THE PIIIIBOIIIR AT *MI MR =1 o `Aix JOrn 'nuts.. ojeot to esk se why Form) mimeo I shoold not di., optila for Ng toply To 'oar throng,— To my eery heern4 the hoof, To the 111021/411/ has the woof; bo yoo wool sore essildvalog proof tor my wrong.? H av e tgnm bavu tdgmer tto wy.. Ile Bmj , And ye bought from perjured aides Prieelesubleod I . Ye Wagged and debaaeth Ye le related, trapped and chimed— Ye Weeenept, deformed, defaced— Like • flood. .Tbiloftlirld,--or the lawn— In the ilght—er raw it traettit— Tr. fair virgln—or,tbe yrirot— Did yo win Till now by force and Hamm feeling is outlawed. And op ton 'bat abroad, Bold and barn • Ire pleader*/ of oar plains, V. olbaseters of our rola., Ito Oben of oar Woo, If I he, For reekdrame, who. ho trod plesli and spirit oath. olod— A dark Non before Llod. What are ye / If some tyrant's blood I spilt, On the tyrant is the guilt, I met him hit td•kUt, Poi my own • And—flee me from this chili, I will defy you this agiln— , -The ye gild with oannoti train, lie elope. ' , It'utay by Banyan be meant That oppreuora should relent; But Jot tho' oppreiteof repent, or the few, Brave deed 14 heart and hand rimy ewe de to lift their land A e Frog the grovelling to the grodlii, V-p-Reeer. And thia penistiag teal Which al/ trauiplial man maid. teal Will defy your ace and .teal VII ye yield The pleader ye have gained. Anti the eapitreye Fare drained, To a host.--peranneee untrained, To the field Thu' my We be in your bend., With lay lire's lut mends I will lay my sierra commend. Oa my ion— By the honorer-hie-wife,- - - By Me fame in death or Life, To be feitii.ni to the white TO 'tie won. E.e Aux ye "DOWN HILL." Isiot long since I bad oscasion to visit one of our courts,and while conversing with a legal friend I heard the name of .lolito An derson called. "There s bard ease," remarkid my OM I looked upon the man la the prisoner's dock. He was standing up and pleaded guility to the crime of theft. He wee • tat man, but bent and infirtft, though not old. His garb was lora, spare. and filthy ; his fees all blotted and blood-shot; his hair matted with dirt ; and his bowed form quir. ering with deltrum. Certainly I never saw • more pitiable object. Surely that man we. bora • willitln. I 4 moved my place to obtain a fairer view of his facet lie saw my movement and turned hie bead. lie gazed upon me • tangle instant, and then, covering hie face with his hands, he sank powerless into his seat “Good God !" I involuntarilly ejaculated, starting forward. "W it—." I had half spoken his name when he quick ly reload hilhand and east upon me a look of such Imploring agony that my tongue was tied at once. Then he covered hie face again. I asked my legal companion if the prisoner bad any couture. He said no. I then told him to do all in his power for the poor fellow's benefit and I wouldipay him, lie promised and I left. I could not remain and see the man tried. Tears came to my eyes as I gazed upon him, and it woo not until I bad gained the street and walE,tY some distance that I could breathe freely. John Anderson! Alas! he mashamed to be known as hie mother's son ! That was not his name ; but you shall know him by no other. I will now WI him by the /IMO that stands upon the records of the court. I=l John Andersen was my school-mate ; and IL was not many years ago—not over twen ty, that we left our academy together, he to return to to the home of wealthy parents ; I to oil down in the dingy sanctum of a newspaper dice fora few years, and when I *turned I found John a married man. Inn father wee dead and had left his only eon a princely fortune. "Alt, hl—," he said to me, as he met me at the railway station, t•you will see what a bird I have caged. My Ellen is lark—a robin—a very princess of all birds that ever looked beautiful or sang sweetly." Ile was antlniastle„ but not mistaken,. for I found Ids wife . all that he had said, simply omitting the poetry. Abe was truly ontlif the most beautiful women I ever saw. And so good, tooso loving and kind,.Aye —she so loved John that she loved all his friends What a leaky fellow to god snob a wife. And what a lucky woman to find ouch a boyhood; for John Anderson was as bandanna as she 'fall, .straight, manly, high-browed with rich chestnut ourisrand a fee, as faultlessly noble and beautiful as artist copied. And he was good, too : and kind, generous and true. J ;ken( a week with them and was happy all the while. John's mother lived with them—es Ens an old lady as ever breathed, and making it bar chastens joy and pride in dosting upon her "Darling Boy," as she always called him. ; gave her an account of my adventures by Ilea and land • in foreign clime., and she kissed me because I loved her darling. I did lactase John again for four years. I reached his house in the evening. Ile was not in, but his wile and mother were there to rewire as. and.two surly headed boys were at play about Ellen's chair. I knew at once they were my friend's children. Everything seemed plhasant until the little Ones were abed asleep, and then I could see Mist Ellen Imams troubled. She tried to hide it., but a face no used to sunshine and smiles rank; not wear a cloud concealed. At tsetse Jabs came. Ills hoe was flush ed. sod Mit tr,es tookwilatimod. Ile Amp ed toy bawl Irbil • happy laugh--ealled me 'old thillevr," ..elddsg,.'—sald I noun come and live with him, and taw alter extrava gant dams. Ms wife tried to hide-her tears, whtll his metherehook her head and •'He'll mow thou wild oats, coon" Ey darling error can h 0 bad man." "God grunt. it I" I thought to voyaolf, and I know Ike mom prayer was upon El- len's lips. It was late when we retired, and we might not hare done so even than bad not John fallen asleep in his chair. Os• the following morning I walked out -with ay friend. I told him I was story . to see him as I saw him the night before. "011," said he with a laugh, "that say nothing .oaly a little wins•patvj. We had a gleeless shoo" I wish jou bad been there." At teat I gambit I "toed my so more ; Ink wee It sii!lay dor' f •I know his ma ture bidet diss Ye know blatielf. 1112 ar , . . - 4 • - • . .. . . ~ „ ,-- A - , , .:l • _ -,. , . . . . . + m, ------ . . . 4 co, in ' L '‘. . k i IF 4 I thijta> 1 thil "a. it. ,VOL. XL pe tiles and pleasures bounded bis own vis ion. 1 knew how kind and generous he was —aims ! ion kind,—too generous ! "John, could you have is, Ellen's fate last evening yon would have trembled.— Can you mderher unhappy 1" Ile stopped me with:— • "Don't be a fool!" Why should she be unhappy? , • . , d3eosuse she fears you are going down hill," I told him. -Did eye say so?" be asked,with a Ouch ed face. ' "So —I real it hi her looks." itl'erhsps • reflection of your own thols," he suggested. "I surely thought so, whew you came bowie" I replied. Never 'can I forget the took he gave me hen—so felt of reproof, of surprise, sill of pain. • - ••14—, I forgive' you, for I know you .to be my friend, but never speak to me egaiu like diet. I going down! You know better Thee can never be. I know my Intuit . My mother kpowe me better than Ellen does." Ait—bad that mother been as wise as she nas loving she would bait, seen that the '•wild oats" which her eon woe mowing would surely grow up and ripen, only to furnish seed form, sowing ! But she loved him— loved him almost to well, or, I should any, too blindly But I could say no more. I only prayed that Mod would guard him ; and then we converted on other subjeces. I could spend but one day with him bu t we promised to correspond often. Three years more passed, during which John Anderson wrote to me at least once month, mutt soinetimes oftener; butt the tind of that Ouse' hie letters camel onteing, aril I received - no mere for two years, when I again found myself at hisaative town. It wee early in the afternoon wheu I took din ner et the'botel. " I bad finished my meal and was lounging in front of the hotel, when I saw a funeral procession winding into a•djetant church yard. I leaked the landlord whose funeral it woe. "Mrs. Anderson's," he said, sod lie he spoke I notioed s slight dropping of the head, as thoggh it out him to say eo 'What—John Anderson's wife ?" "No," he replied. is his mother;" and as be said this he turned away ; but a gentleman who stood near, and bad over. hcanl the con aaaaa lion, at ones took up the theme "Our host,don't seem inclined to non— verse upon tbAkublem," he remarked with a shrug of thi shoulders. "Did you ever know John Andersen ?" ;Ile was my school mate in boyhood,and my bosom friend la youth," I told him. Ile led me one side, and spoke as follows: "Poor John! He was the pride of this town six years ago. This man opened this hotel at that time, and sought custom by giving wine suppers. John was present at most of them—the gayest of the gay,'/td most generous of the party. 'ln faeb,he paid for nearly every one of them. Then he began to go down bill ! Ark be has been going ever sines At times true friends have prevaileclopse him to stop ;but stops were of short duration. A short sea son 'of sunshine would gleam upon his home, and then the night came; more drear than before. He said be never would get drunk again ; yet be would take • glass of wine with a friend ! That glues of wine was but the gate that let in the Boot!. Six years ago be was worth eixty thousand dollars.— Yesterday be borrowed fifty dollars to pay his mother's funeral expenses The poor mother bore up as long as she could: She saw her son—ber' "Darling Boy," she al 'reps called him—brought home drunk many times, sad she even bore blows from him ! But she's at rest tow t Her "Dar ling Boy," wore hew We away, and brought her gray hairs in sorrow to the grave yOh! I hope this may reform him I" "But hie wife ?" I asked. Her heavenly love has held up thus Var, but she io only a shadow of the wife that blessed his home els years ago. lLy informant was deeply affeoted, and so was I, and I asked him no more. During the remainder of the afternoon I debated with' myself whether to call upon John et all. But fine Ily I resolved to go; though I waited till after tea. I found them alone. They had both been weeping though I could see at a glance that Ellen's face was beaming with love and bops. But oh ! Oa wan obanged—sadly painfully so. They were so glad te L see-me, iod my hand was shaken warmly. "Dear M—, don't say a word of the poet," John urged taking my hand a second time. I know you spoke the - trarth to me fire years ago. I wits going down bill ! But I've gone es far as I .can. I atop hers at Ike foot. Everything Is gone but my wife. I bare sworn, and my oath shall be kept Ellen and I are going to be happy now."‘ The poor fellow burst into tears here.— Ms wife followed suit; and I kept them company. I could not help crying like ,a child. My God what a sight The once noble, true man so fallen—bestowe a mere broken glass, the last fragment only reflect log the Image it 000e , bore I--a poor suppli ant at the feet of Hope, begging. grain of warmth for the hearts of himself ;tad wife And how I had honored and loved that man —and how I loved stttt ! °V. I. hoped— aye, mar: than hoped—l believed—ha would be saved! Amiss I gated upon that wife—so trusting, so loving, so true and so hopetul still, even In the midst et tiring death—l prayed more fervently then I ever pray. d before that God- would hold him up ...lead him to the top of the hill. II the morning I saw the obildrei— grown to two intelligent boys now--and though they looked pale and wan, yet they smiled and seemed hippy when their father kissed them. When I went away John took me by the hand, and the last words be said were. .!Trast me. Believe me now. I will be • ass beseeforth while life Isete I" A Buhl over two yam Wed pealed wbea I rest In • seerepaper the death of Mira Anderson. started for the tows When they bed lived Ise weak es possible, for I Might help some oral A fearful protean; went had possessed ntj alai. I stopped at the iditsidp boas* whew Whey bad dwelt, bat strangers olleaPbStlt. "Where Is John Midetsor l", • I 1114§11 . . ultsset,kaslr, kas slue. has bows ENE BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1866. gene these ibree menthe. wife died in theWed-beese last Week !" "And the obihlren r “0--they both died before she did .1” I staggered back, and harried from the place I hardly knew wlllob way I wept, bat Instinct led me Ito the church yard. found four graves which had been made IL Oars, Years. The mother, the wife, and two 4 ohildren slept in them "And what Liu done thief" I asked my self. And •40i110 answered from the lowly sleeping places, "rna.lleMOM Ot TUE RINI TAMA But this was not ell the work. No, no. T•he uesS I aw-0, Got/ !•—was far more . .terrible I I saw In the court roam. But that was not the last I saw my legal friend on'the day follow ing the trial. Ile said John Abderson was in prison. I hastened tole. hinst:"The !urnkty conducted me to his cell, the Ire/ turned in the huge look. the troliderous door swung wit akharp creek upon its hinge*, and I sail a dead body 'responded brittle nook from•► grating of the window I looked at the horrible face, I could see nothing or John Anderson There—but the face I had seen In the couKt coon was sufficient to connect the two, and I knew that wai all that wee left on earth of him whom I bad loved no well. . . And this was tie lut of the derrionle work, the Wit sot in the deems I Ah ! from the first sparkle of the red wine it bad been down—down—down until the foot of the hill had been finally reached And when T turned away Item !hot cell and once more walked amid the flashing Saloons and revel hells, I wished that my voice had power to thunder the life story or which I had been a witness,jr?to the rice of all living men ! - • "SI FIGHT ON---NEVER GIVE Ay. But what are we to do, now ? 'Asks some impatient and dispirited. Democrat. We answer fight on—never girt np—time and persevering work will gi•v Ins •intnry. and establish the truth and Junammo of our principles. What we went now Is* ORGANIZATION and PLUCK. To both of these helps is the Republican party indebted for its suocess in the States *Ad the Republic. Never was party more admirably managed, more ably genet.. ailed. By open And secret organizations ; by committen who work; by papers and doc uments In the hands of their voting thous ' nds ; by unflagging and determined work, are the manes held in fighting oondition, ready at ail times to go into a canvass unitedly and with a purposteto win victbry. Pluck 'has served them well, too—dogged Persistence in achieving their purposes— sending the faint hearted to tiee'efinr, and setting side leaders who ewerved from their staudarli, or faltered in fidelity to the ex treme measures of the party, We, Democrats, have granter, bolter, nobler principles to battle for—we should lack neither organization or pluck to secure their ult imaa and assured success. We are striving for The Restoration of the Union! The Supremany of the Const it ut ion ! The Upholding of the letws The folagrity of thri Republic ! The Rights of the Steles ! We war against an enemy determined to destroy oh, form of government, and per stinentlycitooomplish the work of disunion —4ubt le; conning, it nsorttpulotta dangerous, flushed with the triumph of victory but fearful, too, of °omit g retribution! In dealing with such a foe, timidity, vasoilla tion, temporising, is certain to bring but one result! We want, we must have boldness, cony- He, the tuaintaination and enunciation of &Ind Democraiia prindipla openly and at limes,—a return to the simple end true faith of the founders of the government, and the noble men who built up the Democratic party from nothing to be the governing power of the land. There have been dark hours in its his tory : Those were limes that. tried men'e souls and hearts, too,•when birth was given It, and the allien and seditise laws of the elder Adams were evoked to strangle the infant in its cradle. Darker, too. and mnre trying those stormy limes when . battling bravely against the giant power of-England with one band, the other was engaged .with sneaking, traitorous Federalism. the parent: of Radical Republicism. But Deinouraoy triumphed gloriously And the Tippe canoe and Tyler too" timers, Know-Roth log and •• Bleeding KA1311110" hurrahs. aU had their day—Demoorrey winning glorious victories, inii never succumbing to the ene my Lill 3.p,plicy" sod "expediency" took the plums 111 oar pally platforms of-prim/1- pie and love of country Stand Ilrai,Depoorets—and fear nothing! Run up. the old 'Jefferson's and Jaoknonian banners, and for every blow you receive, give the Radical cowards and traitors, two. lte men, and DEMOCRAT" !--/.4 G4olllle /3.71. offal. SETTER 80 NORTH The Baltimore 7'ra/tit:ripe, in referring to the letter froat'stt abolitionist of the North west, inviting freedmen to emigrate there, as published lately In this paper, says: "By diatribut log them equally over all the Btates,lhere would be a general result advantageous to the interests and gold feel ing of the whole oountry." That is just our own view. As long as the narrow are coosentrat ed sin the South. demagoguery sod an interoseddling Small will make of them a disturbing element or the oofintry. Canting dreamers at the North will send down their ignorant edicts for Southern observanee. end ambitions men mill seek power end profit by Inflaming two tionsl hostilities. Mime th server. and the opporittnity Is tattoo away. We will never have peace uatil this Is dome. The abolition demagogue' are alive to the party benefit to be reaped from the present toes *kw of the unrest. Horace Gr ey, in Lis letter to the North Carolina Freedmen's Contradicts, advised them not to come North, but to stay where they are : to 1117 where the Trams daily tells the world they ore taaltrested and boatels and murdered, in stead of main to the North tcPtprofit by the wehlth and the Illathtute of Republic rue. The °Von of the ado*. apparently so fn• oweeistent aid inhumes, Ls at man to hasp the Neethern'people in ismorainse oll'Afrf sae therseter, pad to nurltmet the negro pole lilies, a pokmanimt parts meld 41ilegmnr. .00 • "ileArZI 3140.1V15S AND STATE RIGHTS AGAIN It would be amusing, If It were not so tragically ridiculous, to see t he "abolit ion papers defending the course of their part's Ban Blood Tnbs and Plug Uglies in Bald more, on Ibe ground that the Governor's action is contrary ro, and the. probable in terforence of the Federal authorities would be in violation of, the rliservod rights of the States. To such fellow,' as Forney, and such Journalists as edit the New lark abolition sheetfil appealing to the " trolaonable her ers of State Bight."—which they so bitter ly denounced through the long and weary . years of the war—and ptessing that doctrine forward as their shield and protection. now. when they contemplate treason not only to the Stale, hut Federal governments, is one of those astottishing,uestances of venison ;Amnesty end mendsteity that challenges attentlon, even in an age of uncommon in consistency and enctlintlion. We do not prokose to discuss the doctrine of Slate nights io connection with the Ilitliiinure business, as the doctrine la not insulted thereinY'Silti would •not bTnientioneh tint for the desperation to ethicb the Aboliii.n iota are delves, to 5o;t1 MB (-tense for their outrageous proceedings in tint oily The prediction was often made by intelligent men titling the lute war, when it eras lash iunable. denounce Vie theory of State rightly as treasonable sot! heretical, Nhnt 1111 Abolitionists would be the firs to appeal to that doctrine whenever ,circumsioneee rest tier it to their advantage to iii4tene the Federal A Immisiration The preseet op pe — dTs of the portisan press in beliefl of the •'deml doctrine or State Ilight• ' is but no illustration of the fulfillment of a prediLt li on which is destined to bare sail more rtnktug teitlliat ions. When the Abolition faction was in that menctity from which it etnorged only to bring disaster upon the country, there could nowhere be found ouch stickler. for State rights as agninvt I lie consolidation of power in the Federal Government, R 4 in their ranks. Salmon P. Cline° and his follower. in Ohio were atmod and prepared to precip. Utile a collision with the Federal Govern ment in defence of thaPdo.trine. 15 hen, however, through the Irwin, of dieConatitu tibn, th 4 proclaimed that nil the rightto privilege., sovereignty and dignities of the States were abnolutely transferred to the Federal Administration ; and they proceed ed to arrest, imprison and punish nll who pretended to dispute their monstrous es eumption. Then the President wan •'the Government," and his will the only law. Slates in rebellion Ind States ran in Rebel lion were invaded, their Constitutione over. thrown, their laws violated, their plaineet rig4te repudiated end derided. Another torn in thowheel of fortune, and a change came over the spirit of Aholitiou dreams. The President of their choice failed to meet their expectations. and de clined to go the length of the destruct ire programme they laid down for bite, The governmental powers parsed fromithe Pres ident to Congress, and a Rump Parliament become. according to Abolition - 141c, the government" de jure. The President, from being the Government, became a 1,110 or to the Government; and Congrem, from being the creature to do the bidding of tin arbi. (miry and irretponsible Executive, became the true and perfect image of the Govern ment itself. Should It it en happen, in the coerce of Litman event., (Tint both President nod_ Congress should 'be opposed to the Jauolon (notion, they will prochitth .he Chief Justice of the Sorrento Coin t to he •• the Government," as tlpl the Juarez um lion in Mexico, and in the event of his foiling to suit them, there is not a tern amia ble doxbt that they will go hack to the thing they have punished no treason, and pt so /11l 111 that the States are free. novereign rind in. dependent, and that in them alone they recognize .• the Government." Such HIT Abolition notions of the theory of our GoV ernment—aticli their idens of the principles upon wrilb it wits foundtd. lt,is not pity ing too much to say that the a Abell tion idea of free government in ecnreety above the idea of the effete Mexicans upon the same subject The doctrine of State righ in and the sip tern upon which this Government WPM s cessfully conducted, to lie of Any ratite whatever, tenet be applicable ot all times And under All circumstances, and not, As the 'Abolition toted integre. to be applied when advantegeous to partisan interests or 'refits .' when the Interests are endangered:-- Under the Constitution as it existed when Abolitionism went into power, the rights di' the Staten were all defined and thoroughly understood. Neither the executive, iegis- Wive or judicial branch of the Government attempted to evade those rights, and there was then no bilempi by any pasty to seper• ate those branches of the Federal Govern-' meant froth their opium' connection, in order to set up oneagainst the other, or to proclaim one branch' to be "the Govern ment" and the others usurpers. These dempkistizing ere oopfusing theories and names Mivdlieed' introduced by the Black Republicans, who have not the proper re aped for either the States or the Federal Government to administer the affairs of the country successfully. The present position of that party—setting up a Bump Congress as the supreme and efficereign authority, on the one hand. and appealing to the doe tries of the rights of the States, on the other hand—is suph a jumble of absurdities neatly intelligent people must eventually repudiate as too ridiculous to be enthir ed. If the Abolitionists would save them selves from the results of their own errors —if New' England would bold bulwark against the day of her trial and condemns' lion—if their is any notion of rational lib erty and political security still remaining ,le that party—they will shisindon the fatal dogmas that has produced-snitch incalculable misery, and return to the original cad only .safe doctrine upon which the Government eau be conducted—the doctrine of State rights and Federal Union, as expounded by Jeffersou and Madison. The people must supply the place of the abeurd and Boson gnome Innovations of the New England fanatics with that sagacious pulley and those traditions which the founders of the Gov teem suppl!eil n it with ' , and which must maintain it in the future if it survives. I —Columbus (Oltsej•Vintie. --Tao National Wool-Oroworo' Coeval tioo..atiw in ocooloa at Clevoload. bag Woo sod ruralist lankarilair a tariff as wool sad *Wiwi pods. '1 .46.• VNIOS." SPEECH OF A /11HILANTHROPIST The name of Mr Peabody I..been in the pnpeee• ofleq of bete, in aolinection with magnificent charities dtopeoceL:aby ium in England Anil America itecvntliy, or the opening of fire Peabody Ind bine, in Ihtai more, fou n ded by him, he &hatred on nil dress altogether worthy of btu character, from which we exAgeci, ne follows Fellow•oiitzEne, the Union or the Polies of Arnett ica was one of the earliest objects 01 my childhood's reverence. For the vole pendence of our country my father bore urine a some of the dm keel da)s or the rev- Mution, and from hum and from his exam• plc I learned to lore Anil boner that Union Leiter in life I learned more fully its ines timable worth, perpapt more fully than most have, for born end militated at the North, then living for nearly twelve 'ears. at the South, and thus learning in the beat reboot the character and lire of lire people. finally in the course of a loug reroletore abroad, being ilitown in int male etuda,t with indirlUbAls at every section of our glorious land, I enemas du most Alitericatie who lire long in foreign lands, to love our country as a whole, to know tint' take prole in rill her 80116 119 equally eulllll men—to know no Norm, nit SO1111101" I:oet, tin Wa•t And an i malt publicly to a SOW that during the tel curve-t through nitich our 11, lion lois piron.l my it3nipatititr were of ill sad always with the Union, that my fiirrn course tendril to a...qv, but otter injure, the credit of the Guymon..., of the Union, mid at the elute of the war three loortler*f all she pt oyerty I uo.,e- mil h•ad Tien tryn , st eat - to t err Onbrof rtratr. -4.:«sevu ineitt and :mate .et urines, moil 1 i 1111 eo title lime I here been to/Jeerer)/ li me, /bat I liner been nectmsl of want. of slelot ion in die Uno.n, nod I bike ibirs eeettNion to ph, tnyvelf right, for I knee not n 'Nora ...Inlsol - not n word of retreat ion to niter lint none the lei , could I foil In feel for the Ennui, to remember till llnlul cal opium. ,s fm hone a moiler oh /mill and educainio than u Cohn ond 1111111111,11 rell,oll and sober thought Even yon and I, my friends, bail we been born 111 the Soil L, born In the feeling., beliefs and pedlars prejudice. of Soul bern men, .111 'gilt hove token the .1f.1,10 course w bleb wav odopteil by the Soul li, and have r not in our Int wink those who fought, as all milvi bravely fir glob they believed to be their rights NOver, therefore, during the war or altlee, have I pertnittlivf the contest, ot any pas sions engendered by it, fb interfere with the mime' rel,tions onek_worm friendships which I had formed for a very large °molter of the people of the South I blunted end !II iII ntwoy• Ideate, the instigators of• the slide and sorrows of ili.sention;both•nt the North and at the South. I believed, end To still believe, that bloodebaL might luive4ien ovoidal by mutual conciliation But after the great struggle had netunlly commenced I could see no hope for the glut tons future of Ante, tort, save in the noncom of the ar mies of the Union, ■nd in reviewing my whole course. there is flatting which I could change if I worth!: nor which I would change if I caltlil And now after the lapse ofithese eventful years, 1 em nore deeply, more vinosity, more painfully convinced than root, of nor-aced of minim! forbear once and forgi4tiess, of o..ted elicit to bud up the fronts and broken wounds of our nation To you. therefore, cittren, or Boum., mud Maryiand. I tnakeitny nppe ii, proltaltly the hint I •hall ever hitve to make to you May net this Inn tome hen cuumna pound. where all 'may meet, carrying former dif ference, 111111 11111111114111e4 genuig 111111 111111111111011• 111111 ISt:l.p.m. M.. went. nog the Moot+ of new tot tchnimons to the co). to the Slate mot to 1 Ile n•tnon ylnv mu lialontoteS her name alneatly 'mooted to history, Iln the kit tit 111/1(1(1 of religion tod oral 1111 l 111 A111(111(.11. 1111111 ClOllll her past fame try hecoonsnir the litty slur of politteal tolet 'thee and chart!), mot will not Nine) laud, in piton of 1. Itattilltround for Immo.' Mg part ten, heeonte rho field whet e nuldir coutmel , rind calm oletther tt lona may v t:1 ; where good 111111 i of n 11 4 ,1,11000 may meet no devote and t.xernte tlye wtra•+l plow. for repairing the ra.agem of war. ow, Joe malutoi the allure wf our country and fluke common, peereperouo and gloritalv, r,lllll the %llntnite to the Pacific, nail fron t our nark• • mu to our mothern boundary. THE CHOLERA AND THE NEGROES The poor negroes, thus far, have been the principal victims of the °bolero in this oily. lbw many of them have died nod are tips tv.•• fetal report do not show with at . but even they tell of sod nod frarfol 'loser, and their figures only Nene no ant ml•r to the volume of suffering en dured hers by I b is ill fated nice The-begroes very generally, refuse to be lie.re dint tne malady among iluseeeis efinl era They say, and seem to believe, tint they are poisoned by the white people— that poison ho■ been put in the food they eat and the water they drink One of them to our employ, tells a strange story about men) tieing brought by o negro woman al a grocery store, and when she put it on the Fite to bake. It exploded with a loud noise ; and, theTefore, she believed, 111111 no did lie, we suspbet, that the meal waspodsotird. and that all the feed and all the water were poisoned; and that-it is poison whoiniWer ed by the white people, and 'not cholera, which is killing the negroes. She is the login of the race. It seems. too, from no eattrits which have reached us, that they suspect the " Yankees" quite as much an the "rebels," and believe that both classes hove conspired against them, for their des fraction. Even the •• Freedmen's Boycott" onnnot be trusted by them---all of its "drawers," in their oyes, being full of poison! Bo the poor orentures deluded by this phantom, lire and die, stolidly. stoloally— gi•ieg thomselves up to the fntalisin which seems almnot to be an instinct of the ritoe. Christianity and humanity. alike: demand that this race he no longer rode as a bobby by the politicians and 'heir allies, the re ligious fatuities of the day. but that all good people join in the work of ameliorating ibeir.physicel. itientgi and morel condition on the proper beets. That basis embraces the fact that, If they trve to -prosper as • reel of freedmen in this country. It rnigt be in the relation of tat under the in telligent end aonsoieniiouo,woiob cam o their einttloyetc.—.XempAia ("Anima's dd• weft. SLEDGE-HAMMER PREACHING The most pi:miller of English grencbtris is Or relebrehsl Dr Spurgeon —relshrsle.l brenuse of the 'homely end forcible lefty Ins bne of sporisiebing the understanding of congregot ion', The following paeo.tgee moored in one of Iti. recent ilinesurses • A eerlytin snot rent far tine of his pith jeers. Ilenal Ito him - ;n11 hat in your eni oloyment Ile raid: ••I am e n Itinek•atith ' • Gu butue and make me a dials ul rind. a !engin " Ile Weal home, it occupied cranial mouths, and be bad no wags!' all the inue ildtt be was making it. film he brought it r 0 die uniaareli, end he said • ••Go make rr 'time all lung " Ile brought lt Up ague and the Inuit:Well gad. • lin, make it longer salt " foci awe time he Ite;uklit it there Wan nor ring but tee command inftkesti lung er m ill —And when he brought it tip at hot the inuallich alkali -Take it nod hind him bunt and Inca with it, and east 1,101 in io a Ildrinte el tire ''there nrellie Wage% tor making tie chain Here in a inxilitalailllor you to-night. 3e rerranis 01 the devil Your muter: the devil, Is telling you me make a chain Some hare been fifty ye ire weld tag the links 01 the rhino and he any." GO ike it tango '-----Neat SAW, etli mere lag 300 n ill open hi it mho', of yours, trod pail multi i link in at SOW tilt you trill be oltonk, and pit anolliri link, nen, Nltaiday you ntll do it •lisliunered nation, 1111.1 a q pia will krill nu making. It e.lt Inrko 10 lire Chain, laid when )1,11 bare Itse.l mein) ye ern rm , m 11.• aryl sr ill any • •11 - iire 1111/, mr still Ind then, st last, it NI dl It. -Take - h nen stud- lima-Um _build Utl_ and eid lido into the furnace' of loses: ••For Ike wages ot our )4 de lilt " There is suited for Juni. nwiltintoon. I du • will Ile dwell, hen if God makes it pofila hi, it 111•1 du )05 13001 Intl mint have. 'tinny IlletliPlllP anineurnee, when the Ili. runs is.), id hail apply II to your hoar, A BEAUTIFUL TRIBUTE TO A WIFE S r Jam., %laekintovli. the Iri•torian was married to ii s rarlierlne StsFor, t a ) ming , , Scotch lad) Nfiri her Ileum tee tons oe• ructell her churl tier te n leiter to a h end • I ons guidad so Ill) choice only by site Wool oflcerion of toy youth I foetid 1111 inr ells gent cornrow , . and 0 Toler friend, n pin delli 1110.11,1v4Wrfre, lartilfol 4, r wit en. and a Mosher rood., ni children ever had a misfortune in lot. , 1 mei 0 woman who. by tenth, merit zernent of my we akness. gradually coerce led rho moo pernicious of (Item She become prudent teem aliee' it'll ; a.ns though of the moot genernue TM 111 11. Pile Wit ill 11011 frugality and economy by her lore for me During ilsenenaLsris real period or my titre. she relieved me She gently reclntinerl me from drasoiat inn ; •Ire propred my weak and irrevoluie mature; she urged my indolence 10111 the cocci ions that Mire been useful and cre.lonble to me, and shy win perpetually Cl hand to nil monislL.my beedleeariesv nr 1111prOWidetlet To her I owe whatever I net : to he, whrit• ever I ;ball he In her solicit tin for my in tercel. cite never for a morn ,nt forgot my feelings or elittrecier. Even in bee reset/. Omen!, for which I too often gave bee 00110 e, 100,1111 irrGoll I could recall ilinse moment/..,she hod let sidelines" or nor 111111 ny firs ie. 1111r1 were wood. nay. nupel -110118 ;hut Oho Wan 11 hieliblr, render and COll4lllOl Such who she wimp I.leave Let, witch her etcelleut natural nenae was rap Idly improving slier eight years straggle and rhores. Lul 111111101 111 lasi together and moulded our temper to rich other , whou n boon ledge of her north had refined nry youthful loee into 111..1'111p, awl ehelore age had dell iced II .Jain I, of Ito nrigul ll ardor I lost her alas' the Choice of my 3 . 11.11 4 rho nano, et my mist . .. Wires, at It moonlit when I hall the prospect of her shertug my better d rys --Errhongr THE "LOYAL" BEAM' GANTT Some week,, ego we cluon:eled the limo exploit of "the polluted pink of loysilt.),.ilie rem guile Guns—ileterted at midnight, to n Ilsos I in attempting to perpetrate • rope on iWr pressen fit little aster m hilt, .N ell rn nl uge —.t 01.1.) doscorered ut the nes but h insle.loter 1.. t i.e officers of pats' tee. 1..1 a preltionsety exnm.unnun held en the itsrulting in his bring relenis on bad of $2,01(1, find bin sodden flight (tom the cu), Ile was lees esght of for omit) when n n•port ran o from Ar- L.f... 01 his payinga secret oat Ina town in that State, after which he coounped his •Itght. an was supposed in the three...) of the Ind hill Tercliary A cot respondent writing from Prtncetosb rknnene, nosier date of Ilse 311th ult. (limit a i s oform4 in, shot the brazen rtivinher 1019 001111111 y had the itsinudence in appear In shot 10R11 0101 not only ptivately, hill in the roost public Manner. attending Ilse (Innri, nod biking hie place inside that par tion of the court room reserved for la o•yers TO the honor of Ilse members of the lege' profession be a written that be remained unnoticed end unrecognised It seems . nlmost. isforedihle !lint Conti should have the hardihood to make hiss tip penrnnee among a people whore confidence be Inns so gronsly abused. and whose sense of decency he bee so vilely outraged A renegade to ble profession's of yearn—once an ordeb• and fire-eat log •ecoseioui't—Then sneaking about the North. fanning she Remelt of hatred nail fonalactam by Into loyal Itritdea—maligning the peoplcof hie Stale and ■landering she entire population of lie South—his career of baseness culminates in Ott attempt to ravioli the person td' a mere child commuted to it Is glioulianelup to More at school I Talk of Southern lawlessness when we hunk of all thekti thiOgs ! Men have been hung harried, beaten to death in Northern communit tee, for ninny less tigers voted offenso, than any of the above I—La Crosse Democrat of Ind, hems lel) the Democratic pally and joined the Radi cals. Hamm Is a man of little mental on ;achy, and it would' not surprise any Son of Liberty to bear that be was a spy in the employment of the Repubßeen party during the whole lime of the Indiana troubles. Suspicion long since attached to him Du. Beetles has Intel; become a convert. He Is now-old and Isis outrageous impris onment In the Ohio Penitentiary came nigh sending him to his grime. It may be that 4Lhos ebanred his petition to avoid Dr. tltU, perseoution. Bat hle eouversion Id beltedliale 614111 fingerless°, ingbemnb Hound Will Wawa only le blast hie times , bravo among bU riblivie sad ferseds. NO. 46 1F. , 11111e IY•TC•1)1,1 THE t CAPTIVE BIRD. Raj' Lroght litlle ettiottle, et there nett r n tont When thou lengett eunto t.O he free 7 Fur (be colt brtatii inr zephyr.. nrt.l •nnni•r Of thy boa o'er the 4111ovry Fen, • n thy warhhop ,of nglotl) Oh r. do.t, thou 411,1110 note that once anrwaml t,, thme. In mem ehtubluwy rale of the warm nanny %Mb, ~IVben the orange and myrtle entwine ? Oh' thud thou not litne, with thy inmost. 'lob "light To Awn iwer tln se t ,. - To tnst of the sweets or fretidioni tt4ain. tdranuret u se r rind s o r ore tid whin cold simfe's menet with its Ousts and Ittn.htig r..rin in its !titers MO tight. thy ...ng hover hus.llo,l, ar - st rbangs: 'et • . . Thy ornt P 0 gliai and ou bright' Ant when winter unelji, and the flowers of Slf'n; hod thew mum° , • V 0.1.1 the • urth, Oh ' rrit. I. there nesi r t with p..wer To fetern r • the 1.10.1 thy birth' tureut lath: i• arldrr p ten4.ltrr art Thal no He. PO, f tiller hue urn t, r ton. h ruo n h.rt.• t r tut tan:. ho Vol tilPrel , l.ll 1111,4 he ~,ttrrt THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER n , Felt Lake• No,' two feet td tnow. l.1•Iln--n preit __When lints die suit ran lie no longer they lloor-kuobr, r per, and reiral a' nor,. rr mode 1r pull ----Thu paper that cantata. the taut fine , I 0 I.n par ed tireciice, iai I is like 1,61 boot—of 111, 1511.01,01 1 111015 conenerilecT inatl'lteil one advantage -he alttev e keeps a hseg. ---A 11/11,113t0 van nnee, be hungry. llc Ilk, a hundred Moen de) --Theoho Intely recta% NI lock", or nor. h o lookout Cro n LP) to it —One hundred and twenty flue Penneylt a rmor. forni.hed lighting proetes durtog the war. nit udtl a rypo foetal be might print oh,. ail hee,eheels. 1“11 he mural pubtioh emerno.r. of eltetea gtntre9f lace elating the 29th 1111.1 fora public Thakegive redienis art: diseosoring that it woold he berme to impeach toiler than the President. -The demand for laboring men In al' parts or°. Stair. I. maid to lIII\ G never been PO gloat as at vat the present tone —CinTonnti is doing a lag business a ig pipg guns and ammunition South for defame. So to Boston —ft ry calculated by etntlreians that the Rolmlatton of the Un ted Mutt,' to rbue fully 55,10u1.11110. —The New 1.,e1t A•tr. !mica the M. hu•ette negroee who hwth,,,keu elected to rep =II —Contesting reale is the only means' by will, h the 1/isisolonists hope to bold their' own 111 the next Rump —The tancaufer baker. have .01,4 their •ott'e to two crab\ per dip. Such Pillar sure ly won t rise at the lart dny --Anthony his wife mill two beautiful daughters were recently murdered at Rome Gs ,by two negroes. 019.1 money. —A wealth) planter of Mi ppi Iv at New York urging emigrant, to go South instead of Woo —The Chip ago 4emebbeen, after ealhng Prendent Johnson a trolenr, so) s that General Sherman IS a tar UMve dangerous man than the rreselent , • , Plobps any.: A. Butler ruled New Orient.," mufti the finteininent rule the Seth Such avow. would undoubtedly create v et number of 4pounioniom mid a fellow too girl who had red hair. keep away from not or eou'll, set we on fire No.longer or that. replied Salk, ,ou am green to }turn --Preoident Johnson may not ha a 'Mose,. but we Fee thnt he give, more tanney to aid the children of flaro and hominy than all the Rada from Maine to lowa, put together. —A Connecticut Divine, of the radical Pk hoot. recently Prtnello.l on I. filundliy morn from the text We are the children of the der end to the afternoon. Children obey your pa. -- A western paper dukes tho earner DI two eubsertbers f its list Levenee they were re coolly hong. The publisher sty. he was corn pelted In be snore, horsy,. he did out knew their present teldrese. —Our roterepornrien seem to he generally elated over the filet that Governor Curtin has changed hangmen's day from irrblay—that day of ill omen. We hope none of them reel • per -1.4,1311i Intertat in the eltan - e--ttiought some of them richly d to do en. —A recta census develops the feet that Illisamalopi hes loot In population. slam 1860, .Lout 8.000 whites end 57.000 blacks. War did for the former what Yenkee phtlanttatopy, with liege doses of the Freedmen's Ilareau. did for the lather. ' What ix the reason that men inn rr kiss ench other, while the Indies waste a world of kisses en the feminine fares? aald ►foolish gent to tt lively gal the other de* The young lady answered, beeline the men here something bet. ter to kin, and the women haven't. The wont sew it immediately. —Mary. who died folgyan, asked. parson of El blooming sweet sixteen. Nobody, se I know of, was the prompt reply- Mot ibe per. son ranmted with met Meer, I say, who dlitd for foe' Mary war Irrl'ated. bet replitd, Why nobody. Mr: there wes Bob Dewlap lay bed-rid for me abbot Dix moelbs bet Mte my he got about epic.— • --nriuring a wrote thonAler atom. a lady fraud am telling tho atilldrea mot to b. afraid. that God held lb. thaudor I. Ida baud, .ad or Aid no , t, lot It butt than althea' Its t h o u g h t tt for pia bait. Eihe hardly oosaladad whoa • loud dap au heard • Tiara now 7 say* a tea year old, God has let go of lt,nui goo* home 001ot lb. rain ! —Io Balm sty, Okla. a iretowatt Dow cret of 101 r iv trim foar tall. to the poilei &nether, lip, wag! ree wiles; sad two oihrry. Mad atd 9 . 4 , e cateddiedde s teers to daprett Demme nib raciest patrlota do thus, what ezrue n• yooti zed .Retold ewe lank far isegleetter lb awmalidelialkiftbakim to wileoll 0011 itta. I .Iplao / . tsar Aralmekl - 4.14, tasup*litii:oraw. was's, Uigki4aboa: nootouweallh raided' two orthodox deo. me: one, Dexedo "Biddle, wwatJthj yeti rut of the principal 'Minim, the other enema Crawfoht, a pieta (.••ne