EME I ow kind Reuben Remand is growing of loin, ow he stops so ery day s he goes by the gate. eking after ml health. 'Tts • good hearted think of the soldier ru lonely and 1 • 06 ho reboot hiltheu boil no no "0 the Brown." eettuee I'm the oldest wan left in the town ; ut when the tient ainbeutnt come hither to li cuben Esmond romee to—l cannot tell why • am a tednati And stupid old man, alto willing lo do all the good that L can; et a crotch and a pennion will tell yon the late the mann work I had In tho lleech-Fdrost vale. In lON 111./ RO).— well, lent Me! or More— . oillitUr jurt here, little 3. In the door, o in poor Nary n child, she that came home to dio, od Loan 0 men bout, I couldn't nay n Ity ) nil Reuben And Jude, they sit very still, lien 1 toll hew I fought titer Ilus!eon 1101; ut the dolt turns non) T I client, to look round, nd stares ill the apple-blooms diresso on the gronind hen sho says l must inine when the sun Ilet is KOne. he net t •Ireitl to he lull here elene. 1.1 Reuben springs up PO cheerful ovi opts, help nu, in doon—l do wonder .11y. !'don't ga assay—he isn t rifrohl f the den on the pois Cr the deep Wiling Ala°. naLlt Le . sit, tedious for Jusie to slay, of she says she slun't mind, 'tis the girl's pleas- • ant way. chem. I like Reuben ,•• and no every nt,gl4 le pinenp her hair with a posy so bright. etranie—iii the inornihg the red roses lie II crushed on the step—l do wonder why. hero's neit Muir Grey's son, he nets very queer, used to bq always so neighborly here, hen I eat to hint how he grows white en& red, ti er a ha MO r Jay., is hi mg or dead e don't scent to filo tier, thought he did once, • Itut prrhaps the .Id soldier ni only a lone Ile won t speak to Reuben w ban poutng Ilan by Nor plop at hot roil —I do wonder o by. s Reuben to Jay. Ile looks round my chats the 41 , orsray for Jo. The rhil,l s•n't there, d tbn lad looks abashed, •'I called—Captain Breen,- 4I then be at ~ p 3 th0rt,14.1,11, awk‘vatlly down. ark yon for Jorge." The lad l‘fln In. brad. flat. 1114 !leek, 111., a prfr. florhcol dll will lowt Ler anil,guaril her until I nliall nd !he 1,147. Inc, .11c may., I cor nnt tell why ha% a aurAy f irxiitten how Time never day!, aw the 1141 e. of the year gulfr the drat. 01 the ttie .to enteen ' AL, }4.a, I remember. oft nes enteen years the Itrieot hlf I Not ember oln Jtowo a brolc • Tfille her Reuben. and be try tentler4fol i•attenl." More elearl3 I teo by Boohoo ;Ifould ran of ery 1 y tirnng lry, atk fur my welfare. Grandfather know. Irby. • -I, It lIIg I Written for the IVatelitnnn THE SEARCH FOR A WIFE. Render, 1 Mn going to trll Tim how d is happened to ben worried, nine, and apt in Jodepetident old bitichelor I had picture In lily boyhood, nit the acme of teasel! ne felicity. I had lived to the wrestler.] age of thirty, ad not one four being Led bewitched me uto the idea that she was the angel, novel its and poets rave about Indeed, I found hem ••of the earth, e:irt 114, • and most of limn very commonplace .. oliiin intiMiliq at iminenner, not dint I 'lonised myself so erfect, that none would suit me: butt won frail that beautiful ides I would worship night cinenble into dust when I pressed ier a my alms To be Its., poetical. I Ilse disenhaulmeut which too surely Mows the honey moon I Rai, one beautiful morning, in any office, moiling, rind pondering 14490 'things. for, hhough my friends eilled me n confirmed II h itch ',or, had lanial intervals of Atrunonial t eagore, and I presume (his as one of them, caused by sight of a pretty hi, who hod psssed that morning my Mice es I stood in the door talking with tt . riend. I am a soieeptible ins n, and ni I sat here alone, my thoughts wandered hack to he sweet face, I hail neon—l had seen 11011310 AR as beautiful, but i {tore was 11 reculiar charm in thin, and I indilenly came o the conclusion that I had, that, morning 'en toy fate Then, too, I remembered hat the face was not the only agreeable art of the picture There was an exi, de form, and the short walking dress ( hint. the present fashion, iy a most senst le one) displayed, Oho peel hest of-feet and nkley. Yu Gods' if 'tin title, that "all er ell, that ends well," then my divinity of he punt/ little hat, ntiort walkingalresi, nil fairy let ( coca led I must admit in 11091 P . llll3lOClillll walking hoots) we, aulTi lent to slinks illy bachelor prinesplea,M their 'cry foundations My cogitations would VIP !sited as long an toy cigar, I Lava nu oiabi , but they were tuterrnpted by the .ntrinte of Torn II trrisun, 0110 01. nry mar red trierlils I offered him a cigar ivhich and placing himself comfortably nn he safe, 'gilled himself for the morning I dw that 1114 Q building of my Tt.ir ensile mnst ie nitei rapier. for the time, and asked Tom hat the new*s might be ”Nr ithing,:': he replied, without taking the ig ir from between his lips, •mothing," ex. apt that Congreii is fighting over the Reconstruction Bill," and waiting gas, Igurati•ely, and litterally, by pro.racting heir settings all night ' Curse Congress," I muttered, '•le less heir of it the better III," 13 your wife, and the babies " "Are you partial Co details," he said la ily, '•if so here goes,--liato I left, in ecret counsel with her prihie minister, dis °sling the relative merits of pink silk,and bite satin, in which to appear at madame 11 --s'. to-night. The baby practising ihe lost difficult air from the opera of Scree hioani , dude my hopeful heir I left deep ly absorbed in calculating how many feet of be nursery floor, a plate of milk, and a late of M0i(133.9, was capable of covering" I laughed, "your piet7;re is inviting, but nsufficient to pursuule me to become any twig inure Limn a disinterested observer or omestie bliss " "Cone old fellow, don't get Allanalla, it nterferes with my digestion, and I tell you here is nettling nice marrying nher-all• It ...nineties and softens the rough side of na's nature, In fuht a uin.is not thor uglily respected, and appreciated unt II he ecomea the head of o family. A single au le hpposed upon in society; he becomes a prey for &re s igning M3Wl . l3—,..intprk for bright ayes, smiling hp, and all the weep• ens used by the riffle god—zand this you know, Is a mist, gpilriting. yet tantalizing elate for a war Yris like a disease in fact, a man in ear!, is nothing more than • monomaniac. If he eurrecdera at once to the disease, Ito becomes parnlired, and then some strong•minded woman seises on him, and lakes rare of him for life. If not paralized, the disease takes • more fearful turn, and be become a maniacs, and these maniacs, my dear fellow, are called bachp.. ''Slop! I cried" just sny, and don't waste your eloquence. to which close of patients I belong, and I one willing to take tba l'!"'aed.Y, be it what it may, for entre none. Tom, I'S. seen my fate, and it was his morning, in ibeibrm of a fairy dressed a drab walking-dress; bleak het, and the aintiest of lace veils, which only lent in tin toL..xlr nldhiangl charm Tom, my tiny; I am going on a pilgrimage to worship at this shrine, and as Fob not lived in this world thirty years to be fooled at last, I shall start out, with you for my pilot. "You know every one, and as a married man, have the noire into , every" circle. I shall devote one week to this pilgrimage, dor if, at the end of that lime, I find her not, then, I forswear marriage ", "Ail right, Frank, we will start to mor• row evening, I propcise i going to the' opera first, and should we not see her there, we will resort to our •I .11 mg list Once seen, ,t mu are a made man, and wish your per sonal attractions, can exclaim •veno, ride, -lie left, soon alter, promising to call that evening for the opera, previous to taking his wife to the party' Fur the first Irmo to ion ycars, 1 [LAW no istabor,ple toilet, and that ofternotn paraded the fashionable promenade wherNtlie fair sex "do . mo.t congregate," and there wan not a drilb dress, or black lint, that did not elicit an extra amount of admiration from Me. Three Illy, had passed, sixteen visits had been paid, the opera visited (tyke, the pfromenalles searched—dry good stores, and miliners establishments visited; but all in 1 , 11111. The amount of eseiei.e I look would have exhausted the energies of any orliv. man ,--but the milueet had become a 1110110131.1.0 with ate, and as Tom insisted, one of the worst eases within his reeollec- Three days had parsed , but they eeoined inonV instead of diys When on the limning of the fourth, as I stood on the st . eps of my hotel, I saw conning down lie l avenue, thiidentieal drab walking tirestrii, I could linen sworn to it ; but the sweil face, and jaunty, hat were enveloped in n thick veil. I drew on my gloves, determin ed In follow, and keep her nn srglit until she reached home. Passing the helot u ith a quack step, she entered a bookstore near by, and I waited until nine online out, which nll9 111 n fe'w 130111 ell le, and I prepared to follow, when a baud nos laid on my shoul der. and a— • Frank, you are the very than I 11119 looking for lea an Invitation fm you front my wife to epeud to morrows eve ning with us.. You'll come, will you not V and Torisdlarrisiin handed me the invitation, on which the Harrison monogram was most elegantly excreted' "Certainly, with pleasure ; but Tint you rascal, you ile4erve a thrashing, 'Here I was on the tack ofilie mysterious walking Ike's, and your •appearance Isas cansed•me to la o it, look I" and I pointed to a young lady in the act of Pilfering the street cars •'Sever mind you'll'see her again, tp the meant IMO we hope to see you i, —osi rnTer. The next morrsing,on t mug, rfound upon my table a moil "e'sqiusite little bnquet of heliotrope, and s iolets, and accompanying it a coolly on Wilith was written to a most delicate female hand Ruh the compltmeuls Drab srnfking dress I rang the bell,—the waiter appcnrod ; but my cro•s exammat ton of hitiwyltetted no information whatever, as to origin of the 103011 ious bolo boortet, and I (1151111, eel 111111, WWI the comr:ltmeull rrthe morn i.•g, which were • that'ite and his,tellow wailers were a eel of fool: . `•Yes, air,•' ha replied 1,111 a bow, and left the room—to convey satd compliment') to his comrades After he left, I stood go tinge upon the flowers Suddenly nn idea flashed across me, and I esolninted aloud— • nook Carler you ore n.foolt—soina one k pin)lng you nkke, and I II bet n tbonsntid to one Tont llnkrison is nt the bottom of it all, but don't let him know it en• joy It 100 much " a despairmrsigh I resigned toyed( to adverse fate, and—my cigar, and for the remainder of the day, buried myself in the dry depths of law Evening come, and I had almost forgot— ten cry engagement for the evehing, when the entrance of an acquaintance in full eve ning dress, recalled the accepted invllation After he left, I returned my lintel, and matte my toilet (or Mrs Harrison's party, and n.l a fashionable hour rang the bell, for the carriage which was tooonveY me_thith- Mr. Harrison's saloons were well crow ded when I entered, with pretty g!rls,liand some malrous, and some few of the passe' feminine known es old maid , . I met aentiaintanoes, and had engag.d my self for the first dance, when Tom came up ..Frank I hope you have made ncretignO• inent for the next donee ! as I hare maile one for you—" “No, and thank you, I dislike looking for partners; but look here old fellow, make no more eng;getnents forme, I dance very little,you know„and I hold to the opin• ion that it a inan'S heels are aptpo he light, his head is also, and the few brains I have, I don't early in my beets " 110 went awry with a laugh—nod I offer. ed my arm to the pretty girl who had con sented to waltz with mg: During the dance I cnmo in contact with Tom more titan once, whirling through the waltz with a fairy like little body— There was something about her figure that recalled my dream of the last few days. Iler face, by some chance I could not catch a glimpse of, and my curiosity was excited to the highest pitch. My companion could not inform ine of her name, and I thought the waltz a most interminable one, notwith standup the pretty little graces of the girl whole slender waist my army encircled. It ended at hull, and Tom, coming up, introduced another applicant for the hand of the lady on my aim. Ile hurried me off through elle ealoons into the music room beyond, which was comparatively deserted. Near at„large. bay window, stood his com panion In the dance Iler face was turned from us, its she bent over a vase of Bowers- "Cousin Kate,"nnil the lady turned turn ed towards ue. Heavens! was I dreaming! Cwas my dream. The beautiful bright-fate, and brown hair, was the same that bad looked from beneath the jookey hat, and the fairy robed fig ire, the same that had graced the drab walking dress... !My friend Frank . Carter." and "Cousin .Rate Harrison," was all I heard, and we were alone I stood for I moments until the rising blush on my oompan ion'■ facie, recalled me to myself. "You will excuse me, I know, when I tell you how very much eurprispkl warto 8411 in you . Miss Hart-loon, the rettlizatltin of ey dreams of the week." and I bent earrly forward "Yes I know now all about it ; but be lieve me, I knew nothing of it until lilts evening 'Twos Cousin Tom's doings," sho added npologet irally • "I believe yen" I replied earnestly, "and Nat blush mu - ime d " I think." the natl. "weltre engaged for Ilia dance , bnl rfear wo ate 100 I.llf The dapeo, a gallop, bas began Homo lime much Prefer Ihts quiet nook, and the ice of your bright eye 4 " My coutplnttont,s scooted to embarr 191 r, and she hinted ho lopic of conrcrea How long we oc'eupied the biy windows I cannot lull mit ilNee linni of voices grad ually died away, and look ing,,a3, my w.,itch found it 'heal morning I made a tas.y adieu, begging perm v iesion to i "..., ~h‘cli was gracefully granted. In the holt I encountered Tone Harrison lin gave Inca proving in•itattnn to call gain. There v.va merry look in his eye as he gave the llpt I eriedl ' '•I see your , goyme• nth fine fellow ; but nous °runt., rank a t ank I in ten,'" kti Make sniffinlion a slandtaz one I iltalike long -coartslop, null I canoed y theory into 'trochee ibis Cline by lun ry lg matters ap, and 111 Ali weeks I wan a mart tett man 1114111 Kate,•• coit,nt tog on con,•leration of Oho trouble I went to catch her, to took, inn a L,ylpy man, .tn•l no I write [oho loot, o• t!‘ toy hltotaler, and leoghn • ntlah tt I have ',tile. or toy rife t.ence while tu aearelt,of a wife THE COMING POVERTY Busineaa men are looking forward with lo the fu tore No prudent matt pos., axing except under petit lur etr. ainstances, wythea In enter into buitne,l, he Is out of it now. This orlvea, largely it of the political di.quieftale. and out of no results of enlist nut tug government FA- per for'real inonoy lint Ilaero'nro !OHIO Pr , CIAI CIIVIV. 11 , 1 noffietently n.tenl^d In, flint nro helping on ttlip9‘erisliment Of the country. 'floe miserable charactor of the currency, and Its tnilated bulk, promotes extravagance Thin ii tinderstoo I But it ii not nocler- ,A (bat the greenback, that are nfl 'lt ml their shvlows, the Nlioinal Rine, nr^ o: nonov, , but ezzlences of tlet lan or fined prop4lp in this contiy, Arlo, e pica in his pocket a Intl of greenbacks pocketing It that-mott! note, on whirh his nuw might he written as one of the rndur •rs I . 4.Cre 14 ft :61 floe fgrrip• nn TIM his property, to mecore the peyment of these, and thousands of nt Wiens more of et'llielle! 14 . debt The people, aq a whole, are in the rummy+ pooltion of n roan snorting him self on horrrowed money' Many millions gold nre go , ng oul orthe country to ply lie ni crest on bowls, held by Europeln red ttora, because of the 'ex irb. , :mt rites MEM But, again, has tt, ever entered into the oga t rYWt this l'o•poltIte tlttlogliont the whole , t 1, 19 of people to lON of. how moray of out not dont to e know, sir, IL it to teL families of these Stott,' fitid t t r t rhr , rrt those ten Slates civil got ernmenis in folio live no Europe than in this lan bur tenet Lice been ie rttablt.lt,ol Ity the 'tett of oun t ry • Taxes owl ni illy ttm ilo,r atyl that will all the notehtn used on this enttni ty, nittkollits the dtarrro cry o f then t it foss naueul tutors to notary to live ttr, on the globe' Ste mutts lulloprewonknow, one, ninon pine r two years past, 113`10 gone out b o y Icon doott,t,,,i ly Tic oothor„,„ of thin ' tth rich passengers, who find it a sortati ,„ p „1,1,, n pets . pnh , to out no , enungeenon coo urn grttenbuck° unt o Au", and t" g° Io 1,1 tog )1 the Si tits of drops to live on fonds drawn front het 0' thin Iron pa'lsome non, „ on . , „ on low tunny millions in gold, is drawn d o 11 1 , s e pt "t hey propuge open, nally oom ibi. c , out. Y , by these uh , nte° &et et tli_r on eety lotto ot civil govern ndlords and bondholders ° If we 11111111.1 I ,„e„, , Shines They propose no nil ti t ° =Dont that we have reaeo° I. ) lie ennorsetle and annul ILe to all ;to take fro. here is constantly thrtinetl from lire to I 3 11' the pet plc o f States a ll va , aa in Europe, ll' these abseniee Americo., it ! lire pnxu shtcl Is to govern them The xnuld nstoontl those who ha, not been he ) otter, and the 1.13 not alone in the hawk thinking on it. The dearness of living, j o f the n ,j,l tet i n t o he 1 it s t o th o s e sl a t, , here, in consequence of these taxes and tar 1 o t, res k tottee is to b e „,,„,, n rr lT; .1.4 a stnor6 tilt, makes it dirapor to import from Europe ore to to k ro t,„„e„etot: of, mid nil al ., . 1 than to manufacture hero—notwitlistand- institottons nro to be subrodixeCto the tog the Ittgb tariffs The mailmen ore.- Lnynnrl Tin „, is war gress increase Ibis dtsenec, by increasing Mt Doolitito then (inured upon a edit the t.x.ifr Tim nee , sarY result of liii, ci•m of the .I.i.ills of the hill, nod often eitifnim m the general impovrislituctit of tits r„itr",l ut „o„ettle„,,to length to the cettulty, and the squainleting of tire the irsiilncion trn.ilucittig burn to resign, property of ihe people - it trying ihr right of the Legislature of 1\ is These are but sonic of toe croes tin it ate bringing chaos. 'lntl ruin on the financial ennui ion of the country The result nit) be 1)1401 off for a wblle by I'm tber expan. -•., ,ion of the corielimy, - bfit the more Oflll.it is dune the worse it will he in the end And. now, comas the Nlilitary Despotism Bill for the Southern States Thu? guts an end to any hope of settled and quiet. 1;1111.4 in that region. The cotton raised at the South the coming season, will be next to not king Truly this land seems likely to make a long lust, in revenge of its extravagint dissipations"' Let it come '-I', rraton', Jonrnal EFIW ENGLAND El A.Vrer —Head the fol owing, and nay if It 19 not about lime f(r the exhibition of so•ne sympathy for the poor whiten of the North. A child of eight years, "beaten by an overseer in a cotton factory ! Talk about "slavery in the South "' God ne‘er before permitted such cruelty no in practiced in the cotton mole of New England . "The Fall River News says that Kale Lyon, a little girl aged eight years and seven months, employed in one of the mills of that city, had her arm fearfiflly lacerated a day or two since, so that amputation will be necessary. She had.jusLysf. beaten fan carelessness, and noon after the sleeve of her &eon caught in some of the gearing, and her arm drawn in WET BEAR Ir.—An indignant planter tells the kllssissippi hair something of his expolience with freedmen as laborers .•If Cmiar," say. he, Amnonloins of n slight pain in his misery, and refuses to wotk, Cato straightway declares he'll not go to the field unless Ctesar does. This demoral ices John, who demoralizes Bob, who be gets dissatisfaction in Jeff , who !gimps some other hand back, until sometimes the whole set are at a stand still on account of the delinquency of one We are not allow ed.to o whip them, sir, and to see the lazy rascals standing like posts over lands that need every lour of their tinie—why, sir, old Job himself ,onuldn't bold - Lis 'tamper under such aggrivations. The country's gone up, sirgone up !" —No man ;err did an injury designed ly to another, who did not injure himself he most. tralit air "STATE EIGHTS AND rialmitax. lINXON." BELI:EFONTE, PA., AN ELOQUENT OPENING Senator Doo!title, of IV 1/Koll,ln , recently made a powerful Precch in the U 9 S - , , TiaTi; tivinst the rvlical measurel for the de struction of the Union, .01(111ng with the fn llow rot shone awl eloquent language,lint em lore strong null eloquent than truthful Mr- Doolittle arose and said . . I rise to plead for what I think the life of the Repubbc, and for that titan vritteh giver it life I stand hero also to answer for myself because on a former occasion I foresaw what I Reber e would follow Os a 9 reev,tlry and logical consequence of the adoption of certain fond intends! littresies originated its the State of Masseclinseli•, and, of which the Senattor of t 1 ismehnseite, on toy right (Mr. Sumner), ii the great ad vie de and champion, I have been formoti thltt eighteen . months denounced 11l my State by many of my rotator politthal as.to et ties and friends for -fmeseetng these rt• sult4 *lnch In no now coop; 71n1c1‘ arc now tending brittle this Senate to the bills which have con., fum the Heave of Repro ',cubit Lees, for denpuncing I hem in advance, for ta,erting to line people of wlscoamn over and over ngnn that y eldlng to these fatal heresies would of neVessity dissolve the Union, and est,thlith a c , netntroted mints ry de•poti-in [ bane, 11,1, I t pee', :Ilare sewn rely iknioniceil INV. 1110 of W tscom sin than eltt .11)11101111011 has been earns' I t each as eraiint as to culmi nate at last in the t emulations of the null cal Irgisl 11111 ii of illitsconsta, initirneting roe to rmn holy in thot holy I say, thereto,. ig \li Pie,l.lolll, as I Inland here Illy, I 'lona to plena for the life of the fleptibitc, to pleml tor Ike nior.t In which It lite', unit without it Is dell, Flr,l 111111010 In :mirror fir our • bromic° I leave 10 0 11 fn a with.all[lc p Wier :G•rd Inns Inc ha the laid Inn years, in n. 511,10,1, nll , l In 11110 8,,,10 and etsewbere. And it, sir, I shall in this olio C 11941911 give titimo nce to deep and earnest course i oat in sti . ong nail col nest Senators iv II nn tut eland II 18 WllllllO nl.l reqloC l 10 111 , 111 It is Mem, my soul is fills I with eoiltimentt which 11014111,7,P lln madly idler. N • 1 PI 0 1n tiny lire, though I have stood 111 tlllll7 11,10110, and I.I I ICO r 1110 DI V I Eire 1 10 the weight of Ih It r • ipantaltilay upon ule whuth in upon tort now .peter lutrure ill my lii, was there n when my hoot I wonitt g I n t :lint at-T. Al - I.l.tht) thi I to the goner to gtte Ito ;nee to ;he until no it pie, in new ; ;to outh I`l,Sllle4 trete ever br ,,, re pit rented 10.1111 •I 11 hot rue they" th till by nhnl haute you wti„ they tire enleartucto a deelAr ttion ;if nor ngninot ten Stale, of It o , Unten They nip nothlng mole—they nre nollting Ices. We know en., That the I -he'll on bon been .llpple99Vd, we Lwow that every nrinttti sent, huh the Potourteto the Rto Grontle line eurrendored WY 'Mlle, nod pktugetl anew his align nee to ;he 1'4111,1;1011o0, the Unton,ntrl the y rA e ts.o. n d role .trin,rl er con-in io rvauc noel] and le viewing lire visas and tilicCebes in. 1110 Fni ale, and Ilie Acts of lr o pul,lio life "which caused ihoiie ICS 11111 0114 in br pn9sod, LI what licit Imo: the 11.141o:11v of lino IViscon hitt cr VIP IVoni.” —Tarleton. Ike Ike 11ev Dr Twinning In ,ow,' 111 , 1 won ning cry in dal cou•dry The following err two of bin most note, ...(s.the great trativtormal ion draws nem-- er the groins of erention rite louder, and trott feels less secure anchorage ground on quill, Our elitlo have been atnitten as with the !Morn of the Egyption pestilence hos decimated great capitals. and tens of thowntnds have fled as from the de. abating angel; the hest phial, asl have elswhere shown, was poured into t'te au, and theignientnt ions of bereaved, and the terror of the lug:live, and the graves of the hastily buried [lout, cry aloud • .11 is done' "I statc[l , in n previous work if the last phial was, as I believed it wnn,'p:•ured oat 111 1818, and still runs on, we [night -exl , Set those (testi - owlva blights op vegeta Wen, on animals, and on men, this very year linvo roused the fears of Europe . As if to Pint ify the interpretation given, the preys, the men of 901011 CO and a[servotior, and physicians, all attribulo tlie visitation of this yea to on aboor.nal condition of the These, ondsithilar [l2sturbances of our mundane system aro laid donna by our Lon! as premonitory signs of Ills npprolels Trumpet tongued (boy sound through nor Christendom these warning words: •Be— hold the bl idegrown cometh.' " A Goon ONS —A Galveston gentleman, lately clopping at the Nicholson Homo, Bastrop, w.ts in a room recently occupih'd by the Agent of the Freedman'sßureau. Ono evening, Tom, a freedman, entered the room fro malfif lire, and after doing so ifiteelowu, crossed his logs and made himself at home, smoking and spitting in lb% fire place. The Galvstonian asked him what he meant by OUel famtlizrity : loin looked up in evident surprise, and immediately arose, hat in hand, and in his politest manner. said : "flog pardon, Massa I didn't know you was ge/ROUDS; thought you was do Freedolan's Donau!" --flews, Galveston Taos. RIDAY, &MARCH 12, 1867 THE INDISPENSABLE DUTY •It is in every erns!, tniperntive, to tett, Arline oarrielqf moment the validity ,of the Sherman Shellib•rger I nit -if it sboll be come nu net of Il_oogreqs--by (ID appeal to Ike COLIILY. Tau wito'e ease Iles thine IYLPc that tsw stands ns authority, we eon do nothing except 'in cinformity er4 to If, Indeed, nor St ito government is sod invalid, as therein alleged -if. it but provisionoh nn l 1i115,11.1bi0 nt plensurc—lt in at once bound by the instructions of the Into. and Imble to be swept out of exi.ienee Mit word, if it de). t from them . lilt. will have no right to call a COWIN' Nan or hold an election of any sort, except in the mode And upon the terms thlrein preen tbrd ,amid to atteolpt to do so would be eensolerrd oont,uninctous and rebellious, and would prosoke nit I :illegal to justify, no it,tant sponging out of our whole s) , deln lYe coons it no !Mel c.ill4sinn Let no ascot lain if the' proposed lawAltill be rceognizrd by the United States Courts ns binding upon the obedience of eLtir.en4 If .they no de cide, we have naitillg to do but sulnott to it If they rule othrrwi•e we stand ris we ''Tire acceptance of ihe law With ait ilc mor is to necopt II? etilfralle testa nod its proscription ,is to acknowledge that the Slat, is tool that its I two ore tis Ist° pa. per , th it Is decrees nod Judgement and title deeds nre a lie words ;Titst iis Inipris toinients were assaitlis , that Ito death sen tences weie; lilt Ile Ink:Wos ore. robber... We repeal—the ni ci goes ti id, and the vital nod aliturobing 911001 ton toittl IP derided—willlproposed I its be held as %slid • Those entrti•led with the all., el the Slate Ore _bound by tu'l the 11011011 We obitgatoms of their to te•l that toed ion tikorotieblv Th 3 tire no right to un, I • that the Sts ' te deAdaintil lh S hare eithatistiolevery menu: of vitidic iliog i:s ri'A l tti Inca duties ate now narrow in.: dowo to Icut—nr rather that duty now ot z Id, Ali others', and its •c^s•fill dt-c l iitrgc Is l'ie rill Icing of all ord•rs It dein 11111, I I.le'olo 014'11 1 . 1,1 and their most zeal Pll - 1'01(.1.11. "51 tins , * at it nwvhr ascerl I mod tits , the passag ,. . of Col 11w iv eirt , tiniropil, ottelit to tip:twat duty a eh ill ho ti ict tin the best I 'gil talent that nionoy ean oru:iluy in the whole and r 0110'1 alaeo-tui took. , 1111 It C 1, 0 the roirLest p...stide moment In I I e tleeis tia f the U itt.4 ites Ftt. presto co ill It Is not. 11^4'e• , • 1.1 '- gest to ingenuity of i n 0h,00., the mode of ni.iing up the t•sue I' to, nitwit be P 1110 1110 , 1,, 1111.1 W 11: /MOW 111111 t It ii T tat ito tone shoal Ihe lust, is evident lin] the feet that ne . ;ro so r lingo nod white prtscrlptlon will be the low of the M by ulectoris if the proposed bill lie atilltnyiy on tits. occasion We sateeri ly hope the Legt-latittre toll he able, fur once al I :Ist, to nano, eaivens fah toot most Int l/oil:int tro 1, wrCeul being einhirrassed by petty polo° 1.11 Jl•limp.ic.4 ambitions Goo 110 Ili' 1111,1 1 . 101 111'11 In .14,1 1111: .•1- J111:61 111 IV 11 , 1 Ii reit., in tilts truly e nal hue legitlatots to it low no paw s .... An I ti I pi opt I ices b: et ine ho t item the i this' le olokto: • Ilse 114 It 11,114 of t.ut tatql wlnctit ttnt - tn. nt wall , 1 he xpethent. and 111 tip the pure at the State in their hands where n h to cute her still for life! . and or the light lit live' It lie folly 1.• spore ellut of 01t110 exit :.dame in a sling Plc, he it t rtnentbet td, 14 comp. altt ely t Ite •111110Irkl of our urttnt thount --I;v4lnos , l tit 1111 ISI CURE marimium TREMENS We took occasion,twilit , month, ago, on the faith of good ittetileal tenon lily, to in vile attention to the beneficial eff,cis of COplc.llo or red I,pperon delirium !neatens Sunee !ben some nett oinked C 0,9 hint omitted in tho practico of Dr Lyons, to whom we merle reference ut lint Tilly gentleman hays desert red she, npon the symptoms a brief lint varlet le Retina which precedes the developed attack of &Anion] tremens These ale of anomalous, uniotelligible 'in the pollen! hion.elt, and lint alwaysanh inn roil Iq lilt ineilicil attendant In this prolinonitiy stage are met with minter, sloeplessne" an I general distress nind anxiety, wit bout ranee of di-Ilium la other riotsingtit merino, nohow tiern , r, (tom win -eh the patient, can, by an effort, arouse himself, antionider sin rang erertions of the will, Q., opium in 1 his Iv:attics rtr a time noel jmrane lilt business avocations, to break d 'nun, it may be hopelessly for a few Louts afterwards if his condition is noglec• toil, unsuntlet .4.1,1 or mistreated rioter I he, eireun,tances. the tteatment by esp. mum conies m ve-y opportauely, an I by its einp`o3inent we may eat short the dis ease, and save the patient from the con, quences of ibis.iniprtolenoe, and possibly restore liincto n reformed life. In the coop ofan individual who hod taken nix grains of opium within a period of two.'•or three clays, without sleep being procurer] or any relief to the llluslops, tremor and distress under which be Inborn:n.l, a ' fitentrgtain Jose of capiseum in a Inrre pill nag follow ed by as deep and rocreAtilng sleep for twelve hours. :The patteMwelverfroni this conscious and restored in another case thirty grain dose bad to be givenbel ro fm u relief woo procured, and in ono or two stanctt;rof individuals of confirmed and -in temperate Labile, was found necessary to repeat the dose some three or four times. As at presdut empr , l, the capiscum is given in the form f s made up with honey and ruses, nit Dr 1!).ons sug, , ,esls the feasibility of its being conveyed to the stomach in a capsule —Fr —A young laker . , who bad long paid Lie court to a lady without much advancing his suit, accused her one day of being in sensible to the power of love .•It dart not follow," she archly repl.ed, ~! b .ri...aF n so, because I am not to be won by the power of attorney " -Forgive me," replied the suit or, "but you should retneniber that all the votaries of Cupid are solicitors -Er. • —A Western man speaking of the Pa cific Railroad, corgi is "one of the fun niest coincidences in the world that almost every alternate section of land on each side of the road belongs to some member of Con gress." —Maideoe ebould be mild and meek, quick to bear, and slow to spealtu 11114 L, A . MALL BOON. -1 We are not sure, but that the peopio of the Smtii night to bo jintukful, to the new Rump Congres•, pa•sric of the w,f,,,,,o.opplement to the :navel:lf flesp.tt mb " Ily It rl ffy wfli be 1,14,.. I frot t the di-•gfeel'fle nece•sfr) taking, any nett,• steps find, toe act, by relit in t •ey lire re laced If, the conlition of vassal 4 to ttf ',tenting corm . ), The •IthoTe work cf p ^rlf efing ilie,machmer) of the Set up, will teal, upon their appointed infers ,Thosiievei4lnow flint it railer' to be f;sst-v,it,Attifler the h nein of their tyrants Tlll4 to a high spirted ifice:llo will he sons slight relief It is as well, too, that dip mad detugns of of the radical desperadles should be carried oit wt'h a high bawl flaring violated every article of .the Constitution, every principle no which republican institutions are foilinlo , l, oil every one of the great franchises of freemen which our ancestors rescued from the hands of kings, by a can tinned fight, WIIICII 1.1811 , 1 through cents rice, it is well, no Jinn!, Ilion the loot pro tense of choice in the form of government to be establishel should he taken away front the people of the South The fle.pot tam to be establifilod is of the most grind mg and gdining cliora,ter 'Thule who are to be its ',tints 0111 never wllitagl) ace, pt it _is well that It stroll I be set up among them as a thing eat ely foreign,n fel be reoognised as,sfinply tine measure of a ' 1 (oleo which they LIVO not line 11 , 111., ba rennet If they must drink of dila .bitter degiadotini, they will no doubt feel relieved wadi they are a.siirefl by tints j 1l1:9011 bin mat they are to 110 Frlred Ilno fits tglecableincee•sity of lffting the cup to I on 1 lir It is a mutt boon, hot is +oluellting to be thankful ff, tr•erthe- I le•• - ' , waft r bitr'!v. A WESTERN WONDER. The greatest wonder in the Slate of lowa, Int perfinps any flitter State, is what they call the t tlYallett in %%night county, 11, NO 10.1,4 t.tottit it L. • Dubuque not I'n rift rkilway, and :tiento roe hundred and fift2, mites st_of Utt'tinitte city The take to 'in two t i tlitee feet higher than the eat 51.11:.100 la to , •I Otte “I ilia wall is iciloe • iitith At bottom fifteen feet, and at the tt , p ale dootocr fact is ttie sic • itt the son 11.P1 in vonstruction ; the whole vnr . t, toe di s•— r ,•it lanai titre% lons thirtfe one hinelred p mits. fhere nn abuntlanee tt e tt t . titne to Weight county ; but surr.fte se 111, to the extent of five or ten in is the, are no to No 0110 can fa a on ilea as to the means ettirt ,-, 3cd to bring the n to the er'', or wh constrtictett it. Anton I trio rntue Irk' is a !bolt of woo It Ind, half t tn;ltt m w. Ili,, toot pe=e I of colt, with this etctplien, the 'country in a rolling prairie The trees, ( therefore, must bait, been placed there at the time of huatitug the wall 111 the spring of 1851 there was a ghat steno, and the ice on .11itt like brake the wall in several p ' 10. Q. and the farmers in the v.eisity were oblng • I to repairJhe dam attewto prearnt n 1 ,1111,111,1. The lot, OC copies n ground .off tee of .2,1 4. '0 acres,det th of water in gnat ins twenty-five feet. The .111, to c't it and c 111; soil sari ty awl loam) It is singular that no one has 6,11 able to ascertain where the water conies out and where it gore, yet it always re -111.114 cht it and fresh —Lx TU. foul. or nu: 1:4 ITIL9 ennplun4lG if a genileman,who, although many years hasionior,a was in fir habit of addressing 41111 by 1111 Chrietaan name, a pa which', as Sydiiey Sun ill, 1•111 , 111,1, be 011ly :1111,0 1 hlr 1110.1 11111- ate frmwls Shortly after, the gentlemen 111 41110S:1011 enteiol the room, and tallith.- ly addressed Smith as “Sydney," inquired II OW he iholight of po=sing the day “For my ' he added, “the Al elthashop of Canto hairy, (tine then lie Howley), has ofton melted awe to pay hint a visit al.Ad• alwagaon Palk, and I (hunk I sh.all ode aloyrp . and return In liar curd of the evening " Al,.''“ retail neat Smith, "then I. t MC giro 3on II pieeo of achice, know notneih.ng of the tielabishop . he is a rely excellent man, hut rather proud , don't call him William, he might not like it.” A ro‘e of TITIVer followed this signill% cm• speech, and 111 Ole dlecomtiliml youth left the room. l 4 ).'ney Smith turned around and rornetly temarkcd, thitik 1 hare set tled tlitt. 'Cs/0(0f the evening' at last " Po Sun lc i:lte Tom. -The Chicago i'ost (Italica!) of I'm ith fins made a it sooner; It,is important, though nothing new to Dem_ ocrats and mummifies Sun the Post The people arc burthened with more lases than they can pay The industry of the country .4 stilted, ihe resource, from which alone the pad meet of the Notional debt is to be expected nre prenmnently diminished and crippled." When confessions are voluntarily made by the Republican press, you may accept the belief. withnut further questioning, that the taxation under which the people nine groaning is excessive beyond com putation It stands to reason, (hen, that the peopltt need relief, or "the industry of the country" canon be released front the 'c)nd tton,which is playing the very dttuce with it I,mc over the preceding. of Congre , o and see whether y ou cop flu 1 any measure either introduced or passed, that is in tiny way possibly calculated to lessen the taxes, which are now more than our people can pay You'll about as quit ly find a needle dropped into a haystack I discover any such legislation. Abundance of legislation increasing the taxes you can easily find —oLio Statesman. LlinniT is Tsai. cases —The following comes to us from good authority, and is a pungent satire on American Itopublican• ism or administered by the revolutionists : 1 A firer in Nashville, one of the largest and 'toast r speciable mercantile houses in the West, toying annually many thousand dol lars of lases, and, doubtless, well known to our Mar,:et street merchants, has, inchuting clerks, sin persons employed in the concern, besid i cs the porter, who is a negro. The latteirds perorAto only nee of the whole con cern fis allowed to •olli under the pres ent Brownlow 0)1.1111111On The point of the Joke lerehat the negro was the bitterest rebel of all, and .cras an officer's servant in the late rebel army, and when fighting by Lk master's side, be was the third man over the ramparts of Fort Pillow, where befell like an &rental; thun derbolt upon the negroes—who,sokallantly surrendered that stronghold.-4e. NO. 12 !:143 Wan. litnan NIGHT THOUGHTS. I=l When tiotord yin uture - q2lin I tnrn"rny eye, A. o , ll . llneetrirnal betuly voile the 1110.. Wail pure delight, I ninth the ••e!nre err 1./gh" Fleur un their niy., uutournitring 1111., la! ! Me' h ink• they speak i - ih r eoine int mtg. lye Diffueing, unto mon, a radiance 'a, T, li/din/ray, throlgh Ifie earth, nit ,ul•unto the pent. that a !biro. The harmony that reigns amid the bluer • e t ,, n treats euliloncly with the direoril here Anil makes or long to lie wYmre all ie trim, tar form dm n anew.( mane miscreant tear Oh, who would dread to die, with Fitch a world In inii,;,thrietinn mule unto ite . shore, From star to star, through boundleet beauty * herald, A "opera perfect made" forger ionre When,' In he heart', nuoluntary On bopo'e uult wmga, when chilled by bu But to that region of celestial light, T find that rest which dwelleth not below f To Join th' angelic choir, in songs of praise, Wht , e n a mow LIISC orb, t on wismune mnilo , nl luc7frotigh enlless day. EnotjAurrd tniri,Q ' 11 , .pr, , Nlatt It 9, ISfi; THIS, THA‘I"' i AtD ' THE OTHER - 1 law) er a alwaye strongeet when he a, MEE —The yoang lady that kept her word has found I t fiery useful —Gen John A. Logan la aturnptng Con fleet wilt for the Rad!cab —Ono third of the nominee. rep end by the Senate were 'Oilier.. —yawqered reign are worn by renhionable New 'fork oa.be4. -Fire thousand people in Cherokee county laltansst, .re wholly destaute of food.' —lt is very eurieu•that'a watdt should he perfeeily dry, when it has • running spring inside —lt le a part of the Boston creed that one Rho is burn in that city d nee not need to be born again. —An inveterate oil bachelor mays ship. aro radiant var rarrattse 4 tbey always beeu a man on ET= nlnn who pal a scolding wife, being n=kedwhetbea ihrn lit ing, replied that he kept n hot hAlivir. The Iranian who never Interfered with hue band's affairs arrived in town tho oilier day She is unmarried.. —The Indian, in Ariaonri and New Meaieo aro cry boat i`e,and ooininit numernu. mange, on the Abdo rettlera --InnsirP;ift, N. Y , eNcted Democratic municipal ofli4ers on Tncrtlay. It hail previous ly gone Repu'Llicen •—During ,tbo whit floodit Cincinnati, people stepped from second Mary indows into boats, In some localities. , —in New Jenny lest year, according to official 'returns, there were 5,355 , marring., 9,- 462 donlhe and 15,193 births. -.--George Washington Bonaparte Smith, of tool KS, has gA into trouble in the cooWl.yliaving tlirentae.sl —The criminal record of a town in Ver mont last week be. been declared by it. own papers too flltby to publish —Harriet Beecher Stowe and her brother Rev Chas. Beecher, have Maid for Florida, where they will remain several months! —The Japanese Alubassadoxe in Pane eat Gee meals a day, and go to hed 'drunk every night. S ea, the Pasta papers —A man in Fredericksburg, Va , was knorhed done by lightning and cured of rill.. mattam. lie don't recommend the remedy. —lt hoc recently tranvpired that the belle MA dinner perties given by the wife of the "late lamented" were paid for out of the public fund. —A rerolutionary mother in Westtiald,New Jersey, celebrated the birthday of Washington and the hundredth anniversary of her own birth. —Serer set yourself up for a musician just %woos° you hare got a drum in your ear, nor believe you are cut out for a school teacher merely beraule you hare a pupil in your eye. —lt is understood that the President has retorted Gensrals Sherman, Meade, Iliwcook, McDowell end Schofield, as Military Commend ere for the South under the Riconstruction act. —foultices made of stewed pumpkins are recommenitid by an agricultural doctor for In flammatory rheumatism. in Syria pumpkin needs are eaten for their medicinal qualities.— They aro diuretic. 4. —A boy in Chicago ;ems bitten last Novara ber by a msd dog. , The wound healed, every thing went well,and he was thought out afdao ger: yet he died of hydroritobla on last Thur. day night, after three day'. suffering —A Stanza for Spring.— See, nnw reminded by the weather, The blade work hard their neete to feather, And thou, my son. think not of rest Till then hail feathered well thy nest. —Guy. Swann sent • message to the Mary land Leg!Altura on Friday, stinting thal he should not accept the U. S. Senatorship, but would retain the Governorship of Maryland.— Us did this ht the solicitation of prominent oill• —A New York clergyman recently, in the course of a sermon bewailing the madam alas flock in religious matters, ntid that the kind of conversion most sought after by church mem• hors of late bad been the conversion of seven thsrtice. —Asa echoolmtlirdr was employed, • short scalea, in Scotland; In his delightful task of teach ing a chary urchin to cypher mo tbtritlVe, pro couc ions pupil put the following tough nettlen to his instill, tor. Whaur a.d o' the figures gang till when they're rubbit out? The last Info of Brigham Young Is nans ed Maria Folsom. Her former residence was at Council Bluffs, lowa. She Is an imperious husk ing beauty of the Brenton rather than of the Roman order, and Is very imperious and Jeal ous. Like all passionate and Jealous women, she is ooLle hearted. Miss Folsom Is Brigham's pet. --It Is announced that the rebel cruiser Sumter has foundered off the English cornet.— Since the end of the rebellion, the Sumteroender the name of Gibralter, has been employed as trading steamer by a firm, and was on • voyage from Ilelsingfors to Mill whoa ./he sprung cloak under her boilers and sank grad ually in smdoth water. —Only ■ Crier.— A famous Judge oame•lsie to court One day le buoy mean ; Whereat his clerk, in grant. marprine, Inquired of him the nouon. "A child um boon." hie honor said, "And rm the happy sire," "An infant judger • "Oh. no." said he, "Al - yet he's hat a grim." 8111 MOUNDED it nom. fl bile collecting natural curiosities, near the river Dnieper, in - Russia, •• gendemit soddenly noticed an imuivnee volume of awoke rising in the dine, cc, and Iwo* he hriteld the sky in his immediate sieTniq becoming"reil with the glare or relleeteJ flames. Thr inhabitintsthis pan of Ruula u.ed to set fire tot woods ini — the begin ning of prin, for the swampy forest thick-' els are the favorite restittig Fasces of wolves. W hen a fire oecurnmany coLthe beasts come to their end, eni—Ate rest find safety an—. My eituatoln, says the gentleman, was :try dangerous, for the only road leading to the plain was cut off, and from' it an ocean of flames watt driven by the . wind directly towardatte, and came every moment nearer and nearer • A thousand terrified -animals filled the air'witii their cries, and I know the beasts would be forced - by the fire to fly to the peninsula where I was I ran toward the epot on the shore where my boat wea,lo watt for me. Among U. birds there was a general uproar , all kind. of sounds rose on all sides; voices cried, trumpeted, vtliistletf, and grunted altogether.— Smoke and ‘ fiame same and nearer The reed. on the peninsula where I stood were already on fire; the dry grass burned with a rattling sound and tbe sparks lew high up into the air, and the cinders fell round about ttte-.• I. had cocked my goo, for every now sod:then fly-wolf would rustle past me through the bushes. " I held now penetrated to the utmost end of ihe c tienter. stile, and saw the opposite shore was like wise enveloped inJW t masses of dame. The peasants bar, iystematieelly, laid fire to the woods on both !tides, in — Nder to out off the retreat of the wolves. As far as I could see there was dense smoke, mountains on fire, flying ducks, wild geese, cranes, pelicans, swans and howling wolves, furious from fear, who moved from one thicket to another, until at Ins:, forced by the flame's and biting smoke, they made a deeperate leap into the water. But here they only encountered their fellow sufferers, who swam towards them frees the opposite shore. None of the, flying animals threat ened to attack me ; fear seemed to have' spoiled their appetite The fire apprchtobed me with great veto. city; • few miuutes longer, and I should have been obliged to leap into the water my self. loh d the quick approach or the horrible ocean of theme@ with • dead like fear. A pyramid of fire role up in my Im mediate neighborhood, and* at the same mo mtueylve wolves ran..gireetly towards mit,,. their mouths wide open, and their eyes wild with terror. An almost involuntary pressure of my forefinger on my gun, and the foremost wolf had the entire load In his head Ile fell backward to the ground, wli . tle his followers leaped into the water, terrifying the pelicans, ducks, 'and swans helplessly congregated there " , I now hetird the rough voice of my fishermen. His hooves i 9 Hallo, there," sounded like music in my ears. Another second, and I stood in the boat . , saved Immediately behind us tho last remaining reeds.horned down, and the licking tongues .r 6rl--drove the last animal. into its watery grave. Every living thing which could not swim nor Ily was lost --Ex. HOW THE TARIFE KILLS USEFUL IN- DUSTRIES The Lake Superior region produces virgin copper of great purity, as everybody knows. California produces a copper ore—► very different thing. This ore is brought hither and reduced by smelting, and this in on im portant and useful industry. But it happens, by.que arrangebtent of nature—who is note protectionist thatto make the smelting of the California ores profitable and easy,there is needed certain proportion of Chili ore. This Chili ore con tains about fifteen per cent. of coppgr ; the hake Superior mines yield. as we, said be fore, virgin tuipper, which is reduced with out smelting, and much of which is so pure as to yield eighty and even ninety per cent. occupper. The Lake Superior, copper men have in. (laced the Senate to lay • duty of three cents per pound on Chili ores, on the plea Abet their mines, which are the richest in the world, end near home,are ruined by the competition with ores which contain only fifteen per sent. of copper, and most be brought all the way from Chili : flutthp three cent, per pound on these ores is nTsrly twenty cents per pound on the copper they yield—annormone defy, which will at nate put an e ad to the impor tation, and thus at a blow extinguish a thriving aneuseful industry and fling bun drnds of skilful American workmen out of employment. - Thom, who now use this copper will here after ithport copper in ingots; for the Su perior region copper is not enough to supply our home demand. This is the waj in which this monstrous tariff will ruin the country, under the pre text of "protecting it." But we have not told the whole story. There is a part of Connecticut where /he reduction of <ripper ores is an MIAOW/TO and important business The people engaged in it there have, we are told, besought their members of Congress to use his influ ence to prevent /heir ruin, but he refuse's. Why ? Ile Is interested In some. brown atone-quarrins ; the tariff lays a heavy du ly on Nova Scotia stone, and it benefits him --bought over wonld be the better term— to iha whole tariff In like manner the shingle trickle manu facturer of New Jersey his been not only favored tpy • monstrous duty on foreign nickle, but has prooured exemption for his product from internal taxes. In like man ner the salt men have gig the' Itlerte to lay a duty equal to 229 ptir Ward. foreign salt. There are dozens of instaneelt of snob WV: gain land sale in the twit/ bille.—New York Post, (Radice.) JOSH BILLING/ ON P .—From too many friends and things at loose gide, good Lord deliver us. From a wife who don't love us and Mita children who don't look like um. goal Lord deliver us. From ?tusks' in the glass,:fkont snakes in oar bouts, from Corohllght prooeuions, and frMti new ram, good Lord deliver as. From iteltzedilers, from young folks in love, from old aunts without mosey, and frookkolers mark's, good lord deliver us. From wesiiit without charity, from praise without unite, ;Mignon worn out, and from all poor relations, good Lord deliver us. From newspaper sells, from pilisfitet ain't physic, from females that Alai, end from men who tatter, good Lord deliver me. • From gals that chew gem and wear dirty petticoats, mid from mu who don't Istelba• bled:good Lord deliver as. From other folk'. secrets, sad MU our own; ffom Mormons, aid imergion, sad am men ounsitteel, pod Lord &limy" as. • From virtue Without fregraise. fres bu 4 ter that sstells,firom Rigger eueiresolliip, from oats (bolero surtispisod Lorddialv•
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers