The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, December 04, 1867, Image 1

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rrl ir, BEAviElt ARGUS I
Th rrimi quED y ErE.RE WEDNESD A,
j .
m the old Ar
i ous building, On Tatum STREW!.
' -
Briitr, PA iat t 4
111 . 0 Doi ,ARE PER TEAR DI ADVANCE.
Single wp i el i of "the paper will be famished, in
a tfint eemts eleh
untcations on rubjects of local or general in
re res )ectfelly solicited To Moira attention,
- t : t g o ? this kindmust invatiablv be accampaniedby "
luoi e o f the author, not for publication, but as *
ete
„ fl eotty against impcwition.
l attes E nd communications shonid be addressed to Vol' 49 No 49
./ WEYAND, /Miler c 0 Proprietor. •
ois sommimemillo.' ............ m. " ..........
TrrAN4ll3ll.-Attents to Canvass for the most sue- IS THAT SO t
ly ces.furpubAcription book in the market Our .
re .meetsnL e t
sih nntraralleltd Rummy We
AVn ts 3 ommisaloa of t 4 90 por copy.
Jet" unc " all3
.11. 1 ( 10 -7 67 am 68 Fifth Street, Pittsburgh 1%. THOMAS CAMPBELL, ,
____________---------------------------- SOLE . OWNER OF; 'l 4 llt BRIIXIEWA
IVEDDING C .AHES TER FOUN • DRY,
&c . COlllfilllie. to lifanU two '
F ANCY PASTR)y ,
ER4IOND II AVING OPENED A vnisT The Unequalled. Cooking , Stove,
, D EEtvn
1 CLASS CONFECTIONARY, on
Crystal - ''Palace.
Railroad St., New Brighter!, BEDRO OM, PARLOR, AND HEATING
STOIrEB, i
IS OW inform the public that Mee are prepared to Al ' Large mid small sizes.
order. for rake.. Sc., for WEDDING PARTIES. MANTLE AND JAM GRATES
upon short nam, at .
or F Vail 5,1 i. rOysters
~ idoton priet-e, and in a title ourorlinsood by an t . And varions other Cast-Mrs
establishments,Prompt attentioa given given Also on band and for kale a =Cid variety of Second
-71-city
to ail order , from a distance Their. Rand Stoves, as goo is new; and very cheap Odd
Pieces for. repairs for the ditterent patterns Of Crystal
OYSTER SALOON Palace and Euterprize Staves promptly troinished.
All orders for stoves attended to-without delay, and
delivered free of charge.
=Rely lifted up, is open for the necommo.
Niue e7et
~ totaers during the coming season -4,,e-I i 1 . E.1 . 112115S SO !
anion 0
oetli 17. GEO. SIZMEN &CO -a. .a.-.2...... 3 , s -1-
- augil,Sr.aat
i
Premium Trunk FaotpTy
tairltt Itlcßiclite grtallty Is of the First Imo.
portant-04_60i
JOSEPH LIEBLER,
AT TUE
.
h.
t.i.k \I. TOTPEI OF AND DEALER IN
,
TRL
TNKS VAL' ISES DIAMOND DRUG STORE
9 I
AND
\ B EJVER, PA.
Travel ng Bags, -
J.
NQ 104_ WOOD STREET, •
•
,
PITTSBURGH, PA. ,
I' ..
Orders promptly tilled arid satisfaction guaranteed. Yon will find a complete assortmenVof, Pare Drugs, ,
Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Paints)Mild, &c. ' .
a0r13t.7 3m, ( i 1
i
"WHERE WILL I BUY I" Toilet Articles, a Speciality.
. - ~ - '
1-
I a otp =thin kith, minds ot eu cry ont i let, tht liolldave ,
r„ r tti inn :Ind ore of gnat impor nee to all, and
~ ~1 I to those. tt hojtunk of making purchase In All the pew and pont:der preparation constantly on
ti.‘11..1 , hand, togiith4r with everything necessary for the well
\
arranger. toilet
wAtcHEs
AND JEWELRY
i \ ,
1
arum, th tin pertui`tone to It. IA e nbald solicit calls tV - Phviticlante Precriptinns and Family recipes
to th ..1 roc, our city during the ROW tys. tson; &irefully - compound. d all hours of the day or night .
l•y (.: nitric our latio and %tell selected stoat of
TV ITCfIMS, PHYSICAL HONES% '
I LOGICS, SPECT'AC LES,
JEU E.t.a 1 1 IS 4 ItOMETEIt ci,
ATSO in the same room, a well selected Stock of
Sitl LU WARE, IfilE114110:11ILTERSI , Boots and Stationery.Magaritum , , Papers, Ac , and
I
nit Books seil in the Public Schools thronehout the
hay'.• all kinds of ) country-at Publishers prices- either 3‘holesale or
Retail
4 Optical Cr oods.
In either department of this Store, the public wilt
find It to their advantage to call and examine the stock
and prices, 5. - n. nimbus,
__ note, 67:6m Agent.
DrNSEATIEI & HASLE
1 -
TT.
R AI L ROADS .
SINS ELEES AND OPTICIANS,
56 Fifth Street,, On andaft ' rT ,
rOct W rI A M Y , NE
18n74. ll l C ,ra .lA i
n C swi la O n t.
RAlLW leaveSt A a Y tions
dolly, (Sundays excepted) as follows. [Train leaving
Chicago at 4 50 P. 31 leaves daily.]
OppO• te If este Hall • PITY9I3IIROIL PA. '
• ,i•
„ , I orl3 `9m.• T .
4 ',
AV
_- w
P ”'s lEsi
1 Gt .
- •- 4I ITSEY I T 40
4 -
Wholesale and lletalil Dealer
I.
-
Irl
i
CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES
anti TEAS ,
weans (wilco EAST
!!Ear's:
-FOREIGN and= DOMESTIO, FRUITS, -
,
Pickles, &o.
/
....
A MI ...I C o u nt ry Produce coil on COMILd.PIOTI,
'- tr mot ret i lre,. , nade
... -
NO 49 /FEDERAL STREET,
I,
Pi
ALLEGHENY CITY, PA.
Youngstown New Cattle and Erie Empress ICav
ro ‘ll ;:IraYoungstown at 2: 50 p. m n,.. , n Castle. 3.10 p tn, arrive
4at Pdt ,, bur, , h 6::S) p m. Returning, leaves Pitteburgh
t 0 on a. at arr, at N. CAMP. • 4 /St Ta, yormirmoß n o 30
TIN NV ARE. Young4toan en Castle en d Pittsblargh Accounec.
d , ati m ou
a lel u t i , , r . l a - t Azir k,h ), c , ,) , , , , , , ,t 0 ......, ,,, , , , , c , .. et t i i iii e, , , n r ,
• leaves All, ^laity, 1-h) I) in, ariVOB New Castle, O F)
p. m, Youngrhown 'AV p m
IH_LX. MYERS, General Ticket Agent :
WHOLESALE AND,\AETAIL CLEVELAND & PTIISIIITEGII RAILROAD
/- On andafter Oct 6,
) 1' , 1: , 7
m tr i t u it i r o zill leave Stations
daily (Sun d ays excel u 1)
,(
DE.ILER IN ALL hINDS OF could SOrTIT
c- , 1 31. An. Exr's NtArt Accox
tri . Cleveland.,, e land „ 840sm12101rx 315 pm
I In, C'epi)er ,S. - -- . Sheet- Foetid Street. (y B4l 1211 856
Ilr(In NAra i.e. Hudson l'ets 109 510
r. Ravenna ,1010 141 _„,, MO
Alliance 1110 225 440
Bayard 11141 252 -
t \3 4 V. entit MC I 120rx 410 ~.
' .
=
11RI 1 (stt T rrrrs,c f 0 Nic,T &NTT YON lIAND . GOING NORTH
, . ku 1 ,r rrut A. , ..1) hilithT IRON
44, E, %%104 l II\ ( o
dll NII MAIL EXT.`B.
_-_-... Accox
Wellsville
.... , . ,
AT TliF LOWEST PRIOES4' 11 I) a 850 AN 410=
rd 10`n 535 . .
Alliance . ~ ~ ) 1115 615 715 Ax
' Ravenna IRileir 6121 -' 810
E ll o u c ds n o e n street 1 1 8 4 7
, 81 14 a ,
1 841
• Tin Roofiing, Spouting & Job Work Cleveland ~. 150 SO ~. .'” .... 1015
coma suer. = * 4
1
, Dltoop kr lu 21..1,4 po , Ibla manner, and at the. 11t, '1414.m• Earsßtes. AcOos
ehorht noti&-- - 4.1- ---..
Belli& Mini 650424 1040444
Bridgeport '' . 203 1105 1050 . .
t'sf' - e -et c 1 t . 1 beet. of material,and
having none B ten°"Tn
~ e ' . 341231 7
/ 4 but the ho t. 4 aurltee, „ e „, ",„. ^ lin sin 10pat
610
`
Smith's Ferry. . -.. 503 442 9( 045
\\ L ' , Beaver - . 540 912 TIO Tel
w
AI , RANT ALL WORK ißochester ~ 550 9%1 0 10 715
\ Pitimblugli - 45 5 A 025 t also 910
•
7..? ----
S'EOP ON TITF: L ( 1 O
11TR - END OF
,_
11 4 11 . \• Pittsburgh fillisx .40th= 4'ls= 830=1
' 4 - 11 1 r c:I. tati=eo - t.T.,
Rec t h e ter ' - . 7 4 5 3 Ez ~e 4 g, E ts,
Smith Ferry 812 343 ess3 544
BEAVER, •PA. WORM.. - . .., 845 420 710 620
- streberille - 950 /sio SCR I. - ...
Gist . ~, Brid.se ors, 1112 630 912
"af di ma t Franz* our Stock. Pellar 11M 640 925
= I
la, lc' \ TDBCARA WAS BRANCH
. F an red 'ware kept constantly on hand 1 t Arr es
"I
Lea% ea ,y. tv a
N Philadelphia, 650 p ut t 13/ryard. 9.5„ arn
tilAt , I Bayard. 12.00 m I N. Philadelphia sooinn
1 • 0 R. V\ t•TFCTZ I 11, R 11EllaitS Heuetol Ticket Agent .
;
isl , -
-
%
[
~ : ~.!... - -- sc . - - . 7*‘:„l - Im- f L . - :
.- ~ -•^ . _ 77 -- 'I - - ; .r:.t::',..- ;;::,(1, "e, , Z. , ;,,, , 1,C. : L ey* -. 4 ' ;' ' 7 :'-' .1 , ' -, 4,7.
- .1
..
, -,- ,:".. : • f . f . '.
/-01 4, i iiii_ . .. 1.44 . ... ' ' i i . . -.... .'
~ ..., 4 7:1„. .t .:* r ; ' . ..—:. , .. • ; -- , • . 4,`..... , "r1.Z , r`
,;;;,..., --- , . ' .
- • - _ - ~*. , ' . % :11 V .1 I'* l '. -* .1 ' - IK, ..: :*, . '-7 • ", • '',...... - ;,, *. - • , ,
- 4 '4.. •!, •, , ,- I , . -
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• .. - do* - -I, RIORMIIar.I,-,, 4.,--- ~.; - ..,' .;,., .„,,,,,,,,..,,... ,- ,: , --A'-- - - --- ......L......- --- ' _ .--. ~ 4 .- ~- '
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15av--
. ~ I 1 , 01. st..l 42„W1gr.4 0 41.• ... - -}r: • "'. i
' '. • , • - . ' • 7 . ..4 ' `., ' : 4 : -'11. .. t: 1- - ---..:'
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.- ," ' ,"'" .. ,- `: ; `-- 4P ' .• f .
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A . • -,•'•
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" • - C•21 6 0. ;:"._=- ''.l ' • :,, , Ir , -14( , ;" i -
~‘ . • . ' " " ~' ` , • -•"'itiWllT ... ,i tr. .., - „,-,....-- 11 '.4 L. .7' • II .• , "4.t...!: '' I -
TRAINS GOING WEST. .
•
.• • EatS. EXee. gist's. Es2tr.
Pittahnrit...! * .. ,-.. '... 645ast 930 - 21394 9991.tX ,
Ipso*. elr
. • .
&tient' .4„.. ]OV-' ~.: Mr - .458 .
Alliance 1140 - ' 110 G3O 595 .
Canton • trVrx 156 '717 618
liassillim,. 1257 216 736 685
Orrville - . .148 9.55 ' 813 •,- 708-
Wooter.
. , .". .... : . -,.. .916 815 840 ~ 735
31ausileld U 409! 600 1014 907
Crestline A • 445' WA 1045 935 .
-
'it rooAx 610 1190 10[9)
Bucyrus 630 610 1150 1029
Upper Sandusky .. 708 722 • 12281 X 1105
Forest ' 71.1 765 1258',.
1136
Lima '- 909 910 216' 124814
Van Wert. -;11:01 . 1020 330 152-
Fort Wayne •' .„ l22orm 1145 '520 830
Columbh • 110 1230aat 601 : 415
-
Warsaw /...'. 200 121 604 502
Plymouth ,
,_. ' 3OO 225 751 ; , (U)
Valparaiso , 436 857 927 733
Chltugo - 700 660 1120 920
_. Ear's. Kies. Etxr's '
Cblcago .
Valparaiso 904 I - 1215ax 627 ax 700
Plymouth ;1.(n.5 ', 151 810 845
Warsaw --•11133 ' 233 901 ; 907
Columbia • 1121ItrX 340 . ,944 Inn
Port Wayne - i 1,125 '435 ; " PO) 1135
Van 'Wert - j 2741 • 1554 .. 1180 112 r
Lima 33: - .1,.. • 059 ' IZl4ax 257 •
Forest. ' 419 -, 813 141 .., 354
Upper Sandusky - 503 svi ;` - 424 •
lincyrus , . ' 538 Pl.Brx , 1 511'
Crestline J
! aO3 '915 310 1 550
t 025 1005 820 6110 ax
Mansfield 1 557 4010 - 848 MG ,
Wooster ' ii MO 5lO SVI
Orrville 'Il 1417 1257 . 510 ' 855
Massillon il 913 137 ' 613 9,53
Canton • 'lOO4 150 , 633 - 1000
Alliance ' ' l'll . l 255 : 731 i -, 1145
Salem -;
_. 1 11 327 ~. 759 " 1149
Rochester ' .11 i.z ., 5 . .kx . .1 915 9(0 215rx
PitMburglif WU
s i 025 1015 810
.7? • • • ,
Beaver-. -- -eih s k t t it: ~ , D
7, „ -
• I . 1117111311311 41.1111A1D31111114''
:i r .cisrgtoes leaves are wldrllnidowii t
nomewstd comes the scented hay;
O'er the srebble i seer and*Wn; ' "
t Thum the anttann kl 6 Wercillt
. • AbOda ,
• . Summers '
Like onloYs - thej tees awtyl `. • "
' Fanned by many a bilmi
• - -Ilk tbe spring
•, I Neaththe newly budded tilteske:
Otudng upward to the sky ;
- • ", Bet, alsql • •
Time win pass,' •
And the bowers of liming blest die. •
Oft my maiden eat with' ma, •
Llertening.b?gle ttMuitee Mee;
Warbled forth from every tree, • -
Ere the meatkow hay was in'otem
• Birt, nisei
Slimmer, pass—
Now I wander all alone
Litice; like enntatrUtne fair,*.
. Decked, wtthima&ttild bloeaome gar;
Rut upon-gala attumil
Poets a volee,rthich seemmao say,
=
' ' Also pass,
As the stmmersitese &vinyl"
NA - 6111Y.
THE NOTEMBEII ELECT/OES-ITOW WM RE
BOLT AFFECTED THE FAITHFUL IN- YEN
TUCKT. •
•
' MST OFFIE, COEFEDUIT X ROADS,
(With is in the Stait of Kenttiliky,)
November 10.,181:07.
The Corneia war, prostrated
rite at the - receet of the new
bet eleeshtma Ther was not:
tive about our jol , ez that 'hen)
uv less irdercst. No, the mut
Our nSelier wiz filled with j(
Wed up to the eyes, and slopt
teers. Deekin Pogmm's dawtei
rered a tamborine, sciai ruic
timbrel and. attempted to da,
street after the fashion nv
"Shout the glad tidins," et ties
bookt yer. Bich exultation
tulekate: .The Dealt' met mi
my neck, wept perfooselyeow
I stood ei long ez I cool cat
Gently disingngin him, I led
fearin that . so grate a waste
cut short the old saint's life,, u
cood be repaired. We Kik
e:ency to wunst. Never saw
The blessid 'old man satin
glass uv hot whisity in his
bair•a fallin scantily about _
tears a-runnin in rapid successi
frost-bitten nose, and glitte j rii
the tip,.droppin like strings';
space below- It wnitecbin
The citizens met that eye)
oice. but to adopt sieh measi
the-yie,&_U) eeetyl4At the o.
to' e
-Illeeveevory white male citizen of the Corn
ers vials fn has 'Beet shire the glad (peals nv the
bell lied ceased points. I assoorned the chair
aßd in a few redishns remarks*e 1 the object
IN, the meetin. Noo York i it ; remarkt, bed,
sfioken, and Noo:Gersy, the blessed State uv
which I heil the honer to be a native, hed
turned to her ftist love.. I not now eating'
wuz ed to own that I ices a native of Noo Gersey.
I am proud ttir it, and were Runt for. the fact
that I owe nearly half 'oilier citizens imams
rangin from 'half a dollar np to eliolleett, I
wood return thereto wnnst. - , Hist I won't., It
wood awake expectations in their 'huzzomis
wich wood never ba tblfilled, and I'm taoten !
der-hearted, too considrit of the feeling, ny
others, to lasserate them feelings. I.pan'tpr&
perly express my emoshuns. Thank iteaten,
the nigger is ourn.k The Northern:SUitaa ;hey
spokenand in thunder tones. The Ethiopiait
WUTISt, wus on the top wave, but whir is he
now? Two ycers ago he wuz needed—but
now Where - Ls he? The Ablishnista don't need
him no more to fill up their quotas; they'dont
need him no more to take their places in- the
next draft, and thank the Lord he's the same
d--dnigger he alluz wuz! The stink of him
hex overcome there gratitood to him—there
good feelin hez bin swamped- by tlicr prejn
dig.- The Democracy uv . the two sectiono ! of
the Yoonion hez nista into each other's arms,
the nigger wuz between, em, and!censeltently..
is our feet. What happinis for ,Ket2. !
tucky ! The nigger,can't go North with the
elecshun returns stain himiti the face, and of
he stays here he Rust stay on our.terms.—
Thank the Lord.
Deekin Pogrom sec, that he bedn't felt .so•
good Bence hisfitst wife died. He felttoo good
to speck ; and the brethren wood cicuse him ,
of his refnarks shod be breet, ["ive will?'
'we will !? with grate rlonanim4ry.l: Four
weeks' lig°, when I head from. Ohio and
Pennsylveny, he bed to wunst .drawd up
*oink uv the loss that hed bin inflcted onto
him by the tyranlcal edict nv the Ililiioy Gor
rifler, a Copy of wich he wood read:
_
• 100 SITED STATES OP AmEILIKT. . 1
IT ACO'T WITH GAVSEL Pooama •-; Tor. 1
To 1 niggerSam,426 - years old ' $1,5 00
" 1 " Pompey, 30 " ...... .. 1,300
4 1 ' ~• Scip, -- 30 " • 4,400
1 " Peter- -40 " - 1,009
Tot lot miseellaneeuaniggers 22 in nunk •
bor, mostlyy , crippled and not uv much '
tikkound, having bin flogd and chawd
by dorgs, and- inlonied by bein knoct ,
about t-kelead and back, a dissiolinin„ , ,?1,
\ ur em; at say $5OO . eacb.........:„ :11,000
01 nigger gal, Jane; 18 years oldnekr; -
ly white, with bloo eyea. and curly
halt., for mulch I hod bin offered $2,500
!tco goto Noet Orleans. , - 2,400 ,
To other wenches/Iv all shades and ages, •
1 .12 in number syiraain say $5OO . -
' ' 6,000
$28;760
•
This.bill he bed determfiled put in, be
ars nvtin's Finpertibe bed bin robbed. • Last
lite he heerd nv the resultartibe Ne): Fork
and Noo clersey elecahnns, and.ho felt more
yet Witi. du , him from the tine.onieontoosbnel
goverrunent:tuth ietch .we Are forst to live.
He wanted .paY, - notenlY for,his twenty4our
thousand doliors'sierth of niggers,ut legle
interest on the amount, from Emitneipashen
to date, incloodin teat he paid - to hev the , ad
enlation made, and the interest figgerolpnto
gr
goi4 t eitL,e .
tQ
1.4 nsidered
rerei,l**.ki.eick°ta-..
~•_. , . -
.-. .filir* Illitil.*: 04 0* lieNislf
t ee fiaililkifitilia:"l* !i - jAlm —, :'rni ,iiiai,
4 1
. P. ' 11 : -: go bed niioe7 .6 o tllC,e4,l**
4 1 # ?filietofictiannA:44, 'ltiiier4i for his
t ei!titiot to ‘ be ' tlo ), a*Woodn't
t t p
it .
~
.#oiAll ,: - . ,,, - *," ' l, 8h„ . 4 jet:!iimie ll o9 . l
.0 . O' ora! ' ‘4 11 1"go:9PI:ae .tt s bill wich
.1 ' v 643 4 4 4 11 0til thci 0 1 0 '.. :** litait
&Limo ininber'pf 104 'l . l#
idiVbethea :allni, .ieit jtiqst''' 40:
entintetrfor lila *1410: • : 1 ; :bided than
1 . ~: b c iaii /. ~ t:;..- , , -, - t„,',#:::;, : ::
..,
'g.t3TlS3*_
To
iiiiiiti,
_,4- ‘ `:*,,i 'He itin t : .
id his'n e *•-To_aaekt.. We he : 49* :
knoWl e rite liV* n- ' ~.. lorri ll er to
releesitnb
elitch ike wiioff - ,: ..,f'do. •He' be
one,tt4klt r -liiir to.dasr+;. 2 ' "be wood :ev
baelc'oga":lliii and her `7 d," hed
Isl i
bfii . tnarri4sem% they ' . ' ,tiirrrt ,frem• him,
hed 4:41 , 4%tein akersitio''' : id . tipitoards
. r . rrettato_4* aridwtM - ii
- 40**pm emanci , : , ',`:, ail Illeg4 t . :
pri2Tui*theirlabor se . : • • . "time ivnz .1 ,
zen,just the Same ei ,! ! ! ,ey remained hi,
tlielmormal cmidialte.: - 'Ft: kkers Wocidnt
I make him . gdod, but Ahiii.. - two children
born
s ititb see* wieig:iflibrimi brot any
prioe4roOdilo imthin 'thskskit: •
n:
Basconf preferred to ' ' Government
pay their valyoo , and *._ 1 1tay , free. He
lied arri,ved at this eon ' a ft er givin the
fijeCt . tnatcx3r comae . :'''" They aft rhed
lin
MEM
"I want you," all thelreina
"Wa' foah ?"
"My Mend," sed the Kernel impressively.'
`‘'ef I remignize'yoor dulcet tone pot. my 'nig
ger. Four years ago yoo wuz set free; yoo
spiiiie4by•Linkb2, but we've done away with
that: - Came fofth andlive yeorself up; yoo,
she% of Soo go Rem:ably, hey ynor old quar
ter; agen and be treated espy old." '
"Noway, white than and atop your foolln.
Dia *toga's in bed."
the doors r yelled the Deekin
"and hey done: with it," and a rush wuzGnade.
The dOors broke4ign, and in a mint
the nigger and his wife, - a4id two children writ
out in the street, bound, and . the Kernel bed
the ktuitoor packt, ready to take to his own
110,150. In= the meantime: assaults lied 'bin
made.on two other houses, with rather differ
ent results... Deekin Pogram led oil% 'onithe
hOnse nir a runner slave uv' hizzen, and wuz
disabled bya charge of shot in hisleg; and the
iiifirfiat9d nigger threw open the winder and
swpreilint he'd empty 'tether Vitra .into the
headof thotirat:s;txm who came withm range..
The whole Bettis ment wuz by this time alarm!
ekandtlic liies , Spiang up, and we cool hear
tiLacliek uiihe cocks uv muskets, and the •
pilau np nv fttriltoor afore the di ors. It Win
decided thatibe attempt to re-inslave cm be
giareniner rfbi that nite; and carrying the
pet.kin, whe.wuz weak from loss uv blood,
we madeour tiny back to the corners agln.
' The result demonstrated to me the lawns
sibility,nv the two races livin togenther In
harmoney.;'=;There is a I:Lateral antagnism
between em which must result inevitably in
a war :its. races, onless the status uv the two
races is tiated liyonn)terable It.imn't '
deified that,:so , king ez they are among us, so
long shel w,ebe tempted to snbdoo cm, and so,
long will sicesele-hStro*g scenes cz that
uv hist 'pito result. ,Ea Deer the groans uv
thatiirostiated saint, Deekin Pogram, (this
is writtentat his bedside in the intervgls nv
foolin him likker with a spoon,) I feed .tho
I must-vindicate my birth by going out and
nigger. Nothing but the
,onegitain
ty et to who wood be killed rest sins me.
Thank heaven, next peer, when seymore or
'Pendleton is - preddent, and the tits:onstitoosh
nel acts uv aßninp Congress is aone 'away
'with, all this will be list. * at is this that Boo
tPes the,Deekln and enables him to cncloor
hirsute:rings.
. r " -Pirrsobsui(N. NASTSY, R. M..
(Which is Posttiutster)
Wirth' m -11tirrn ► at is troth r; We
sturwar, - God. ald gloritus 'attributes,
Christ and His great salvation, the Holy Spir
it and his heavenly mgr., the Bible and its
revelation* tire' brinciples*and duties of a
ghristiang and the ample and glorious real-
Wet of a futUrestate. 'O % •
Ax editor out Nest,offers his entire . estab
figment, sullocribeo' accounts, etc fbr a
eleau.shirt and a good: meal of victunti. He
Ass been iryingtn please everybody:
11 Tx= heart rll work 141. some way for
the moor of iti affections. fouler
tonider l ,thi(tuid' enquire, "1.4i1 Warking
for Jams? "
ttn .Wado-;-1111s Relations With
• 4.,t A. J.
": 41ack," 4:lollcfncintiati. Comnieretatlias
4ay witli the Icon. Ben.
*lide . ;ina conversation with the
te . lia‘i 61 a two cohltan and a
halfjetter. 44 following are the oxicltuilng
Paisg P
PIIIISMIMT JOHNSON
, . .
Mr. Wade 'Mated the folloWing abOut A..
: "Three Orlour days after/the assassina
tion, Jplu4iint forme, and I! went to the
,Muls .ntekinatirpcordially,lautking me
with both luintia,,andsaid he ivas,exCeedingly
g*Ulfien.inei and , that there wasn . 't a man
Waidilligtint whosdiadvice he would as soon
babe; as .,„ nitine.',l l tOld hizia was very glad
and.yeri itlPcoui.;,etthat. IWe s it th;wii, and'
he said be Wanted to hethtnyvieliks (In pub
lic queatiOns and public. r4dicy. .Well, said I
the first thing I've: got. to say to.you is, be
Warned by the fate of all Tice Presidents who
have been in your position.; - i l k ook tat Tyler
.add akl pray ta i GOd very niglitio
saTe3rottft* tbeiT fate. .Johnson seemed
asionished,tO think,thit I had any aPprehen
teens ofthat kind, but I told him could iltot
be too Careful, for that he thrtainlt would bd
temiited as they were. He said 1 need have
no fears; that he mearitto stand by men
and the patty' that elected him. 4 I then went
ontoadvise him What to tcdd ',him the
first thing to d 8 was to order the trial of a few
of the leadeni of the rebeliinn, beret. mill- .
Larycommission, and to hang the r m when
found guilty.' He said he would do that very
thing, and would commenee . wlth Jeff. Davis.
He told= to bunt up thelaw on the question,
and-I agreed to do it if he - Would name raome
one in help me. Ile named Ben, Ender.—
Butler and I called o bini a day or tv,:o af
ter to 41 . .,0tit exactlY what he waited, and
'Pe had along talk with him. He told, us he
meant to Winn: . the leaders of the . 4.ebellien
right away, is soon as they could be tried and
convicted by a militatirtommission. As we
weltaway;Ben. ligtlei said he was
ood
Ned
and
ed with Johnson ; that he seemed' to be a reg
ular tramp. • We looked u . p..the law of the I
case, and in a few days I called DI him again.)
I tasked to him about this very rintion of re
construction.. Ile.said he was vcrNla&Xliat
jt•wass matter with which he had nothing, to
,c),;•.that it belonged to Congress exclusively,
and eheuld let Congress take care of it.—
We ylafte& and soon after /Went home, vrith
the'litaithance from him that he would take no
ae
ith
the
n and
Idta.
filler
PP"
an
a!epiiot aftactloned by the.leaders of • the Re
imblieitsf from' heard 'nothing fro 'm
.
Until ibittte,two months latef,When Imes
John.o4:Wei it a hotil in „Cleveland, and
leaned, Shit the President had been in 'Close
ooutmunloakith Copperhewds and rebels, and
had .. !iiliiiitoirode that he (Johnson) could
4 k 0.1 NiiitiUgadtcita bitter Ap ,it thaltial7
icali con iiWrlfrolitiMet. - -- Ati I
after I Went on to Washington for the w inter,
and I called at the White House. I found the
ante-room full of rebels and Copperheads, and
I was soon convinced, rriAl the style in which
I was received, that Johnson had found
friends and advisers outside of the Republi
can party. I knew then that he had started
In the - downward track, end made up his
mind to betray the party and the country,
too, If he could. I WO my beet to keep tam
iii,-but it was no go.
Itet
• ItOniantle Change of Fortune.
TWo l Tears ago Hugh. Crawfoti Pollock, a
young (gentleman, then about twenty years
-old, suddenly disappeared frbm his home in
Scotland, much to the dismay of his relatives
and acquaintances. It subsequently became
known that, he had come to this country
with .£5OO in his pocket. - lie sported about
Now York- and other-cities until. his funds
commenced to run short, when, in a fit of
delieration, he enlisted in the Fifth. United
States CiiValry as a, private soldier, aria in this
humble capacity struggled against hardships
and privations to which he had been wholly
unused.' In the ineantimo his father died,
some months ago, halving Thigh heir to a ba
vonetcy, and *a snug-little income of £5,000
per annum, or alsofit $25,00 in gold. The
young baronet was duly sought for, and, af
ter an expenditure of $BOO in advert is.: , ,ments,
it was ascertained that
,he was stationed at
Camp Verde r Texaii, discharging the duties
of a farrier. Colonel William S. llillyer, of
New York, who became interested in the case,
induced Sir Frederick Bruce to prOcure the
discharge of - Pollock; which was promptly
ceded to by Gen. Grant. Tlie • young Sit
thigh Crawford l'ollocl4 his, therefore, been
telegraphed for, and has given up the occu
pation of shoer and curer of horses to enter
upon 'a Scotch baronetcy and £5,000 a year.
It stole on its pinions to the bed of disease;
the spfferer's face became a,smile—the em
blem of peace and love.
It went to the house of mourning, and from
the Hilt of sorrow there aline sweet and cheer- .
fapong.,
• It laid its head upon the arm of the poor,
Which stretched forth at the command of_ utt
holy impulses, and saved him frem,disgrace
and ruin.
It swelinke a living thing in the lxiom of
the mother, whose' son tarried long after the
promise of his coming, and - saved her from
the desolation and "the care that killed."
It hovered about the head of the youth who
bad become the Ishmael of Society, and I, l ed
h
him to works which even his enemies praised.
It snatched the maiden from. the jaws,of
death 'and went with the old man to Heaven,
No hope, my good brother ? Have it; keei) .
It always with you. Wrestle with it, that it
marnot depart. It may repay . your pains.—
iiih la hard enough at beat, but hope shall
, Ifiad you. over RN mounteini, - ind sustain_ you
amid US bill3ws. with all beside, but
keep hope. '. -
. --
. TIME is gohl; throw not a' minute away, but
,
place each oric to account.
• •
Mil
"`:-I~Bg~7.
What Hope Did.
liiiiM
- r
- 1W -- ,
'AEOtaibiligiiiidlBlB
11111
ESEN
Mr. 'Lincoln as a !Render - and
I , - 1 Tinter.. . .
06. The twcrbooksw eit.he ' read most were
die Bible and Shakg.speare. With, these he
was veryfamllti, reading and studying them
* hitt:tally and eetuitantty. 'He 4 had grist
fon4ness for' poetry and eloquence, and hts
taste and judgement in each ,Wasexquisite , .,
Shakspeare ties ; his favorite oet; ' Burns
'stood. next 4 ITolinces beautiful poem, "The
Last Leaf," wis with him a great; favorite.
gal'
The fdllowing verse he re lied as equal
to anything , in We language :
"The mossy marbles rest
On the lips that he has promiaii .
1 '4
In their bloom. - 4 ' •
"And the names fie fired to hear,
f Ye .been carved for many a year,
On the tomb.:l.•
Re 'in' ado a speeCh at a Burns festival in
which he spoke at longth of Burns's poems
4 filasiiiting what he said by many quotations,
<which was listened towith the greatest plena
urer, but it wits unfortunately never repented
rtie ma i = treinely fond of balfads, and simple,
sad and plaintiveniuSic:.
. waft a most admirable reader. • lie read
and recited from the Bible land Slipltspeare
with great siimplicity, but remarkable ex
pressionland effect Often (when going to
and from dip army, on the iteamers And his
carriage ( ' he tookiktiopy thakspearc with
liimoin not uniniquently read aloud to his
associates. Alter conversing upon public
affairs, heWovild take up his Shakspeare, and
addressing his companions,. remark, "What
thiyou say now to a Beene' from ilacheth or
hamlet," and then he would read aloud, scene
after scene, never„seeming to tire of thv'enjoy-
Tent. •O l p the last Sunday of his life, as
ho was °tinting up the Potomac, from his
;visit to (347, Point and Richmond, he read'
many extracts from Shak.speare. Among
Other thins he read, with an accent and
feeling whiCh no one who heard him will ever,
forget,extracts from 'Macbeth, and among
others the following: • ,
•
* f "Duncan' brinhisgmve: 1 -
After Bfe's fitful fever, he sleeps well.
Treason has done its • worst; nor steel,.: nor
- i
Malice domestic,koreign levy; nothing
Can touch' hifurther.
After "treason ' bad "done its wart," the
friends who heard - him on that
. !ieeasion .re
tnenibered that he read that' p assage over
twice and with
l iiii 1 . absorbed • 'aid peculiar
manner. Did' he Itcl' amysterious presenti
ment of his apprOaching fate?.
Xlis conversation Was suggestive, original,
instructive and playful]; and by its genial
1 humor, fascinating and attractive beyond
Comparison. Mirthfulness and sadnesS. were
itionglroambined in him. His raiz* lino ,
, exuberant—itsiliilidea in.4s l stf ililir7- aiult. Igti t ,
i x
ecdote ; and the eat moment those • pecu
liarly sad, paths ic, melancholy eyes showed
a man "familiar ith sorrow and arxinainted
with grief." I have listened for hours at his
table, and elsewhere, when he has her sur
rounded by statesmen military leaders and
other great men 6f the nation, and I but re
; •
peat the universily concuring verdict of all,
in stating that asit conversationalist he had
• •
'no equal. One might meet in cimpany with
him the most di#inguished . 'men, of various
pursuits and pssions, but -after . listening
for or thr eelio,rs, on separating, -it was
i .
what Lincoln th A said that would be re
, membered. 11l ideas- and his illustrations
- were thlise tha would not be forOtten.
Men o ft en called uPon him for the plea Sure of
listening to him. I hay? heard the reply to
an invitation to attend the theatre. 1" - Ifo, I
am going up to he White House ; I 1 would
rathor hear Lincoln talk for half an hour
thanattend the .best theatre inihe country." .
—lsaac 2V: .Arriokl.
. A gad 'Prospect. 1
The New York correspondent of the Bos
ton journal wries; ,
Dry goods have not been as low since
1860 as now. The auctions are glutted with
goods which can be bought; with ciireticy,-
very much below what it costs to buy them
with gold, in Europe. . All classes Of dry
goods are lower than ,they were at any time
during the war) The - aty is placarded in ei
my direction with olltirs to sell at I+ than
cost. The manufacturers over the water are
obliged to send their, goods' here. 1
Provisions a still, high, bemuse sPecula
n
tors control the arket. Thousands q work
men are out cl employment, but will not
work for less th n-four or five dollars a day.
Real estate is atstandstill. It usually the
last thing to go p and the last to fall. The
pro - Spect is that the winter will be a hard one,
not only for th'e poor, but -ior laborers and
tradesmen. Many parties took houses last
May who have had to abandon them this .
] i
au
tumn. ' 1 I
Lade stores that were leased at great rents
are deserted. - One ' firm, that made more
noise than any_Other in the city, who; on one
1 of the side streets did au immense business,
came up on Broadway in the spring and
took a mammoth store at mammoth rent. I
passed the store yesterday, The sign is still
On the-building; the gKeat rooms deseited,and
and the suggestive ',plaatrd meets the eye.:
"This store ;wall lofts to lot"
*crusalem. 1
Jerusalem, is,!peihaps, unlike any other city
in the world. 7'he , midnight; slumber is un•
disturbed by the shrill voice - of the irOn horse
tu3'he thunders ftlong proclaiming thd march
;a
.of sei ce, and lbearing with a speed L swifter
than; agle's wings i.he products of civdizatioir
and the labor of"genius. The weary sufferer,
tossing through *the 1 cng watchrs of the
night, is undisturbed by the roll of V'flieels.—
The, devotee of fashion, the midnight reVeler
—ono who has i tarr r l long at the games of
cluinee, and quaffedlthat. cup which at last bi
tetl like a serpent and stingeth like tin adder
_.bas no cause ;to curse the fireman's !sunier,
which has startled him from his drunken
IMO
_',WT~•y..t _
~:~1-
MU
MON
IMMI
-:i l~
_ _~,
~•
Mir
:OF
"~"`-.
ILIIS.
. 1
4 ADVEttI:ISE . . . ...,_•.- A
y.
ii.Afituraneidware lisiiiid - 41! irsattis
4 m :1 1 / 4 4i. ft r oriaztri.4iiidiali- -',l ? iiiteintio_.- A : ..-
lf lo f e w, cents. 'A nee
, rf, disable ok,liiiii,-*
:4. spans equal to tun Unsaid this izrpolin*sinkai . -.-
111BasIneso Notions sof ye* "kind liy,ffisniditsisillin; _ •
snollately Matta locieviviv hichlied inswitis . .
Lid. &nal for "4 itsok oll ,... --
-go; _ ' l / 4 ; , 4i. .
~ 1 and destbvannotuatodikno of obardo.."
The tonblialisi'reserves the *gilt to chenips *nip Z,. '.
tisenteiro from one place in the Piper ,
to anotbir
odisbeier it is desirable to do so., - ea' •-, - • .
' Adifirtheadaato should be liandeil hi bellies • Wei* - ,
I noon transom Insertion in that. week's paper. -.„ •., ,
slumber: The man of literature*holas-,lor
lored tong and sadly; unlit the, night has *-
*tined, to bring fmuthls.brain the creational",
his fancy, that, his loved ' ones mo t - basaved,
fromlstarvation;will'not have :eginsclohariess
• ~
arousell,and his weary mend called back from
the holy land of 'dreams hy'the roll'ttr •
market cart, hringing to his - memory'
Aurora has already harnessial her hinges; and .
again the burdensome cares .oft the day mtuft, • •
• force him,to arise } *
fire bell tells, h,in
whiblt ward of tile. city*powsir of distil:in
thin IS wasting, , with more than '- lightning
speed, and hriapres the siiong arm and sten
torian voiceaf the , fireattn:.to, reactle
somelielpless infant or tnSublinginaiden front
the'suilbaiting flames. I. The weS,ii mother,
,handing over the cradle'lof the Sick-blind; Is
not paltual hy. the hilarity of the theatre go-:
ing crowd.4lThere arc no brilliantly Moroi
nikted street'--no light to be seen ivithout.r.- . ,
wive the &Ail glimmer of a paper lantern car., ..-' 1., •
ri - ed,by the hand . of a solitary night Walker.—
_No police Men stands - sentinel. The sert.liglit
of the moon cannot 'penetrate thpso, narrow;
dark-alleys. The. daughters of music have ,
seeribronght low: There is a quiet pe4.-
ding these ei.reets,, in which. The windy even
seems faint, and nothing finds itteranii save
the bark of a dit,.the m;ttin . nod the
muzzeim's cry, doling nut his lugribriouB suntt -
mons for the faithful 3fahorametitin ' '
and come to prayers: - • , '
Ilnditlits is Jerusalem, once the 'joy' of the
Wholiesit" It! 'And this the spot spread . (Mt'
by Jehovah for the eternal dwelling-Owen( -
his chosen.: Aturthese miserable, filthy IpOv
arty stricken and oPtnrslied , Peof) l %, (14 r
mordants of the friend of God—tholzhiidren
of Abraham. Behold the literal fulfillment
of the pr , Ophtey I Bee them "zneltedont ? peef ,
ed and trodden , ilown,),!y,l,be.worst of huOr
en ; their houSes P44sesseil,, pomfrof.thp•
strong has eels!ed,and .• thefr holy pillow. Ain •
deftßid." Where .pow is that magnifica* .
temple °meted! by King. Solomon Yea,
"not one sum& has Wen left upon tknolfl - •
.er, that hai no tl been thrown' down." WeU '
might tlfe Savior ; fay, "daughter ofJen4l,-
lem, weep,:n6 fOrme ; r tbrit weep for yens'
-selves, guid your cbrildren. . ;
ititilnia Freedmitir Oh iiie:iS
Ele•
lion. le
. A freedman or Rialun ond, Va Writes" us
I hat none can regret More thaittin members
of bin race that they were cOmpelhedliyateir
sense of dnty;ltl the recent election, to vole iri _
solid phalanx against the - white td. But is it
seemed to the blacks that the iueAttionion
which they* ere voting. Was whethet•tfiey
should ever lime the Flume to-veto again; it
was absolutely impnssible that' t,hsT Sturiad
vnte away their own right - to iota. tie'pr6_,
diets tio,:as sooe Its 'the guestfon of
tet* trete le eektlat width sctill*lkineV
thiCAPtlitirS 6l 4ltatbillisilt*. 3 oi4*
iuloptedby _the Corriention, the black vote of
Virginia will be as APiersed m r, ilig white on -
all questions of State and . National policy.—
The blacks not only_ - helieve but ardentty
pray that after the Constitution is formeki, se
curing their rights.' the blacklS May never
again be obliged, to vote as a party together;
or against the whitei. As to this candidates,
he writes (in better spelling than tWo-tlitrdir
of our. Common Connell or Board of Super ; ._
visors would be competent to minufietnie,
as follows :
"The &en who led the ticket of what waif
called the, Conservative party, were well
known in Richmond, by both black and , _
White—and knoWn as gentlemen of the, high;
est order—and they had anil-still have the re-_
I •
spect and high appreciation of,,the colored
men, as well as of nib white ; but they unfor-. -
tunately happened to be uponthe . wrwrungn .
track. Hence the colored men 'had' ' to lot ,
them and twee tlioni 1 They looked like a fine
coach, but going to the wrong hotel. Hence
we could not take oar seats in it. While
.te
I; .
men who led what is known as the Radle‘'l
party in Richinond,.even if they was (were)
objectionable in some respects,-was (weft i '
known to approve of the, reconstruction actki,
amk_hence they must be supported. They
may have appeared to some as a very poor .
team to an old shackley coach, and traveling
in mud and mire; but they' were going the
right way. Hence iie• took seats in the old
,concern, and put our shoUlders to,' the wheel,
and pushed the old, thing along till
_we all' •
reached our .destination:' And t,h' pa:wa
gers all wont home without Saying a word to
anybody. They did not send tip one single
t!hbut•of joy, as soma people would have done
had they had the !same success. But. - we
thOught,it was lest tomake uo demonstration, ,
as it might hurt some, one's feelings. And ';
this is all thatas been done by the colored. '
men Of Riehme d," . . '.
The pnly pla by which confiscation in
Virginia could c nimend itself to mAr con
science, would be \ one by which the Ind of',
the late leci,t cis ‘, rnight to distributed as Zo 4
give from an acre te,nn acre and a half or two •
iicr(..4 to each freedman, while 'the sense and..
discretion of the !freedmen should.in some,
way as cOmpensation therefor,'be confiscated•
divided up, and if'''rit.ributed around, so ai to
tbrnish from an ounce to an ounce and alialf
or two ounces of brains to each'"Conserva
tive.7—.N. Y Tribune.
Joz and Bill Benton Went to New 01!cans
with a flatboat of earn. Joe wrote to his
father thus : • _
.Nu Awleeus, Gunc Ist._
"Dear Dad:—.Marliet is dull and corn is low;
and Bill's , • -
1 , TILE Ohioans are so fondof the name Jack_
son, that they have mimed 87 towns 'so, and
are still Oroceedino in the noble work! -
•
Mims - - O'Rmix having assOrted that .
twice as many Democrats went, to war as Re.-
3Linnesota paper wants to know
if Mites means for?* to count both artnies.
'very popOmr. officer -4 w will the ;ladies—
eneiNi;t3•
4 " .
.e
__,~; ~.
IS