The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, November 27, 1867, Image 1

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• TOE WEAVER, A.:pat% .- , "••
• - p 01L11411,E. D'i EVE.E.X.; WI: li,lq EEt 4A , 1
r— in the old .kitaus building, on Tu,tnn'S'rltEri
...:..:...._., .„..,.
„„,,,,,,.....t._... -, 1
~,,,.0.),:„....„,....,.,E.TEArtt5;-,ADVA:CCE.,
• ~. . . .-
...'`,. , i
_,:r;
- s wie copies of the paper 'will be furtdeted, i t i ,
opp m. p s fire tu.,l4t ettc4. - ,„. .: c
.. ' . 2il
coniakrtir,as on - ;ulsject% Of local oigenersd in!,
w.efare'etperttally solicited. 'ilo_ insura attentioN:
Do , of lki. , kind I*.lAt invariably be accornparded by
t0 ,,,,„,, , ,:f the author, not for' publication, but is it
~. Atcoi,,,l,ll4lpoMtiol!.7. .. :. ~ -, - ..- , ,
'- - -..— :Ind cominunicat ions shonld be, addreesed.to
• Ldt ,,,
Wmto . o InTapn_far die mord Inc;
'ce44lll?.nhition hook .in the mplcer. Ont
t , qv. meetlnft 'O -c il) unparalleled pidc6i , em,: We
oup:tie:4°n of *1.90 per
IRWIN & CO.. I
• GS Fifth Street, Plitshnrgh, PI:
j,wEyKf T .'.l:4, Editor it. Propriet9K
q - EDD - rN.g -.AKE S••
yOY P
ir.sajErittihNILTIAN,INO OrESA'D A
CLAPS CaNFECTIOSARY, 00 , : ,
1 ri:Iron:1 St.;Neiv, BrWito
!Ovid ptoilic.thtit tams are :pc mit to r lll
ft.r t'Aes. (S P AIiTTES'
r , also. OY.ter 4 npomithort notce, at
wrr leer; and atvfecirntatirreqywd !ny nny.
Wentf(n,gtven
CI -can a dit.a4ce. 'Par:
OYSTER SA.LOO:4
•
ei4,ll.ivly fitted np. 1. npen for the accomm
durin theituipinz Pea. on, l
• - GEO. t'JIEMEN k. CO.
P r emiu-in , Trg s n k . F:ao
•
rjOSETH• LIE 81.1
6:• .
31.VSUFAC41:Elt OF AND 'DEALER
- •
TPANKS I VALIB
.6
1!El
Traveling Bage,
NO 104 WOOD STE
PITTSIVEIRG 11, PA.
I , 7llers promptly filled and entl4nctlon goO,
oar
WILL 1 • BUY;!"
111 rlnr:Ftion in the minds of every one a. the holidays
;mil on. of 2 icat importance to all, rind
o i,:in'l;) to thoce . iiho Oink of making i purchaties lu
ta,:ine
WATCHES AND,, JEWELRY,
:rmirtliim..pertshang .to it. We wottld I , olicit calls
Nn) thrW ;1.1tiu.2 our city during the liolittnySeason,
to statue our Ir.re slid IN ell selected tuck of
NITSIEA.II.. BOXES,
srECTACLES,
JEWELRY, BAROMETERS.
MUER IVAIIRE I TILE RiOIIIETERS,
.tr). Linda of
-t` • Optical Good s . ,
DriSEATH & J HAS.LETT
- -4!
4: 1 OrTICIANS„
I I
Fifth. Street;
ME!
OPP t•':e 31 •
ocrsl3 ir -lin.
G. W. PUSE
Wholesale and Retail •Dealer
CHOICE riviiL3r ROCERIES
. • 4.
•
! 'FE S,
•
FOREIGN - and DO. A
NIESTI , FRUITS,:
Pickles, &b.
kh..1.:..1 C.• •ntiiry Promo Fold on ccinnntssiOn,
it romp: rt.:nrus triad°. r '
•
NO. T 49 FEDE RAM STREET,
ALLEGHENY CITY, PA.
c~ - 1".~ ;tl~
EOM
T/I N WARE.
WHOLESA L E .z AND RETAIL
DEALEIt IN ALL BINDS OF
. 1 411, Cepper Sc Sheft,"
•
Iran Ware. I
•
- 1 : 1 ' 114 F: P.PI iNSTANTLY'ONo j
jiAN
kIIA. or T 1 N • COPPER AND BLIELT-I.IION
9.
.0 . •
whlth 1 •.'ill Krll•
AT T 1 E - 1,0 irEsr
.14410 ES I
I ~i--
Tin Roguing, Spouting"'
Date krorder In the pottelble
thartest notice
41:C Mr.(' 1 1. , A of intlteriftl,
but the 1i iof workthen,.
I
3VE• WAIIRANT ALL WvIIK !
MOP ON THE LOITER, END OF
'X' ra ei tree ts
BEAVER, PA.
I t'e 4 a Call, and. Examine . our Bock
4Panned ware kept constantly on hand.
MI
101
EEO
49-11 b.
i:S TH
• "
SOLE';olVisjEtt-CiF.
• •. TER' FOUNDR
la
The "Unequelled Cooking , Stove,
, ...
•,: • . Crypivt.a.l. ••• Eta.la.c.,e. -;-
.. 7 3gD006A,PARL 0I? , - - I.V.D .1 likti TING
, . .. '• : ' .BTOV E S ; -- i'
' Lnige and Small Arita: • - 1' • : -
' • • AritzTLE 4 AVI , 'J:LW GRA DES,- .
Awl vnrions other CaStinza. 1 . , •• .
. Also on hand nod for-sale* great variety of Second-
Zantle,toves, as good as new,. and :very . cheap. Odd
Pieces, for 'repairs for the didi..rent patterns:la Omaha
Palace; and HnterpriseaShrtespromptly tarnished.
All firders for stoves attended to without delay, and
delivered free of Charge. --
1 .
. 1
— l 7- 8 : , .THAT ' S •SO i
- zug,2l,Cf:ligt: , • ..
••• j . . I
. .
01 7
« •
1,0) - In2/7fedttlne Quality - 1s of the First Ins,
portanee..;a3;
• . •
. AT Tpli
•
R 1
DIAMOND D STORE,
• ,
. BEA VE4 PA.
RE
EiN
Ton *lll find n oruntarten.lsortnictnt of Pnro Drags•
Chemicalv, Patent Med!clites, Pninte,-0110, So. • •
BE
Toilet 'Ariteles;,-a Specia lity.
An the Tirnr nnfl phpalar preparation constantly on
tan it'tegetlfiY with eventhing nece3eary tot the well
arranget.tcilet.
,
arPliygtelans` Preeriptlona 'and raadtl recipes .
carefully compounded all hours of tho day or
ALSO. in thrl.ame room,.roll . selected Rock of
Book,. and Staliont•rr. Mazazines. rapers , : itc.. and
all Book'. thallic Schools thYoughout the
country—at l'ilblishers prices— either Wholesale or
•
In either department of this Storo.' the imblio win
find it to thVir adrantag,e tonsil and examine the stone
and prices. • J. B. RHODES,
nov6 - 67:Grii . - _ Agent..
PITTS., PT. WAYNE CHICAGO RAILWAT.
On and after Oct. flih, 0307. Tranr; will leaV6 ;Rtittionn
. (Sundays excel - iced) fellowA. rl'rain leaving
Chicago at 4:50,1'. IL , : leave•!.
PrIrrSBURGH.PA
.
-. 9 ...+-7 , . - T393 : 149 001140-99214 T - .- • 4 ' - '." -. "
i - I'E3P!9. E. 3 4 09.1 Ere 9. Ex to v.
, -- 7 ---
Pittalinrgli ' • 615 Ax 1!I 0.. .215 ex a 092
Hoch Eater - , • 815 11041 315 310
Salem 1031 11131•2 rat n 3 , 4,n
Alliance •• ' 1140 -. ;110 ClO ma
,
Clinton nton I•`.l7ex 10,4 717 . _ 618 1
•
Massillon. • ' 127 i 21$1 736 6':i
"Orrvllle. • -: 1)1 • 255, 1',13. , 708
Wooster - 316 M
315 O 735
Mann field - ~. 405 !(5) , 1014 ! 0 0 7
Creitlino
. • 145 7•01 ,1015 , UT .I
i
1 - , 600 AN 610 11120 ", . 1000 ,
Bne.i'rti., • 830 (4n 1151 11r4 ~
Upper:itaidusky • ' 509 ",22 • 4228A31 1 1105 1
Forest- ' ; 739-, 1'55 12n - 11136 I
klmn •1 ii6o .: 1110 210 112-Pril
I no Wert • ' 11134 1020 330 • 1:11..
;Vort Wayne ' ' ,1220m9,1145 520 a3O
'Columbia I -; 110 .112309 x 604 415 .
Warsaw . - .2w 121 _ fit . 502
Plymouth. 1 1 flq ;22.5 •.. 751 600
Vialparni.O ' 4313 357- • '227 735
Chicago ......... . . ~...7; 500- 550 1120 - . i
IMI
T9..*:r. , :s Gemci EAST. •
1 r
f, - . j'E.xr*.i Ex'r's.iExTo 1.. .F.lcr.'e
lJ
Chicago ' ' 710aq-liFi2Orli! .1.-Arm 150.uf
Valpara/eo •' ' 901 li2ls.a.ati 627a.x 760 ,
!Plymouth ' 1035 151 $lO 845,'
Warsaw 113'1 253 I 901' 947.
•Colambia . 11.1ilina 340 1 811 1017
Fort ‘Wartie.., ... . . ... • 1•11 435 MA 1735 ,
Van Weil - ' `l.lO 554 ' 1135 112• P
Lima, I. ' -• • 33.1: 659 12.21.4.31 257 ' ,
Forest J ': 4.31, 813 141354
Upper Sanilneky '. 503 818 206 . 424
Llucyras 538 . 91S8F 544 511.
Fre:Aline i - ', I I + 1113 945 810 550
. I , 625 -1095 - .3-20 ' 600 ax
':liTanclield '• I' 557 11991, 349 936
'Wooster . ' , 840 ;1“7 • 510 822
Orrville. , ' .-...‘l 007 1.2.77 . 540. t 55.
Massillon ! ~ ... 1 I 943 137 -• 913 933
Canton . 1 1001 • 153: - 64 Iwo
Alliance :: - . ' • .1100 , 255 730 1115 .
Salem ' • t..:..';'113.3 • 327 731* 19
/ 11,
terßoche ' 'l2 s.km: 515- • 94” -215 rat
Pittelnirgli , ' _ . 1 . 130 I C 35 : 1015 340 ~,.
Youngstown, NOT: C4tIC awl Erie EXprel3f , len?
Yuan tu.town at 2:50 p. m: New Castle. 3:40 p.m: arrived
at Pitt6bargh, 6:30 p. m. Returning. leaves PittAburgly,„
600 a. in; arr. at N. Cantle. ti: - .15 a. m: Youngatown.9:.lo.
- Yoang , Anwil. New Crislle awl Plidelnirgh Accomme
datMii leaves Youngetewn., 5: i. fm New'Caetle.l:lt)
a. in: arrives at AllFuheny. 10:00 ! 8. m. Returning.
leaves Aneubeny. Jr.h) p. ui; urriAts New Castle, :;2!0
p. in; Youngstewn;i:i9 p: m.
F. R. NIYERI, Ceneri7l Ticket Agent:.
CLEVER:X:O) S I'ITTSBL'RGII' 'RAILROAD.
On and after Oct. G, ItY.7, trains wilt leave Stations
• daily kEtundays excepted) as follow!. '
, '
Euclid Street
llnd'On
!Invent:a . .
AlHaute
Bayard
Alliance
Ravenna ....
EMIE
.. .
Brideeport • . ! I zrt
stennenvitie - ; 301
W I
eitsviite ~ -1-10
Smith's Ferry , 4.NC'
Beaver 1,.5.19
ThicheFter '., , i."-o)
Pit.l.4burgh` . - ~, 6.5.5
Pittsburgh
Rochester
Beaver I
Fmith's Ferry ' 1
Wellsville ...... ~....i..i
Steubenville ' • :
Britigmiort'. - - - - -
Be!lair
Leaves . Arrive
Philadelidiia. p. 3 raynrd. 96.5. am
liayard;l2:ol.m. . N. Philadelphia Scitipm
F; R. ItIF.YERS. General Ticket agent..
0. R. AICSHUTZ
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SO!
SY ELIZA P. NO ETV%
ClOUlDOPEElldirieiltbdt Igy
Srugltllug and blue the
• A ship upon 11? e waters,
Salling.avritylriu?t
littudiare wahine
ior:ett "-
Tlinttral weary Yearl , a"!
It all einneiback"tO •%;.'
My wife la ar.ated near, mo;-..,:
I tom [Mon her face, , ~. •
. • • And love her for herlfinattiz,
- IThr gßodneiol antther 1 06'
And yet there 'Onto bets-feit,tut •
vision of loot year .t •
•I'he lien . uteous love ortiD„, hood ,
r- •
That all the pact endears.` • -
'The mmehlite of contentment
Smlles softly o'er my life; '
•
My 'pnir.4t Joy Is loving I
My faleaud thetishedr
And yet there comes -between las
IN A memory of lost years, -
That moves the eptingocitiorrent
And breaks In sudden 'tears.
...‹..13NV1111,7 and dark the heavens,
- -
'Heaving and wild the sea
A shattered hulk la sinking
'Mid cries of agony.
Two hands in prayer uplifted
Upon the wreck-strewn • ehere; •
Though long, long years have vanished,
• It haunts me oVertnove.
II:
Smiling and clear the heavens, .
Peacefnl the earth below; •
My first love bending e'ey me, • -
With blissful worde breathed low.
Two thrilling panda aro clasping
My own, entreatingly ;\' .
These hours. forever vanished,
Still live in memory.
Another non; is near me--
The husband of my choice—
! lean my ogres upon him,
And balls love Malec.
And yet , thige teals betwcen us
A dreamoflong. 4,7 , 4
I scarcely thought manernery
Could ever /120r43 Ja4 ;V.
/7‘
31y life like some cAlru.river„
Flows toward theland of rest; •
My husband's fond devotion
The ennAhlue on Its breast.
And Yet the drifts between us
A cloud thatmelts in tears,
Which memory's breeze hash *rated
Through ail the realms of years. ,
Ethroatierfand !ad thelteavertm, I
Dreary the earth below;
Within Ito cold, dark' bPFOM
.My Ifra love lying low.
Two band,. in anznialt wting,lng,
Team falling Filen tly
Thorich weary rears have clefthod,
It ril cornea back to me. -
NAStIY;
•
A 11TEF.TINO AT TUE ortNErts ten TARE riTO
FONSTOERATION TITF. BEST AND MOST YEAS
TIME METTIODS OF PIIFFEJVPID TO TICE DE,
MOCRACT THE STATESTITErvos TILTS FALL.
• ,
POST _OFFICE, CONTEDERIT X ROADR
(Rich is in the Stait UV KuoMiteky), Oct, 30,
1867. I wuz sittin in the Post Gifts, day be
fore yesterday. cogitatin over the glorious re
suit§ uV, the Ohio and • I'ennsylvatiy. elections,-
and hopin foVan ekally good report from.Noo
_ .. ork ; thinkin the while that perhaps of my
hopes wuz realized, and sueka
.Constohshve
Dimokmt ez Pendleton or Seymour shoodbe
elected, I mite, in consideration uv my long
bleeve valuable services, aspire to sntli
in higher, and. better:, and more profitable
than a Post Of c, sichez I am at pres.ent lol
din. I do.not complain, for the posishen . has
bin the means. uv establiabin a credit upon
wick I hey lived thus far comfortable, bnt yet
shocHl,prefer a place where the salary wood
be suffishent to give, me enuff so that I rood
lay up suthih: . for old ago, The time is not
far off iwhen my indi vidoel exertions will not
supply my wants. $ • •-•
1 felttmd oyev the yietnry, and it seemed
to me ei.J . lto we ,ongh( to• Speak cz Kentucki;
ens,. to our brethren•lcorA,
.instructin cm
how to hold the Stair" whicisthey have won
Torus. 'When Idecid:. upoii u pint,-I allnz
art, and so it wuz this time.
give imtis, by Issaker Gavitt, that the
Corners' wood assemble at the tootin ity the
purpose horn, for the .uv scfndirt' 'forth. the
voice uv Kee t tucky to the Staits North; File
evenin come, the horn was tooled from the /
steps uv the church, and the , entire Corners •
NVIIZ there. Dcekin Pogram wuz , in his regu
lar sent; Issnker Oavitt win in his sainted fath
er's place..wich hez gone hentz, Kernel Mc-
Pelter wuz there, and ,also the 'others • who
made up the male - population nv the- Cor
ners, and their wives. 'lt west a glorious
meetin, and Y wuz a rulhin hands and
1 feclin good at the prospeck try an linprovin
"occasion, when to my utter disgust, I saw the
door open and Toe Bigler, who. wuz born to
be my pest, cnmehi, ivithPollnck, and twen-
ty-tive niggers, old and young, male amide
male, white, yaller and lilaek, and all uv cm
-took i seats tog,et`her _ill the corner uv the
church. knowdby the meek look uv the
niggers, And the cggstreerequietocxl uv , Big
ler himself, that; snthin waz up, which would
of course develope itself. Bigler and Pollock
generally develop.
opened the meetin by ren [ tarks that the
times Wore an auspieshui - look. The power
d the Rigger in Amerikan politicos hod .bin
demonstrated. _The nigger hod bin so man-
ipulate4. Ohio and Pennsylvany,
give up these States, which * We cood hold of
we choose. Butt the Diniocracq nv Ohio and
Pcnnsylvany bed a 'Work td do, which they
cannot neglect!
. with safety- . They hod 4 ! -
claied4lie nigger Inferior to the Causlani,
which he undeniably is, and they 'must keep
hint 50... The pigger roust be kept jist egg
sactlirivhere he is, to serve es' a irritant to
Dernocrisy. Ohio giyes the niggers uv that
State certain facilitieS for Iparnin to rend a
write, accomplishments . no laborin
lama which is to be gtiidecl, contredled 4nd
worked exeloosively by a superior class ,
i needs or hez any bizniawith. SO Soon ea a.
man be tins to reed he 'begins tohev a inquir.
EMIRMEO
EMI
lIIM
lAccom
715 Ax
• •
. RIO
ha
,1002
Ear's. Acco3(
1410 Ax
IOW
11:,A
140r11
202
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240
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610
615
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EE=l
FIIM
YY. ~.e~v~e~ ; =P~., ~a
TWO• PIeIrIIRES.
Eli
in mind, and
with his spear.
talSract, that
iqiiiversi 116
~
ler.:rlsin, "144
.
whl 1.044,
~ 1 ' FA 'ot t egg*
It'iii) to whet
. 1 4.4. gained t4`
=I
and .surte us,. it
I' , •
"70 hint:
yes g9tthi o stj
a' Diuthcrat; ez •
'from that cause
Lord, which
,yoo appear, i -
. w c
' i ilizir 111 Is
strange, eonsiderin yFor p,, ~, 2 :1 3 . Ei . my
colored friends here wuz o -: . ed:hfthe Al-
tuirrlity. til ailuz - okkepy 'an - ,itilbrior
,position
to .s, why they ; 11 dO it kilt 40: onhms, in,
d wedegrade-mtreelveshiiki,r, thiiqey#l.
4
Ef understand yooildeil, Itfittediapt aa :
.aneashen - fs the Onif , ._: - :ijk which
flxeS its own poslshen*4
~that 111 the
1,,,
other races hed places diem,
• Wieh
Gothilmity hevin fixed, they: #''
peek.' That.
bcin the case, wat's the yoo4,:.„Profeisej• Tilt
our s foolin away our time a fyiri . ,to strength- i
en hislaws fiy an act, nv 'n10! , f, the Al.)
mighty fixed it so, kin w ‘'' wit any, better'
tha 'he?,' . • • :: ' ,
"But spostithe niggar,• kit, irp d on% keep
him donmbY law, shOod its*live ns e
"I shoo(' unanimously corictood that.ther
he d bin a mistake in the, figgmai,and that we
'crux, lOW', all, the sons. nv 40 40 they the
sons ny Japheth. Bow to,n#,lptt:ao that P.
Bui. that ain't wat ailusi.l,ll*rii.liriiicas or,
ain't wbere'bur.danistrliNlAlimodelll4,7.' :like a
1
1 man with - at.ape-woni * ,eavtr;t4o4e mebts
nv its own de-streekshun.
~..4hilsarninNun is
wat'ssappin the foundasheiginvtii4 pn,rty,-
- Agrccin 'with you that' the jiigger's.-place i a
fixed, and that the
.Dimn , ci*' ixxident get,
a long a minit without the nigger, I , bere utter
mysolemn warnin again thilrontihydixtl les,
scnin uy the race, becausvihat mace is
rock, amLonto that we sta*. Wat sense is
there in wastin our capital, liir nither.iiilutin
it 7" •
• "Wat do yo mean ?"- not -- gettin at
the drift uv prat he wuZdrillin aC -
"Mean! My.Meanin is pOP . iin. The black
er the, nigger ns—
the whiter hi
In this .11(
genee nr vire)
in*count,
&bait dovliii
blebetter thai
Therefore,
g a r's reht,
af).W,
libv brought
The light cn
And every cussed one.' v em .got, up
r ez of
l'Y magic: and I saw to w nst what he wuz
gin for.
/) . . .. '
"Too see, Perfetser, Ihe I here twenty-two
s Ilea Tuggers. Erery one uv thera ought to
b r bin the son or daughter lir two pure nig:
ers, but they !tint. ] Thil ones mother; for ini
s ance," and he Ida iii.,band upon the,
s milder yr a likchy,_quad)Pon nv eighteen'
y 1 rs, "wuz wnnst ithe prourty uv Deckin
overt',
with circumstances accounts for her 1
It vin the Pon•ram !nose and general cult uv 1
1 . _
countenance to an elartningtlegree, and—"
il. Thor wuz a- pieercln shrt.rek, heard, and Mrs.
ogram was carried out , thintin; and the Dee
kin
turned ez red ez a lobster, While Bigler,ez
solemn ez a JtulgeJ, went on— • ._ '.. 4 ,'
"This girl wuz Mast the property uv Deekin
McGrath, who is, I nuts, here tn-nite. Me
lissy, stand up," sed he; end a likely mulatto
1 , ,
woman ariz. "You will nods," sed he, that,
Melissy is rather dark, while her girl wichd,
You,see afore yoo, is quite a halt lighter. The 1
race 'bleached out considerable on Deekin I
Mc4rath's place. I hey in My recollectiens
ten or fifteen more uv varius shades,_who heV I
the McGrath face; but—" -
iris. Deekin McGrath, utterin a shrelk'nv
rage, swung out of the church,while the Dee
kin to wunst assoomed the color nv hisfellow I
.
Deckin, Pogrum.
t
I , "I mite go on, but ph J erefore? You hll see
, .
the pint. I can show you in this colieck-
I lshun which I hev picked up, the pecoolyer 1
'feachers nv the Dingeses, the McPelters, the
Bascoms, and every family around these pails,
r—that is the 'feechers uv the male members
1. uv ern. But sense the emancipation, I have
notist that this , thing hez. come to , a sudden
I
1 en• din. I hey notist that o 'sence the niggers
1 hev owned themselves, there 'Lint nb more uv 1
this minter. Too purpose, I suppose, aigin
redoosin nv cm to ther normal condislAm,
and mnkin nv em servants and maidservants'
Ef this is done, let me entreat yoo brethren to
stop the bleachin process. Ef you her 'any
regard for the Diniocrncy don't tolerate it to
(more. The moment a half-white nigger i
;born, yoo can't ensieve only half nv him,-for
only Pelf comes under the cuss, and only hall*
under the laws Agin niggers. That one-half
keeps down to thellam level, but tother half
sores t, the4apheth place in 'lecher. , You
Can't whale mulatto with only half the in
tensity yoo kin - -a 'clear-bloOded nigger, and 1
when they keep bleachin out; and, ut, and out,
until they are almost white, what then? Wen
a nigger is nlne•tdnths Pogntm and only one
tenth nigger, what then? Kin theDeekin be
s(Acaf to the voice of nacher—so bare uv lm-.`
pulse ez to oppose so much Pogiam for the
sake of gettin his foot on so little nigger ?.. I
can't believe it. Besides, when Haan run out
—when the nigger don't show at all:-.-then wet
is to prevent em from welkin off alone sn(
setim up in bizness for themselves ez White
men? What will become uv the DiumFrasy
then ?"", ;I'..
, .
. ,
All this thud the nigger3 i wuz titterin, and
the white Women wuz gaspin.for• breth, and
the men will tyinin red and willte by turns.
11 - rose to reNike him, when Bigler remarkt
that lie guest enuff bed bin sed, and that prob.
Oly thomectingi heel • bettor be adjourned.—
Ind the audacious cuss gire its two minutes
Atti-a half to get out uv the buildin.
1 .
:
• r.
• it " , .
•.• • •
•
t A
• . ! „,r ; _
•
,•
, .
.• •
ber ,:27,...18 6'7.
, .
I.wOiid . give'my nest quarters salitiy•iitthe
ell 4 fever wood Conti, to -ital, , Cotners, per
ided-refial be ashoored that Biglei Arid Pot
ock wood be victims. -
I -
PwruoLutrat
Riich•ts Posbusster.r •
• , , • ,
OLD unkliNs.
' •
The Journal of Commerce has, sir Juteres
•
tingtnticittoti thesuggestivencssofohl'hymns.
Tirliii'OrmytiSare:ripr6enled donvereing
I .4ether in alibniry, and ticli'taikgoeiiin
-
"DecialP—An. 'hymif4s a great thing.
! inold hymnbook -;
is suggestive. What emotion it 'bears record
eft- nil net. much of a literary.. man,: 44!
E when" get an hour's 'leisure from • the pains
and. - .e4crlngathat Qccnpy. P I Y Auf t ,l very"
oftiloolotcsistiti-readin4 old, hymns. It is
onlroncellti agreat while that I . have a seri- I
Ration. rve I almost Outgrown munitions.
When I was flat:lean old, Ithoright it over,
and concluded that My profession liad worn !
ont
the sensational pomibilities of , my. soul. !
But an old bytitnto an-old tune convinced me
I was mistaken.' piit Sunday morning I was I
driving OW mi. morning 'round, ! my mind
Intent on.a case otsurgtry that Lad kept. inc
up all night Iras passing ti P,resbyterian 1
church, in mine street, hen I heard a strain
of familiar Music, and I pulled up short, $.4 1
. Ipltime to citch the last words of a- Terse. 14:
tie hymn they were singing. Why, Philips,
4 .lLey speak of the warhorse starting •at- the
sound of the trumpet, so my old heart star l teti
,at the sound of that hymn mid music. • '
,jrnitars,-I.understrini you. Once I MILS
wiping listlessly : of a
,Sunday afternoon
thrthigh the narrow streets of Cairo, the heart
of the orient to Oils day, as in -the 'flays of
'the- caliphs. I came accidentally near the
jiouse . 'wherepme Scotch missionaries reside,
and where they and their. &Mines Were
hobliWg service. Out on thai•stmnge atmost
phine of the oldcity, whose, every stone and
lattice, And whose very sky:were mysterious,
old and incomprehensible, - floated. with per
fect distinctness the, words . 1:of an old *mit.
In an instant I *is carried, away to the old
church in 'the np-country - village, and I
leined against the Wall of a house analthought
and thought, and thought, till 'the misty
condition of illy eyes reminded, me Where I
was. And that wasn't half.' so powerftil a
sensation as I had some months later. I
*wer knew.a' more tempestuous night, for a
stiarry one, than I 'had inlipper . Egypt, when
kliarce gale carried my brxst, through the pass
at Hagar Silsiels. About nine o'clock in the
exeutng a I Fa,s stanAing .on deck, watching
thalttireicatilltstai dng. to‘ the? itiehr it - the,.
boat through.-the brown Nile, swinging and
swaying her great sail as • she dashed along,
Suddenly I caught on the wind the strain of
an old tone, and I-saw that we were passing
a boat which lay near the shOre. Ther i tt were
Americans on board; and the very words of
the hymn came.clearl : _v to Our : ear, or else I
imagined them. Either way, it Was a start
ling interruption to the wildness of the scene.
My Arabs were as heedless of it . as the wind.
They lay on deck, wrapped up in their
hournooses,-slumering heavily. The Nubi
pilot,stood firm at the helm. But to me
the sound wasliko the voice of an . angel •
What I saw in, the next Moment's imagination
It would take hours to tell. Welltitink swiftly.
Tha vision Was one exceeding beauty
and peace--such peace!' Do_ you remember
Deaion Stu ert Joe? •
"STEkanyiritornt (waking from a doze.) Dea
con Stuart ! What—here ? I thought lie was
in glory forty years ago.
In
heals
3..-
nig
eh-
Rt-i
1.-
"Prinuars.—Not quite so long, ds we count
time in this slow world. But twenty-five
years ago they buried the good man, 1. then
full eighty-five years old, and ripe for heaven.
No, he isnot coming here to-night, Joe; .but
if he didn't Came to my Nile boat that /night
with - his grand-daughter .ante; then all I can
say is that thud a p6werful imagination.—r
Don't ton remember when she died? I was
a bay. She was the prettiest girl in the i'hole
congregation—older than I. Was by some five I
years; but I used to look at her in church, nd
wonder if anything more beautiful was ever
seen in any age or land. ;When I read of
Helen, and Cleopatra, and Lucretia, and all
the beauties of old times, it wa's always with
the notion that 'each one, blonde or brunette,
must have looked like Katie Stuart. She died
vet? suddenly: One Scindy morning 'the
church was unusually full; for there had been
two deaths in the previous week and a funeral
sermon was expected. The day wasbitterly
cold. The'thermometer vas twenty degrees
belowxero all day. I remember how much
emotion was visible in the church ; for. the
.deaths had been. those of young persons very
ranch loved,' and there had been a story that
one'of them, a fine telloW, but long faiting, had
loved Katie Stuart Very dearly. 'Whether she
knew it or not, no one could. say. Bid slien
the minister had finished a touelhyg sermon,
leaving young and old ii tears, ar,tl gave out
the hymn to sing, it was hard to sing it. !_rhe
precentor got along tolerably well till, he
came to the beginning of verse. where he
found almost no one to help him, and he sting
the first tfueeipr four notes with* only two or
three jokes accompanying him, and than he
broke down witlra sort of soh.- Then—l can
hear It now; : how delicious, lio4f glorioui it
wast=Katie Stuart's voice, clear as a bird's
floated up as if she was inspired; and the very
atmosphere was filled with its 14plody as she
sung— „; A
"rwould begin the music hem,
Am' se my soul shnula rise;
Oh for some hbavenly mote to ,bear
My passions the skies I"
'lt was five miles fitOni the church to the
Deacon's farm.- The old man - drove and Katie
sat wrapped in builido robes by his ''sule in
the sleigh. 4, I remember the black horses well.
I ownixl,themAitei,wards.. When they start
ed, I, Nvas hor face. I ilad watched
ber,from the clo*e of iha seri - ice. • F!lii4 spoke
' - 1 ~ i .1 - - . • 1
too no one; but went dirently tn the sleigh ir
eilyietterearblfatherirnip the rnheS aroun
her, .remained silent; and 'the linysna • went 6
at a *Mud. : . .vsto theDenenn 'thought of 'a
: Um way-, liorup no one can ,imagine; hut whe
heionehed . norn6; Katie lad gone , , far,' away
She was sitting wrapped in the r obes,
gaping ilqe ig hut 604 alai iNtitrAtind dead,in
the sleigh.. That hymn Was i her . laSt, Uttenn4
in our hinimign, which, ,niakq c tispissirino
As we may, does not, cannot remotely India
the songs the : y:sll4.llp yonder."
ME
- • •
Harry w it wild lboy and keptthe,yhO j le
.house k•turmoll. He was terrible min.
chievous and thoughtlqut: pumping in his'Sun.
day hat and drinking threfrorn, leaving-Its
school-books on the roadaf*; while be play .
ball; and forgetting where 'they were until they
were ruined; and carrying mats - hes, fire crack
ers and fish, hooks in his - Rockets. What 'was
ever to be done 'with this boisterous fellO*
none of the.household could fbrsee. This was
Master Harry as he was three months ago; kn;
thy he is another boy, tamed down to the gen
tieness of a very lamb, Moving quietly t
'the bouse, waiting on grandma, leaving' t e
j kitchen to those who belong there, and hov4 -
ing morn and night about a certain - chami-
door. - Wha t W rougbt the change+ Who to'.-
cd the lion? •
,•~.~.
Estabhshed 18 i
. • ,
Tho:-14010:14on'Irainer.
One afternoon out noisy hero came - ho e
from an expedition which had
.hrotiglitinoc .
weariness than — fish. „I Polet, hookg,
worths apt mud were' ,all deposited o4_ the
newly scrubbed ltitehen floor, and he shipt i ed
as usual : - „
_ .
"Fm himgry, I'm tried! Isn't tea lnuist .
r9titlyr „ •
his answer wOuld have been Oh rciat
your mother kfir;" but now liridget
looked - wonderfully amiable, as she said!, "Ye
ain't gum what we's'have got." .
"What:?" asked Harry.
baby!"
"Whose is it 9"
"Our own entirely." _
` -"I don't believe you r' -
"Ask ,yer grandmum, in yonder."
"Grandma," shouted Harry, have we of
baby of our own ?"
"Yes we have a sweet little sister !" re I t od
the old lady, coming into the kitchen:• 1
urg it our own, to keep forever ?" .
.1
.
"To,keep long'ap God pleages, my &tr.,
He sent it to ns and' He can take it away, if e
are not thankful I" ' -
"rm afraidlt will die!" cried Harry
n rik"
ing•nlarmed. • "Can't I look 'at. it, grand 41"
"Yes my dear, if ynn step very • aoftly,l II It
Iss,freil i . .deliatte little thing, which nmat,he
very
should handle it asyou do the cat or dog, you
• I
would kill it in a moment."
"Why,-grandma ?" -
Babies were a class of the.rommtmity with
. whom - Harry had ;Try little intercourse. He
now brought out his slippers—their office w i c t s
a sinecure, lie.never having time to wear them
—washed his face and hands, brushed hishair
and tlieri followed griindina up stairs on tilp
toe,—a style of walkihgdie,had ! never tried be
fore. He went into the chamber, and there
Wroopedin a blanket, and lying i in the rock
ing-chair was she Whom we cal "The ?Rile
Lum Tamer." Harry tmiched, the velvet
cheek, lifted the tiny hands, and evimined the
wondrous frame. Ti!ars filled hS ergs. !Islip
kissed his mother, and said, "0 ti other wasn't
it kind in God to Send.it here? Ido hope it
won't die I" From that hour h 2 laS been sub
dued; and if at any time the of boisterous
ness returns, a glance from tiles bhhy eyes,
or a viall from the little lips, brings lam back
again to his new found gerdlenegs.- The i . 7
lent influence of the helpless babe:has, dope
for harry what neither the discipline of home.
nor the chastiseinent of school cOuld ever fic
..•
complish. • ! ! '
Seymour In the Field. ,
I. .
119iltick Seymour has been .noromated -. or
President, and the iAtittatite„ Inkbeen taken
in precisely the rigfit, quarter., ::.: ills trunit
' er is Gen. John A. Green, offiyi7retrse, who ito
doubt - during the rebellion, embodied more
of the vitTua of 'treason, secession, : and reb I
lion thariwas to be filmyl north of Marylni il,
except under the jacket of some skulking fit_
gitive of rebeldom, wholi:Was too cowardly to
[fight for his cause, and hence sought 'his way
surreptitiously thmughl our .territory to Can-.
ada. Gen. Green proclaiths Mr. Seymour as .
a candidate for the ' residency, and his flat ik
I now law with the Democratic party. - This
we reMrd as settling the question.
0
It would be well to thing the two sides Of:
the late: issue from.which carne a sac i rifice l of I
so ranch life, blood and treasure in open um ,
test an the next Presidential campaign, and we
see noway in which it can be more definitely '
thine than by , dramirig the party lines over
the backsof :Ulysses S. Grant and lioralip
Seymour: The one defended the (iovernmein i
and • the
_Nation through he peribt of that
dreadful struggle, while theother had sympla
tides. which. brampte4 hint to ri
. eontinnal
lmning - to the side 'of secession during the
contest. Let it lie fotight out on that line, and
under those leaders, say We. There is a fit
ness of things'in such - an issue Unit will be ap
parent to every loyal men in the nation:l-Mir.
Tel. •
SA's a WaShington leder: Itappears_ that
no purChlusers can be foorat for the warril robe
of Mrs. Lirrcoln;andit; nin- be thaftlie dress
es; have not been well d..lcribell.
Accounts of such articles as were worn by the
money-seeking lady int - her reeeptinS arid
level' at the White House can: be 11 d
on application t 9: the reporters of lbe: I°6l
wipers.' She used furnish thenil ' r
awn liandWritlng, that nothing. I s iaidght e
overlooked or wrongly : described , '
• •
A OrunICIST, or doctor's lif si:4li i t, in S .
thonias's Hospital, London, - act4ly
l
off a corpse lately. The cost wastinveStimi
led and t ha cannibal. in illlgrare7
II
MEIN
ADVE-ItTISE3IENTS. •
- •
J~d~rtt.aoeuta are lnaiiinfai the sate
squire fee firii theertloi; Cod' i eneir subsequent In
HOtlon i 0 C'enta. A llbenal &annul. made on yeeOlf
advertleementa.
space -equal no Inn lines of type strossred
- iguana: •'
BOaineas Noticofieet under a head by. then:webs pt*.
iiioiniely artist the local aeos, vfin bechar* iounloa; ; -
bla ten =tail IlueAr each insertion . . ;
!dart*" and deathiannommed free of "eharirit. -
The-publisher raceme , the .right :to• change $d
[Moment* from one-place in the - paper to aso!beit
whepeveris .deetrable -to do, so ? . • .
4tilvertlootocuts should be.handed . before' Xandaii
noon to inane Ini.ertton Iu that - iieeles piper:
''A thericans 'ln Egygit. *_ . .
There , has been of. lafe some- trouble be.
tween the Egyptian_Government and , som'e .
'American 111;s:um:vies. - - The latter, who be
long to, the Uni,xxl Vreshyterian Church of
this dountry, have
_had for, years 'a highly
lourishingtrussion among, the Copta,:the mart
tivo Christians of. - E. ,- .71)t. Thy have estab.- ,-
fished a numter of sellook'w.ltich.were vita, -
ted by children, . of: all creedst;* the : ol4oJ
seminary, and a press, Aluts!AltroWing quite* -.
ferment among the petrified Church of ..the ,
Copts. The , . latter numbtfr •abotit 150,600
souls, and „With the exception:4 thd Abys- 4
sinians.,are the most ign4ani andilte rohdt s
degraded of the ,S ster i Churches.
,Thdl'attlarch of the Copts, like the Patti
h;
1
iirelfs'or 'the other :Eitsterttl!p Ich,,, L enjays,
a kind of temporaljurisili gill ,11
or tlidTrieitt.
herd of his:Churcli. , . -.- " '
The' Influence of 'the At
ries . upon the Coptic po
course, regarded-by the PI
utmostdissatisfactien, but,
to the arrest of .the morel
the present year, when th!
journey through the qopti.
and instituted the nWist• b
Lion againt all asio4ting
Can missionaries, ehlsing t , eiricheids, inflict-';
lug bodily ptudshmetits a°fen proctiring
the banishment of soilie o the leaders of the ,
Protestant niovement . Al this : was first ':
silently indorsed by ,o,e • eyptian:- Govern--
ment;and at length Opent , approved.- That ".
the American miSaionaric Were4ncluded In : 7
111
the decree of banishment:l is tioVileforelPech
stated, and is probably lon or Hid-many' ink
tors of the gable dispatch : , At ail events
howeverolic work cif' m ni years , of .toil'.
and sacrifice Was waittenl t threatened with .
utter destruction. •,, 'il . t l - --'-' • -1- ; ..
1 1 ' f.
The American Co4ul-General - of Egypt -
very. properly* has used his' diplexnatie itifiti
-
Cl.lCe with the Egyprain G over ament- in behalf
, . .
- of his perseentede4yuntrYnien, f 1 int :11 the Ca::
ble dispatch can be relied upon, 'his efforts
have finally been crowned With sti - ems. ::,A f t, : -
least, it is , stated the Viceroy of Egypt :has
repealed the decree of banishment againstliw•
..
Copts whohadjoincd the Amerkatti t missions.
Thus the ' cause of religions toleration 'has
gained a new triumphlu the: far Dist: In
Western Europe public Opiniiinis!almost.ev
erywhere overwhelmingly infavor of intro-:
dtteing full liberty of religious worship,' but
in the East the progress has been less rap
id. We ,haVe during 'the current-year had
new exhibitions of inteleranee in Rusasie, in
Roumania, iii Constantinople, and elsewhtire,; .
but everywhere there are strong influences at
work in favor of religous 111)6'4, and thefts:,
vocable issue in Egypt affords a new hopii
ifult-Abe-tProareferftoWini - .religtons-11berty
will bu in the . .Eiist as •Steady.;• if not as rapist'
as In the ;West. —N.. E Trihqine .of
learti froin the Getty Sburgh Star that
previous" to cite. ate October election, the'
Dernocraey of thritState "sounded" Major
General Meade asti)Ns fitness for:the
Presi
dency:. The politicians presented the lease.
i'ery Plansibly ranl urged the . General. to be-.
come Hier candidate. lie irplied substan
tially that there were three.difficultles - ilt the
:war ,
First-Ale preferred his: prr•_sent position
-1 Major Geperalin-tlie regular army. -
Second—llelt:AlM taste for the duties of.
•
-Third—tie called himself •a Republican,
:Mil intended iOting the - 1-lephblicau ticket at
'the.Oetolfer election.'
• The "committee" wore satisfied thatnoth
ing could be doneonid left in chop, but de
served lanillatiOn. The- hero of onr great
battlC is ildthhitto the flag; and to the peinel:-
ple . for which,he has :fought. •
,
Nast* VOslickn 01111 C Seripluirce,
, .
Nasky; writing from his "military and bib
lical instit' , Otin Kentuck,y, ieennls4e effect
of the defeatollequal sulTrage,i4.ohio': • ,
- The Faltulty of the Institpi . )t . next
mornin' for the puritis or: revistie the Scrip
ters. Wuzidesided that • 11161, word • whito
shoal be instrted ivberever necessary, and
that thAcdislii onfy,be yooll.r.y the Dim
'ocratey and. tionse'rVat.iye IZepuhli4ins. We
made progress, the'llollerin' a= few yv
the changes ' , •
"Si God creatid a white man in his
.own
image." , ~
. .
. .
"Whosoever,.therefore, shall confess me be
' '
fore white me ii,'l 4e. i
"'Suffer little. , :viiiie children to one unto -
we, for of such is the kingdom - , nv Heaven."
Rich last is coinfortin,ez it shows: that the
distiueslujn is kept up ihrough all eternity.--I
give these merely; as S4niples: . Vs fillet have
it finisht in a few .daxs, and of finds can be
ratiek shel publish i t.. Bich a'Vershun'Of the
• Seripterslis needed.
. .
A: J. list week spoke a piece. The country.
- Will be rejoiced 'aa know that he thanked God
—that lie relied upo:t the people-that helms
no id.ep offgOiug back" qua; the Constitution.
—tliAthe rod of despotiatn bill be broken,
the armed heid of power lifted from tliv..neeks v
Of the ptople,and so on. The speech is re
markabl for not swinging around the circle
and for:thc absence or any tislott to the
fact that' his . xcell y w 114 ; formerly. Mayor
of his natiN'e that-now he .hai•
reached/ the `lkight ofthis ambitiono , ,Andy
is In better bards nowlltan When he went to
Chicagd.—K: •Y. Tr:ineue of Nur..
AN "improved nursiag !.ippanatts", is ad- .
liertisett 1 3 Sc don't hclisrv.c the old Way can
be improvdd very' :leach: There are :soma
things-that about cdnuileth at the bight
. .
Is a funeral:party in BoitStott' was hAring
a victim of }flow fever to his grave thesup- .
posed eprpse kicked off the e. , Ver of his coffin
and indignantly . insisted that thepall-tearers
should carry him back. lie is now , recover
ing
PII
-. ..__
El
tiarlean miaetoha
ulation was 'of .
'triarch ' with the
:tthing was*done
tent" untdA3arly in
nail:Arch inade a
. .
dirgricta ofEgylit,
rl;lirons pri)sedu,.
with theo4lol-.
II