[For the WTenN THIN E FOREVER MEMIN Uy those starry oyes so soft, and blue, By thous rime!s that have robbed the re.e of iq hoe. fly ell that's around, and above we -- By est+ rhining tress oethy dark brown hair, fly those ruby lips, 1 fondly swear, love thee. dear girl, I I.*. the.. By that foot that the 'tuners so daintily pram, By that brute that the zephyrs love to aaaaa By the star-lit sky above Ina— By the moon, whose soft and ell very light, Falls on thy face, so fairlind AO bright, I ewear again--I love thee. tov :IT. •Hrtho .usio or eadt sweat, low tone, Ily this fair hand clasped to mine own, I swear it, beloved, I swear It— 'llint thy loving heart o the priceless pearl, 110 madly onset, and I long, dear girl To wear It—on my heart to wee; it,, 'Magri epee that are brighter, and lips _met • • sweet, To my waadertngs afar . ' should chanceto meet, Though fate to Part us endeavor— Thy presence will follow wherever I,go, To bless me In weal, to cote fort'in woe, I am thine forever'—forever ' In tile voyage of life, if oar trail little hewing' Should GM on the •atere of sorrow so dark, My arm. will around thee be ever— TO eh ield thee from danger, and if it moat he, That Ito wawa sweep o'er us, m that hour. with thee. I am thine, forever '—forei er ' V 1,1 arenas that aro brightest, when to mortal. are given At mete 01 the joys 'immortal of heaven,— My heart will turn to thee ever-- TIM h fey will but bring,' tweet thought of thee 61 thee, and this hour, when I slowed I would he forever 1=1111El!Ill When Death ho hand, NO 1 . 011/, t,n oy Cal Whoa walled fru= thee, darling, eo sadly to part, E'en Death our lives may not never— With thy heart on none own—thy lips preened to mina large h may nut Oast us. fur eltlll nm thin. Forces;! my tuning, forever ! , THE EVACUATION OF RICHMOND, =1 ••IVell ' ±" 'said I, inquiringly, as, on the of April, 18(6, my •colored" nurse en- lead Ike room, on bre return from a forag mg expedition throughout the oity. '" 7 ' There ain't nothin' to t, be had mistime. I offered twenty eight dollnsfor a bait pound of poor middlin,' en' dey would'ot let me have it no how " "Never mind," I repooded epeouraglog ly "We can have Home sorghum sod corn oake for dinner t 6 day, and to morrow—" I hesitated. for you I hall but little idea of where to morrirw's dinner was to come from.or of what it would consist We were • afraid now, to go out into the euburbe to wither "wild salad," so near were the '•Vankeeti" hovering a)out and closing around our besieged town. For some days rumors had prevailed that our troops were .about evacuating the oily, on ataceunt of ihaving no provisions ; but to these no one pal any serious attention au improbable ;did it appear 1008 that Richmond could ever voluntarily be given up to the enemy, after so many gallant defences. (tar scanty MCILI partaken of, I stepped out to call upon a friend on the next street and to consult about some means of preur mg provisions They had, I knew, ceased to issue meal in the public rations...rt the ;supply of flour was diminished one half, had also within the last two days raven enormously and there was now, I had heel told, actual starvation in the city As passed alor.g through the gas-lit streets, I was struck with something un usual in the aspect of things. People pass ed hurriedly—groups met for an Blatant •t the carriers, and separated with a few has tily spoken words. Long lutes of army wagons wound up Main and Broad streets ; awl at the warehouse buildings used for army stores, bales and bundles of goods were piled on the pavement, and rapidly transferred to wagons in waiting Pres ently there came marching up the streets 111 Ie rm inpled lines of infantry, while troops of cavalry dashed past, and followed. What could it meari I stood on the sidewalk as the troops passed close to me in full glare of the gas- Intnp What was it no strange in their faces ? Had there been a battle without the city, and had our troops been defeated? But po ; there was none of that eager ex teilemeat which they always manifested stun Muder defeat. They paned with a Hatless onealtanatal mien, and a fixed stony look,as mea that half abut. Some there were who walked curet and proudly but with com pressed lips, and sworn resolute contract ion of their pale featrarea, such as I had ob- served in those who had followed the corpse of Stonewall Jackson. And with this thought a terrible fear fell upon my heart. I turn ed, and unoongaiointly laid my hand on the arm of a crippled Confederate soldier who was standing by. "Is General Lee deed 7" I asked breath- Neely. \ "Dead I No, thank Hod !" "Then what does all this mean 1" • Ha looked at me without answering, There was a slight tremor on his lip, an en presslonrelinost of pain in his eyes. His comrade replied to my inquiry vo•v •!They are retreating before Grant—evae staling the oily." eft I feltior a moment like one stunned by a blow. 'The Yankees win be here in • few Eldora," resumed the man, with s'ellif, stern look. .•llave you a protector 1" '•Ood have -mercy upon our women I" maid the first. "Woman die like men if It comes to that; but the women—our Wo men l" And here the ettoond who had spoken—e tall, dark-eyed Louisianian—lifting hie hand aboie hie head, uttered slowly and solemnly lb bitterest curse that ever fell ~,,from man against his enemy . - oft. the house of my friend I found the ,doors looked and the windows seourixl, in rotioipation of the arrival of tilt Yankees. Thalia were not the only preparations, "We one die like men also," said a young lady, with solemn sameetnise, as **grasped more closely the pistol which ** grasped secured in her belt. That night but few women werarwithout this defense. For mysel I feared nethiog. I felt only stronger, calm er, more resolute and fearless with the threatened danger ; but my thoughts' were principally with the haggard, etricken look ing men, on their weary march before a triumphant, pursuing enemy, and my' own heart echoed antagonising cry of the soldier on the street—"Oh, Qui 1 that it should have come to this !" No one slept that sight. Holding my I'llp Prineritati( -11't!1_41i-h, VOL. XII. baby chute in my Kum, after' some hours I fell into an uneasy, lus If conscious slumber. From this I was aroused about daylight by my maid, who with ashy-grey face and eyes Wart lug frets thoir sockets, cried : "The Tank tea the Yankees ' raisins '" The roar of n gun. shaking the hones to its very foundations, seemed to corroborate her words Anothri, and another, and then • ifenfetting crash that seemed almost over our heads. I opened tho window and looked oat There they were—the federal cavalry, in their blue coats and' yellow seamed jackets —there at last, and .or the first time gal loping freely through the deserted streets of the city in defence of which so much blood had been spilled, and which was theirs at last without a drop of blood eked and down, back and forth, widdeut ordSror object, apparently, with drawn swords and flushed, excited faces, they rushed through the etreota at full speed And now came pouring in troop atter troop of negro caval ry, their naked swords gleaming in their hands„and their whiteuye-bells roll ing rest lonely front side to side The white sold iers shouted, waved their caps, shook !bands with the negroes grouped at the street cor ners, and called derisively lathe few whites ststble; but not a word was uttered by the negro troops—not a mile antinated their solemn visages It was with a feeling of profound pity and kindness that I looked at them—the poor race which nature had her mit! degraded, and made "a servant to his brethren " My thought was—"lf they can be happy for it, let them be free ; but will they he happier! 4Krti they be better for it ? flare we not repeatedly tried the ex periment cm alSimited scale, and found it to fail? And what right had filly one to inter fere between them and Its v", - As the Federal troops continued to pour past, I observed that most of the officers, unlike the exultant privates, wore anxious looks, sad that they rode up and down, watching the troops olosely, sad exerting ' themselves to maintain order and restraint. Many a in in who would kayo strayed out of the lines into the houses, or who scowled or jeered at the pale, care-worn faime that oc calionally showed themselves at the win dows, was summarily driven back with the fiat of a sword, or sternly called' to order. Disoontentei remarks were irrhead an they passed aleng "I thought‘e were toburn the d—d oily," sabre corporol of a May sachusette regiment; and a huge,rnisehaperi ferociouilook Mg negro Aixelaimed fiercely as he elikok his naked sword—"what de use oh dese,'if we ain't 'lowed to nee 'am now we's got die rebel hole !" And now a new horror broke upon the doomed city. For some hours, even before the Federal, had arrived, the lower quarter of the city had been in flames. this was et:ma/cloned by the burning of the warehouses in which had been army stores and provis ions, nod also, (by General Ewell's order) of the bridges across the river, to prevent or retard pursuit of the retreating arufy. In thisquarfor the flames did notexterni,but by some means or other, which could never be entertained, flames had broken on in various other parts of the city, and in all directions Soon every house to the vicin ity of the fires began pouring forth its in habitants, each burthened with what hole properly or clothing ilieg possessed. I was among these Expecting noon to sec our house in flames, I hastily collected a bundle of clothing, while my maid secured about her person the little bag of corn meal and the little bottle of eorgurn wit* formed our whole stook of provisions 'And thus prepared I clasped my baby in my arms, and she leading her little child we went forth not knowing where in all the wide world to direct our steps. On the hill to which we finally repaired,hundreds of vilimen .d children were collected—some in wild est calm and resolate—.. many with faces of vacant (toror and des peration. And thence. looking down upon the city, spread like a panorama before nee, and upon the Minote lying at my feet, I be held the wildest and most awful scene 'of horror that my eyes bail ever rented upon Far away, on the level plaint,on the other side of the river,,appeared a broken, dimly seen, dingy line of some moving object, fa ding away into distance This was the rear of the retreating confederates—belated wagons, and wounded and crippled soldiers from the hoepitals, and from their homes in the oily—spores of whom I bad seen the night previous, and even so late as daybreak with their little bundles on their arms, painfully wending their way on foot, or with the assistadoe of crutches, in the track of the retreating army Clone to us, on the left, a huge pyramid of dame was glaring white now and then an explosion of am munition stores, suck as had at-daybreak aroused us, would eause the earth on which we stood to quake and tremble. In front, en Main street, for • distanee of half • mile extended one Pving,rburging sea of fire, creeping slowly up on both sides, and meet ing overhead in a horrible arch of glaring flame and dense blank volumes of smoke, AMi through Ibis awful vista were rushint hundreds of gaunt men, and wild, halfolsd, half famishing women, snatching at and dragging forth from the devouring element everythlng they could lay their hands on In the slope of food °retelling. Some fought for fragments of clothes; others knelt down in groups and atirsped up from the earth and ashes, with eager hands, the meal that had escaped from some shattered bar rel; while others, still desperate with 5.1- ine, would rush again and again into dames to be driven dock soorahed, panting, suf focated, by the anvanaing element. And farther on, up Shooks Hill, all around the-Capitol Square. extended the same hor rible line of flame, while • dense cloud of smoke gathered like a ball just over the oity shutting out the very sunlight, and iroduo log • darkness so ' deep thnii at one time I could not distinguish the faces of those within short distance of me. Across this sable canopy darted detached maws of flame and drifted sparks in thick falling showers, as of • fiery rain. And through all this horror, and terror, and confusion, rushed the Eisderal cavalry, up tind down, to and fro, alair borne' all steam, and the naked steel screaming in pie lurid light of the ghastly flames. Tru . ly, it was a scene to remember for a life-lime. Such was the first day of the possession of Richmond by the federal forces. By the second day we began to warn that our antiopatlonilf lawless violence and brute_ lit , snob salad ;narked the taking 010°1- t and etheqlsotte Ih Bkormaarseorrse were ungrounded, and that the officers, at least of the federal army were resolved, ins, accordagee with orders, to preserve strict , dleeipline. and to protect us fr y tiny oat- I ragerlrr.injustice I observed too, that nearly all the men were good natured and civil, and many kind hearted and sympath ising When my little ‘upply of food had given out, having only confederate notes, I bona it impossible to procure provtsions of any kind lat length reluctantly spoke ton federal soldieres he passed, and 1.1,d for bread fit my little one Ile gave me it handful of unity limonite, which soaked in naler afforded a two days subsistence Mille child. In this time not a morsel of any kind passed my own lips, and then a kind hearted German gentleman, Or S—,—sent me four dollars 111 greenbacks, saying that IL was all he had made sAme the a rrival of the federals to the thy. ►Hallo. thief gave o two genial, crippled, inteerithledooking Oil federate sold. re, w tout I found—tollw own one begglng bread of a negro cook, Inc! other lucking tip and eager ly devouring sonic lettuce cabbage leaves n•lnch a Yankee sutler hail thrown tato the street The sad Moe-ileg,9nv tacos 01 these roll haunt MC 81111 And UZI Iho third day the saddest eight hat I had yet seen was unexpectedly pre oiled to no I was passlng hastily nloug ho street on 80040 unavoidable errand, bell there, truce 001111.1 lOU timid the crowd of noldicrel, and I nrein,ed carg ly Im ward to ,/ he ro an immense United States flag was draped across the sidewalk. „ I shrank antis out of the press - and ory arose—“ The prunuors ihortibel peanut era f Lee's army Then they came passing close to me, the long, slow-moving line of pale faces and ♦inserted rums, with their bare feet, their tottered a lathing, and their bandaged, bleeding limb, Never in my life hove I seen a apeetaalu more end. A soma stern and solemn stillnees had settled upon the fates of all. In Rome were eyes of resolute and undying county, turned upon the Jeer ing triumphahl visages of the federuls who pressed closely round them Others walk ed on in stern and unyielding pride, look ing neither to the right nor the left. A few with compressed hp and eytis glisten ing in tears, glanced upward to the folds of the flag which they wtre sternly ordered to ~ p ass under !" But the most of them passed as I had seen them on the Inglht of the evacuation—with !stony, passive faces, and automatoirdike stepsi One man smiled inn ghastly way as he looked up to the triumphant emblem above stying—"l fought In tweenlytwo battles for thin !" and' was immediately silenced by a sharp blow on the shoulder from the sword of one of the guards The last crippled soldiers in the ream were urged on in the same manner —with thrusts and blows—while mole than one voice among the federal lookers-on cried, "Shame '" and more than one rough face, as the line filed past, was turned away to hide the gathering tears .1 foinid then what I had not known before end learned afterwarbs, that there were kind and gen. 4.10 hearts among our enemies, and 11101 1 / 4 who , in oven this hour of triumph, would not in , cult the feelings of a conquered foe Ilut looking at Them—at the ruddy, well- fed, well-clad ferderals, and the worn, weary, tattered, emaciated confederates-1 said to myself, as east. the Northeners said, "flow could these men fight when they are almost 100 weak and enured lo stand Pier it is a wall known fact that torlkweek pre- oits to Lee'e atirreuder Ilk nice bad no ',l ous save an re r roon each be lug it portion of the horses' provender, and that Leo lumselt had said that be "would not have suriender bet that he could mot bear to see hie men dying around lam , of starve- Iron " flow he loved his epithet, we all knew Ilnw ho must have felt, seeing that ragged starved, long suffering army follow 'iug him, true to hum, ready to obey hie sligh toot command, trusting their liven and fortunes to him in unwearying 116votion and confidence, until at length they could fol low no longer, but laid down by the way nude and died of hunger and exhaustion— how he felt, seeing all this, we can only imagine, but who that knows the circum stances can wonder that he surrendered at To Too GIN 1.9 —0 irbi, beware of tran sient young men ; never er the addresse s of a stranger; recollee t n steady far mer boy or a mechanic is °oh allthe floating trash in the world The meat of dandy Jack with a gold chain about hi. neck, a walking stick in his paw, some honest jailor's coat on his back, and a brainlessakull, can never make up for the lone of a father'. huoee and a good mothers' 001113601, and the society of brothers and sisters ; their affections last, while those of a rich young man aro Mat in the wane of the honeymoon pia Finer' TRICHTY Visa. - .4 - , -: 0 i71111 long Si you may, the first twe from the greater part of your life Tel appear so when they are passing: they seem ed to have been as when we look back to theng; and they take up more room in our memory than all the years that summed them. If this be so, bow impoetant that they should be passed in planting good I)Am:ti ptoe, cultivating good tastes, strengthening good habits, fleeting from all those pleasu res which lay op bitterness and sorrow for time to come! Take good care of the Prst twenty years of your life, and you may hope that the last twenty years will take good care of you. impeachment testimony has oost the Government $BO,OOO. Of course this does not include the amounts that may have been paid to induce wltnespes to be more than ordinary communicative Some of the Rads want to publish It, and urge that, as it has already , cost so much, it "ought to go to the country." Going "to the country, however, will cost from one third to one half as muoh more, and what is the use I—nobody can read it all and no body can belirre the half he may read. ---A poor woman who had lost her hue bead walked from miller county to St. Louis, a distance of one hundred and fifty miles, with her three children but when she war within eight mile of her destioatifin she stopped in the wood. over nighigto rist and during the night . ruffian- #clastrAgy eldest girl, aged fourteen,. end carried her awny. 'STATE 'RIGHTS AND lIIDERA.I. UNION." BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY AUGUST J. 1867 PRINCIPLES OF FREE TRADE Free trade IV 110111 a result of free Guv eminent end an evidence of the freedom of a people A people who are prevented by their Governineut from buying in the cheap est and selling in be beet market are Dot a free people Judged by this criterion, the American people are very far from being free, and their Government is just an for An " lens " oorAaqiondenon w.t 6 every from being a free Government section of this State enables me to speak Now we hold ibeve principles to h e sound confidently Della the extent of the mischief in political economy already umminplisbed by Abe Radicals of I That every one has a natural right to Tennessee Loyal leagues and other still purchase all the necessaries, con•entences, more nefarious orgsnisations have been es and comforts of life in the cheapest market, tablished among the negroes, who 'are he and to the beat advantage, the man himself mg educated 10 the belief that as soon as yeing the judge of what is cheap e st, and best r the Eegislature meets steps will be taken for his interest v to accomplish for them such dotision of the II That every one bits the same natural orients property of the opponents, as tight to dispirit of It IR labor or the produces emonottokttriltetti for their yours of slavery' thereof, to the tier bidder NIA in the best du old hie, of the to•kr° hint ut "."t fu m without tlo•ernment restrsint or 111 , day he t' to role her° as °°tier ho , hindranet been reviked,"atiti the present is suggested 11l That he moro t Levu natural rights as the nme to meet which 0.1 rtn itted are restrained, the less is the persons plac their to en ported under reiir.iint Ili freeman and the inc.,. They are Leldi-AibM Idtt.oln 'et" , murderer he approaches the condition of .err dent or by direct instigation of the Aluitglity, who shivery knew that lie was about to fail to sui.rcess- IV poblOa rest ratnt open the tia.l.z , fully establishing the day of Jubilee Then utal iglu of a people to 111/Ike the stout of StutitimPntiOn wit • Litt purl payment of the their labor, whether in ilinnestic or foreign Immense debt owing to Then, by the white markets,is n na•nlen of tyr:ll.s owl d e -pm- people They firmly believe that to coin ktll, w inch to out obmiteterratin of freetiov- piste the work nod discharge t hen debt the eminent., bur tan peculiar trait of Govern- pohucat maotership must be theirs, to the melds whlch du not derive their existence exclusion forever of their old masters hum the consent at the govertiod,and 'thick They firmly believe that nothing short of it do nut respect the rights or Interests of the complete turning of the tables will put them people in their centinet tin po.ttott.to make good to thenuselvtio and %. That a tloveroment wh t el t p reven t s ilietr generations sipeceeded turever a tint people hum enjoy mg th e h t rg e st wettottn t of nopnly of the goodlungs of ,illtnd that once happiness which eon he weeured by ex- flowed with milk tik honey To accent.' change ut the products of thett labor, tor- plish this—and they wr ill be satisfied with fells the support, respect o r eonfid euet , or nothing short—their white leaders Instruct a people whose rightsareilly violated,and them` poor, igooroot• .erorP°nrikle crest' whose happiness Is thue7u7Or red ores in the manual of arms and school of a We need not enlarge further than this an.nsoldier, in preparation for a possible failure the present to place befur the render some ! at the ballot bow that mast be reversed by idea of what we understand by free trade, . the cartridge lion and as analogous thereto, free Govraiutyly 'rho roost anti beat Government' id, that which governs the least • iliais to say, wit job interferes the least. with t natural rights of a people. Now, as we re laid 1. 1) down as a fundamental principle, i is the natural right of every one to go o the I cheapest market for all the necessar ee,con ' mummer. and amorous of life. ut our Government steps to and says, no,you must not go to the cheapest market, and ,to pre vent us all flout doing this, it legislates that whatever we purchase in any other market than what to called a home market, we must pay a great deal more fur than the seller Is I willing to tube, thus compelling us to pay more for commodities thou they are worth Now, why should a floweret/mot do this? It is done under • ths pretext of benefiting certain classes of industries,and very likely it does benefit them, , but why should Gov ernment,wll i.di is an institution for thelien efit of-all the peolite,hecome the beheficiary of one class and the oppressorof anpther for the benefit of its favorites' rhere is no good reason for this conduct of Government and it appears to us that the Government has not the i ight to thits,hivor one class of the commithily by its legislation and to op press the othei classes by ouch favoritism. 11\ what principle of good Government or sound policy, to say nothing of the riOt of the matter, dues Government, or pan it say to u producer, you must sell your produc tions cheaper to cue sot of persons and in ono set of market., than you shall to oilier persons or 111 other markets, or, to a con sumer, you ball not purchase your sugar, coffee, cloth ing,tnedie•Meti,llllll ten thousand other Collllllmac es at their market pi ice,htil, in addition to the niarl.et price, you must paytlinucli per cent, so as to make the pric • equal at least, to what 01101 her obese of 1 mono o.to ttriord to sell the muse cum. mod. ties for, the latter cars of pel•sonii toe ing !Antler the protettionuf theGovermuent Doer any of .r readers realm, that the Gores nment of ill IN country . is preventing him or her from buying his Other !Mee., rion of lite 111 the cheapest niaiket, or of selling his or her produotoons or labor and capital in tlie best inarkeltrp, Very liti.v)y there might be persons Who are unaware of this fact, or, being aware of it, they hove beconis indi ff erent to it, or they feel it is of no 11901 Ito complain or to attempt to apply a remedy The interference of our Government with be exercise of the natural rights of the people has become intolerable. and were. it not for the partisanship which absorbs all other interests, and which diverts the minds of the people from reflecting on their per sonal interests, the course of the Govern ment in tie relations to trade and taxation would not he born patiently or acquiescent ly for a single day. There would be a re bellion to the land whioh no Government could withstand, because nine-tenth. of the people would be on one side, and the other tenth be "no where." iitalever else the Government of this oountry e becomee in form or ',velem, it cab; not ling tontinue to be oppressive of the' many for the benefit of the few It might become a centralised despotien iu ilt rola two to Stales, but it cannot withstood the popular force and power which demand of it the exeroiee of ilut natural rights of all men-to make the ittost of their labor and ure the largest amount inienoes and oom forts for a.nount of labor anti capital, and to pro ofneoesearies,con the enrallent poeel. money The people will to their rights and now what they oinnn .übenit now to wh, bear Already the t ardship npd wrong of preventing tiosio go gto the best markets for all they need is - oiling iu them &Writ of hostility to the 01 ernment,whieb grows stronger and more vi lent with every sue oessivit oat or outrag n the fertg „ of tariff - duties and domestio imposts. We do not warn the Government to beware, latiomase It is heedless of admonition, but we appeal to the people to be true to their right. end in terests. and to get ready for the making of an effort to re-establish free Government in this oountry, and with it the Uhquestioned freedom of themselves -St Luau TIIIIg4 . —lf a man who makes a disposition is depositor, does it neniesarlp-Akllow that a man 11113 maim; an allegation le an all- gator. The pinewood doing good is the only one that never wean out. RADICAL INCENDIARISK IN TENNES SEE. The The New 1 ork //crab/ of the 18th cou minx a letter front Memphis, Tennessee from which we take the following descrip lion of affairs in the State ruled by Brown Everywhere in Tenney.° there is appro. nenmou of trouble with the negro, and whole families are going north, fearing a riot on election day I bear of men in all the towns and villages, native conserva tives, wbo are preparing for such an event as that of Fronk lin, sending their lamilies north and arming ; and unless the l'i esi dent intervenes the strong arm of the mill ta-ry power of the republic there is no room for doubt that such is carriaue awaits, 4 the °owing of election day as will startle even the tools of Radicalism if it does not afford them swill au end as they used to covet for Jeff Davis This is shout the animus of the cootending parties is its State ks they are here, they arc in all the other once Con federate States. Passion rules the hour and misrepresentation is the stock tu trade of the politicians who run on the aide of es anlled loyalty. Office, ollice, office is the cry of theme Radicals, who copprisci the very worst ele meats of the population. They have not Poly secured all the offices existing at the time of their advent hare, and which in the better days of the Commonwealth were all "ufficient for the public welfare, but they hare created others of fattening emolutnente fur the support. of which the Inuit; and cow ' theme of the State is taxed well nigh out of eximence. 'Murders they commit with nn 1, punity As in the palmy d.iys of the church, Rad 1.1111111 has erected a refuge in which its culprits are safe from the 'mamma° of the law. Thefts they commit every dap `which being charge.' ns only minor offen ces, are elan ed over as of no moment, and "certainly not to be discussed when party 110 by is NO necipmetry " About once a year the Republican leaders fall in love with the laboring MAO, and the cooing commences with a political anal paign which confidence game is played until ihe election is over, and the poor man finds he has been' listening to gaydecemers &hie must always be the case w4ili It party that has no principles, always reedy in seise upon local and transient quest 10. 10 mislead and at tract the crowd Brims bands, fire works, secret associations, and O'llentklioue parades, in turn serve to cloud or intlame the thulitiude, and carve the purpose of unscrupulous men who only de sire Owe to aidtheir plundering propene, lies The Republican party in the main controls the commerce of the country. its banks, cud mills and shop keeping, it is es sentially aristocratic, because of its wealth, and necessarily opposed to the interests of the poor man What care they about his complaints about wases, or his rights in the bustnese world Vet. when it becomes important to - iecure his voles, everything appears to be yielded. We shall soon hear in this country, beseeching appeals to the coal diggers, the puddlers, and working mon generally, to came up as one man and vote.against the copperhead., the disloyal, the men who wooed the war, killed your fathers and brothers, and saddled upon us the great nationaldebt. We shall be re taled with speeches from young helpers he want to make oliente,or go toCongresif, reciting the horrors of Andersontille, and the base ingratitude of the South. The poor white man will be just as gnettas any body else, exoepting always Hie nigger who is soon eipeoted to take their planes, —Pittsburgh Post. TIMM Ostv Hors.—The only hopo the Radicals now have of carrying the eleatiene is in the negro vote. They are aware that their conduct has been so outrageously bad that they and their policy will be cottotetom oil at the ballot-box by the white men of the country They see now no other way of preventing this than Congress •assuming deepatic powers, and enfranchising the Ne groes all over the country. Hecently,fium nor, of hlassaohusetts, attempted to force upon that body ttpacittsideration of blabill for "universal stafrage," and in his remarks upon the subject he unblushingly admitted that the object of the measure waste secure Yates for the-Radical party. He sold, "in Delaware, Maryland, and Kentucky, et leas needed go increase the Union (1414 eat) 004 It would secure three thousand voles In Connecticut, and fifteen irousand to Penn sylvania. It was needed.ln New York and todiana, and in fact in every State," slwaye be iedifferent latereate. They bear t always mime. They the eart"not always White men, what do you think of this progremme t Are you willing that on gibes shall be mode voters in or4er the hey shall rut, the oeuntry.—ls. THE POOR MAN'S VOTE. JOSH BILLIMGS. John Billingo, Esq., hnn tornplk II p in the Neu , Yor4 11 - reA /,/ wllll ihe 4ollowing .ni otiraplis Thebhatoul mon is alrtus n bunting lie is &Iwo: a hunting for swathing that he don't expekt taw 'Bad, and after he bar found it, he is mad hekaitre be has These fellers don't helves, in spoke, and yet they are about the only folks who ever see enny .1 Jealous man is always happy jig in pro. politest as he is totserable Jealousy is n incense, nil it is - 11 'good deal like sea wane:is—dreadful, nick and k•n't 'vomit The Anonymous lan bonnie - Ca a red tar era, and ply, for Litz hoard by tendingilw ockaatonally Ile ain't got no GlO4ll karnk ter than the jack or spades Intelstest b. aunt trump• loafs hi prorel.ll.ll, wit hot early vices Ile rules on the boa suer in a while with the drier, and nobody thinks or asking for his stage tarn Its sprung from a respeLtnble faintly , his grandfather tees a Justiss ov the pence , but he has not got vanity mutt law brag about it Ile ain't necessarily a phool, cony more than n bull's eye watch is , if cloy body will wind him up, he will set still and run •ss quietly down^ The SOlrMon looks down when he walks upon folks Ile don't seem lew hove but one limber Julie in lion, nod that is located lb bin none lie is a kind o• masculine turkey on pa rade in air..yard lie in generally loaded with whale. clear op tew the iturAle, and when ha goe oph, makes a noise like a kaimon, hut don' dew may dimmage Lbar :men him fire mto a crowd end mix eery mant.“. This hind or .raft mon to pry handy Lew flatter They seem ten know they ain't en titled tew a good article, and therefore aro antiefled with Very hard coup. There ain't but to men who git stiff on what they aokinally. pheal Stiff men are called aristoLrate, but ,thtt ain't iae There ain't no nick thing an aria tokrats in this country. The country ain't long enuff yet, unless a man line got sum Indiask in Gus Az a general th tag in &men pit mail tired ful easy, and have tew git over it dredful easy, bekause folk. ain't apt low git n big skare at what they ain't afraid oe Shf Man had a grandfather once who went to kongreas from our distrieitt, and there ain't one in the whole familit that has been able tew get limber sine The Model Man never disturbsa hen when she is netting . never speaks cross taw lost derg ; &twos puts a five cent‘shinplas ter in his vest pooket Isle Saturday nite tow have it reedy Sunday morning for the church platter ; rites whenever a lady en ter. the street bare ; remembers yure uncle plainly, and asks after awl the family If be steps on a kat'. tale, ne is sure lew do it light, and immediately asks het- pardon ; rends the l'nrinny I hellotes, and life be {Lase be kan't help it , hooks up his wife's drese, and plays hose with the children. Never meddles with the milk to the milk polio goes easily ov errantly and mime back in season , attend. every boddy'e phuneral ; hue a/wils tell when the moon changes , thinks jilt an you do, and tollowe eve* buddy's advice but his own , prank tines most sr the miewe without - knowing it ; lends the life of n shorn lamb ; zits sick utter a while , end 1111,1111 9.11 us he kan to save making runty further trubble. 'Fife model man's 1110 e, are not fearell,nor Its virtews respeckted Ile lives in the memory of the vturlditst shoot sr long on a pleasant day dun Ile may be called a 'klceer feller," ant ihat to only a libel ; knit be will git Lti re ward beleafier—When the birds gil (heirs The Lancaster !WWI, the pedigree of Henry W Williams, the Radical candidate for Supreme Judge '•The Radicals of Pennsylvania kagt the most wonderful admiration for reuMne Democrats and I inporietl ankees, When ever they do especial honor to any man it may be safely predicted that be belongs to one or the eller class. John Scott, who presided over the Radical State Convention, belongs to the Rest class, and Henry Wil liams, the candidate for Supreme Judge, to the Second. Mr Williams is an orignal Connecticut lankee. Ile Is vend In be a fair lawyer, and hasbeen an associate Judge in the court of Allegheny county , but he is almost unknowiti either to the bar or the people of this State Ile is said not to be popular in his own section, and it is sure that Judge,Sharswood, with his great abil ities and high character, which have made him known to every voter in Pennsylvania, will have greatly the advantage of the con test. BEAUVMUL AND 'Taus.—Education does not commenoe with the alphabet It begins frith a mother's love—with a father'. mile of appfdtildlotiror a sign of reproof—with a slater's gentle forbearance—with a handful of flowers in a green and dainty meadow -with bird'a,lteata admired, but untouched- - with crateping s ante, and almost imperetepti ble enimeta—with pleasant walks Ineehady lanes, and with thoughts directed in sweet and kindly tones and words to nature, In nets of benevolence, to deeds of •irtue and to the sourer, of 'Mimed—le Ciptihitoself Erchange I'mte sit TOLL.—You are a Radical—s genuine Republican. Tell no— flow dolbu restore the Union? Row do you preserve s'Constitution? Inn . 'have you banefitted the negro? Who was benegtted by the war How much better off Is the poor man now than before the war 1 Why not exempt the poor working men as well's@ the rink bondholders? Which benefited this country the most— Demoarsoy whioh made, or Republicanism whioh destroyed it Why tax the poor soldier who fought for his country, and exempt from all taxation the speculator who staid at home sod stole from his country 2—Br —An amendment disirmsehmement all who voluntarily went into the retiellion was adopted by the New York Constitnional Convention. Ose conferring suffrage upon boys of eighteen, was referred. ITIME OUR Cht A D Nothtog ie our arru, we hold mir pleasure• Just • lutlolthile, ere liter are te I . one Be life roiltor , r vut Nothing it our own screw our dead. They ere t/ure, and hula .111 falthful keeping hare floret er, all they t ook .way Cruel life eau never et it that eleepu Cruel tune eau never serre that pre% . Just. e palt,,truth laden, g a r,. 11.)1 rams ho.n en Human are the great whom we re% ere N.. true . tnnu of hauor eau be gut en. .he wreath Iles n Eurtern I Purr llow the children teat e tie , and no tree, ',lngot of t but nulling, angel baud— Clone, forever gone, and in their place. IPeary men and women eland. Yet we bar e mine little tines still ours, They beet:kept the hatiy smile, we knothill Which we kneed one day and hid with lers * on their dead white fat ha long ago. When our jay is hist, and life will take a, no memory tit the past remains , Sate with some strange, cruel sting, to make it Bitterness beyond all present pain• Death, more tender hearted, lea% es to a,,r,,,re Still the radiant I.lindole--fond regret {Ye shall find, in tonic far, bright to morrow - Joy that he her taken, living )et la love tour, a nd do wo dream we know it, Bound with all our heart strings, all our ow■ Any cold and cruel dawn may allow it, Shattered, dearer:tied, ON ertbr..w• Only the dead hear eYoriske u. never Lose, that 1., death's loyal I are has lied Is thus non., rated oar, foresee And no ell sign can rob u. "(oar dead s o when fuze mane to bermge oar city, Dun our gold, or make our flowers fall, Death, the angel, 1 outer in uric end pay, And 'low. e our treaoure4, <anima th, m all —Err/luny, ' THIS THAT. AND THE OTHER M th e ..,11,•01.13.9. whipper 1.1 ban, lat vt it h n title of t 2 and eon.. —it in tint termliain Young promisee to ntiolieh polygmne 11% ROMS no the Union in ITIZES —A 36obile paper iipeitkit of Mr Raymund, an "that earl-spoken and mild mannered Radi cal sat age." —A lady brought before the police eon rt o f Clow eland for dronkenne•e wore $5,01111 worth of thainunde. —.Hare •care," paid a quaker to-an aim. situ young man. "that tuayest run thy face against nay list." —Twenty thousand Americans are cilium ted to have crossed the Atlantic, from west to east, Pince February lent. —A fellow went to Scarboro' fur his health —to pick up a littlo—and picked up enough to send him to pruon for threo yours, —Somebody it preparing a 'biography of Den Wade; di which ho will probably be •'Wade in the balance and found wanting." —"I can't find bread for my fain aly," mud a lazy fellow to company "Nor I," replied an •Indurtrioun 'oilier, "I'm obliged to work for estimated the: the Philadelphia ramp meeting will be the most extensive une ever held in America by the Metbodieft (rater- diabolical attempt was recently made to blow up a foundry and machine shop at Bha• within, by ca.tening down the safety-valve with a bruit. Squire, bristlier of Jacob Squire, of flirt place, unA ono t 7? the earliest settlers of Er e ruunty, Ohio, died March '3l, in the 90th year of hie age --The rage for d won.. ie eu eir.ng in Chl. sago, that a negro sued for a emparat ion from a woman with whom he lived, but to whom he had nee er been married. ----The abolition of imprisonment for debt is gradually conquering a place to the Eagle!. - t ion of every Europeep country. Even France has now adopted the reform —Now that "tilting hoops" an going out of fashion, let one thing be mid in their favor , — the wearers of thew were never liable to arrest for "hat mg no bable mean• • of support." Bacon beautifully !MA "If a man be gracious tusk; strangers, it shows he Is eiti• ren ,Jr the world, and his heart is no wland rut I a from I tiller lands, but a eontinent that join,' Irea I them SEM --The Sw tee Federal rdie shooting match is about to commence at Seliwts, near the spot where IVilltate Tell shot Hessler The differ ent prison offered represent is talus of 311,000 franc. It liar been lung kill. n that Garibaldi WWI planning another expedition againet Rome. Ile has now issued a mandarin, by which he de clares that hir cone and frientifiiiwill tight for the Liberty of Home. -o , t ford hen ',..onfetral up. Mr. Robert Drowil. a illphuns of :Heeler of Arts. Exeept, hi (ho rune aeono few rojw,L fietennwges, no onofunce the Duke of iVellinlihn in 4 haw been thus honored. —The Declaration of Independence was read to the negro. of Memplus on the Fourth at A pie-u to. They became highly anceneed, and the wont of thorn left, declaring they didn't go there to bear such . 'd—d rebel staff --The Atlimtic cables an paying vary handsomely. The receipts of the put year w it is estimated, reach L 450,000. They would be still greater if the rates were reduced. The cables are not employed one fourth of the time. ,---"Hasn't four hone got the heave. ," asked a custoleer. "Heaves, is re , exclaimed the apparently •e -toolsbed owner. "An' If he's any better for the heaves, he has 'em; if not, the devil • bit hu he!" chasrful amp u►med Culliaosi, who has been officiating as • Methodist clergyman in Middlefield, Conn., proves to be • bigamist with lour wives living and the soent at the pen itentiary poA;gding his pretended clerical robes. —Quite a number of persons la the North.. nest have lost largo sums of money by holding their wheat after it had reached very high fig ures. One man lost 0,000 on 5,0011 buehele. A few in this vicinity considerable in the mate manner. ' —A pert young lady was walking one morn. niron the Blayne, at Brighton, when ebe en. mitered the celebrated Wilkes. "Yon nee,. .bserred tho lady, "I am come oat for a little an and air." "Yon had better; madam, get a Ulla husband end." —A forlorn fellow says thus plaintively "When Sally's arms her dog imprison, I always wish my neck was hi en ; how often would I stop and turn, to get a pat from • hand like 'men ; and when she kiwis Tower's nose. Oh ! don't I wish that f were those."' - • —The contributors to the [Amid ei monu ment are demaoding to knew what has become of their money. No matter whet has become of it.. - It cannot be pot to a more disgraceful pur pose than building • nimmunent to such a man as tineola, whose life was • withering dense to his oojtaWy, I:3= To look upon it, as, filled with rich, ruby it sparkles and glows in its crystal habitation,we may term It a thing of beauty but ere long. wrkarcertain by the baneful 'oftener , it...sects upon mankind. ibat the serpent though invisible is none the less ' - 'l .- •01101110 UN We have seen many • promising youth, possessing all that we so much admire in the young, and, in every sense of the word, xu ornament to society—mak to the very depths of poverty and dtagrace, by too fre quent indulgence in "wine cupc' r 'The first drink was liken at some social gather ing, and almost before the victim is aware, the appetite, for strung drink has gained suck mieendency over him that he will not scruple to partake of the most poisonous liquors, that it may be satiated. The foun dation of life fast crumbles away , and, ere long, the miserable creature goes down to a drunkards grove N 0731 We have instancea_such as this in every day life Why au ei repetitions! Why will rtui our youth take warning! We have seen the light die away front many a happy fir... Me—the glow of health from mill a ivy cheek hod why • The denuth Drunk oma, hos intruded there. Contentment sod the "wine cup," pros peiity and drunkenness, cannot exist In the sante atmosphere That which nourishes the one, is f nil to the oilier Morrow sad desolation follow in its train, and the sighs end tears of broken hearts are it. only har vest (0 how numerous the victims of the scoursed bowl, They are found not only among the ignorant, hut often, eery often, non of Weill, education and position enter, not blindly, the ranks of King Alohoho and spend their few remaining days in do ing blinimmage It seeks not only - the fa ding, bit (Amens its hold upon the bud just bursting—just giving an idea df future loveliness, and almost before we are aware, the work is finished. It destroys not only its immediate steams, but sissy, many cold forms do we lay away whose lips wine has never polluted,but yet horn wise has killed. . We have seen the destructive influence which isle only fiend exerts—bow almost imperceptibly be ineinuales himself Into the very bosoms of our f+milier, driving therefrom every actublanee of prosperity. We should, then,. by giving our influence and example to the -temperance reform, aid iu exterminating this evil By doing so we stay restore warmth to 'many a cheerless beartheione,and joy to tnettr a heavy heart Young roes, if you to aught that is good and nohle,bt wait; of the • wine cup " A TOUCHING PASSAGE flow eloquenily does Chaulaubriend re ply to the inquiry ••Is there a (foil !" Our French brethren in Masonic orror should receive this lesson from their oouoirymen : -There is a God; The herbs of the val ley, the cedars of the mountain, bless Him; the insect sports in Ills beam ; the elephant salutes him with the rising orb of day ; the birds sing to Ham an the foliage; the Mea tier proclaims 11am in the limens ; the ocean declares flip immensity. Man alone has said there is no God. Unite in thought at the same instant, the most beautiful ob jects in nature Suppose you see at once all the hour, of the day and all the seasonal of the yew. ; a morning of spring and a morning of autumn.; a night bespangled with stars,and a night covered with clouds; meadows enameled pith flowers and forests hoary with anew ; fields gilded by the tints of autumn ; then alone you will have a just conception of the universe. While you are gazing upon that sun which is plunging under the vault of the West,an other observer admires him emerging from the gilded gates of the East. By what in conceivable magic, does that aged star which is sinking fatigued and burning in the shades for the evening, re-appear the lam* instant fresh and humid with the rosy dews of morning At every instant of the day the glorious orb is at once rising, resplen dent at noon-day, and setting in the West ; or tither our senses deceive us, and there is properly speaking no East,Weet,oeffauth in the world. Everything reduces itself to • tingle point, from whence the King of Dey eendeforth at once a triple light in one subsiance The brightest splendor is that perhaps which nature clan present, that is most besuliful, for while it gives us an idea of the perpetual magnificence and resietlese power of God, it exhibits at the same time _lining bonge of the glut ions Trinity. The little Jacobins, like Minium roosters in a biro-yard, crow loudly and shrilly about their "loyalty " They say they are '•loll" and feel happy in the contemplation of the thing; but did they ever ask them selves what ..loyalty" implies, and what a really contemptible, position an American rill:01 pieces himself in when be says he's loyal Subjects owe loyalty to, ruling, princes. American cane's, only allegiance to lam The tortes of the Revolution oltaimed to owe loy alty to George the Third, and the 'subjects of all monarchical governments practice loyalty or disloyalty to their kings emper ors, sultans and czars. Rut in Republican America, there never has been any one man ruler, or thing, to which a free damn owed loyalty. The word smacks of tyranny, Old World tomfoolery and Now World stupidi ty. The pereistentAssutoption of the Kept Haan party, therefore, that they are the "loll" party, means that they are what they are daily proving themselves to be, the ens mitts of4he democratic or republican form of government. No true Democrat will degrade Ms party, prinalpies, or person by acknowledging loyalty to any ruler, party or *reed Ai a freeman, • sovereign himself, loyalty to meaninglou, as there Is nothing in the true Warhingtonlan and Jeffersonlan character. of government to give the term applicabill ties. Au American °Risen, we assort, owes loyalty,lo nobody and nothing. Allegiance is due from him to law—laws made in con formity to the higher law of the Comilla tion,to God sod his family. He is,or ought to be,wbat his fathers intended him lb be— • freeman in every We despise loyalty. There is nothing in the term to win our our respect. It Is 1• our own land eynonymons.nriti war, bare lag bon.as,ooollagr•tiona,oppreesioo,ylme, wrong, tyranny, furor% lessee and moboe regy. It is • transplant host foreign shores, and will wither end di* as Whits the •uWilemoogany.rises.- - Jriles (►llh.) Sensual peat Border. —General Malts. commander of the Carolinas.it Is roperted,llves is rest was in Charleston. •Uoappoetra N thallionsa so pleasant albinism'a hi a oarrisgs MTh/ tour splendid black horses. rim spleadfill tuner mountings, treaerally with Ids dano sow beside hits, and a earvavt in livery Is and This splendid establlaluaust *t heta!' the enthusiasm of the negro popahl doe. [lot tie WIT CriNl• THE WINE OUP. I=
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers