MS * [For th, Watagnin THE DRUNKARD'S WIFE. Is la her chamber, to listen sod welt iif toil till the boon grow late, g oply to dash the teary from her eyes, the Ilght from the ilia Wring candle dies - morning tilinight she has tolled ter bread, hungry and cold will she creep to bed, . 07 msalug her child to her breast lulling It sadly, though softly to rest, sits in,the darkness, memory bright her book to the days of Tight, her childhood boars so happily flew, weaning Of sorrow she searwsly knew. amount". her taw, 4q haat, on the Id elm tree and the •ins-eovered door, hir father 'lts In the pleasant shade oft u a child she has merrily played. .• olden has fled, she hears attilto door and a voice she kiss heard before, • starts from her dream in Agony wild, he clamps to her heart the alumb'rieg E And e urrles the cradle achy out of sight, Where , sy not ea* it, for onlyiast nisp6tY • e oath., he had threatened to try Some meted of stopping its sad little cry. Then, trembling and fearful, she creeps to the door-- She upshs It softly—and there on the floor, Drunk, Moaned,Jtud boantry, unable to more, Lies Um man elle liad Promised to honor and lore. With tenderest ears, ee though worthy it all, ale tottering etepeehp 'guides through the Intl, Lap, hie paritlyeek limbs on the tumble bed, And places the pillows beneath his head. In agony mate, ehe then kneels by hie . "Hare pity! O h ! Father in 'leaven," ehe cried, "nave pity on me, and on mine, Oh, Clod ! And help me to bear thy chastening Md." *hue night after eight, and day alter Travii I aorrowing tread life's toilaome way— go weary of eorrow—ao wirry of life— liars pity, oh, God ! to oirrirunkorti's Irop THE TARIFF-IS IT JUST? This is the first question to be settled in determining upon the merits of every not of man, whether it be the mot of en individual or of a government Justice in the great high attribute of Ood, the loftiest virtue and the greatest security of mnb When governments cease to make it their rule of action, the people have no se`ourity for the enjoynynt of any of their rights. "Is it just. ?" then, is the 'all important question, by the answer to whjoh the mer les Of miry bat of government must be tes ted. We propelse to apply this test to the tar iff,end to shoe that it is unjust in principle and unequal and oppressive in practice. This being established,. it follows that the highest and beet intereete of the country re quire its immediate abandonment. The (arta' presents itselc for our conside ration in two characters ; in the one as a measure for raising revenue for the sup port of the government, in life other as a intrigue° for what Its ftli - ocates call ',pro tection" to certain interests in the country; though why it should tie called "peelers. 'floe" to these we have never been able to see, as nobody ; has ,:ever interfered with them, so far as we know ; It strikes us that •it would kpoore properly defined it Jt."was welled thl'eystem of aggression, not only upon other interests, but upon the rights of tho people generally. Tor the present we shnlldirect our atten tion to its character as a measure for rais ing revenue. Then, what isjuelice in rais ing money for the support of the govern ment! It is that every man shall pay in proportion to his means. We suppose no body will deny this , for the severest joss lice cannot require that the poor man shell pay more in proportion to his means than the rich one ; it would be a mockery ofjus , lice to permit the rich man to pay lees in proportion to his means than is required of his poor neighbor. Then every men should be required to pay in proportion to his means We assert and will prove that it in not in the power of man to devise a tariff under which this can be done ; and that any tariff must be unequaled and unjust. We shall not un dertake to dedide whether a Itriv tariff is leas unjuet than a high one, tor whether, as 1101110 contend, a- tariff which shirt. laz, the rich exclusively is less unjust than either All are unjust ; and what we seek M justice to all ;. the rich as well es the poor. Wheu we agree to lake euji tariff, we yield the whole principle ; we abandon justice as our guide : and whether we shall bays a high or a low tariff, which shall op press the poor, or wroug the rich, is a mere quertion of power, and we shall have the one or the other as the ono or the otli %class shall get the control of the govern. -tent It is unwise to confine ourselves to choice of will, when the good is in our power ; it is wicked to adopt, or continue system of injustice and wrong, when one, of justice and right is open to us What the country needs and wisdom requires is a system shall be jitst to all, now and for ever, This system the people have the power to adopt at pleasure Now to the proof that no tentf can be just es a revenue measure From the report of the Secrete= ry of the Treasury for the year 1805, the •afiens ofthe whole property of the country at that time may be assumed at twenty thousand millions of dollars. The tariff collected for that year, ending 30th June, 1800, over one hundred and seventy nine millions of dollars in gold ; for the conve nience of calculation, we will call it one bunfired and eighty millions. This was ninety cents upon every hundred dollars of the whole property of the gauntry. Then ninety cents in gold, or its equivalent, is what every man ought to have paid esevery hundred dollars of his property, as his just share of that hundred and eighty mil lions Nobody can deny that. If every body did not pay that,somebody paid more than their-just share.' Tiers are men in .this country., whose property is estimated alien, twenty, thirty end even as high as fifty millions. Ninety cents on the Infe• dyed dollars is nine thousand on a million. Nine thousand dollars, therefore Is the &model which the mess with a million ought to have paid. Auumidg the avenge of the duties at fifty per cetit,4m could not have . 14,1 d his share until be had consumed eigh teen thousand dollars worth of dutiable foreign goods at oust. Let us see what it have cost him. The goods laid down in Niar York, cost the Importer eighteen thoufltand dollars worth of gold ; he pays the duties, amodnting to nine thousand also in gold, this makes twenty seven thousand dollars is gold; the profits of the several merohania, through whom the goods pass to the consumer, will probably reach at least fifty par cent ; this upon the-tfenty 'thousand dollars, ;sat MIRY =Saud five hundred dollars, which the man with a mil lion of dollars must pay In gold for foreign goods, for him own consumption, before he could have paid his fair and just share of that hundred and eighty millions collected from the people, by the tariq.. It Is clearly impoulble that he Gould Lave done it. The altars or a man with abripdred tbeu sand dollars, was nine hundred ; to hare Tj,lif"Ptiliturraik. -- liii.'ilfitiOit' , .: VOL. XII. paid thin, be most have consumed eighteen Itundred dollars worth foreign goods at Doer.; duty and profits added make four thousand and fifty dollars which he most have paid in gold for foieign goods for his own consumption. this does not include foreign goods frei of dutyr, nor goods made In this country, nor any of his °there:pen men, so that he was a very extravagant man, if he paid his share. The share of the man with thirty milliocs; Was two hundred and seventy thollsand dollars. Before he could have paid it, he must biro consumed four hundred and for ty thousand dollars worth of foreign geode at oast. And fifty,per cent duty, end you have eight hundred and ten thousand ; add fifty per cent, merchant's profits, and gives twelve hundred and fifteen - thollsatir dollars, which he must have paid in gold (er foreign goods for his own consumption, to have paid his share. Suppoee . he 0011511Mell foreign goods to the amount of forty five thousand dollars in' gold, including dutiea.and profits, •then he paid only ten thousand dollars of his share, leaving twe hundred and sixty thousand dollars of it to be paid by somebody else. Who paid it ' The man with a million c fdollarscouldult help him, fur wo have seen that he could 'not pay his own alter°. The man with a hundred thousand dollar. could help him but very little, if any, unless be was a fool . - ishly extravagant) 'man. But somebody paid every dollar of it, for the government got it The question occurs,"who paid IC."' This question we think wee can.a.nswer satisfactorily to every sensible man.' The share of the man with a hundred dollars was ninety cents. When he bad consumed foreign goods to the amount of one dollar and eighty cents, he had paid his share- Let us see what they cost him Add the fifty per cent duty and youhave two dollars and seventy cents, add the fifty per cent profit and it ices four dollarsand five cents in gold. 196e;n he had paid that amount in gold, or its equivalent for !.,reign Rootlet, he had paid his share. When he hail bought himself a pair of boots, he had overpaid it; and every time After that, when he bought, for himself or his wife and children a pair of shoes, or a garment, or a pound of tea or sugar, or coffee, he went on overpaying it, until if his family consumed a hundred dol lars worth of foreigni-goods, he had paid twenty two dollars and twenty two cent., just twenty two dollars and thirty (no centi; more than his share, and just that much to help make up what rich men did not pay of their share, and which this system would not permit theT to pay Miley would/ The farmer, the niee'llauia, the day laborer, the school master, the cheol mistress, the preacher, the °ler , the shopkeeper, the sewing w oman, the washer woman, all who depend upon their labor for k living, not even excepting the poor negro, are heavily overtaxed to make up from their scanty earnings, what justice required that the rich should have paid from their supera bundance Can anything be more dishonestly, more meanly unjust than such a system ? A system under - the operation of whiih:thi; rich man can, by no possibility, pPy' his just share to the aupportofthe government, nor the poor by any possibility escape the payment of more than his. A systerirli ich on one hand compels the poor to pay ten, twenty and often a hundred times their share for the support of the government, and on ,the other cheats and robs them to add to the wealth of bloated capitalists. Is there in the whole country an honest man who is willing to wring from the hard earn ings of labor a porlion of the money scarce ly' sufficient in supply the bare necessities of life, either to pay what justice requires that be should pay, or to add to his own already useless store ? Not one And yet this system, the offoprinr,/ of cu pidity, the instrument of tyranny, the em bodiment of meanness, deceit and fraud,tbe most cunning And effeetivedevice which the malice of the devil has inspired the inge nuity of man to invent and to use for the slow, but unremitting and unflinching tor ture of suffering humanity, a device which tests to its utmost the capacity of its •io time to suffer and live, finds its warmest Advocates and its strongest supporters iu men who call themselves Christians, And claim to be peculiarly the friends, the de fenders and protectors of the poor; men who profess to recognise as the cardinal doctrine of their faith, and the governing rule of their practice the obligation to love their neighbor al themselves, a • do with others what they would others should do with them. Out upon such hy pocrisy • Let us take another view of the subject. Government collected by the Internal Rev enue three hundred and two million In cur rency, and by the tariff a bundred and eighty, millions in coin, which reduced to currency, would be two hundred and seven ty millions, nuking five hundred and eighty millions the govetnnient collected in curren cy. The internal revenue legislation le only an internal tariff; and like the tariff proper, collects from the poor much more than their share. A man with a million dollars hap ten thousand timer as much as he with a hundred, hut he can neither eat, drink, nor walk ten thousand times as much as very poorest man who baValy geleinkeb to kcep..bim alive through the year. Any lax upon consumption, must, therefore, necessarily be uumeal and unjust. ' Suppose there had been no tariff or inter nal revenue system, and that this five hun dred and eighty millions had been raised, by collecting of every man lo_psoportion to hie means ; what would have been the re sult ? First.—Tbst juetioe would have been done to all of f men. And that is the most important of all things. No man would wow have any cause of complaint, nor would any be made by any honest man. &cond.—Hundreds of millions of moues that was ustl in opeoulating upon fopd e,nd enhancing la - price, would have gone through the Treasury into circulation, while the hundreds of millions of which the poor were robbed by this system, would have supplied them with many of them aaaaa lea and com forts of life, of which they have Yee¢ de prived. and muoh suffering would have tonsb.preventeld. Med.—Every legitimate busbies' would now be in a healthy, prosperous condition. We should hear of‘wwant . of employ for lgbor, of no branches grin/illness paralysed andbroken up ; even the manufacturers, who are clamoring for this system, would be in a batten condition than they are now, for it is in undeniable fact that they were more substantially prosperous from 1860 to 1860, under a low tariff, than they have ever been under any high tariff. Fourth.—All the pratiftetio4 of the coun try would have been cheap enough for the merchants to have paid their foreign debts yith them instead of gold, while they would have yielded the produserr more than they did then, or do now, because he Would have purchased with themptyre than he did then, or can now. FifiA —The increased activity and healthy condition of every legitimat6 business, would have given legitimate and useful employment to all the currency of the country, which would have largely dimin ished the premium on gold. As the mer chant could have paid his foreign debts with the produce of the country, there would have been no use for gold but to ply the interest on the public, debt, there would have been no necessity fdr the government to make it scarce by locking up a hundred millions of it, and there by increasing the. premiuni on it. Raving no obmpetttion, It could at any lime have gene into the mirk et and purchased enough for tin immediate use. bonds would have commanded too high a price at home to have permitted them to be a eubhat of speculation in Eu rope, and as the goods, for which they have paid, would have been pail for to produce, if the bonds hod been sold in Europe at nil, the proceeds would have come home in gold, and to day it would have been plenty in New York at a premium of lee per cent or less &Oh —Wo should now hear no complaints from any honest maningoirist the injustice of the government." These complaints are now going up from all partwof the country, and from every clams of citizens, and no body denies that there is abundant cause Tor them Though". burthened by hurry taxation, we should be sustained by pres ent prosperity, and encouraged by the bright prospects of the future As it itiove are a discontented, dissatisfied people, no body is solialled with the condition of the present, and every ono looks forward with dread to the future. But there would have been no necessity for collecting flee hundred and eighty ; instead or collecting a hundred and eighty millions in gold, the government need have deflected no much money Milian would hove bought the gold to pay the in termit ns it become due to meet the other expenses which would have been reduced many millions of doltnee. There would have been no use for the thousands o f men who aro employed on our borders lo pre vent and to help smuggling ; there would have been no use for a guard to be planed on every dist,llery in'the country ; there would have been no use for the thousand, of government detectives }frying into the private affairs of the people, under the pretence of hunting up frauds upon the revenue ; there would have been no use for the thousands of custom house officers; there would have been no use for the cus tom houses oath revenue cullers ; they could have been cold for millions of dollars, and the proceeds appropriated to the pay ment of the public debt, or to defraying the public expenses There would have been no bill passeiPby Congress giving the members Ave thousand dollars for a few month's nertice, nor any of those-corrupt bargains and frauds by which the people ■re everyyearrobbed of millions The Gov ernment could have been carried on mneh better than it was for a hued* . millions lens than it cost, and mush more satisfac tory to the people. ':very man could have calculated to a dollar what each few expen diture would coat him, and what each re trenehment would save him, It would be the interest of ertry mon, and parttenlairly the rich, who hove the tune and means to devote to it, to watch every expenditure, and expose find punish their corrupt mem bers. The tariff 18 a bribe to dishonest rich men, to encourage corruption and fraud, in government, because they- pay lees than their share of the motley, and use the men who profit by the tot jobs and cor rupt bargains, and corruption has so perva ded INS govdrnment and the people, that the honest 4ich look on with fear and trembling, and almost despair. Coder an honest system of taxation, the people would arouse themselves,' the expenses would be reduced to the lowest point, and the gov ernment would be purified by the expulsion of the Harpies which HOW prey upon it. Corruption would no longer have induce ments to get into Congress by bribery and frqud, because they would have no chance to Meal, and Congress would again become what it was in the better days of the Re public, an honest and no august body: It is now too-late to escape entirely the evils the tariff has brought to our doors We have sinned against light and knowl edge, nod we must pay the penalty. "Gre viouely have we sinned. and greviottsly must we answer it." But we warn the peos pie that there is no hope for the (afore, but n the abandonments of this wicked-corrupt and tyrannical system and the 'adoption of an homes( system of taxation. And it be hooves them to rise up everywhere and re quire it of their.pre , senl representative ; it may be too late elected wait for theaolion of a Congress to be if they two years hence N. I'. Day Book. PARTIES —The New York Tows, com menting on the fact that a recent joint-cau cus of the Republican members of Congress had especial reference to the organization of a Republican party in the Southern States, remarks that the said party, in order to d i p anything at the South, willhave Id renounce its sectionalism. The feet that the Repub lican party has always been confined to the Northern Slates has, the Times oonf "unquestionably had greet influence on the polhas it has from time to lime pursued." Thts Is very evident, But be desire to call particular attention to the wise suggestion of the Tunes in the words follow log: "Those who propose to iln.dertake the formation of the Republican !Tarty in the Southern States must, above all things, avoid anything like setting one class of the people against the other, or one race against the other. There is no greater danger at the present time to the South than this r and It were better for both that North and the South that the Republi can party never bad an existence in the lat tei than that its action shoal be of this °hamlet., Above all," it adds, "the blacks should be discouraged from politically an tagonizing themselves against thedomluant race." These are wise, humane ant Bally suggestions, come whence they may, and they will be properly appreciated by the Southern peciple.—Oelession, Tress, News. —The sum of seven thousand and eighty dollars has been subscribed WWl adelphia for the releif oflL staging peo ple alb, South The paliett of that, city complain that the contributions come In very slowly. "lITATR RIG = k AND rxxIER.ALL viszim." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1867? 'IRELAND AND THE IRISH." The natal day of Ireland's patron Saint, in in tension which Irishmen, the world over, love to commemoiste. Clustering around the 17th of March 'are memorfet which excite emetionn.of in fervent patriot ism in the celtic heart, as were formerly evoked in our own land, by the annual re turn of an old fashioned Fourth of July—, favealax, Ignored and igtaominiodsly'ehel ed along with the Silt of January, by the radical Jacobins, who arl)hurryiug all that is left of a heroic- past i o the maejstrom of national death.• • In common with their countrymen else where, the Irishmen of Look Ilaven„azd surrounding country, determined to dom. • memorate in an appropriate manner, their national holiday, and coming on Sunday,as it this year did, the 25th of March, was ilesignated by the St. Patrick Beneficial So ciety of this place, as the day upon• which the usual ceremonies would he observed The St. Patrick Society, it is needless to observe, is cotnposed of well known and highly respectable and intelligent eitisens Upon due reflection the Kl eullemen compos to; the organization, above alluded to, de termined upon securing thiservicesiof some well known ft ienikof the Trish people, and one closely identified with their interest. for the purpose of delivering an appropri ate lecture on the occasion before mention ed Fur this purpose, Mr. William Lar kins, the Secretory Of the Society, was dis patched to Philadelphia, , tif possible, to Indere the attendance of the Rev. Dr. Mori arty. Owing to a severe indisposition, pr. NI. was obliged to decline the invitation, but referred Mr Larkins to Arr. Spellisy,- editor of the Uns,erse, a leading, Cntholia journal, ass proper person to aid L in seouripg a lecturer. Agreeable to Dr. Mo riarlf s request, Mr. , Larkins called upon the editor of Out Universe, who by some strange hallucination recommended Mr. Thomas Fitzgerald as lbe man to edify our Irish fellow citizens - Upon Mr. Spellisy's endorsement Mr. Fitzgerald was invited,. with the direct and positive understanding that no question pertaining to American politics should be discussed Instead, how ever, of acting in good faCh with the socie ty which invited him, Mr. Fitzgerald delib erately ma& a hid, in the interest of the radicals, for the Irish vote, and used a vast amount of very ordinary "blarney" for this purpose. As proof positive that the lectur er waeln the interest of theradieal traitors, we reproduce a dispatch penned by himself and telftravrheil to the nsimoiated press, sin hours before the delivery of the lecture here: I= LOCK Ifni Iv, Pa , ilarch 25.—Colonel Fitreerald. of Philade phis, delivered as address,n inland and the Irish," to-night, before the St Patrick's society of this place. Tire hall was crodwei&to overflowing. lie spoke for more than two hours, and his remarks were received with enthusiasm Every.lrish society in the State /mould hear this able, itiatorical, political and literary argument. Colonel Fitzgerald said the Irishman must make common causewll; 'who seek political redress Every du Help in valuable, and it is folly to stop o inquire as to nationality (or et:implosion) We stand on the imperishable charter of A.crictin libel lies, which declares that "all men were created equal," and fromthat declaration we must not budge Irishmen in America' should vole only for the party that will pledge itself to aid the independ ence of Ireland If imeltruen affiliate with their real friends, with the friends of free dom, they will receive legislative and ma terial aid of incalculable value The Irish. man has learned that one of the helps to secure freedom for himself and his own dearly loved land is to grant unto others what he' would.have oilier, grant unto lulu._ [ft is the Irishman'. creed that all peoples, no matter of what clime, cowl:ism., or eolor,elioolil he free ] ,This is a platform as broad as the world—it is the embodiment of political faith and splendor. „The address was allot able success It will be repeated in other cities. ERIN The above dispatch we copy, verbatim, from Forney'e Press Against the wish of the gentlemen who were inqrurnental in bringing him here, Fillgerafd insisted on sending the dispatch, as we have aloud be fore, viz hours previous to the delivery of the lecture After expostulating with him, he filially erased the sentences which are in italics and included-in brackets, and in this shape the dispatch was telegraphed '... Save in the mere matter of form ii was guile un necessary that the dispatch should have been forwarded at allots the nequenceproves that the thing was nll "fixed up" before-he even left Phillitelphia, otherwise the eras ures in the dispatch prepared by him hero would not have appeared L in the Press die patch• Not satisfied with the ealf-laudiltory dis patch telegraphed to the associated press, ie concocted a still more elaborate himself, which ilio Universe was foolish enough to publish, purporting to come from Lock Haven, but which, as we can readily prove was written in Philadelphia by the windy individual himself As an example of bombast and ynblushing perversion of truth we republish it from thesheet la which it appeared : LOCK HAYIN, Mara 20 Editor Universe: Colonel Fitzgerald, of your etty, lectured here last night with thk most eminent success. before so Immense crowd of our people I never beat d a bet tor orator, never saw a larger audience.— The distinguished gentleman had, of course, Ireland for his subject. It can never again be said that the Irishmen of Lock Haven cannot celebrate Bt. Patrick's Day. ` Without deeming it necessary to comment upon the subject, matter contained in the marmots above quoted, we can nevertheless hardly repress a smile at the modesty (I)as well as the verdancy of the individual' who "never heard a bet ter orator, never saw a larger audience. We are almost led to be lieve that he author was in aoondition aim• ilar to the occasion of hie celebrated speoeb in the rear of the custom House, In which he feelingly portrayed his intignste acquaint ewe with "all the children, aid all thebbil drens' fathers 41 the fifth ward.""- We are inclined to think that it would have been, perhaps, quite aa well to have permitted the mantle of oblivion to have gracefully fallen upon Fits'e lamentable failure—for we candidly bellillt that'iihi game is not worth the powder already en pendedbut on behalf of our large and in telligent Irish population, whloh to a man —and womrn too— udlate and morn the contemptible eophisi ;Of the contemptible tool of • ocuttemptlbl party. Ira :have elab orated Morertuilp, porhapu,thaa hoottettarr. Although, true to Molt nitlyo courtesy, the large asoomblap of Irlstuueu patiently llat- ened until the close, withal' any outward sign of either dieopproval or approval, yet we assert ass fact which can be &oily etas stontiated, that should Mr F in the future appear in the role of lecturer, there ore not one docent Irishmen in Chntbn county who would be induced to hear him. Our symPathy is freely extended to the gentlemen comprising the St. Patrick's So ciety for the grievous imposition inflicted upon them by Frtrgerald., It is due the officers olethe society to state that this arti cle ha. been inspected by them and meets with their hearty oothinendstion,.spth the exception that they comaider it altogether too lenient, so ,for a i s , concerns the indivffi. oat who, mid& the guise of a literary lec ture, attempted' td - make a pulyisatcalsPaw outof charitable essociation.—Clffito Den!. Otto: ANECDOTE OF . JAMES K. POLK /,ADD , JIMMY JONES. There is a good anecdote toblof Preeyaytl Polk, *bile canvassing the Staled Tennes see with his elegant competitor, lenn James C. Jones, many years agor•which we hare never seen in print, and which we give be low In tho days of Whiggery and Demo, rely, there existed but a small difference of opinion on ninny minor questions of the day, and hence political animosities scarce ly ever grew as bitter as in the present day, when the breach is wide and cannot often be bridged with personal friendshtts It happened at the closing of thegubernation al campaign between Polk and Jones, in one of his speeohos, Mr. Polk took occasion to refer pleasantly to the small difference of opinion existing between himself and- his competitor; that they had eaten,drank and slept together, and he thought he had male a gond Democrat out of his Whig compe titor! This, of course, somewhat puzzled lean Jimmy, as he was familiarly known, for a lime ; but on entering the stand in reply to Mr Polk, he referred to the former's folio- Ilona remark, saying, substantially ttLa dies and gentlemen : My worthy competitor has told you that we have been on the most agreeable terms that there is little differ ence in our vihws ; that he and I have eat en, drank and slept together and that lie thinks ho will be able to make a good Dem ocrat out of use. Now, to exhibit to youths fallacy of the gentleman's position, and to ellitbil hie incompetency! to aegtpaplish the task, I will direcrroAr attention to the fact lh'tl he has been eating, drinking andsleep ing with his lady (Mrs Polk) for the last twenty yearn, and has not yet suedei4 B. l in tanking a Democrat *lit of her!" It is needless to say that Mr. Polk was not ao boy ant a litErward, but blushed, and drop* the subject '—Sentiorl on the Bor der,Anoutilf, We. Lowneeas or SouTtt CunoLixn.—The into Marquis of Landsdowne remarked on a Certain occasion to the celebrated Mr Ros coe, that be "had just met the tallest, tkes beet bred,eand the beet informed Man ha• bad ever known " "Then,",said Mr. Sas coo, 'you must have met Mr Lowadee, of South Carolina, for I know no other person that answer that description " Mr Clay, on being ricked by Col. John Lee, of Maryland, who of all tinspublio mgr with whom he had been asseeiated, was, in Ids opinion, the greatest, replied that it wait verrdiflioult to decide among so many die• neon with whom he had been in timately connected ; but said he, "I think the wisest man I ever knew was Mr. Lown? des, of South Carolina." • When we consider that the oldest citizens of Washington Hier in their yenth with such noldoehoracte s Lowndek,Miul mon, Chief Justice Marshall, Rufus King, Bushroil, Washington, Clay, Webster, Wil liam Pinckney, Wirt, Story, Trimble, Wat kins, Leigh and John McPherson Berrien, is h strange as some of the Radicals appear to regard it, that they do not conceive a violent ousel ion for ThaddeuiStereas, Ben Wade, Zachariah Chandler, Henry Wilson William 1) Kelley'; J. IV Nye. and other luminaries of the Destructive party ? As well might we 'expect 111,3 me who drank in their youth from the, pure well of English undeSled," to rejoice in their old age in draughts from (Le Pelailential fountains which are fed by the literary adventurers of Grub —.11121..al Intelligenctr Out LOCAL OPPREASION —lf ever l'iero woe an outrageuncalled forand unprovoked, 'inflicted upon a decent community, it hi the negro ,offrnge bill for this District. The bill requires - all the voters to be registered, and it is really disgusting to go to the rag 'tkete'ritileltilithil to aeo the crowd of coat. leaf, shoeless, ignorant, dirty negreee, that are present by hundreds—no qualification whatever, exceeetwenty-eight year, of age, no proof of residence except their own elm pie declaration snd embracing among them the vagabond runaway. and criminals from the adjoining qtatoe. It is to such epos, not fully grown apes, that Am white population of thti oily andel' tb.eip.proper ty tiro handed oper tie betakra and the mon ey spent at Weir discretion In every ward where the registry has been oompleted,and is definitely closed, the blacks far outnum ber the whites, and at the next election can undoubtedly elect a negro mayor and the two councils entirely of negioes It would not have been so bad, had there been any qualification, even that of residing or writ ing, as in Massachusetts, or a small proper*. ty qualilleatiotr!as In New York. Bat the infliction is more Ifritatiog t lwhen we reflect It is done by the vote* of representatives from States that will not allow a negro to vote at all within their borders, and some who will not even allows negro to live with in their territory.—Washington Cot. N. Y. &prim. =I —The defeat of Barnum destroyilll our most ardently cherished billies of the organization of a "Happy Family" in the Contrai. He might have caged Butler, 8 , the hyena—and other congres sioealettimals. But this fresh thold*for Barnum's usefulness is aimed againstNma. and• he roust go on the end ignobly exhibiting Ist, bearded women intelligent seals, sagacious mice, and Oalifornia bears: Or if he wearies of this treed mill of the Jarley family, be may try his !mad at an other exhibition of gigantic bull Wogs like that which filmdomd sheb a sensation and terrible bellowing in New York during the fall of 1866.. vIF CM EXTRAORDINAY REVELATION IN CON NECTION WITH THE WIRZ TRAO- E,DY---WIRZ OFFERED HIS LIFE IF HE WOULD IMPLICATE Ma. DAVIS", The astounding rarelatien made by But ler concerning the suppressed diary ofßeoll and the consequent official murder of an in nocent woman, is followed by another little less astounding or disgraceful to the par ties embraced in it, concerti - big the lawless trial aneezeoution of theunfortunateWirs7 The iliaclbsure is mode in 'a letter from title city to the New fork World, bearing date March 27th. It is.a.s follow. : It is, perhaps, not generally known that during the incarceration of Win and Ma jor Winder in the Capitol Prison, they oc cupied adjoining cells, and enjoyed faaili tiea of communication, one to the other, by word of wetting, through an aperture not observed, doubtless by the jailor.• No one was permitted to see either, unless by ipinal priu siege frurn the Secretary of War: an the night previous to -- the elecutppl..'st r ikira three men entered his cell, of course by permission of t'lanton, and to him, that if he .would agree to implicate Jeff Davin in the alleged conspiracy to starve the Northern prisoners confined at Andersonville his life would be 'mare,' Wirs replies' that he would not aarehis own life by sacrificing the( of another innocent man. The parties thereupon left the cell, and Wlrs'immediately communicated all Olt transpired to Major Winder The Major prometime after met Mrs. ,Davis in New York, and revealed to her what is here stated, backing it up by an affidavit, which he gave her, and which she now holds The trial of Demi§ would -involve revela tions which wield shook human*, and test to its funnel whiStever sense of justice or feeling of national pride is still left at the North. IL is not unreasonable to pre sume that popular indignation would be aroused to a pitch a t?Cwould render it un safe for the eon° ors of the vile plans de •ieed to secure the sacrifice of Davis' life, to prolong their residence among a people whose fame and character they so grossly outraged fibtluld not the names of the trio who made this infiMous Proposition to Wire be traced out by some means? If the World would initiate some movement to that end, it is probable that some light might be obtained wotkld the identity of these vil lains. The time is eminently auspicious for such rn enquiry; now thit the rogues ars divulgiug each other's iniquities It may be that Major Winder has some infor mation which woulk give a clue to am names of the parties if he has, ho should be in duced to furnish it, and then the wretches should be held up to the universal scorn and contempl i they so richly deserve A LITTLE GIRL DROWNED —On Saturday evening, Aprile Gth, at about 6 o' clock, our citizens' were some what stasttled by the announcement that Alice Foley, aged about 13 years, and youngest daughter of lion. Wm C. Foley, hicriallen infer the river. A large number of persons at once hastened toiler rescue, but they were -too late—she had sunk to rise no more. The facts in the ease, as near as could be ascertained, are as follows: Alice and a little daughter of Judge Bar rett's had gone As a rtft to watch the drift wood floating by , and whilst than engaged and when near the lower end of theraft it seems Alice became dizzy and staggered backwards, until she eteppeed off into the water The ether little girl at once gave the alarm, and Mr. Foley ran to there lief of_las Aughter, but by the time be reached the water's edge the swift current had carried her a considerable distance down the stream Mr Foley at once jumped Into his skiff, and hastened to the reßef— she was still floating on the surface of the water—and had approached almost within reaching distance of her, when she sunk out of sight. Alice was a very amiable, loving and interesting child. and hence the grief of the family is deep and heartfelt on acmount cif their sudden and unlooked for bereavement The entirecommunity sin cerely sympathise with thamourning family in their loss, although every efforthas been made ~hy our citizens to, reoover the body of Alice, up to this time, they have been unsuccessful —Ctrsrarld Journal DEATII or SILNAIOII RIDDLE —lion George Read Riddle, of Delaware, whose death in Washington was Announced lart Friday, was born in Newcastle Delaware, in 1817. Ile wan educated at Delaware College, where he studied engineering. lle afterwards engaged In the engineering profession, and was for years employed in 'costing and con structing railroads and canals in Pennsyl vania, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia, the last of which was the great work at Harper's Ferry. Afterwards be studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1348, nod-was apdointed Deputy Attortey Diftelrsl-45-' . • native county, which position be held until 1850, *ten he 'wive i2leoltd a Representative from Delaware to the Thirty third Congress serving, on the, CommiDie lip Roads and Canals, and wap chairman of the Committee on Engravings, and also of a special com mittek.on the Peruvian guano question. (a 1840 he was appointed by the llovernor of the State a commissioner on the part of Delaware to retrace the celebrated "Mason and Dixon!! line ,"the report of which *as printed by the Legislatures of Pennsylvania Delaware and Maryland in 1850. ile was iloo a delegate to the several dehhooratio national conventions of 1844, , 1848 and 1856, In 1884 he wlti Malted a Senator in Con gress from Delaware for tie term ending in lem, serving on the committee on the Dis trict of Columbia, Manufactures, Private Land Claiins and Printing. In politics he wee telassiA among tha old line Dimoorats —The Bade propose to admit Utah am a fl i titie under the name of posere q ty with polygemy and negro a¢ ge. They propos, tojalaw the Mormons hiapJoy their peculiar Institution undisturbed if ths word whits is left out .of the Constitution and the Benotors and,polsgaLes ge to !Washing ton pledgeld to go with Bummer and i'had. Marcus. There to no doubt whatoter that this proposed arrangement 1/1 lithe far on the way to completion. —The ',We people elf.lol Tense of negleepWrielstor . ud. arerreshaerlat ell the '.datkleip • to many Olean and ealhholi hAtelts 411 it palates • the oldest liliabltaa to know where Om all eons fron t . NO. 16 [For the Watchman. THEY'LL THEN HAVE ENOUGH TO EAT =I A little girl in New York said she war glad she was golog to dle, for her little brother, and' sisters rould.the bare enough to sat. • 1 a 4 glad nil a ar go w tt p. to ri t g e, , ... ,,, e om the e r The ns . And away, 'way off in the bright, bine ebyt I can see my beautiful home. -A musical soundithorue, mother, Oh the cold and cheerlan blast; And the outstretched armor angel form., I can pee as It whistle. peel. WO . lll very little to eat, mother, I am glad I thall.ipm t.elfree; We've soaisl)3l hungry mouths to fill, And too little for them .0 me. And now they eon bare enough, mother, S i infe . .efea little plate is gone ; A Akan be well supplied, In my beautiful, bright new home. rory up thole sorrowful tears, mother, pl Why do you weep for me sot' .Mien you know that all is so brightutd good, In that beautiful home where I go. Sweet music is on the air. mother, The angels are whisper ing"some,", And others, they tell . me, hero gone to prepare For me a beautiful home. Nun gather the little one. close, mother, On earth we shall neer again meet, And I would kin them "good bye,"little !lean, I'm glad they'll Marl plenty to eat. ' 0, look at that beautiful one, mother, With the glorious, shirting form, 'Tie Ile who has come to convey me home; He is taking me In his arms, I am growing so cold anti falntoilother, But I am glad I aro going to die; Thitaittle ones shall have plenty to eat, Good-bye, darling mother, good-bye. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —:The death pertal , y his been restored In Blichignn —A young lady seven feet high, resideqe Memphis. --Infanticide is again greatly on the In crease in Great Britain. —Brookhaven, L, 1., has elected a Demo erotic city ticket by • gain of 150 —A LottieviUlan killed his wife recently by striking her with a candlemtiek. —ln Pulaski county, Ge., a freedman em ploys hie former muter as orerset.r. —George W. Randolph, ea-'rebel' Secretary of War, died in Richmond on Wednesday. —The Ohio Senate has passed ehf.hood Barrage bill, es-eluding ex:rebels ' and 'desert- —The size of forme Is growing email in Col- Myrtle. Formerly the average war 4,066; now ITEM —Strawberries, grown In the open air,were sellktig at Sap Francisco on the 14th ult., at 75 cent, a quart. —Thirty-eight counterfeiter., 'eked by the Government detective., were lodged In jail in Rochester, N. Y., hut week. --The National Democratic Convention, to .met In Louisville, has been poslponeil until the 4th of July. —Seventy-fve new building., twenty of them saw mills, haat. been built in Peneaeo/a, Florida, sine. the war. --.The inmates of the Marierbutetts :State Prison, who have suffered from Intemperance, favor a prohibitory law. Congressman w hirer Stream, has been given • stolen ring *longing to Jefferson Davis, that htgotay restoreit to Its owner. --Governor Geary hes bused* warrant for the hanging, in May next, of Robert Foliar, of Washington county, (or murder —The Boston Post thinks the Demoerats of New Ilempehire had great cause fur Joy, but the Nutmeg State funciehes a greater. Evansville, Ind., a few nights sines, • little boy was playing with • marble, and it got into his throat and ohuked him to deith. —A society out West Is disenieing the question : If • man deserts his wire, which is the most abandoned, the man or the woman ? —Joseph It. Hawley, who was the Aboli• tioil candidate for governor at the recent Con necticet election, is a native of North Caroltdu —More Indian outrages are reported in Idaho. A elation was attacked recently and a gage driver and two passengers were killed.— The Indianetontinue hostile on the Tessa bor der. —On Saturday, at Rochester, ► Sr. engine, returning from • fire, was ereeeing one of the. Erie Cantl bridges, the llooring gave way, let— ting the engine, horeee end three men into the canal. O'e-of the horses was killed, and all the men were more or less injured. • —A little girl, 'daughter of W. Baukshaw, died suddenly in Chicago on Sunday night— said to have been whipped to death by her fath er. The body of the poor child when examined was found to be literally cut to pleom the fiend ish punishment which caused her death baring apparently been inflicted with a leather strap or heavy raw hide. —A New York correspondent writes that the art of defrauding I. being rapidly brought to perfection in that city. Seven pay roll• of employees In the Custom None were recently abstracted by some one coats:led with that es. lablishment, and, being altered to suit the eras mit month, were presented one after another to the auditor and embed. —Kentucky and Wisconsin have passed laws for Ile payment of Who "arteries of their member. of Legislature to gold. Arkansas has followed thh example, though with • &femme* —the member. are to Ita paid in (resubmits at the prevalent Imhof premium on d geld. Very little of the precious metal bulMtoly been sew in that far-off men. —Has 'anybody a nickel penny of IIISO The Washington mar says there's en active * march for them, and that they are considered worth tweaty-Ere mats mob, because they bare been almost wholly withdrawn from eireeletien, and wilrb• 'vary valuable by.ad•by In eons pletlng collections. The peaty in question will be remembered as bearing on one face the ropes amtation of • nondescript broka•baoked bird, supposed to represent the American eagle. A gentleman who has returned from the South what* the loud meetly prevailed, repute that Matra wyye gathered together in _paddies upon high . Flaw to bare thew from taing• Ide beg* have destroyed inunonee 'UMW of cattle. They woulteinnannee sad Int eat of thair booth, awl tiontlaabig the *Math wail& at ono* drew/ the ealwala or have them la web *audition that they ,soar tionhi mown —The Civil RigbUblTlliaa 'shoal sa Inge eating wootba la Alabama. • Nodal ottlie ;Wm has boon arnotod for riodatingglio ordering • aggro to lio whippator stoodingslo, aimed of wading blot toga& Tiociantio~ Ott lea mud. the ordiprMows 1114 4 a= wagtail to be *Wapiti laoloadat ...a. ta. Waal' or what Um ups wind is Owls bkirgall• iiiii SATURDAY MONTL, . 4 .111nn more dajsoltt statettopiadj i tioni eta —six gloom* nights to ihssiletillokersir e ar. vy the sicker's% light 'hid . 000/110111111 ~ .. of lifts—have iessed, to birusbitred wltk 44.1pagjouific its iMymna TWO hive preceded them eines' 800 dawn of creation. And, reader, let it, sit together to night and look back over the brief elite of Sears that we have been awake le the audiog realities eurroanding no and 'mak our kernel/ If we have grown older by aseeriewee Sr bete, by ..,years--more pare 141 age and wanner at heart —Note have-traveled near, er heaven, or drifted farther filtrate realise of Doubt. What have all thaw brief Beeting_yeare dope far you amine, wrath', what have we done for them! Have we done more than live, eat and drink, sleep ' and wake, straggle and rest, weep mad laugh? Have we made' a Oasis mark evalign on the Maker's Footstool which shall lead other erring feet from the rough had an aertain road which we have ever traveled, that will live after as Witless as? Not one. Twenty, thirty, forty, fifty, perhaps sixty years are gone, never to be mailed ! They are swallowed up in the greet sea of Time like tear drops in the ocean of eternity— gone I Age Is creeping along over these, earthy houses in which we dwell ; disease, like the house breaker, bee often picked the worn looks apd attend the rickety doors and robbed the body of bealth—they were' but forerunners to tell of he mortality, the eessmbliog nature of the home that is built upon sand and cannot prevail against the storms of time I We have beee 'warned, and how often leave we thadoors open WU* intrusion of the ploWler P . Pallid, olaiimy, suffeting disease not alone has altered by the doors and windows °ribose tenements. Before it same the syren of Temptation and Violation, end Excess. Do they still some welcome guests In the old tenements—these old trauma almat past otteapation t Alai' we fear they ere boos companion's, and come still by invitatiop: i lt was but yester day. as it were, tit you and as, reader, at • .upon the mother's hose and dreamed the innocent dream' of unpolluted childhood Look at us to day ! IL was yesterday as it were that we prayed with baby lips from baby hearts t'ltallowed be Thy name—Thy itingdoos come I" Do we still hallow the Father's name, and pray that the kingdom come to us 1 Saturday night, when thitoll and strag gle of the six days of Temptation aregoing to sleep, Is • good time to think of these thing. This hearth, with its glowing coals and fancy 'brooding', sad past red•llinge, and present - forgeitinp, is a good thus to pie thigaghtto than things. Here may we ask ourself the question, what mire living for It is merely to gain food, wealth and place in the world 1 To climb the earthly 001i041101111 and reach Their pigmies • day only before death I What are all limp to you and us, reader, if we are to go to stelep soon and be known no more In this shadowy and uncertain existence i—Sratenel on Mt Border, Evansville, Ind. An Eye-Opener. • The proposition introduced in Congress on Thursday, and favorable received by the Radiosls, to remodel the govenunintof Maryland and force negro suffrage upon that State, is such a step in advance as,will help open the eye of the country. Thisprop °salon was received with so much favor by the majority as to be referred to the Jo disiary Committee, and whether &bill is re ported and pained previous to the adjourn ment or not, enough' has been done to dis close theft:tore intentions of the Radlerels. Such a bill cannot be passed without being discussed ; it will be that the Radicals will End most of the atgumeols :available which they have used for forcing lieges suffrage on the rebel States. Congress has just's. much authority, and no more suthority, to force negro inalfrage open Miryland or New York, as to forte it oh Virginia and Letitia ants To do either is as clearly repugnant to the Constitution as it would be to create on order of nobility. Bat In transferring the theatre of operations to State's that seceded, the Radicals confess the hypocrisy they have so constantly praoticed In making • broad distinction between the aatiorityof Congress over the *seeding and the non seceding litotes. When confronted with the Migrant unoonatitntionalit/ of theirrneas urea, they have always hod the ready and deceitful reply, that it is the prerogative or the conqueror to dictate luau; to the eon quered ; that the secession of the Soatiterit States put them to the position of aUdl enemies and invested us with all bellprest. rights over them, until they submitto subh conditions as may be our pleasure to hn pose. By this dishonest dodge the .Badi oils have evaded the constitutional objec tion. but what will they may for themselva now I Wier the radicals argue from what they, have dola y in the South to what consisteney requires then to do in Mary land,ire admit that the two manures are prenisely of • piece, but we shall force them to abandon the distinction on which they have hereto fore rooted their whole define.. If their course is defensible In Maryland, It will follow that Commas might have interfered to abolish the State governmeats of the South if those State' had not seceded and made war on the government. Dare ihe Radicals take this ground I They will Act,e to take it, we shall force Dims open It in the distention' growing out of thisMery land question. If they hare a right to interfere in Maryland on the same groan/e and to accomplish the same objects as la the other Southern States, the right is net founded on seceetion, it does not grow out of the war, but must rest oe grounds whtelt would have been, as valid in 1867 as they are la 1867. The Itsdieals - that !sweep awyryfiteir erhole-4418111T define., Audi as it is.' They make it plain that the dim tinotion on wide)* they professed to pro ceed was not a reason, bed only a par. test. The ' mask being thus thrown of,, their diehoaesty sad hypocrisy are so clearly akee' sled. that muter of their fellew era will be undeoeived.--/Asylitook. Ezeorson Busouir OLAIIIMID.--Tlie Lancaster election effpdsolin is England ands that of 1,519 poem who enlist al Pase lent eleoLion, anoksding Amid athinoedeoll„ 631, or more tben twe-thirdo, were 110kPi in rams-aswiriag from is to 44 leke now bor bribed by seek lefty Slits about ze d l l: or the total naseber, 400 weill tutu Nen, 1140 sonata frieinea.ense US Mew. Wises. , anbdtridiosi Sinn bee elisefers ill' spOult tNiditut,tot6.l2lo6l66o • ,216226• was mut pikeim,1222262126.61142122" Situ. II ; .. 6 221166211ei 022.224810.40nr • IP . ' • • 4 or of ge- 4 ''t 4 t t , ~ %, 4 , • , ~ 444 26 insibeibed ort • Millkibk. , •„. alma o , 1 i M i 2i4 .4: ok 212,; , ;,. 2 1 '4(4 -- • • 1 24941,TiF1Ventbil -0 .. 011 ' f-•-• ye a. . ' 4 • 4, * ' gjcw f!74e' is M beteehia • ii MT=