VIRGINIA FUIT The aurae of lontnonwimith is pest end gone, —Rpm, Ode to VI lire, awl...Lim —the work of 4ps(ruction is done 'ln rime of the hest of the Stites hes been run, The gull° of her Coes finds its triumphs at Jut, And Virginia, like Poland, belong. to the post. llow her story the heart's deapeet re% area° stirs! 4, What a stature, altiltue and heroic, woe here ! What a grace, what a glory, her presence ad orntng, In the fresh dewy light of f tir Liberty's mnru• ing ! In that day ol hor enrly °spends she canto With her dowry or empire, her birthright fame, Ti, enrich and ennoble, on land and.,un era, The Republic her Washington'tlalor wad free Amt what griminess resplendent it won through her love, Leeithe eloquent pep of the annalist pin., Wherein though tne . page is now blotted with Ware, Virginia but ever as Empress appears The nation's decrees did her counsellors mould,* And bar orators' words wero an apploi of gold, blur epplalne triumphant, Minot and ashore, ===EM And for this her children disgrace•.] nut their eves, That they grove to heed lighted their liberty Ares, That they hailed her ne rightfully wearing the crown, For this hatijrar enemies trampled her 110W11. flow low lies she now, etript of half her donna, Bewailing her sans who in battle wore plain, With the shade of on infinite sadness nl her, Awl all she hired dearest, oil lost, hut her honor' Thank,flearen! that is : with a nunlnees !Well rs t, Let the tyrants th t role for the hour do their worst , She in,Ly bleed 'nenth the hoot of the hireling invader, They luny spuil, they may rood, but they can not degrade her. Let then, sulekgate nature- 1 -enraged, let the!. peek To dram the broad waste of the blue Chess peak.), Lot there meal up the aoureos whence rusho Itull Bun, Awl shut' out from the Valley the !nee of the • Let thee. fitlnify feet—withaut 0000010000 0 Let them paralyze Jatittee nod ulantwie Truth; Fair Truth, wiz accept of Asir poet the Itrie -That .the years of the (teamed eternal are thine.) Vet tub record remains r .lo the garment o song, Tho legend ufJaekson her praise shall prolong And l's• dos Usreno crushed dawn though it be Shill spring to the light is tip story of Leo! Frew the attitutth abyentah when, proetrate she Virginia the %mist., never may rine ; For already the iron bath entered the soul And behold ut tbe fountain all broken tho bowl, Bat to - fttel redrthation themcomet h the day ; The maker hath pritawswllt / otoll reply And wo to the people Ile mulles wall Ilia root to that terrible day of tho vonoeanee of tiro , G00,cf.." •To mould a mighty State', deems, And shape hke,whisper of the throne. Teter.v.a. bi Alehtorle n • , _ "REGONSTROCITION" AGAIN !- ITS IMPORTANCE! We gave our renders, last weesk, a !cm ark role On "Reconstruction " We are vol ell frirna "Itecov tartlet ion." We think tt is n thing4t,i .,,, lt t:ty, that ought to be done, but lb:0, , Lie, must be dot, --a thing flint must re' done, so far as p add.,' We hinted, lost week, that a new putting up of n narrow building wan not a "recon struction" of a brood one , nor a top lofty building a "reconstruction" of ono not too For to the air; nor a brink building a "re construction" of an old marble one ! Ito- eonetrnet ion supposes a reasonable eon furtnity, in material, and form, lo the thing of which it 99 I reeonetruet ion We noted, moreover, that, with a elect surprming immunity, the people of the South are in favor of "reconstruction ," And that it is a minority of the whole peo ple, token North and South, that are againat a "reconstruction" of the Union, on its old trbite stifTsoge basis, inoluding V troinia, the Carolinas, licorgin, and the rest,now damn ed as a Herten of military perfect ores IV° intimated, moreover, that President Johnson was not a merry-Androw, only be cause he wne a very sad Andrew—and that he was FIN seeing the lams executed, accord- Ingle his oath Well, we think it best to leave our last week's article to be digested a little longer, before giving a new tattle's :neut. We have so nineli to say in favor of .• reconsleuetion" that we jktvp a large option . . as to whore to begin For this number of our paper, we think, pm hops, it will be enough to show how our finances ought to be reconstructed." As to restoring anything like our old happy tones, under Democratic rule, with a huge paper debt banging over the people, it is out of the question We must get rid of the debt, but don' In medicine, we have been astanehed at the effects of the treatment based on the prin ciple untilia situations curantar. •'A disease is cured by superb:o4lmeg, artificially, a lode set of symptoms " Iran ear is frozen by contact with intensely' cold co, cold mow in applied, to draw out the Croat ! I ( a handl he scalded in very hot\welee ex posing the part to the dry heat of an open fire is an admirable allevialme. Accept, or n6L, the medical - law, we want to bee it applied in finance We are suffer iug front too many and to heavy United States Bonds—moat of them payable, inter est and principal, in told. IVs want•tp curs these Bonds wait lireenbackail That will he, 814.1i111 •.11161/1' .•bike by like I" That will, in, a very attert time, pay of the Bond holders • in their - own coin," or in their own rags! Those of tut who have never rectigaixed these Bonita as a legitimate debt due by the people of the United Stater, will net have much trouble in helping thus to ''cure like with like l" For others, who, in their lanocens!, ask if this Is not a "nem way to pay olddebta," we have toshow that it Is simply an old war of paying new debts! here are proofs: e idow of au honorable olilsen of New York Slate, her deceased humbeeda estate having been sett. ed Up in 1859, found her self in possession of about twenty thoueand dollars. She wished to invent It safely,so a fund from 'Atoka educate her fatherless ehildreu. Eel a ssured her elle had bet ter iurest in Now Yuri Stale Bowls! She did so, and, her nearest friend, living in Car %din, she went thither,with herehildren long as these bond, paid in eeeee t in gold, she did very well. Out when the glorious United States "Ooreroment"—Lineoln,Elsw ard, Cbase,and their Congrees..-mideprena harks a legal Wader, this poor *talon wa e belated. When It got so bad that It look two and I halt gretlahacl► dollar.; to wake one Canada, or gold dollar, she quits Canada, and came book to New York, to try and Hie on greenbacks. Now, we object to this impoverished widow being forced to pay (axe, on the remnants of her greenbacka; to mate United States b . ondholdere millioqat ! The United &Wet government matlttyntitiGarks a legal tender for her contract-angel,' with the Slate of New York. That Government did, thereby, im pair the validity of contracle ! did make something besides gold awl ether • legal leader for debts ooniraoted to gold. ... • r ... a i I I 1 1 1 1 111 . 1 1 "STATE lUGUTS AND FEDI/IiAX. UNION." • _ . . . , VOL. XI I what., r sympathy we may have for the credttors of governments that con tracted debt/31.1th no recognition of any other .•money" than gold —we have very little for any who lent mono, on faith of being wild in yob/ to adoreroment that had Jut marinated the paying off of gold debts with greenbacks! Front the day, to 1861, when the United States Government came into violate eon iracta ea gold, mato declare greenhaeil pure e a legal trod, 11ir debts in gob!, we leave the creditors of that government to Caine other esort thou a plea of equity, to get an - Y. lug but greenbacks for the loans made to .ilelt an administration of government ! Alexandet Smith died in 1860, It y r ti,tt n the early spring of 1861, that hi■ execn- tors closed tip his estate The time. were very gloomy, It was doubtful what real property, a )ear or Iwo later, might fall tool) New York A sale was made; On what was considered very advantageous Om ins, of real estate near this city. The properly wits sold for oa certain ■mount down, and fur fifty thousand dollars, secured on hood and mortgage, to be paid within fire years, any time the purchaser chose to pay it The purchaser elected .14) pay oil the mortgage to 1811{, at a time when green beck. were worth less than forty coals en t Rio dollar ' The num..' worth of the prop erty sold had, meantime, more than doubled. Its price. in yold, in which the transaction was made, would have been a little less Iran in 1861. Ilut the government come in, and comp./fed a family of helpless or phans to take greenbacks , as a legal tender for gold ! lt,nompelled them to take twen ty thousand dollars, gold value, for what bad been mild fondly thousand' The guardian of these poor orphans of Mr Smith, invested these twenty thousand, dollars, of gold v,.lue—nominallyfifly thou sand (Greenbaohs)—an bond and mortgage. But the Band-holders, with their eyes °pent to the foot that the Government had repudi ated payment of debte to gold, onntraoted with that government for Bonds to be paid in gold ! ..1t is but the Bret step that le hard !" That is an old proverb I Bond holders made a commit, on a gold basis, with a government that had At enforced the principle of paying yold debts with green back., ! If the Bond-holders did not have their eyes open to the character of the par ty they were dealing with, it is their own fault ! Hut, tins is not all ! The fifty thousand greenbacks, of Mr Smith's pour orphane— paid to them when only worth twenty the eigibt,pl.rold—is now taxed to pay to gold theee Bank that were contracted by a go, ernment that had already avowed the pow er of making greenbacks a legal tender for gold ! To ''reconsiruot" the, finances' of the countly, is' a I necossatY 'step toikards a "gerteralYrecoditruetion So, however old Mr Moneybags may roll up his eye. at the proposltton, we put it at the people, square —what the poor orphans had to take for the gold value of tgl,teeessed father's prop erty—what th or widow had to take for ber gold Investment in Slate stooks, Mr Moneybags, and Mr. Shoddy, and all tbat sot, will hove to take for their loans to a Government that, at the very moment these bonds were given, was enforcing the accep tance of a greenback only worth forty dol lars as "legal tender" fur the debt of one hundred dollars. This tzloblsslied 0001010 of the United States Government, is why we call it right ly an old way of paying new debts," We eubitut this item of a true •'recon struction" to the meditation of those whams gold bus, already, turned I'o :greenback.. Give us one currency for oll!-AN. I', Free man'. Journal THE WIFE Onig„let a woman be sure that ehe is precious to her husband—not useful, not valuable, not convenient simply, but lovely and beloved'; let her be the recipient of hie polite and hearty attention, lot her feel that her care and love aro noticed, appre ciated and returned, let her opinion be ask ed, her approval sought, and herjudgement reapected in matters cf which she i r cogni zant; in short let her only be loved,honored and cherished, in fulfillment of the mar- range vow, and ebe will be to her husband, her children, and society, a well spring of pleasure. She will bear pain, and toil and anxiety, for her husband's love to her le n tower ands fortress Shielded and shel tered therein, adversity will have lost its sting. She may suffer, but sympathy will dull the edge of sort ow. A house with love in it—and by lore I mean love expressed in words, in looks, and deeds, for I have not one spark of faint in love that never crops out—ia to a house without love, as • per son to ■ machine ; one is life, the other is meolianlsm—they unloved woman maybes., bread just as light, a housejust as tidy ss the other, but the the latter has a spring of beauty about her, n joyousness, an aggres sive, penetrating and pervading brightness to which the former le a Wenger The deep happiness in her heart @biles out in kWh hoe. She gleams over it. It is airy, end iiraostul, and warmand welcoming with her presence ; she le full of devisee and plot., and sweet surprise for her husband and family. She ha. never dope with the romance and poetry of life. She herself la lyric poem setting hereelf to all pure and gracious melodies -Humble betusehold ways and duties have for her o golden eignW canoe The prize makes her calling h igh and the end sanctifies the meane, "Love is Heaven, and !leaven is love." —The New York retbtone lately espreesed a fear fur the result of the coming election in Ohio, bowies some of the counties" were fettled, yam elle. by a sehool-hating, rum_ loving breed of Pennsylvania Dutch," a class of people who, it ear, are "fearful of smalgamation," and who "can't abide 'Nigger Edna lily." These are the utter - Knees of the prinelpal organ of Judge W ll llama' party, and Is °omitted In almost the same terms used by he New England en dorsers of Mr. Wlllama. The —Pennsylva nia Dutch" will teach Judge Williams and their retliers among hie Meads tha they have leonSti a flitting or two"in tha "school of saperienoe"—one of which is to selec t for affirm in P Irani& men who ar e identified with the laws, institutions and Constitution of Pennsylvania, Instead of stray Yankees who have eons. into the State to propagate negro suffrage and other about - IttaUoas.-- , -Ps trio! # IMPORTING NEGROES TO. GOVERN PENNSYLVANIA When the Rid nchninisirs. lion commenced negro emancipation upon the ridiculous plea of "military neliesnity," it was urged as an objection that Northern States would soon he over run with negroes. The Radical looters. organs nod preachers decarred in reply thatefraSoutherti negroes would forever remain in South—that it was the I{uly climate fitted for ibeni,ko No sooner was the Freedmen's Bureau es- Almhed, however, than the tliipment of negroes into the Northern Stales commenc ed offices wero established in all the prin. :ilia' Northern cities, and agents were sent out in every direct ion therein., to virtue places for the sorplun dark!. who rOllll.l their sly into the Federal Capital. For nearly two years past the Burt au has been quietly driving this buisness The weekly chil , went has perhaps averagfli two Mind red—distributed 111 await lots to each of the Northern States, and ench lot so divided and placed that the people have never Ell, petted the llll.vement During that period not less than fifty thousand negroes have been scattered over the Eastern and Miadle Statee—generally ste hotel and house tier rants The numberdistributed throughout Westmn and Sortharstern Slates is largely in excess of that number. Philadelphia Pitleborg and Ihri burg have had hundreds of Southern negroes added to their popula tion, whilst there isnot a town or village in the Stole that does not contain one or more ' strange dark ies The new Itadical programno Ly which negro eulirage in to be forced upon nll the Border and Northern Slates Through an ac t , of the Rump ingress, next winter, requires the presence of a large number of "colored citizens," if the Radical party are to reap any benefit (tom the measure ,The native negro population of itself is not sufficient 111 any one of the Northern Slates to com petiolate for the loss of white •otes which the Radical party is continually sustaining hence agrent influx from the South is ali• solutely necessary to ensure Radical sup remacy. New York, according to the cen sus of 18G0, (and it,lian lost in negroes sjoc then,) can All ofil? 1000,1 black votes of native growth ; Pennsylvania, about 11, 000, Ohio, about 7,600 • and Now Jersey opout 6,000 These figures, provided every vote ikeast for the Radical party, would ii balance the losses. The necessity for er importation. is therefore rendered imperative, and we are assured the Bureau is using every exertion to induce Southern "colored citizens" to locate in the North, assuring them that,.after one year's resi dence, they will certainly be allowed to vole, hold offices, ail on juries, and be in vested with every other civil and politi cal right and privilege poscased by the white citizens of the Northern Staten. The rdlotre Record, An influential or gan of the Radical party of this Stale, late ly stated that the Williamsport Colhintion, which nominiated Ilenry W Williams for the Supreme Court, did not declare ID favor of en amendmentOkking the word "while'. from the Stale Constitution because, the Radicals of Cuogres had come to an under standing to pass a bill nest winter to en force negro suffrage upon all the Northern States Not a single Radical leader or organ has denied the statement of that newspaper The platform erected for Judge Williams hears internal evident of this ne farious, underhanded scheme In not one of its resolutions does it mentiou the word constitution, or Any alierepledge the Mind '- date to abide by 'tiortlltiOtonal guarantees or obligations. Il leaves him free to act as though the Constflution had not au exis tences Whilst thus 'goofing the organic law, it rcqu ireh Itim to 'race the Supremo Court in liarmoti'y with the political opin ions of the majority of the people " That ie, if elected by the Radical party, he mug , ignore all lowa, and constitutions and de cide every question and case in accordance with the partisan opinioue of the leaders of that. If the leaders of that party inCon green pass a bill to enforce negro suffrage in Penneylvania,ln dellaneeof the State Consti tution, lie nowt place the Supreme Coot-win harmony" with that bill, or act in bed faith to the majority which elected him. The plat form further pledges him to make the Su premeCoart "a faithful' interpreter of the liberal spirit of the ago, "(the ruling negro mania,' and "an impartial and fearless ex ponent of the equal rights of men." These declarations and pledges to ntgroiem, in the abacence of all obligations to suelain the State Constitution, need no elutidation They chow moat unmietakahly that Judge Williams is a party to the base plot to de. etroy our Stale Constitution and to sub merge the white role of the State beneath that of a horde of ignorant Southern blacks who are sent into the State by the Negro Bureau for that purpose. , The voters of Pennsylvania must be on the alert. Therellll4ois of Southern negro°s now wiihi . Should the Radios] plot not be o er-thrown, there trill be perhaps fifty thousand unthin our borders on November, 1808„ punts tied tooth a years ree• acme to dote, wider the 6111 which the Rump Congress will certainly pass at the winter ses sion, and which will as certainly be approved by Judge Williams, ti elects! to the Surpremst Court! Aro you prepared for this, vote* of the Old Keystone ? Are you willing Jo give to a horde of Southern negroes the balanort of power in this good old Common wealth! If not re)eot•llenry W, IVilliame and vote for Judge Shorewood, who Is pledged only to themaintenanoe of the Cpn elltoljon and the laws —/ air sot f Union MARIIIIALLINO Hie Poetise —Wendell Phillips appear. to have the undisputed leadership of the Jacobi. party, sinoe Gree ley fell front graee. Phillips has made • speaoh on the Orissa, la which he predicts another atoll war. Theßzpreet thinks be I■ a proper man to hold snob opinions, as he wan a pesos man la war and a war mai in peso, and never loot a drop of blood, or gore a dollar out of his abundance, to put down the rebellion The philippic Phillips informs hie follow ere, that they will not do their duty until Mho name of • bleak man Las been placed upon the ballot for Vim, President, for the purpose of strengthening the party." There can be no question but that this arrange ment would make the Jacobins •strong." But his political pupils. may Inquire, why not put the strong man first, and so get the whole benefit of the Infusion 1-11 s. BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY SEPTEMBER, 7, 1867 [Fur the WATCHMAN THY WORD. 0 GOD, IS TRUTH." Nut so, says the skeptic, wire has merely stood by rho fountain atvl lasted of the ro vignraung waters of al,ionee Not co, lie says, for the discoveries of science peeve— if they prove anything—that many, very many declaration, of the Bible are aligurd, as well sitatintrue It is net my p:o•liire—even If I l.nd ilia ability --to pluck en much as nne fe Oiler from off the wing of science, by which her upward flight might be retarded; nor is it my purpose, by ignorant and silly ileeltinet lion, to raise the counter cry, beware of science, for her utterances nee untrue ily object in the low, brief, articles that may follow this, is to call the attention of the honest hearted reader of scripture—though of the discoveries of science-10 the Net, that e Bible ts not and never iris denigra te hr a teat book on scionoe . yot,whencver in the course of historical niZrralion, or pi our espression it notie, the outward pile ' noinena of nit tire, or lairs the confines .of science, its niterinces ire ever se/eminent ly correct Older. by many thousamlyWlTS than the ./.'4. , , , res or ~atte.. ),1, a is contindicied in no iinp,,rtant tautly n awl rigid test of rseent, rttnhhol 1 truth The heading of this ail tele, "Thy word,O God, is truth," is the key note, ihat has 50uVad....611, clear and soul iii.piring Ihriniglimit the . long successive ages 0 K tria re o Proplictnand apostles, and is now as 1111 anchor In the • , 0111, that waits and longs and hopes fain die CORIVIIIIIIMILiIOn of 114 bliss, beyond the ' , CCM, of lilac Let abe proelanned to the world that the word it God is not true—ile.itroy thi n faith and what retnains to man , Nothing Ile may then eat and drink lie the beast of the held, and lie down and perish the some Let ago forth to the world, that coon a parlor God', word is a myth, n filhio, to falsehood, and the anchor of man's faith is rudely torn away and he to cast adrift upon nolieerless, dreary and tempestuous leen On sorb to BCB-110pelOPS and desolate the enemies of faith in flaw revelation 1 , 1011141 drive and imperil the eliristian world. It may 11 1 18111 impossible. yea improbable that a onto should ever came when the en4f. mien of truth should 80 subvert .he faith, its to cngln moral blight 511.1111.80181111 o t our earth, yet it 1s none the less a font that de. proved nature has mode the attetnpl,and by Means of sophistry, ridicule and false nem, nation, liawjzioil the faith of twiny With what success has been aces and 'eh in eve or olir Ist bully But whether the inoderatfly intelligent—puffed tip with the little they know, and ignorant of the !peal unknown , or the profoundly learned bring their eunibined wisdom to search and find out the oriole rind about dilies of the Bible, or to hurl their sneers and scoffs at the ig norance of 118 authors, I apprehend we linen as little to fear for the future no for thu past If the enemy have weapons of offence, lee Lava weapons of defence. When They nosed, we can defend If it be demanded that the statements of revelation mugs he consistent wills the foots of science , we have nu equal right to do stand that the facto of science proclaim a conflict het meet) levelrtiion and scorner We hose a right to demand proof that there is a conflict, on irreconcilable conflict One that till future Inventignlion— no forger tie quaintancirWit h 1110 subject—tie future In formation, tr. rule of mica pretation eon pea sibly reconcile or harmonize. Every feet, a llegtd agarm any statement or revelation most he proved as clearly no eternal truth j bust It to a fact, and that it caunot posslbly be otherwise than it is declared to be Blatant declanners of science lose eight of a very plain law of honest investigat.one They grasp at eonie new discovery and call it a fort, then urge it ngainst revelation. A new discovery proved the fernier false The old in discarded and new the becomes the wenpon of attack, and thus th‘e assault is keptup, the formerprrausied facts, aver gin ing place to new ones This article is now longer than I intend ed it should lie. In the following I will endeavor to illustrate what is here timely hinted at in a general way THE FINANCIAL QUESTION The radical lenders just now in (rookie They hardly know how to meet the finan cial question agitating the country —The proposition to phi AT the entire debt with greenbacks was nssailed as impratienble, and denounced as indirect repudiation But when they fi,nd the Democratic" and con servative masses are in favor of abolishing the Notional Banks, and thereby saving twenty millions per annum, and substitu ting greenbacks to the full extent of the requirements of a circulating medium, and by that means eventually absorbing the en tire funded debt, they have no objection to urge, but Ignore the fame, and attempt o create party projudioomoffioleut to scours throb success This to no misrepresentation : we chal lenge any member of the radical party to meet the issue 8o far I,hey have failed to chi jt t stet we venture the assertion that tbez ;RI still fail to do cotter the simple reasSolhat they dare soh Alia the people took m elt topivissues, The radio.! lead ers have forsaken them and have engaged in a cowardly nod disreputable tirade of personal abuse. Their arguments consist in foolish betel- loge of their valor, loyalty, and empty de. Osumi'. about a Union that is Is yard of but no where to be neon If the inilligent people of Ohio can be misled by the parli sun harangue' that are now being uttered then iho Democracy will be donated But If the people act independilently end inlet /igeutly upon the lemma of the aerdpaigu the democracy will be triumphant. Will, some radical gen tleman dome forward and express bill dews upon this gunman' ques tion ? Will Gen flay.s express his views upon this sobJeott Not by any means. It rept Ire. all Ills time to talk about past Issues We feels %wave upon bottle Meld. where lb. foe has been repuleod lie is charging around over the b title-fields of 18113, with courage that would do Pals Ti?. credit p-G But when theneral*._wa, horse twvile his bead Unite airwolibn ottite Mild whore the prelim/ contest is going on, he recoil from the respoolibility, and calls to his follower. to rally around him upon the old field where they can claim a •iol.try withotit • battle. - ' AN CUTRAGEOUS AFFAIR AT CLEVE LAND TENNESSEE.---THE PULPIT ASSAILED BY SROWNLOW MINIONS ---ATTEMPT TO SUPPRESS RELI OIUS WORSHIP. An occorrettce tc.taplace Pere tilts mom log 11;a1 Is truly n •nutplo of the sprit of Ifntltc tit , op tool one iltat tile people ever, where might to hour of II wins an attioolit to w.oppr, , wieligwwii 4.1V1e,1 T • fol ow tog Ilse line history of the • Rev Th nn 1.1 II hi (Nine l're. , by , wr , - nn min.sleg residing at Cliattannogs, Tenn essee, woo muted by the members of 111 Presb . )tertan 'Church at 0111 1.1 , k0e to eon duct divine scrvieeo here to iliy 111, NI Valle tho invitation, and 00001 Jingly i• ion) op nn 8 itorday evening's 11 . 1111, my to fill he, nppointnient to d It the depot he was riot by Cap tain David resident or this ploeri find it inemberoftio•ernliellrown , uw • stair, who informed lino flat coal.{ 1101 treteh here to day 'll Ctlhe trifil 00 at tion ti, noznarliw. but Went directly In lilt boarding 1101130 'Chic (Slimily)morn ing, .0 the hour of service, the bell was rung for the congri•g ,nun to assemble Vol). soon nltei, Copt Nelson and One James ./ Kelley cone m ttching up ibe street of t be he td of droll t fifty negroes, all .aritieW: 14111.10 wain p Aqui.; mutl, hats on, and other, Wllll slacks 11111 1 I/I'k. After the grniiol army Is 01 arrived 41 the e torch, icy opened column and formed on t toll onto of the alt eel, opposite the Clitirob, after which, Nellool nit I K , lley °mere I the church, fastened down the ivoidowi, shut the door, and niacin went In lire gill!, where they placed them...lves m each side and awatte.l the nppou te't of totelity, r Very soon they looked up line rotol, .iiel at 80111 e distance they beheld tiv I oltishy form.] ap proachmg Im otedi.itely the 111111.4 tut along the Imes, .the 1.1 comnig lll' ." They recuLl .alarmed at once Nosuu would ontnoilly p 1,1 along tiro lines law I , ipeak sumo wind io cheer them lip What in grand sight' to behold ' A wpm.] of almui fifty mew well newel, beau kng the arrival of a 111,1 t inoffensive minister of the gospel, who 1111 .111.• 1y sprii tol that light before UMW winds en indispensable to his soul's salvation Slowly yet sten II nut ly these two objects approached nearer otuol nearer, when finally their features were plainly discernible, and sure enough it was the heinous monster (Rev Mr M'Callie) land Ohl lJoele Joe Miran, a plain toolleattive and ClIria11:111 farmer, who resides some ono nod a half males north of Cleveland Fin ally Mr M'Callte reached the gate lending to the door of the church, where Ito was rudely pushed back by Nelson , acoompa nied with an Oath, "You can't preach here " Mr M'Callte wished to know what authori ty they (Nelson and Kelley) hRII to prevent Ilion from preaching in that church Their answer was aril he could not preach trea son there, neither could he convert that in to a southern church Mr M'Collio informed them thot such was not his intent um, anti, es,is Lo, "I hereby notify you in the pi4sence of these lICIVIUM. Umt if you forcibly protest agninet toy entering the church to preach the gospel, I will hold you both responsible, and make you boll. necount for it before the civil tribunals of our country --Nash- Nile (Soon. A TEMPERANCE INFOKMER In the winding up of the stoty of Olivier Twist, we 101110 that one Of.tllo Meitner vil lains of the story, ''Mr Noah Clitypole, re ceiving a free pardon from the Crown its ennuiptence of honing tut not Stat ex evi dence against the Jew Papa" went, into hil•iness as an informer, 111 11 , 111011 enlhng he realises a genteel subsistence „fits plan rito walk out sin Stitiatb; !title, attended by Charlotte en respreiable , noire The holy faints iiway at Ike doors ore charitable mlllllolll'll nod the gentle man bring accutunto.biled with three peony worth of brandy to restarS lim, I inter mat inn the next day, and liockeix 11 elf the penalty Sometimes Air, Cl»ypele faints flannel r, but the result is the Paine Clay pole must have emigrated hither, to glean in the ample fields of New Eaglituil In rt recent 'oilier trial mCon nrrticv I,re poi ted m lie Hartford Ton,s,Trescot Barnes, a witness, swore that he was paid $.2 a day and lint expqlll9ll, by the lien II S Platt, of IV inetml,thn agent of the (I rand Lodge of Good Tempters. that 1114 10181110[0, Wto to buy tend d 1 ilik liquor FO as In procure evi idence against liquor, ILnt be wits direct ed to di ink by the agent of the Order; that he drinks front three to twelve I intro p day' that he itas to lie by and recruit after his arduous labors , that he spend one day at a saloon gambling; that he is bound to obey the ceders of the agent who appointed him; that he wits pledged to secrecy and would refuse to reveal the works of his department in, a court ofjuattee ; that he did not kite* that society had any protection again. false and malicious charges, except his own integrity ; that he did not think it wrong or dishon,rable to ask for liquor, pretending to be in the habit of using It, and then to base the seller prosecuted fur the crime he has Induced biro to cammit —.4fbany d epos -Judge Williams, of Connect icul, the "nutmeg" candidate for the Supreme Bench is well 'known to be in favor of negro equal ity, and eat neatly advocates the striking of the word "whqo from the Constitution of Pennsylvania This Pontoon Yankee jurist received his early training IA the higher Inn dodtritte of Now England, and has al ways remained t rue to the faith of hid fail, crs fie is a worthy disciple of that pecu liar school to which !bp New York Trt6,tne belongs, and dottl i tless shared In the opin ions of that Journal which recently referred to the hoobst German saltier. of Penneyl ennla as ..the sehool-hating, runodoring Doleh... How 44n the people note for 4066 4 onneildate.—greannyo. ,--TAe Boston Trawler, en ortholtaelte publican paper, any.: t•The Government le swindled out of $100,003 annually by MAP. feature's of whisky. The greater part of ibis itnmense num conid be collected were our government what it ought to be; butes it is nothing but a political dub it has to eubmicto the loss, sod also has to plunder the poor because it cannot melee the rich whiliky Manufacturers pay their Juat pro portion of taxes. 'Tis a new and Immense fu I whisk, Rourreotioa." MOTHER! HOME ! HEAVEN ! I Mai her • Ilurne ' the i lase bea can lighio inn life s u eon nil MO ner the in easy. warite or wilier, they 101 ehei & ig light IQ ihe mini 111 horse I inirill7r roil when siirruien a irk clued kites the blue sky, and Ole Irvmhled waves rine higher null higher. rring with ill° winds. lie Oei`ll Lie tin) hark In and &irefully avu tiling the broken hopes that like rinks lie bid lon beneath the trencher owl whets. rob II" Mel heel in the gol den rays niarlike w tlier ' flume' (leaven 't•• • 110 , 1ely mny the wares lb tell a lii the rocky rovst below Rini, loud Inv the winds roar antKhantil)eir solemn psalm. and lightnings tiny blurb and ilmndeia roll, yet he bngery cilia nnirobled, in Innr'n "la castle, turning over the records of the past, and re id ing with lereno eyes the dim prophecies o f the futtire. Far hack to the benot ty,ts of long ago—he sees the form of !other, and feels the soft touch it( her lips ns she press 4,14 loving hl,lB. Ull lbe baby brow ,or, to 11, quiet of 111.1 loved Home, bents her sweet vote, as she leaches 161,11, with closed eyes null reverently foltlitt,bands,to repeal, 'Obir P oiler, rho art m Ile.vven, and then In ,kn,far into the rotor°, nod itnctes the tune aheatly at hand wil l !, lie Anil anchor his bark on the shore pi Etellllly, nod trend wttli 4. joyogn slips Ihe golden Nlrcel4 of ILe Ileasenly or linger by the etyslvl UnICIS of the Hirer of Life with glad drams of welome to h tin from the Aug,' I holt+ gathered nronntl (toil's Throve. THEY BEGIN TO COMPREHEND A portion of the 11.ttlo:ula RV,: grotto thy aw atoning to as deo, of conactottaotoat that ettablett them to lot E41.7e Iho results of their pulley We quote flout the Ntar 7 ork Ile, old of IS recent dale . ' In stew of Out stilling tran+fer of our 11 t uellal balance of powni we are onll oil up on to plume and 6iiislde:y idle in °liable con serlitebees#f After a terrible il war of four years, la:miring the b100t13., sacrifice of over half .t million of ablu'ltodied num and putting upon the country the heavy burden of 11.4111°0 , mnd of debt we were rolua from the political &polio noon of throe hundred thousand Southern slaveholders Heavy as leers the costs of this liberation from a tyrannical mil ul3O - olisrachy, the end itchie•ell was silll regarded with proud exultation, we amply rowan dug us for all our contributtons in men and money But if the power wielded in their day by those three hundred thous and domineertng white eloveholders is to bo transferred to their four millions of ignorant, debased and credulous negro slaves, we may well inquire what bate we gained or where are to be our compensa lions for all these stupendous , Z , fforts and sacrifices required to put down the, slave holder 's rebellion l—Ara we drafting from oho 'excesses of liberty, equttlim? and fra ternity' to a French reign of terror, o(-to the bloody reprisals of St Domingo, or to that fusion and couluston of aces which culminated in Mexican anarch Yes, which is it, sore enough v I:QUA LITY —On het liaturday night at the speaking on Brood street, we noticed a Radical who was talking with the negroes abort equality, advising them to •lemand their social rights I tall negro evidently front this country but sharp sr ithal,said to hint "Aro 3no willing for ur niggers to art in your parlor, court your daugliiets, accom pany them to cluttch and balk and marry them Mr Rid commences to east mn what equality was, and what he meant "No, uo !" cried the negro, •'what I want =1 ••\}'ell,•• said Mr llnd , • I war rained —" • No matter erltar you waf r tired," inter rupted the negro, • dot and got nothing to do wid it, you is tither in favor oryou and I would like you to %flaw er my que.it Mr It td !nett agaln awl rig un 10 explain his potation on that gartteular fenture of negro equality, and every time the negro would Map him and demand a •yes or no :" so he finally gave it top. leaving Ilre negro mauler of the field We believe in the old negro'e manner of answering white LUAU cabs when they preach op negro equality,— Nor/i dazrlle. STATKA —Dal nRy decent ',Re publican" ever dream that hie purty would Inak• Nruno STATKA of ten Sates of this once free white Itepub:ic ! Incredible us it may mete, this hos b e en done! Tennes see is now ruled by a tlovertior elected by Negro •oles livery Southern Stale under the rule of the "re-oon-strnotion" Satrps, in negromed, the greater portion of the whites being disfranchised and the blanks to a man, made •oters Negroes vet on juries in those Sluice, to the !excltiFiOD of of the moat intelligent of the whites This is the Rod's truth, and no "Republican" of ordinary intelligence will attempt to derky that It Is time. le this wbat"Republioabe expected at the bands of their lenders? Did they vole for Xivre States? Did the tow hundred thouiand whys soldiers who went! rom Pennsylvania to risk • their liree and their oil in the late war, fight fora BLACK turret: to Tun Roulli? Let then queistionslppounder and onewered by the fair mind and hon est canines of the "Republican" party, bo fore they onst their Totes once wore for the men who havejlistraved teem —Bedford Gs —The platform upoinninch Judge Wil liams stands -does not contain the word .•Constltution " It has not • word to say in favor of either the Federal or Bute Cem entation. This silence Is most eignificaot of hostility, and should be • warning to the people. A ao.t., eonvitulon ihat :weave or refuses to bass Its principles upon the organist law, and at ths, same time. Ht. up ~ the liberal spirit of the age" In appeOlon to It, ie anvistiby Ito itntrt of jary Men who regards time-tested prsoepteu better than the Impulsive wiriens of tho mob. lad ge Williams to pledged to a false, heretical platform, which none but the enti-republi can advocates of negro auffrege and a cen tral military despotism can stand upon or support —Pairlot & thitort. 7 darkey proscher was 'elders...low Adam was the first man created, and set up against the fence to ,dry. An old brother who Alameda:Ali bad luoid.idear interrupted Ilion and said: **lf dat ts true. who made da Ames 1" Pius around de Sasser. NO. 35 KNOCKING, EVER KNOCKING =1 nnek tnr, kink Inn ever kr, rkiog IV no Iv she, I 1. a pilgrim, efrange and ktftgl, Never Attch war 'teen trvfore Alt,preet moul, for Inch a frontlet Undo the door. Oh, that door Is hard to I poi, Hinges nasty, latch a broken, Ihd hen g Wherefore w tth that knock in 4 4lreeW Scares tho sleep.frotn one so weary I • Say halt no Knorkin, i l i.i kz..ek n i u n o c l , th ev er er knocking?? Oh, sweet %out, h.l olive hohnht .IVglla the glory erowne,l hair; And 111.35 e ryes so Waage and tonder, Otng Ow to • Open' Open 'On, beholfl him Alien, no fair. Yhat door ' nh wilt thou tea tun, Coining got, to perplex me , For tho key is @hilly rusty, dud the bolt ix ,logged cnd duty . Many fingered toy tine Seals it lust with twist and twine . (Cu b. , of ye", and 3 ears hefore, Choke the p tat+ o I that door lin hrinilting ' tt h.tt ' nt Jl knitching ' 11,4 II there the till.' The night 14 Hilly hest n drear notoplaing, Anil n chill', n.iil omen( ' ihni ' it nte ' Seams my eileop with dream. ' 111, tau re•t, Rini—Ail, reel Rest dear soul he longs to tot e thee . Thou limit y drentned,ut pleasure, Prentned of Ole and noldvh trenintren Elrentned of Jewel. in thy In epinK. Wake I to nett.rille. of weep mg. Open to thy pour., one Lover, And thy 'instil .irdrennin in over The Inc• hying hate seeenvog More than al: thy rude I drentning ' I)ot rha upon r Dent she W eke' ondermg iru bettold, Dem, the pit-titre to the sign. Pren-ed upon emir Poll! 11.11li mine t • For in et cry sold that In eth Is that sir Inge, in3,-terin. door - The Coreaken soli betangled. try gnarled and weed Imganglefl, Duety, rutty, and forgotten, There the ifferved hand ninth knorketh, And with ever pall nit welching, Wall the glory crowned hair— SDI a Clot/ ma watt-I.llg there -F: rh . ,y THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER. ton in the ,n it I, worth 'lwo in the hand -- —The eholera has 'poem., ept.letnn , on the treqern plain., near Fort Ilnyr. -Grant inert have a gnat 111,0 to Fay, be hae said tulle in the cowle of hie life.. --Lim and lino of liberty are given togeth er ; and the Iptter is the hotter gift of the two. --Wesholgton has n temperance newspa per There is enough for tt•to do there. —lt t. more ,11111cuir en I roll. fur higher energies, to lore a martyr, then to der one —How sweet to walk all day for God and then lie do *a nt night beneath hiv smile , —Lot every minister 'while, he td preach lag remember that God is one of his hearers. —A garment may an soon be fitted to the moon ns a system of laws framed to flt every man's conscience. —Marty people behove that when a great doubt raid some thing must be. true; Mi°9 the different°. --hints ore the potr man's music; flowers the pour men's puetri, end the rich man is no better off. —A small town le a place where there ►n many tongues to talk and but few beads to think. --The anger of God le no furious agitation but the judgment winch awards punishment to —The cross of Christ is the centre to which et cry tiring Units, the summary Of the Inolory of the universe —The number of emigrants that arrived at New York up to the 21et inet., thin year, wan 16.1,059. —St liotiol In. 280 melee cf streata, 73 Wile. of Pima., 80 miles of water 14006 mile of gts undo lopes, and 36 tulles of alreet rail road —Why deen a parrot, that ir poorly lose othelt of hilt Renee of touch 7 Because he dosn't feel we II —A Maine Judge bee derided that hop beer is not into:lea mg But beer &token an nearly intoxicated with delight at the dee ision. ----A ilivorco is Meted at V.C.weeb the Prin es Alice of Ile•ee, Victoria's Mgbter and her husband, who is SRO to ill-front her. e—t-Alterener's Jury in :Hotline rendered • scrtlict "that the deceased committed suicide, and that he did en in self defence!" --Siam) Dap Sickles has toren removed from command of one of the Dependencies and Gen E It Canby takes her places _Briggs has a fsfhlty (or getting things cheap The other dap he had a beautiful set of teeth inserted for'noihing Ire kicker -• dog. ---ri 0. Donley, Collector of Internal Rev enue for the Second ilintrtet of Texas, has been 'eat to prison on a charge of murder. He is a Northern nice. —A t girl living In n family nnu Liverpool, hail unexpectedly come into • for tune of $1,000.000 by the death of n rotatto e in one of the colonies. —A paper mks very innocently If It Is any harm to eit in the lame of ages. It depends on the kind of aged seleeted. Thom from eetenteen to twenty-eve are extra haeardotok b iv A is • delaslog,madam !" est:dale. ed Remaly old bachelor to • witty young lady. "And men are always bagging some delusion, or other," wos the quick retort. —Si% months ago a Batton heads sent oat to Japan ; • cargo of hoop skirts as • venture. The Jap• pat • cover un them and used them fns embroil. —'•l wonder when those elobds Sr. go ing," sighed Plora,peneirely, u ehe pointed gell.Ndelreatklargegfathe eloeds that dented to the sky. • I think they an going to thunder nid her brother. —A car) , modest young lady who wee a patsongor on board `a packet .hip, It le sold, sprung out cf her be'rtte.msd Jumped overboard oa besepsg the captain doriog a storm order the mate to"heut down the Amt.'. —Thetis Is something exquisite in the Yea- Itee's reply to the Europese traveler. when he asked him whether h. had Just crossed the Alps, '•W now, you out my attestion to the flat, i belle,* I did puss lisle' ground." --It to reported that Gen. Iloward,tbe boss of t e negro bureau, Is to be removed The Treasury would be greatly beeefitted If both buss and bureau. ---Two negrom bare announced themeelvee as candidates tor Congress in the Ylret en Vourt b distriois of ticorgot Zherfalahn that the ei g ht to rote carrion with it the right to hold oboe, and that esthe blacks as, In Mlll•Jor ity, white megotre not competent to represent them. The Rada will get aweigh of ths clues) pmettly. JIM WOLF' ANL) . THE TOM CATO Sere in one of Nit.;, wain'sgood stories. lie knows how to make the reader laugh, end if the following does not provoke • smite, it is because there is no mirth In mankind during the hot werAer I knew by the sympathetic glow uponbis held bead—l knew by the thoughtfuj look upon his fine—l knew by the emotional flush upon the strawberry' on the endof the free liver'. nose,that Simon Wheeler's mem ory was busy with the o.de• time. And so I prepared to Were, because all these were mptoma of a remialattenoe—.lgoe that he war , going to bb delivered of another of hie tireteitne pereopal esperieneee—but I was 1,14 slow; he got the start of me As nearly aa I can i'coollrci, illi t inticition was couch ed in the following language: •IV. were 11 II 1103/., then, and Join 4 care for uoiliing. and didn't hare no troubles, and (loin t worry about mulling only how to kirk school and keep up a reririo' state of lerilment all the time Thieli-) medial Wolf was a talking about, wa•ihe•prentice,and w the Mal hearted feller, be was, and eMot forpvin' and angelfish I ever see well, there couldn t be a more Milner (til er than what he was, Inking him how you null Ind sorry enough 1 was when I evi him for the last time. ••\lo and Ifenry wits always pestering hild'and plAstcring boss-hills on his Niel; and pulling bumble been in bin bed, lend no on, end r•imelinies we'd crowd in end bunk h 6ini, not,l:hstan,l4ng binagroitling,and then We'd lei on Ito get Tad and fighl.aerost bite, Co OR .o,keep lams stirred op like. He woe nineteen. lie Iris, long and lank, and 1iam145.1, end we WR9 fifteen end eistern,and tolerably hazy and worthless ...So. that night you know, Ihn I my lister Mary give therckntly they slanted us Mkt° bed early, au as the comp'ny could have full swing, and we rung in on Jim have some fun. ilur winder looked onto lLe roof of ,he no.lnlrout ten o clock o couple of old cite got to !nun' and charg in' iound on it and earry4 on like sin There we, four inches of snow on the roof, and it was frozen so that there was a right smart crust of ice on it. and the moon was shining gilt, and we could see them cat- Itkedsy light First, they'd stand and e-yow-ydw yow. ju.t the same as if they most casein' oe another, you know, and how up their ha n cks Anil posh up their Oils, nod steel around awl tipit, and then all of s sudden the gray eat he d saisioh • handful of fur alit of the yeller cat's ham, and spin her and, like a builon on it born door Bu (i.e yeller cat wa• rIII,V, and he'd come and clinch and the way they'd gouge, and bite, and howl; and the way they d nicks the fly W.. 14 p .verr to I Well, Jim, fin - got thegilated •iih the row, and 'lowed he'd clout, out there and shake them off n that toot Ile hadn't ree ly no notion of Join' it, likely, but we ever, Isuntily dogged hun, and hullyraggiel him nnd 'lowed he'd always bragged how he wouldn't lake a dare, and no on,till birneby be bilged up the winder, and lo and,be hold you, he went—went exactly as be wall —nothin' on but a shirt. and at was short. But you ought to ta. seen him! You ought to see ham creepin' over that lee; and dig gin' has toe nails and his finger nails in for to keep from elippia'; and shove all, you ought to have seen that shirt a flappin' in the wind, nod them long,ridiekulous shanks of hien a glistenhe in the moonlight. “Them oomp'ny folksW*B down there an der the caves, the whole squad of 'am under that ornery shed of old dead Washn'ton Bower rinse—all settle' round about two dozen s aaaaaa of hot candy, which they'd sot in the snow to cool. And they was laughin' and talkie livelerbut bleu you, they didn't knoi nothin"bout the paoors• ma whioh wale lgoin' on over their heads Well, Jim, turtwent a sneakin and a Basaltic up, unbeknown, to them tom-oats—they was n 168611,0 their tails and yow-yowin' and threatenin' to clinch, you know, and not papa' soy attention—be went a sneak in' right up to the comb of the root, till he was in a foat'u' a half of 'em, and then all of a sudden he made ► grab for the yeller oat! But by Gorit he missed flro and alipt hie holt, and his heel, flew up and be flop. ped on his back and shot off that roof like a dart—went a amuhio' toil ► mashie' down through thom old twill nines and landed right In the dead centre of all them two donee aaa of red hot candy and let off • howl that was hark from the isimb ! Them gills—well they felt, you know. They see he warn't dressed for nomp'ny, and so they left All done in a unwed ;it eras just one little war•whoop, and • whisks of theirdres_ sea, and blame the wench of 'em was in eight anywhere. •.Jim be was a eight. Lie was covered with that Win' hot tuolaaoes candy clean down to hie heels, and bad more buster] ens. sere hange to him than if he was a Injin prineeso—an conies vanilla' up stain just a wboopin' and mauls', and every jump he shod some ohms, and every 'quires he fetched he dripped some candy! " , 'Autl blistered! Why, bless your soul, that poor eretur couldn't reely set down comfortable for km mush as four weeks." JOSH BILLINGS ON GONGS Josh Billings relateth his first *armistice with the gong thusly I never can oradi. cute holt from ml memory the sound of the furs& gong I ever herd. I was atlas' Ifte the front step or a tavern in the elity of Buffed°, pensively smokin. The suit was goin to bed, and the hating for an hour MY bluebin at the performance. The Bey Ka nsa, with its golden waters, was on Its way to Albany, And I was parasite the line hates n Bolin by, and Woken ov Italy (where I one to liv) end her gondoliers and galls' w tannin. bly entire sole wee as It were, in a swot I waisted to Mime, I that grate, I actually grew. There are things Is this life is big to be trilled with ; there are time, when a man braes Ines from hisser, when he seas *petrels, when be kin alines t etch the mune, and feels na tint he Mod all hOth bands with the slant of hereto, and al meet swore he was • baskpreeidast. That's what ailed the Dot the lions of Ira luv net did run smoethe, (this Is Shaksper's °pinyon too.) Just.. I was cluing my best —dummer, dimmer, spat,. bong, crash, roar. ram dimmer, dummer, rip, rare. rally, dossier, &linear, dem— with a tremenjas jump I 'trash the anther ow the sidewalk Tub another 1 istiamed the gutter and with lutetium I shied IV the laid. die of the street eaorting like es lodise posy it e baud easels. I prod Is mild• deepen at the tarots mead, net bast eingi; op big as a oat dear over. eel teeth woe ha Ines to • write of hector I lbetanlit oD ow the ereekergia the tonere hod All dews. I thought ofilabditl and hie hoer. I woe Joel on the pint of kiloton of emasibis else when the lendlnrd hem oat ow the front letups of the tavern, holden Iwo web% the bottom of • old bream kittle. lie howled we yeti/ with bli heed. I cast stela sad slots tip to Mist he hammed met limes, be said It Ora; a gong. X saw the «mad thin. be weld topper was teddy. he Med me art roust here black er geese tee, eel 1 Ilea 1.