As Sty 0. B. GOODLANDER. EOitor. I VOL. XXXIV. WII0U1 NO. 1770 PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS $1 25 per Annum, If pr-ul in fihnnc. CLEAKFIELl), IH WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1863. NEW SERIES-. VOL. IV. NO. 7. From tl.s Old QuiirJ, (moutlilT.) rights that are older than the constitution. J All tho unnumbered oe Hint now af- I (lid our unhappy country ro:ed from a violation of rig.ts. which nie not only abundantly pro ee-ted 1 v Hip constitution. hut sro adiniHed lo ha older than the con- sworn duty is to protect them not to stilu'ioii itself, attempt to cliHtif tlit in. Interference w bh slavery has brought all ' If the confederacy should crumble to thin dentil upon our land: not tlwcrti, in piece, if the c ri). t i i u t imi hcio lopa--s i strangely affirmed by Mr. Itanoroft ard nwny, tln.se lights would remain umdia Mr Everett, but interference with slavery .ken would exist while those Stales exist i the cauac) of the civil strife, j whatever should become of the con fed- Slavery in the cause t the wur in no eracy." Insieud ot losing any nf -their-oilier sciiro thiin money is the cause of high suvet-cign power, 'on the subject re- theft. It is true that men would not fened lo, Ihui power was expressly re-1 r 'eal if tlieie were no money, just us men j sot ved, both in the Article of Confcdera- ' ff would not destroy our country with ttn lion end in t be Constitution of the Units"1 ' sgiialion shout slavery, if llieio wtre no States; und the non-slavehulding States slavery. I not only adu.ir.eal and functioned it, but I3ut we un not propose lo abolish money ' or propfil ly because bad nion will iial it Nor ix it a rational demand thnt slavery should ha ali'ilished, because mi-liievoui fanatics will abuse the laws by agitating . ncanut it The constitution of our country recog nizes slaves as money or property. It I taxes tbeni w such, nod in many wavs , ( ! - t ' ril. l t.. ' - i ui ' v 9 i lie ju uieuut'ii nit' mvt a ijvlt llle- j institution. I l We committed as great an offense j against the constitution uml laws of the IjihI, when we allompted to di.tuib our ; Sou I hern fallow citizens in the safo and ! j rnreuble posesi.ion of tlulr properly in slaves, us tticy would liave couiujiiied hod I hey at. temp ted lo dint urb Ji in our peace ful l igbls of linuAes and lands. We may iiinriel with our constitution, and fight 'or laws we may ay that theonoisa '"covenant with death," arid the other "an itgieemetit with hell" lint all this raving due not alter the constitutional riglit of States to establish cr retuin sla viy, according to their own sovereign v.ill. Itislivtho ioverei'n St'iie will thnt slavery lids been abidished in the North. I I in by the samo sovereign Stale power tli ut it bin been retained in the South. .)r right to al"Jl$!i, nnH theiri to return, ; springs from a common fountain of risrhtx. liicli cannot be violated wihoiit destrny ; luj the coimlilulioiial foundations "cf the ! 1,'iiion. If wo dcitroy these rights ol pti perty in pIsvm, the wholo jtraud olr'ie i tore of constitutional law th.it protect" j mir light of piojicity lalli to the ground. We c.iiuio. lioa. down that half of the liitiip.e of laws which protects their hedn. and leave slandirg that hilT which shel i lers our own. Were we to attempt pueh a thing, v. e. f Im'ild impart a t.icred ivsttcc ' to Revolution nuy, should rot ke tioa ; rcvo'vi'i-n a crime ncainst liberty uiid right. Possibly we ni'iy dislike slavery. liul ? ihul is our own private ali'.iir. The gov ) ernriHMii was not founded for the. benefit of our like? or dislike. Oilier States np provo of it n much :n we condemn it; ' and the constitution extends an cqusl ptotci'liiin over nil. We have no more right to punish them for approving, than thev have to punish us for db approving ;it. rii Feder-il Hovernnient hai oo tnoie - right to conli-cnte slave property in some Slates, than it hm to coidi'.c.uo church Dioperiy in r'.hcr States. i (lur hatrrd nf f lavcry doe not inviil:- I fbite.one of iis eiuiitis lo all the protection ;f ;'ii;rant"efl (o it in the constitution and ' i'.iws of Uie country. On this subject ' then' ran bo no ground fir depute ' mno'ig bonoi ablo and in clligcnt iiii.-n.- , Tha constitution does not leave us in i doulit. ' Article I . x-etion 2d, of the comtitu'ion rt-cogni.es slaves as peison.l to 00 rppre- turned by their masters, and as prtycriy to bo laxed. Ai licle. I., section c'th, authorizes Con ; press to tuppreai insurrection; which clause was intended, says 'h'ef . uslic-J Story, as n protec'ion to the Vave State. Ariicle I., sei-timi 'J.h, prohibited Cjii j;ress from suppre..ii'g the slave-lraiie prior lo lsu8, and gavo Congress power lo impose a l ix or duly upon each slave im ported before, thul timo. Article IV., w't'itnn -u, compels in' State to give up, on claim, fugitive slaves lo their owners' Article IV., section 4tb. again makes it .Iniv ..f the Federal Government to protect any State applying to it for aid j legislature, and left the paltmiio friend " fliiiiinst domestic violence." i of the constitution and th laws, in the Here are no less than Gvo sections ofj North, for the time, powerless to resi-t tho coiisliution, winch recognize, and , the now whirlwind of f.umlicbrii and irive protection to slavery. 'sedition. Notwithstanding this, maJinun bv the! Had the South remained truo to. the namo cl 1'oweroy, ir Kansas, recently Union, she would have seen with what fleclared iu bis place on the floor of Con- determined will t he frierds of I he c nsu gress that bo "did not beliv thsi any totion would have beaten beck tbendvHti slaves were held by any I ight or any law." , cing colmnn of the seditioni.t. Then. If this man (Fotnm ov) exe t!i. only not one of all the beiy nibble of abolnioti niadnun in this North 'or ot:r we should ( 1-ls which Mr. Lincoln has elcva:ed to not, U tio at war with our sister Slates, honor and power, would have been cu lt is because we bavo had million? of firmed in the r cent by the .Senate. I hen l'omerovs. who have been lighting the Mr. Lincoln and bts Cabinet in W.ishing constitution and laws of the Republic, ' ton would bot e been no better oil 1 than that we are now perishing by civil war. ;.i isonets who are allured 'the liberty Millions of our Northern people huvo of the yard" , .it been o misled on this subieel of slaverv. 1 And. evfn imw, let those oeluded that they mo ei.tiiely blind as lo the wandering States return to their old seats riunts ol the slave -holding Slates. Yv'e? In the Union, and licdp t be IrieniU of tha everywhere hear them talking of what constitution in the North to reioreliberiy . they are going to do ahout slavery; as and law to an sfflic'ed country, nnd tliey i though it were reslly in their poiver to do will fiuTl that their righ:s und projieity anything about it, without a v olation of will still b sale under the iim le piolec l.in, ami of the sa.:red lights of our sister lion of the g'oi inus old tmisti.ution w liich s(ttles. wa received from our patriotic Icrehi'.hers. Slavery is rustier over which tho non- The enemies ot the const imiional rights elaveholdini; St.nes have no control, and of the South, have proved that tbey are with wliich tbey have, legally, nothing to abo the enemies of fieedom in the North do, except to obey the laws and repeet and everywhere. 'J he ti ue bb-nds of the tha constitutional rights of the States Union begin to real ue that they have on Tho,e tights exist, not merely unUr the their hand the businees of puituig down 1 constitution but ovttr it. They existed not only rebellion, hut uturpitum aa well ! brorethe Union was formed, ami. in the They have to see to p, not only that the Articles of Confederation, no iota of those Inws are testo'H in the South, but in the rikjhu was relinquished. Tho conslflU- North also. If the SniMi lias a Davis and tion wa, .anctiooed by lhti. rather tban a Yancey, the Norlh has a Seward and a thnj by tho constitution. ili not that tiuninar. Ali thee men and thtir fiery instrument admitted ibst sovereignly of panisans r the common Iocs ol". he con thoK riuhis. the Union would nwbtv atitulion nnd the Union. It the laws owe ktea formed bn miiWliy the power of the sword id i Tliu not of Union Lowed in deference lo lights, older in iheir dale limn any ol which ta constitution of tho confederacy run boast. Theie original and unrelinqu'shc-d rights are out of the lawful leach of the Fcdeial Government. Its office and bound themselveves lo return fugitive slaves to tins South (Ju this quention of ilnvery, Ujoup State are nisi wnai tnev were before lliey eii' teied into t tip Union sovereign and tn- uopenuent. And the non-slavelii Ming Stales are, in reference lo ilia same nuesiinu. what they were before that compuct -ioreign - :. : uui uiu nine. South Carolina end Virginia had no more- connection with us on the tuijeet rf slavery, rhun Ku.sbia or G. eat l!iitai:i ; we had no muie right to interfere iih her donies'.ic legislation on the subject of slav-( ety, than we had with the internal clluns ot lSnse kiiwdiinin. Nor is ftiASnulli itn uer any greater ooiigauon itiun inese Pil lions would be luminal! lo sic.h interfe rence, without vindicating her rights, and punishing thoo who Uaro ludisiuib her iramiuihty. if the Northern Stales violate thes6 rights, or permit their citizens to do so, they not, only break thn compact, but make i! iho du'y of the injtited States to defend themselves as a free people ,-hould, f-oin tti 'hilion of their soveieignly. Weofihe North entered intotiie Union n iih our eyes open. We knew that iho cornpnet was sutjeel to th s :eservatioti. We pledged ourselves to observe it. bveiyihing Miored lo us is patriots, as Aup-t'cos, and a. men, stuuds pledged bu- urr hoiimable adl.cr. iice to ihe ialih then plighted Not only by onr solemn compact, but by lli'i las which govern the conduct of all Oiuhv.e'1 nations, ate we bound, at onward forever, to coase ail wuifnie on the slxve institutions cf Iho Southern Stales. Vulleli, iti hi Lutr of jVu(i'f!f, suys , ' . ' ' Tho suvrrclgn who rvfujes to rnufe 1 ripara lion t'i he tnuili nf ttio dntnngC) caiifod by 1i!s sub ject, or to punish Jbo guilty, or, in (.hurt, to du livcrhiin up, renders himself in coma measure an secmuplli'ij in tli injury, ui.J becomes responsi ble fur it." We do not hesitate to say, that tha Sou ill would be justified in resisting any slid every advance rf abolitionism upon the domain of her lights, if the (ieneral 'ioveriur.ent had even failed to defei d and protect those rights. The first mo ment that abolitionism bad iPlideted life Hiid properly, in il-e Smies, inse cure. and the (jciicnil tiovc-t nmcnl had failed in its duty to them, their right to seize the sword, an 1 resist abolitionism and the whole world in cb-fen-e of their laws, .lands uiujuest.oned and uiHiurbtionable. litil here is '.he weak point of the South in its ptesi tit iiiTt:ed attitude; for allho' there bad for years existed in the North 'organised Land against her rights, which urged an itica-sjni guerrilla warfare upon her iiisUtniioiis and her peace, yet ihc Federal Government had never proved faithless to her. Though eveiy Northern State, except iev Jersey, had trampled the ccnstituiion and laws of the Union under their feet, in violation nf the rights of thus Stnles, still the Federal Govern ment had remained firm und fuilhful in ilie defe nse of those rights. , ; . it is liu that a sectional party a party of one idea, and that of hostility to them had obtained the control of the govern ment. It is true thnt this party, after its triumph, declared that, lo use Mr, Se- j aid's words, "this is the beginning of 1 me ena oi slavery.- I Nut still it wa a fangless serpent until the South withdrew troin the national the South, so have tbey been rHtpcnthd by the same kind of power in the North. II tho people of the South have beet! im poverished, imprisoned, and tin u jrti 1 erod, so havo se of the North also. The curse thin has fallen upon nor country bus des cendid upon all nnd itery psit ot it. If III j irciiiM'is n about, the streets in eveiy Snuthcn city, so do they in every Northern city. If poverty, end want, and unguis!., and death eta there, so are , they lieia. t or every Southern hpnrt wo break, a Northern heart is broken too. If we have made, their hills red with their blood," tticir valleys hre aho red with our own. 'I ho business we are carrying on if, "an e.e lor an eye, and a tooth lor a tooth." So it stands. U that some angel of wisdom would descend upon the delu ded people ol t lie South, ami put it into their hearts to lav clown their iiiuis, ami return to their places in the Ui ion ! 1W so doing, they will not only savo them- selves, bul ub. We cuimot go oti to ettish them, without crushing ourselves Also- Commerce, tiudo, ud every aiiciy of jmispcMty havo made us one body ; and whatever ciubcs the life out of them, ciushes it oul of iid as well. The shallow demagogues at Washington do not coiu Jirelirnd Ibis, for tbey iue mad ; bul the people are beginning to rr.ri, it in a hun dred oppi eisive nays. Though the dema gogues succeeded, for a lime, in complete ly abolishing their reuson, yet they could not ubedish their five hungry M-i:set, end these lire liow already beginning lo preach and eigne, and detnund ui a fashion lhal must be beai d by-Miid-bv. Anotiicr thing the people m e beginning to underslnnd is, tbnt Ihe peace and prosperity can nei er be restored to ibis Union ur.td abolitionism is etleclually si ler.ted. Thai is the first fue lo coiHiuer. Get th'A fiend unuei hatches, uud we shall le rid of that other rebellion in no time. Kill the mother, and the suckling cub miisi die. If there had been no abolitionism there would have been no rebellion: this is wlut the people tuo be giunini! to understand , u h idi nbo lcad them on to comprehend Hie lact thai uLu litiniii.sm, and not iy, is the cause of the war. Slavery was here befoie our ccn- sliiution. 'J be consiiliuion was foi nuil us much fur its piou-ction, as for the pro, leciion of (ipy other kind of properly. , The aboliiiiiiiisls understood this well enough, nnd, ihereforc, tbey boldly de-! nounced the ci rstiiulion as a " covenant A i i li desth." Tbey knew that slavery I existed nnder Ihe soli inn sanction of the laws. Rut al olitionistn, to far from en joy ing such high sn.nclion, is nn organized wurlare ugninnl tho constitution ami laws. It was a sedition and a rebellion from the beginning. It is the cause of all out woes : il is Iho. lilsl devil that must be caught nnd chai"ed, preparatory to a re turn of peace and piosperity to this suf feiinglind blood-stained land. To the God who judges all men we ap peal, when vie declare that then is one prayer burning in our heart iliv and night, that the rebellion may be forever ended, and our beloved Union restored 13 its old foundations ; and to that end we direct our best and holiest poweis to l he r.'eslruel ion of Ihe lawless and bloody fiend abolitionism, which is the fountain head of all the rebellious crime in our laud. TttooPd at Ehtin'io.Ns, Uy the 'doth section of the Act of Assembly of the .StatcofTennsyyftiiiiiof2d Ji.ly,lS.'!9, it is emu-tod that "Xo body of troops in the. army of the United Motes, or ot this Commonwealth, shall U present, cither finned or unarmed, at any place of election Within tlus Co. monwialth, daring the time of such elec tion." tri order that no excuse br want of timo may bo alleged, wo now thus early ia advance cull on Governor Cur-tin, that ho sees to tho execution of this law in letter and tspirit, at the October elctions. We demand, in the r.amo of a Democracy and tt Statu al ready outraged and insulted by a de nial of out- State- authority and a siip- iression of its d'.gmity. the rigjid exe cution of this law. All troops must be absent ft oin dIuccs id election" in it.:., c. ..i .. .... 1 1. till, nm,.i..i... i,.i I iiihui, hiuv.ii .ivu ,,,. VV'.bors and exposure upon the or the Democracy vydUco, if our Gov-, heu:ill t ,P,ri;,ni , ,;til, he ernor daro not, that the laws ol our Common wealth - are not Iramjiled down lit Federal behest. It had bet - tor bo understood thu? c.irlv in tho day that tlio farce of tho Kentucky il.l.! lllll Olll.hl.t Kiillllll f Cl 1 1 I'sllll. w.v.., . . ......s i.u ...... ..iv V SylVUIlia th:t wu ai o CleterinineU to navo a Tree, fair ami nottcsi election, ac- cord inij to the laws nf our own tState- spring of ls.)l. 'and if the Federal pat rap who now! " 1'ccling an eUdlm iu the Fourth ein il.lc 1....:... ,.c .i. V.;.,l tricl. I for ut this timo the ollice had by : Government fails lo do Ids duty in the ' matter, an outraged hoIo will hiiji jily the remedy. Vhil a. Aye. tiirlf "the jiower of tho Govern ment" can only bo illustrated by rc- Berihinir how the iieoiiU ahall think, and what Hhftll be thoir speech or their silence interpreted to mean, nnd .i,,:.. o... .i'n..-;,. then coercing them into swallowing the prescription somo artist should bo on hand to catch the illustration and immortalize it, in wax! Wo adopt the lungungo of a cotem pornry, and reitcrato that the Democ racy of thU Stato will not be provo. .uiiai.e-oiiuitMi a,, iiij e.v -.- tatkod by force, or forcibly . rebisted in tha axercihe of la-lul privileges. -judge Woodward is now ielotit forty In t'lat case they will, as they nhould, seven years of age, ot an agreeable fcV, MAIN TAIN THEIR RIGHTS. HON. GEORGE W. WOODWARD. Testimony ufa IiKtlnKul,iicd Opponent. The following sketch of the Democratic candidate for Oovernot is fro the pen of U.vid Paul Brown, K,p, the great l'hila-' delpbia lawyer. We copy from a work of his enii.led "Tl, r ? i-T I ma eunuen mo l orum. tiuh is ieo in ' 1S" j Ul. . ... .. ,1 Ml. Urown is an Abolitionist of the ttric.est sect, and therefore bis tosti- mind. In Lis person as , have else- monv in boh-df oftU ability and crreat whe,e ",M.--"""i.ily resembles Chif "V ? it V ... y ' .gWat!JtisiieeOib)nt . his age; but there is moral worth of ,Iude oodward will not ( vePy Illtic ..esemblnnce in tho structure of! be doubted by the opposition to the De- Iheir minds. JudgeGibWs attainmeuts - mocricy ; ; were more comprehensive and diversified ! draw no " We bh.ill for the present comparison: but regulating onr enhcl- ,.i,ik l,v r,,r vrl. u ..,!. I littlo hn.ird in s:iyint, that, in all iiimlili ! . J . ' . " m, , ui cntirns of the judicial character, extensive. legul learning, sourici morslity, mid mou uibnno and agreeable manners, there have; been bul few judges in the State, perhaps in the country, who at bissge, have given promise of greater excelletieoor eminence than the Hun. Heorge W. VVoodwai'd. Let it not be suid our praise is too general in regmd to the members of this court lo bo ueceptMble or valuable. This i nothing to us. II there Lege nets i merit, there should be general approval. We borrow no man's opinions, and ask r.o men io adopt our's. Truth i. more desirable and more valuable and more lusting than popularity. We do not meiui to say that nit or any of the judges nro without fault ; hut we louvo it to others to find thorn out, and Irj-t we shall never manifest that very ipi'isiiona ble virtue id seeking for vies and biemi-h-c where they do not betray thein.c'.vis. " Judges have ft pretty bard lift and need not be envied. They cannot pleuo everybody, and tbey never sn'isfv the par ty or counsel agninst uIk.iii they cbviiio. How unreiwonable, (ben i:. is. ivho.i lli y encounter so nu.ny prejudiiT. t; with hold from them the just mfed ol'appro'ia t ion. Tin re is no safety in a judi;e ih it i svnyed by any olber consider d ion than a sense of c'liv. A very di-tin:'uishi! 1 judge, upon n oeeasion not. muny years sin .e, pctisuited the pluintit!, lo the great displcn'ireoi the counsel, ot course, which llie judge pen eiving, said to him. call. ng bim aide, ' You seem to be hurt.' ' l o be sure I am,' ha -lily replied the cnun-c l, !' I think 1 have retison to feel hurt.' '1 think you are mistaki n,' Miid tho .titl:!o. ' Kemcioher we huvo both Our clulie. U perform ; yours havo been faithful! formed, nnd I trust so have mine. per- have ro more right to mak" yourself the judge, than I havo to make myself Hip counsel.' This once understood, uud there can be no dissatisfaction. " Judge Woodward' birth was on tho 'i'ith of March, lf'do, in Ihe villuge of J'cthany, Wayne county, I'eniisylvan in. His parentage wa as good a any in tho State, of which mother voucher cun bo required than the moral and teligiuus training cf Iheir s-in. "'Tho ncacleniic education of y-'-un Woodword wn principally received at ticneva. New York, und at Wilkesbai re.lil Luzerne county, Pennsylvania. Uoon ils compleli.m, be entered, at the kit ter place, inl tho ollice of the Hon. (iarri- k ilal lorv, and was admitted to practice Jit Au gust term. 1 .'$'). " In Hie sprint; of Hoi, a few months after Ihe admission of Judge Woodward, Mr. Mallory was appointed lo the beti- b of Northampton, Lehigh and Hueks coun lic, and u ihui assuming bis scat liansfer- rod his entire piofessi-mal business, whiu.i then exieniie.l nil I hro.igli Iho counties of N.n ihea.tern I'eniisj Iviu.ia. to his favorue pupil, Mr. Woodward, who, though at. thai time not twenty-three years old, had already given nn erriie-t of that industry, fidelity hi t ii ability, whioii could not fail to secure future success and emia-nci at the bar. Judge Woodward, fivu the time of his admission, remained in Judge Mallory's olfioe, which ho retains s'.dl down to Iho present moment. " Here be continued in the enjoyment of full practice et the b.-.r nn i il the begin ning nf the year Hll. Certainly no man ol In age, at least in Hi? interior of Ihe Slale; whs ever more rapid in his advance ment, mo:e implicitly relied upon by the community, or aiore desemng of l hut ad vancement and reliance. In 1S41, tluough Ins professional 1.:- cncuiU, Lis health beitinnina to fail, he accepted a ,.om,nisi.m ns Fiesident' Ju-lge of ihe Founh Judicial Dnttim, cnup-i-ed of the ' counties of llunungnon, MitHm. Centre, Cl-'ti-l 1 and Clmion--et i n mi-.l I y the bogest .bstnot i., .he Sun.... The two .... disii ict the next tear, and in Iho oilier three Ju itro Woodward preside i until the expiration of hi term of otlieo, in the constitutional provision become elective.) and also declining u nomination ou th State ticket for I he Supreme Bench, he ' returned to his practice at Wilkesh.irre ' with the full intention of continuing at the bar for sevuril year ; and buch wa his popularity with all who knew him, hat he would have no ditlicultv in re- ineving his lormcr extensiveand luctutivc ! -lB olBn' Zf' Coulier, in the year IsoU, the appoint ment to the Supreme Conn, in the place of ths deceased judge, being teudertd to hiiu by tha Executive, Higler he accepted il, and thus unexpectedly, but not unde seryedly, readied ihe highest judicial hon ors of the Slate. At the fa 1 election (for the Governor's appointment was temporary ana provi sional.) be was chosen by the people for coaslllutionul j,erioJ of r.(leen r and graceful person. U is upward of six feet high, well proportioned, always sppiopi iately apparelled, and very kind, attentive and dignified in his deportment. Calir, patient .ind moditativo, ho closely nun ks the progre'ss of a caute and tho course of the ml-ument ; exhibits no fret- fulness, rarely interrupts counsel, never l'.""I' "Conclusions, nut always bides his , "m' 1 " hls d"irg'8 ftt IViu. and w, ..v,l..,,iaii iii .omiong iue ironuers. it is not intimtvted perceive he lofty leira nnd moral tone of ' .i. . ... but not so conceriiraied and available; his , ne , i .ra, .irniw. but it wn not ,,!. c:,i..'. -,..,i. .. i, ; .. . . . c . . . .. ' e. blow, nil ( i l noL ii ant it or to nw 11 up so judiciously. Judge ii.uson soma '.iraes rose above . peclat ion : .ludgi'1 Woodward never faIN below it. Judge (iibion's in duslry unil'ot inly Ciialled his t.'dr-nts. Judge Wood.vai (i's lalenls are, If po sible. surpassed by his industry. Judge Gibson was, perhaps, the gi eater lU.'.n ; Judje Woodward Iho safer judge. " When it is remembered tbrt this comparison is made not between men of mi eijual ago tor ijliwt Justice Uibson was ' "'uowii.g p.u uunas legaiamg tu. ouiii more t haii twenty years tho senior of f11.'-' 1,1 thai, city by the gueifiihi- mmer .lu'lgo Woodward we must in our com-1 lJ'"'iHrell : Tho list of killed und wuutid pulntion, upon the other fide, throw into '''' numbers some hundred nnd oijjhi) , t:.o iho scilo th- experience 20 years will ; J.roiiuee ; while, on tho other, e must in, itve a feels, w in'aiice fir tho infirmity and d-- ich aro uluiost invariably attend-: lint upon u life perplexed wilh Mccuoiula- ted littles, noil nro' I aCLCd Oevom.l Ihe tins- pel is, I ;;'.l.uv.fic! of tbree-cii-o and ten. ll ind-e 1, upiih to be doubt, d wbeiher in .ii ever improves itit.-Meetu -id'.- .if-cr ho U six tv. He iii.i v sli! com in up M iimiitii 1 SnioivUl 111!, "be ll'uo tlk.ltl.il Iv ltw ' inue'i that by h'd previously gi.lned. Tip: in.p.-. fi'iiis made upon tho uiind of tho ng.'rf, as compared with the itnprossioiis upon youth, nu: liko tlm ivnting in snnd, computed wilh the lie ci ii.ti'.m upon the retentive ro, k. in January, 117. be b.vnr,.o a member of the (jnve.itioii for the amendment .d the Coii-tltu'.ion of I7'J". This Convcn-; io se?sioti from lime to lima from turn win January, H !7, un'il the of Felonry l:i. It consist .1. a i will knonn.of some ol the ablest and uio-l distinguished men id the State. And w'nnn it is remem bered thnt Mr. Woodwind wit then under t".i.,i-it,.-ei;;ht ye;.is of a;:e, and hud been admitted In ; i.e't-ee bul about seven year, the proiiiiner.t ,'ind ed.'-'ui ; -; t iti ri wbieli b- held in such a body was remarkable, l... .gh n-.t snrj ris'ng to t hose who Jmd been fimil: ir wilh his talents ind bi vir tu s. !-; nik cch upon indicia! terures. a jeet which called forih nil th energies and elo-pii nce of the Couvenib.il, wis l:u beyond what could justly hava beer, ex peete.l from one nf hi year, and indeed, pl.i til e I bi:r, hi tbi . in 11,,:!, br.dy. rap. f Ihe best A Eeautif-l Lxtract- 1 1 u m night .! erus:-b in slept as iilielly amid her hills as a ch ild iiion the bieast of its moHier. The no seles's sentinel stood like n slaiue M hi post, and tho pbiloaopher'n lump burned dimly in the ree--s-e s of his chamber. l'.ut s moral darkness involved tho nn lion in ils unlighteuod sliad.iws. Reason shed a faint -jlimi.iei ing over the minds of men, like the cold uri'iilhcienl light of a distant star. 'The immortality of man's spit ilu id liul ure whs unknown, his rcla- tuins unlo heaven und:.- ivered, and his in a cloud oi ruture de.sliny cibscuicd mystery. It wa at this period that two forms cf etheriid mould hovered abojt the la.id o tio-Fs chosen people 'They seemed like sistei angel sent to earih on som- embas sy of love. The one, of maj..uc suuie and well formeej limb, which her si.oi.y drape-ry hardly concealed, in her erect bcaiiug and steady eye, exhibited the highest degree of strength and confidence. Her right arm "vas extended in im ex pressive gesture upivard, whe'-e night ap peared to have placed her darkest pnvil- . , , . , I C. I t I 1 . loll : mule on iue leu recunc-i ner iiei- icate companion, in form and couiitcm.nce the coniriist ot the other, lor stie. w.-i; elrooping like a flower when nxustc n-il : with relieshing dew., nnd h. r bright but troubled eyes m rtune-d the air with varying glances. Su-ilenly alight, like the sun, li mbed from ill- Leave us. and Faith and Hope ii lib-d wilh exubnit song th ai-, cei.din.i star of iiethleiiei'i. Years rolled iivvuy nr.d the s.ltang. I W:11 Keen in Jerusalem. lie was ft meek, u:i-iis-uiiiing mini, whose buppine-s seemed to exist in a-t of benevolence l- the hu man nice. 1 uero v.eie oeep . i. n.es ui uoi- r0iv mi bis ooin)tchnnce, thuu.li knew whv lio gticve 1, lor ho iivc:.l in the pnictiiMi of every v itue, w ij -,v,hs loved by nil the good und wise, by mi-l by it was rumored that I h stranger worked mira cles ; that I lie blind me-, nod thecluiub spake, and t lie ocean npielersl ed lis c iuf mp time, and the very tbuinUr hi ticuluted, " 1 J o is the Son of (bid." I.tr.-y n-M.,ld him lo death. Slowly, and tlii-d-.ly gild ed, lie ascended the Hill of Caivnry, a cross hem hi in to ihfieaitii. iui. taitli leaned on Lis arm, and IJopa Hipp? ! her pinions id his bl-o l, puis i.uui.le j to the skies. Another Renegade Laid Oct! lion. 1'. C Shannon, ot i ulsburli, lias been for bomo time extremely anxious for tho Republican nomina tion lor Supremo J udgo, hut the Lon vention never mentioned his name at all. This id the unkiiidost act of all. s c "j'T " i . Z i,.r I The loss t Lawernco is not lessilmn $3. tirA dandy, smoking a f-gar hav- ( m mMA (iH . yok ing entered it menagerie, tho propne- and Leilvenwol,n ll)CTiiuti,u.. Two banks tor requested him to tako tho weedlwere ,,.,1 0f every dollar, and thethifd from his mouthlest ho should teach escaped only because the best was no great the olLc- rorVeys bad hiibil-s.' , ' the rebels could not get lb a faults open. THE WAR IN KAN3AS. Burning of the Citv of Eawieuci-. I , , , i V-'"5 Tl. . r " ' jiuv w cuy n...e.., can nn some una of the real character .of the ptesont wsr " ' m E 1 . P-t orietnliaHftn. Nor dee H m.ter. It is but two weeks ngo that we r.,bli.-hed tho account of the wholesales murder of a hwiy in tho nei ghhorhood of Memi.his . , , ,, . , ., . , ' ;,l,c'u,4,n6 1,10 lnno''',t criiidren-t.y & i ft band of negro soldiors. These scenes. r . u, g.vmei o. ies f!"" com l.TPa j with the following, ore of u'raost v e-kly ; occurience. They nre euoip;): to luuko I liumenity slriddor. They ou 'ht lo r:ako i us ijiii!-:i ior our oonsteu ciuvduin civ i lion, and et. to rxpte.-s oppntoii to such a ui, is lo bo branded ,lb ui ,i .'j,', and sympalhy with treair-x I I.tAVUNWOTii, Au;;oM 2, From cituens of Lawrence who have ,.r rived here for siinplies. I have cat here j :ho .... a snnjony ot wtiom were killed lostmuly. Ih names cat. not be all ; vcl II. I lie cm nine, nowever. i no nou-ei i.n.t r.;-. standing were fdled witlj kil'ed and 1 wounded, of all cbisoej. ties nuns ' ''" "v onuses me- eiu i.os m ot her vici:m wer-s being found. 15 d one h ;' idt sLaidiiig. Quuntreli havior; p"i .,1 d it. his cr, nooen c o ot lus hiuing m.ide horn- I hwi e som'j yea rj since W'jthuut e.i- petJSe, but lllO pi.ll.rU! shot , .ii:n ng i in" mo. t promiiieni ct owdii! are known to be killc !.S -id T. f.,1' W. i.?ulliin ii e. Muvorof the elf. . this sot .J, 0. Low, lsni.ih 'Ft no!. . ,: ; Thorpe, IV. (Jiis'AuiJ, James' r;.i.i I Jacpos FciviiiC, Colonel S'lie. p.' y 1 l'rJ ''di, A. u. urmvoict. HodencH Kim- ' 1 ho:uas tUurpl.y, John Sper, U.n: Lrolheis Dix, A ddison Wau-.li, Duuuap Al ! v",n ''o-go Burt, Judge Carpenter, Rev. Mr. Snyder, Augustus Kllis, Lemuel Fill mun, Dwiht Colemsn, Lewis Swan, it. Loom it, JuhnCiiine.Livi Yates, two broth er liunge, John Evans, (i, W. bell, Messrs. K:tb, l'i-o-.vn. Dili Twooii. Ptdiiipr, Siirgeant, Deliutki, A 1 buck. Powers and Kraut. Theso were Ulled instantly, most of them in their houses with thsir wives and cliil-lti ii clinging around theui, V l.iie the mio-b'tets placed pLtols to their bodies and shot them. 'The following are mortally wounded l John Lldi i dge ; .M. U iker. linn of Kiden hiertoc li ikei -jMi. iV.ll-.aiusoii ; lien. Holt; J. F. Hanson; W. S. K Lyken. In oi.-o pm these guerrilla di'n4" twelve loen into a bouse, shot i'ibih, nnd burned the btiiidingj and the lienui jto itl on tl.o banks of tiu iivr and ibc I .iu-.J them, k.lhng nnd wounding several. 'Twenty -liv o negro recruit-! trr-rc :dtot by tho gnert dins, who took all tho money lhal could be found in tho pockets of the citizens or in houses, and at-de all the la elieV jewelry, even to tha riojj on theif fingers. Jiai Lime escaped on horseback, rallied about two hundred men wilh arms, . fjU lowed and overtook Qu.intrell twe.lve miles iro-jlhof Ln-.vrenee, when a fighl occuired, the result of which is unknown. Quuntreli is now retreating toward Mis. souri, burning everything on his lO'Uo. It, i not uspccled that. h) will bo inter cepted by onr forces, ar.d will probably got n ay wit bout b.s.-i. No '-esisinnce was evident Lawrence, the peoples being shotdown as they ran Ihrouga. t Ins streets iu lht.-ir night clothe:,, and their bodisa lino.-, n down the weds mid ci lel is. The citiicn-? bad been expectins; such ft rail from threat Qiatuiell had made, and had organized military companies tot clefenu.s, pui I of whom had been under nriii-s constantly, bul fiom a.-s-jraneci thnt (Juantrell would not invade K m; as, their oninnizaiioiis wcio abandoned, and the guc-i i ilia found the (own cntncly ilecncij- le- A I irge train left hern to-day tvilh sup plies ft' floibing, provision. Ac, for tho suilereiF, nnd the citizens of Lcayenworlit b-ive opi ned their d uns to all , ybo com. Many hav e availed thi'm-elves of tip bC li .j iiii'lte. , tin 1 will be. well cared I h" foi lln ; Btniur; t::u eilieli., bore ki vci y bit: vi bj; linsi iho eoinman lor of this cb'p .rt nu p t 1 1 .r bemg so w holy unprepared .s re -, t -.'i.-!) no emer-.-eiicy. Tie b'on. e.dipg lienernl was nlient fiom hen iipiuriers, and did not know cf ,iiv i v. idon uiiiil the destruction of Law. lo-ice wh complete. Evervthing was d me, ho.vever, in im-ard to tho iiinveturiit of troops (o intercept and capture Q iniillcil, but it was too bile. . Uur Sinto auihor'.lies are now i d.inq r.i.-.t '.;! in their own bun-Is. Cl ui-d .lenn ioii bus 1 i ?r leinstaied in comio.-itid if tin. I.IPV lil'lll i l"gmie,t; lipd 19 I belli tihiling c'.v-.-.n ihe bolder iiii s.ifjicient ' t- nips lo ovciconie any loice the enemy enn bring ligaih.st ldm, rind tt'not in'crrori ( bv o. mounding orti-'cts, nidi inti I Untm's wid e nd with the present one. 'I'l.e niei. rnmi l is i g Quanti ell's. h.rceSJ i.i ihrf IV lilOae Olll'l ''I tllOaO ritll'li Li i i I Ins ' ,.1V, i1fP, n bbing and murdering alon-i the border forthe j.ast six months with but little opotition. and hsvtj tm;-io time to prepaie cvorj thing thst wc uld ensuie iue ceis, Thy me. probably, no.v saTo in Miosouri with their plunder, end quietly a their homes ns poo.i Union ciiuens.