I AVER ARGUS ; '-I ■-m : ' r ' ' ,!*#■?'["' '■'^■i..:i“4= ed Every VVedne«|Jay ‘V- : Vu I. j ; . v ]4:, :\ L ; :\44:'-4-, : ;4' r . %■ i- *.,• 4 4'44 444|44-V: litl V(> l' 4:1 " No ' a 5» ' Beaveiy Wednesday, 3B, 186 S. Eitaiblished 18 TIX) -- 3 f~. .SiHtr ” ' ;’d,v Ik Wi«g *lO, fi.i, r other -U ' some accident ‘ c ° uld accomplished a tures otthe new ConkuntloJ of tat- J/ jj.t v the failure of n A persons woniddonbt- soan, justadopted bya majority' of ity-the failure of adr -ail themselves; of the opportn- the people:! 4 ■[ * 9 »r the I* of .wealth to purchase Immunity It!;decUres ilMissouri a f&e St the like the impels x taxation, and the national :*iobt forever. J i il! md person wo old be reduced- in pioportipm A It establishes the eqttailt it off so aat oroogh study of the principles of men before .the law. i!T .yeragea might enable statisticians to Jt prohibits ieg^l^or i nn * . capitaliaojthe annual tax qf monStart- : with the personal rig’ fed pane like to do ing in life in almoet any vocationj and account of their col*- , 4' 1 . . 111 -ip many cases such persons might be .41' It declares that " pp *" duals (houldd' ir able-and willing to accept] theoapitai- Jjfitwen*-' remain $ ‘ ker iVlc'*' .e»-th. debt tafnH : , ! T JgS ,>i»k ® t o J gM Ail snch schcmes are mero crudities ftflijdiliui the from offl'- therefore eost as yet involving no mean difficulties. V have P a i t W f * ’ .'*® * or Batthe advantage inf I getting- rid of shautn&htiUed to whf ; thknternal .lum; a|jkk'b r „y dS»T;S . aslion is means be accomplished, sopalpa- ‘'xmntyiwirhich thev es, like e * e .operation bib that no excuse need bo offered for : V' ~. J. .? 1 “ he rato of groping in that diction in search of D o!f GfeWfeik d' ' ““iw. ** • a|iP‘ igsofaiM ,by a pros TFee%, |; /i. if; . . “Ibe ■ electors of iof those ifotins angelic T ,j * ;J fIT |; | both branphes of' the’dfcr itcb of earth! could make, , WegTO SUurSge> bly iball beeititlUtHr sUiiethe simplest relic , **,- pne pf the i j ...j, f| —I i . this StibT- and dlui» r err heirt-stphg achc. antry Over had, Matthew Stevenson, of Tennessee ata b®' ana saai r 1 /her ooiJeta caring assional financiers wrote, in -1834; in an address to the ot twenty for oilier oometa caring, - ■ -i ~ _-L_, a ■- k. ■ ; I, T ■ -i, paid tax for tb incoDstant ircjam,; } . jftdloftrnod nothing popple of his : Bistp, exposing - i"^, ittie (ombatope, bearing i And certainly the wrongs and evils of slivery : “We ■ , b |“ >hme of her home: ’ . i . ; •! . a. ; ■ f ■ monthfc w* p f 1 je law is worthy of “°M it w«Be policy in evory[govern* b where th dre w . ha'd never board of menl to make it the intetost of all its ,0 lo'ok through (e . a system of taxation, sabjects to support, defend and .per i tho cron’n of orabiho every possible!} potuate its civil institutions.” Nol i, ig hand not productive: last fiscal onh will donbWhe justice! of this sen ■ ~- - : yielded $102,00.0,000, and t ei j ,ce s and as, in this (country, the per -. -j r | ~ after all that has bekn said pie are ihe government, it .must Lia 11 QIIS twill yield 8200,000,000 net bold to the people’a inteiests tb off tho n- I u . 19 ? on ? tpQUBly wP reB ' f hoald havo oqnal ri e hto bp/ Debt ? ; some localities and, some I'tW- _ 1 I | ‘ | «es of trade and industry, while . question whether fi escape ■ altogolheri -And it is vote is getting very p- Aiinbroua and complicated ! that, at| this time. Sob' ilc it opens the door tg'vast[frauds, ar’e, without cs o e eponseof collection will probably know, in favo’ xcee l 12i pcr cor.t. Those man precise’ *dll o( courso ba denied by 'jfHoiais. Bat any! .othc Wt U 6 wait till we get the returns, with a |t will bo urged, that thodawis to bo' bred j T'^h en^°d ’ and'that a commission has tV r in-f appointed'for the .purpose of ? Ore Hgg o! tibg tmpffTvenienta. '.Koj'ddubt the system .lastS'so long we. it their wy^! l tbo: law being altered at ' J onlj- sassioi ofDongressfiirtho next cabouts yy If may be improved Jf 'million at 11 revenue law wi' - n secured ‘Vjbich ibttll not 140 unf: l ,ti9SOOO,OOO dp this or that cis' That .this iyoii'amo.timo bo ■ ier red need is , b P ad niriisterei’ plitaihs a Srsfc, ablo cr owiipapors—ao- “ SiWlr • that irndo ia 1 ? rr as up appreciable' B |P rea < . " NVpnld not bri. r aclijvts j ciuivussing l ' /0,00( wore secure*’ iheiij of; Course, w’ i,OOO ■ L*» jcollect tiuctiori of I’ich roii : no to p|p nr rich mea r ''lfftn, Arthur's Horae. |s f. «4r ciabesck r. ut !|• V ' 1 ~ J itWy stands on hcthels '■ 1 With eyes'that seeih '■jtijhi, Jeepriti that J: , v-ir&ces - 1 J , ; I X wierd,. enchanted i si'll*] e® aod lurrei,_bird ank I•' i As delicate in gram! ' •1. l,y elfin architects l|t '. | sketched on the frost i* ■ 1 I * ' j a Jshe, as iuAgrippa’s g asst sutweying i The wrinkled Past jnce more, ■ (J ! lord! companions or I dor childhood Splaying - I .-II •Hound the old schoolnouse door. jod toon those depths grant white with tip; i turned faces, • r ■ 1 Such as, when dreams are o’er; ihjteU'' haunt us, while rapt fancy gifzet . | \Vhen eyes can see po jnOre.-~0, I i Avfjnoijl nianj- poop o have been lipuccl during tlio past;week of Ho n!i|. pensiilcsa n|jon«Jt lirifi. bragged jHi| wiilr-vA Plan for paying off the iiu|itl Debt,’* rtlic <ing oat of his jtkiA; . i’or it lias ru>t only’[boon T»vi|y proposed ,by s:tn oof our jonr» iltj that out rich men t-1 fb together to; he 1 tuber of 150,000 or - thercaboutsT' ' ;peuVv't\iulaB2o.()oC O: tqh. „to ■ exti n* iSlpoßrdcfef. but a. score or more mcuaforefui id haye i ,cUialljv in writing tpjperform their ,r i §1 undertaking prpvidad only’ •t jjlio i»l her thc-capouts A n uplo of miHioji '!i|i|av.s have already' booh secured <vii|g qhly the trifle 0j§£,995;,000,000 i That .this inon|it \yill. bo,still furlher ridncod is iarj|oii a subscription dlitaiijisia first, to.i|iotici in the iiowspajiors—ao- JilJidyantago;. now 'that irado ii v ivi|ig£_ a'nd involves np appreciable' ■nii,|ary -risk;. It ‘ wbuld not bri. |>y nclijvb j canvassing as 810,000,00( wore secured in j|iipor,jiiid their; of; course, with %'|2:090, 000,000 .' , id jcollect, the the,! extinction of- ‘the debt >uli|jbo clear. I’ich noli in all conn r'cs ip-s so prone to pWj other poo Wijjflitß,and onr rich men so given b i,r.|pt their means on bontimontal 1 uticijplcs that the success of the ncjii| is assumed, to tjplbeyond ques j 4 n - hen it Miecoodsffpe shall owe :k»|t a statue to the jbrillidntgenius lo Fjigjgcsled it, and tbi'ljc apprecia- which (ostorod it.to ma lri§l Is-however, it shduild chance fiiljr-aud, it must bp and pi fusible enter-, 'pjj Will fail Hoinetime.s—it may -‘svopeliiud it a rosidujum pot unwor “JJ °|st'nou3 thought. 1 ; j ! ~ fwice before in the jiistdry of this national dtjht jtvas forced I,n j ls by war. EacJ i time f it wal l d Ijj pack cask j peace led to ill cnched expenditure, increased "^IP 0 * aud . co'nseque ntly . gradual and at las ,L comparative ;. lit | li< ' n °f indebie(| iess. For the ifl*"!! 0 war bas us 4. Mlustimo much viiatet* than anV r , C if us *>’ hicurred -p-; dreamed of 6 :l 11681 arises,-'•SJi'aU; \es—follow precedent, 1 1 id go to worjc jjl’, debt as. we iraidofl' the ■ 0,1 Ihe Revolutipii and of 1812- wo follow! the European Jr ent i and content burkelyes with ls -;|* lho regularly, leay- I’ rinc 'P al practically irredaerjr ijfe 6 IS ' no s Laxim i u poll-’ JL, !" VeU h,a monc *y b eiter thin in' fish bt 0t 4 of us - Kvery lav h' lD /•" I* o1 ’ 8 ®!! 1 an d property, in| i u 8 aie of itr Kfory foot of f e 'oterest, and the Enforce tte trUBtBe j tbe credito?s ' iDeXOrably i. , or I“ 19,f property, we ■ . ■ iiM ■' real and personal. Is iiabietobe and. sold to pay that in- If thfs incumbrance oh our ty had been Created in conse y of dome accident, personal Ihv-' -the failure of a debtor/'the loss >ps, unsuccessful speculations like—tho impulse of everysound refill person would be goto work it off so as to transmit ha an gered estate to his neirs. [Many be unable to do this.' fi'ut all like to do it,and nearlyall would 's there any reason why indivi duals (kould deal differently with Their share ol the'national debt? . " | . It ii urged that posterity'will ben efit by the result ot the war, and Ought therefore to bear its. share of the eos t .Wo dipt affect much coneerh for posterity, ahd thiok H may be left to look out fop/ itself. The' question is wbeth Djuit is bettor fpr this generation to go on paying taxes atJthe rato of two pi tjhiep hundred miliions a year, or to i sake ah effort and, by a pros out sacrifice, got, rid of them alto gether. , I ■ fho , late Mr. Cobdxm; one pf the i friends this country’ Over hod, milled our Congressional financiers as Bot rbocs who had learned nothing from ixperence. And certainly the Internal Bo venue law is worthy of legislators. who had never heard of such a thing as a system of taxation. It tea ns to combine every possible! dc feat. It is riot productive: last fiscal yor i , only yielded $102,00.0,000, and ws doubt; nflerallthathas been said Whether it will yield $200,000,000 net Hi is year, jit is monstrously oppres ’o tppii 1 some localities and. some vea of trade and industry, while escape • altogether; -And it is mbroua and complicated'that, it opens the door tplvast frauds, epenseof collection will probably 1121 per cent. Those statqjnenU coursobe denied: by officials. But wail till we get the returns. I bo urged, that the daw is to bo' «d,, and'that a commission has appointed'for the >p.urpbse of tin gdmppavcm en (s. .Kojdoabt. system IjuTCbso long we. may :i tbo: law being altered.at every : ofCongressfiirtho next twenty 11 may be improved too. But ) revenue law will bo ’passed i shall, not lie unfairly oppressive iis or that class, and'shall at’ ! .mo time bo ■ productive, andean, ■air. is to red honestly and for a ablb cctit, is what no man can 5 Who realizes the vast diversity nrests existing, among.a people ft.pm—the flip Grande to the ’ LakC) .and from the -'Pacific to alahtic, and who possesses the of thj past adminia n of Siho| custom jbquso and post system lin this country. ■ There ' o constant efforts made by on o b or dijCjindustry 4o shift its pro- ojf the common burden other sjioulders, "and Cong'r'os-- combinations will ■ frequently i success to such; efforts. An i >f tax-gatherers is warm through mntry, like toes disbanded vet" plundering triend and foe alike, uadis extorted from ’the| people o prodigious; the revenue rccaiv i GoVernmenCXdisproportionate. ot nien will find ifc work •r theirjtaxes andoarn a living, is will laugh, af ifesossors. The i coS | and vitalityxjf the country • groat that it is beyond the pow t sgislation, however bad, to stop i tionkl progress altogether. But I unquestionably boretarded,and Till bp the case, in-spite of all iiprdyoments whiebcan be made n. law; | '' ’ tho other hand, it must bo con i that the problem'*—bow to : ecessity of taxation by paying io debt—is oneofjShca difficulty at first glance every one is die- I to prohounce it insoluble \ Still I dej no harm to keep always in that we ought to solve it if we and Hat as a people; we have many things which had been : tinped impossible. It is-well to nbbr tjbat the bulk of the debt not ijmgin to mature till three, and; eight years bonce, so that is j plenty of lime. for reflection, itibn pay be directed to tbe op* >ii dfjA’ sinking fund 'on a ; an : Institution .provided for by but! tans far not called into ex ip by the Government. It’ might sfltp Inquire whether a system pt iUtalipn of taxes could be devised due!regard to the interests of indent , and tax-payers; pach a >m, for instance, as would enable ■-payer, whose averavo abnuab D ISLE. nkjimd gazes ! whi!e> id gloom she paj aonm might ?vpald try. ] !. ■■■.• ■ ■ ! iwer/engraven n^tule njsbinej mcholyj ijing syne. i' no. more ira, night la itional rand thor BO Cl\ while ttho e excee will o let ui w *‘ _amenc boeß> sdgges the rely-iot aas'sioi years, tliat s which on thi tfio Vai i'easor bsliov Jj inti irtrea. '’•eat ast 1< iitioi ffico' ill be setioi >on onal icare •my i 10 cc •ans, ho i ill be .on'e- • pa; ogu< IBOUI 0 M) •of I le di will >osei an, loqo ironi emei loos 10 w ioim vifjb jOV< >yst< V, 1 takes, were $l,OOO, to get r«#i of them forever or for life? or' for two or more lives by pacing $lO,OOO or any other sum ; If this could be accomplished a large nnmber o£ persons would doubt less avail themselves; of the opportn nity; of .wealth to purchase immunity from! taxation, and the national debt would be reducedJin! A thorough study of the principles of averages might enable statisticians to capitalize'the annual tax of mon Start* irijg in lifej in almost any vocation) and if many cases such persons might be able and willing to accept the capital ization, and discharge; their sVsrodf the debt in fnlL ■j, I' | . J All such schemes are mere crudities in yet involving no mean! difficulties’ But the advantage of j getting- rid of thennternal toxes7 sfl.it cani by any means be! accompli shied, Isf so palpa ble that no excuse need bo offered; for groping in that direction in search of a road toward that end.— Harper’s Weekly, ' / j."i|- ! p:.. -, | 1 1 Negro Suffrage.. Matthew Steyecson, of Tennessee wrote, in 1834; in en address to tbe people of his Suite, exposing the wrongs and evils of slavery : “We hold it wise policy In every govern ment to make it the interest of all its subjects to support, defend andper petuate its ] civil institutions.” No one will doubtrtho justice- of this sen* tence; and as, in this jcouiitry, the pud pie. are the-goyernjnent, it .must bo bold to the peoplo’a inteiests tliat all should have equal rights bolore' the law. - .1 ■ i■' ‘f ' ' The question whether negroes shall vote is getting very general discu-e ion a|t‘ this time. Southern | Union men ij- ' .Vi I are, without exception, j so far as we know, in favor of giving to the black man precisely the rights [possessed by “dyj .other man. .Wehave | spoken with a-, number ! of persons born and bred in the South, find! have found tqdm all of jOno opinion on thisqnes» So [far as anything has been- lately pilblisbed by Uoa fr rrrr.J mo.l J.. : the subject, ‘ wej l remember nothing of a contrary tenor. A|lotter from Gen eral Gantt, of Arkansas, dated the sth instant,' is the latest ami perhaps the clearest definition of Southern loyal opinion'on this question. | Gen. Gantt 'says: ['•That the hegrc is needed at the Sbulh, that he is capable: of culture and improvement, is certain; and that seif-protection will Compel the South to protect and improve reason* aple to suppose. That all men should accord to him the principle of suffrage and equality before !tho law, is becoming 1 a' wide-spread conviction, and will gain strength the more nar rowly it is scrutinized. j* :♦ I * w As jto suffrage for the I colored;free man, he once had it in the South! It was! taken from him, not bccanso he 1 •- * . J ■ j was unworthy of it, but because ; bis exorcise of it rendered Kite slaves aroir.d him discontented, and endan gored ,tho slave fabric by his future influence. But . now that slavery is: destroyed, need men Bo| afraid op the fPeejdmen ? VVhat do thej people want? The perpetration cf liberty by whole, some laws What [more jealous and watehfulsentinela could it have than those who, themselves had come np from bondage, or loarned of its hor rors, with perhaps many ezaggora* from tho traditions of their fa thers? i | “What is the duty of the cation; what, the'interest ;df. !tho Southern White man in this connection ? The elevation of tho black, j What strong er [incentive cduld you give himfor commendable effort than the protec tion of equal laws, and thh right to suffrage when ho prepared himself to exercise it ?*' j / i | General Gantt says truly that the negro once enjoyed suffrage at the South. In every Southern State ex cept toxy and eeeessioii South Caroliu na tho right of suffrage was original ly held and exercised by j “alt free men.” The Declaration! ’of {lights prefixed |p ihe,Constil>utipn of-j Del a and pert of that document, de clared : < ... |-! i j ‘‘Every! freeman- having sufficient evidence of permanent common inter est, with an attachment to the commu .hity, hath a right of suffrage,’* | The Constitution of Maryland pro* yided-: , j !' | “All freemen abo/’e twenty-one year* of age, baling a fceehold ot fif-i ty acres of land id the county in which they offer to vote, ! and reaming there in, and all freemen haying property - in this State above the value 01, thirty! pounds current haying reaided in the county they; oflter to vote One whole next ceding'.tjhe election, shallajffie a right of suffrage in the for Buch bounty>r r, | The' yirginia Deolarau||s<it Bights provided:; i 4 I “All men having suffipiWit evidence of permanent common irfjSweßt, with an attachment to the odtnßWAity,hBve the right of suffrage.” ■ I ■ | The Constitution of pwti] na oohtoinedjthiß provislo^ “Ail freemen of thd ahr have her of any county Within V months' immediately iday of. my election paid public taxes, vote for momhar Commonafor th/ mide." i'| iT?he 6d that V. j':' “The electors both bram hos of bly shall be ditirei this State, 1 andsh the age of paid tax l‘or the yi election, pnd shall month© iwthin the pi '■ So ikr noka word a on account j)t^lpiv.. Vo very free man,”—that iw Bat tyovr wp. con s to SohlliCatv a State, which nc yer hi idiirepnbHcan or Democratic fi >rm of igwcrnmon^— whose people ncvorvoted|for ifreii dentj where oi ilyjth > ffh-.j wealthy citizens I wore be Id Jap iblp of holding office. |riie.Con ititution thia aris tocratic: tory Sta to pro nidi, that i r ~| “The qoalifici,lions ,of Tan elector Shall be ovory frsotpAiVe cajau, and ho "otherperionj” Sx ): t , ,j. 'j.T J ~j 11 Colored jpeoph vptet in jPpnnaylvp nia till 1833; in; Uohne :ticnji they: vp • ted till 1817. li| iJow ; origin ally, whitO and black the same ground, tb< right to jtpte in both being ll Openddnt upon i lirpWrty qual ification; Abonl the amendment of abdP ished this property tlest is' regards tho whito man.Jhpt left It ajsregafila thobladks.. Thiistosdy, it was‘p half ',j ’ j , |, ■ A - | Within the memory ofniin now Hy ing, negroes votid regiilarlf in'North ‘ Carolina and ln J&e fortner Stalest is related' llataryoal thy slaye-owner secured lis election to Congress by s|etting|;frof a conaid era bio pumberof his slaves whowept to the polls and' voted ft>i him inja ' body. Inj Torinesseo, a ippson well known in his day, wiwfirl elected io. , Congress by negro votes. John Petit, of Indiana, said in his pice, in .the Senate,linilSMji.: i !■! jj •; ' " ‘A * ; “Many pi the State's ikve confer-- ' red ■thisjright (of salTragj) c pan Ip- ' dians;;[add. ujany, bitWNtJrth’ arjd South, | have ponferred k upon free ; negroes without propdrtj | Old Cave Johnson, of; Tennessee] an honored and respectable genlldir. 1, formerly Postmaster-General, ai i | for a long time a member of tile ithof House) told me with his owp ijia lhat the first.time ho was electa to Congress from Tennessee (in IBs,) It was by the' votes; of three nofroei: and. ho ,| ; . | '•(?'' I i ‘ ' told mb how..’ Free n’efroes in Ten nessee were then allowld by the Gph stithuon of the'Slste' tovotp; andhe was anj iron manafacthier] and bad l a large number oi'freeliegroda as well as slaves in his employ, i I well recol lect thd number ho stated. ,|Ono hun dred .sad forty-four free negroes in bis (employ entfd taesballotrbox and elected him to Congress the first time ho was elected.’* \. 1 i ’i’ i In Maryland, colored men voted un til 1838.. [ In | North (Carolina, os jwe have said, they originally voted.—r JudgeGastoii, in : ia; legal opinion, in 1888, said:; r'il “The jveiyj Congress wpioh franjied our Constitution (the State Constitu-; tion of 1776) -was 1 -chosen by free holders. That Constitution extended the elective tradchispjto every freeman who had arrived at the age of twenty one, and paid a'public tax; and it is a matter of universal notoriety that un der it, ffpe persons, without regard to color, cUimed fcnd exercisdd the .fran chise until it taken from froo men of co or, a few yeairs dined,. by four amen led Constitutiojn” i h Tho Union men of the themnelves true conserved they declare in favor of inf frage refuse to jmako | oh; aecpnnt of colpjr moi have the matter in (their for tl e States declare wrh cicisc this right : in eac want peace aud piodpepit] look to it .that all! m'eh equal righU.-.-N. Yi.Eve, '• ! ' i• : i P. .~ The Hew! Constitution at BTia -- 1 ■Wurl - -££ The following arbjtbe lea ling fea tures of the new Constitutloi| of kia- Bpari, just adopted: by a majority' of i the people:| j| -Hi • Miflsouri a free State .forever.-, :.,-J ;-J ( . | It establishes the equality of all men before <tho law. j; ■|. It prohibits legislation interfering ; with the: personal rights of [men: On account of their colo r. -. 1 ’"ll ( It declares that Missouri s tall ever remain * ‘ member cf the American Union. : ; |i„ - ■>- ;■ |[ .] • ■ it orcludesfrom tU ballot-bo j »nd 1 from office traitors; rsbelt, rebel sym , pathisers, guerrilla marauders, bush whackers, pud! their aiders and abet tors. j' I r ■■■ . ' . It in like manner excludes Enghts of j the Golden Circle, Sons ol£] 3b arty, Oj A. Ks. j -Jl/i. .-. ■ ...if 1 _.U . It in like manno:* excludes tbpse who enrolled thomsc Ives as disloyalj orres Southern joymp ithizdrs, avoid militia duty, j' 'V ■ ' It provides for an sfflcidlit registrar Cion of votdra, thereby securing the exclusion ofillegal votes.> | It removes the rnl > reqnirlhg trea son to be proved' by nt ibastjtwd wit nesses, 1 and ledges it toil? 3 proved as any other crime. It invites limmigral ion from Ee rope by eztecdinjg the elective rrajti ihise to those persons lof foreign vbiVth J who have, more than one year before. an election, dpdlared th sir intentronVac-j cording to lawj.sto bocompcitizens of the United States. 1 , ‘‘•v- r ! jii 1 It forbidsiprivato, local%nd, special legislation, Iwhiehforj 30 years, has cursed the State, and bringsithe StatJ under anniform system of ? general laws. 1 -’; : b- j £' > ij- [•£ 1 It piohibits lotteries. ij ■ It .forbids ■ the Legislator! >,making compensation for emancipated "slaves] It slops the creation of cor by special acta, with enoriions and dangerous powers, and ret uires all oorporationa to be .formed ,bj idecgoa eraTHaws. It prohitjUalthe (iraation, rpi or extension ■of the charter of bank' of issue.ii | , |0 [ It protects the, inti treats ol the pie 'by imposing ujion ,sto:khol (individual, liability ibr the debt corporations. i ' i' ■ It secaresan efficient system of ; monschpols lor the free ediiejilii: the ohildren|<of| the State. :: j It gives, increased facilities ,-foi own amendment, and allows the * pie a direct| vote upon every-air nient proposed. . j. Caroil-, ■wenty ibitants V twelve ingtho 11 hafe itled jtb ■we of they declat- 880 m, int« 6f iced ip d have >g the led six tfoclioha •«ajoen,” ephrase. 11111.- ' , f[ "'”7 : d wonder, hd dor, EpStephens ,wcj bio had never ijiUore Which holdid toi a Bpc souve yv«i «j Nebraska bill |waa \ In bis in will have titrje to, coni Holhaii said: j “Weil,; gentlemen, deal of clamorjoh tb cures, bdt'ib qon’t i Wo got nsed to You have threaten e< nccer periormod. ■^d ; id mi ; >in jarid ycin will ag!— . a - mputliing, vhite Uvoredj Bo~i Of course you w;ill oppose; we expect that; buVwodon’Vcare for your; [rail ing- Yon will hissjbut so w|ill I 'W«i! exp’bet it cf adders, and wc pcct it of you. , You arc likje tnbj ila that; ware pitched over tlement’ of heaven into hjall. | act up'a" bowl of discomfitorej so will you, But their fpfe was b| and so is yours. You must Ssd)i tte yoke,but don’t chafe. Gen l w'e have, got you in out power. tried to" 'drive us to the wall in but times inechafiged. *,*!.* | woht a pooling, acd have corap fleeced, d on’t bo so irapiudent complain.' You ysill'only bo sb in the faeje.; Don’t rdsisY« only belasled into Obedience. | cavfci , ta.it is to rob tho in Toronto ered, and tablishinoi Those attc principled jdmjpejna j ■» protection South show btiyes, When livcrsal suf distinctions irolyi They own hands, 6 are to 'ox<> h- If they (•j tbey mnst eh all ihave Post. 1 ' ] 'L' Tp* No did when ;ho Bays that .obograluli ed stales fairs.” • iw much A! ixan- Juld ,nj|W if sd tho folio'ving, j soch dn Congress i under. discussion. Fort Whrroi he sidor thoise words. you md ted a good io Ncbw skal mea lilarra us n!t;. all. that kir d of i before,- 1 but have ou bayo : alwayd •ain. Y(|a tiro __ _ I said, that an extensiypulot banks and excbangioffices :i has recently boon discby inconsequence kli the so ce nts'are now closely guarded. : mpts are, ;made by |ll o nd ekodaddlers and I bounty ;(h|o havo lonnd ic G inada i tmd congenial spirits, ' I .■! -la -. I M - ■ I■■ r- . 'M • I ! which ont-_ ■o*v Johnson sidetit, nojs! » refat on to 3 high minq beaa of af '' . i iW York. World} fo abuse of Andi 1 was 'fVjipoi Pr< “the country, ba alb itsplljthat tin ih’an is : at tjhe V I Proposed Amendments 4o the Tax Bill, ' Somebody proposes ’the following ncvramccdalQnlsito the Tax Bill: ■ * 'For kissing a pretty girl, $l, For kissing a very homely one, $2 the eztral&monnt being add od,prob ably, for the man’sViolly. , ' f. f For ladies kissing one another, 821 TKe'toxis placedjat this rate in order "t< _ break up the custom altoget her, it | biing regarded by our IT’s as a piece oj inexcusable absurdity. For every! flirtation, lOeents. F<>r every young man whoJias more Ilian one “girl/’-i|o is taxed $5. ! For courting !in thekiteben, 25 / - |t * < ’ - . tints. , |] . ,/■ Courting in the sitting- room, 50 nts. , -■! -- f |i- .j | Courting in the parlor,;sl. Courting jin arpmantic place, |5; *id ,40 confsifbrleachofiehse tboreaf* tnr. ... >: .!(.• :j. Seoipg a lady homo from Church, 25 .pimis';foreach offense. ; >•,-/ Seeing her homo from the X)imo So cl ety, 5 coots, the proceeds to be de voted to the relief of disabled arm}' Chaplains. - ■_') For a lady who paints,' 50 cento. Per wearing low-neoked d’esseS, SI. >P or each curl ;on a lady’) head a bovo ten, 5 Cento. : i- ; - Tji '■ # iJ- i j. j For an .unfair device for entrapping yjoapg men into matrimony, $5. , For wearing hoops larger ■ .han eight f'ietin circumference; 8 cents foccach liodp. ’ Ij, Old bachelors over thirty, arotaxod $10; over forty, $2O; over fifty, $5O, and, sentenced to banishrccnt in Utah. Every pretty lady to be taxed from .25 cents to $25; she is to lix the esti* mate of her own beauty, li; is thought fiat a largo am'ount will be realized from this provision. I I Each boy baby- 50 cents, . . ] Each girl babyj, 10 cents foaviijig more than, eight tahics are* not to be taxed; and for twins, a premium of $4O will be paid out of the fand accrumg from the tax o&oli ;FI r, ■ .. .Each Snndny'loafor |pp the street camera of abofit church-doors, io be tried at his full Value, which is about 2 cents.’ - f |[? J ' ’IF i ir' ©wa« anji' Swearing.— The absurdity and utter folly of swearing ia admirably Bet ( £r |h in. the following | anecdote of loclzebnb and his impgj jThe latter w eh t out in the morning; each to cpm mabd liis.sei .of||inen —or e the mur derers another the lihrs and mother the swearers, &c. At evening they slop-, ppd at the month jof a Pave. The question arose among ;t ; ’om ; . who commanded the meanest] net of men. Tbo subject was'debated ate length, bntj without coming to| it decision. F inally, hisjSatanio Majeatj was called u PPn to decide the matter in dispute. Tr f »t •--/!:,» 1 • j mil ‘I • •tf - gyv, iomoliing far killing; foristcaUng, and the liar for lying, but tlloawearcr wasj the meanest, of all: ho served without pay.”!* iThey were his majesty’s best subjects, [ for while they wore costless, | their legion, presented the largest .division in his (Satan’s) eAploy. j. peo ddera mo) r it? poo lend- j&.lt is reported the. government bis discovered a largo batch olletters fi dm Pornikdo Wood, Ben Wood, the SsyiiiourB,| and | various dthei prions in the North,among the rebeliarehiveß seized in 'Richmond It || is farther said that these letters, when publish* od, will startle the community, show i ig as they will theTsomplicity! of '(the; irriters in the devilish vmrk of the, rebellion; 1 1: 1 ' -•• J exi dev-- bat* They . and i aalod, i nit to liraen, P ano Davis 6b Abolish' Capita*. Punishment.— The Univirsalist h&v iW beon censured for intimating that Davis should be| hang, replies: “After; the excitement has passed, .arid'Jeff-; erson Davis isJinng, we wiay be sorry ! Put in all| soberness, tot os say, if Jef- ! erson Davis is;} not hang, the band, bat in ibis land ever; alter signs a loath warraut shonld drop [from its socket. If lie is pardoned, lot cvor£ prison door open, j , ; i. ,: - i I Ti I ■ J ■ i -L ■ ' ! 'I .-1 =' ‘I You 1850, Yon home as t|>. ipped iiu mil fj ;fcav|e the feUenU How are the .proud laidlpwl Just: think of the daughter of the yeryj essence gt Sod th i Carolina aristocracy—recievfng rjitions from iho Government of the ICJnited States! Such is thofatejof Charleston! Such the result ofsecesaion. Pride, passion vanity, must ever meet tbpirlsad, hut merited end. : ' -.-1 ( The Extra Pay op So: orney General Speedhai olnnteers whoi enlisted | •r three years, under | uly 6th, 1864, are ep, iionnties pioinised them,; |o the time of sorviee nej tiered. ; j [MEI IB II iLDIKRB.—At. 1 decided that |for cine,! two jtfaye statute of (titled to the .in proportion nally rondorj- i t • ' ■ i li ; ; : I|-. -ii-..-:. *? notice TO ADVERTISERS. I -j. - {.--.rv :ri! ..oi ': ’• "r f Ady«rtli#meiiU inserted U the rmto of ji P**:' iJjs *aoi aniceqaent iniertlpn K oenig, * adewtUe:■*[ Mid onlongadtortisement*. | A *p«ce equal to tweivJji line* of (hit typa ! f measured as a-ntnn.' -f '\y ‘ j ;-i ' ..•,.Spe.oi*l notice* 26 per cent, addition to reg ttlnr IM«S. i. , j{ U j . Basin 7£pent« a line, per year. Marriages tad Deaths*: peligious,: •» and other Hottoee' of a public nfetdri, freSi-Vtf. I - ■ -*!}■• '"'j|-V .j. , >. ; _ .«3.i»S. 1 Religious. n : ■ 'hV •! ~ 1 • • . j,. -■ I —rGod knows what keys int.hohu— -1 man soul to tottOh, ip ; Prdot.to djraijvV ■. opt its syCelest and niost pprlecthar- ' monies. '[They roayl bo tho miuort strains ofisadn&s >m sorrow; ‘they ,1 may bo tne '■ loftier notes of. joy and ■■ gUdnesajGod Jcnjowa j.y hero the mpl- , odiea of bhr s’nature 5 ’nature aifo, and \yhat dis-, ciplino will call thein forth. Some with plaintiCs softgsj must Araik ip lowlyvalbsall life’s weary way; othejrs \ inj loftier] [hymns |sha|l[;Bing of poihipg K bat; joy, M they thread the mountaip tops of life; bht they all unite'without a discord |or a ja|t, os the ascending anthem of loving and [believing hotris -' finds- Itaj jwaV. iclth iiho chords ;' reieemecj {in heaven.' —Six things are requisite to a hap;- : v" py home-i; Integrity jmnsfc be the hi- - chllectand tidiness the upholsterer. It.' must be[ warmed Jby affection; lighted- . . np with! [cheerfulness,. and industry must bS tne yefiti llatpr,' renewing. the :, atmosphere ahdj brihg in frCsh ialn~j hrjty day: by; day; while overall, as a . protecting canopy, and glory, pothipg - will suffice except the' blessing of God - important OTfiht,‘in thcwpypf ■; church reconstrnctioh, ~South,is_th| ; repent prganizatibh; df ah abirtar^pn 1 - ; ferencei Of tho M Bi church in Bast • Tennessee. Bfshpp'Qlarb,, having con sUluiodtho Conforench by the tranafer . pf] six ministers froip ;1 the: loyal [States, admitted into it no legS''! than- ferity •thrCeJ jmimsterA from’ the ■ Sp ath ef p Church; Then eW : conference starts with a ; of M94’«q4 in Tenncppee, apd, Georgia. ; • “rtfsjt A^‘Jfeh&fdUa atjGrMnjsjastle. Pal-j ; aged soventy-selhm years.’ Ho was - one of tpo pioneers of the, German Heformod Church it Southern. Penn- ■ sj lyaniai'i .flu broached.ehtirejy Gor- - man, nntil his (jbngregafion® ; .be6arho ■ English .ip his hands. There remains ' • but one congrogatiob of all that be .. soijved j that _ retains a - moiety of '.r~ German.;' 4’ .Jr ; - —it | in' .stated] that Miss Gladstone, X sister to' the Chancellor of the Ex- : chequer, has subscribed SS.OOd tb wards the' Wiseman ijisiinionial; that aKe wi|l giye; a [similar sum for ten years ■ to ] coiiieiJ pud that .{she has further : ‘ premised! toNgifrej 85,01)4 . a.year to? i. wards ihe augmeniatipn of the iu<- como of the hew. ißpman Catholic , Archbishop of \Ypatminster. : V •• % -;i j|- Raising Galves. I . , c/jwii >ell from ... fifty dollars each, ,is l l ft/ hot tfrneto considerf whether it will not be y goda • policy to raise simo calves,,especially, if wo have good ato|ck to raise front? Last sbison ,1. raised t.wp^ : and this spring I|startotl thirbh moje,' l.cons&ii der early spring thereat time to start I them, as;they will require-but little h care until fall. j ■ A calf that. 1 ; am|going to.raiso ;i never leji stick the cpw. 'll isr inach ’ easier to learn it| to drink,before than - fitter. I have hiiwl tjiom; jjfiiik'•nlptfo--'- Without the hid fit - the finger,' before they are, twolve honra old; and after ‘ thc_eecopd’day have jbut/li ttlo ’trouble-" - ? dri.nkfroelvif they turned out with the dows’ Kvur 3 trouble them; .neitbisr have I, to put straps arbund tho noso, witty loagnails in,! to prevent their packing, asJthley know ndjthing a loutjit, j ' ' . v l : ,) I .The first twp weeks I giveih9mm|lk» drawn frjim the mother!, of the: calf. After that the cud comes,; when I give them a little cabc-med‘ brand nhd salt; miied|Witli water ahqul milk ; warm. ’ jt is'.hotter :tb scald ibo theal. .. and IbtJftßpnk dWejvp }hpawt- befoie Ibcdingl li If tiny is leftjJeCait on aomp-. thing else, and make fresh thy calves!,every time, as it w{H splnr. ; Abontjthis limb .tliiy will eat alivtie hay, and cljovei is best. As eobnlas . there is enough grass fob them to ge|t_a - bite,, f turn thern out, and I -soon slack I off theirlfeed. ■ | ' ■.l', A small enclosure, With .water and | shade, and where horses dr cows | are . not! permiitefl! to. run, is the , most suitable,—: t?or. i GSmantown T6k- ; graph. :]-.f ■/]- £ {;• ;• •••:■!■.- £V. ;; | Remedy for CraokedHhofs. • vTakbsa pieeb ot copper, four inch? ea long and two inches widej and drill oight hQtes, four in: each end, so as not to interlere.jwith the crack, anL screw -It fast to the Ihobf, across the , crack. .; Then take a hot irpn wilir’a - sharp edge, and burn 1 the brack,; at the edge of the bair,tiHit goes tbrotigh.'v to the qUiok. Aftep this,lot the horse .rjxn,onjlpasture^and itwiUhbgyi/jd heal up. m a few weeks/, This. 1 have tried, and it did the; workeptyj ploto, jslnd I worked .lhe,.hprso'allltho time. iQare shobldibb tbkeh to the craqk tight before the plate is fits-* . J ■ '.;;j ■ j ’ ’ | : ! ’■ , Con ji cprtespopi gland farmer i follows!: • • 1 . “I hive, worl and qn. some of i, away it the sec we did not cut limb. . W here . jWercsVhall, ap off tjye| 1 ears w ; - |jr ■ iSu< lent fives jkcd them ■ood 1 1bii we wl lire ■,»! , V:^ Mr !ckerSv;' . of the .New jEn-* i hjs^sitmonyns odi aevirhl <a|rn?. wje cut the sucker toeing; on ,others Ira a.trat itf jkny )e!t them the. leirii iWe. they' weie tut at'iri« Riul fa'. ijty,“
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers