(Tor the WATCIIIIAII THE VALUE OF A WORD. er Wly,lll w. MASMIIX A won] Is but a trivial thing, But oil a world of moaning bearing, From which delight, or woo, may spring, A pleasing thought or sorrowing— To charm a soot, or multi despairing. Full many • heart of purest tone, In friendsfilp's worm breast swelling. Ilas been exiled, from Briondsbip's throne: By some hank words& random shown; - Or unmeant coldness thoughtless welling. A bitter septenoe; half expressed, May carry woe where: i t: t ele gladness, Although It he hot het • jest, And In a friendly tray adateaped. 'Twill brood no good but may bung tontine.. Thin, ob,beworo! lest ye In. In breast's of those you fon cherish, By careless words, feeling chill Which may result In crime or 111, Or cause your fairest hopes to pertri, When friends, in churlieh mood appear, Or angry, as you find them often, Oh ! chide them not with thoughtless meat! But answer with a smile or term, And you will touch their hearts and en flea Strive by the gentlest means to please,— Rough winds augment the "troubled boon twins," Ma the soft breath of tropic gene, Dome on the wings of summer'. bream, That melts the lee of Greenland. mountains. Withhold no kind eneouragment From tho young soul in life beginning A favor elight, to childhood lent, May Ming amok]] consequent Noy lend a AM/11/1/ Ma /runt Ithillaray. And it elm be but eligbt ex"peneo, To givo a Mlle, or word of kindnere, And theme may shines lifetime hence— And in perpetual fructaaonce— Bright beacons on a eoa of blindnens . _ AMNESTY PROCLAMATION Wheninoron, Sept. B.—The following pardon proclamation, although prepared yesterday, yes not issued until title after OEM = WUZILZAB. In the 41t: of July. Anno Domini 1861 lhetwg Congress, with extraordinary .4tilmirj, solemnly de_ declared "that the war then existing was nut waged on the part of the Government in any spirit of oppression,noi for any pur of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established institutions of the States, but to defend and maintain the su premacy of the Constitution,and to preserve the Union, with all its dignity, equality, and rights of several Slates unimpaired and that as soon as three object. should be uccomp Halted, the war ought, to tease:" And whereas, The Presideiit of the United States, en-the eighth dity-of December,keno Domini 1/46iLadon.11he twenty-sloth day of March, Anno Domini, 1861,414‘1, with the objects of suppressing the then existing re bellion, of.induclng all persons lb return to their loyally, and restoring the authority or the United Stales, issue proclamations, offering amnesty and pardon to all persons sqin bad directly or Indlrictly participated in Ytte then exist Mg rebellion, except as in those proclamation., was specified and re set wed ; - Arid tolitron, The President of the United 'lltstes did,on the twenty ninth of May,Anno Domini ISO, issues further proclamation with the same objects before meutioned,and to the end that line authority of the Govern ment of the United States might be restored and that pence, order, end freedom might be establisbml : and the President did, by the said last-mentioned proclamation, pro. claim and declare that he thereby granted la-all persons wino had directly or indirect ly participated in the existing rebellion,ex cept as therdin excepted, amnesty and par don, with restoration of all rights of prop rely, except Oslo slaves, and except in cork lain cases'where legal proceedings hail been instituted, but upon condition that such per sons should take and subscribe .an oath therein proscribed, which oath Should - be registered for permanent preservation ; and Whereas, In sod by lb• saidtaetmenlion eJ proelamation of the twentyininth day of May, Anno Domini, 1865fourleen extenenve classes of persona there nropeclallx dooorib ed were alsogother excepted and lieluded from the benehlp thereof, and IVhereas, The President of the United States dld,on the sooond day of April,Anno Domjni, 1866, issue a proclamation dealer• ing that the insurrection was at end, and was henceforth to be so regarded ; and IVhereas, There now exists no organized armed resistance of misguided citizens or others to the authority of the United States in the States of Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Ala bama, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Florida and Texas, and the laws can be sus tained and enforced therein by the proper civil authority, Slate or Federal, and the people of said States are well and legally disposed, and hare conformed, or; if per milted to do so, will conform In the legiela lion to the condition of affairr, growing out of amendment Is the Constitution of the United States prohibiting slavery within the limits and jurisdiction of the United States; end Where., There no longer exists soy rea sonable ground to apprehend within the States which were involved in the late re bellion, any redewal thereof, or any unlaw ful resistance by the people of said State, to the Constitution and laws of the United States; and Whereas, Large standing armies,mllitary occupation, martial law , military tribunal. and the suspension of the priyilege of the writ of habeas corpus, and the right of trial by jury, are in time of peace dangerous to public libertfa lirompatible with the indi vidual rights of the eitisen, contrary to the genius sod spirit of our free institutions, and exhaustive. of the natural reso ..... ,and ought not to be therefore sanctioned or al lowed, except in cases of aolual necessity for repelling invasion or suppressing insur rection or rebellion . ; and Whereas, A retaliatory or vindictive poll- Ex, attended by unnecessary disqualifica tions. pains, penalties, confiscations and disfranohisments, no• so always,cmuld only lend to hinder reconciliation among the people, and national restoration, while It mull seriously embarrass °helmet, and re press popular energies, and national indus try and enterprise ; and Whereat, Per these reasons it le now deemed essential to thepublle welfare, and to the more nimble! restoration of Contain- Mond law and order,That the maid last-men tiobed stinfolantaken'at aforesaid issueatn on the 28111 day of May, A. D. 1866, ahead be modbled,and that the (Oland benefielent pardon conceded thereby should be opened and further extended lb a large number of petiole who by Its aforesaid exceptions hams bees hitherto excluded front Executive clemency; ' Now, therefore, be it known that I, An drew Johann, President of the United States, do hereby dodos and proolabil that - Cht. ' - A ) t* - 41Et4iir l'l9-41tihnia'zi.,: the full punted described In the said proo la.nation of the 25th of May, Aoeo Domini, 1805, shall hdnoeforth he opened and exten ded to all persons who directly qr indirect ly partiotpmed In the great rebellion, with •he restoration of all privileges immunities, and rights of property with regard to slaves and exoept in MOM of legal proceedings un der the laws of the United Slates, but upon this condition, nevertheless, that every such person who shall seek to avail himself of this proclamation shall take and sub. eeribe the following oath, and shall clause the same to be registered, for permanent preservation, In etc came manner and with the same afoot as wilk the oath prescribed in the said proolamation of the 20th of May 1866, tiamely : do solemnly swear (or affirm), in the presence of Almighty God, that I wil henceforth faithfully support, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States and the Union of the Slates thereunder; and that I like manner abide by and faithfklly support all laws and resolutions which have been made during the late rm belhon with,referenoe to the emancipation of slaves. So help me God." Tho following persontrind no others, are excluded from the benefits of this proolien lion and of the said proclamation of the 29th day of May, 1866, anruejy : First. The Chief or phitemled Chief Ex ecutive officers including the President, the Vice President, and all heads of depart ments of the pretended Confederate or rebel Government, and all who were agents there of in foreign State. and countries, and all who held or pretended to hold, In the ser vice, of the said pretended Confederate Gov ernment, a military rank or title above the grade of brigadier general, or naval rank o r hide above that of ciaptain.and all who were or pretended to , be, Governors of States while maiNtaintng, abetting or submitting to. and aegaiesotag in the gebellion. cond. All persons who in any way Ir sled otherwise than as lawful prisoners o soes who in any capacity were emp oyed o engaged in the military or na val service of the United States. Third. All persons who, at the time they may seek to obtain the benefits of this pro clamation, ere natnnlly_ In nixkleilitaxi naval confinement or custody, or legally held to ball, either before or after convic tion, and all persons who were engaged di rectly or indirectly in the assassination of the into President of the United Statee,or in any plot or conspiracy in any mennerthere with connected In testimony whereof I have signed Leese presents with my hand and have caused the meal of the United Stales to be thereunto ll= [L. a ] Done at the oily of Washington he 7th day of September, 18137. Artnnew Jormson lly ihe President. WILLIAM IL SIMARD, 800. Or Btnle CORBY The Great Bell Matph—O'Paks Venus Chad , -'Stupendouscilay—Brillient Bat- My, Frantic Fielding, ande Remarka ble Conolusion—The O'Pakes the Vie- =ttl=M DRAG Tho great Bees Ball Match which I referred to lest wrk has been played It was between the (Wet (and only)nine of the (Trate club, and ‘he Chad club. We played on the Copitoline ground, which had been nicely swept and sprinkl ed and the bases white-washod. The weather was fine though cloudy, warm though windy. The etteudianee of simatatore must have • •en less than fifteen thousand,but for fear of acaidente front heavy batting none were allowed in tho enclosure. Chad arrived first and throw has castor into the ring and offered to bet a year'ssub scription to the Poll Player's CArotude against a ticket for a Turkish Bath on first blood. There wero no takers, as every ball play er takes the Chromcle, but bone of them oared about a Turkish Bath. O'Pake soon after appeared, and was received with applause—and music by the band. }lugh D. Mode, of the Rooster olub, WAN oboaen Umpire, and play began. The Chula went in first and we went out. We expected to have M. T...lugg for pitcher, but he didn't appear but sent his cousin O'Tard, who pitched in so heavily et the start that he bit the batsman, corn ered on the short atop, ,and knocked the scorer ou of time. The IJ4 e cried fowl. O'P e wanted to, know who he called a fowl—if he alluded to any of his nine.— Red find there were no obicheue in that crowd. Umpire apologized, aml the game want Chad got a 'pleaded strike, got al far as We second base, and was calculating on a home run when our right field, who was ■lalloned on the corner of Washington and Greene avenues, (taught the ball on I fly. Chad out. Blister then leek the Ist; he Ist dy at the bell, but the Oldies dodged, got battle en hie breed-basket, end sent him to peal. Float knock down for the O'Ritkee— (Great sheering ) Came suspended to lake a drink Bloater then tried his luok at the hal, wbieh he handled with great skill, bat Bill ed to eoaneet with the ball Ile always kit when the Mle wasn't there. lEftaFoire ruled him oat. The O'Pekee then went la. Chloride O'Llme then took the bet; eqd . as soon as the bill (11111111 aloes, Cent It book apliv'ead start 4„ in pursuit of the fret bloc flomsbow thil hall got theta' berm he Ma, anti the *hap who ran that eat Le the Ohmt Intermit plat htm oat. Itt O'llygue had the pest ohaalts. 41tei ninth tithe he got 11111 retake tutti l iWit a hit. 0 f 01Anni. 31 SU 00.ter a 14 - 'o'Bllqatt rttg 1 ouwrii. 41 O'Llaa . 14 2 'Ohne Se D'Pana I 165 Bloater 10 6 o'Bltarr .97 12 Boras 21 0 O'Door 18 17 Clhantontilo 14 1 O'Leandoe 11 125 Janipar 17 4 O'lrmust 15 231 lionyroyal 62 0 O'Tard • 9 141 wllingor 61 I - -- - - Total _in Ulf Total 397 29 ?We ore gobs, g to °O&M's'', the Atlantic'', *At_itoos, an d Matosto. ' - I , m going • to write a book on Base Ball, with explansti ono of the new =Ms, eta. Sall Tonto C. 0% • tle I otrtloat moment in • man's We 1 „ or /kook:re . Bogie. The ball cushioned on a house In Bed ford avenue, ()around on the Ilaireqaft oflbe Capitoline headquarteee, ani.wi'd Caught on the bound by Caeleille. O'Bilque out (Boma mean person in the orowdalreered. I eiterwards heard thit Cuterlle was impor tad from Idaho, ixpreamy to billet us.) I took • turn. The Grow/ liiispended Ito broth. , BELLEFONTE, PA.,- FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 20, 1867 wheit Wieland' for tb ... ! first lima with an exaggerated potato masher In both bands, to protect himself from flue designa of a chaff in front who is going lo fire a ball at him, another behind lobe hawk ready to take any advantage of him, and all the field be fore him. But I stood a monument of resolute firm ness waiting for the ball. It came, I esw,l hit, I run. The ball went to right field and landed in the Union Grounds, about a mile off. Orient the Al'antics who was playing at the time, kindly threw it over the fences, and . lame to-Imnd just as I bait scored my fourth home rum—and td'ken something. who brilliant play atit•tetl up °Y oke who we& in to beat it. O'Pake was always good on the etrike, whichtcyounts for his success in politics. Ile countl•ted heavily on the hall which went off to left field The ball waalast eight of for some time, but by the aid of the l'oticco Telegraph we ascertained that it had COM down in Pros pect l'ark. A Committee was sent after it in a buggy Meantime we took a recess for refrbelt niente O'l'eke moored tiro home ruo►t Ile might have made more, but be said 141 wan not going to run himself out before election. o%Mum took the bat ; being left handed bo knocked the ball round the corner It made salon stop on the Umpire's noesand lapped hie claret. Fire( blood for the O'Pakes. Umpire got savage and ruled O'Shaw out on the grounds that this abet was counter base, contrary to rule 1114 This put our Bide out The Chaitiste look desperate and played as though they meat mischief. Thep made one run, owning to O'Blique o . lliique was left field, and having broke Ili, eye glasp looking so hard through it, Mid left theleld, to got s new pebble loser. ted, and didn't get back in time to find the ball before Casterile made a home run It was the muffinist play I ever maw. We went in and made another run, on the bar, and told the barkeerer to score it. We should have moored one, but the Um- WO - ruled nit out on a tnehtricality: O'Limo hod made the first base, when o,l'ake mode IL hit and changed his bane. O'Shaw came 'after him and made a ten strike and wee followed by o,Dear who made a foul , and woe subsequently caught out on a fly by the pitcher, when O'Blique made a hit and ran and got to the second base just tie O'Shaw had made up hie mind that it was too hot to run, and o . llike re fused to leave his base until he had a drink. The field hands being nimble to bud iho ball the short slop was unable to put any body out though thav were all out, at the bases, and the rest of our nine having gone to see a men there was nobody to take the bit The pire, who was made because we hadn't asked Ir to.take a drink, ruled us out The Chad. n squared for work, and Blister haring recover'ed hinitself, made a hit nod got hie Ciro. :time in void style. Borax followed and got his second base because the small boy I lead 'hired to ran (or me on loft field had run home to see if hie mother wanted him Chamomile bit to oentre field and brought Blister home This wee all they made We went in again. Things began to get mixed. It was toy fern at the bat and going in I found they were going to play a doubled game, two lunlngs at once, to notice it There were six tomes now. Also two pitchers. igraeped both the hate in boil. hands, and stood on the two home bases The two balls came at onoo, and trying to hit both 1 went between them, and went down to avoid puniehment. The referee called time. Asked what wee trumps? • Somebody said clubs. Said I'd pass. O'Pake ineleted on my playing. Offered to play muggiest for drinks for the crowd. Somebody took me hp and stood me on the base The two Umpire° wanted to kar if I was going to play. Told them it was none of their darned business, I'd play them or any other man ,even-up, till moonlight. Short stop put in an observation on fleeing As it wasn't hie pot in: I Copped him port by dropping the bat on hie oounte- The pitcher t'anagh he'd pitch in, and caught it on the. frontispiece. .* The play begun general Things became very lively, and the bat ting very heavy. I got mixed ap with Custerile, the Umpire, wool a oamp-etool. We went to without regard to innings. We tame ose will heavy scorer. I saw somebody home, and have , been home ever elate. Duo Ball has a singular attest on parsons unnooustozned I. It. My shirk reek and treasons ripped in all direotions. My head has expanded and echos like he mischief. One of my eyes don't matelt the miser. sad my nose Is much enlartge end Tau =EI My limbo ve rheumatically out of joint, and I es at et aorta generally. I don't think bus ball Is my forte.. It's too vigorous. Something mailer would suit me better,—fluob as muggine or Maher. Yours on the home bass. Oesair • P. 8.--O'Palm has Just brOughf me EZE=I QUAD. B2=l V7T7WTT?M7TrrVrMmrWrl'irllal DID OUR SOLDIERS DIE FOR THIS ? Tu vindicate the will of the ninjority and maintain the existence of the nation the people made every sacrifice dint is in a people's power. With an unbolted exer rise of strength the nation mit down the greatest rebellion of which there is any re cord, and then required of the dominant party only that it ahouldipacify the country and restore peace, exacting front the cen t quoted merely such a guarantee as would theoretically provide against the recur, once of the war ; for parctically, the nation looked upon the defeat of,the South in the struggle fairly fought out as the besbof all val./totem, for future peace. And whatdid tbo leaders in view of this plain puipose They ignored it entirely, treated:the known will of the nation with an insulting indiffer enoe supposed to ho- characteristic only o Cottinnem Penmen Puritan rind nigger was made the bargain to give to the half civilized slave supremacy over his former master, in order Clint the political balance of this brutal, ignorant and unreasoning , vote might retain the Puritan in power That is tire exact present position of the radical party In accomplialting its pur pose (has far it his traded away every title of principle it originally had form the emir. 1 cos ofapower, and has reduced the 'memos of giternment. to a greed swindle, filling high places with con uptioubeyond ail par. _Old. Will the people submit ! Will they consent to see the principles upon which the nation stands traded to and fro, between : scoundrel. to whom the gamblers, thimble riggers and pooketkook-droppers of our streets are, by comparison, honest &Mere? Will they see the very heart and life of the nation rotted out, that a careen, brutal peo ple, to whom slavery was more n benefit than a degradation, may be met in power , above the white own of the country ? California answers"-Nu !" And iu lice voice we may hear what Is to come from the pro- pie of New Yolk and Pennsylvania—the doom of the political traders The people I are no longer to bedecened by the sibboleth , of party cries that have covered with the name of freedom all this atrocious seism ' ing They will make a salutary example of the schemers —New York Iltrold. AN IRISHMAN'S LETTER--PREPAPE FOR A LAUGH The fullowneg churneteristle lei Kr, writ len by an Illbernian of air }oars' experl taco Of American inatitutiona, •as submit tea 10 a reporter or the New York Sun NEW YORK. January 14,1867 , 11v DRAn Most—the darlint- of my heart and sowl—l am well, but bad the fever toil ager, and hope you are in the Caine clown lion, thanks be to God. I wish you many happy New Years and theChildren,and hope you'll have three mune and ten of them We bad Christrrins here, but the heythene don't keep it like we used to at home Dlvil rescue the one leer said to me, many happy Christmas, or lind luck to nie, or any other politeness I didn't get it Christmas box until I was going home that melt and a night-walking blagaad gave rilevile on the eye, and axed rue for me monei 4 .. l Fero him all I could, about a score pounde, which knocked the entitle uut of him.— They tell tne that the i(agur is going to be the white man in future, and that the white nagure 111 Congress (a big public house in Washington) are going to try the President for being a white man If they find bun gu,lty, and thete's no doubt of it, for they ore accuserelvtifbeiTs'es, lawyers, judges, ell in one, they're going to execute the Exectiii•e, make a fellow called Cold facts President, and remove the side of government to a place called Bosh lon, celebrated for its Republicans and sin ners. Thim to the came na the ridiculous fellows they call ridteutere—no radicals— saving your presence. They want to con done their own power—God betting us and all harm. They say the Southerners must me down on their knees to them. They for get thAt the poor d mils aro Hat on their beckons the dust already, and they're a mane sot to kick a man whin he's down.— Be jabereat makes mo blood bile, to think of it , nod that is the rasen I'm running over on this paper Otto war is no sooner over than they commence the beginning of another in Washington, and God drily knows where or whin it may laid I lost one fine leg in the last, but I have another left for a good cause, and I'll fight for d 'Anson ; for I hear his great grandmother, by Ide fore father's side, was an Irishuseas, * * We have snow and frost here now, end at so likely we will have more wither. Tffe tem perance inen-09d save the mark—in a place axlied'Albany, where the people sind Rep resontativee to chats them, have stop ped our grog. only by day light. Idyll a much matter, any slays, for they 'don't keep a dhrop of decent Mink in the country—no ral ould Irish potheen, a tum bler of which would charm tiri heart of a whsxl-harrow,'ox,A wed donee— nothing at all but e s.? that would kill a pig if heibad to live on it, monk leas a Christian baste. * •' Remember am to Jim ;.yell him he's well, and silk him how I mini 'S i lk sorry to hear of the death of the bull, and hope you're likewise. liar milk ina bad. Tell Tady AleFinit If he comes herehe'll see more of America In one day than If he'd staid at home all his life. I'm glad his wife got over the twins, and hope she'll be better—next time. There's room for improvement. I like thiscountry, but there's no place like ould Ireland,where you raft' monk whiskey for a shlllin' al would make lay for six paple. If youdoa't get this, write and let me know. If you don't write soon I may be dead, for life is uncertain under the Radicals ; hot dead or alive I'll answer your letter. address pour dear brother, Jimmy, New York, Anterlia. and I'll ale for a letter from toy darllot sister. —The radios' organs ore writhing Un der the reoont orpoeure of the Attorney °antral In regard to,Asblay & They cannot deny that radical numbers of Congress—Ashley, for instance—were eor Intimate with the convicted perjurer, Conover ; or that prominent radicals out of Congress—Hqlt, for instanoo—were not SCUMS the radical throng who attended Conovir's dolly receptions in the Waahing lowjall. ---0, Wee Low wonderful are 'our waterfalls. [For tllO IY•riuuer THY WORD, 0 GOD, IS TRUE. Bearing in mind the principles of inter pretation laid down, in a ,umber of rules in the former article, for determining the meaning of word.; our inquiry now is, "What is the meaning oil) Reshith 7" ••In the beginolug." "now is it ondermood by our bent scholars 7" It will be accessory in t' , as to our former number to intro duce umber of words from the lanai& Heine , Orrei, &c. The excuse ollerad for this seeming pedantry Is, that it to tut. possible to aioid their use Tim render them intelligible, however, to every reader, they are written in goglish and their pro pri;nUnctalion ul imitated as nearly as pos sible The meaning oFeseli worn in given with the word. We find that for the Hebrew It'lleoholh, .oin the beginning," the Chaldaic version al the Oil Testament gives as its equivalent• the work, /(6adnitit, "luiantiquities " If these words are equivalent, their meaning must ho equivalent also But ll'Katintra means “In antiquities," or "former time," Its root, fiimarily, i iiicanspriordy,and when applied to time Meanie autmortty fiance E'A',shilli may bedggned as signifying. in oatmeal or former balm and when we read on Gen. I. I. ..In the ItAnimeGod created the Inetreene aunt the earth," we are not to understand it to mean, ''at first, as to order, or in the beginning, as to order, God crea ted Sc " But we nro to understand it to former linme,•of obror antiquity 011eforeated Scc," %Viten that former time wan, of how old a date or of what duration we are not told, but simply the fact, that at preinunibine period, God created, Ito. Now instead of a discrepancy existing, between Moses and Geology, there is thy most per feet harmony Geology says that the e•i deuces arc that this earth to of vast age, a, to ON elements Moses says--liits viand point being the mention of crea ted this earth, nen lo 114 clewcnts, an the it thprities Agntu in the Seplungint wo find Rn nrke used for the Hebrew and Chnhle en lindunn. St John in his gospel let eh and let T. says, "In the beginning was fIWOZILSIG22._ _Will any.nm .11.2.3 C -11 Ul.ll phrase, "In the be, inning was the word" refers us no further back than the period when this earth was filled up for man's hab itation • "In the beginning here refers us ' bock In the pro-existence of our Lord,lnfore the foundation of the world Hence it is evident St. John refers to a lime preiious to creation, or the forming of our world. Our best critics so interpret. For example, Dean Alford, says, "Before the world was' Meyer translates it rorre•tlerhkeel—pre tem pera ity—and says it is equivalent to the 'Septuagint version of Proverbs VIII, 28, "In tho beginning before he made the earth.' Luke says, "In the beginning" includes the idea of premusidane existence The LXX translate in the same way. Betwyen these authors and others that might be qu'reteikihere is this agreement, that "In the besinning" signifies Isom anima', of old or of utettvoites Hence if geology has found out, and c. rreeily, that the earth maybe miitiotut of years old, it does not contradict • w h a t la said by Moses When therefore we :mallae the first word, by which be introdu ces bin account of creation—whether ue to its construction without the definite article, thus haying it indefinite; or os to its ety mology inelnding the Ides, not of order, but aulertor, or as to its civivalents in Chalilee or Greek, moaning of old, of gntiq uir "Before the world was" we reach the sa e conclusion that Moses is scientifically correist,in his history of creation. But while Melee leaves the time when of creation indefinite, merely tinting that it was of old or former tune beds not thus iu definite in his statement of the fact of crea tion. And here again we sell attention to the peculiar force of his language ; "In the beginning God created thr heavens and the earth " In the nem,unt we have of creation there are three words used, that at first eight eeem .to signify creatlnier to create But they do not Alt mean to ereate,.: The words used are the following: flora, wit lob means he created, Areh, ho made, and Yet mr, he formed. Bare, he created, occurs In Gen 1 oh. and lv, where it is maul "God ore sled the heavens and the earth," and nigni fies is connection witty, "In for mer times, or of old, God created from noth- g" the heavens autl the eartltr:Wh kb he Is now about to fOrm or fashion Into a now system. Mth, he made, and Zalsar, ho formed, may be predicated of man ; but Bard, be created, is predicated onlyr,or God and never of man. The forceof the4e..three words, and the nicety of distinatuil Nada by Moses is their use will appear bypseleo- Ling • few of those plenae in which lb oy oe our, in the account of creation G. I. I. "lit the begietting Oott.,(Bard) created the heasesus and the earth." Here the creation, or production of something tfrosa aothiag is theisce amid by the word Bard. This is the grand picture iodic vis ion of the narrator, and thin is the picture be holds up to the game, yea and sanding of future generations. Then follows the announcement of another fast, that, "the earth was without form and void," was vast elms. Here the attention of tbe narrator le flied upon that chaos, and he described in plain and simple language what claws to lt during the six days God work, in pre paring It for man. The foot here estab lished by Moses, is isert .„L in, the Use of a word that eignifles, to produce, or bring forth out of nothing. Again Gen. 2 s 8, where It reeds God bleu ed the seventh darand "rested from ell hie ,work,, which God had Created and made," there ocouroth Bard, he crested and Leo soth, to make In Leasoth, L, is the prefix preposition and Aso lA, the consiuot form of deed. In this passage we lam the throe of both words, and their use, side by Ind., minim their distillation ; while it hole:Acre our adtalretion of Slob communes' of the Mauls narration. Observe in the phrase, "which God created midi:Bade.' In the orig . lit reeds, "which God Greeted" to Koko ....serve again, the beautiful and aritios r dittinotion, MOM. make,. booking at ao finished work, a saw world, and_r! .... mapitu• !sting the manner of Its building, he As not say “oreated? nod made"--es it rends in our &eighth Version,—eo though means; and whine were *se and the same sot, but ha tap, created, to make, s►gnityiog two acts.' Created alluding L 9 the proems:Una ant of manipotoome; la bringing something out of nothing. To make, allnding to the omitting chaos from which he made the world. Thus am when of oce.ition is i brown hook into the antiquities, 111111 ilie fart or oinking brought into definite time, Again, Comparing Bard, he crealed soul %M¢.', he filmed, we find ihe same die Uncles., and force of meaning Gen I . 27 —So God fltardlikereated man in his own longs." Gen 2 7, .•And the Lord God ( Vey tt mir „,fysin %al :or) fenced men of the duet of the ground" la the first passage. allusion in made to the creation, or calling into being, of tho sail, which is the man prove, and which alone is ..in, or after iniaTe and lilieliese" of God. In the second. reference is hail to the building a house for the soul, or body for the man, We have now examined the three words, .11.11 by Moses in bin history of 11 e creation From them we not only learn the correctness of his statement—in far as criticism is eon cernen—but must coma to the inevitable canclunion, that the same spirit which “mored upon the face of the waters," mow cii within him nine, in guiding hie mind to the choice of vroptis, and controling his pen in the faithful inscription of foals that will mond the lust of a world's criticism WHO ARE THE REPUDIATORS ? The act of Assembly of June 12ib, 1810, passed by a Democratic administration made it obligatory to pay the interest on our State debt in coin or Its etpii•alent A terrible finan:ial crisis has just been pass ed through, and the passage of the law wan essential to the establishment of (lie credit of the State uPoti — s I secure tr.sis Front that day nett! January, 1864, the Treasury paid the interest in epecte and our loans had grown to be favored investments The interest was payable on the that day of February, and one 27th ring of Jan uary, 1861, !ilem, of Allegb&y, then a member of the House called up a bill wLich read ns follows . That so much of an net approved 12lb June, 1810, as reqnires the interest on the public debt of this common wealth to be paid in specie erns equivalent and also the third section of an Act appro, ed 11th of April, 1862, be and the same are hereby repented." “That tt shall.he the duly of the State Treasurer to pay all in fanfitgdtie on, thepublic debt of the Commonwealth, on nut after the 31st daj, ofJanunry, 1861, in such notes as hate been or may he ts•ned by the United States overn m en t." Ilightint put it on its [mitage at once The Democrats resisted it and Ilighom call ed the previous question, and two members from Allegheny seconded the will. The Radicals voted solid In favor of-the call, ■ll debate was cut elf and the first section passed. Beery Radical voted for the ate than and every Democrat against it The next day the second section 0•1110 up and was passed. Qn the 29th Bigham called up the bill for final passage, and Barger, Rice, Sharpe and Hakes, all Democeats, spoke against the Bill, nightie], Etneir and Cochran, of Erie, all Radicals, in its favor. Kerns, Radical, of Philadelphia, called the previous question and the bill was finally passed by the House, every Radical voting for it, andltiory Democrat against it In the Senate on the Irnlt of March. Con nell, of Philadelphia, called up tine bill nail the first section was passed by a strict par ty vote, every Radical prevent voting for it ank every Democrat present voting against it, Clymer Wallace and Beardslee, all Dem ocrats, spoke against the bill, and Fleming, Radical, in its favor Wallace, Democrat, maid, “I:am opposed to the repeal of tho Act of 1840 1 am against repudiation, our faith is plighted, and I, as a repreaentatire of l'enneylvan i•, will newer consent that her Minor shall ha tarnished by the payment of stoty cents when she owes a dollar " - • Fleming, Radical, in reply to Wollaao said, "that the bill proposed to effect a sav ing to the people to the amount offifty cents ou the dollar, and that the business of the Representatives of the people was to taco money when they4o , uld, and the bill should therefore mos, as It' proposed a saving of at least fifty cents on the dollar." 4 , 'Further debate was had upon the blll,and it came up on a final passage on the lath of April, 1864, was paesed,and became a law Every Balboa' voted for the bill, and revery llemoorat, except Kiumey, of Bucks, voted against it. Pending the passage of this bin, gold stood at ICdi. Of the morality of its pas sage and tits effects upon the credit of the fitate•it acme to us there can be but one opinion. It It was in 'effect reptlstion. that it alfeeted the credit of the Common. wealth is plainly apparent from the foot that the Radicals at the lute session of the Legislature forced through a bill raleiug the rate of interest on our loans from five to aux per cent . and thus have fastened up on the people a higherrate of intereat.which will be permanent until their final redem Lion. Of the outrageous jobs and financial tricky that the clique who rune the State Treasury, have perpetratectin platting this loan, and the amount of money they have pocketed at the expense of the people, we shall have more to soy. The act of 1840, repealed by the repudia tors was palmed when bank notea were at a heavy dim:tenet. Financial distress perva ded the whole conntv, - and that law was a guaranty to those who invested Moor loans, that they should not suffer depreelation - Under the law, investments of the money of minors, of trust estates and of those whe had fixed incomes were made. They be lieved that the plighted faith of a great State would be inviolable Bed they supposed when they oontracted to receive 5 per mat, that they should receive but 8 per oent.,not one dollar of there investment! would bows been made. bow gross a wrong was PAW' trated may be seen by taking the sass of * minor whose $lO,OOO left him by. hie prate was planed by order of Court In our seen- Atlas. At toe par mut, before the ioda tion of the Gummy his $6OO of faintest was onielent to sloths and edneate him, when the 000 of living was Increased by the rise in gold,. his interest under the, ant of 1840 %till was adequate tor his purposes, horewhen the cot of 1804 wee pilled his 8400 in corret°, was only equal tb $BOO in gold and Ws guardian was compelled to drum upon the principal to support him, was thlejust I Was it honest? Can oar great Contozonwealtp plead that hi, noose• slime required irf The men who perpetrated this nreegmho have thee timedsilied bar fame, beset•Mlii power and her wealth. They Mill rule la tad will ruin her lame and 4 bildhruPt h ormilL—Prifiessrph Awl . • NO. 37 'For the WATCII,I TO SISTER-MAGGIE. Whrn T ale 11111 dearest Maggie, Whoa the death ileums dim my When they bear me from the home hearth Low in the grave to lie; Will via be with them Maggie, , And elm.' above the bier Of,yourgirl hood'. playmate One tewiler, heart felt tear? . Will you watch them ar they lay me In my cold and narrow bed, And learn me theriS notedly Wtth the unforgotten dead Po ) would have them lay 31/11. Maggie, Whore Om tall pin. en • • And the sunbeams long linen reetet , On In) darling mutheCe gruve. I with no nottl,prolud marble To murk the humble spat, But fileggie, plant a men boob To tell kin not forgol And romp at twilight hour, Maggie The hour we loved the beet, And smile, to think my tired heart Han found Its dreamless rest. THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER —A Pitisburger canned Parker was shot dead in Drandway, New York, on Saturday —During the limit twenty yearr, four nl- Inin emigrants have arrived at the port of New York. —The Maine Democracy hero certainly gained coven State donators and forty. Repre sentatives. --Ex-Mean:ler Thomas Brown duo! at Tal lahassee, Florida. on the 2.11 h nit , in the 82t1 Jeer of his age, —Greeley liCell,o. Forney of using the par_ ty foods to distributtintivertinetstonta of bin two paper. in the South —Thp °Mom I .noturo s of tho Kentucky eloe• (inn chow e. majoclty for Helm. Democrat, fo r (lovernor, 4,47;950. —The Worfirs Washington correepondent says that Charles Francis Adams and Mr. Seward will change pl.. lir —The affair. of the Finnan end Olt leens Nation id Bank of Crook lye are In the hand. of a receiver. Alas fur depoegor. The Ott emeriti. fir California hasottfrenti nicks Ilaight'a majority 14 . 000. Nine counties to hear Prow will incr.se the majority. —The New Jersey Democracy hare opened the campaign vigeruurly. An immense man meeting eas held at Newark on the 9th• —The yield of chestnuts, walnuts and but ter-nets in Vermont this somon, will he larger than any preceding amain for many years. —Three of Brownlow's blackguard militia hate been arrested at Nashville fur brutally In stilling two citmens nod assaulting their wiles —ln Virginia every negro over nineteen years old Is registered to vote. This in a epee -lal privilege not granted to the "white trash?. --If you want the negro made your equal —nay, your superior, vote the Mongrel ticket with the Connecticut. Yankee, William., at the head. —The Radical. at Washington declare that there will be no attempt made at impeachment unless Wade is first raMored .. President of the Senate —Kavanaugh, Democrat, is sleeted toe gross is Itiontana by 1,500 majority. The Ter ritorial Legislature 'trammel. uraialmoaaly Dom IM2=l —Hamilton, Ohio, with a population of on ly fourteen thousand, make more malt than any other tonal in the Union,and has 325 drink- ing solu ne —When the Sultan was in Peri. and Lon don, he was .hocked beyond expression by the low-necked dresses and bare arms or the women of fashionable society. _,—Auother of ilairy's pocket paito• wits produced In the York county Coal, but week, by a person whose politic. demanded ex - coalition from punirthment. Cincinnati on Tuesday night, Joseph Zumbnach stabbed himseltto the heart In a mil linery stone, where Miss Amelia Della told him she never wanted hisoompany more. —(loperal bee hr arrived at Sweet Springs Moor. county, Virginia, with his family from tho Wh do Sulphur, whore ho had hem (or two weeks. 110 will spend two week. at the Sweet Springs. . —The Democracy of rbiledelphts have on their ticket two soldiers well known to the ctiun. try for gallant eorViee in the field—Oem Pyter Lyle, Par sheriff, and Oen W A, I,eeeb, fur log ister of will.. —When a white mull votes, that is "suf frage," but when the almighty nigger moues to deposit his imonseuleto ballot, than you have mnoihood surroysip all Its sublimity. The dif ference is perfeitly hirensa. —On Wednesday last, In Cleveland, a Mrs. Ward, for gym. trifling offense of her little son, told him that she would kill. hlm. Ile replkd that she need not del/hat,. he would do lt,and then took a piste Land abet himse:f. —A remarkable ammeter named Said,a na tive African, lire. on one of the 8. Islandkoster C arlestou, South Carolina. He is said to be a great, linguist, and speaks, reads and writes a dozen language.. Ile is now studying Hebrew• . —Old Thad. had felt the pulse of the Hall cal party Very accurately when he declared it w - 01 too much debilitated to make mach of a fight ia Penasylvmela tide fall. If the Demo cratic vote is out It will be literally annihilated. —A apeohd to the New York Worltd, dated Bangor, Maine, 10th Met.. Nap that It lorktake some day. to decide certainly whether the Rad_ teal candidate...lhr Governer is sleeted. Flyer counties hare certainly been pausal,: the Dem. °erste. —The local black and tan organ gravely tells us that Elision Cameron bad um oonidenoe In Andrew Johneon.. Do telll And where, pray, is there a manAroman or ebtld In Pennsylvania who has any eoaddenee %Aid Mommln Tombs? —A prominent Redieel—an ea-member o ) 15oturreet—adatitted to. toAllo4lo of this 014 7; on Utopia/ hot, that diolittdre 'mad GOV Atom sounty by live boodrel majority. Pb admimion wet bated, grit, `arm the periwig POPOlority_of the moo, and, moondly, art the prevaillAggroundlerell arldmietaili gad t,lee ay. to amita'efidie putt, Ttsa,—Thelfew Terb ilk ad*. tees fetton‘liaow woritag bets the etude brae pee. pie that ttualasitaso oar debiltitebiouteed sot to save the trafoa, butte save the Hadleel par: t 7 and gat the newel sofa few that pa*. Therew now tic !toadied %timbal meatelaegle, tared sad 'three Wiliam et debt *seabed, idasply to band op a fanatical patty, I. seak.•bir Pam mad deal the public, mosey. —llia &mime Opioadn, pultllabad Mob - mond, Va., very trolly says Tls mut Wm which Ls rapidly ovallawlas up soon other, Iu Moak maa sada , bathes soul , Is to be a orbits maa's obit I. Mboalat halt of ft is to be bola m grape, les /masa tor MasistMllt Flat/ 6 1M lf At rlmusb mulatto% atimatmi " P.M and degree of YOMptibl/M and • • • AYIAFAX ' • '• --! rdf,k. iiopiv totiiii'ibrin. Lincoln, and the men woo acted wiih bile composing the , Replan/emu party of the preeent day. (bat the South would not se cede ; tberillce could not-ibe "kicked out'' of the Union ; that even if there should be secession and war, thirty days, and "a tow old cows" would @Mile the sailer ; that weary body, wolonodloomobt, old ace! young, amid, thereupon, quietly go to Mohr homes nod enjoy the rights, liberties, and privit egos guaranteo‘to them by the laws of the land, without further disturbance: quit this alight proacedingcould he the oaustrof no groat additional national IMO:dodoes' : that the onward proper' of the nation,toi oroaperity would in no way be impeded,. no!, tinnily, that the pillars of Constitu tional liberty would, upon the whole be otnengi honed Now, was stet such a batik of lies of wo important Choracter told before, by a poll ties] pert, making pretensions to respects,. billy ' As the world known the people of the United Stales have now Impend on them oriole • national debt u few countries were ever milled to beer ; that we are pay ing such taxes iu proportion to the value of our properly as no civilised people were ev er before required to pay ; that thousand, upon thousands of the beet men of the na tion, from meth end smith, arel —sleeping the Bleep that knows no waking" on the grandest battle he . ld the world ever saw, a Cold etrotching from PrifinsYlvui• to the Gulf of Mexico t in short that moraly,phys ictly, socialy, pocunlarly, and politically we no longer occupy the high position whilb was our bout only six short years or. Now, shall we not deserve the worn of the earth if we do not rub our eyes and begin ho inquire what party hut reduced to to • position so utterly degraded Why should this state of things be eon tinned 1 The debt perhaps is inevitable ; but wby does not the port) , in power `ice us at least one thing which is of more tm• portentie than any other, that Is, a restored Union If this were done. other greivancee might be tolerated. In due time they would be removed . ; but with a dismembered Union, a disfranchised white population, and with negro equality, in fact in some sections with negr reprosteryi we cannot expect to aohleve the great triumph of re storing to this continent that grand Repub lic which was the work - of oar fathers, the gloriof us of baler rewires, and the omission of fear aid dread to the devote of the old world Ell the people arouse, and place In power MOO of the old Union, constitution teeing stripe, cud let the teachers of the higher law dootrioe be smeltedd le the infamy which is the proper portion of all who ig nore and reed the will of the people se es- Premed in the luadatoeutal law of the land. ,Califorala has spoken, and let the people of the old ponimonedwittujilsengyjeggiop.. spond.—Es. AN INCIDENT OF MARRIED LIFT. A wild young fellow married a lovely girl, and having been addicted to habits of ,dissipation, even the sincere attachment which he entertained towards his wife„could not entirely disentangle him from snares, His occasional irregular hours would haws given any but one of so pure and sweet dis position every reason to expect shit did not bold that place in his affections, which was her right ; but this reflection scarcely ever Intruded upon her spirits. It happened ones that he was called out of town, and in his haste, he leftbehind him • letter, in which to plesse an unprthelpled friend, he had spoken of his wife in teems of oarelesaness, if not derielo•,aed dilated freely upon his nouns all& Imagine the &Safety and Suspense ofthaprolligate,when be found himself bents by a rapid MAIMS, upon &Journey whit& most of neessalip be of several day's duration, yet remembered distinctly that the fatal latter wan exposed unsealed upon the table. Ha recollected, too, with • pang, that he had wantonly, in answer to her inquiries, boasted that It con talOul a profound secret, which be would notfbavo led for the world. Ile paced the deck in agony of grief and shame. lie pictured her opening the letterArning pale with horror and indignation—perhapifalnt leg with anguish—alarming the servants— dying to her father, 'and renouncing him f . As soon as possible he returned, but with a sinking heart he entered hie dwelling, bracing himself to meet the Eery of an en raged and wretched stelae: He '-opened the door eeeftly. She was binding over the table busily writing. A placid smile seal. ed her mouth of parte.; beauty, and spread over bar glowing features the mild expres sion firjoy and peace; and even as she wrote, the fragment of a sweet ballad r. 4 from her lips ip Ipw mole theeoply go ge from a heart entirely at rest, The lueshapd stole noiselessly around and Mid as bee pep traced her gentle thoughts xXoyeedettewis lying by we, the very letter containing the ..prolound secret," Now I could punish 7011 for your carehrse /Less bat, my dearest Charles. Iwo/ could look you in the face when jog yellow, after having basely violated your trust is my in tegrity, and meanly nought to gratify a ail- "' ly curiosity, at the expense of honesty, del icacy, and confidence. Ito, the letter Is un opened ; sod, lestyou should rwa uneasy. I enclose it to you :with the sincere love of your affeetionete wife." ..What an angel I" uttered the ettectolesee stricken husband& She started upF nob a yr, ofOeuvre, and st Mues l met,the light of 'her dear tuishrinking eyes, be new hamhied Oahe Amid bare eutpectodi 'ben ad limply struck with repentance al his own canduct. He beneeforii severedailtias thsitisow him abroad. And tfehe pato heist molten lo- Boma had haw hl* la art auk, of AIM bad perused all his owbooqudel lottate. she would have found rot i lilqui,opaospolug }tr ier acre twit. of Ofh-Opormal *pa ran ndairation•-74._ . , —Whilst la ?toed' aaftalaitiolt, tie priiprisiy anti' Hight • of , Nyilrormar partial" or "ataaltoott imilaisit,'f the *Wl rile us, it:eto Booth, ri,lrlektai the ' sf rate to' tlas neapioa and a mill ttatNir of Altiii;tad dotes' Cho of *nig to handrails of litoilaarida .*fired atanboiod Itosolatilbliiallollokli:" This is Sat dies aid* .42 1 ' i•hwi~ tbi,ol or 4 1 + 1 + rat* *gm „ bl , sahissel ev Vatiatikkliatiteuel ata Patiffgab Wireso/1111, 1 1 40. Maas n.eliak maiwommh,a•iimmtw*P7 OM me% al .0,4•4 7.01, WiAl NM*: f .*- 1 044 1 4 givH4 $ 4 4 4 r, , . " - - 44,4 1 t.R 4 .!4:014 4k 0 ..9 4 110,1 —AN tor 64: „ asked • ror plletl will.4.l4‘ol4llftorgiallig ge a aeotM •1066•Cfatigthilai **la Ml l / 6 4 moo roc AV A r r , e 4Nr t! Mit r e~Nt 0.40..; 04• ' — 'n , „ rfir • .a l d J 31911 o WIT !AUX
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers