'. ktsres spin To whn•A a eery er.l.nt rung gentlemen, replied— Jee nm ••-lem ' dearest. I that Itta • tisth My lips shall with knots respona to thy swish. „ I,'ll cheek wit the Liao! thrtlling w Id tn each flat rt...p thee from drooping for kooton nom. Ittrn up thy 1.11. lose. I'll pounce 'lke • bird: And through vale and through,forest the remelt then Ire hesrJ. If you starer for khowte. I'm th•?. 'you nutty het,' And I'll hist thee from ruhrn till the nun obeli be set. ' Clone Mire thee' eh, thumb,' Cm one of that kind I'm the asap of nil others you're try tng to Stoll So you needn't look farther - a n d your pulses may dance. Till you're runotheretl with hirer•. owl die to a Irsnre So bring .n lite find, 101 e--vollr kmnpr I For rdrtrun wor of and h .ng Lid pen. 6,1 • n•I creme, I'm end pant Inc. and pray mg I I So eorne slont. drnre.l. Ai+ quick a you can ',romp. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER. , --- 1 Mon in the receipt giten for paving •d lire ,•41 —General Santo Bute and Late at media Non York . - - k blow from x 'e m to weleome if she strikes you egreeoldy. - —The person who made the 'retitle ring had on obondanee of hrose till lie. nn the *clam of the moan tains around .loneoloone, East Tenn...Nee. --The rtoirganization of the militia has eimatimileeil in sari..oe miontsee of Virginia —The railroad companiee do no , receive a ny hot national curreney to pay for ticketo 1111 l menrernent al lieorgetown College,•l I). . wtll take 111A1 , 0 Ulla year on the 3.1 Julyt. ---Why le w• 9 thing Alien" like a slaughter house. Ileranse lean and fat iii/tea are seen in The four grent preventtv ev of tberbolera are eitulton, elercneen, rebnnese •n.I ebeer --0!tv: Murton, of Indian", has born given nip by boo phyeteinn•. There iF no Lope of hi. recovery —A 10.13 in Pik! I °only. Mo. bort ealitol Ire; Ink hub, Veto. lie a ottiopittuent to lb. Pretittlent. ---Um going to draw 0114 how Into a knot, mt the 3 tvAt 1.,1% ita tit when ' , Moiling at the Ilymenntl alter --AC Pumpkin pies can lie purchased his twenty rise rents a piece, how mach would a whole one east the told Adam to chaetise his son, what the scriptural names Seth Are, Cain Abel. • --an exchange tells of a man who stopped his paper on Saturday, nod died the next Tnes day a. terrible warning —A W.I. in Nene, • who was formerly blsok a. nny African, has within the !met ni• month. liarome perfectly white. --k man in California has wade prepara. lion to hatch virileen thousand rhirkena by area. during the rousing seanon. ---It to stated that President Johnson will deliver the oration in the laying of the corner etone of the Douglas. monument. - —The New Haven (Conn.) Board of Educe tom Ipile I °tell to exclude colored children Irons the public xchoole of that tity - —They say that Thad. Slovene is getting ver) obi We hopetbat he wont ••go to seed " There s entiugh,uf thebreed eleeady. —The portion of Oil City, l'a , rei entl• burned to beirig- rapidly rebuilt. Thirty three new buildings are already in progresa _N a mpa in much • thorough teetotaller that he derlerea be would rather prefer • 51- tery griti o than be 'tree., ell in apirita. —Lind Gen. 111 rintra iniy, antler the law ertebliehing the full rink 'of General, will be shout twenty thonannii dollen, per annum. According to *London paper, of the 20,- 01 , 0 persons who attentied the Derby races re cently 15,000 Inft the course beastly drunk. cry nine pounds of dour eaten by the inhabitants of Wolk-enter, Mum., they drink a gallon of rum. So etatiuties show —The barns in Shenandoah Valley time. been mono) rebuilt, notwithstanding the war ty of the farmers, and are ready for the new crops --The Richmond ()rand Jury buye feund • true blyagainet Jebel C. Breckenridge, for treason, on an indielment identicul with (but rif Davie. • —An exchange limper think. Hiram Pow ers, the sculptor, is a swindler, because he chis eled and unfortunate Greek girl out of • block of marble. leer -S. A. Douglas Grant, son of LieuL Gen. Grant, has been appointed by the President to a Cadetship, at the P. S. Military Academy at West Point. .•• —A down east editor says be has seen the contrivance that lawyem use to 'warm up with the subject.' He esinwit , le • glass effacer., and holds about a pint. —An attempt will be made in July next to relay the Atlantic cable. The cable for the purpose is now being stowed away in tanks on board the Great Eastern. The Protmtant Episioptl Couvention of Lou isiana, hare Amen Rev. Dr. Wilmer, of Louis. hum, Bishop, to fin tya vacancy occasioned by the death of Leonida; Polk. —The Secretary of the Treasury on Wed. witty last, received two enstalments of con- science moykope of $l5OO from Booted, and the other o 0 from Philadelphia. . —There are thirt7•Ere persons resident in Westeeti, 19ass., whose este us not less than Sit leen nor more dun 94 pure, seversily.— Niuteen .re moles and stztsen Sr. females. .—The first gram eon% or the SIAM made Its appearance at New Odom. on tha 11th.— TM prim paid wen two dollar. per dosem and It was mead op at the restaurants at twodfs- AVO mutts per ear. —A torrospondent writes that, If we nano It, he w II "tend us something to Ml ap with." That's Just what we want. Suppose you mow meat* now with • good routing pima of hear, buret of Irmk a a gallon or two of aa armoire:ilea. —A elargyman was depleting harem &deep ly interested =Maim the alarming increase of intamporiater wham he sootonhdied his Winn by exelodlang : "A young wan= in my neigh harbour! died arty soddenly bat Sabbath whit. T. was preaching Um Gospel hi a Mate orbmstly iorozioation THE FENIAN DELUSION. It is wonderful, 'aye Ibe Day-Book. how Absurd and foolish masses of men will seal limes • Thera are In thin shnntry perhaps two Milbank of Irish born ,isericens, who are sorely exorcised over tine oppressions and wineries of Ireland,and are gl i nting their money and time, and their prayers and ntdlgrealef *mono! of talk, to the cause of the "Irish RepuVp," which they presume is quite certain to exist in the futurtn,though certainly rather shady at prevent Now, there is no doubrlreland is wronged, and the Irish people should be free.bnu they are no more wronged than the great Mons of tine English people, and have nq more right to be fete than have ijnel l illeri It i. not the English people that wronged Ireland. It is the English oligarchy and they oppreselhe elilieleS in England jll,ll as they opiiren• the masers in Ireland thin Waving this out of view, the Irish in Africa at this moment ere wronged to a mill gleaner extent than they are in Ireland, and it the'power flint 4ougs thetn in not broken mid overthrown, tlivir future is airenietleir flesh Polls greater than Ireland ever ',tar: of in ever lad!, to nee A faction in in power that his fasten ed a larger debt On ate laboring clonaely ban even Clint by menus of which the English oligarch) rules the ninsnewn I:lighted and Ireland It bee tiTertlirown self government tut hole of line country, that halt' which hire hitherto defended the right. of bitter, sod rendered liberty unit republicanism prattle obit., which beat down ancient federaltsm, hell in check the tendencien of consolida tion nod monarchism, end finally overthrew the Know Noiliihgisni of 'he North. and wide freemen and ATllerleile eine.. of the Fenian patriot; thiithnelstn. Finally, this faction, to keep poweyj.njts kends end continue its littribetia ho the working classes. proposes Id ilinfrenehtte larie proportion of the reel and reliable champion.. of American Deninersey in the, one h, anti to traneforin or ileforin 11011, of negroen into riiilPll. i s tientrahre the vomit .if these Feniatm at the North,and 'has to realm them aloycct and helpless slaves forever. The Broods oligarchy rule. he in Intend as m England,through an enormons debt or mortgage on their hones and reenclee, which leaving them berelmnough Itil„preserve their nnirttl en intence, sleeps them in poverty, ignorance, and mint;;Y: -But while the Abolition olig archy expSeln to rule the Irish and Ameri can masses through a debt more enorinous . than that of England:they also intend to de grade Oiem into amalgamation with four, millions of negroes,and thus to render them forever incapable of recovering their liber ty. ROMP future, generntione, if not the prevent one, may rise tip same day and cast off Irritjah epprreeion in Ireland : but if the °skier,/ donee, of thin country are ever de graded to a common ,condition of " free liom" with four millions of negroes, then they will become as ineepable of freedom, rebellion or self-government RS in Mexico, Central Awericaniand exexixthers Z.ll94,Whyroi the white race has degraded, amascuLated and ruined itself by the "abolition of sla very." Centuries hence the mongrel ele ment would he slaughtered off, and then the descendents of the Fenians might, perhaps, recover their liberty,espechilly if the freed. men of Irtilind and England came to ',heir aid. But in Olt Ineentime, and as thing. stand nowAba evils impending over Unapt in thin country are PO much greater and more horrible than those impending over Ireland, that it is difficult to express them or coca. pore them, fo; whll l e'their slavery would be equally abject and miserable, equally with negroes must needs render them incapable of resistance until many generations rotted oil, any, they recovered their original man. hood REMARY II OP Cot.. Flaw:us—While the e" meeting wa. waiting ft.r the arrival of Mr 'allandingham, the Chair Man called upon Col. Sawyer, of Anglaise, to entertain the waiting crowd. Mr. Sawyer said have been in the habit of meeting in State Conventions for thirty years; I have seen some bright days in the Democratio ranks, and have lately seen some dark ones. But I think the horizon !allow brightening. and I have implicit confidence that the par ty will come out all right The Democrat ic party can never become extinct. Our priciples are as firmly fixed as the ever lasting bills. We cannot give them up if we would, and would not if we could We hare had a splendid Convention,and I feel satisfied that we have done something to aid the good cause (tar Democratic brethren in Washingttm are going ahead. Johnson in getting right, and I feel confident he will comr out all right yet. While I was in Congress there was no truer Democrat than he. He got off tato bad ctoutOnny for a little while but I thtbk he is now returning tolds first love, end I have an'abiding , confidence that he will come out all right very noon. I glory in seeing his enemies attuning him, for the more they do it; I heVrlght er he " *ben Mr. gager had concluded kls re marks, Mr. Vedlandigham was 'iiitroauced by the President of the Colivention.—Re. Knot' YOUR DIKIIIAII3IIB.--(iOV. Curtin having signed the bill disfranchising non reporting drafted men, and the Supreme Court not having determined the constitu tionality of the not of Congrass of March 3, 1864, (upon which decision thenalidity of the State law rests,) it is eseenttal that all honontkiLtlisoharged soldiers shout pre serve their discharge papers, and thatall persons who were enrolled for the draft and' secured exemption for any and every cause, should preserve the papers furnished them by the boards of enrollment. All those papers willhave to be preserved with scrupulous care, because it is likely, (and proptir enough too,) that all persons -echo were enrolled or' who have been hail- Hes wilt be required to show their gantlets lions as eleetere„.2_will be very annoying end irritating, no doubt, especially to vet erans who have served their country faith fully during the war,to be compelled to sub mit to the same drawbacks and annoyances so long endured by naturalised elthrens,but there cantos no kelp for it If the Disunion shoddy-Itetpublicen bill gees into operation. The soldiers must thank thi "soldiers' friend" (I) and the Disuaiostista of limiest Legislature for all the trials and dons to whit& they will be setteeted, serve the papers and dteehmiges.—Petriet t '(latex. How A LOYALIST law.— It Is a well !mown feet that the ..If ilitylsd Glaloniels" during the late Idyll war IWre (read db. unionists Wore the war, sad aye no *Oa now. It auty pralhablpiespasseadap awl& many of oar readmit le knew h.w these fel levsynd whew; wader the latnewee of Weir prefesse4 Prealloe. Whet of the Unborn*, Heetuelty. JosoVitill s 9 the follerwiag foot. H . Haase that. bawl. lag abolitionist, who was basally; shoat his loyalty, was sakwil what he resat by 14,ssil how he felt; to which he ;replied, "I fa.' 41( I shoold like to shoot iewapbolly, eta staid liii thleg." This =o tearedm oral pr s &wag the Into one ler:peat anatiere. Wb W. pa p is keep thews Ns. Is any 'Utter st pipes, ramie& ti. he NM,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers