AK EMBER PICTURE how Waage are the freaks of tumor, The lemma of life we forget. While a trifle, a trick of color, To the wooderiel web is •el— r L A chance had brought us gather ; Our talk wsw of in shore course, We were nothing. one to the o But a short half-hour's resource. Set by some mordant And deapiLe the sratr Of time or diataned or tri Insists on its right to Fancy, and tear able, 0 there We awoke of French acting and arrant And their ehey natural way— Of the weather. (rrt it woe reining As we dr.ye home (non the ploy. We debated the fielded nothing,. Men take much paint to dneo The thunder... mind - . of L., , Were event the while fur u.. Arrived at her door, we left her With a droopingly hurried nd And our wheel]. Iwo nt crunching the gravel Of the nak•darkencd no caw.. A. wo drove away through the almilow, The candle rho held in the deer, From rein-vernirked treu-trunk to treo-trunk Fleshed reinter, tool fliahrol 461 more— Plumbed fainter end wholly faded ' Before we hall peered the wood . But the light 01 the fare behind it Went with me and etayed for good •r• The vision titer.. moment, And hardly marl oil at the time It comes unhidden to haunt me, Like a acme of ballad rhyme. llad she beauty ? Well not what they eall so You may tel a tialmeand an fair, And yet there'. her !ace in any memory, With no special right to be there. As I nit some Lunen In the twilight, rkpd call back to Ma In the eon In Old laces and hopes and (anal.. Long burled, good rest to their souls. Her fitee shines out of the embers. I see her holding the light. And hear the crunch of the gravel And the sweep of the rain th•t night 'Tin • face that can never grow nliler, That can never part with its gleam ; ;Tie a gracious possession forever, Our s tuisat In it all iput a dream' —Atbsfitir 31.rAly FACTS AND FIGURES We have conversed with planter, from all parts of the Cotton States, and literal' concur In thie, that they cannot raise cotton at the present price, and pay the tax, and that they will not attempt it another year Now we are very fully im preued with the belief that the Government cannot do without the produataof the South, and it becomes the port of enlightened Statesmanship to restore the agriculture of the South to something like its former con dition. The rice of 1860 amounted to 187,- 140,171 lb.. Seergia and Carolina alone furnished two•thirde the export rice of the world That exportetrade to entirely de greyed, and rice from Ch'ib hire actually been sold in Charleston Harbor The cot ton of 1860 amounted to 5,196,944 bales. II has fallen to 2,019,271 bales in 1866, and is destined to a'greater decline, and it may be to extinction. The Rutter crop of 1860 was 302,205 bor.,' beads Last year, it was 80,000 and Ire year It will be less The tobaeoo crop of 18110 war 429,86.1,761 lb.. It has had a similar, thought not so great, • deoline. 7 — Pitch, tar and turpentine, cypress 'Mingles, live oak tittiber,...liemp, Ilex, wheat, and generally all Southern products have been fearfully reduced The great Weat has al most totally lust is Southern market for corn, mules, horses, hogs, S:o Thousands in the rich producing region of the United Staten have been kept from actual want by the generous charity of the manufacturing or non-producing seution of our vast coun try. How long can the United States afford to have its producers term.' into paupers? In no period of her history line the South showed greater energy than durilig the last two disastrous years Without money, without credit, without permanent labor, end under the depression of unfriendly leg islation, she bus repaired her amste places, built up her burnt towns find villages, re stored her torn up red.roade, ci cried once more her eahoole and soil ao es to furnish three-fourths of the °sports of the country Th ie agricultural labor ham been c irric,l on where leaves lied been cut exposing to in undations, where fences had been burnt, • implements of husbandry destroyed, and horses and molts so scarce that men and frees women have pulled the plough by hand Is there not enough hero to excite the ad miration of the most malignant ph ilenthro plot 'I le there not enough here to euggett the thought that the South, with friendly legislation and a generous helping hand, would soon afford once more it market for the West, and impart confidence to the credit of the Goverummt 'rho products of the South even now constitute almost the sole exports of the country, and therefore almost•the sole Lope of establishing the cur rency el/00 a sure basis! Northern - men, who have attempted the cultivation of Southern farms, have generally made mis erable failures The Southern people, of course, understand the culture of their own staples and the management of their own system of labor better than the rest of the world elan,. Hence, enlightened self-inter est shouldprompt the North a r i d W es t t o give a wise encouragement to Southern planters by • fair and equal legislation, im posing upon them no heavier burdens than they themselves are willing to bear.— No mad of settee doubts! that the agr lout tete of the Booth- bulk up the great 011ie' the North and m•pe the whole United ;States risk and prosperous. No one at all etionversaet with statialles doubts that upon weleuseltating the South depends the poly Laps of maintalning the credit of the goy,. ammo! at home and abroad The rich bond-holders, the merchant prawn's, the farmers, and mechanics—all of and troaditlotie are interested in Southern pros perity. The party that devises unjust and unequal legislation for that section will surely be pushed is the wall. Self-interest will in the long run gel the better of hate and prejudice However willing the loyal North may be to see the rebellious South punished. the loyal North is not willing to see ruin brogit- to her own border to PO: complieh that obTai. We think that the clay Is notdistantwhen the American people ll see that they &repaying loodeer for their whimile of negro equably. If we estimate the bale of cotton at one hundred dollars, the payment last year in the reduced pro ;Wallin of cotton amounted to three hundred Anti Aventeen millions, seven hundred and ty-four thousand, three hundred dol ls@ ! (1131T,774,800.) Assuming that the Wee upon all other products of the South Is equal to that upon sou" we paid last year 5685.548,800 for this ebony whistle. "ow long will the people, he willing to sustain this mettelitif A 'aloe has reached our little backwoods village on this Sib ()Weber morning, coming from Penneylvania and Ohio, "this is the lent year of folly I" So may it be Is our Adgust number, we ventured to Nugget' to our colored brethren that they should put on probation for a Ape" their new lovers, who had once been negro-tra ders or fire-uteri. As elf eltviee was ‘ 'oelv•d in such • kind tippreetative -- --- • "Ile . • . 1 • nal . '- .' 1 •L' I 10' O l jL !1 V . II j e ni l otra it i!. . ~, # # "STATE ILIGUTS AND rEDEB.A.r. UNION." VOL.XII spirit, we venture to drop them another hint. Id the first transports of requited love when the youthful pair are exchanging vows, and for the first tiele having a lender exchange of confidential confessions, is utual (so say the novel writers) for the en amored couple to ask one another, •'when dud yet' first begin to love me!" It is de-. lightfill for them to trace back in their own experience the first awakening of the soft' emotion, and each desires to know when the other first felt the kindli4 l4 of the gentle flame. The lady, especially, le inclined lo learn the precise day, yea the precise mo rueise when her dear 'wain heaved the first sigh for her. And if she be al.all jealously inclined, she will not rest satisfied until she has found out all the motiviti, causes and attendant circumstances, which brought about the first sigh Was It the charming style of her dress Was it the sweetness of her smile' Was it her singing or dan cing, Was it some noble sentiment she ut tered, or some sparkling w I All these interrogatories and many more (we get our information from the story books) are pressed upon her hirer, and he has to telt Mk precise moment when Cupid's arrow rook him, anddesaribe the precise feather which winged the arrow. our suggestion to our colored brother is that he should imitate the prudence, as well as the tenderness, of the jealous lover.— When the old negro-trader and old seces sionist comes filling and cooing around you gratify him with a kiss of tenderness, bu t at the lame time. ask him, "when did you first her etriove me 1 * Was it. before or 'lifter the battle of Gettysburg} Was it be fore or after the passage of the Sherman bill? What was it made you love me ? Was your heart won by the shape of my nose, the quality of my hair ob the style of my foot 7 Were you subdued, however, not by my personal grease, but by the charms of my eon eeeee lion and the noble ness of my soul 7" All these question Vars important and we hope they will be duly propounded. The negro has a right to know at what precis* moment the tender passion first seised the old negro-trader, and what particular grime or person or character first excited the soft emotion Since we have become a loyal winter, we feel an irreeleble inclination to explain our &lining by a "little anecdote." after the manner of the,"late lamented." We remember that in o ir youthful days, (a long time ago,) agentleman whose subsequent history the world has resound ed) mune to us and said, ^I don't know how it is, but I onoe thought the features of Miss were harsh, now they seem to me all sweetness As the lady in due season became his wife, we presume be found out the cause of change of opinion Uid little Cupid have something to do with it? So It seemed to us The President of the first negro Conven tion, which met at Raleigh, had told Gen Howard a short ,Mme before, that the ne• groan were encorrigible thieves and liars, and that there was no good thing in them What caqsed his sudden change of vl6wa ? Had tho mischievous God with his bow and arrows anything to do with It If so, at what time was the shaft shot? Hew deep did it penetrate Let each fond lover be asked the question "when did you first love me , " "How much do you love me?" For fear that all may not be equally can did, we wJlsivo the answer of the frankest •r the crowd of adorers I began to love you just after the passage of the Sherman bill. My love is equal to (he silent of my property, and the measure thereof is my fear of confiscation!"—Land We Love. ANOTHER DIAD DUCK.—Drake, the noto rious lawyer of St Louis, who now mis represents Missouri in the United Stales Senate, has killed himself in the estimation °Lail honorable men, us one of the future Judges of Prorideut Johnson, in the event 9(.6 impesahment. hewing publicly so preseed himself In favor of the worst that could be done to the president, In advance. Thus we have another senatorial "dead duck." It is strange that men as smart as Drake thinks he is, should adopt seek a low estimate of tliejudgment and <Tamen sense of the American people, as to suppose that they are in favor of sustaining men who oso thus degrade their proper manhood in the insane pursuit of political power. Drake is well known in Missouri as a thor ough demagogue, and so a perfectly rea lees politician, regardless of any principle of honor, right and justioe. He Is a Gross between Hum., and Ashley. He can take his choice as to which of the two he most resembles. He was ait bird for lovely as sociation with the D. D. Forney, but he has killed himself. -Alas poor Drake.—Pflts buryA Post. —The Radiosls deny that we have Democratic gains in Indiana, and yet re fuse to give the teats and figures in em anation with the reeent election in that State. The Demooratio gains are 'oil as large as lathe other States, considering the importance of the election We have re turns from thirtyfive clountles In * that State, in which then, lea demoeratio gain of amen thousand sk hundred and ten, from last year. Of these thirty-live donation. re goon twelve which were carried by the Rad icals one year ago There are ninety-two counties in the State, and the Radical ma jority in 1866 was 14,202. The reaotanary tide has reached Indiana as well as all the other States That fact is demonstrated by the result If the election had been for State officers, and the question of negro suffrage and equality fairly presented, the Democratic' victory in Indiana would have rivaled that of Ohio As it is, Indiana roc safely be placed in the Demottiatie column for the Presidential election. No matter who the Radicals may nominate for Presi dent, be willNhave to carry the irrupreetbie negro, and that will swing all the Western States against him. The West will not 6°- 680 the negro, even if United with spurs and shoulder-strap.—Aga. —A letter from Richmond says Hunnicutt has kept an armed neggro guard in front of his \ office for the past three nighti. They ha4e refused to allow sill ' revs to pass on the sidewalk." Ife shall probably next leer of the erection of a temple to this villinaloua Wheal demo ' gogue, and a statute will likely be passed. under the coming negro regime, sommead ing honors to be paid to him.—Ys A SOBERINO EFFECT 'Senator Howard, of Michigan, wrote a letter recently in favor of impeachment, 'which he was persuaded to withhold from publication till after tke election of Tues day. It is likely now tb-ke suppressed al together. The truth is, thia the result of the election. has hail a suddenly sobering influence, like a bucket of cold water on the head of a drunken man, and the Inoli nation now will be to moderate and reason able councils. The schemes of Butler and Wade to depose the President first and im peach him afterwards will no more be heard of, and Impeachment itself will be only named by the more impulsive politicians Tne schemes for oonliscation,for reconstruc ting the governments of Maryland and Kentucky, and for establishing equal suf frage by law of Congress in all the Stales, have all gone by the board." • We clip the lbove sensible paragiaph from that bold and independent Republican Journal, the Springfield (Mass.) Republecan, one of the ablest and most influential papers in this country, owned and controlled by that excellent poet and prose writer, Timo. thy Titans:lib, Dr. {falling, whose fame as an author is world wide. We sincerely trust that for the good of our prostrate country„ not only will the lessons of the election induce Senator How ard to drop this perilous subject of im peachment, but also that they may persuade Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner that their I prejeots must be summari ly abandoned if they really desire - peace and resonstruolion. We, in common with ail conservative men and well-wishers of our native lead, would rejoice to know that so much real good had resulted from the &Imitator the ultraiste of the Republican party in the resent elections, as the sober tog of the fanatical men who have become intoxicated from a too free use of that ar dent spirit which is distilled from a full cup of unlimited power. Judging from the tenor of the speeches which have been made In the halls of Congress, end those made outside upon the campaign, Atump, we should judge that more tflitClifie of the Radical leaders had become confirmed po litical inebriates. The manner in which they reel into Impeachment, Confiscation and Ifni 1 Suffrage schemes, conveys the impression to the unbiased and Impar tial spectator that absolute power ,ba s been imbibed la so freely as to produce' dell rims Irtlllol. It would certainly be a blessing to Sa vannah if we could be assured that defeats cts . .• antthing else had sobered the insatiate oflieeilekers of our oily It will be well if thee. solemn tidings that have been sent from Pennsylvania and Ohio have a sato , brume effect upon the half deranged ;minds of that class of colored men who, S few months ago, when they foolishly imagined their infamous and clandestine plans to trample under fool and crush every white man who refaced to bow to the African Oesler cap they and their white w ire-pull ng and office hunting cohorts had erected, could be carried out. We say it should teaoh i them that it will neither be politic nor safe hereafter for them to eland up in the presence of thousands of respectable white and colored people no cl aim that white men are hypocrites, not ou est, •rul are unfit to be trusted by the h ok race " Possibly out of these defeat. may yet en •olve more, still more that is good. Per haps the Southern people will also be led to believe from these elections that it is not the will, or intention of the Northern peo ple to force them to quietly submit to thAt cajolery and insults of MI illiterate and Im prudent negro, while he vauntingly boasts that the political programme ne and his followers, white and bleak, have laid:down in one wherein they intend to "mike the tw6 races mix and run like molasses and water," and that he and his aolorel breth ren will not be satisfied until the spoils of Aloe are equally divided. Who knows but what these reverses. may even remind Bradley and his white backer. and supporters that it I. not wise for Union Leagues or any other leagues to threaten the editor of • publm journal whenever he sees ftt to expose therliesciality of rascals We intend to f9Bow up closely the shameless plans ofdleee bogus WI lots,and if we succeed in opening the eyes of a few of our Northern friends to the villiany the' these cliques hope to perpetrate upon a de fenseless people in order to hoist themselv es Into literally' positions Of honor and trust, where they can disgrace and dishon or the grist Republican party, to the Rad ical wing of which they cling tenaciously, we shall benoutent. We are strongly in favor of a convention, believing it to be, If properly controlled, the corner of our future peace and prosperity ; but If the worthless aloes of adventurers we are op posing are le be the chosen law makers, we p or thriqesver the safe, respeotable, and sforthls military government. Men whose By Antoci force us to believe that they so progressive in their ideas as to pro pounde religion and morality but vulgar errors that pass ourrent:among the Igno rant. are certainly net well adapted to make law, for those who regard both as rich blessings.—SavononA Republican, (Rep) —One pound of rotten will make 4 yards of 88-ineh ehl ling of fair quality, such as la common' fled for by the trade of the count nd oommonly .old before the war al 8 ents—co that a New England manufacturer, riling on that theme, said : "With cotton at 10 cents per pound to the planter in Tem, or 221 cents at the mill, the manufacturer will get fair profit." Three yards are required for a shirt. One pound of action will make six yardc of '.lion, such as was commonly sold before llue war, at 9 minty, twelve yards being re quired for a dross.—Galvevfon nave. —o 1 Logfp, one of the Itinerant stomp epaskers enfploysd by the Radicals, recently *4mme to grief' in this wise: "At one pleas," It is reported, "while be was making a speech in favor of Radiealiam, • lad, arose, and said, substantially • .Did you not, John, °filmy husband money If he would go and join the Southern army ? Did you not olfbr to equip him out for that purpose ?' No.' replied Logan. 'You lie, Joh•,' was the response or the lady. am your sister, and the man you tried to get to Join the rebels, wai thy husband. , " Family the Odsisi's feelings, after that I --Pall—Th le column BELLKFONTE, PA., FRIDAY NOVEMBEyB, 1867. CONCERNING MAN Wonders al home by familiarity cease to excite astonishment ; but hence it happen• Chit many know but little about the “bOllllO we live in"--,the human body We look upon the house from the outside, Jost as a whole or unit, never thinking of the ninny rooms the -curious passages, and the inge nious internal arrangements of 'the house, or of the wonderful Inflictor° of the man, the harmony and adaption of all its parte. In the human skeleton, about the time of matuzity, are 165 bones Thiirinuseles are about 5911 in number The length of It o alimentary canal i 9 about feet. The amount of blond in an adult averag es 30 pottlig'ur full ono fifth of the entire weight The heart is mit inches in length and four inches to diameter, and beats seventy times f(Er — ibintite, 1,21)1) times per hour, 100,8(N) times per day, 35,772,000 listen per year, 2,5135,110,000 times to three score and ten, and at each beat two and a half ounces of blood are thrown out of it, and one hun dred and seventy-five ounces per minute, eta hundred end fifty six pounds per honr, seven and three fourths tolls per day (II the blood in the body passes through the heart In three minutes This little organ by its ceaseless industry, In the allotted span The Psalmist gave lu - ninn, lifts the enormous weight of 870,000,200 to. The lungs will contain about one gallon of sit, a their banal degree of inflation., We breath on an average 1,200 times per hour, inhale 700 gallant, of air, or 21,100 galkros per day The aggregate surface of the air mills of the lunge .Elteeeth 20,000 square inches, an eren very nearly equal to the floor of a room twelve feet square The average weight of the brain of an, adult is three pounds and eight ounces, of a female two pounds and four ounces The nerves are all connected w Oh it, directly or by the spinal marrow. These nerves, to gether with their branches and minute ramifications, probably eseeed 100,1100,000 In number, forming a “body guard" out numbering by far the greatest army ever marshaled The skin is composed of three layersmnd varies from one (mirth to one-eigth of an Inch in thickness. Its average area in on adult is estimated to he 2,000 square inch es, The atmospheric pressure being about fourteen pounda to the equal,: loch, a por tion of stadium 81x0 is subjected r,t a pros sure of 40,000 pounds ' Prosy tight hung Each square inch of the shin contains 3,500 sweating toba4,or perspiratory pores, each of which inity be likened to a little drain tile one fourth of an inch long, in M ing an aggrog ye length of tho entire sur face of the body of 201, 110 foot, on a tau ditch for draining the body almost forty miles long Man is made inervelously Who ig rag, to investignte the curious, to witness th. wonderful works of Omnipotent Wisdom, I, him not wonder the wide world round I seek them, bill evtintne himself “Th proper study of nminlktaid is mutt "—fir cannon; Journal at Coonnrrrr SNUFF-LING Lt thu amine mon or the black and tat organ which annotnicui that the —cop, or beads" Intend to noruSaajajieo Sheraton sohlter—for the Presidency—the loon black and tan organ says that— "In their organs, at Mole political con ventions, In their mama meetings, the effort of the Copperhead lenderels to. snuff mit all soldier. of the Union, end morn port icolor ly to !muff out Urant, Sickles, and Sheri dan To get rid of these heroes, however, will require wore miffing thou Copper head slanders can accomplish They most snuff out patriotism first. They molt next snuff out Joy.] devotion, then they must snuff out the great Union party, wiitch will iurolre the enuflung ila of the nation. be cause when Gra9t. Sicklem and Sheridan are entiffed, Aniertua, Union and Liberty will lack theclighr make them worthy of preservation'!" I=l little more left, however, if not exactly of the tame sort. A few wieeks wilt° r. deipb is "copperheads" nominated three "soldiers of the Union"—Generals Lyle, Leech end dallier—for responsible city offices Before' the election Qor (leery and his comniiOsioner—one Mitchell—en deavored to "snuff thew out" with a bogus soldier •ote from Fort Delaware That not suoceeding, the defeated Radical otndidat es, the leaders of the Shoddy league and the Radioal district attorney undertook to "snuff them out" with a contented election Whether the will eventually succeed tu ' , snuffing out" those gallant soldiers re mains yet to be seen. Agent, The "cop. perheads" of Dauphin, Lebanon and sobuytilir nominated a brave “soldier of the Union"—Col. James Elite—for judge of the supernumerary criminal court, but although pledged to drow no salary until the not eotablishing the court should be pronounced constitutional by the Supreme Court, the itads—among whom were the controllers of-the black and tan —ignomint onely "snuffed him out" in order Noma' a person who hes drown $1.750 kr doing nothing IVe could *stance more than • score of other good and true "soldiers of the 'Colon" who were "snuffed out" In a similar way at the late election, by the Radical negro suffrage propagandists, but forbear. , As to Clan act:a, te are twinned to think Deacon Bergner •'snuffed him out" effectually, about a year ago. by declaring that '•Orant is a mere ratilt(ory adventurer, whore opinion upon political natters in not worth morn than that canny other ordina ry man " A to Skates end Sheridan, the people at the late elections ' , snuffed them out," in the partial extinguishment of the Radical party From the reticence of the Radical press, of late, In regard to their fitness for Presidential and Vine Presiden tial nominatioos, we judge that their 4:1- anguished "winks" could not be relighted even with the flame, from the bncning barns and dwelllngt that mute lighted up the great Valley of the Shenandoah After the general ...nutting out" of the "great Union party." ;so-called by itself, because every thief end scoundrel has a de cent sounding alias.) at the November elee ages, the "patriot.'"•who so long d lean guilhed themselves by their "loyal devo tion" to mule ostaractors may as well make their minds to take a last grab at the gash-pots, for ever thereafter they will only snuff their savor afar off.—Patriof tt Unoa. THE FRAUDULENT SOLDIER VOTE Win Irm•nirinutf, (lot. 16, 1861. 11 II L Ihrst, PI? , 211 South Sixth Street /!nkd. Iph In reply to your letter or Oet. 12, receiv ed yesterdoy, lionerol firnnt direct, me no Fond you the following cell of ielegrom Octj received fioni the conunnuding of Fort Deluwure t: , FOR r 001,11,001, Out, 19,1857. I) fotrmend, Assmtant )libu taw Generd . MEE I was in Philadelphia when the election occurred here. Colonel Howard. who was in command, reports that a citizen presen ted himself here with nicommisrion from Governor (leery, tinder the sot I of Pennayl- - •ania, appointing hon to take the vote of Pennsylvania soldier. at this post Colo nel Howard told him that lie wan tinder the imp:contort that such nn election was not legal But no the mart had a CWIIIIII.IIOII front GOV,IIO r he allowed bun to take the votes, I add on toy own nifthori ty, that I have ascertained that a large proport 0111 of the men voting had no vote in the Ando under any circumstances It Ilr said only thirty-three (33) ..antes were poll ed, while over a butdred (flat) were return ed Co officers were concerned one way or other in th is elect ion (Signed) C. II Nlont.Art, Major Fourth nrldllery, Brevet Ilrigadierdleneral Commanding I'. I) Townsend, Asslslard, Adjolant, Ucn It is astounding to what a depth of mean ness John W Geary descended during the tho latii . ‘gampoolgn. Not only did he go about from place to pace making political speeches from the hustings—not only did he lower the dignity of his officio by presid ing over a local meeting, held on the inter est of the Radom' party—not only did be disgrace himself and the State at Antietam, by u violation of all the proprieties of the occasion—but it seeons from the above oar lespondence, Ilia, be has lent himself to an attempt to pet pool i c a moat outrageous fraud upon the people of Pennsylvania The above tilegrltilliteClOtlee an effort made by lima to have it,' vole, of United Slates regular troops, stotoluneol at Fort Delaware, counted in Poutc.xlv mom for tic Stale ail eve, rot we arc 101,1 1 hot ohe man ,who went there to take the vol.- the soldievo "had comalissloll from GoVerlior Geary " .'4IW, Gol,o'llol' just nu we an any other outsell 1.110, , , !ha: the Amend to our Stale Conatitui ton allowing soldiers to vote, only confers that right upon such its are •'ut any actual nubby service under a isquistilon front the Prestooni of Orel ni led States, of by the authority of this ('out tnonwetilth " The following to thin not rind moot to the Stole Viinuttution allowing soldiers te •ote Bet 1111.1 I II hellever any of the qua!, tied electors of this Commonwealth 0111111 h in any 00(1181 military service, under a re cititsit ion from the Preeidetit of the Untie. States, UI by the authority of this Common wenitb, Pilch electors may exerciser he righ of mill:rage in all elections by the edify,s under such regulatton. as are, or shall hr prescribed by 1/111/, No luny as if (bey vl present nit their U. 1311 place of election It never entitemplAted, and call not p 04 athly It • no eon ttrited, investing gold lent it the revollaf army with the right of stifirage And yet, with a knowledge of these fame Le commtesitom a man to take the vole 0 ilie gold Lire ' , tattooed at Fart Delawarr who, he knew, hail no more right to tote ir lie Lrtr election, th in the inhabitants o Fron: . ilte letter et Major 1101 goo, it or peen, that tiiivetior Geary mutt ha VP know lets ;null Ile .teelat Ito hove 1,11/1111 144 1011 C, an culturally honorablte and hottest 111,1 VIII 1110 to 114 ih o rkork "Utile Iy•dir vale., is err 1.11,1, While our re r turned mot 441110.1 the returns IVho aterestatal the figure• I Sorel), th agent beartng tltn 001111141041011 of the Gov ernor, ought to know FOJI4 II Ifig Let on know who he t. het him explain the disci epancy the netu tl vole cwt and the number or votes returned Toe GUI I Thor ought to clear hie skirts and w tk” di.mlositre of the facts It is tune that Radicals should show 1101110 dtspos won to fern et out I lie authors of ouch villainy Our readers will remember that a similar fraud was perpetrated somewhere in this neck of woods" in 1805 for the punpose of °feeling Mr Duncan for State Senatorand one of the Ed.tors of this paper for District Attorney It was admitted by everybody to be It fraud and no effort was tondo to have the vote counted, but no steps have been taken as yet to discover its authors, that we are aware of And eo, we doubt not, Ibis infamous attempt at fraud will be covered up The vole will unqestionably be rejected,, but the lolk tools who wyre4sill ing to do this dirty work will be *remind from detention and exposure by the men is high places who eneouragedifhe project Oh ! miglity Geary, bast thou sunk of low ! Contrast the Governor's conduct with. that of General Grant It will be seen by the letter which we publish, that the Adjutant General pays to Mr. Meet, "Gen eral Granl' ' lnstructs me to send you the following" &o , and then follow. the tele gram of Ilithr Morgan to the Adjutant General narrating the. circumstances uncle} whiohdhe vote was taken. General Grant Adently deairea to see ante light thrown on his business lie did not even entertai , sufficient regard for our redoubtable Gov emote as to ehield him, from this terrible publicity. Ile is doubtless of the opinion that the "villainous perpetrator. of this fraud, be they high or low, ought- Id be punished, and so th ink we. What a striking commentary upon the irtue of "the party of great motto' ideas! 't A putrid mass of corruption from the crowp, of its head to the cotes elite feel, it woe high time for it to he completely buried out of sight —raffev Spirt( reply to Forney'e question, can the Roman people be froe, enjoy the bless ings of a good government and all modern •'improvements" without n Repreitentati•e Chamber, the St a ndard of Piiilndsighia anewere. -IC not the oitisens of Washington are to be pitiel To secure the Indepen dence of the Faileral Government, they' have bees practically d.sfrsnohlsed They are governed by a congress, in the election of which they have uo voice, and, no} being residents of any Congressional District, or State, they are ineligible to Congress or to the Presidency If the people of the United States have the right thus to treat their capital, the whole Catbkilto world may demand similar gunran tees from the Ho man'W" i—itead and hand in your neighbor lb. iff ATOIIII/111. . , Are ATROCIOUS FALSEHOOD From • leadlng edttoral in the New 1 - ork /Mime we extract the following "If the Democratic party wero to power Oily would ark, ru Merl do 1101 g, to Piracy about Mt/or-nit, relot.. &Innen noo;irr and slain, deprive the freedmen of theca social and political right,' reeled to them by a martyr's' blood " We deem it proper (though) not a mem ber of the Democratic pprly) to disavow, for the Southern people, the charge made In the linen Italicised above We have doc uments circulating in this sections ti t which it is openly charged that if the Demoratia • should regain power, the negroee will again be suelaved It is by such falsehoods that theltailicals hope to secure the undivid ed eupport of the black population of the South bnt Mr. GreekregAbohassome reputa tion for fairness, should le slow io give his svection to euoh an empty charge. He ought to know better It would be no ad vantage to the Democratic party of the North to base slavery revived in the South. None whatever They owe their tempora ry defeat in the North io their connection with it as a national party They know this very well, and nobody knows it hotter than Mr. Greely Ile knows that they imuld not carry a mingle State of the North (they would avow sualf purpose Slave y can never be rev din any country here it bat been aboli ed, much lees - in he United Stater. As we hare no Democratic party in the Soutn, but only an organized conservative party, made up of the great mass of our white population, ready to act with any party North that upholds the Constitution and opposes the party of revolution,—such a purpose cannot be attributed to on, No Southern man in his senses ever dreams that slavery be rcitored here, and very few yen dome it. :Governor Wise well said .They have been emancipated as• well as ho blacks," nod they arOctot disposed to take the burthins whionit imposed, upon Choir shouldele again. kln, °reel) , is. or ought to be informed upon this subject, and for the sake of oommoo &looney, should re frain from indulging in ■uoh gross misrep tesentetiona —Lyric/diry Vrryruatan. A CURIOUS PHENOMENON A lilies Willis, of Cayuga, New York, aged sixty, Meanie blind in her left eye wills a cataract, about four plant ago; was soon operated upon by a physician in Bloomfield, in she State, the eye being to tally lost About two ye ire ago the other one became blind froilla cataract also, and was opsrated upon in Syracuse, Use 17th inst , and sight restored. But this is not the wonder in the case About OLIO year e,go elm began to nee an image of a bediati ful slipper (although both oyes were blind ) It became snore nod more perfect, JA, shape until it was a real slipper, as it appeared to her In. the course of a intukth or two it changed from a slipper to be a coffin ouch an was used in the olden times with the top or cover sawed in two across the breast with the top part partly turned back ; this contined to grow more perfect in shape till' she could see the Intiges and screws. Up to this time appeared a most beautiful peN eon lying in it The person did not appear to be that of a corpse, but, on the contrary, appeared to bo a Icing, fat, and heulthy,pleaaant, smiling cuuntenance,chaoging now and then to an older person, and more lean lit flesh, but at no time as dead or sick The countenance of the image was nt perfect in shape show ing the nostrils, mouth, lips and chin, the hair dark : and complexion beautiful sad healthy iu appeirance and nevor changing Tile col, of the slipper and coffin was changeable" generally a bright green, changing to a purple, and nevir abase t,but always to be seen day and night: The writer asked her if it was a source of dis comfort to her , and she said, oh, no, it is the greatest comfort I hawe,to watch it I would not spare it I have fears from it, but min anxious to have it explained —Sy ramie Couner. Names or Cot:antics —America, from Vespucci Amorigo, an early adventurer, who, being sent out in 1501 by the Spanish Government ants chart-drawer and chief pilot, placed ou his maps "America" or , 'Amerigo's Land." Circulation or copy ing of these made the battle familiar to the world. Europe stgotfies a country oflwhiie com plosion , so named because the inhabitants there were of a lightl3aq:do:ion than either those of Aida or A a Asia signifies betwe , or to the middle, from the foot that geographers placed It be tween Europe and Africa. Africa eignifies the land of corn or ears. It was celebrated for its abundunce of corn and all sorts of grain. Spain, a country of rabbits or conies.— This country was so infested with these animals that the inhabitants petitioned Augustuirfor an army to destroy them Italy, a bountry of pitch ; from its yield• log great quantities of black pitch/0, _Gaul, modern France. eiplitles yellow heintl; se yellow hair characterized its Bret inhabimule Hibernia is utmost, or last habitation ; for beyond this westward the Placeniclans, we are told. over extended their voyages Britain, thp country of tin ; as there were great quantities of lead and tin found on the adjacent islaa t he Greeks call it Albion, ',Mat signitled, j u the Pturnician tongue, (labor white iti• high mountains, from the whiteness of Its shores or the high Backe on the Western coast.—Er. Cum; von Flumes —As there is much needles mitering from felons, we deem it a duly to give • remedy which we know to he perfectly reliatlibi Take • portion of the bark of sweet elder, or hops will do. put it with some sweet cream Into cup.aand boil a short time; then put • lump of saltpeter ivviaiku large as apes.; let it slowly dry amply to the coneletenoy of • wales, which apPly to thy felon. The saltpeter is the eier— i. cure, but the alder bark and sw cream aid in eating the pain. As felons me times make it. necessary' to amputate fin ger or haled (if left alone,) they should be attended to at one. By putting on enough saltpeter any felon can be oured.in forty-eight hours. and pain will cease almost Immediately. —Demooraots shoold all subscribe and lake Democratlo books and papers. NO. 44 AN AUTUMN JOY. , It is et fair autumnal day. The ground is strewn with yellow lures The maple stems glean, here and grey, The grain* bound In golden sheaves, Afar I hear the speckled pin IN Pd. 'mid the stubble dry, And muffled begs from busy flails Within the burn near by. The latest roses now are dead, Their petals seatrered far and wide, The sumac berries, richly red, Bedeck the lane on either side A dreamy calm is on the air— is A dreamy echo on the see All, never was a day more flair Than this, which hi me' I no the stack of ripened corn— The yellowed mosses on the roof, The diamond Jew-drops of the morn, That string with gams the spidiJee woof; An attire haze is hanging low About the outline of the bill., And charming ties fowl southward go From marshes, h•ts, end kills. For many years the autumn brought A solemn sadness to my goal-- In sombred e'on my l igheat thought, _ And on my gagßyt moments stole: Tons sad, yet s t—a strange alloy Whop° and sorrow intertw toed— THIS autumn brings me only Joy, No shadow haunts my mind And why is thin' The dead leaves fall— The blossoms wither as of old And winter comes, with snowy pall, fo Trap the earth so chill and cold; The sea fowl, strung athwart the sky, .61111 chant their plaint". monotone— And why, when leaves arid blossoms die, Should I leel Joy done? Oh, ask me not—l mut not tell; NMI dare nut all my heart d Meiotic— A fairy wove a magle *poll Around me, when decayed the rose ; Two gifts did fading summer bring— Two nymbols of un fading bliss— Upon my Anger glow* s ring, Upon my lip.—a k ! THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER. dings have slain wore than the slings of akt. Cause. many to take a wind- tag way home —Champagne in the cause of many real —Punch ie the cause of-many unfriendly ponchos. —Tho fellow who wrote "Ask me PO more," was probably —Ale mums lettings, and beer stretchea many upon Blair bier. —Brandy brands the nomse of those who can not peenn their appetite. —Tho menarho wrote "I'm reddest when I sing," war a fool to ring much. —A herb cucumber paring realism:id around olorets are said to be o good exherm Ma hn of towbar. --Read the election new. from Georgla,and rejoice over the degradation or the white race If you can, —A Western Man says he alefays respects old age except when some one sticks him with ■ pair of tough chickens. —Why are yyang hullee generally hod grammarimi ? Diniuse few of them are able to dielmo matrimony. —What is the diforenee between a man bitting his wife's nasal organ and a woman knittjevitockings t Ono hits her nose, and the other knits her hose. ---What le the difference between It saw mill tender, and • sailor ? O'he goes to me and the other goes to saw. —A Wheeling N.•ll. advertise. • French medicine, one bottle of whisk' will enable • person to talk French in throe weeks —A lady trampled on • dog's tad the oth er day, and the animal bit her leg. The blood did not flow, however—only sawdust. —At Waynceboro', Augusta county, Vir ginia, on election day, a negro who voted the Conservedre ticket wee attacked and heated nearly to death by a mob or Radical nigger, —An improved nursing apparatus is ad vertised. We don't believe the old way can be improved very much, There are some things that are about complete at the beginning —The New York Times speaks of the Dem ocratio party as "a united and powerful enemy , to the Radicals. A little while ago thli Yiwee woe ridiculing the Democratic party as defend'• Wade is going out of the Senate, and they say Brownlow is going in. It is the old story of one satan cast out and one seven times worse returning. —Philadelphia claims to be the greatest manufacturing eity in the world,. except Lon don. In 1806 the factories there produced over two Inman I millions of dollars worth of staple good• --A canary bird at Troy, New York, having acaped from ita edge lately, a eat, which was my food of listening to the bird's song, caught t and brought it Wilily to its mistreat; before he knew of the crape. —Well, Johnny, what kind of cake do you Why,,i like .pollsps oaks, and poundeake ,and plum car, and ahy kin! of cake but etona4e --orke-rithat I don't Ilk. at-. 11, I don't. —itiree . l4 saym that smoking ls the "allot mita detestable abuse of him corrupted sensual apietlta. obereJf depraved man Is eapable." and jet Greeley tells es In his autobiography that his mother smoked • pipe. —Aaron Hurt, the Conservative negro ors brut Columba', mt. ts{rpl-end featberad In Savannah on Thursday, by aln Radical negro°. Will 'rehear of till. ontrage In tho Tribes's, or "My two papers, both dolly" ? —rit is nothoritively auerted that B. F. Wade bu uo intention of retiring from public life. If he can't be Senator he is willing to be a driver one eft, cu.,. calling for Whiett he Is well Med. - 11 —Stanton wu 'engaged to make • con gratulatory epeech Phltadelph la Loyal Leaguer on election oigtE - Ile was dined and wined preliminarily, bet when the ratans acme In, Stanton and lb* Icemen and the lights went out. —Simon Cameron was reeent/y robbed of his spoons. no epeenistar entered &boat noon, without break mg,door or look, 11.11 If to show there is still (some) honor among thieves. Nu Butler been in Harrisburg lately 1 —A pretty fan estimate of the magnitude of the natlon•l debt may be formed zleaLthe foot to called to mind that, in a meat. state. meet, • clerical error ocoatted of some thirteen millions of dollars. When a clerk has seem ter making a trilling error like that, It miey be sawed that the satire debt must be modersielp largo. —lnquisitive 11ttb Miss.-11a, if I were to die sad go to hearse, should I weer say Moho Autique dress. Arletooral,la ay loge; we eels seereely suppose that we shall WIPP' the &Übe of this world in tlfie next. 10g1241111,6 Ottiol(los.—Thon 441 us, ea, how would the Lord know .1 . 110ikonlid to the bolt oodoty? iy [ c .. L . 44 A MELANCHOLY IIO.IIIAPARE. A strange incident look place in New Orleans a few Jaya Mote A man, for ad vanced in years, had been employed to ear; ry a ber to a aertain quarter in this city ; but, previous to reaching hisdestination,hs fell dead in One street. The authertifel Or dered the body to be renamed to be hearse depot ; the box being meanwhile left in an adjoining house. The inmate proceeded to examine the box, when, their astonishment it was found to contain the skeletou'ot • and the skull and some other blithits— belonging to the body of an adult. Tlie ' discovery was comniuuicaled to the proper •uthorities, and at length the Wolfing par , molars transpired : IMn Ramon Durum native of Spain, married in estaktOits. many yearn ago, a wealthy lady, Arl Donna Isabel Romero, for whew he pro ell Ike moot Irn.l lOW:amen. The I titer dying after the emigration of Orleans, ii D . u n r; some couple new on of the other hone of ibis deceased sod , hp seer after kept •itit the greatest care, wrap ped up to n piece of blue silk Boole year. after the death of his first wife, Duran mar ried a seoxsil—a person nisch younger tban himself By this he hal a daughter, on whom he Cacti lyetextl , but the latter dying about 1838, when only in her seventh year, Duran was plunged in the greatest grief ; and determined not to part with his daugh ter's 4bdy, Lad it secretly embalmed, and put a bor with the remain. of his for mer wife ; hot in order to not appear as opposing the laws And establish oultomt, he went to tho expense of a mock inter meat This loss exercised so strong an impres sion on Lis mind that he seemed indiffer ent to all about Lim and his affairs began rapinly to decline Ili, keenly sensitive mind was, however, destined to feel another and, from the attendant circumstances, still more painful bereavement, to the elopement of his wife, which event almost unseated hie judgment. Rum made now snob rapiti strides in the fortunes of this hapless man that, in the course of a short time the once' wealthy proprietor was reduced to the con dition of n common beggar. But he had still one t left ; this humble sup pliant wandering from door to door depend• entripon publio cparity for support,had yet in his poesessithi,and ignored a priceless gem which shared with him his fortunes—the box containing the bones of hie wife acid child. lie thus lived on for • series of yeare,and whenever it became or': y to shift his place of /endow)°, Mu box containing the prim" relics woe ever his fret care, and for whioh he craved a shelter under the title of important papers. ilia last residence wapat i llsk bonne of a widow who had known him in better times Here he lived until sickness overtook aim, when the scanty means of his landlady not allowing her to administer to his wont., he removed to the public. hospital, where he died about a year and a half since This lady, who appears to some degree to have imbibed his prejud ices, out of respect to his memory, would net, for a long time, allow the relics so highly prised t° he removed ; but the earn est solicitations of her acquaintances, who were already, as well so herself, apprised of the contents of the boa, induced her at last to consent. Pr wer steps having been consequently taken to insure their admission to the public cemetery, an old man was employed for the purpose of con veying them t) the hearse depot, who, as we have seen, sunk under his burden to ---No newspaper -in the West goes to greater trstoble-andexpease than does the Louisville Courier to furnish a choice car(-, sty of excellent readisig matter to its culti vated patrons. The corroirpondents of Jail paper are selected with great care and their statements can usually be depended as entirely accurate. But we have discov ereda grave error in the Nashville corres pondence, which should not be allowed to pass without oorreolioo In speaking of Ilts Excellency,the Clovernor of Tennessee the Nashville correspondent oalls him '•the twin brother of the Devil." Now we, di' course, do not-know what opportunities this writer may have had for. aequaintanee with the family of Nis Sptsuie Majesty, bol•we hardly suppose that kis sources of informa tion min be greater than those of The throe writers, Job, M Mon and Goethe. who have written the most about this remarkable in dividual, sod they attribute to him very ditikrent qualities frolKthose possessed by tin reverend blashpbtuner of East Tennessee. Thus Job tells it sthat His Salami° Majesty, is food of good company. (See chap 1, 6) a charge which BroWnlow's worst enemy never brought against him. Milton represents his hero as the high arch angel ruined, ohivairchs and daring—always leading his legions to the fray, and not looking on like poor Burnside with "a pow erful field glass" three miles from the bat tle field Ilrownlow wps ,a, soldier of the Burnside school, urging others to the slaughter, but keeping out of the way of the boa' in his own proper person. Ile bora no resomblanetilis this respect to the great chieftain of Milton's *pia. Goethe represents the gentleman in black as remarkably neat in his person, and as Whoring Olean hoofs instead of dirty soc([s. In short, Goeth ileseribss the Governor of . Pandemonium to top,j,ust ; the opposite of the Governor of Tennessee la "esters sod in person We are / 1 11111Ined theirefort to think that the correspondent of the Corner is in error, and that the two Governors have nothing in a3OlOOO except the pilaus) de light they feel in settles their r sobjeols to horwa•er —Lend We Love. —ding klieg testimony as La thrrown ersh 1p et' a cow, In Ohio, Iti.t the In . dge to adopt t singular methed of ambling the question. The court adjourned to a :geld where the cow was. The sae eLissant then tried 'all his permissive power*, tot the now would net monis* hit. Thee the woman called „ poll, I" and ohs gent animal seattored tie crowd list sur rounded bar and broke for the 11101110/1, where she rubbed Aar mem against her mis tress, overjoyed to tied her. Trlis jiMaMa decided that the our 1111111 . 150, . —To morratt.MAT lIIITIR INIIII ,p;PSlfl. we cannot Mull It in •ny of oar tr4lll flan; The man who own; whey Nootp otVosqi li j tatoo. dad Edw i t ship• o•t tho •••, , , dom ot, swa • single ,pthwtio of it 1•1• 1 41 • ft, morrow 1 It hi • • 1 10 1 11 ,10 • 2 „P. 11 • 1 1, , P not yet born. lets undor . tkissit ilild. • , eight—boblad dm all 0-4/16faidiai ilea= Ste l hitis l 4' . 7 o 4 9 .o. , !... ail 4..0, I *V- 4 '1'1;11 aW,OI 9 . 1.1 1. .1- " i; 00.. _ „. ~, wee • oral of Cuuttprq., ,• ~11r ; 4o7' 4 I wo DIOS eldri . alcara: th at near bat Demoo4iiima 'ii, . C I b... .t it e t 111.4.1, iiiTaiiil 10 ter who rite4aligleiritih *ado duet re'llitous'ist4liidrioneldli -it nis r ' re" iiitettfissiviat tor IP , faiini. •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers