-- Thrrlttan for the WATCIIII.IOI THE iguthurm OAStLE. • (A. Allegory.) IT WILLIS W. W•SMIVRIIIII. • Built by the bands, of oor patriotic Gres, An edidee of Right, to God ordnined, With walla emblesed in glory, and it. opine Lost In the height of FM, which they bed • gained; And hen, In gentle sway, Cage Jostler, reigned, And *Fey stalled 'hove his whlte.vailed Throne; Here blissful Pesee,a proareroas rule maintained Till half a century bad come and gone. The bend of Plenty, on its altars strew, With lavish fingers, Wealth and joy untold ; And Petriotisin'e holy seal and tree Fanned timbright flames that round its one d, And e'er consumed, ZAK ardor uneontrolled, .The rich libation. Then op nursing tongue Poured the swift insult, with Intent bold, To rive the heart-strings which around it clang. Mee loved to esliehis Tonsple,then,their home; And'eherished every menery of the days ' • When blood ley eurdlini In •th' uncovered tomb those *he fell to wlte It. While the blue Or battle lit the spire with fitful ray., Its inmates gathered in thenounell . . And owned the struggle common ; and the prise Well worth the blond and trounce of thew It. And Independence—noblest friend of men— Wiped the .red main• from each eurvivor's brow, While Liberty ecintbd the meet refrain Of eeace,which rang with wierd enchantment now; The Sword slept In its sheath, on9l a foe, Of foreign birth, swept round its morsel watts, And lit the bale-dens of carnage end sm., Within the sanctum of one fairest And then It eamo—the hone of pain and trials— O'er its tail Spires emidnight darkness' spend; The warn,' Aguish chased the (immesh'. wiles; And war-hounds bowled above the fallen dead, And worse, the traitor—base ddcelver, wad The cause of Britain—llt the beacon bright, To guide the foe among its room., and ;Mod Upon their mimed a smile of warm delight. In council met, they, with determineil 'Their Pretend strength engaged in works of hate, Urged on by envy, then resolved to kill Their friends, and aid old England's poten tate. They failed—the war ceased; ■nd the Cutlo great Survived the struggle, and its proud old dome Reflected brighter glory; and It. fate Dunned the fair robes of splendor, not of gloom Once more its Ihro - plerept. the sleep of peace Till forty years had floated down the tide Of Time. Domestic joys saw cares decrease, And industry's strong fingers quickly guide It's yoemen on to wealth. The ocean wide, Surrounding It's oped gates, rich treasures bore, And Veered Into Its marls; and yet, beside, - It won the homage of each foreign shore. But mighty minds, imbued with treacherous spleen, Tainted with enry, secretly conspired To trail its honor low, and paint the sheen 'Of tts gram' Wails with theme. They name Wired In Mulling miuks of friendship. and desired Their fellow turn to lift to p.rwer high, That they could bettor cheat us Some admired, While others warned lip of their treachery. The Are-eyed demon., bloated with success, Began their work of ruin one:culled; They ;dabbed their brothers while they feigned Then kiwi(' the reeking blade which they had used. We eked to compromise, but they refused, And flouted us with Insult in earl, breath . ; Even our sacred freedop they abused, And left us etrugglinig through allying d-enth. The purple gore of many a freeman slabs Stained the white walla nod clotted on_ the floor ; And ing careen told the tale deplin That followed death and scarrmllle face of wari Its battlements were razed by men who swore "A.houee divided could not else but fall," When they were laboring, long years before, To light the torch of discord in its hall. And pile on pile they heaped th' unnumbered dealt, Till, fainting, those dissenting tem.,' to fight' And, ware un wave. the crimson surges Spread, Till sll seemed lost to Liberty and Right; The hungry bustards croaked the •leepless night; The orphan and the widow wailed the day— Thesselsemen prowled 'round in-doers, to smite Our ears with pauper.' mild and piteous lay. They grasp us now with the highwayman's cry, ".Vittof and deliver "' to support their shame; And chain us in the dungeon if we try To show the world their wrongs , end they proclaim The negro and the white man are the same; Sj And mortgage our fair Castle to procure ' The means to reach their beer, preposterous elm, •• And render, yet, our utter ruin sure. tk Th . ! e se t... au l u authors to rsofourwo, fare.brasen, dare sustain, when rather they Should kneel to as whit penitential prayer, Or ehrink,with blushing cheek., (rem us away The time, veal come, end at so disoint day, When they aril shudder as their work• they vier, And sigh to roe oar own protad Temple lay A-wrieddiug is Destrssetion'• bleachow deny - Or . ,an Horn, Pa., Jona 9, 18611. RADIOAL INFAMY The Puritans tined to whip women at the cort tall for religious opinions, and banish and Imprison men for the same offence, and now their disciples in HOMO of the Western Steles are treading the numeauti-Chxistion path The Rev. A. 11. Doan, of num 'coun: ty, hliesoui i, was recently arrested and Io• earcereted in the prison with common felons for the crime of pr , ggeibing the gospel, with t, out first taking an oath propounded by the • , polo teal bigot. who rule that Stole. Mr. Dean wag the only man initiated by the grand jury of Cass County at its Met sitting, , and he, like the ittiv. Faille; CM0111615, west 4- 4 to jail rather than give boil und a law which,is infamous in all its prim na. .4 The Rev. B. 11. tipencer,Rov. 8. W. Cope, and Rev. , Father O'Neill, have also `'' been arrested in Itlonigomery County, Min souri, nod held to gummier for offenses simi lar to ilant charged against the other oleri cal gentlemen. The itadionis seem deter mined to trample upon all the restraints of law, civilisation and Christianity . ; in order „,.., to retain possession of political power The c vilest men in the State of Missouri ore en gaged all spies and informers, and upon their testimony pious men and good citizens are jorn from their families and lodged in the common receptacle for vagabond., thieves, and nity4yArs. In the ease of Mr. .Sean the infireinastwsha a man rendered in .. famous by his conduct during the war. and yet upon his oath the grand jury acted, and a patriotlektitisep and devoted minister of the Prince of Peace was deprived of hie liberty. 0- k Ai. • Will not such nets as these, perpetrated .., by order of a political party, arouse the fears of the friends of religious and political A freedom in this country? The Radicals have violated every provision of the Conati ; lotion wpiob stood in their way, and now ' they assume to dictate what restraints shall hedge in a minister of the gospel before he is allowed to perform the functions of his holy Ace. This is a long step towards uniting church and State, • movement full ...,,. of danger to the perpetuity of a republican form of government. But even ibis will not eause tbeitadicials to halt in their wild and . wicked rue for sapremao,A? 'be offrff of old lime Intolerance is rampant In Minsouri and if not checked it may moon appear in full vigor in_pur own midst.—Aye. Bsangitut. Tuovaur.—We remember at the battle ttf the Wilderness& gallant young Mississippian had fatten at night. Just before burying him, there mune a letter from her he loved beet. One of the tearful group 'round his hody, a minister, whose tenderness was womanly, took the letter mud laid it upon the breast of him whet' herein how was stilled : HUry it with him. He 'XI. it When he wakes."• It was the soblimast sentence of his funeral service.— Pet. Index. h _ 11.(nr.viit J m VOL. XI DISBAND THE DEMOCRACY 41 , -- NEVER! el'hy should this grand good old party be distisuded and its braro members left to rally under banners of their enemies or to die by the wayside?, What good can some of giving'up the name, the principles wb havelougjat for . ao r, • • ---,,, In till, State a, in other., leading '(so nailed) dmnoorale are in favor of disband ing our party organization, forming a union, or a Johnson, or some other kind of a party, and to thin move, be it hero or elsewhere, we wish to say a few wordy, earnestly and candidly. In the name of twitmillion demoerotlo voters, North and South—in the name of one million and eight hituired thousand demokrZa iu al North who voted fur McClellan, n'e arise now.to ask'what good will clothe of this forsaking priniiples ? We tespeet Andrew Johnson, President of thi Unite'd Stater. We have gewat faith inn hint. We• are Willing he should lasso and form a Johnson party, if he wishes to, but wall never consent to see the dem ocratic party of the country disbanded and called together on his platform Idaltomet may go or come to the mountain—the slate ly ship may enter the Itorthor-Zthe eagle soar to the earth—Johnson natty coma to the Demodratic partL i ond it will shelter ham so long ns he is true to the Constitution—when lie is not, he will be spawn out of the mouth. The mountain cannot go to Mehemet The harbor cannot go out to shelter the ship, no matter how bravo it be. The great cerulean dome cannot and will not come down to meet the eagle, no matter how bravely he soars .tort The beautiful earth will never go up to claim thei rain drops from the clout's which are of its own Making The Democratic Fury of the country shall never disband and go straggling out In meet Johnson or any other man, (or its ptinciples tend hopes ate beyond the reach or any one mortal! We nro willing Johnson should come hook. We are willing to endorse hint in what to right—and nesuredly shall denounce him when wrong lint we are not in taws of tine formtng Johnson clubs of Democratic thither The gre trouble in this country Is thnt people think in droves. anti wept all sorts of Mal etiVnit a as factsPihillese peoilltita are too credulous. We object to piecing Iwo million Demo. crate under the influence of Seword'e bell cord? Wo object to being blended when going into a tight. Wo dislike forsaking tbe eternal principles of Democracy for an in: dividual name. If Johnson, and Seward and others are tired of Republicaniem, let theta Come out from the Rump disunianiets, and stand up friiite principles of that great democratic party which has no apology to make for the ruins our enemies have strewn over the land. We do not wish to enlist under vnen who will soon want us to fight under abolition, republican, dieuniCn banners—men who would in a year or two go laughing home showing the fish caught in the John - so - 0 nets and claiming high reward for their stralAgy and Impudence. It may not be fashionable to spent thus, but we cannot help it Five years sinne Democrats were caught by chaff. Let us not be taken in that manner again. What ! Disband the Democracy? Nevelt ! While theregs one Democrat in the coun try that party must not be disbanded. The hopes of millions—the happiness of the pen ple—t h e future glory of America—the guar dianship of the Constitution—the honor of our laws—the restoration of our bleeding Union is in the custody of the Democratic party, and to dissolve is to betray Take rare, so called deader. ! Eighteen hundred thousand Democrats in the North protest, and will hurl you over the battlements if this thing be forced upon liken,. ABOUT FACE! Men of Flack nod nerve to the front'. Close ranke—steady—ahoulder Imehoulder, head °footman forward to death or to victo ry ! The battle in won already. Ghee up am? Disband noir ~bon the enemy le divided 1 Disband when the country is on its knees; is with tearful yes end upl!fted hands firmly clasped looking to us for sid and bap phnes Disband when to do no would he to bring wore ruin on the hod? You men who think of this, ;some with us fora moment. Take off your hate. Forget your pooketa and step carefully. Do you see a dime/fad Union, broken by the men who ask you tn_diaband us Do you see those prisons filled with inno• cent Democrat., kept 'here till opened with lice, filth and mildew, with no other•musie to gladden the hearts thou the tinkling of the little bell in the.bands of the ounniug man who wants us to kiss the dagger which stabbed us• Do you see those nagbs, beating the brains out of defonpeless Democrats, while . the President was telling his little jokes in the Yhite House .? Do you see' the paid soldiers of the repub lic, by order'of the little bell turniturtheir bayonets upoor Demooratjo 'voters? , Do you see the cowardly tools of apyront. learfng down printing offices and batierlus the presses Into splinters? Do you see the party In power prose-rib lug men in business and 800141 °irate@ for being Demoorata Do you see the sneaks and blue coated minions of the provost force sneaking under your windows Do you see postmasters opening your let ters and retarding the olrouletion of you; papers,beeatise you will not shout in prate of wrong and Sorruption? Do you see half a millionof widows etand ing in tears over soldiers' g —wldowt who were made by republicans in a lieso crusade for cotton, mules sod nig gent Do you see the orphans in raga, the hon. see in ashes, the unlettered head boards of soldiers' graves, the bonne of those made poor by Linoolu'e miaious i thkjewels, the mistresses, the houses, the hods, the bonds of Lincoln's thleree, Abe mobs of his friends and supporters beatinviko brains outer, or suspending to trate, the Denim:irate who would not forsake their principles Look, you cowards and time servers on these pictures, and in shame recall your words. fly the living 000, the Democratic party /dial/ not be disbanded. We have an interest in it Our father bad an Intereat in it. Oar children have an intereei in it. You shall not barter it for a handful of greens! We have stood by that aid flag when cowards forsook its—when men sought our life—when bayonets were at our heart—when the rope was ready for our nook, when the hand of the assassin ban nought our heart—wheq enemies have 'at tacked us on the street—when men• have withheld business from us—witch poverty looked loose eye and death in the other— when mobs have sought to drive frotej principle—when offers of high place in and out of the armyiffiae been wadi us—when to say we were a democrat was to court abuse, to toy with death andsubJeict ourself and our friends to insult and to blows, and we shelYnever give up the flag or the faith. While there is life with' ue the democratic party hoe one nientber'whowill not be led into the shambles. Two milltoe democrats—Ott truest men the sun ever shone..upon —the men who vu led for McClellan—who stood by Mimi-Mull wrier coward, forsook them—the only true patriots of the outwit y, wou l d be a nice pthm-for Seward to lead back to Itia dies, tegrated party, but (here is one Mantle clari net lead. Ile to II good diplomatist, but not good enongh for Otis most impinlcut swindle upon the hopes and the patriotism t.f people. If Republicans want Demo-wais t they know whereto And us, every time—if they use us it milk be as a body, and not in sheaves to-keep their death and tan mill running., STANK UT 111 K }LAG !—L.II Cr;,;; . l3rtno era! —The Fet.inufioreo in Canada is a met; aneholy think to think upon It lonke at though it 'was an affair extemporised ¶ty the leatters, who have collected an immense amount of money from honest and hard• workjug Irishmen and women, for the par. Rise of showing bow sore of the money went. None can tellhow much, or bow lit tle, Suppose only one half of what eine been collected, has been expended in this wretcifed and inevitable fniluri, the other half 'will be a - rich haul for these wiw Boger it. There is little doubt, we think, that Killian's ridiculous funs at , Eastport, was designed to make a ehow of using the mon ey given by the poor Irish. It wee a tran sparent trick on the part of Killian. This' Sweeny affair looks like another of the same nature It seems that Gen. Sweeny did not accompany Ilia eipedition Ile woe safe enough, out of reach, while his honest dupes were sent into the jaws of destruct. ion. We have a profound respect and ad miration for the Irieliman'slove of his coun try jsniefor hishlesire to be revenged upon England for its long and abontonablet potism. Nothing can he more beautiful than to witness the enthusiasm with which hard working Irish laborers and 'servant girls give away their all for old Ireland ; and nothing can be more heart-siokening than to witness the way they are cheated by cun ning knaveli who fatten on their subWance That the great body of Fenians are proudly honest and in earnest none dispute The leaders—not the heads of circles—but the fow who handle all the funds—it strikes tie, are in • very bad position in the eyes of their own countrymen We have never had any confidence in the Fenian leaders who have used theirs influence to rope the honest Irish masses into the Abolition war of con quest and plunder, , The object of the Abo lition war was to create on this continent a worse and more cursed despotism than Eng land inflicted upon Ireland. Irishmen who really loved the great cause of liberty, did not try to drag their countrymen out to make a crusade against liberty.-01d Guard. A SCRIM Loon is ALLIMMENT COUNTY --=The '. Republican" party, so.called,ie be coming more demoralized as the election approaches. la Allegheny county the Joh nson " Republioans7 are well organized un der the leadership of Ex-Gov. IV., F.:John sten, Col Mollelvey,W. Hampton, the Saw yers, and o .. ther prominent politicians.— They have started a new paper—the Repub lic, and will be able to poll several thousand votes. The Pittsburgh Chronicle, a .• Re publican paper, opposes the "reconstruc tion plan" ofklongress, whilst the Costumer_ mat, of the same city, is to a stale of oscil lation between the President and Coutitem The " Republican" convention of Allegheny county meta few days ago and acted in a spirit that will certainly alienate from its nominees every Johnson man is the county. They endorsed Thad. Stevens from one end to the other; denounced President Johnson ,and generally nut-venomed all the vermin and defeated all the soldier candidates ex cept two. But the rank nod file of the par ty gave notice to the Convention, ip•ad vanct, that their ticket would be detained if they endoreed Stevens and the Radicals.— Clarion Democrat. 1011111111STIXO /1111 , ROMANTIC RlMlNlS ciesca.—The Montgomery Volt re-produces the following interesting episode of illus trious Virginians in the olden time The grandfather of Robert E. Lee was a rival of General Washington in a love affair. The object of their affection was the 'beautiful Miss Grimes, the first love of Washington, sod whom he celebrated as "the lowland beauty.' Lee was auccessfu and boee-off the prize. pi eon of this marriage, "Light horse" Harry Lee, was alwaycheld in great friendship by Wash ington rand Irving, in hie biography, mug sea Is thaf f ne priory of his tentferyr pr .the moth* wimenot withourite brifluenoe in oonnedifon with the son. This friendship continued between them until the &elk of "the father of his coun try." Major-Gen. Hepry Li* was &salient officer, the author of "Memoirs of .the War In the South ;" Governor of Virginia in 1791 ; an advoositrof the Federal Constitu tion in th. Virginia Cobvention ; a member • . .gross when Washington died; ap pointed by Congress to deliver the eulogy on the cutossian, audit/ hiseulogy originated the thumb, words, "First in war, first in paces, and test in the hearts of his coun trymen." —The man who went in for' a Consti tutional iresioution of the war" has sow no objection to makios the negro oenstiattional. Masa to tits pulpit, slum to the sohooh, , Mum la the Osopess to piers the knaves an d foots. ♦ 4.1 "STATE DIONTS AND ranzzAL 'UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1866. THE "LOYAL" ROAD TO WEALTH I Get a position no an agent in the Freed men's Bureau. Previous thereto. or subse quently% tunntme the name of Reverend, or get yourself dubbed that by partial Need.. :This is enlicniial, because it will inept° nil Republican editors. strong-minded wnmen, aetill'adittnis generally, with a faith in you which can not be shake* no matter what you may do.- , 2 Select a nice place to Ureic, end .rent yourself a plantation ou "easy terms " 8 Contract frith yourself (or the requisite number of able-bodied freedmen, wages, part of the crop of rice, augur or cotton, when male, you to feed and clothe three meanwhile. 4 Supply them liberally with rations and clothes from the Government stores and at public expense This will add largely t. your profits, though it helpv to emelt the tarot ion ut the North. 5. When the crop is harvested, sell the who'll, (Alt; pocket the proceeds, and leave without plying your laborers. Cormience need not trouble yew in this. as yeti will leave them no wets!, oh Then you found them. fi Return to your notion 'Binge and some the firs nod snivel of mortyrdom ; you con he "s victim of the President's pol icy," it will pny well in securing you plea ty of defenders of t h e highest political in *thence II wing now wealth and position, you are prepared to lecture Democrats on their Pin., These lectures • if well spiced with '•ropper head," disloyal,'• and like epithets, With now and then It donation to the onelety for the prevention of the reconstruction of tjic ltnion, wall so relieve yont• mind, that you Coll pans quietly down the sale of life mann radar of hypocrisy, and tinnily die the death of the pious, Recording to Ilia profit able llootrinea of liar Republican Church .1/Lang A mts Gone Mites Fuou A roll Gino rite political news from 1110 far Went ii 90111 i• hat cheering. In Nebrasitn,we learn from Ille'Tri6une af yesterday,tle Democrats have 6.h.ed eonsigerably on last year's role, though that journal still claims the success of the Radical disunioniats •• beyond all per adventure." The '<attic tin have been joy ously appropriating Oregon, and some of their journals have been quite ecstatic over the-result on the Pectic mist Yesterday, however, a brief teleran onme. over the wires which greatly dampened their hopes in that distant region. The news is as fol. The result I the Oregota eleetiom remottaa doubtoo,lloth parties darn the S'eote by II moron'. ty °Gout vox hundred. While this performs... was going on in Oregon, the copperheads" were bar , ' at work a little further north, in a Territory called " Washington,': and the result of their labors, " ns far as heard from," is thus pleasantly announced : The return., of As elcetion iot Wft•Aiongtora 7'er ritury show forge Desooerntee TA* entire Pe..lorratir toeket o, 'tamer rt....rttes i* elected, Ira le .0 believed to be .0 en four other. We commend these fellows to "Congress." They certainly need " t'econstructing " If the news should, be confirmed by subsequent intelligence, there is• but one thing left for the Rumps to do and that 15 to pass some constitutional amendment which will pre vent the inhabitants of (nese benighted re gions fororer hereafter from voting the Dent °erotic ticket —Age. The Richmond &miner says the ,irebel lion" broke down, and the scattering among the dry bones took place. " Rebel" mem bers of Congress bail funny adventures to get out of the way. Mr. Hubert, of Texas, fell into tile bands of a squad of Federal soldier., who hail heard him declare he was • Member of Congress, at a livery stable They were afterwards laughed out of it by some friends of Hubert, who declared he was bogus, owl only attempting to pass off for a man of consequence. The soldiers thinking they were sold, let him go, and he lost no time in going Several of The mein tqrs painted themselves as paroled soldiers, and were transported as such without dote° tion,on Government steamers, tir points near their homes Of the. were Mr. Perkins and Mr. Wiest]. The latter, in a disguise that precluded all suspicion, entered freely into conversation with the soldiers of the guard, and in the Course of the conversation asked wink they would do with old Wigfall if they were to catch hini. " Oh, we would hang him, certnin o :' was the reply " And you would serve Wig fall. "1(1 should be with you I have no doubt I should be p alfmp at the end of M. rope okyraelf" .• The double entendre was not suspected, and its wit was tlterefore lost, but is worth producing now. WUITIL Alegi, flow DO YOU LIKIK flu Pie 'max!! !—The following item was clipped from the Indianapolis Herald of a few days since. 5. “ik soldier, sick and destitute, is nowiy ing at the Globe hotel. Yesterday they were talking of sending him to the poor house If there is any loyalty end patriot ism left in Indianapolis east means any thing more than words,:' aka And the following more a Washington: Associated iron, dispatch, lately : "Oen. Howard has begun the distribution o r the $25,000 appropriated by Congress for the relief of destitute sod motoring freed- men in this, ,district A board hes been "voluted, with Dr. Kelbten, chief of the etytitical bureau, as president, and the city dry ided into two distil+, with a .iuperin tendent for ea6h." labt poor, sick and destituie soldier had only possessed a black hide, there would have been no aumalon to send him to i poor bump, Out be would have bad his grants looked after by Generals, medical bureaus, and superintendents. Pleasant for the nig gers—how do the while like the arrange ments A DAD Coil. WWI the yellow fever wee raging in New Orle••s, • oolportiar while tr•ieltn(along the river near Notches Tin ited • darkey's cabin, gal • bowl of milk, opened hti stook oWl►blas and asked Dinah it she bad religion. "Dunno mania I I'll call the old man I" The old AMo•n came npi when eolpor teur Robot/ 7 . "My good man have you gob much relig ion about here 1" The old rooster who had heard of the yellow jack, which soared Min so he could ,think of noticing else, replied— " Dunn, manse, but'dey has got tun like fell down In New Orleans I—b. A LEAF FROM THE HISTORY OE LOY AL MASSACHUSETTS. During the war of 1812, Mastneehtmetle won busily 'engaged in deerying the war. villifying its supportein, dishenriening its troops, encouraging and coniforting the enemy, threatening tiipir fellow-cititene bullying Congress mill attempting to depose the Premdent of Ipe United States. Their Governor look the front in this crimmie. the Legislatitte simnel tell the Governor, and the people by a majority cheered and nni mated both. Ilut the opposition woe to rceeiVe a more imposing and solemn tharseter. II was moved in the Legislature by it Mr Low : •• That a committee be appointed to'COß fer with all the New England States and sick they will agree Id appoint a committee to join them and repair to the City of Washing ton immediately there and Men re persona ally to make known to the President the opinion of the New England States in re. gard to the prrsent war, and the manner in which it has been conducted, and inforpi hint Gant he must either resign his office its President, or remove those ministers and other officers of the General Government who have by their notations plans ruined the nation " The nefarious plans of theme New Eng land disui gnntzea were not carried oil, be- C• 111.10 higher destinies for the 'nue awaited the country. Prove was restored, nod the Union preserved It wan reserjed.illor latet day, OD give Maesachusetts and the lest of the New England ;ital' the oppor: tunny fur which their souls Imre no long 'printed, to undermine and filially overthrow the Union 011E1 tbo Constitution, through the agencies or a bentional fanaticism 'An , now after a long and bloody war provoked by the fanatical blotting. of her own med dling, officious and unconstitutional policy, she stands to day , , through her Represents ives and Senators in Congress, in fierce op 1103111011 10 the restoraiion of the and the ad roc lie of alt., nal nets whoch the Constitution oI Ibis country Ins beew made it dead letter 14 she wits in Ike past, so she is In lie pie.ent She prayed and labored for 1161111101/ In 1012, she was praying and lobortmClor it 10 ISIII, and succeeded , and now, In 1111,0 through her Sumner', Wilsons, Fosters, Polands and Sprogues, she in endeavoring to establmli, ns the policy of thin country, the reduction or. the Southern Stnies to the condition of conquered provinces, and the milistitution of n vast centralised desputient at %Vitiating ton, for the Constitution that our Fearer. go. .1": News. Itsl'. II Es sy WAS', DlSZll6l4—tisssitiss . 1) leTelscs Flan Cu SliseTintizso —That brilliant and eccentric divine, the Rev Ileury Ward Beecher, in a sermon last Son day to his congregation, in Brooklyn, on the test, '•Overcome evil with good.•' de 110110CC5 SieVellS end his ilectrines, nittl the course hitherto pursued by the No'rth to wards the South. He said: have not been •ery popular with my people during the past year. I have failed to carry them altogether with se on some public questions—end lAm sorry for that! But yet, I must say that I cannot escape the direct bearing of thin Gospel law um es eirung as ever in the conviction that the true result of the war mum be recogniz ed Whatever went into the Constitution on account of slavery .nust come out ; and what.' wan keph out on account of slavery must be put into our organic law—and I have believed and Inhered for this as strongly, and longer than ninny of you But I have felt that it should be done In the spirit of lose, not of hatred I consider the doctrines brought forward tit the Ilmuse of Representativen by Mr. Stevens, though followed to their entirety, thank God ! by very few, I think them to be the doctrines of Belial, leading them to destruction. The North had a chance to show grace,' and love, and magnanimity Hew I longed to see it f Both Congress and the President should have been prow(' to Union I lied hoped'to see the North showing our superi ority in Christian ',oblations and generous forgiveness But I hn•e been dinnprointed ft has not been done You can no more change rebels to loyal men by canting "them out and turning them allay, thou yOd convert the wicked by building up ■ wall of separation between them and the good— shutting them out from the very intXuences that should be brought to bear umni-tbem "If thine enemy hunger, feed him; if h. thirst, give him drink ; for in so doing thou shalt heap coals afire upon his head. Be not overcome of evil, but over come evil with good." There, go ; vote that. You have been talking it long enongh ; do it. You have been praying it long enough ; try, • —Thu party opposed to the democracy has always been famous, not alone for the chameleon-like facility with which it chang ed Ito policy, but for the variety of names it swanned Beginning under the title of Federal, It has rung all the changes on an ti-Illasoury, bard eider-Whiggery, wooley- Slggery, Know-Nothingism, Republican, and "yownyll'" 'An it will doubtless change its name in a few Mouths we present a good one for its use this summer, for which we charge nothing. As the members of tho party generally hate Thad. Stevens and his rule, istgd,get are so joined to their idols and so musk:skald that their shop dere will be encoratod by the party whip, that they dare not break away from the ty ranny that enchains them ; as they dare on neither mice or men, we for all these rea sons, propose to oall them Tusti-Pms.s. They would like to Do full frogs and sing base on their own hook, but that infernal rump cannot be got rid of, the tail will strike, and until it is gone they are Thad- Poles. -Geary has been asked by the Phila delphia Daily New to repudiate the plat form adopted by the Disunion Beate Conven tion ',Mob nominated him. That platform endorses Congress, and in so doing,suslains the efforts of that body to faros negro sot frame upon the District of Columbia. But the hero of Hagler, Ferry is mate, and con tinues to stand on the Congress negro suf. frage platform. Therefore! the Daily NOW and a number of other Sepallean papers in this state, refuse to support him. Geary must repudiate.negro suffrage or he sill be beaten by at least 60,000. —Gerrit Smith says you bare no right to try the Confederates as traitors after having acknowledged them belligerents, aed treated them as a regular Jr r power. Whether we have the Tight to so-try them or not, it is vetritirtain that GitiePlustice Chase hos no stomach for the basin's,. = LET THE LABORING WHITE MEN READ. There is hanky, in this broad land, says extemporary, many an earnest. honest, hopeful working man, breasting the waves of adversity, hit stout heart clinging to the picture he seseawsy off in the future,ft home of Os ovfn, purchrotod,with the savings of lira weekly toil To be mire, to day he has nu ravings, the groat war debt, with its taxes upon him, cola up all his little. sur plus The enhanced price of the necessaries of-life, growing ovt of the paper currency —the financial shinplaster curse upon amt ;Ind his- 7 he has to stagger under Ile has ha surplus now; but lie hopes on' and hopes ever, lie sage the little home, and the school-house, and the church,and his week ytilwe journal, snit a deetut wardrobe,and three good meals a day for him arid his—a beautiful dream, away off in the distant clo ture. For the prettent,all is dark and gloomy. nod if it were not for hope'lits heart would sink within him lle struggles on in tom erty and self-denial; his children are rag ged and ignorant ; he' works and earn, his ten or twelve dollar. per week,but the land lord and the butclier,the baker and the coal dealer taket,ll his money—for are they not taxed, trebly tired, and has he not to foot the WI? Ile realizes that he, no a consu mer, must suffer thiough these taxes, that ft& people must breed at every pore.bitt for what? Let thercomplaining tn. plyer,who °donut educate lire children, and final and clothe them as formerly,read and judge for himself V • - • The , 4egro Bureau wiint's,ticoording to the bill reported by Sir Stevens, $11,584,500, for negro necessities down Booth, the cool ing fiscal year. What a sum '2--alinotit equal to the entire noel of sopportifig the Govern ment of the United St•tee'thiity yearn ago! Negro commisoLoners,sl7,soo negro clerks, $12,300 ; Tierra printing and paper.so3,o 0, negro fuel, $15,000 , negro wardrobe, $l,- 750.1)011i negro food. $1,1141,250: negro doctoring, $500,000 , negro railroad riding. 1.800,04./0; neer, school mama, $21,000 ; negro school helices, $390,0 0 0: negro telt , ;ft...piling, $lB.OOO, etc , etc Working white men of the North, your families are made by the present party in power white sl.tres Vour task is placed be fore you. and it In no 01111 that you cannot mooake it lon are to toil slid sweat so that the negro may have $11,584,600 in comforts, though you and yonrwdie on the roadside..througli the labor 'wills', sqmie . gives this vast rum the laay,wortbless black roes of the South. You need not memorial ixe The State Legislature for en eight hour a day law It will he in vain for you to expect returns for your labor. lou will be compelled to work longer nod take lees pay per day for it than ever, in order that four millions of indolent. good-for nothing negroes may be maintained iu idle ness at your expense Since the formation of the government up to the present hour, the work of Democrats has always been to repair the politiosl and social damage the old Federal or Tory fac• 'tionltrts, whenever they gtit into power Aim uniformly perpetrated. Democratic &drain intentions have always righted the.abuses which the innate corruptions of their porifi• cal enemies, when by accident or chicanery they obtained the reins of Government, al ways committed. The great reform, we trust, will commence with thepwrit year; but the job in the Augean Stables informer times was child's play to the work now on hand While the blunders moral and political, disgrace the irbole country and ore bringing ruin in their traiu,the true reformers should ,not be disheartened, but should put their shoulders manfully to the work, and again, as in times past and gone, endeavor to get the old Ship of State once more on the right track with a Democratic pilot at the Lelm, and a Democratic crew on board THE RADICALS AND THE CURRENCY Greeley is still Imploring his Radical friecds in Congress to contract the curren cy Ile might as well try to break n nig. ger's head with a ripe squash. This Radi cal Congrass, though made up in great part of "contractors," will contract nothing but debt-,an expansive as well aa.expensive prooeea, under the greenback avow of ft- , winciering..Yeaterday's Tribune says: "Gold still flutters between 160 and 100 —at 153 ,1143aturday—and no prospects of o fall During the last six weeks we ez• ported $40,381,322 ! In other words we ex ported $40,000,000 more .of gold than we imported, with calming Influences on the 1. - ondon market perhaps, but will, what in fluence on America? The premium flutter ing toward 100 must answer In the mean time all business seems 53 be uhaenf- , -chaos with double and single en try Prudent merchants find it hard to buy at a safe cominission, or to sell at • safe profit. Shrewd money-dealer reap Mega gains, and Wall street once more revels in a war delirium of gold gambling. We hear of combinations to affect the price of gold, to put D up and put it down, to damage na tional coedit, to create a panie. The war has been over for sixteen months, the soon. try is giining , new strength, and yet cur eurrency, gin, commerce, our business, the laws of trade, the rich man's cargoes and the poor man's loaf, are still at the mercy of desperate men who seek Itersunal gain no matter how many suffer." Greeley recommends his standard remedy of additional " protection" for the partial cure of these evils,but his main reliance for their entire extinotioh is • contraction of the ouyreney He says : " Cur ourreney must be contracted. With. out this, protection is a mockery—a mere reaper's song—and of no permanent value. The people insist that the wages of labor shill not he sixty or ty per cent. lest • than the value of labor—that an hour of hard work shall rude* to :fable in hard gold. Congress has the 111141 n part of this to do. Let the doty be done I" . But the duty won't be done, Mr. Greeley. The negroes not being concerned, you may pound Mr. Stevens' wig to pieties before he will bother ttls head about the contraction of the currency. Your tt chaos with double and single entry" may continue, and your prudent merchants may lad thetneelves doubled and twisted and finally wound up on the reel of bankruptcy, without suiting a single emotion in the breast of Thaddeus Ilitemetue, or causing hint to desist for Mte moment from his traitorous work of "ember rushy' the government" ia its Worts to re store the tfulea.—Lsweuaber laiettipswer. NO. 27. VIRGINIA I=l Oh Virginia. fair Virginiaqueen of all our run ny land, Of the warlike Southern ehtern, thou, the rhos. en of the band. Thou Bidet piedgo no, royal sister.: though thy pledge was not with want. And the mere ran :all crimsoned with that deep leek pledge of thine; !fere we Crown thee in thy sorrow—thou has bowed beneath the rod, While the foemen o'er thy teeming fields relent :bodily hare trod Thy homesteads he in ruins. od thy daughters wander far. And thy sone, amid the foremost rant., have borne the brunt of war Upon thy haughty heraldry. thy.. proud and • high archive... In their blood (heir namer Immortal are Written theseiluves.> O. Virginii! fair Virginia' impaneled be thy soil, Beneath it many a soldier-beart bath rested from its toll. From thy mountains to thy waters, that meet tie deep, du k main, Thy plains smile green and fernier woth the life blow) of our slain: The breeze that sweep. the hillside, bearing southward to the me, Ifatb a moan upon its murmuring—a requiedi for roe ; And we waft thee on the stroller wind, • blee long sister's sigh, ' For her gallant pins, who on illy plains bath lain tham..4lqatild re. So In efur t himrts we snliffe thee, a d we crown thy regal brow, ' queen, our sons sleep on thy breast' a fond, fond mother, thou' 'Ma mid May in oar sunny land --our land of lore and Rower., (Mowing wildly in our woodlands, woven deep ly in our hone.; And our dark .eyed maids go tripping, t7lppinil lightly o'er the green— Ilurgeoun skies and silt ery streatudetz, all be dazzling In their sheen, In the cup the red wine spatkling, yet, yet, I cannot alp, For the team have gathered in mine oyes flu I pre.. It lo,lsy lip; And my heart goes beck in yetalring ozwr land and over sea— Alt, the lip. ere cold and silent that pledged thin cup with me. And thus, oh ! fair Virginia, when the golden hours flit by, We mourn for those who on thy field. hath Min them down to die. :—Nroe Or fro. Times. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER negro preather,wes final $5OO in Cm , the other day, for expounding the iftetPel ith his fists, on 101 , hend of one of is gook. -----81ight changes make great dilibrenees, "Dinner for nothing•• le very good fen, but you can't pay as much of "nothing for dinner." —lt is proposed to elect p broad sad sob• stancial levee, eumpletely - girdling the city of New Orleans.. This Le a stupendous eoterprim. bill to change the place of holding the United State. Cuurt, in the northern dietrict of ileorgta, s frolllAllaiietta to Atlanta, was pulsed. —the greenbacks retired from circulation between April Inc and June lot of this year amounted to twenty-one and squirter million.. —General Santa Anna is negotiating for the equestrian portrait of Gen Soott, painted by Troyes, by a resolution of the Senate of Virgin- The citizens of Cincinnati have presented one hundred and thirty- four firemen °Met ty accident insurance policies for $25,000 —The Brooklyn Vanier. have discovered • large defalcation m their funds, and the O'tlationy treasury Is said to be reduced down to $5OO. —Front the Mercer Prew we hewn that eines the earliest settlement or that enmity there never Tits ouch promise or bountiful mops as at present. —The managers of the Dthir County Agri utural Society bare decided to hold a fair, at lollidaysburg, on the 2d, bd, 4th and bth day. f October next. —lt hi stated as a notieeala fact thal. the department at Washinglova has issued more passports to Americans visiting Europe this year than in any preceding one -4 [pier er he recently o•me from Virgin ia City, says vegetalirn is se .arcs in that re give that two =ellen stocks and • bunch of thistles is billed • grove. —An editor in Altana., was lately shot in an affray. Luckily the ball came against • bundle of unpaid bills The bullet could not go through them by a long shot! —The latest novelty is the ' , palpitating be come" for the ladies, which is deuoribed as gent ly "bearing" when an "emotional spring," con ceited under the arm, Is touched. —Corsets are now being made of leather. This is donbtlese in obedience to the poet's re quad: "Hide, oh hide tfirme hill. of meow." --The Commirtoner of Agriculture recede ed from Colorado several sheaves of wheat end oats, the former yielded eighty five bushels to the acre, and the later one hundred and twenty. —Three young men, natives of Kentucky, have bllOll senteneed at Springfield, 111., to be bung on the 22d inst., fur the murder of Joke Saunders in March. while on a pillaging cope• dition. —A Gellollll girl .t Mt. Palestine, Lowe, wee taken from her home, a few nights ago, Py four men, whose fares were blackedbd, •tripped of all her clothing, and tarred and. feethered.— Thelast Is believed to have been instigated by her adopted mother, oat of sheer wile. —Mies Howe, the inventor and patentee of the mw log marble. needle, has declared his purpose not to apply fob an extenalon of his patent, on the ground that be has made a ml!- ion and a ball dollars on it already, whiob b. regards as fortune enough for en. man. —A Ward thus describes his perils at sea , Deth stared es Into the Isom But we bad rath er the advantage of deft,. While flea seared es Into the face, thsr was about seventy of us .twin deth in the am. The proemial wasn't plessitr to us. Not meek. I don't know how deth liked It. —lt Is oadentood that tM Comedies Guy. erossent will shortly make a demand ow oar own for the estradltion of °moral. Sweeney, Spear and other Fenian offer. Caaadlaa spies an reported to be badly engaged collec ting intimation naiad Anteriaas who aided the !Waits in Wing dons, ie., across the border. --Publotee latest and worst. The latest whim of halos in Europe, h for ladies t. iw ereaw the height of the forehead by lumber plenteous supply el waters far the is of destroy leg the hair Oft the tore heed at sow and forever, The less expert, or more economical, shave, end have a hideous bias mark, like the result of a riser ores. • rough beard. —A model application for ollice.--Among the mem whims appileation for olSoe reeetwed by the new collector of the port et New lferit, is the following 7. Sir :--I am twenty -ley years of aim I home mewed right years In the Uni ted Stoma army. I.• willing to do anything; I am married; In Um Sal, I sastatod to enp• port the Oaten Mad tha Oeentitation ; N bete I would like W seppoet y 'IA as haft Moil Andy Jobeoa. A NEVE,ND SEOILICIA. , • - A correipondeut et Bah= sends as the following Meriting revelation. of a shocking crime perpetrated in Yembi . ll county,abicb, did we nor punitively kn T the veritable character of the writer, we should' he in clined to doubt lie traib ; bat we are com pelled to believe the twat ement,not with /I a Ills Its diabolical atroteity ..8/41.11)1, April 20, 1888. •• Bev, W. W. Boyakin has Busily copped the climax of hie infamous and amorohs ca reer, by *tagging two girls and debauching their persons. T t he outrage, for cool,delib trate, diabolical atrocity, is unsurpitfsej Boyakin, who hos beau resoling in Salem during Ito winter • and 'officiating aipaetor of the Baptist Church, recently went to -11tashill gooney to deliver a series of 'lee- ' 2 ' tures OD the )111.11111 he became the vein of a worthy minister in the same church, and for some weeks partook qf the hospitalities of that good intin'aud his Very eetunable hmily. Thee family consieledof the minister's Wife and three , daughters, the eldest of whinn is Married, sod wasst her father's home,sick of tionfinement. The pa rent. had, ch•ngil their sleeping room to one adjacent to that of their sick daughter in order to administer to her watite,and Boy. akin was permitted to occupy the vacant room. which was of conveulent acissa to the chamber of the two Young girl., who are about 18 and 18 years of age, respect ively. Into this chamber Boyekin intro darted hinteeff 61 the night and with the aid of drugs, 4eriliene their inooeene✓and out. outraged their persons. is stated Night after night did this huiherous old ruffian sa- Odle his infernal lusts upon hts powerless vietims,,until the crime speedily maniferted itself in the appearance of the da,sghters It woe with difficulty that the lives of the unfortunate sufferers were saved,never, how ever to recover from the,aufferings that Boy-' skin's crime has brought upon themselves and their stricken parents •• Boyskia-•escaped tale just retribution prepared for him by the neighborhood, by Seeing from it. Ile iv supposed to have ef fected his escape on the.lilierra Nevada, on her lait outward trip. Ile is ■bout fifty years of age, with lunar and beard gray. Ile was guilty of some improplety in Salem last winter, while et the la theatre, ated public indignation was quite strong against hini, but the cherub of which be was pastor nestled him in her lap and careened his uo- worthy carcass. "The-family in which be has wrought thin ruin is one °Vile most estimable India State, and it Is • pity that they gave such implicit eontidence to a man about whom the world bad rumored bed l'bings, even if ho wee gray•haired and • minister , But *bet is moil to be regretted is that the Bap- I tet church In Salem did not,when his stu." rious conduct in the Salem theatre excited ouch universal oomment, put its foot Upon the monster and oruelt him, instead of giv ing him a passport into homes to blight and destroy them. Boyskin was for some tints editor of the Corvallis Gazelle. lie larperambulated the valley divers a nd sundry limes, lectu ring on loyalty and Samba. Joan winter he was au **teemed and worthy Correspond ent of the Oregonian,. over the pogao,men of Oniof ilia Smiths.' He was a great fa. , vorite with the Editor of the Statesman, lib% was eager to champion him. He was a • burnin and •hinin' light in this:, Union• party, as well as in the choral. He was very pious, loyal and lustful, incessantly bar anguing on polities and belaboring &copper -heads through his favorite mediam,Ote Ore gonian. •'_,His services bad been moored lo stump Vac :Mill county for the 'Onion' ticket the present canvass, and his untimely Slight will be a severe loss to tie ticket in that mum- 'the old devil Was seen in this City about the time of the sailing of the Sierra Nevada. and we hear it stated that some one bad him arrested for debt jest as he was going on board, but the matter was settled, and we 'appose be has made hisenspe. We hope, howrog, diet steps will be taken Immedi ately to scours his arrest, if possible,in San Fraieletto or any other place where he can be overtaken.—Portiend ( won) Herald. April 28. (The Rev. W. Boyakio, w ose exploits are related sbove,was a chaplain in the 80th regiment Illinois volunteers, when that reg. iment first went out, and was loyal and pi ous to a degree. His home is in Bellville, Illinois,where he has or had a family He has probably bad to leave the Pacific coact,and is doubtless in Illinois at present. —Ed. Chicago Asses.) NOBODY CARES The other day some Yankee soldiers see ing a negro fellow sitting on the dock wharf, with Ws fest hanging over the water, bethought theinseless.how easy* thing.it, would be to send him to ..itingdlim dime" by a blow on the back of the head that would at once disable him end tumble him into the wale(. This was done with the admirable promptness end dispatch which form part of military training. and the re sult folly answered their expectations. The negro, whose name was Roane, went, with out a struggle, to the bottom, and lay there until fished up an hour or so after by the charitable boat-hook of a skipper. The Coroner bad some' sort of an investigation, but, as one of the soldiers objected to tes tifying before a jury, one member of which was wearing gray clothes, the ingneet does not appear to have ire very searching. One of the soldiers who •ffirmed the gang that played the pleasant little freak was known, and is now known; sod there would be no difficulty, we fancy, If General Ter-' ry, as head of the freedmen's Bureau, as . well ell commander of the wither) , throes here; were to like bold of the miller, In oompelling this man to disclose the ramp of 'ill who were in the party, and whb at present divide the Murder iilnong them. The next Mop would be lowish* each man so impliesSed to exculpate himself, elearly and beyead,all question. This sifting pro ems would eliminate• the marderer. We do 'slot isms that anything is being done la the matter. What does Oen. Howard think of this quiet way of Littler dm' who make !Withal* of his beloved! Has Hensel Oreille, nothing to Say &best it t Hadalio groat and good Sawaor, hw lailialidag lo say crow la armory ofladiewuwalklbewill or," and is heaping to las "the deep dam- Rollo; of taklair off" pass wildowS a Hard Cams, Yaps. Terri, ?sword. Romney—lat as hoar hiseriatn‘d. --eks P "*". illeNd ea eater dtroothog ampaaslf aB allows of dia., tooogiames, llama •,/144aelialoi. aleee/ 1 7 or ladarootgy, la tbit eal4lNatioa ig tarns la NI. Bowan* Stalaif.. llowswal sl tho, perpra thoo a : '' lora *wiloalo,aal aroarirat two Wal riaoltoro, Was laveloolo lag Ilulikasi ion tato fee 11 1 1 1 00 4 bile. Tim Niro , totiboolo iR 6011114 tiot , roosiotati obip Verotook Ole/eta Alrotolgra navy rod, to dm otookme•ofttiOvado.l. tautly ottovootod $o swap ianietddig . is morior thobrolloovo obi Sp Ottoksokoo „ • PintletWitroi 4 . ,, 11. OS tIIM itPIWIVIALI NA lYe irlioglawkw• ardaothilfrK. 7."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers