Whole No. 2566. BLYMYER & STANBARGER, renin L COMMISSION MERSHAXTES, Year (anal Uasin, Lewistown, Pa., Will purchase every description of Produce at current prices. AI.W AY s 0 N II AX D , J'LASTER, SALT, FISII, STOXF COAL i,f assorted sizes, LIME Ji I RXF US' ' <t IILA CKSMITHS' COAL. GEO. BLYMYER, dec- C. C. STANBARGER. "W~ -A- X-. Ij AND WINDOW JE*J±-JP , J£2JE=L^ m i LARGE assortment for sale by ii F. J. HOFFMAN. i (HOUND ALUM SALT.—A large lot \Jf new full sacks G. A. Salt, just received, fur sale at a reduced price, my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN. M ACKEREL. Herring and Shad, best quality, at iow juices for sale by my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN. TUN DAY SCHOOL BOOKS.—A large as by sortrnerit of Sunday School Library, Class and Reward Books, for sale at same prices as sild by S. S. Union in Philadelphia, at my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN'S. lAYTKA Rio Coffee, at J3 cents. AlsoSu -1 j gars and other Groceries, low for cash at my 17 F. J. HUFFMAN'S. /CONFECTIONERY, Crackers, Nuts, dec., E ,Vt\, at low prices to wholesale dealers, my If. F. J. HOFFMAN. f TOBACCO and Segars—good qualities at I /car prices to dealers, my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN. THIOL FINDINGS.— A full assortment of 0 Shoe Findings on hand, some articles much reduced in price, my 17 F J. HOFFMAN. THILL LEATHER. —A good stock just re 0 ceivod. of tlie best Red and Oak Sole Leather. 1 have also a good assortment of M .roeco. Linings, French Calf Skin, Upper, Kips A c , all at low prices for cash. my It) F. -J. HOFFMAN. VAILS—F. J. HOFFMAN has always on hand a large stuck of best Nails, and sold at low prices. 1"* •' KMIR'S STORE.—I have on hand 1 Corn Ploughs, Corn Cultivators, Ready 1 crn Si .<• He re. Hay Drags, and other Farming Implements, for sale at prices warranted to give satisfaction. .joyF. F. J. HOFFMAN. I I FRA'^CISCIfS, LEWISTOWN, Pa. PGLbdIED Long Handle St n el Shovels at 6-1 cts; common long handle Shovels at hum :!7 to 50 cts, for sale bv F. G. FRAXCISCI S. (WAL nil and Lamps: Merchants supplied J with coal oil and coal oil Lamps, at low <.T rates than can be bought eastward. The 1 - are superior in quality and lower in pri than <*an be bought from eastern markets. ' V quality of coal oil always guaranteed free uom smell and smoke, for sale by my 10 F. G. FUANCISCUS. ')/ | coal oil Lamps, varying in ' prices from 75 cts to $5.00 each, all with superior burners, for sale by ">y 10 F. G. FRANCISCI'S. HARDWARE. —We have on hand the . largest stock of Hardware which we hare ever had, and will sell to merchants at as lew rates as can be bought elsewhere (by the package.) F. G. FUANCISCUS. .*!( i( t KE(IS Harrisburg Nails, equal to 'l'"J the best in the market, for sale by raylo F. G. FUANCISCUS. j/ W W i BUSHELS best Alleghany /\ * Broad Top Blacksmiths Coal, w 121 cts per bushel, for .•gie by my 10 F. G. FUANCISCUS. ||U 1 SETS Thimble Skeins and Pipe d v/\ / Boxes, assorted sizes, for sale by PjlO F. G. FUANCISCUS. i IKD Wagon Haines, at 45 cts per pair, J-V (usual price 024 cts), with almost every variety tf Wagon, Carriage, Buggy and Dear horn Ilames, at equally low prices. F. G. FUANCISCUS. |-I''ASS Scythes—good articles at G24 cts. 1 strapped straw and hay Forks, at WW rates. F. G. FRANCISCI'S. ') | IMPALING Hay Forks, wood head, J s tcel prongs, patent springs, at $7 each, J?s{ article in the market, for sale by m H° F. G. FUANCISCUS. ( 'RIFFIX X. DARLING k Co's broad If,. £ rai . n an K ra =s Scythes—Hay Hakes, ■ ' °rks, kc., for sale by m y lo F. G. FUANCISCUS. Bullies for unloading hay forks, j, at " cts each. Ropes of all kinds and - at reduced prices, for sale by F. G. FRANCISCUS. THE Mil !J 33A g A FQR j. 1 rout Anther's Home Magazine for July. BY MRS. P. P. BONNEY, Lemon Pie. —One leuion, one spoonful of flour, three spoonsful of sugar, u little butter and salt. Grate off the yellow out side peel to flavor your pic ; then pare away the white skin, which is apt to be bitter, and slice the pulp into a plate lined with paste. Dissolve the flour, and other in gredients, in water enough to fill the paste, then cover with another. This is an ex cellent pie, the lemon being a good sub stitute for apple. Another Lemon Pie. —One tublcspoon ful ot melted butter, one egg, a small ta blespooniul of flour, a little salt, and sugar to your taste, (.rate oft the outside peel, squeeze out the juice, and add to the beat en egg and sugar; then pour in, carefully, | boiling water enough to fill vour paste. ]'ii is pie has no top crust. Another Lemon Pie. —Grate oft the out ride peel, then pare off the white part and throw it away. Slice the pulp and lay it into your plate lined with paste. Make a custard with one egg; a little salt and su gar to your taste—all lemon pies require a : good deal—pour it over the sliced lemon, then cover with a top crust. - I lemon Pudding Pie. —To bake in a deep plate. 'J lie grated rind and juice of one lemon ; sugar to your taste; one egg and a little flour, or grated cracker, a glass of currant wine, and two large, fair apples, pared and grated; a halfspoonful of butter j and a pint of milk. Roi| tjio milk and ! butter together and let it cool. Heat up the eggs and sugar, and add them—do not add the wine and lemon until the moment before you set your pie jn the oven, as it will curdle the milk. These pies are all good, and do not taste in the least alike. ]Vhij>s. —Take a pint of rather thin cream, sweeten it quite sweet; then add a large glass of wine, and a tablespoonful of extract of lenion. Good currant wine is quite as good as any other. Let this stand in a cool place until you have cut the whites of three or four eggs i.o a stiff froth ; then add these to tire cream, stirring rapidly as you do so, and fill your glasses at once. 1 hese whips are delicious, much nicer than those made of whisked cream alone, and can be made in ten minutes. For a Desert. — bine a large dish with thin pieces of sponge, or any other cake, spread quite thick with jelly or marmalade of any kind. Prepare your cream and eggs —half the quantity will be sufficient, , as for the whips described above—and fill your dish with it. This is a delicious des- ' serf, and can be made so quickly that it is a convenient resort when you wish to add to your dinner or tea for an unexpected guest. Fr a Des rt. —Line a large dish with pieces of cake of any kind; then fill it with nice boiled custard. With the whites of two or more eggs make an icing and pour over the top. im making an icing always j beat your egus while adding the sugar, a little at a time, and the longer you beat your icing after the sugar is in it, the nicer it will be. MORMMEMGiOiiI Profane Sinarin</. —It is not generally known that the Revised Penal code, pa-s --ed lass winter, makes all persons who speak loosely or profanely of God, Christ, the Holy Spirit, or the Bible, liable to an in dictment for blasphemy, the penalty for which is a line not exceeding one hundred dollars, or imprisonment not exceeding three months, or both, at the discretion of the court. Persons in the habit of swear ing had better be careful, as no officer who regards his oath of office can avoid return ing to Court all persons who are guilty of the offence as above specified. Science in Nature. It is a remarkable and very instructive fact, that many of the most important oper ations of nature are carried on in unbro ken silence. There is no rushing sound when the proud tide of sunlight breaks on a dark world, and floods it with glory, as one bright wave after another falls from the fountain, millions of miles away, i There is no creaking of heavy axles or groaning of cumbrous machinery, as the solid earth wheels on its way, and every planet and system performs its revolutions, the great trees bring forth their boughs and shadow the earth beneath them—the plants cover themselves with buds, and the buds burst into flowers, but the whole transaction is unheard. The change from snow and winter winds to the blossoms and fruit and sunshine of summer, is seen ig [ slow development, but there is scarcely a sound tcecll of the mighty transformation. The solemn chant of the ocean, as it raises its unchanged and unceasing voice, the the roar of the hurricane, and the soft notes of the breeze, the rushing of the moun- , lain river, and the thunder of the black browned storm; all this is the music of na ture—a great and swelling authem of praise, breaking in on the universal calm. There is a lesson for us here. The mighti est. worker in the universe L the most unob trusive. Happy Women. A happy woman ! is not she not the very sparkle and sunshine of life ? A woman who is happy because she can't help it— whose smiles even the coldest sj rinklingof misfortune cannot dampen. Men make a terrible mistake when they marry for beau ty, or ibr talent, or for style; the sweet est wives are those who possess the maic secret of being contented under every cir cumstance. Rich or poor, high or low, it makes no difference; the bright little foun tain of joy bubbles up just, as musically in the hearts. Do they live in a log cabin ? the firelight that leaps 011 its humble hearth becomes brighter than the gilded chande liers in an Aladdin palace ! I)o they eat brown bread and drink cold water from the well? it affords them more solid satisfac tion than the millionaire ile foie or as and iced champaine. Nothing ever goes wrong with them—no trouble is too serious for thent to 4 make the best of it.' Was ever stream of calamity so dark and deep that the sunlight of a happy face, falling across its turbid tide, would not wake an answering gleam 1 Why, these joyous tem pered people don't know half the good they do. No matter how cross and savage you feel, Mr. Gruniblgr— !U) matter if your brain is packed full of meditations or 'af flicting dispensations,' and your .stomach with medicines, pills, and tonics, just set one of those cherry little women talking to you, and we are not afraid to wager any thing she can cure you. The long drawn lines about the mouth will relax—the cloud settled gloom will vanish, nobody knows when, and the first thing you know, you'll be laughing—yes, positively laughing 1 Why ? That is another thing; we can no more tell why than we can tell why you .-mile voluntarily to listen to the first blue bird of the season, among the maple blos soms, or to meet a knot of yellow-eyed dan delions in the c-rack of a city paving stone. We only know that it is so. Oh, these happy women! how often their slender shoulders hear the weight of bur dens that would smite man to the ground ! liow often the little hands guided the pon derous machinery of life with an almost invisible touch ! how we looked forward, through a weary day, to their fire side ciniles! how often their cheerful eyes see ronleur <?c rose where we only behold thun der charged clouds! No 0110 knows—no one ever will know, until the day of judge ment, how much we owe to these helpful, uncomplaining women ! IBS MS THE LUCKY PREDICTION. BY CAROLINE R. I'IIKSTON. John Wyman was over head anl ears in love with Annie Grafton —an attachment which Annie was not uutyijlicg to receive. So far, everything seemed prosperous and plain sailing, but—my dear reader, did you ever know a more tie test i bio conjunction than that but? AVell the but in this par ticular case was that the widow Gralton, who sustained the maternal relation to An nie, iiad & very decided objection to John as a son-in-law. Not that she disliked the young man. She admitted that he was steady, goodlooking, of an amiable dispo sition, and all that—but he was poor, lie learned the trade of a carpenter, and though he made fair wages, had thus far been called upon to support two sisters, both of whom are now married and off his hands, and consequently he had n&t been able to lay up more than two hundred dollars or so, Mrs. Grafton, on the contrary, was the owner of a valuable farm, and some money in the bank, altogether no less than two thousand dollars. This, in a country town, entitled her to one of the foremost places among the village aristocracy, and as An nie was her only daughter, and would in herit all the property eventually, she felt that it would be a decided misalliance lor her to marry any other than a rich man, or, il not rich, a member of one of the learned professions. So when John Wyman ventuied to broach the subject to her, she said, not un kindly, but still very firmly, 'No Mr. Wy man, 1 cannot give my consent.' ' Have you hoard anything against my character ?' asked John in a tone of great disappointment. 'Not at all,' said Mrs. Grafton. I be lieve yoa to be a very correct and estima ble young man, but Annie is entitled to look higher.' That is what Mrs. Grafton said, in sub stance, in response to every appeal the young man made, and he was finally obliged to retire from the conference in despair. But when man's wisdom fails, woman's wit often steps in and avails much. When Annie heard from her lover the report of his conference, she leaned her head on her dimpled hand and said with a smile: ' We won't give up.' THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1860. ' Yes, mother,' said Annie. ' 1 declare. J don't see how you came to 1 do it,' jCQ'jtiniied her mother. '1 suppose 1 must have been very carc less.' said Annie penitently. 1 \\ ell, what's done can't be undone, and j I suppose we must expect such things to ; happen once in a while.' Meanwhile Annie was putting on her bonnet and shawl, and :>t once bent her steps to John Wyman's shop. lie was planing a board when she en tered. He looked up with an air of glad surprise. Annie explained Iter erj-avd, and like wise added a lew words, the purport of which our readers will learn in duo time. In about tw.enty miugtes Mrs. Grafton saw .John advancing up the graveled walk that led to the door. ( \ our daughter left word,' said he,' that you've got a job in my line this morning ' ' \ es, said Mrs. Grafton, 'and I'm glad you ve come so promptly. It isn't very comfortable in this cold weather to have a broken pane.' 'Whereabouts is it?' said John in a matter of fact way. 'ln the sitting room A alk right in there.' Mrs. Grafton did not fail to observe that Annie did not come home with her late lover, as she feared she might, and in her heart she commended her daughter's pru dence. '] am glad she knows what is good for her,' thought Mrs. Grafton. ' I hope in time to secure a lawyer for a son in-law ; they usually pick out lawyers for political officers, aud 1 should really like to be the mother-in-law of a politician.' The good lady went back to her knitting work while Wyman, with a business like air, proceeded to his work. He had nearly finished the job, which by the way seemed to take him longer than vvb.cn a knock at the door caused Mrs. Grafton to put clown her knitting work and answer the summons. She staited back in surprise at the ap parition which presented itself. It was apparently a venerable crone nearly bent doable, attired in an old plaid cloak, a,gd leaning lor support on a rough stick. ' Good morning,' said the visitor, in a cracked voice. ' Good morning,' said Mrs. Grafton, men tally deciding that she was an applicant for charity. ' Would you like your fortune told, my worthy madam ?' inquired the crone in a quivering voice. 1 Are you a fortune teller?' asked Mrs. Grafton, wonderingly. ' Yes, madam, 1 can read the secret of the stars, and from their mystic depths trace out their wondrous secrets. Thou 'What! do you really tuink you can bring your mother round?' said .John eagerly. 4 1 have strong hopes. I know my moth er better than you do, John, and l ean ar range some way or other to manage her. I don't exactly see how. vet, but I'll set myself a thinking, and 1 guess something or other will turn up.' 'Hut if there should 11 t, Annie, do you think it right that that should separate us ? \\ out you promise to he mine at any rate.' ' No, John, I won't promise to do that. 1 should not wapt to leave my mother alone.' 'Then I 111 afraid,' said John, despond ingly, ' that there is 110 hope for us.' ' Fie, John, do you mistrust my power,' said Annie, shaking her head at him— ' If that's the case, I've a great mind to say 1 won't marry you, even if mother dees consent.' 'Anything but that Annie, but you know when your mother once gets her mind made up about anything, she isn't apt to give up very easy.' ' I know that my mother has some strong points of character, and it is on one of these that 1 rely for success. I won't tell you anything about it just yet, but I'll let you know before it comes off.' \Y ith this agreement the two separated —John not knowing where to hope or de spond, but be felt that if ever Annie be came bis wife it must be through the re suit of her stratagem. It was, perhaps, a week after the con versation detailed above. Annie had ta ken her mother's decision quite calmly, much to thi>t lady's satisfaction, for she loved her daughter, and would have been pained to see her grieve. This particular morning Annie was un accountably careless. She managed to break a pane of glass in t);e sittifjgroom, without the slightest apparent necessity of so doing. As it was a cold day in Novem ber, and this wits the room where they usu ally sat, it was a matter which must be remedied at once. 'There, we shall have to send for Mr. Wyman to come and pgt in a new pane,' said her mother. ' I have got an errand down in the vil lage,' said Annie, demurely—'l will call and tell him to come up.' ' You had better do so' said her mother, ! 'and tell him to make haste. Igh! we shall catch our deaths of cold if it isn't put in at once.' wouldst know cf the past, present or fu ture.' Now Mrs. Grafton had in her nature a large portion of superstitious c !>y, and she listened with no little awe those words of the crone. ' How much is your charge?' she asked. ' Twenty-live cents,' was the replv. ' Gan you tell me the past ?' ' \ cs, madam.' ' \ try well: what is my husband's naige ?' 'lt was Ebcnezer. Hut your husband is 110 longer living.' 4 \ ou are right,' said Mrs. Grafton quite impressed with the correctness of the reply. ' Can yuu tell me how long ago lie died ?' ' Three years since.' ' < >n what day ?' ' The day betorc Christmas.' 4 1 his is wonderful,' said Mrs. Grafton to herself. 'Can you tell me how many children 1 have ?' ' You have had two, but only one is liv ing.' 4 Is that male or female ?' ' It is a girl.' ' How marvelous,' thought Mrs. Grafton. 4 I wish Annie was here: 1 should like to hear what she would say about her.' Hut Annie did not seem likely to make her appearance. At this moment John Wyman came to the door. 'Will this young man have his fortune told ?' inquired the crone. ' Yes,' said the young man. 'What would you know—the past or the future ?' ' 'J he future by all means, my good la dy.' 'Propound your questions.' ' Shall 1 be rich ?' The old crone took his hand in hers, and examined it attentively. ' lliches await you,' she said, after a con siderable pause. ' Well that's agreeable,' said the young man. 'Shall 1 become in any way distiu guished ?' Again attentive examination, and the | crone started in apparent agitation. 'Young man,' .said she, 'you will be | come President.' j 'ls it possible?' exclaimed both Mrs. ! (Jraiton and John, in chorus. 'Kcly upon my word,' she said, shaking j her head solemnly. 'Come,' said John gaily,'she deserves to be well paid. ' Here is twice your fee.' ' 1 cannot accept it./ she said ; ' I never take more than my fixed rate.' I his more than anything else, convin ced Mrs. <raf ton of her predictions. After the eld crone was gone, Mrs (Irafton seemed plunged in a brown study for some time. At last she said; 'John }Vynian, I have considered the matter which you spoke of the other day, and if you still desire to marry Annie, and she is willing, you have my consent.' Jt is needless to say that John Wyman very warmly pretested that Ije \v:is .of the same mind. That day a month they were married, and John took charge of his mother-in-law's farm. -!'• £?••—-a*s the reader may be anxious to know whether the prediction has been veri fied, I will say that John Wyman is now President of the B bank. As to the old crone, she has not been seen since. Hut 1 shrewdly suspect that Mr. and Mrs. yuian know something about her. An Interest uvj Meet in;/. —Among the rescued from the slave bark wildfire at Key West, arc a middle aged woman and three children. She seemed quiet and subdued in manner, and excited no special attention, other than that she had part of her family with her. Her great hope was to m.ect the others from whom late had separated her. On the landing of the William's cargo, she, with, the others of the first arrival, peeped through the fence which scpa ■t-.-J the new comers from flic old. Quick ma ernal in stinct discovered one, two, three and four among the crowd who she claimed as her daughters. She gave vent to her joy in the loud language of song, and the children hearing the familiar air of home, caught sight of the singer, in whom they found their lost mother. The meeting was one of tumultuous joy; shouts arose from three hundred voices for the gladness of a sim ple mother, and with her four daughters entw.ned in each other's arms, the mother took them with her, to meet the long sepa rated, of whose fate each party was in ut ter ignorance. Tenacity of a. Death Grip. —The body of the boy Smith, who, with his brother, was drowned at Albany on Sunday, was re covered opposite this city yesterday —six miles up stream. As some men employed on board of one of the tow-boats were en gaged hauling up the hawser the body of the little lellow was found both hands clinging to the rope with all the tenacity that has ever been ascribed to the death grip. It is supposed that as he was sink ing he grasped the rope, but was too far gone to pull himself up to the surface. By this grasp the corpse was fastened to the rope for forty-eight hours, and its tenacity was so great that even the very strong cur rent necessarily met with in dragging the body six miles up stream had not force enough to loosen it.— Troy Times,. Tune f>. New Series—Vol. XIV, No. 34. Address of the People's State Central Committee, To the Pen file of Pennsylvania : We are about to enter another great na tional struggle, the is.-;;e cf which must tell decisively for the weal or woe of our court-. try. fl e so called Democratic party has been in power f.r nearly eight years, and the fruits ot its policy are now felt in prostrate indus try, a paralized commerce, a bankrupt Treas ury, and a huge and steadily increasing Na tional Debt. 1 iie domestic peace and harmony that wit nessed the restoration of the party now in power, have been wantonly exchanged for sectional discord and fraternal strife, and even the sacred landmarks of the constitution have been blotted out, in the systematic ef fort of the Government to spread the Might, of Slavery over free territory, in dt nance ot the popular will. Corruption has gained undisputed mastery in almost every department of powi aua stamped its fearful stain indelibly upon the Government; and shameless profligacy lias given u- nat: i al bankruptcy at home and na j tional dishonor abroad, j The time has come when a thorough ro ; form is unmistakably demanded by the Poo ;ple. i in t-.is great work Vennayl.arua must, as ever, be potential. Always loyal in the last I degree to the maintenance of the National | I niun and to compromise i tin- institution, and faithful to the supremacy of the laws, her people have no warfare to wage upon the : rights of sister States. They will maintain ! these rights inviolate with the same fidelity i that they defend their own. Our Free Labor is the basis of all our wealth, our prosperity, our greatmss. It lias trusted and appealed in vain to the party in power to protect it. its conlidenee has been ever betrayed, its intere-ts ever saerifi ! ce<l. Our uniold millious of slumbering i wealth and umemplured and unrequited labof I are swift witnesses to the suicidal policy that ! has impoverished us. The studied purpose of the National Ad- I ministration lias been to seetionalize theGov ! eminent, ami give boundless dominion to a system that has dishonored and bcggarecj Free ludu-try wherever its desolating steps i have gone. Against this fatal sectionalism, the friends of a diversified and prosperous industry have | pretested without avail. Nothing but a rad ical change of administration can give reas onable promise of respect for the great in dustrial interests of our State, and redress tor the endless train of evils flowing from tho faithlessness of the Government. i'lie Territories of the Great West teem with beauty anu iichness. There, with free j homes, our sturdy sons would rear new en j pires to pour forth their boundless wealth j and add to the prosperity and true greatness |of our boasted Republic. They have escape i ed-the withering blight of servile labor thus j tar only by defying ti.e whole power of two : Democratic Administrations, and leaving a history crimsoned with the blood of our breth ren. ; Failing to subdue, even by force, the strong arms that are there scattering the rich fruits of peace enlightened industry, the Con stitution itself has been assailed ; and its sa cred aim perverted, to sectionalize the nation. The startling declaration is now made by the I party in power, through its official exponents, t that the Constitution must defeat the wisp beneficent purposes of its authors, and carry servile labor under its own broad shield, in to every Territory of the Union. To restore the Government to its original purity ; to redeem it from its fatal hostility to the interests of Free Labor: from the corrup tion, the profligacy, and the sectionalism which have marked the party in power, are the great purposes of the People's organiza tion in Pennsylvania. To this patriotic end, we invoke the aid and cooperation of all whV> desire to join in a common cause, to inaugu rate a liberal,just and faithful Government.' Our standard-bearers fitly represent the vi tal issues involved in the struggle. They command the unbounded cbpfiJepee of friends and the respect of foes, liven the partizan malice is impotent to assail them. That Abraham Lincoln, the nominee for President is spotless in both public and private life, and that Je is as " honest and capable" is confessed as with one voice by his countrv men. I!is well earned national lame, the off spring of no fortuitous circumstances, points to him as the "com'.iig man" who will ad minister the government honestly, lrugally, and faithfully, and restore the Republic to domestic tranquility, to prosperity, and true honor. True to these great measures of Re form is Hannibal Hamlin, our candidate fop Vice President, as is shown by his long and consistent public career in the councils of the nation. Andrew G. Curtin, our nominee for Gov ernor, has given a lift: time of earnest, untir ing effort to the interests of Free Labor. He has advocated in every contest, with all its matchless power, the true principles of gov ernment, as declared by the convention that has placed him before the people. Measured by the highest standard, he is faithful and qualified. lie will be in the front of the bat tle, bearing our standard loft, and defending our cause. We have but to join Lim in his efforts with a zeal worthy of our principals, and he will lead us to a decisive victory in October. Whether our opponents will enter the con test united or divided, our duties and dangers will be the same. In any event, the triumph of the right will be resisted with the spirit of desperation. Armed with all the power and corrupt appliances of the Government, they will leave no means untried, no effort unem ployed, to perpetuate their ascendency. Al though rent asunder with intestine feuds, antagonized North and South by irreconciL able differences of principle, and bleeding from wounds inflicted within her own house hold, yet there is one common bond of un ion that will rally their discordant forces when all else fails—that is " the cohesive power of public plunder." Our cause is worthy of an earnest, united effort. Our languishing industry, our home less laborers, our bankrupt treasury, our na tional tranquility and national honor demand
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