MY•HUSRAND'S GRAVE I= Al last-nay husband'. grace Is found ! My aching feet may lest, And I may noon away and dream I lean upon his breast. A Southern man, fur Southest rause. Regardless of the cost, Wore Southern grey 'nesth Southern flag Ile fought and won—l lost' And though the marshals - 11 hosts In filo Tratnpiteary on rity heart, . I'd rather ireep than blush for him— Thank tied, he bore his part! lime long ago I cannot tell— It seems one hundred years ' For time ha. held in scarlet hand An hour-glees dimmil by learn. tied bless theigentle 6 wh•hvnme At dawning of the year, And wept with Me eel garlatilled Bright laurel, for thy bier! A widow', prayer will rise for aye, ' Slirengers, for thee and thine: ' The kindly hands that ,ministered, ROW blest. had theprbeen mipe An onablem of my widowhood I. all that I nab bring— A tunelors•barp, four broken chords And one poor silent string' Ah, wake me not This spirit hand That onkel., the green, strung pine Kith fingers light, and stroke. my hair Caressingly, is thine. " Kisses I press spoil the earth, Olt, stillest ants, unfold Thou n ill nut give me kiss for kiss Oh, siol,'lltou art so cold! If life and Jeath wore mine to choose be the rolileat chat On thy dent heart, then lit log Bower That breathet Phoi o the god! I wait, sleep on where comrades !deep OR guard ; thy warrior food Would ratlinr ripe in funks when (101 l Shall his intoter.roll —Attuoto „Ippeet/. GREAT STATE TRIALS IN THIS douN. The Chief Justice of the United States Imving been clothed by a recent act of Con gross with authority to hold a special term of the Circuit Court of the L'niirif Stutv in Richmond, it is now very getter thy conce ded that en-President Dtvis, will be arming ee for trial npow the charge of . ..reason . ' in ad, month of Ootobor neat The trial will it the most import 41 which has ever taken place in this or any other country. No ouch a State trial ever occur oil iu England. It is n remarka b le fact In the history of Richmond, th it if the trial of Davie shall be held there, three of the most important State trials which have taken place in this country will have occurrent in that City. •tif. hisitiry of the its. , proviouis trials is thus given by the Iliqhmou.l Teintz The trial or John Thoinp.onlmlar, in 1800, for eeditioun llnet upon President, JUlm - I:dome, wit, the first of there Crimea al eases Calendar himself was hide worthy of the whirlwind of exonewni"which his riot then excited, lie was a foreigner who is represented to have been as depraved in mortis as be wan malignant in temper. Ills case derives its Importance from the foot that the Democrat ic leaders of that day t u tting marshaled their forces for a terrible conflict with the Federal* party, availed themselves of his trial, and of the rude, conteruptimun and in decent inneduct of the partlean Judge who presided, to break down +he alien and sedi tion laws, and impeach the Justice of the Dupre:nil Court, who bail made Inumelftnost odious in mercilessly enforcing them The alien and sedition lewd punished with Site and imprisonment any one who discussed with ilinraspectful asperity the public nets of the President of the United States. Calendar published a harsh and vulgaf political pamphlet in which he abused President Adams For this he was indicted, on the 28th of May, MOO, by the grand Jury for, the Cir cuit Court of the United States, Justice Chang" presiding The prlhoner wag defend ed by M . Ilay , Nichols and lyrit, and the course• of the trial was marked by the moot brutal and' indecent conduct on the part of Justice Christ toward. the counsel fur the defence Ile refused all reasonable and proper motions for a continuance, bul lied and scolded the counsel for Calendar, and played the part of prosecutor inn wan ner to completely eclipse the District Attor ney. Ills sittings were evidently dictated by bitter party feelings, and not by justice or prec'elletil• When Wirt was proceeding to argue to the jury that the alien arid minion act was unconstnuttonal, Judge Chase insultingly ordered him to take bin seat. * The counsel for the defense then refused to argue the cane After a long and violent eharge'rent Justice Chase the jury retired, MO, after an abscence of two bourn, brought in a ver dict of -guility," and the court sentenced Calendar to nine months iinpriaontnent and imposed s fine of two hundred dollars. Cal endar was nubsequently pardoned by Pres ident Jefferson, upon the tt press grounds "that law was as absolute nullity an if Congress hail ordered us to fall down and worship n golden image " The teinpeet which his trial occasioned throughout the United Staten at that time can scarcely be understood The newspa pers of the day were for the first tuns cram iced with detailed reports of the cane. Vir ginia wan in a flame; for, even before the trial, affidavits *ere circulated in which it wan stated that, before the trial, Justine Chase had said be would hove no Democrats un the grand jury,',' and "that he'vrould teach the lawyer. pf Virginia the difference between the liberty and licen- Doneness of the press." Ile nice likened himself to a "schoolmaster who was about to birch a few unruly boys as they deserv- His poOdal admirers got up caricatures of this judicial ruffian stretching in turn, Wirt, Hay, Nichols and other eminent Vir ginians across his knees and flogging them soundly. Ills rude, coarse and indecent behavior during Calendar's trial, was de signed to humiliate the spirited and able bar of this city. The slaps he gave Moho]. and flay, at the outset of the trial were ter rible specimens of judicial' rudeness The offended and insulted lawyers resent, ed,,the conduct of-Judge Chase no fiercely, that Jobe Randolph, at their instance pre ferred articles of impeachment against htm, five of them based upon "Calendar'e lie was found guilty upon the article which charged "rude, contemptuous and indecent conduct to counsel," although acquitted up on other charges Nothing but party sym pathy cif the Federal members of the Senate saved him from conviction bY a two thirds vote, and the Impeachment is said to have utterly *rushed Judge Chap. The next great State trial. whioh drew the saltation of millions to the Circuit Court of the United !Rates at Richmond, was that of Burr, for' , ..tresson: wbiob 00 111. mimed on the 224 of May, 1807. Rich mond was then a oity of only six thousand inhabitants, and it in said that there were at tha eommeoasetent of the trial, twice that number. of strangers in the ally. Among the striking scenes of that day was that of a lank, ungainly man, named An drew Jaeltron, who is described as "mount ing upon the steps of a corner grocery, and . .* • •,1 h e , 46 1, alt - , t 1„ L.4lt VOL. XI denouncing Thorns Qefferson for the part ho had taken Mn fritturakng the schemes" of Aaron Burr he 'rat took place in the Present hall of die Rouse of Delegates, and the struggle for admvsion was terrible So great was the number of die logo Ished per eons claiming seats within' the bar, that awyers of twenty years standing were ex eluded from theiraCoustomed seats. Among the young men qf the town, who summedWil in forcing their way In, was Winfield Scutt, who clambered up and stood for many hours on the massive look sof the door of the hall. Justice \i krshall presided at the trial, assisted by Cyrus Griffin, Judge of the District Court. of Virginia. George !fay who defended Calendar, was the United States District Atrorney, and with him were associated Alexander 'Mcßae, who at the time of the trial, wan Lieut. Governor of Virginia Edmund Randolph, John Wiele ham, Luther Martin, Benjamin Botts and "Jock Baker, ' appeared fur Burr The grand juries of those days were composed of the most 00111101 R and distinguished moo of the State, awl we Pod a II S Scooter plilex) among the gr. I Juror., who was trithdrau it in coaseitteuce of "prejudices against die accused " John Randolph, the great orator of Roanoke was summoned in the place it Senator titles, and was fore man of the grand jury. rontrast this grand Jury with that which so lately Mt At Nor folk, and after listening to Judge Under wood's harangue, found a Into bill against Mr Davis After the finding of a true bill fourteen days were spent in getting nn impartial jury ; who had -neither formed nor expressed an opinion, tit to the guilt of 010 Recoiled " Out of n venire of forty eight men hut four men were tound whore opiniens' were suffi ciently untreated to permit them to not as' jurors There was but one juryman per. entplorily challenged by Burr It must be ••borne in mind that he had, but te short time before his trial, killed Alexander Hamilton in • n duel. A person who was ling exam ined as to hie competency an a juror, )tharp ly quentioged nod somewhat nimble by Ilurr'a counsel, turning to the spectators, - said am surprised they should be in such terror of me Perhaps it is because my name is Ilantilton " "That remark," exclaimed Burr, "is a sufficient reason for objecting to him. challenge him peremp lorDy.t. Out of a second rewire of forty eight all hail formed unfavorable opinions to the aocetsed. and ({tatters looked no dea. perste that the counsel for the defence mov ed to squash the trial for the simple reason that no Impartial jury could be obtained. A jury was at last obtjted by permitting Bur , 1;e select right jurors, who were added to the four Already selected in the usual way. The procurement of a jary , had occupied from the second to the seventeinth of Au gust and on that day the examination coin : , meneed The examination of the w'itflesses and the argument of counsel continued from the 17th to the 20th of August, when Chief Justice Marshall virtually decided the ease by that famous opinion, the read ing of which occupied morn than three hours Nol‘overt net" of treason Lad been proved against Burr, and the decision of Marshall had no testimony relative to the conduct or declarations of the prisoner, elsewhere nod subsequent In the transac tion on Illlannerlumset Island, (the alleged overt act of treason,) can be ntimitted , he can. Ruch testimony being in its nature corroborative, mid incompetent to prove the overt net in itself, is Irrelevant until there eau hr proof ol the erect art by 'fro telt nets..." The jury with these instructions returned the following qualified verdict of ticqu'ital "do of the jury say that Aaron Burr IS net proved to hr polity under the in dictment by any evidence submitted to us. We therefore find him not guilty." This verdict greatly excited Biter, who at onhe sprang to his feet end with great ex citement of manner protested against the form of the indictment, and demanded that it should be rendered in the regular and I less damaging folio The verdict was fitial ly simply entered on the record ns "not loth), " Ilurr wan then admitted to bail, and t ill nod acquitted of the charge of misdemeanor on the ground that the offence ,was not committed in Virginia Thus eight month. after his., arrest, and six months after the commencement of proceed ings against him in Virginia, Burr was once more free The, it tale of Calendar and Burr, in their day and generation, enchained the ,atten• lion of the whole, Ration, but compaired with the proposed trial of the en President of the Confederate States, they shrink into absolute insignificanoe. Calendar was a low, brutal and drunken hack writer, whose cause was'espoused by a pkrty then rising into power, to annihilate the Federal party. Burr was a disappointed adventurer, whose real objelt must always remain a question of grave doubt. The distinguished and unfortunate alatas• man who is soon to be tried is the represen talive of the millions who agreed with him in sentiment and who conferred upon hint unsolicited and dangerous honors. Ilia character as a man of 'pitiless integrity, ability, and Christian virtue, in not quoe tinned, nor is it pretended that he is the author and principal promoter of the late out war. Thousanda who were far more active in initiating hostilities than himself have been long since pardoned. lie alone, merely as a consequence of having held a high office, is to be tried for his life. In this trial we recognise the arraign 'sent and prosecution not of one than, but of an entire swim'. Hence in dignity and Importance It will be the most important trial which has ever occurred.—F,Whange. AN EDITOR IX lINAV/I•.—Undler the above caption an exchange gives a long obituary notice of a deceased brother editor, from which we extract the closing paragraph: "Should we not then rejOloe that our late, friend of the scissors and oCill is in heav- . ant In that paradise the ory: of "more copy," will never again fen upon . his dis tracted ears. There his enjoyments will no more be interupilid by the growls of the un reasonable subscriber, or the duns of the paper maker. There be will enjoy entire freedom'frodi the detractions and misrepre sentations of political opponents, and the earesses of ambitious political asp ta. In that blest abode he is no more trc, bled with Illegible manuscript or ibominab po etry.. No rival salters will thews:at his thunder or his Items, and tysengrs lag errors shall baby his no more foreve " INDICTMENT OF THE REPUBLICAN IZElill The N. V. Herold indicts dm Republican party for its many crimes in the following emphatie terms: As represented by the radicals in the present Congress its polio) , is a complete contradiction of its platforms and pledges. Started as a Union party,it has now become the party of disunion Originally opposed to slavery,tt nog, attempts to impose North ern slave drtveid• upon the .negroos, who were freed, not by proolitmatiou, or point chine, but by the armies of lien, Grant.— More than this,it maintain, that anomalous Institution, the Freedmen's Bureau, for the benefit of agents and officials nt a east ex pens. to the government, It id conn'ives at cruelties which, according to dye reports of Gene. Steadman and Fullerton, 'exceed any ever practiced by Southern slave owners romming financial reforms arid an eoonout ical administratiou of lie government, it is more corrupt than any other party that ever gained power. Where democratic politi 0161.11 stole thousands of dollars the republi cans have stole millions. Under their gross mismanagement during the war Rye dollars were wasted for over dollar necessarily en ponded. The people could have endured this with patieuce, however , for no price is too great to pay for the k Union But not on ly does the public plundering continue, now the war is over, but the Union, for which e have paid na, dearly in blood and trona ure, is not rastored On the contrary, Ow President, whom the republican Congress men coifed before the people to sustain is now denounced as a traitor and persecuted with the utmost malignancy for persisting in the work of restoration and for vetoing the Congressional jobs During the present session alone Congress has engaged in transparent swindles amounting to over two hundred and fifty millions of dollars. The Infamous Freedmen's Doreen hill, st it lob the President vetoed, would have disposed of fifty millions, and another bill of the same character, appropriating sin millionsls now present d. lien Wade's Montana job, also vetoed, gave twenty-five millions to a party of grasping speculators. The national batiks are presented with 11 bcinus of thirty mil lions. drawn from the pockets of the labor- ing men. Jay Cooke's 0098Ciiidall011 scheme involved a• job of forty millions. Twenty millions aro to bp bestowed upon the con tractors for building Mississippi levees, if the urgent spreads of tbie radical organs are heeded. Jobs in regard to Mexico, footing up from twenty to fifty millions,nre *treacly proposed—one of them by Mr Thad. Stevens himself. The Internal Revenue bill, just passed, is crowded with private jobs. Such corruption is unparalled, and will be fol lowed by an unprecedented revulsion in poi- TRAITORS TO THEIR RACE Admitting That the Abolitionists, howev er mistaken in the means, really do wish to benefit the negroes of the South, it is then o matter of doubt for which they work hard est—the good ofthe negroes or the evil of the white people. It is atrocious, and in deed amazing beyond conception, haw any man or woman in the North dares to meddle at all with whites and negroes m the South •' or how a citizen of ltlaahachuseitg dares to go info Virginia and dictate to a cttizen of that State hit relation to his negro Ifthey have any legal right growing out of the government or Union created by Washing ton, Jefferson, Sea , to do this, or to “abel i3ll slavery," as they call IL, then the name. of Washington and Jefferson should be ear °rated in all coming time as those of the •r , lest traitors and •illians that ever betrayed a people But they have not—Washington and Jefferson, and Lee, and others 'who brought about the Union with Massnchnsets &c., would have suffered marlyidom and would rather hose died at the stake than thus betray their descendants. or rather than give the men of klattsachusetts an) le gal right to “abolish slavery " But it is, nevertheless, the fact—chisens of Nfassa ohusette do go into Virginia and do dictate to them such relations to their negroes as suit the ideas or theories of the fernier; and we repeat, it is a matter of doubt in which they are most esruast—a morbid and de•il ish desire CO benefit the negroes, or to in jure the white people. The devilish and unsexed women, who go down to teach the negroespezhibit the same phrase of de•s)- nese ; they teach Sasebo his alphabet et the same moment that they teach him to :nsult his fernier mistress, and with the Lord's Prayer they teach the poor wretch to bate his master. Indeed, by an inexorable ne cessity that links evil to evil forever, this mutual or coequal devilment per'Xitiles all Abolit iondom. During the war, the Aboli tion generals were just as „fierce to Steal cotton as they were to destroy the sources of cotton production, and every day, in the vllecoucern they call a Congress . , they strive thrOugh Latillfaistud all king of plunder schemes, to rob the while people just in pro portion as they profess to benefit the neiro. Perhaps this is a 14w, an inexorable peaes sity, that their father, the devil, imposes on them—they , must hate the 'willies just to the extent that they love the negroes, or in oil.- er word., must be traitors and enentles or their own race In exact proportion as they give themselves up to.the nasty and obscene love of a lower raoo.—Day•Book. —Andrew G. Curtin ban been Governor nearly nix yearn. During that time the Pennsylvania Itail,Road monopoly repealed the tonnage las, by which the State Mat (risen millions of dollars ; secured relief from the paylient of the Sunbury and Erie bonds to the amount of eight milliotit ; re pealed the charter of the Connelsville roil road, by which the people of South Western Pennsylvania are deprived of the _Wants gee of that reed; and adopted generally, just snob measures u the monopoly want ed. The. Republican party, In addition to bevies had the Ovveritor, when all those Iniquitous bills were passed, bad also •ma jority of the Leglelature, end most of the time a majority in both branches. Could not the Standard be persuaded to apart, • little of the lash, with which it is so indus triously dagellatlng the monopoly, ass ap ply one or two gentle strokes to the Repub lican Legislature!' which passed tile bilk In queiM, and to the =Verner Inter4rne4 them? Wouldn't it be as went—Gem* -of Liberty.. —The young prince imperial of Frannie is mourning the prlntleg business. "MATE RIGUTI AND lIIIDMILIAL UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, AUGUST -3, 1g66 HOW GEARY'S MILITARY REPUTA TION WAS MADE. The following amusing aeon imion of the ..no.krefis" candidate to a —ernor, we clip tenni the mir"respondenec of the Sunday If,- eitrY, written front Cape May "bear Mercury:—l'm antboroil off for th,e. .seasolt and am to a most delightful state of preservation I see by the papers,and hear by many of my friends who entitle down yes terday, that you 'died great limes . ' in “old ['hilly" on the Vourifi I don't envy you! I dislike all that sort of thing,...! witnessed enough •'pomp and show" during the war to last me the litfattoe of my days I was amused though, in renting the graphic ac counts of how the thing went off I should have been glad no have been present for one thing and than was to have noted how line ter Geary behaved. suppose though, he kept his vanity down as much us passible— that it did not stick out more than a foot. I have met Geary upon several 0CC.1.110114 met him at the "Rice Course.''below Phil. adelphia, a tiny or two after Andy Cutlln commisssioned kiln Colonel, i mot Tom Elliott the wine evemng—wailing for hm at the St. Lawrence !Intel, who introdimed his pomposity The sonic Tout Elllu t, by the way, who made huts 31101 What he is Who, during the war, sung his pro toes no off of the l'lniLidelphist papers,incluthog the Sunday Mercury, and who spout lays and nights in writing up every little one horse or X Roods skirmish, itind for what • To glorify the vanity of this 01.111 Geary Elli ott has gone to his long holm and I never see Goary's name in trrint,but what I think the honors belong to the former Let me give you a remitim9eime of Elliott's amnion. One Saturday evening there came a rt ; 11l or to Washington that lleary had fought a great b.tit le and won a great victory This was the &turd iy preceding McClellan's first march on to %masa. devotion. Washington Was full of nowspttper tn.lefaati gables, who devired to te1eg. , 2 1 5 what few items they hail gathered concerning it to their respective journ its North Your cor respondent was at that time connected wilt. a New York paper, and along with oilier, went to the telegraph shop,scratched elf our "startling," 1111111 were politely told* by the clerks in attendance that the news ;:could not go." "Why ?" of course was the next itcterrog story "Mr. k3onfortl, censor, (orbits tt " Sanford, of course, was wished some where else, and a number of correspondents still carry him a grudge that will be paid some day with interest. One Sunday. morning—a bright and beau tiful morning it was—uty cars were assailed with the cry of ••Phdudelphio Sunday Iferris ry.' Sunday Dapairh ' Full accounts of the great light !" I inrested of eourse,and then found that Tom Elliott had commenced the work that was to make a groat man out of G eery. "How did they get this news in Philadel phia T' asks one correspondent "flow did they get a." replies (leorge Bower, whom you saw interred a few weeks ago—"why Torn Elliot telegraphed it to the Associated Press, of course " And no Torn did, I last saw fleary in the flesh at (iettys burg, one year ago last Wednesday Thar,. was a number of distinguished people there. Quite a number sfeade was theraund mad, a speech. Howard was there, and so wa. Doubleday and Sykes Geary rode. a splendid block chaeger Ilia uniform was the brightest, and his gauntlets just tbe thing forphow lita beard was newly Weakened and oiled,and be won, as I have hinted,..giillus" look:ng And Geary,he was Master of Ceremonies Ile was splendidly gotten up,for the occa sion, and he certiainly looked very flne,but still resembled anything hut a Major Gen eral, Crovernor Curtin introduced nie, and Geary, hearing that 1 was connected with so loyal a jetlllial all the Verrray, remarked that he had just parted in Washington with Toni Florence, Jo Severn., and other genii fellows Still I did not, could not like Mt man, and so told our amiable Governor My disliked e to Geary arose partlywfrom 11 prejudiCe created in my mind towards him byAirein Forney,esti .the brains of the Har risburg Telegroph Geary, it appears, some time previous, lind been woutulegand wan taking things "r o sy" down the Cumberland Valley But Forney related how airish e•• cryibing wne about his cantle, and informed me elicite had a guard marching front of his house, and was, no might be supposed, the "laughing stock" of the good people of the Colley. Think of that for n Major Gen eral, reeding home wounded,having n guard posted In front or trio Gotidwr Stylish,rnlh er, you say Very much so for plain people renew easily " IG:nc Tar. DISCONBOLATE CANDID/IV.: =John W. Geary has been on a visit to Lancaster. The Republicans of that (omit seem to have a very poor opinion of the Gen'eral The Lancaster Arrihyriserr, in speaking of his fisit, says: •We are informed 'hat none of the Gen eral's friends were ■t the depot to meet and welcome him, and that he rode alone to his stopping place " The same mut be said pf Geary'. vieite to other place.. No one seems anxious to enjoy his company The Abolitionists themselvea have little faith in his chances How different has been the reception of that true and unfaltering Democrat, Mos ier Clymer, during his visits from•home The people have crowded to see him, and none have met bun but to praise him. The following extract from a letter dated Ditteburg, June.2oth, will give the render an idea of bow Mr. Cl:Omit wee received at that place . "Mr. Clymer was with ue two days last week and made &remarkable good impree sins among the people. The German Repub linens are very sore, and I think we wit make very large gams among them. At I • same time dlymer.s address. gentlemanly bearing and knowledge of business took by storm every business man with whom he met. lie utterly disarmed many Republi cans, and captivated nearly all of them." What a comparison with the nmeptious of John W. Geary, the hero of Snicker's Oap I —An Indimm school teacher attempted to chastise a female scholar, when a yilung Allow threatened to sbistis.bim, whereupon the mister drew his °ln Pistol and shot the boy. who returned Ihe Ls, bluing his mare Both were badly wausdad. In OPPOSED TOTHEAOHNSON PHIADEL- PHIA CONVENTION Numlierrof the Southern papers oppose the psoject of sending delegates faille Phil adelphia, Convention The Marine ((teo ) Clit,ll reviews the lathject nt length tri its Issue ol• the !Id oil— the article closing with the follovrtng etiggemt ire paragrnpbs: "h le fear it iv only a it.;, and trap and a innate ' Its intent into may be to nit ride and destroy the National beinocrntin party, that now gives good sign of revival of power oil the basis of the C'otualltutaon nail the 6.1011 ar Mey were in the palmy days of the Republic. het us of the South await the jostle of the coutlict for principle before we bumble ourselves at the feet of either of the .111,1111,18. Let us demand front both a full restoration of our rights haute we give our moral aid or sympathy to either. In short, let 115 not forge chains for the further fel terurg of our limbs until we one free eo choose eir future course or .0.0. If no attend ,the convention and tribe part in Ito proceedings, we ore morally bound by Its edict., mill less uo4l, protest lit the time and place One Word more, and we shall Mire dune, for the present' Is+ it not in the highest degree insidllog for much n call in lie es tended to the 0011111, in view of the fact. that Jefferson Davis, the represeittat lye he ill of 'llse eleven Staten of the I , kle Con federacy, is 41111 n eoptlvo in a government bauble, neuter mictunstances of humiliation to every friend of the South and of human ity The President and (lore, unbent have It m their pox er to annul his decree of Im prisonment and bid him go free, They have not done 11 Seu6er department of Government will " take the responsibility" of doing the work of justice and mercy— and until it is done no Suullkerik won should have anything whatever to do will, poliuonl c.ibals of northern polo iclnnr. Lei them work out their own intention .with fear and trembling' without our lifting a hand to help, until President Johnson, (ten eral .temesty, and a generous poople,Nortb, prominent, the whole irA,tetioutli,“redeemed regenerated and disentbralled I.y the me instable genius of untveranl emansmat 1031 —(hilt es etemierepeeletere • AN EL IgIISIST LAIVI Kit Tot•rarn Ills own Cciasr —The Baton Rouge Arfrorote tells the following Last week a case came up before ilia jury, and the Muriel Attorney had exhausted all his eloquence in lie nitenipt . to convict a darkey for stealing a goose The judge was tired, the jury wearied, and the bar officials and spectators, all hoped the ease would be spottily closed, but they were doomed to disappointment. Up rose th e old Major, the hero of n thousand contests at the bar, and for two hours a flow of elo quence poured forth upon the ears of the jury, evidently convincing them of the pris oner's inflated.. Shrugs and gestures de noted that all Alley wanted was a chance to get out of the jury wiener, and the goons, darkey, prosecutor and all concerned might go to Oninea if iti77 could be released The Major piled it on thick ; be showed them law after law, read Supreme Court condensed daimons, referred to everything relative to geese, from the Roman time down to the present, and closed his brilliant appeal by calling their attention to the hon est countenance of his *haul , '•could snob a man steal—the Ilenvene forbid ; look at his face, you perceive sterling honesty in every lineament —could you steal, prisoner at the her, could you steal a—goose 9" '•ten. sir. I did steal um, but I didn't eat not," wan the unexpected reeponwe, and the gallant Major thunderstruck and exhausted caved Tug Ait.tin CHILI, —The following in a ileeoript ion of the little girl, Lithe Da•nleion. why wall abduoted from her borne to (.111CM new, on the 15th ApriLand who has not yet been found , She is between four and fire yews of ago ; rather stout in stator., light complexion; light broltis hair. cot short; till grey eyes; a round full face, and a lit tle 81111 ken across the eyes , Iwo moles on thy eide'of her face' one nearThff femple l the other near the top of the ear' Two thimmod donors is now offered for the re covery of the child, and the amount has berm placed in the hands of the Mayor of Cincinnal t New4i:tapers throughout the country are repir4ted lo copy the description uf the missing child. = An exchange paper says there is no exduse for hawing the blues It tells how to be free flout them. lion V.it the ho e of the poverty's.. stricken, and lends themall the Resonance do your powet. Depend upon ii,such noble employ inert W. 41 warm your neart, and cause your blood to course freely and warmly through sjagnant veine. Charity expands - lhe human soul, gives •a generous color to the failed cheek, fills the dull eye with the lustre and brilliancy of benevo testae, causes the sluggish gait to become elastic, drives away the hypochondriacal eturits, and gives buoyantly to the whole body. Try. A Cons leo Boy —A genileuiau who wan traveling•ihrough the western part of Mos eachitanifte last ig.mmer, saw a boy at..ssork in a corn field by rise rood side, and being of en inquiring turn of mi nd, he slopped his horse and addecesed the young farmer i•My eon, whose farm is this!" "Dad's. ' - "Does your father raise any Mock ?" ••Yee, foie of 'em." "What kind ?" "Corn Malice, malty," wan the reply, and he proceeded to boo s, bill of the article. The gentleman proceeded on his way won dering at the effect which corn has on boys. —Sept the Sew York Tribune': •When President Lincoln, on the mirrender of Sumpter, walled J7-five thousand men latrine, there was not a aecoiew of a statue to justify his demand. Down to the meet ing of Congress be seemly did n Conant u none% not." All this Is no justifloation for violenton of the Constitution now. if there woe s necessity for those violations In time of wer-i—which is by no means clear—there min be none in time of peace. The present Disuniokilsts neW 'et attempt to screen 'themselves by showing up Lincoln's trans rank os. . —One of the ablest physicians in New York asserts that ao satire Americas Is ev er &unshod by sunstroke. Can't see it. THE BJECT AND THE IMMEDIATE EFFECT OF THE PROPOSED TARIFF. Durittg the diecussion of the tariff hill in the llouve, Mr. Harding, of Minnie. fully exposed iis r hindering avert, and its im mediate effect. when he' slated that The amount of goods on hand and for sale—im ported Intl notnulactured- sots about a thou sand millions of dollars, all of which were iniportvl under the old tong, ov„ manufac tured and for solo while the old tariff regu toted its price The average increase pro posed by the new tariff being neer thirty per cent over the old rates, there rah, and will, of course, be added over thirty per cent to the price at which 0146 goods on hand are offered, as that is the amount of '•protecitdn" granted by the new bill, and thus the happy owners of them will Mahe from the unhappy consumers over three hundred millions of dollars, of which the Government will not receive a solitary cent And this is one object of this bill. It is to he , an enter front the Government, to transfer $300.000,000 from the pockets of the masses of the people. to the coffers of men who. at present prices, Ire realizing from fifty to one hundred and fifty per cent on their capital invested And this sante people, upon whom this robbery to to be committed. are expected to come up to the polls this fall sod vote that it is ull.riglit ; It is expected on the part bf the members of Congress who rote for clue iniquity, that they can make their constituents believe that it is good for then. N pay over this :300,000,000 to these pets of the Govern ment dint they eat 11413 this sum of motley to the better advantage of the farmer.'-toe mechantc and the laboring man than they . con themselves. It Is a very general opin ion among men that they con use their own money. to thoAdvancentent of the tr private interests, better than any other men can or will do it for them and we are inclined ill I Link that members of Vongr eel who rote fur th s mensitre, and explicit are election. will have n pretty laborious job, and a neth er unpleasant one. to prove to their constit uents that these Importers, manufacturers and merchants con sub $300,000,0000f their money to benefit their 'fortunes better than they esti themselves It will be a bard task to prove to the people that these men Are ehtilled to such a premium just at this time. It will nut be an easy undertaking to prove that the present Iligh prices are de sirable. It will be a much more easy and agreeable task to show that the present op pressive tariff, the unnecessary internal taxation, mid the cheating clemency, are chargeable with extorting exorbitant PM eel for everything that, the people have to buy; 'and Wet to change this stale of thing. for the better, all these apneas must be changed —Detroit Free Press JIM LANK KILL! Anomie MAN —Jim Lane, of Kansas, killed another man the other day The first man he killed had the audacity to ask a bucket of water out, of a well that Jim had robbed biota Jim am strued this into an attempt to add insult to injury, and instead of allowing the fellow to fill his bucket, he toady him "kick" it ( bout that time the undersigned received a letter from a friend in that locality re questing me not to send hint the Logan 6'a "lle any:more, containing many able papers on the homes of the day, as their reception endangered his life and property '.The public sentiment here," he wrote, "won't tolerate democratic ideas ") That some public sentiment, however, tolerated Jim Lanes and patted him on the back It lifted Lim 11119 local place and power, and finally landed him in the United Staten Senate But to resume the thread of sty story The next man that Jim killed was the Caine our that he ought to Ayr killed the first tune lle killed him in melf-defense. The fellow kept following linn round, and he couldn't get clear of him 111 any .other -way. lle sent him to where u single drop of water is supposed to be of more value than a whole well of 11 anywhere in Imagine Jun Lune begging for a '•drop of water to cool his plumbed tonguep::..fro . in the nine he shot dead at the well in %Kansas -- We hoot; on authentic record of a similar event And suppose the withering reply should be. "Don't you see that st# bucket it taw, y 1 " - Jilts Lnne perished by his own net "Time, the Aieoger," is on Ilia mission Ret ribut ion follow. crime —Logan Gazerl —The Rump House has voted Smith Fuller $2,500 as compensation for expenses incurred iu the contesting the seat lion. John L. Rawson. This is another of.the 'ways to which the friends of the Uteunion iets are retreaded for their party service. This Fuller had not a show of rie to a seat in Congress, and ne well knew the (sot ill 'het Pei:- —Prof Blot atty. t Neve; drink tea at breakfast; it in suicide. Drink coffee .or chocolate. If you drink tea at all, drink it after lamb or dinner. Coffee should not be boiled, and be perfectly clear of itself, without any foreign bandanas used for clearing ii. —Henry Stansbury, of Kentucky, was couOrmed on blonday last as Attorney Gen eral of the United States, in place of Speed resigned. Judge Stansbury is regarded as one of the most accomplished lawyers In the country. —A four year old went to church u Sunday, and when he got home his rand Mother asked him what the minister said nllon't know," said he, he didn't speak to me.'• 41 - good many older people alight sw atter in the same way. --A lady wtio had been just three Gaya married,pereeiving her husband eater, stole secretly behind Lim, and save hint • kiss ~ the husband was augry,and said she offen d . ed against decency. 'Pardon ate," she ex claimed, "I did not know it was yes !" ---A lawyer engaged to • ease, tormen ted a witness so much with quemloue, that the poor. fellow at la■t cried for water. ..There, said the judge, "I thought you'd pump him dry" Tut Cowl Caors.—Tae corn and eats crops in ;his seMion,are said in promise bet ter the coming season than they have for - years. . -lion. R. Toombs, of Georgia, is ror Main in London whilbor Mrs. T. pm soon. N 0 . fit► LEARNING TO WALK Only beginning the journey, Many • wile to go, Little feet, how they patter. Wandering to and fro. I r oing again, to lira,ely. Laughing in ehilihrh glee, Hiding itiefare in mother', lap Proud an a belly ran he Talking the coltierl language Ever before was heard ; Out mother—you'd hardly think V/ rmlcrAtand, every word Tottering now and fallteg, Eye., that are going to ery. Biases "nil plenty of love words, Willing again to try. • Father of 0 guide them! The pattering little feet, While they-are treadmg the up-hill road Braving the duet and heat. Aid them when they grow weary, Keep them in pathways blest, - And when the joirrney is ended, 0, Saylor! got, them rest ACROSTIC • . Meer ut, Mont High, and then inspire In apirn now with holy ere, Engage n 4 now to line Thee more. Send peeve and plenty 1.. nur 'Tin tune to tern 1.. Ind and. Inc. Ere he reftiae4 b. forgise , Remember right and do the •nnte, Cleaner our hearts and ran-e to fame Let truth and jumice guide t , on. Yea, and our did) tuner Ann May we make choice the u.an e n fit. Elect nod place on 1 tut trk'n neat , Remember, God no, seek and flnd. Ile well nut Irate u 4 lurk behoul --J J —lbstror,r THE ISLANDS_ . 'Ti. far beneeth the erenn et.° Thttee grand ..ld ~,,, entitle+ tire. That rear their tall and pant peek 'reward the bright blue mkt, And where (Mid lull epee]. reach forth Abide the iiilld.f . ehri`i• • They rotm the glittering Wands That gem old oomn r lirenet And they are gems. :mist beautiful In the breed, lent ocean placed The brillianta in the mighty ring That has the earth embraced pllB, THAT AND THE OTHER ---A egee head keeps a still tongue —Twelve hundred doge were killed al New Solt lot week —The Miaateatppi rir ern a tele in the ef. faire of meg, Which, taken at ita flood, lead? to misfortune. —An exchange MVO ' " In coneequeure 0 our article two weeks ago on hugging, the la dies have ceased to hug ue We hope they will soon resume " —A roof is to prioiers of construction at DetroA, over the Michigan Centraldenot, which will cover three hundred ih.ineanj square f ee l, or /DV. acres. —The Legielsture of Pennsylvania. In 1161 passed the folk/wing - "Sew. /red, Tbat no mem ber of the logislatore will he allowed to come into the House barefooted " —Several women in Nashville and Lora, ville have been rodeoned recently by ogling green tea, In which arsenic bed 'boon mined by • dealer in order to make it more lively and in vigorating. —A yOung lady said to her hem as she held out a pot of hot water in her hand, "Prom- Ire to marry me or I will scald you. " Thro tile water," raid he, " I'd rather be scalded onee than every day of my life '" --After the wedding of the Promote Mary, and as the bridal party were leering on the wedding tour, the fair bride was nearly covered with a shower of white slippers, thrown after her for look --Western par ors assert that what were Vast prairies in Illinois twelve years ago are now covered with a dense growth of thrifty riling forest t rem Amprising tar ions species of oaks, hickory, cottonwood, ash, ar. --The lady who iled not think it respecta ble to bring her children up to work has lately heard front her two eons. One of thein tea bar keephr on n Oat boat, and the other is a steward in a brick yeird —The following advertisement appeared in a New York eountty paper • '•Manure—Wanted, Stable manure Any per,on having from fire to fifty loads to olleptme or, will pieeee rend wont or drop it through the poet-office." —The . pompous epitaph oja close•Rerod citizen clo.ted with the following passage of seripturo Ile that g.voth to the poor lendeth to the Lord." " Dat may be," soliloquised Rambo," but when dot man died, de Lord didn't owe hint • roil cent." —When Alexander the (treat eau Diogeees in a cemetery, he asked him what be was doing there? "I alp seeking," earl the philosopher, "for the bones of your arrestors among those of beggars, but everything here appear. to me, no confused and mingled together that I cannot distfigulsh them." —A Georgia paper, critielsing one of (1.. tave Dore's illustrations of the Bible remarks The Judas kies which, strange to say, is the Ira pinto in the Genesis, Is anything but fine. Judas looks like Thad Stevens, and come or the feature; in the background are horrible—almost no bad as Judge lindehrood's. —Colonel Forney Is est ing and raging and fuming arid foaming through km two papers, the Philadelphia I',r.. and Washington rlasoacefe over the ea no( the Philadelphia National Con vention. lie is alarmed. lie Is terrified. Ile Is chock furor' trepidation and fury ; We can't prescribe for him. We are no poultry denier.— Prentice.— —A railroad accident recently occurred canoed by the axle of a tender giving way, de- Lantos the train several hours. A lady inquired of • gentleman passenger why It was so delay ed. lie .y_ery gravely replied, Ntadame, the accident was libeasionedit4 what is often fol lowed by serious minsequence—the sudden brea king of a tender attachment." o'id fellow or the ultra Inquisitive or. der, asked a little girl who was sitting by her mother on board of a train, as to her name, des (Motion, etc, After learning that elle was going to Philadelphia, ha eked: "Whet motive I. ta king you thither, my dear?" "I believe they call It the loco-motive, dr," was the innomnt reply. The "lutruelve stranger" wee extin guished. —An old man named iyileon, 1111 years old, eat his throat with a sneer, In Warlbault eminty. Minnesota, a few dys•ago, because of ill treat ment by hie .daughter and son-la-law, W. J. Diakersoan, who boarded him as a peeper, re miring pay from the town. On learning that hcryvas boarded as ■ peeper, he nom witted Pass around the bonnie( W.J. Maker man and wife—model philanthropist, • —Tn Madman churchyard In a stone In scribed. A man had buried two wives. After statists the name sad's** of the tint me :he wenn ; " The Lord gars and the Lord bath ta ken away binned b. the aeon of the Lon." Ina few jeers his nocond wife died, and ant her name end we. are tinge words "I railed upon the name of the Lord, end be heard me nd de)ivered me out or all my tiomblan." THE-TRINITY OF ABOL I TION GODS-- JOHN ONOWNA , A. LNCOLN ANQ LANE. Another of the greet men of the Abolition party has been "called bonne—who L y e life of infamy. crime and °boll, bad cornett the highest rewards whilsh could be ;ilia to one Abolition traitors delighted to honor —God - navel. ins my/Wiens Way life won ders to perform " lie calls men from their lives of wickedness and •illsioy in cations woye. %Viten lie summoned John Brown from earth to' flie Awful Presence, Ilc per mined hint to consummate and 6nielt his life of sin by plobniug rapine, murder, the besotted revenge of • fonatic, and perish like a worthless cur on a Virginia gallows, Mildly the horse thief called his free-baot, ere about him. raided Ilarpei's Ferry, paid the penalty of his Jiatttrirewith tin lite, end woo couonised as Soh:U.N.-Dna in the Abo lition colander. Bella were tolled; build .lirounded in bloc ; he was Ihe theme of orot lone and puma, auJ it IN lg declared by one of his implone worshipper. that 00 Citron hod corte?!.tted Ilie cross, ou John Brown-bad mode the'gallowo holy. Little more than n yen- ego Saint No Iwo stepped from the hos of a coalition theatre to his prepared theme flow ,bad be won tis place In the Abolition calender ? Ile bound a land Al peace, he gore it bloody war—he scattered • bolt millioh graves all over the South, front the Potomac lo the Otilf, from the Atlantic, in the Eiet.heyond the Itliseisoippi in the Weer—le cent free men like boasts to the vhaintiles--lie entailed out it freapress nod ,solled free speech—he converted the forts made fur the peopley defense into beettleo /111;1 dutigeous fur the, people's enslavement-6 • obollobed d ie Con s; Mallon and destroyed the Union—he ct,n• 'Tried the temple Liberty into a negrO pot house Great God, what dui he not And Re who chooses Ilia awn tgents in Ma own good time, permitted thin devat, drunken with powrr,at the rery_minacle of auecess,posaessed of more than kingly erne deur, to pans from 1114 palace too theatre on that solemn tittod Friday night—nn•l with a voile upon hie lip*, called there by the mil ly words of a player, through the medium or n bullet at a zealot a hand,(lo,l summoned khrohnm Unman bifore Hie great white t brone But it needed one more Abolition notable to complete the Mutinous triomod the bru tal braggart, Jun Litio,frensied plitips by the stings of conemence.or the mortification of disappointed ambition. ruslied unbidden to the prosenoe of his Maker The "mystic three"—the trinity of Cruet —the Apostles of ruin—the awful fionile script hags of Abolition, they bare passed from earth to—their reward John Brown was the ammo( court, of the bloody treason meditated by diennionisis-- liito prepare the way for the 0.111•11111 ls. two of the work of treason by Lincoln —and Jim Lane, by his life and death, to furnish the commentary and doodled Riotere of tie fronts of fanittinient Ids eat err has been one of moral outlawry, and sin against di . God and his fellow men, Ile never perpetrated a good deed, never was guilty of a country losing thought—his sole °bidets to steal from and oppress all over whom he had power, and ride rough shod over those un fortunately abandoned to his tender mer. glee. Ile wee the product of Kansas agile tionthe oh . ampion of ruffianism, intoler ance, hate, and murder for ;hat bleeding Sovereignty Ile made .'ithriekitg Kansas" the steppingstone of Republican success, and received his reward. Ills hands red with the blood of a netghbsr,*hom he shot down like a dog, he was indeed worthy to nit be side the pedant Sumner, drunken Wade,and bloodletting Chandler in a polluted and un lawful Senate. And an ornament he was to it —the largest bully in the ring—the foulest toad in the puddle—the most unsightly wart on the nasty, polluted, rotten and stinking Abolition wen or "Rump " • There must have been a bob-robbing time when Charon ferried Jim over the turbid Stys, and the,shades of Brown, the horse thief, and Lincoln the obscene jester and tyrant, met their brother Jim the border ruffian, upon the dark and gloomy shore.. It must have been a eort of Fourth of duty festival, when the illustrious three clasped hands in the presence of the assembled shadows of evil, Hitting like bate and un clean things around the deities of Abolition ism, terming them with their wings, and cheering them with a demonise concert in 'natation of the groans of deed and dying Men, the wailing of women and the cries of orphan children. • There is a fourth wanted down betme.—. three-bonded games ore not interesting— the blunders of a dummy spoil the hest laid plans , shad's of the illustrious great of .tb• olitiontsm, the quartette will be complete when MOM{ Morton, the leprous Indiana "loyalist," join* you! lie Is coming—pre pare It place for hjoi—get out a new •'deck" of oards—pritee another glass upon your tahqueting board, and let your first sot be a bumper to your eternal reunion, a curse upon your country, and a double curse to those who will rescue it from the to isery anti desolation you have brought up on it—the Deotoitratie Party.— Le Crosse Democrat. ..:UctiTWO Ifirsoar."—A slaiaisg light of republicanism once exclaimed, with great glee, "we are making history." Anti so did Nero and Caligula. Jack Sheppard and Dick' Turpie, make history before bun. Victory is little elle Mann record of the blunder. and reacalities of men, and that made by republicanism in nothing else. The six years of republican domination do not fur nish one great man. or groat idea, or great notion. Its only claim to greatness lies it., the amount of Iti rascallties. It found this country a united people, and it has divided them—a wealthy people, anti l lt has loaded them with debt--• people dwelling together in peace, and it bps filled their hearts with bitterness and It has "made histo ry," but it is • history lilted with infamies. It is destitute even of the excuse of gerM intentious. Its original idea was ppwider and aggrescion. It lies made belt the °buff try a bowling wil44rniss, and carried death into every nimily 1p the land. Its "blow, ry" surpasses, in the magnitude of its oriet-' , inalltiem, that If any other ei'a. It world have been better for lie abler actors had they bees bon.. .I.tet.-us endeavor to so fix things at the nest bleating that there will be so coon gush .hieiory." sod so Moro such men In a poshdam to (Mich.) II WiPlllllllll4llll, • 14106.86‘,11214,11Q,.—The book, of the /ant. nal revenue oillpe„ la Maniacal for the final year ending June 80614-han,last been balancsd, ciativappeart tlialtheinanstat isomer eolleated during the' year: la torso In that &portant, was inn Modred and Ave million, Olibt.lindredeuid aisty•roue. thoolelltA, hun dred stedneetroin lot. . and twenty into I I This la sionly a one of the Gonornment one, and le imia-r are or the tamales. or Meta on 101111 laz es, Whin are about as mush saw, Weer/ dollar of Ibis. alight have ben oaredbj tb exercise of a peeper pauionen sad train• nal fading, lane Cowen . coelol9rA.. We ; Would have ..allteleloloal l9Kist. d woer.., • 'ire are paying for It, so ahpTa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers