• D for the)Varcitum. MY PALACE. =! I've a polar° with marble ball., With windows and crystal walls, '— Bound which rare flower. bloom alway, ter which "old Sol," theit Mg of day, Drops a bright lilt of woven gold; And the people who dwell there-never grow old My palace is built on a verdant vole, Whero sunshine and music never fail. The gun on his dully round doth pass, , '" Transferming jhe 1 . 641 r on Sorters and grass— An emerald droops from the sword like blade A pearl In the heart is laid— ♦ sapphire bonds thit, Toilet low— Diamonds rich'irilktragrant glow. Ent irelo the rose like a fairy crow 4: Bending the greenly-head 10 . w doWn. s • The garnent tremblde r willta blush like wine, On the bell like Soarer of the mtpress vino: A pendent of ember from the locust swings, 'to the clover a ruby new splendor brings. In the morn when cool winds fan the brow, When the heart with a joyous freshness leaps, And rose of health on the fair cheek sleeps, , Sweet music is borne on the balmy breeze, From the choirs perched on the forest trees. At me, when weary mind and herd, I lay to rest on my chamber bed ; Open hoert's wide door I threw, An the ruled, light pare through. a r , Pure, golden Ilgitt from my verdsnt vale, Where "My palace" is, wllpro joys ritt'or fail. Sweet, dee ebildtoh laughter 'mei goofing along, . Andi ill lbp leaflets ore vocal with evening' mho ',oong. \Vould ye know, fair ones, where 'my lthe& is Would yo know hew I gained' much wealth a this? I've roared the etrurturo in °Joinery's vale, While reason lasts it. founts ne'er fill. The people who dwell in "my palace," called Love, (Our beautiful (ones through Its wide hall. move) Aro the playmate. of childhood'. golden day They shell dwell there together, for .yo, for aye When I scorch for the mirthful faces now, For the tinyf3briu, end the clear entoth brow I find than wah Childhood forever flown Ita truth, ita faith, Ito innocence gone. 0, gladly I turn to my "p►lace" again, From the faithleseness of women and men, 'And welcome the child in my youthful fold, And mile ae I think It elm!l nover grow old The flowers aro happy, Jays long fed ; The sun, the light of kindness shed, On a little heat't The dew in tears, (Pow, few wore shed in thosesime l y years) Transforlued to geniis tyNtt ray of light, Exhaled is heaven as it grow mare bright, o palace , i■ the t live once more, Those henry cloudless dive of yore Ye may sing of the maiden's deeper Joys, And gladly rosign your childhood's toys. But deeper Joys in quick time bring, Carne departing an leaden wings , There are frionds; true friends who bavo cross°, toy any, Fitico the sunlight of childhood lies failed way For than I have rotund a palace of Into, But this to childhood is consecrate. For the WATCULARI THE OLD STONE HOUSE. "V was the alleritoon.4l It warm sultry July day. The atmosphere was hot and dry, and not even "a aloud as big as a HUM'S hand" was to ho soon in the blue ex panse of the summer sky. The cattle sought eagerly the shade of the trees, or stood linen deep in the cool current ar the neighboring stream Even the song of the little birds were hushed, and they morrow fully chirped the death d oge of the tittle wild flowers that refreshed for a while by the mornings dew had drooped and died in the scorching rays of the ma Just off the road, and sheltered by the beautiful linden trees that brushed their branches against the old fashioned gables, was au old stone house, bean- Wel even in its old age—for around its autigue windows and wide porticos, the ivy oiling tenderly, like a beautiful child caressing its hoary grand-parent, and look ing, by its ..own beauty, that of the old house attractive; while the sweet Loney- - suckles, and luxuriant passion -flower bung in festoons from branch to branch, dropping their sweet blosathe soft turf be neath where a little boy of six summer's played with a little negro of the some age, who had permitted himself to be harnessed to it small wagon, and was merrily drawing the little fellow up and down on lho cool grass; while sweet childish laughter rang out on the open air, as the the mmaturo chariot would upset with its important lit tle driver. On this afternoon, you can imagine, rea der, the attractive temptations of eireh a spot—and so thought a °trouper who bed paused beneath the shade of an elm to al low hie jaded and heated horse to refresh himself in the stream that ran close by.— Ho threw the reins loosely on the horse's neck, end dismounting, stood leaning against the tree, lifting hie slouch hat to wipe the moisture from his heated brow.— Ilia complexion, naturally dark, wan browned in A, deeper. ohmic by. foreign mune. The dark eyes were brilliant, yet soft at times as those of a woman. They are soft now, and tearful as be gazes on the old stone house and its beautiful euvroundinge; And the white handkerchief is passed hasti ly across the eyes, to wipe away the fast coming tears. He replaced hiehat, andap. preached the gate which led into the grounds. The gate was festered now by a simple latch, though the remnants of bolts and bars, of what had been C ott lodge' lay near by. Ones he paused, when be found himself within the grounds, and hurriedly up the long avenue that led to the hones Ile started slightly on seeing, sitting on the'froixt portico, an old lady, who, unconscious of hie approach, contin ued her reading. The lady, as old, but there were traces of beauty still in the soft dark eye, that had lost none of its bright ness, and in the oulljnos of the pleasant face were no treees of passion; though there were many furrows of sorrow and care°. it, and the lips wore the smile of patie!toe and contentment. The sound of the gentleman's foot steps on the gravel in front of the door aroused her, and she laftl aside her book, while a young girl who had stood in the hall arranging a vase of dowers on the table, disappeared within the room adjoining. As the gentlemen cause up to her, the old lady extended her band in graoeful . wel come, whiob he acknowledged with true courtesy, bowl ley over the hand that No many bad learned to bleu for Ile generous hospitality, and kind charities. "You will pardon, madame, a strangers intrusion: but I have traveled a long dis tance, and have yielded to the tempting luxury of • cool retreat; while spy weary . horse refreshes himself for awhile.— beg some information relative to the lotmli ty of Ilidgeway, the place to which I !win bound, end which I hope to reach to night." CO/he '.-Itifist6iii:iAjoklinnut, VOL.IXII is tea miles from here. and I four you will meet with a cold reception, as Mr. Millpr/disposed of the place to a gentleman j. Euriopo, and is now traveling abroad YU will find no one there excepting the house keeper, and a kw soilvants who have been retained by the present owner. If yigli will honor my humble roof, I shall be most happy to extend to you its "Nothing, madam," said the stranger, "would gratify me more than to accept of your kind hospitality; but I must hurry, on begging the liberty of acimpting it at sonte uture day; also that you will holier Rid& ay with your proseuco, and that • of. your family. 1 ant the gentleman who pinatas ed the estate oe Mr. Miller " Then you ore Mr. Allan, of whom I heard Mr. Miller speak as the owner or ItulLoway? Allow me to weloome you to our neighborhood, end to hope we will provo friends, ns well as aaighbsks." "Thank you, aulam, for your Rind and most gracious welcome, and rest assured I shall avail myself of a neighbors privilege to encroach °Ben on your delightful retire ment. As Ridgeway will have no occupant save myself, I s 'all trust to your generosi ty to save toe from the horrors of a "Bach elors hall.' " "I pity your loneliness," Said the kind old lady," I know not what I should do without my daughter May, and my grand son, little Harvey. They brighten a life that has had much to darken it, and fill the void in a heart that has been robbed of some very dear 01109 " And old Mrs Mor riss sighed, and brushed a tear from her eyo There was an answering sigh from the strangers' heart, but none heard it save one, and that one unseen to Mr. Allen It was the negro boy Tom, who May had JlB patched to take hia. horde, and who had slopped to look at him as ho passed the Nut door. .t(leincann indeed," emit! Tom no he hue rind 'wrens the lawn on his errand. ..oem Man, indeed! I mostly 'speots ha be Arise Mcy'wewect heart—a new won mos likely; cos she's tote on . '4e Lordy nos though 'what she's gwan to do will dem all—she can't marry dein all fur sartant, less she he what I berm Uncle Ned talk on, a “Mar mon." llar's not him n wedditt since I •Thank you sir !" replied Mrs Warden, "I shall be pleased to serve your worship until you shall see fit to discharge me Your worship will pardon the appearances of the house, as we hail but a few hours notice of your coming. We hope to have things right in a couple of days sir " "You can take your time, my good wo man, to arrange [natters. Al present, all I need is a bed, and a supper ; for I am both hungry and tired." The woman curtesied again, and left the room, and soon after a servant entered who nerved supper. Mr Allen made some in quiries as to the arrival of certain boxes, and when he bad finished supper, atisissted the man in unpacking a box, the bontedta of which ho carried to hie own ehamber,and hung above the antique Mantle shelf It was the portrait of a beautiful lady, and tenderly, and wistfully did lie stand before it, and look on its beauties Ile took a small gold locket from his breast pocket, and looked at it, then NI the portrait, as though comparing their excellence Ile pressed the miniture to his lips, and turned with a sigh from the picture. and leaned far out on the deep windows seat—gazing out into the blank night beyond, as though craving sympathy from the only thing on earth that accorded with his own feelings— nature. A storm was coming on, and the fitful flashes of lightening fell on face al- most distorted in its agony of mental suff er to the call, and soon atter a white rob- I eMng li =tM3=2El an dal or wur a dismal won, when poor Miss Kale war alarmed soon arter her pa's def, an old N 1143111, alto all drossy I in blak fur ule month what died so ambient. Lar dy! warit't thorn dined times. and to liftk Miss Kate oho don dod an ler a boy. But wham her husband, I say? Whar's ho (raped off to , —to de end on de earf, and norer come bank ,gain I 'sped lion dead too. Lord) , nos what makes folks do so ! I dont. But dat •tr strange man be jun as mush like Niles Kate's husban as kin be— 'eeptin'he has his whiskers all streaked wid white. he's jos as much 'am as chalk's like cheese I'll jua run down and git ant Joan to 'sprees her pinion on him. She's a sure shot, she is, lie's like and no shakes Accordingly he went for the old nook, who rubbing the dough from her harklw, and turning her apron' wrong side out, fol lowed the negro boy to a clump of lilac bunker that commanded a view of the front porch. Aunt Joan's "pinion" was 'sprawl ed' an Tom predicted "Tom, he's as like as two pens Ilim's little older p'raps, but eeplin dal, he bo like him as two pens," was her comment as ghee looked on the stranger. Mrs Morriss sat conversing on differ tent subjects for awhile, then excusing her self, roseand went to look for May The stranger board a sweet girlish( voice ann. ed figure emerged from the garden, bearing a basket of fruit anal dowers As she cr3seed the lawn, the little boy, catching a glimpse of the tempting basket of fruit ran to meet her "Mama! oh! my sweet mama, give me some, for I've naught a little hint, and ho eats cherries and fruit! Oh! give me some —phased, my sweet mama May—jOr the poor little bird ," And he stretched his hand for`ihe bucket which May hol d high above her bead, while a sweet silvery peal of laughter rang out on the air. It witc.well Mrs. Morriss id not Bee the eager look with which th tranger follow ed the shill across the lawn, or the invol untary stretching out of the arms, it's though he would clasp the little one to a loving embrace, or heard the passionate— "My Kathleen! my Kat , bliten! Come, back to met Oh! com9beclr-to met !" When she returned to the portico with her daughter, • few moments after she saw nothing on that face but bland courte sy and, courtly amilea as be acknowledged the introduction to the young and beautiful May Morris I say no one saw him; but there was who had seen him ; himself unobeerved. wag Tom, who having fastened the horse was returning norm, the yard, and stopped for a while to look again at ft face which so strangill reminded him of another. It was Tom who had seen the struggle that shook the strong man's frame, and heard the strange words that fell from hie lips. "Lowly, aunt Joan, you jail oughterseed him I" was his exclamation as he hurried to the kitchen. “Ile's can gone crazy. bet! Holley, how he trembled, and how hie eyes did pop when little mass► Harry No_ actress de yard, arter de bed he notched." „ Tell you what Tom,” said aunt Joan, dot or rooster never crowd in die kitchen door for nano, and l'se been sorter in a trancelike, I does things contrary like— hind!promos, and such like. klomilling'e gwini . to happen, hear me." "Sure 'tis something Is gwau to happen ; for de disnusl cakes am burnt to • orl4, while you an Tom Is tiositylng hers 'bout nomo dat 00111111111111 you as I knows on,"sald Mottle Ned, who had been pondering the philosophy, and aunt Joan's flaps.' cakes at the same time. 'I'M *ld you Tom! you lazy wagabone, or strap you smart, sot will." "Ned 1" said aunt Join coming clones, and oioaktiwg in ou oftioum whisper, "Ned, you turfs at meiend Tom, but you Jae go and take a peep at him from 'hind the laylook bush, and if you don't nay hal like dal s ae soaps goat of bliss Kate'. den he's a krieh mush and no shake.. You go mud moo for EMI 11timp41" ejsaillted mule Nal, ..1 - +~-- dont mean myself to go peeking mound at white fulks—l knows not her way of finding out, Igo and try anyhow ; but mind you Goan, you bettor keep dot raskal straight, or I broke his neck for him; so I will." Unole Ned had been dining room eorrant in the Morriss family since hie masters marriage, and was looked upon, by the rent of the ■errant, as quite an oracle of wis dom and discretion, and be was the umpire to whom they resorted in all manner of dis pute, and like the cats and the monkey in the table, I am of the opinion uncle Ned got the better part of the argument, lenring the conkertants minus a solitary crumb of the dish before them. lie was on the present occasion rather dubious of Tom's assertions, and though he would never have admitted himself to be curious, there wan sufficient in his reflec tions to induce hint to tie on his apron, and polish his ebony fano to its last degree of brightness, and repair to the dining room ; fully confulan 4 dint he would find out, dur ing slipper, all he wished to know. for To had informed him Mr Allen would remain to tea, as he had haord the tun station given, and accepted. But lie was doomed to disappointment, for an the sun began to net, Mr. Allen, de clared his purpose of continuing Ids jour ner, end regreling he could not accept MIN Morriss' invitation to partake of her deli cious strawberries, and Tom bad the grad &Wien of deepening his first impressiorims he held his horse'Rbritlle while the geniVe man mounte). Night...gathered rapidly around the siren ger as he approached "Ridge way,"a large, sombre mass that loomed up in theilarkness and whose echoing halls, and chambers sounded dreary and ghostlike, as he, dis mounted, and entered the house lie pas sed through suite after mite of apartments, richly, and elegantly furnished, and open ing the door of a library at the end of them, looked relieved, and cheered by the night of lighted candles, and a well filled tea table. As he entered, an elderly lady rose and curtesied low. '•Tbls said the stranger, .isllrenlrar46 the hobsekeeper, I presume I hare heart Mr Miller speak of you, am! shall be most happy to retain you in your present posi tion." '•Five years ho lam for gotten Even my owu child knows me not, and the memory of his sainted mother is obliterated, and another now claims all his love, all hja beauty. Anil what a tloniked recollections swept over me as I Inn! etch familiar spot again ! My Kathleen if a life of love, and devotion to your child, an! mine will efface one remembrance of the dark sorrow, which blighted my life, and drove me to distant hinds, to seek oblivion. If it bring light to my' Mrwhours, and one smile from thee when I meet the in another lard, I shall bo blessed ! oh so blessed lie buried his Noe in hie hands, and wept, then turning from the window ho threw himself on the bed, and mid tossinge end in broken sleep passed the summer's night, while the storm swept. around him yet wak ed him not in his deep dreamings of other and happier days. Days passed, and the inmates of the old stone house, saw nothing of the stranger, though rumors reached them of doings and wonders at Ridgeway. The house was lobe thrown open to the neighbouring gentry, and faterlorstales were told of immetiseboxes that name from abroad, fulled with books, paintings and statuary, all of whi n went to add to the already.. elegantly f ished rooms at Ridgway But the inmates of the old atone house were not so entirely forgotten as they im agined. The master of Ridgeway had not forgotten them, and several days after an cliegant basket of fruits and flowers made its appearances eocompaniel by an invita tion from Mr. Allen to the tadies, and the little, boy to spend the day following 'at Ridgeway, and the carriage would be sent early, provided they would honor km by their presence. "Oh Orandmanot ! and am I really to R . to Ridgeway to morrow to see all the beau tiful things naked little Harry, with oyes that pleaded brightly for the pleasure. "Yea I my darling. Mr. Allen-hat been en kind as to include you fit his , lnrita tion. You my go rweetest." •Yes" said the ~4 1 1 fr. Allen partic ularly wishes the young gentleman to some. Re cihugectine to say so." " , Bay then to Mr, Allen, said Mrs Morriss, that should the day prove pleuant, we will be ready, and most happy to oome." The next.day was as beautiful al any that over blessed the earth. A thunder storm during the night had pooled the atmosphere, .d rehashed the beauties of nature, and how the Inn glistened on oath dow drop, transforming It into diamonds, the beauty and brilliancy of whloh *quest Might covet In vain. The earring arrived early, and after a pleasant drive throughout one of the most ,beautiful portions of Virginia, they teethed Ridgeway. They were the first arrival' on the geemlon, and Mr. Alien took them "STATE RIGHTS AMMO rEDERAL BELLEFONIE, PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 21; Iq7 through the house an grounds, showing them the thsaiities the lace already pos- Booked, and explaining (hobo he would add iu the course of a few years. Mrs Morriss and May, were standing in the conservatory, now almost forsaken of its Moral occupants, which bad been remov ed during the warm wentrto the epee air, near a fountain Wil IC (lABIII4I its noel spray over a bed of calla's that grew in its basin. Listening eagerly to a discrips den of the flowers of the Paris con servatories which Mr Allen was kindly giving theirs, when little Harry who had been roving the house, and grounds ever,at his sweet will, rushed up to Lis aunt May and eager and breathless hied Welty some thing .'Slop o•moment dear," said %Illy kindly "atop and catch n 1.1 ci t before you tell us of a new wonder " "Olt 111s111111 you should seett—the most beautifulest--uh nto—ilte toovt lovely la dy, I ever ',LW, opine and see it 14 ouly up vdairg alloy; you: I fo I out Ilte T111._,..411e way alk Ihu prel gloppe , l for 4!l,er clitng If ty'.. hand, Here wool of ho burr Morrie Alicwolk•fer Mrs . ' moel recoil - 6 - A ne ehe r tun are ill! iwalatato,l, uto I 1.111191 you 1..* ••No,' !answered tplickly, ''you can do nothing for Tile , but come, and I will tell you the cause of ell my misery !" and ho drew her silo within his own. nod hastily led her from the conservatry, across the up the lirm.l marble staito,lllll.l open ing a door led her in. and closed it otter them Mrs Morris had been surprised nt the notions of her host, but still more when, On entering the roil.), she fo I May there silting by the window with her face buried in ber hands which rested against the win dow seat 'Mr Allen did not seem at all surprised; on the contiary ho seemed both pleased. and gratified on finding her there. Ile led Mrs Morris up to her dough ter • 4. “Tell her May, what you 114V0 seen to this roan, Tell her, though it in.ty ho the happiest, or the most wretched inunnont of my lite, when she .11.onve, that Mr Allen anti her prodig A il writ are the ratio percents Tell her, that riititigh I tied home, l have never disgi aced the name of Allen and tell her that 1 have suffer 01 the iteohl' an indignity that sho.ll,l' !Live been heaped on another , yet 11101 innocent, and and I acme back, now that the other ono has antlered the penally of his crime, and freed my name from all disgrace, to claim my boy—to shunt the privilege of houor ing the memory of try lost lilt Henn. and to claim also the love you once bore to the buelntod of one who knew I was innocent Ile ceased speaking and stepping up closely to the mantle shelf took down the portrait that had hung there, and holding it to Mrs. Morriss, said,” ...rilla is for you. - I took the immature from you ; but I will replace it now whit lb to. only leave me my Nat ileans hying 1311111W,', the red is 111 y buy's, arid ibis day do I intend to acknowledge Ism es toy heir and I--only tut..ve the love of those hearts so long alentated My wealth I cheerfully resign fur ibis one nunnont of happiness " When he ceased rpeicklng, \lra• Moine folded line, in tier arm•, nu.l N 615 -coottag forward held out her hand to hull 110 caught n in his own rind WO over "Yon have proem' a mother in my orphan boy, will you continue ouch ?" "Will you abate Itiolomun and 1111110 ('an you ble , i the lonely tile,on long de4oloted May, my darling, be my Wile, be the lone ni 80 1 8 COM fort P' An itimvering pre , m4re of the hand Who the only revenue ; but tt unlike,' for Allen Lindoty, laud when be led leer forward and introduced her to nil good. timid 411 9 . Lt wits as lint (untie wife, and timidly, yet gracofully:Alid she acknowledge dm honor, paid her noble devotion to the little boy so long supposed to be nn orphan Yot 11Ien I,ltulnay hid returned home To that home from which he no long had wandet ed. in supposed crtminal, an °nitwit from all home endeannentsland home onto fort, For five long weary years had Ito borne the shame of another,who had embez zled money toy large extent And to-day before those who had shunned him for no long, would ho vindicate his good name, and stand among them proudly and man fully ,1621 Ile once hod stood, the acknowl edged peer of them all. Six months after there was a wedding at the old stone house, and a merry one It was truly Quite enough of a jubilee to suit even the fastidious taste of Tom, who would teiniflon how ilO 4 llllB the first one to find out Miss Kate's husband "who was as much like (other," as chalk's like cheese." ltulgewny was sold,and the happy couple. settled down in the old stone house, where they were as contented as though it were a pulses, more so perhaps, for oontentnicnt 'resides not always in a palace TIIR SINCIIIiT or 'RADICAL 131INNOTIt Tl.lll SOUTII.—The Helena Ark., oorreapon dent 011ie Memphia Avolanclke allude' t. the prevailing idea in the Arkansas freed men's visitels : The most singulnr illusion porvade• the entire element of our negro poptation, touching the threatened confiscation of Southern homesteads, by the Radical Con gress, when it meets in July next. Scarce ly a grown up man or woman of African extraotion, in town or country, but belleves 'that he Sr she will very shortly be placed, by virtue of f Cottgresalonal edict, in Foe session of the cuirnfortablo homes and broad Corm of his or her wbilom masts, or Thie subject and Its proximate real. 'nation Is thoroughly eanvassed under lb seal of elan and "colored" confidence, by every group of ;bon idlers rho • most to gather on the highway), in mace corners, or at the doors of their °tibias, and flothylow end then eifttexelon from the lips of india. ° reel., dissatisfied and "unfaithful stewards,' . twitted by their tunployers for their idle ness, antkorged to better (moaned—AM mtl.. bored people will-aeon hab all doe-plants= ions," ie urged bj the foolish and the ti t:dorm among the blacks every day in Wen nadir- and excuse of idleness and gross negligent), of duty, or both. READ I READ I READ I---THE NEGRO TRIUMPH IN WASHINGTON. \_ The licence and incidents connected with the triumph of the nogroel o wter the white population of Washington City (tarnishes food for serious reflection. We give a few The Now l ork Hera 111 correspondent en's • The cerepirmies of tile day appear to have boon commenred by the colored freedmen As early no two aelaek this inorning, when title gallons of them sallied forth with 1111 horns and 011ler barbarous instruments to arouse the more slothful to the impuil.lllt wet k of the day Long before the polls were opeeit' ell a long line of sable voters, three and four deep, were of waiting at most 'of the procinote. As a large proportion of the tie groes were too ignorant to answer the imes lions propounded ill 81101 a city ea 10 COlll ride with Illeir record on the registration lists, mind, ♦alit tole little was consumed in Inking their rotes, and the consequence wan 11not I•trge numbers of the whites who were lot in the habit or voting e•trly rind often" were rerouted from ctsting their vale , \s a case to Peltt l , at tent this morning, tit the First precinct, First ward, the list shim' tiro Iniril'red and twen ty floe r Iltore.l and one white, anti Second precinct two !limbed and InentySeVen col cited and one white (roinall accounts the colored vote was 1111110 st entirely polled, while 11 large portion of the white vote fill ed to get in - The Nallonal latellognopr, the old Whig organ, has a column full of , incidents We select the following items - Throughout the entire day the negroos monopolized the polio, and esoluded white men from the spin oacher This excite.) a good deal tif feeling , but the excitement was most intense about the Fit at of the 'fends netted. There woo a lung line of colored uteri there, extendlug along F stutitt' lad mooed the corner down Four unit a boll sircet to I: In all this dusky crowd our oldest inhabitants could scarcely recogutxe It falllllll, lieu Indeed, Ottawas the case at all the precinct. It was mani fest th it the whole contest was one between p taper itogroes, depmilont for subsist/knee upon the hours thrown them flout the Freed•nen's Bureau, awl !he old indite. 111141 propel ty holders of Washington In die Seventh Ward during the day a doll!, lo line on white •01004, corresponding to the line of colored voters 011 Foal . all 1 a half bit eet, was tornied on F' street, mooting the other line at the window, wall the idea of voting the whites and--colored allot solely, and quite n lllllllllof of willies were voted in this way , but complaint haring been !mule to Major Richards, Superintendent of Po llee, he derided that the separate white hue could not be permitted to vote in this way, as being unfair to the voters m 0111 on igival tae, who had stood wanting nil day 'finis deor'sion created considerable fooling htnongst the Whites, and it was proposed to open polls lit five I • . M , to take in is seps tale white vote Considerable additional excitement was created by a controversy between Major Richard., and Nlr TllOlllllB l.nyd in rela tion to the above decision Mr Loyd sta ted that the double line had been formed - Afi r th i.et commit of the f*tvvers of voles, it!til he denied Mr Richards' right to thus brook up a Imo of voters, especially as it won COIIIpOSOII of 801110 of the oldest ettixetim of the ward Ily this decision the wk.!os were excluded front noting , and men who fur ten, rwenfy, !hilly and forty ygars have exercised the elective francht, here—melt who have ptimetty mar rests at !duke - were virtually excluded front a lumen' 111 lalllllll - 111111110 by a horde of arrange new eel who have nu more imeresi ill IV mltington allows than the King of Dahomey, and know as little ao 111/11 11101111 . 011 Or its tette 121113 111 all'the precuiciiof the Fourth Ward the colored people opened line I, II with a good tiliowmd, Intl they polled inostef theu strength in the morning 'thin, was the strong Conservative wti.l of the eity The number of colored Hien that appeared to vote at nn e.trly hour was surprising. The recmvers at some of the peronista were very slow Especially woe this the ease at the Fotuth Precinct. Here four of our oldest tuitions were turned away and told that they were not registered. Mr. -Urinary Lloyd subsequently appeared and offered to vote; and wax told i.e was not registered Ile demanded to see the hooka, and found his own name and that of the three others a had been rejected dilly recorded. At the third Protitict double lines of white and colored voters were formed and the ballots were received alternately. In the Seventh ward the colored people were out early. This was the great negro stroughold,and it seemed to be a precoucer ted movement that the polls should he tak en possession of by them and held during the day. They therefore paraded the Wools at 2 o'clock in the morning, and iveked :leisper . s, and made the air resound with notes from tin horns, smiling out the faith• ful. At 4 o'clock some seven or eight hun dred colored voters were in line at the first Precinct, and up to half past 10 A. M. the number had increased to shout one thou sank At that time not one white man was in too at that precinct, and only about twenty five white votes had beau received By an arrangement entered into early in the morning the committee of ten, vote dis tributers, &a., of each party were permit- • led to Soto without waiting to fall into line. The polling proceeded vary slowly at this precinct from various causes, net averaging more than one to every five minutes One of the recovered . 11. Plena, insis ted upon examining the books for the names, and it took him just five minutes to spell out the name after be had. found it. Al there were so ninny persons in line, not more than 100 votes were polled at 12 o'- oloek. It was ob , d that but few colored nun were at work yesterday. All were in attend►ooe upon the polls. In some of the ward. the colored people strained every nerve to prevent the white people voting. One of their scheme/ was to swell the line with men who had already voted, In order ..to keep oat the whites. Thus; a negro would vote, and would then pass around to the rear of the line. ilo would monde there until some one name along wbo bad not voted, when he would drop out of Ilue v ond glee the newcomerhl plane. Tble wee preetioed to such an iffe tonna ono et the First Ward precincts that ilireet appeals to prop of it hail to be mole to Vile police officers ThSjinlges of election were in SeS9lOll in the Post office building yesterday, fur the purptse, as was staled, of correcting errors in the registration.—They give certificates slitting that certain individuals hail been registered, and a large number of persons voted upon those ceittficates. During last evening squads of colored men paraded the streeet,t, showing and hurrahing on account of their success Bonfires were lighted in various sections of the city, and it was a night of general jubilation for the negro finely AN tNIVIANATIC PIZILM-1101.11Na man who lives in one of ,the rural count uf Ohm, drew iho prise of noes of hind in Pike county, Kentucky,'• in the recent grit enterprise scheme in that vicinity Ito called upun_the managers of of rho enterprise and told them he d 4 1 ,411 1 .1 wail the land, and they uugirt"krtt•}t it by giving kiln $20,000 They decline the utter, generous as it was, and then he dropped to $1.5,000, and finally to jilt, , Mt, deel iiing that he hoped never to tee his wife and children if he would take a cent lean The gift men didn't want' the land It w.is Werth doable the price he offered 1 , 1 hike for 11, of oon,e, but they hid ether uses for the money and could r 1 Ile look the deed fur the hied—would Lave taken the will for the deed, ilmt is if they willed to give him the money —and went to Pike county to •iew his p. 111411,10. Ile found 20,0 M) acres ofhir ren rock and timuntain, that would hardly afford eub•iorence for a rattlesnake Ile couldn,t find n level spot of ground that afforded milliment space for ibe emiumnical garden, paid], but he could loiter.] —"See rudely +weal. Crag urnr crag, and fell War fall And nothing eke. He wended his wny back agar —.Lail the wny from Pike'k—and and offered to let the gift managers have tterlittol for sBo4—hoped to die if he'd fall another cent. They declined the offer, singular ao it may appear, but finally agreed to take it off his hands and pay im $5OlO This he indignantly refuse•!, end so lie still remit' 111 ono of Um greet Laid monopolists' . °elite day, the owner, of an exceedingly picturesque unit undo]. sting farm of twenty thousand acres —7'orf Firld and Porto RADICALISM In Tit L' FAD. WMST —it is re niarkable how rapidly the new Stales of the West fall into the habits--ospecially the worst habits—of their elder Eastern :iv tele will be remembered that the S telet of Nevada, which has about as ninny inhabitants as one of our second class ward -had unite a struggle to elect a United Stales Senator last winter, and that Gene ral me 1.111,1 \V Nye finally succeeded over tilt competitor, 11Ir Charlee DeLoiag, in being again returned—a thing which had not been deemed possible It semus that a commille have boon investigating the mat „ter, and discovered that a good deal of mon ey woe used to pay for votes A man nam ed Ilanegati, fur esainple, swears that member named Cullen, told him he liati.go ceived $1,350 for voting for Nye Awdther witness named Scare, swears that lid. — fff coined a check fur $3,000 with 111.1roctions to deliver a to 11 member named Proctor if he voted for Nye , but an he voted against him II hail not been paid I'rocior being called on, refused to testify Various mum hers testified to having been offered various sums if they would vote far Nye—but of emirs°, none of them admitted that they hail taken the money There ism great deal of political human intim° 1011 t weal. The ra ge rimss of certain politiciane to have new Si tin., wilillllol, route after another, before lines liars half the population riopimite for 4itigle member, rook us proper centrum, iniy in there transaction, The San Fran eliMa Ibilteim says it is reported illat a large part of the money iment to elect the Nevada Senator "came from n optional committer ” V 7'stntx 8.0 ac n. Ourunass ly TENUS9NE —Tlfa following special dispatch from Washing ton to the Baltimore Sofl, of the fob. shown thot the Radical despot Bruwnlow line created a prefect reign of terror iu Tennessee : AdvicserfroM Tennessee inchoate that the State militia are creating terror among the people of Middle Tennessee by oppression, unwarrantable starches and arrests, and, in some instance by the murder of citizens. Several oases of murder are named, one in which a man was dragged from his house and killed in the moat brutal manner, in the presence of his wife The body was then carried to the woods by tho murderers who sent a messenger to his family that they could hare the body if they oboes to go after it. . These outrages are alleged to have been committee by the State , zeilitia, anal the terror 'Oaken slatting of 11 , enneettee pe tition the Federal Government: for ,nroteo lion for life and property,, they sag if nit granted, they will be conipeAleel: tAbantion their homes sitid,seek safely in the adjoin ing States." Several Instance are given of destruction of property and seeking of their homes of peace . ble citizens by bands of the militia.-6r Rile CLOUD, I THY INDIAN LMADIII bpeaking ef Net totlrtheoming war on the plains, the Reese River Reveille says : The great leader of the tildi.os is Red Cloud, or Malipilatan, who is represented as one of the ablest, Indian warriors of any time. lie is about thirty rice years of agic,...tall, hand some, athletic, and as perfect:rip his horse la manehlp as in his physioppea ca. He has commanded In aerereiTiattles reelous to the masseurs of Col. Pectoral 'a com mand, and has never been wid d. Ile was at Laramie last spring. at the tents making, aniorinile faros and treating it, as sunk without dis nisi, yet nooipting all ths presents offered, but left with the deo laration that his oeueiry should never be ' ooaupiekby the whites, nor garrisoned by them, nor should their road. oross it. Then be was at the head of about 820 warriors of the Ogaiallah Biota, but his marshalling 8,000 at Fort Phillip Kearney shows Iks influenee he has over others, and his de termination to make hie threat good. Ile Is an active, euargetio, and able warrior, 1 and he who (magueys Red Cloud will do more than he who conquered Tecumseh, or Black Hawk, or Oweela. ' . NEARER HOME The followour .err. Lt,peare.l m 1 , ..111C Vne the relntiotto paporon few yoAro ,gok, hot whet ..r when. or by whom, Ilrey wore written. Are unable to sAy. They seem to no ‘ory bee Ono srrontly roletnn thought, Contex to not o'er and„ or, I'm nearer borne to day Than I over have 11.41 before Nearer my Fullier'4 home, Where the many itioneiuns he Nearer the great white theme, Neater the gasper •ra Ne:tr... the 6.00,10 01 tile, Where wa lay our burden* 41..rn Nearer le acing the eraos, Nearer gaining the'. re,. MEM 11111 I)ing d.trL ly hebteen, Wstvltng clown threogh the eight 14 the dint Antill4lli,ll Or. am Thet two et led le It4ht Cbtoor, dower lily mter. Come to thn nloN•in, C1 , ,,,1n.th to I) hpn the hrt.nt Father, perfe , t tr.t, rellgtheri the night of Inv faith, Let mu feel ns I leatal‘l nhon,l htan.l On the rook of the .Lora ”t death. Feel n 1 I would when 134) le, I Are 414,11114 g On the broil., Fora luny he I in ne•r home, Nearer than I ilbulk. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —The Sultan line thirty ot with MEM —Cherish your beet butte, a. a f.tall, an abide by them in netion —Marriage ,IcatAanted n Lri ki Auto, a ite put. a Larlo upon a 2.1.4 pe.plu —Popo Plus IK"ltas nearly cutuple;o4l tI 21$1. Joar of 1114 Papacy —lt is ruin red th it Milsiwilwn has bee , released, nail is on his Way to the Tutor line - , --Thoro is conmilurublu igrirt ion au • Now England to Florida —Them aro 7 10,000 more make MAR f males M tLo Unikal State, --Popo PluA IX 'wis7s year+ oh' on th 13th of May. —The Chine. robatn aro .leptedattog the vleiniry of Kong. Ono twin in Clientor Lounly Lu planted eighty scree of potato. —A Indy M.l recently gored to deoth by bull in On sheets trt Kniglatid --The sheriff of Victoria county, Tea/fa i lle refused to accept greosbs as legal tender. Afilsquera has dissfilreil 17te New ti 'Reedits Congress, and pruclanned himself Dictator. —Tho cholera% hos dasltipeakrutl froth NI., —Twelve thenann,l dollar+ have been offe . 1 .. 1 minced foc,a epan of w.f. horse§ in Be fele. --The General Land Wilco at Wathtngbo has favorable reports of dlie crops throughou the entire West. —Who is it that sits with his hot on borer the queen, emperor, and also the President ti the United States joker has sad that it prisano bufaru a New Jorsuy Court is always a room• his maa—he is •o open to ou,4ir .tion• —A boot block, who was rejected by n elisinbertneid, tried to hong 'morel( in Pitts burg a few ,ley. eines, but the rope troke —The petition of Tennc+aeo eitiena aching protection ttninst Brownlow's negro militia i forty faoc lung --An Ulm negro named Lang.t. l. bee apponand nnopector of negro eel) In V Irg‘n by II .Irl,l of "110 Iluro." - --lit I. speech 1:011% troll low years gine° Irrownlow sold "negro.; were only monkey with rhea tails out nil, fr wwwlu nny bo w. nut SI ightenod when ho trembled nt ooh toy but only obeyed the old onlur—.• hlnough .141; nohuke " —The :talon or (leneral Sheridan in moving - linvurnor Walk tonderatood to hay , Loon •Ikappnee.l In the C.lbmet Illetting yea torday.• —Chicago roinplains that it has no good Leaf to via—nothing but l'iorideweil i ennietated cow; suputantititoil 014 bull; aged and mrald ---The lent "outrage" on a freeman at the South man that of one being htruck by light ning. Congrers meet meet in July to regulate thunder storms. --The Louisville Coorotc Lb Inkr that who. the full vote of Kentucky obull be broughl ou in August, tliu Democratic y will react wanly thousand. --Tho State Department hos loomed Os , Minister itilions, noting under instructions, in Wooded for the convicted Fenian, in In]lona whosa eentenees wore eornimated —Thu b ill iud match for the charepionsh ip of America took piece between McDevitt end Dion, at Montreal, on Monday night. Ihon wes the winner by 6.1 i points• • o --Tswanaly (torus, buildings i• Atoll icon 'Kansas, wore burned on Sunday. Luse, bO,OOO. The Ctly Mille, anti • wareheuse, in Mendota, lll.,were burned on Monday, reusing a loss of $21,005. —The following it a eopy el a bill posted en the wall of a country I.lltage : '•A lecture on total abstmence will be delivered in the open air, and a collection frill be made at the door to defray en paw, —To leave church before it is out,whmpering, gazing s ‘ t strangers, loud laughter, climbing barber poles when "sone over," and:Jacking the dog under the table when at bre Arise, i —One of the meanest men in New England Is sold to reside in Northampton, Mn... He sued his brother. the other day. for twenty dollars for board Suring • visit which they paid him three years ago when Ant married. A gentleman was somplalnlng that It cost blot $lO ovary time he went to thumb, es he only attended Are times a year, end his pew tax was tlfty derive per omens. "In, don't You 10 - slollter," acted a reltskme broker. °sad reduce the simmer That WWI a posy. —A member of the "God ins moralitg party," who went dowp Beath Si teacher of tl►.' boalghted, hubbies arrested to Texas for slop log with • neves., a married woman, and for tattooing bee to commit theft. Bosh assess of the “great moral ideas" whisk abellUonista propose to leach tho mot:therm people, , —Some people place Weir 'dais of happl ^ nom upon ono thlng aitd . roma upon another . A lady maks upon a Mond who ha 4 ly boon married. When her husband woo home to dinner; the sans '•I haw, been to am Mn.---." "Wall," replied Om tmbon4rf% soppme shit is very 146." ..11appy t I should think aim ought to he U. • wales hair shawl two third" loorilsr.e. A FEW WORDS THAT MAY BE READ WITH PROFIT BY DEMOCRATS IN OFFICE AND OUT OF OFFICE. The Democrats of the country may learn many usaul lessons by observing and imitating the Republicans, 'While the Democrats are resting, the Ile publicans are working with untiring in dustry Whilo the 'tearoom., are striving to heal the wounds of the past, the Repel,: tient., ore treasuring up etraitjt (or the its lure NO 25 While the Democrats are baying: •We will not, hereafter, make any political teats in bileines4, relic 1411 tic social life," the Radi cal is casting itliont for 10M0 way to make hi. Itit.timas, hie, religion and lase POCill I positiots,:d . onfrilmio et-tenth to his perly• SF iitya ineihe week Itepublieau laymen work far Hain; puffy, and on Ike eereitili the notate kind ofCurk a done by many of the Republican aleriymen who infest the pulpit y,,,, loony lienuierata, out of regard for t hu feelings of suareiiiiiile Rep. Miran rrienda, hold their 11101113 C an days Tii the work. 111111 1.111 the sesmiili Democratic elerZ MVO lefused to 101 l politics Republicans stippot I their papers—ad •erttair in them, subscribe for ahem, talk for them• ante,w fur them, 111111 if the p, per hay, a jolt olline puronir, ri liberally. Too man . ) , tremor. atn.,rrfn. Lo elipport their pope --doadvertise in them, nor truhacribe for Ilion, nor talk for them, nor forllieni, mil if the paper have a jo!, office, .lo pitroiline it If they ward. or bill heads, or cards, they rend m 201.11 her city and obi it, them from Republir.to firm %nil even Denim raw rot eiimes send In ,nother city and pittlioaire Republican pranging offices This office holler may say in npokgy that the foreign office does better and che . apeia ,printing, all las they arc very fastidious men, the apology may be sufficient with rho Democrat to party ; but we assert that Republican office holder never prentits his lore of lino printing and cheap pricest _lnduce hint to rend away ' from a town which there is Republican printing office, a blank 4r a poster to be done by a Democratic printer If he did, no excuse would be sufficient to rave him. front the wroth of his partisan. They would become too fastidious to retain him in office. Reptihtto,t metes Democris do not often become school directors. and 111° school directors never employ Democratic Cl= In Dem.:rile cuiei Wr Demoirnle too often premil the Itepohhetes to bore nisjorit f of the school directors. end f heel° directors nia.C. employ Itepuldieln teach er., who are too mach prejudiced against the Democracy to eith.erthe for the Dem ocratic piper. it city the only paper' publshoil l tht y Itefort‘ and after and during political oailmigns, the Itepublcans subscribe lib &air; to pay for party • , Before and after political campaign. a great. many Democrrts refused to gill4l"any money fur party purpo.ies, and during a campaign It takes greater labor to induce Lhasa to pity half as much as they ought to Pay At present the Itepu'Aleuts are working wilgreat industry to make sure of the Presidential election next year Al pesent the Democrats are ind ustrtouwly doing nothing The 'ltepublican National Executive 9eminittee have just issued an address, in which they announce that money is want ed, because this fan " auspicious et Isis of our countrp , t"not a day should be loin!" that "it (money) is the preening need of the hour;." that it is "an imperative duty" to ooniribute -legal tender" to aid in the work of epreading "thy trinciples which underlie the great political divan isa tion to which we belong." The Democratic National Committee awl the Belmont Committee are doing nothing. We refer to these facie to arouse the par ty in this part of the State from its lethar gy. We want to COMOICIIOO the great bat tle of th 69 now! Now is the suspicion!' time in which to labor, More converts to Democracy can be made new in five min utes then can be made six weeks during the ••but" 1.1.11 rasa that will take place ■ext sear —Cairo (Pis )Thanorral. I= lowing from an each e The.lndianspolis I mad of the 25th, bait the following : '•A young lady of ihm city amiable, intelligent and beautiful, was en gaged to be married to n respectable young man, a church member and it hypocrite. In an evil hour she bimetal, the victim to h is wiles of this white sepulchre, was seduced said deserted, her destroyer marrying another woman. About ten days since, the unfortunate girl gave birth to an illegiti. f mate child and died last Friday. Iler physician said she died of shame and grief. What must have been- the feelings of that young man 'as the funerel cortege of his •ictim filed slowly past his residence t Did ho feel like a murderer? Did he writhe beneath the scorpion lash of remorse, re minding him .of vows forsworn, betrayed trustotil early grave for beauty, and that innocent and d'hably orphaned ohild , dim • greases thousand times more through its father's baseness than Ws mother's sins I She now sleeps beneath the ME Can he sleep t" IleAyr Viranicr verdiot of $lB,OOO was given against the ,Penns. Ttairlroad Company, in the Snyder county Court, on SZturday last, In the cave of the heirs of Col. William 'Butler, against the Company, as damages for the killing of Col. Butler, of Lewistown on the occasion of the great Railroad aoeitlont near Lsnealter, In Ooto bor, 1863 —The suit was Brit brought in Militia county, but the venue was changed to Snyder. Another suit will be brought by the some parties to for the killing of Mr. Butler, in the mime accident; he whale question turning oa the alleged .hlrge of negligence on the partef the Company.—Murlinlown Demetat. CUT ruts OUT.—For • Wog time hydro_ phobia wee thought to be ioettiable, mud persons •Illiolod with It wer, Wan_ gled or 'mothered to death.'flat a 'Ger man feirbester dyltrg a few yeahrigo,' mule known • Ai& secret by ablehia gad saved *any lives cad what' duty tutee * goal y a Mira as come of ate timithem. &die the - " 1 wound sionaisatir id* 1421811 Na- and • Eivediedm yeller demo &hike Audi, day. >i hartskOni datogyitsio 'bola IWO be virus instatlisold bur Opt %squid. Sad . imsessdistcly attars gad destroys Its de : lirioaseees didn't you ',MO tile' for biller Timmy f -yea. toy Wind, . 1 ;y0411 hurl /OD .veiy mesh.". A . time, pa , you milli 14 whip ' lb/m -*4l meek Weiler, tee, for he bis Immense 'right is the ineowit." . elephant,ea& .4ii. weft!, with greet tohrel ' Wi; le afford obellei}omewbeee as easierldat Wiens the tams." •‘ =
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers