IThr the Watchman THE FREEDMAN% DREAM. Beneath a spreading sycamore That shades fair Carolina's there, A colored freedman lay The sun waa bright, the aky war clear The ocean'. billows, tar and near, Came reaping ep the bay And from the waves a whispering air Came, softly playing with hts hair Or tangy ebou thread, ' -; While Stortilmus, with on unseen brand, Ilia potent and mysteries!. wand, Witted o'er his alambenag head. There rose ► wind and hideous train Of ghostly specters on the plain, Like troopers in the fey ; The shadowy form of furious man Strode through the Halls of filutey th n, In b,ttleie red array. fiery hog with wild hwrnh!• Advaneinithrough the din he BIM, And high their banners ware' Above the cannon's thundering roar We heard them Omitting, O'er and o'er, = Bet see ! far dowskyon distant slope, A phantom phalanx dimly op( Upon the slumberor's view; The steady t read, ilia Morn sad face, As ep the echoing shore they pace, neveltl the brave, the trite. They tpoet ! Thep kW' And host 'pins heat, Each shout along the retro mg coast. We battle fn . , thr riga t Bleed leaps at. every 'Are stroke; The mass of curling, tainted smoke Lifts black aborts the fight. The groaning roonJet.l gasp for break, And maddened roman fall in death, Lacked in► close embrace, The charger Ole/ across the plain,— La! yonder lies his rider, slain, With gory, gnellily face. hark' when the conflict's deepeet din Roar, o'er the wavering ranks and thin Where blood in stream lets (Imre -IVhere flereeet gloms of fire and ball And hereaming shells in terror fall, The ery of a tetory rose. There: issuing from tho Geld ofidood, Delors the frightened dreamer Mood The victor., rind in blue ; .Arise," they about, ' . the gyi es no more Shell find a daro upon this ah, re— (Jo th,•• to freedom, too." Dot see! near yonder corpse they stand Oh Oo I' They're binding, hand to ha Their captives, wan and pale, ANS, me, they monk his piteous tones, That plead for wife and little ones, Who nn his bosom wail. Now Morpheus wnred his wand again, Above the dreamer's head, and then The ghostly vision fled. But as the Aadowy warriors want Adown the shore, they paused and bent Thous o'er his 'wildered head. They off-red gifts pf glittering gold, And promised Joy to young and old, And said, l'bilio/if yinere per, Yoter t free ! G., forth' but not as yo A deeo hound at thy master's door— Thy iioori rs tibel I . )" • The vision roniehed. Ile •woke,' And on hie startled view there broke A scene of dark ripest; upon his former master's grave lies left to starve and die—a eln With holm and comfort wrec ed. Ile woke' and round him gazed the whi ILs erred bentidided with (beguile That fraught his fancy then, And as he beard the Auk's,. chink, And saw •n army's hostile rink, Ile wept for faults of men. ---- ""They peuisal.reeedom, but he cries, “Their - p7dges ore the They protnieed but to win-- Hy staler!, nom is tes fold worse 2 hen what they termed the Au/cocci covet . Oj refer'. 'ehttery'e ..Far then my master clothed and fed, And pleasures in In, path-way spread Tu smooth the dark, rough way ; Ile gave me hours for laboring, lie gave me hours to laugh and slag And blemsed me In my play ..But now, alas! I'm doomed to roam Without a friend, or guide, or home, Or /tamer. et 'nun; 111inch'mito' when earned,eneh totleorned Is, by the plunderer, stole away, And m pretence of reg At. •'Where is my, master?' Qed rater... Ms strong, protecting nrm once more, To save die negroe's life; Hat oh' hen rain do I implore flea slain and buried on lb. shore, A victim of the ttnfe "And I most die' Cold Icor-1.1,40 eve!!' Woes that are rest my dreams expel— rot slam by trenchery And here upon my master's grate, Where eleepe the great, the true, the brat 1 *bib —I foibt—V tese." Glen hope, Pa., April 1 et, 1311; A TALK WITH THE PRESIDENT--TEN DENCY T4` 'REPUDIATE THE NA TIOINAL DEBT. And now, apart from tho directly politi cal, confroued the President, what ix the maid items looming up in the immediate future! What issue is deafly foreshadow ed to be the Aaron's rod 'which must swat lb -low up all the minor questions I It is the "'great financial issue, the issue of the na tional debt; whether it shall he paid or repudiated? Tisiatiatine has fibres extend ing into the pocket of every eitisen ; for wherever s'inan has a dollar, or can earn a &oar, the government is now compelled to go for its portion of his subs ... Vivi', and with the vast machinery under its control, the money is fetched. We have all read history; and it is not certain that of allorielooracies,thetof mere 'wealth is the most odious, reptile's. and tyrannical? It gem for the last dollar the poor and helpless have got; and with swab . a...rast machine as Ibis government under it. control, that dollar Mill be fetched. It is an aristocracy that can see in the people only a prey for extortion It has no or military relations with them, ouches the old.feudal system created between liege lord syd eagle; it has no such etrotic bond of self inlorast with the people as existed of necessity between the extinct alsyshold. era of our country and their slaves. To an aristocracy existing on the annual interest of a National debt, the people are only of lane in prlyortion to their docility and pow - e# of patießtly blending golden blood Milder the tax gaiber's thumbscrew: To the people the national debt Ina thing .of delft, in be paid ; but to the •ristoerney of 'bonds and nation al . seeurltieo, It is a pi-welly of more than two thouened fled hundred millions, from which a revenue of one hundred and eighty millions a yenr to to be received into tbolr pockets. So that we now find that miarialoaracyatthe fitemihj;# based on three thousand millions of dollars in Degrees—who were a produsoing du!— has disappeared and their piece in politi cal control of the country is assumed by an arielooney based on nearly three thousand millions of national debt—a thing which is not ptoduciog anything; but which goesow- Ti hr-- :72:' tnintratit . - I(ll,4l,o*arit, WI VOL. XII •iendily. every yenr, and must go 'on for all time until the debt is paid, absorbing and taxing at it; rata of six or seven per oer.t. a yenr for every hundred dotter bond that is represented in its aggregate. Now, I 'tin not speaking of this tadoany thing but deprecate the fearful Niue which the madness of partisan hatred and the blindness of our new national debt aristoc• racy to their own true interests, is fast fore• ing upon the country Hut it is not clear that the people, who have to pay oho hun dred and eighty millions of dollars a year to this consolidated moneyed oligarchy. mu'ht sooner er later commence asking each other;"1Iow much was actually loaned to our government during the civil war by these bondholders, whi note claim that we owe thein nenriy three thouenrul millitme of dollen'?" You know what thepopular an. ewer must be—l do not say the tight an ewer: ..Less than half the amount they aniin, for gokhangedut An average of one hunt il premium' while this debt was being 41r6e1:eli Just think of this annual tax of one hun dred and eighty millions for payment of in terest on the national debt ' This govern went we have, with itsenormous machinery, iv a pretty hefiy,business in itself, costing more per capita to the people than the go, eminent oftngland, which we always here tofere regarded nv the most tax devouring on earth But over and beyond the ex penses of this government proper, as it should.stand iu 'lie scale or, peace nt abbot sixty millions 0 year—we have in the one hundred and eighty millions of interest paid yearly on our national debt enough to sup port three such governments as this, with all their vast machinery anddisbursements' We have net. cm/ye under the present eye tam, one g ernment for the people to sup port, but over and beyond this, we have to raise by taxation frotrOke people sufficient to support three similar establishments every year. =1 And what Woe been the cones of that Congress which Les just ended, and widelk thigOblind aristocracy of national debt sus to4Ged in overriding my efforts for a return to sound principles of internal government Look at the bill giving from four hundred and eighty to six hundred millions of dol lnre—nominally for black bounty, or on an equalization of bounties In soldiers, but re ally, an all intelligent men most be aware, to be parceled out ns a prey among the bounty sharks and cinim agents, who ore the moat reckless and olamorous adherents of the dominant majority 111 Congress Then leok of appropriations amounting to another hundred millions for improvements, which should properly be len to the taws governing private italustrjr nod the pro green or our national developement. Look also at the increase of all salaries, with a prodigal hand; this Congress fleet Betting an example against retrenchment by voting to themselvee an Increase of calories Everywhere, and. in nn ever increasing ra• tio, lhemotto !seems lo be • "Always spend and never spare;" . a fresh issue from the paper mill over yonder (slightly pointing his pencil to the Treasury Repartmenti, be ing the ponneein prescribed for every evil of our present situation Every Owl to increase our annual taxa tion is resisted, for increased taxes might help to awaken the people from their false dreAin of prosperity under the sway of rev olutionary and radical ideas; but no addi tion to the national debt con be proposed, no further inflation of our inflated eurree ay, which the preponderating votes of die Western States will not be certain to favor, The war of finance is the next war to 'fight; and every blow struck against my efforts to uphold a strict construction of the hayseed Lke Constitution is, In reality, a blow in favor of repudiating the national debt. The manufacturers and men of capital in the F i on!eru Stoles, and the Stales-along the Atlantic seaboard—a mere strip or fringe on the broad mantle of our country, if you will exandine the map—these are in favor of high protective, and, in fact, prohibitory tariffs; and also favor a contraction of the currency But against both measures the interest p of the great producing and non manuf4ring Staten of the West stand ir revocably arrayed , and a glance at the map, and the census statistics of the last twenty years will tell everyone who is open to conviction, how that war must end The history of the world gives no exam ple of a war debt that has ever been pia , but we have an exceptional country, and present an exceptional case. Our debt might easily be Paid, provided the brakes against excessive expenditures could ho turned on quickly enougb—but now is the appointed time, and now or never the work must be commenced. If the debt is ever to be paid wo need economy in every bra . nch of the public service—the reduction, not an increase of salaries to Congressmen and other officials; the systematic, reduction of the national debt; and not its increase by Web monstrous bills as this lastdemagogue measure for the pretended equalisation of bounden. The Congress, forsooth, is so patriotic, so loyal, that it "can refuse our gallant soldier! nothing;" but you must have seen how promptly it rejected 'the names of nearly every gallant veteran sent , in by me for confirmation tb any civil office —a majority of our extremely "loyal ffena "tors" using their guillotine without remorse • in nearly every instance. Willa! ABM WI PRITTINO ? • And whither is all this drifting ! 'To intelligentroen there can be bqt one an. ewer . We are drifting loword repudation, end the moneyed aristocracy of the rialtos.' debt—the very men whose butifttesle'llre most jeopardized—are so blind that they are practically helping to amity:ate, not cheek our course in this downward direc tion. We need the M lnetry and enormous possible products CT tho lately revolted States to help us in bearing our heavy bhr den. We need confidence and calm—we need internal harmony ; and above•all, we need a return to the unquestioned suprema cy of the civil laws and constitutional re atrainte;lf our debt is not to be repudiated efikirr•the next half score of years. troanolat prosperity was ,wiecured up to witliix a recent period Ant •Iready this delidknaric of public credit—a house of cards.at best- w begios to totter nudes ttle conoussiotui of the, "tevolptionary ideas which base been recently exploded on the floors of Oengreas. Who is not now made a -Istriktig stock In the paperi and speeches sit"' of the violent revolutionary party, is ho the way elenred for Crnmvetll here rtes n shall be so hardy telt) claim that, being talo4mtin that plowed deep, rind moistened again at peace, the sway of civil or milli!. his land with the blood of a king ry law Should be immediately resumed, if No man did more than lilirabenu lowerdit we desire to maintain our liberties I "The the starting boll of the French revolution C.Posliltition is Played edt," we heir on or- Ho was the great hunter that called up from cry hand ; and every effort to advents the their loathsome kennel4 r the ravenous curs Just ascendancy of the civil law only fur- Robespierre, Maret antr)oJust, and the dishes fresh food fur ridicule blood-houtil Delon. Ito was Inking moos No party as yet, and possibly no party urea to bent batik the debtor°as pack, when for some years , will openly lapilli/She ban- ' deaths hand was laid uponlitin. Ilia allot nor of repudiation. But" a mnjority of led task was done. lle had pointed out the those who shaped the ligislation of thin game and started the pock. Ilk giant last Congress must know, unless they de- linnil was not-needed forrolling forward the eeive themsel•os, or are 100 ignorant to up- guillotine nod slelightering victims during predate their own sots, that wo are drift the reign of terror. Nor was it his allotted ing in Oita direction, and , that it is by their task to rebuild the edi fi ce for the destruct voice we lines been str ung oat into the ion of wioch he had taken a contract from downward stream Doubtless some cohere the Almighty. The man that was to do would either be, or aired le feel horrified if that work—that was to reunite the broken today branded repudintionists, Jost as in' flmgment.—to cell ender out of chaos —to the infency of the free soil agitation it won divide the dryinnd from the rea—that than considered n bitter el:rler if Ilia "Free- ass then a ntripling, unknown to fent°, but ;oiler" ehould Inn styled an "Abolitionist, ' tl ..guns were already rust, which tinder There are steps in everything , and the , his guidance, Were nicotined to thunder at term of reproach to wi'l be worn es tl the gales of every capital of continental feather in the cap innie years from now, Europe and—to enter them unless the true Conservative system of the ' IL [nay seem preposterolis to comonre the country ens be a Inkened, rind rapidly, late Abraham Litteidlo truth suck men as from its nsphys tat ing dream that •ottr ••nn- Hampden nod Mirotenu. And we have no tional debt ion national blessing " intention of doingany such lining Still,we rrrner or Tilt • lIIYONSTRUCTION RILL. have seen COCO!, null gntliered, not °el .\ by And look at the recon , struction bill just men, hat by monkeys. 'tossed over tug unavailing veto I mean The p ower that was Placed in the hands peculiar effect as a step in the direction of Mr Ah " l ' am l ' tee°l " at the he g atain g t, of repudiation, end not its generaleffects of the present revolution, ns fodder io plat, ed in the rack of a Jack•sv—w talent any a high handed measure of Congressional uourpatinn, striking out of existence so effort on the part of the iya—such 'Mower in establiohing o military many State•, antisuch bands, was greater than any ever despotism over one third of our geograph- wielded by Hampden or o li h T m ica' Union. This hill suddenly adds /Nur but for the pistol shot of Bmi t . Anil lr. !Att minim,e ignorant and pen niless argrne , co/a would 11,10 ruled the presegt to the •otin . g force of the country—au ac- lion ye believe be would Inane sgte, or O cession of just so much strength to the par ethert would hour seen for lion, that his ly whose interest it to, and must. increas- interest Iny in consolidating Lie power, nail ingly become, to favor repudiations+ a poi not in prosecuting further the work of , integration Ile would liner out Jolinsoneil fort should be—it that were possible—to kr. To secure the public creditor, our ef- Johnson in opposition to Congress, and 'restrict ratber than to extend the riglit of with more effect lie would have stropped suffrage ; for money rapidly aggregates fe his long legs around those of.,tpo Pre•idet, a few hand.; and whenever the men wa i l. ' tint chair and held on with the grasp of a have nn interest in seeing that our nations twenty foot tape worm Thai ilia mvt debt Is riot shall have become unit oR-All was removed by Divine Plovidence, n proportion few compared with those ,Who no Hampden taut Mirabenti were ri s .- have an interest in its repudiation, the,moved before him Ile was removed be votes of the many will carry it; and thedebt cuu, his. big foot was in the way of the Le of three thousand millions will be struck re ` elatiemer t new flint ilie"gl4!?' rtin( existence by ballots, just as lapidlyl bi g "'might lint the Almighty differed nod utterly as the• similar amount. bloomed haa . "" pal h." out of the way, with in Southern negroed a s tiolisluid der- Booth not iii P t ' a el 05 ' in '''" ""n" log the recent war under sooners of ballot, The "'mull" of Jal"”e" to eh l i the At least Ibis is possible present revolution will be no Nide no woo ' That we are to have a greet financial (lint of Duntouriex to poll reign on the 'ev olution Mark one words, it will roll un'i't crash this" year, I hold to his inevitable— ' the chair of President lied bench of Suprenle though deprecating it, nod linving used Judge rite swept ninny into outer darkness every effort for 110 avoidance To say thnt Society at the North needs the lancet, and it can be etayul off by any legislation, if the Divine Doctor will not to ailminia my nail for it, is to assert that water can be ' the •iolated lawn of trade And public eculto ter it And it may be dint the patient will wrillp BO under the operation that his sir made to run uphill, or shell cease to seek tery will be mit. We shrill nerve ourselves its own level under the compulsion of a Congressiobal enactment Perhaps for so for the prospect, and try to stand it without violent a disease, this violent cure may be ' Or proof of what we say, hear how Nero the only remedy. It is like a man lint am- IS tuning his fiddle Chnrges are made on inkhis strength on broody: so long as he coffins, not only by undertakers, but by car. increase the dose daily, lie may gel embnyo Peeling: Fiendish laughter, and nieng in high goad humor — ia , t as we have demon like howl; of triumph are heard in been prospering on an irredeemable paper the halls of C„„ greq , in 0 . 001 „ p „„h„,„i I „ currency and fresh issues of public seouri- the sol'inds of the befl that tolls the funeral ties But, sooner or later, the day will/ of the Constitution ; rather last sliced come in which brandy no longer can shire.- o f that i„,i romen t, w hi c h, i; to b e b ur i e d Inte; nor can irredeemable promisee tope, out of eight under the bill thal consigned ,pan current as a c irculatin g medi " n t for - ten provinces, whit.) indepentlezVitales. ever. To the waved] cone a severe fit of to the government of irresponsible n kilns sloknees, venahlni4uvn that tho lows of hem- Roll on goad of revolution , lune wane', eau only be VTlVlfflfd ITndtr fearful yNur fiddle, beloved Nero, and keep penalties; and.l4 the nation will corn , a "Tune, time, tune, T • tho wrangling and jangling of the financial crash, teething it thAt riper is belle." only a representative of value, not value The fire bell, whose pe tls will bring in itself, and that the ‘ only true iseeurit len of gel her, not Airmen, but incendiaries —No our public credit mist be looked for Su a tie Troltiur ayatern of rigidly exacted obedience to all The Murder of Mrs. Surratt. constitutional reale/tills, and a thorough ayetegi of economy in all branches of :he There was never a heifer illuntrntien of public service the truth of the maxim, that the wor lil does TIM YtentlE more, than (be fact that Benjamin F But ler,' For the slights and indigni 'e , itempled to of M i.ichusetts, from his pleco in the constitutional curinilinent au 'diobonors ' s—the tin- ss . Bantle of itepresentatt•es, Pronounced the which the recent Congress has : execution of firs Sore it [ n legal noirder committed by the authority of the United cast upon me for my unflinching, and anal- States, remarks the Cideinrinii ' Envier, - , terable devotion to my constitutional oath and to the interests of the whole country What must be the change in public opinion 1 gm:lording to my best judgment and expert-, that could elicit sucli 0 decl iralion from the worst, the most unprinoopled and Goo once—l am only sorry as regards the indig. i most blood thirsty of all the aides lead nities sought to be imposed on my high of li era r Whether fur the sake of making a lice, lint unmoved as regards myself Con-' point in the name of humanity and justice scious'nf only having executed my duly— conscious of, being denounced for "usurp, , ° V int ' "n- opponent, ^liell-'" Buller, in. lions," only because refusing to accept un- ,flue instance, gave expression to bin honest opinionsTil reference to &terrible tragedy constitutional powers and patronage—and ! ta immaterial, so far as it foreshadows the satisfied that the day of wiser thought and future judgment to-be pronotineeil on that a sounder csilmate cannot now be fur die' land—l look with perfect confidence for my event That execution of an unfortunate and helpllls woman is destined to rank a which I am convinced cannot long be delay •indication to (110 justice of that future mong the most scandalous of the horrible , Slate trials and judicial/ massacres which ed Unless all the senses be deceptive ; unions all Outh bon lie; unless God man stained the annals of Great Britain in the ceased to live. I ten you that the folly and earlier and darker periods of its history. , The fate of Mrs Surraii was like that of fraudfsw dominating the councils of this Anne lioleyn, Lady Jane Orey, Vary of distracted country in Congress will ruin it forever." The President uttered this last 8'9.133.d. and ilfh.*•ictille‘ of the same sex sentence with great earnestness and fire,bis who perished on the altar of personal ha teed, political fears and malignant revenge. previous remarks having been delivered in It io by all odds the mosehurrible disgrace the calm, grave, earnest monotone which is hie habitual form of expression, which has ever attached to what we call the , It is, perflaps, but right to add, thatihe administration of justice. Arrested with out any legal authority, brought be'ore a foregoing is ii\report from - memory of re tribunal unknown to the °constitution and marks made by Mr. Johnson in en extend- cd that yesterday as o, and laws deprived of every guarantee of liberty whisk is afforded an Amerionncititen, con that tbe original did not take the arm of a damned to death without the least shadow set speedo, here unavoidnbly given R. It of ptoof of (ho crime, ^ viond , oremorse 'testy should also be added, that slew points em- °f upon the day followinriffif eon , - sively to thePrenident, may have been,more braced-in the report, and attributed exact- viol ion, not allowing the soul even lime or less, suggested by interjectional remarks to prepare for the awful change that n of tbe person to whom he was speaking; i waited ii. There were in thee. proceed but nothing bas been hereset down in which logs, when we consider the sex of the pe \ rson, the full assent of Mr. Johnson wan not glv- an indecency and series of outrages which en—always provided, of course, that his should make every American blush for listener understood him and remembers nor- shams as he reaalls them The lapse' of reetlr—Sunday Transertpl. time will only make the tragedy appearof a ,darker hue, and give to those concerned in it lip immortality of Infamy. When one recollects the justice of God, and the re tribution which po often in this life over: takes-those who have been connected in scenes of viee and crime, he will look for ward with singular interest to the fate and fortunes of Mrs Surratt's pretended judges, and others who were instrumental in bringing Ler to the scaffold. History is a lie and the laws of justice a my th,Pf in the sequel there is hot visited capon the alders end abettors of this tragedy a.,pun 'obi:neat commensurate ton their deserts and which, in future ages will serve to 'point a moral and adorn a tale."'—ffenlinel Evantatt led. NERO TUNING _AR FIDDLE believe` in dentiny—in an Invisible Power that shapes toe course of human events, using men themselves as the instru ments. and withdrawing them when they begin to eut too deep. The royal dragoon *ho mortally wounded Jab?, Hampden, pas sed the decree by which Charlet@ I. lost bin , bead. The genius, influence and honesty of Hampden would base held heel(the arm of Cromwell-would have preserved the monarchy. Out English society needed a more thorough @abseiling than it would have received with the hands of Hampden on the plowhandle. lie wan removed, sad "STATE RIOECTS AND FEDERAL UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1867 A FEW WORDS ABOUT BOYS Every close obNerver knowa that tho pre. portion of shiftless, good for nothing young men has largely increased within the past few years. A number of different causes has been assigned for this ellect, and num erous pious_ Suggested to remedy lhtnxoL n our Judgement we - attribute the princi pal source of this evil to thwspirit of false priiro which piducea parents 'Alt their boys in stores mid offices and to have them study professions rather than apprentice them to good trades A few y earsago pa rents generally regarded a trade n 4 some thing esarnimi in the preparation of their boys for the battle of life Even menewliose circumstances did net require them to manual wbrk made it a point to Vase their boys learn trades, in order to gist them practical deceitbout boainess, to make. them industrioun, and also furnish them something to fall back upon iu cone of oil entity flow to it' now! !decline ice and LibOrittg men, even, have too generally int bibed the idea that they ought to place their boys a peg above the drudgery of manual labor They stein to think Ow [they me not doing jil•lieo to them in positions where they con wear ~,,, clothes rind keep their hands while TM re never nos n greater mistake I,o'ok nt the leading men in our country, from the President ilown,andy on n ill see as a rule t 1 is the men who have lett-nod trades in ir youth who have become faeniest eery brooch of pi ogress and enterprise. The boy who as placed in a store or office itsually gets his bend full of vanity and self concert before lie has been long in his rC. it i..n Ile acquires an .inordiunte love of dress, find Peon heroines no p u ll e d op in hi, own v..1;11,341011 that !Inten~ al common Sense frill find no !oilment in his brain Pik aim is to 43i,, no well and live ns high nit those with whom lie eOnle, In contact nod hew pods likely to go from habits of ezi rrtengttoCe to habit a of d ,sipat ion 11,e do nett 'oh 10 be undid stood ns say ing that this is rho era which all boy. travel who do not lentil trades IVis imply nay dint such is the tendency, and it re— quires a boy of good mind, foil died by good 'early training, tora4tel the temptution The tley who is put to a trade, on the oWer hand, gives vanity but little chance to gel holdwf him. Ife\acquires practical ideas about busineSsa • his habits are moulded by frugnli:y nod economy, and ho lays the foundation'of a good, useful and indostri old cit iLsti j'ho idea that manual labor is not rerpeettible is one of tigi absurde•t th trigs in this ago of absurdities. Ni per son kith a thimble full of brains will say any thing of the kind, and those silly crea tures who do say so nro generally the de generate scions of hardworking mechanics. Boy., whether high or low, rich or poor, ought to lealii a trade—noteliat they should nirrny, work et it, hot that they may have it no a reserve capital, together with its fluence in foiming their chat/telex —La. FA lAN TNACCINCiii—LOOK ro a A YAN- K CC Tit ICH —We Limn that Professor Wick ersham, now the SnpeWinrendenl of Common Schools in (his Stole, coritemplaics intro ducing uniform school books in Peunsyl- This sounds very harmless, and may ap pear so to many of our renders ,but like owlet - Reber things in thin world it contains a Craig. The books-that ore published for th s uniform system aro partisan in their character, and are written for the mere purpose of moulding the political pleas of the ehtlaren who etudy them than to teach them undid nod general knowledge Tho, already in use under thin system I,nal of our late civil war nun flipmuit partisan manner Democrats lire spoken of R 9 "Cop perheads'. and denotiviced an '•traitors," whiie the Itadie l als are held up an patterns of loyalty nod patriotism Ire object of thin course of ' instruction is Iy to be seen. It is In ernate a 'melodic,' on the pail of the school children towards 'D,in °crate, by educating them the belief that they were traitors during the war. These school beaks come from New lingland, and are nearly filled with the peculiar ideal that prevail in that section. It is a part and parcel of that grand scheme to sober. dinate the whole country to Yankeedom by preserving the coining generation to their print real sews This meludes the cure., ott doctrine about negro equality and the dlokis of ibe Radicals. We nre opposed to our children 'earning the history of the war from the expert° testimony of New England school hooks —Doylestown Dimo era t Ltrzerne Union says : learn ihn( come of the agents have been (raveling through our county for the purpose of introducing such - works as are mentioned above, and we would especially wee sk director. lo,belln their" gourd, and eht4e 'ltem from our public schools " MOVING TOWARDS THE END The republican party got into power by arraying One section of the country against another, and, its present policy is to retain power, if possible, by keeping the country divided. Hence it may be inferred that they love Power more than they love their country ; that their party zeal is stronger than their patriotism. To carry their point, such men hesitateat nothing. Throw ing constitillions sod laws aster, they set up some ideal standard of right, duty, and authority, and preps on to their cads in _spite 01411 legal impediments The first step is wrong makes the next more easy, until usurpation seems j a o derive a sort of warrant from impunity, and a career that Is begun with some degree of apprehension, is pursued at last without either fear or ' shame. It is quiVlcerlain that two years ago the leaders of the Republican party would not have dared even to propose sunlit a measure as the Stevens-Sherman militarylictAr the sweeping confiscation project recently ad, sot:Med by the captain of the Radical for ces in the house of Representatives. The first, however, was carried through both chambers of Congress over the veto of the President, and the other hie beat postpon ed until neat December, when, it Is hoped, it, w.i,lkbe passed by the requisite majority. Since hes rebel armies laid down their arms and kluLciell dear actually paused through, out the land, Congress Lai progressed rap: idly from a imueiliatory temper, to one that is positively repellant, and viodidlive from measures oompassevely moderate and DEB conservllive, rb mensorca that are tngly revolutionary and destructive. Under this deplorable course of affaire„ the chan ces of a restored Union have been leased a hundred fold. The prospect of rweptab lathed peace and national unity which, two 3 ears agn . appenreillo near s is now retnov. el 15 a period tudennitely retnel. There is no one who can say, tvith'any ream uable probability when or how, if ever, the Union will be recenstpicted. And yet dig most marvelous fact of all Ito this end progression of the republic towards disorganisation and ilepol!tim, is the grow ing insensibility of the pepulnr mind to nets of arbitrary powct. on the part of Con gress, which ten years ago, would hurled from power any party that had ventured to sugght them. Thus it if seen how a free people mhy be gradually educated to, bear with patience the encr . oachmen of tyranny, until the habit of suffering one violation of consitiotionnl liliert,y and then another, renders them at last capable, of submitting with silent indifferenee to any imaginable measure of outrage and oppression This lies been the process 13.3 which till popular gov ernia to hove been overthrown from line earliest ti d this is line fate threatens to subvert our own —Sanday-Afcrcory The Hard Times The people at the west are sillier togfrom harder tunes this winter than fey have for several years The bail crops of lot sum mer has something to do with this, for it will always be noticed •n all countries and at all times that the pert l pte prosper in the eaget proportion as farmers prosper ; when it is hard times with them, it is bard times wifb all ; and when-times are ea.y with them, it is with all No inconsiderable amount of the strinlgency this winter results directly and solely from this Ohne, (sedan abundant harvest next year will go far to. scant removing it Much the larger share of the responsibil ity for the present distress, however, is to be found in the unwise legislation of Con gress, nail thig, instead of mending, prom imes to get worse oil averse Any farmer-will teltyk that he could gel along with the plices lie receives for his hogs and his produce if this prices oT articlel he has t. buy came lowa proportionately t • • • s enable man of course expected alway i s to get $l2 to $l5 fur pork as was paid one or two years ago. but it does seem, lined to have to come down from these rates to less than one half for what' he tins to sell, and at the same time have to pay quite as much for what he has to buy, hie auger, tea, coffee, Cloth, nails, and in fact all articles . of commerce as he cli•l when his. received big prices for his products The merchant, however, has to charge large prices , Ueeaas lie has to pay the whole- sale man large prices.; and the wholesale man charges high rates as he has to pay high rates to the importer and the manu facturer. The Importer has to ehargehigh rates because he pays a high tariff ; and th;manufacturer charges high rates because. he is "protected" against competition'by the same high tariff enacted by Congress It is estimated that the average tariff of dutiable goods is fifty eight per cent in gold or about eighty per cent in currency, and this excess has to come out of the pockets of the farmers to pay for the lux ury of "protection " That is the amount of ton, sugar, coffee, tools, 4e , that he new has to pay one dollar and eighty cols for, would cost him but a dollar, were it not for Congress legislating wholly or the benefit of do manufacturers and against the farmers And it is now propored to increase (berates still more and the bull to that effeCT has already passed the Senate. So, very much of the present hard times here at the west is traceable directly to Congress, which divides its labors ab . out equally between the nigger and the New England manufacturem—Dubiie Herald, lowa. MR9 PUITIVIIT"I %ND Ins —"For pity 's sake., what are you two!" soni Mrs. l'art inglon, as Ike came in, elevating his heels in the sir, and falling against the clean buffet in th& Conner, his grnveltr shoes endangering the ancient china ; "what is the meaning of this ? Ara your brains so decomposed that you have forgotten Wlikgh end you should keep uppermost?" Ike recovered, and simply said Wilms trying a little gymnasts* exercise "I should think it was nasty'exereise," said she, wiping the ell from the buffet — With her apron; 'but you should pc. keerful. Only think of conjestifre of the brain, and see how many men kill themselves during operation of mind and let it be a, warning to you What should you think of my turning heels aver bend now, cutting up all sort of antiques like a circuit rider!" "Bully." shouted Ike; ciapplnghis hands; '•jest try It ; you•cam't dts it, I bet," "I shan't, you diagraceless boy," said she tolushtneto the roots of her oap ; "and if I see you trying any more of ylb - ur nasty tricks, my shoe shall teach you wdlqh end belongs up " • She looked athim Nevem'' , as ifehe'ineant It and the boy went out, sospearing as if he were regreting she did not try the experi ment, kicking over the dust barrel on the sidewalk in his effort to jump ever it. Ma DAVIS'S PL ANTATION.—A correspoodeu t of the Weldon (N. C. )State writes from Mississippi "I mentioned in my letter below Vicksburg, that I had passed Joe. and Jeff. Davis's farms. In speaking of thente . tor, in conversation with a resident citizen, he told me that President Davis and his brother's (arms had been confiscated by the government and sold to • negro, • former slave of Jeff. Davls's,for $400,000, on ten yearn, tinee r .aud that the negro would clear this year $BO,OOO on the land. The negro is said to be quite an enterprising man, and is working a large force to great adrantagp. I do not find here on this wtiole‘trlp ono man in ten of Sou"tersi birth or sentiniene - The whole country memo to be is the hands of Northern men val foreigners. Even the needs, talk a lingo that I eau put poorly understand." —The place where the Joneg chicken' retire to ought to have s dry Boor and be kept aorupuloual7 elm, and as the Boor la the ooldeat pert of a room, their. mowing box ought' not to be more than twelve If she' high, and to be *leaking, which will keep the warm air In the 'roost. NO. 15. A.I.FRAGMENT Broken—the golden chord, Severed—the silken tie! Nererpgairowill the old days ( . 3 -- Darling, to you and I Dead—the beautiful past— Scattered around its plef; - Pore thoughts lie thick, and memories Of days that were so dear Memories? Poll them op— Lay them liaised by, What avail it to dream of the wit ? Th. future for you and I. Broken—the silken chord, Savored—the golden chain, Linking as with the beautiful put, That never can some again —Grren•berg Argo.. - --- ---- - SENTIMENT. The square mouthed Thing of Iron shook its head, And with a eold,dl l l!TiTeering accent said: ' Pah , 'its bat eenthnent Bentiment And what is that ?—A w aimed partner bent Ia agony above the pall—a mother'. kiss On her young infant's ebesic in sposchiess bliss A father a e 3 o •blaso upon Los son, IVIIo panto to hate tome glory laurel won— Fricndahip i strong band stretched qutokly out to The henr a t that higher throb. beside a Bras e, Where sleeps some patriot wh J died that mid. M.ght not fore, er wear a bell of chains— A Howard Charming down great prison psdiss— Los e even for a dog, or coma old rhea Where we !issued clilOPhood's innocent tuft grace— And more than all, that phrensy sweet that folds Sweethearts with (leaven's debelle perfume, Nap, makes them Heaven stsAf—all Perfeetton's own ineffable full bloom— A swooning aetagy, tho !Slurs of bliss' 0 Bentatnent, thou art those tel Ibis' iVhot would tho world without thee be' 4 gress,y et.), a deep, dark, weltering see Of loathsome monsters—one rest, firtid curse, Steaming Its stench upon the shuddering hni rem. —Er Annge. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —Fashionable—The Bellefonte ''Lasaes —Punt+ thinks the Mormon. have rtaii tired their Territory —There Is raid to be a fire engine 200 years old in Bethlehem, Pa." —A littlo boy has walked all the way from Warren, It I , to Sao Francisco A law suit la pending ;n Chicago show Ore nil a. half inches of land. • lOral ehilaitgare hereon( rated at ,ififllt•nchoels in ?finahville. *Gen. Sickles has issued an order •utpen ding elections in South Carolina. --- 5 -Addiiirowilow has commissioned a col. °red man to be captain in the Tennessee militia. —The New York Senate, on Wednesday voted 5105,000 (or aid to the destitute in the South. —Two thoasend men have been thrown out of employment by the doting of liquor mho'. in Bog.. —Pursuant to rote, the members of the Minnesota Legislature visited a circus in •belly on Wednesday weak. —The Lousavilleans are enthusiastic ore , the project for buildings bridge user the Obl. iter at that caty. —The anniversary of the erseution o Richmond was celeb:ated by the negroes o That city )esterday. —There were no deaths in the town o Scarburg, 'Vermont last year, and there are a. doctors ih the place. -4The while vote of North Carolm• uode the neer/detraction act, is estimated at 90 000 end the colored vote at 35,000 —Ananias William James Andrew Jackson Jones is a registered colored voter in Washing:. ton. He ought to vote. '--rrhe a., of El 3 237 hes been subscribed in Philadelphia for the starring people of the ffouth, and Ell 006 In Boston. --The colored people of Staunton, Ye., have requested General dohn Echols to addrese them on the present eituatiop of affairs. —The Longworth Wine House in Cincin nati', offers prenrhunr to the amount of SRO for the beet wine grape of the country. —Three Charles Smiths were recently uni ted in matrimony to three Misses Smith. at tile' same residence in a Kentucky town. —An aged woman in Illinom who had long been tortured by eicknees, dehberately set her melt on fire and burned to death. —The Spring&ld Republican *ay. G I Duller is bottling himself up politically es tight he did in hip mthlary name.. —The fact of next year being a levy year, has added £l3 000 to the British military esti mates. This is-oriiillay'e pay for the forces, —Th o white women of Ohio hive pelltionsd Congress to alloys negroes to sote. It is not Ithat.liieck lambs should bare ~• ballot to marry a while silt... Southern paper use; "New England are-an Alabama cotton mill more (bean she feared all the regiments that Alabama sent to the geld in the ate war. Board of Trade banquet, la Char• I eston, 15. C., on Tneedey evening, Governor On made a speech. recommending compliance with ties terms of Cmigress. —The negroee Toted at a local election in Jaaksborough, Campbell 000nty, Toupee. , " on the 21st ult. They were the first votes east by lorinlyetar. in that State !Inca 1834 —A German count is under arrest in Lou stale, Kentucky, for marrying„tbree woman here, two m Baltimma. and an 'benttre brigade •t lediesin t lcew York. - The papers say he had Ire on the brain. —The people of the South cannot defend their right. by arm., they are not allowed to rote, and Congress bar. the doors of the COUTO against them. Was there ever a more mounted Cyrenny —There is now 11•Ing la Itookoreek town ship, Carroll menty, , lidiana, a woman named Mrs. Elisabeth lidging, aged 110 years. She 1. in the enjoyment of good health and all ber faculties. —Lieut. (lea. Sharman haring obtained no. of absence (or the mummer from the Prig• dent and Goa. Grant, announces that he will .ail for Europe early In Jane, aceotopaqed by hie daughter. —At a late ball at the Tuileries the Russian Iglacess Kauai, Korsakow .are • dress this sestarisl ofwaioh Irns completely invisible, ere closely nes It severed tgitkitosh hot-house TOM and almonds. —Under radical rule tt takes 150 cents to make one dollar, and seventeen dollars to pur e WIG one barrel of doer. In democratic times all the States were represented in Cosigned, led cents made a dollar and STO dollars would pur -1 ekes. • burel of dour. • --,—One hsedred and twenty-three ltrensh soldiers cantered by the Liberalists in It ortb. ers4 Mexico, end secreted antil the Prima troops had withdraws', have mostly been mar 'lend le cold blood, by order et Probela-- They wens taken eat otyrleoe "sad AN down. one by one, nutll the lest wee belabored. SINGULAR S Eerierraw. ono , - ANCE. - babgnarti dives au abstract of a curious paper by M. A. Matigell, read before thi Academy of Selena. It^ states that...am llloy, 1866, the waters of all the streams and springs of tke Pavincie of Naples and the 'adjoiningciaoyr,. to dimialek alit Juni!. So far there %as nothing remitta ble, that being about that time an mum) occurrence, but on Jane 29, to tha.earpria of the inhabitants, the wain of the wells, springs, and rivers or rivulets of the rota try became auddeurdar, and diminish ed mat rapidly. • ma was the ease with the Carmignano canal, which supplies Naples with water, and with another *anal called Lague di Medici. But what eased the greatest astonishment was the fact that all the Osh of these didevent watenoureas • came to the 'gada half dad, and were caught in that elate by the maple In pri digious quantities. On the litikk, Ow wa ters became clear again, but they had ex- • • perienoed.a diminitia of at least one fifth. The wells fed biapriags, which on the previous day were all dry, to fine water again had to tie sunk deeper, and even then the quantity obtained win but one half the caner Mount. Sorrento was left entirely without water, notwithetandiag it possesses eleven largo. reservoirs, built in Julius Cater . , time, and anaideride theaost re tuarkable monuments of that period is this, pal l or the country. Two of the many sr taiali wells bored by M. Maga In the valley of the Sebeto were filled with sand at the same period, and It was with great dlt. tinnily they were got in order again. One of them, which generally supplies 2,000 litre. of water per minute, for several days ejected upwards of 200 cable metres of pumicestone sal !ratty tic sand. The cause of these ,striiiiin phenomena is attributed by M. kfauget to some greet subtenant, convulsion, whereby a quantity of earbonli acid must hpa also penetrated through the large Maas . which diverge from Mount Vesuvius and poisoned . the waters so as ...,..., to stupefy the fish. = THE MEN WON'T PROPOSE Because they are afraid of the 'oarsmen' expenses of housekeeping. requires • Unto fortune, o6w, to buy • .hause, and every artio's of furniture costs about three times as mach as it did years ago. Young men of spirit-4 end they are the only ones worth having now) begin to count - the cost of wedlock. When limy see Me extrava gant length to which our daughters go in their dress ; when 'they look at Ike splen did mansions in which their , fathers live, their minds begin to run in this channel:- 11m is a tiliarnr‘ girl ; in fact, too good far me, but Ito pleas Boobs trustingsresture to i condition inferior to the one in which she now ends herself, would be dishonora ble, slid Ismnat forgo the happiness of mar rying her, even were she willing, until I have o. Mined the 1130106 of placing her Id o social position worthy of her." Aid while he is bending his energies to bring about this end, years creep on; opinions have changed, view,' of life have altered ; the affections have become chilled and lb* minbiardened with its attrition, et men; prefers have been diverted,"and in too many cases an old bachelor and anold maid occupy the plain which otherwise might have been t h e abode of a happy family and a delightful association. Everybody ought to get maraled who can boast of three things, fink a sound body; second, a sound mind ; third, a good trade. This as to men, And as to *omen, they should p good health, tidhies andin dustry. With these, any young get as rich as they ought to be, or as rich as is necessary to an enjoyable life, if they will only go to housekeeping a little below their ability •r to be ede The young should hard aware, to lies within their means; to have ntompride in the consciousness that they have a Willi spare money at home, than in living In — ll style which keeps them all the time cramp ed in maintaining. Better to live in on. room, with all the furniture your own, then occupy a whole house with scarcely a their or table paid Ter.—Ere/togs. —lt is said (but then the,„Washingtoa correspondents are such infamous tiara generally, that we know not what tobelleve) ,thot Iteverd,p Johnson gives se a reason for his self staa , Fyiug vote on the deetructien bill et, irTsis bill domino{ beams. a law, there is dangerthst "the next Congress will parcel out the lands of the South among the negroes." Congress has just , as , right to parcel out the wi!eSAind diughtei s of ell the white people, including Reverdy • Johnson's, among the negroce. It may just as well do one as the other. For ohs, we could wish no swifter overthrow of the negro party than snob an sot :would bring about. If Reysrdy Johnson has really giv en such an excuse fay his tillimobs vote, It is but an moues, a fitlee mom, to draw of attention from some real Motive which lies behind. As Mr. Johnson has net been looked upon as being Wend the reach of money, we can better comprehend that as the prime argument which bee adeeted bis judgment. As' he cannot be riignrded as want intellect, the cense °fur yor--- must be sought for at the expense of his honor. We hays no soft words to wet. u on any of the 1 wretches who one after soother. "sold out" to the negro perry. Lot 'beta be branded so deep that nothing but eternity man wipeout the stains of their sham !—Old Gourd. MIDNIGHT F .—ln amerdance with the wishes of the late Profaner Job H. Alexander, who died on Saturday last at his maiden's, No. 272 Neill Leslogien street, his funeral took plane lea eastrethet novel manner. at six o'clock last miming, the body being removed from his resides., carried byalt persons, renewed by his or lades* and friends on foot, to St. Luke's Protestant Dpitietipal Church, oa Carey and Lexington streets, where Ike proper xplig ious eareineules were read by the Row. Dr. Pinckney, an old friend and elametato of deceased. The body then remained le . the ohnroh until midnigbs,..diterkir after whit* hour, in "trill compllsoce with Um espremi ed desire of the demented is his last was borne to St. Paul's Cemetery, on tits' dormer of Fremont. and Sanaa streaky where, after reading of the berhil services, the vestals' wore etonedgeed to the tomb. 'As the clock struck ewe this morn lag, In the midst of a Poltlito hailstorm, the coin, elegantly dm . 'hi bloat "MA with luaideam• silver • Vie DM erenlittrith vaul idalmge number *fhb; malt friends, who eseolotegm• Plod the body tole rive. TIM mane at.N the burial** of -am aseibehmilly s ett is character, the totems dmiloatee, 'Se Yet hour, the' lurid *Mad MestinialeS' ilk•• theeemf the attendanta. the , eedimmrilash far Oa dead, oil eddieel. IDS 'imMrstrirti. elfeet..—Boltises ans. —u i onlisootod qW 4 1 ,,,,probpon e or lows woo onolbol, at 0•10,17 ..'grades detios , l 01. AM. V • bly• bo sorodiod dobips 16* twat par. • •