Whole No. 2663. BEAD! READ! READ! 4HM M M '• Is there a man with soul so dead Who never to himself hath said, My own, my native land !" I Xl> now, when patriots look for the ear jX. ly return of peace and prosperity and a general resumption of business with assur ance, we are pleased to inform the public tint a large, new, and carefully selected stock 0 f goods has just been opened at the Old Slaiul of JOHN KENNEDY &, Co., comprising :4 general assortment of Pry Goods, Groceries. Stone and Queensware, Willow and Cedar Ware, Fifh, Salt, Ham, Shoulder, Flitch and Fried lieef, Cheese, Sugars, Syrups, Coffee, Teas, Spices, Snaps, Tobacco, Segars, Dried Fruit, Turpen tine and Paints of all kind-, Linseed Oil, Fish Oil, Putty and Window Glass, Coal Oil! and a large assortment of Coal Oil Lamps and Chimneys. Our Stock will be sold at a small advance to Country Merchants. As we buy for cash, and in large quantities, we sell LOW. Country Produce taken in Ex change for Goods. Remember, one door below die Black Bear Hotel. JOHN' KENNEDY, A<-t. April IG, 1862—1y PATENT COAL OIL GREASE. 'PH.IS Grease is made from COAL OIL, L and has been found by repeated tests to be the most economical, and at the same time the best lubricator for Mill Gearing, Stages, Wagons, Carts, Carriages, Vehicles of all kinds, and all heavy bearings, keeping the axles always cool, and not requir ing them to be looked alter for weeks. It lias been tested on railroad ears, and with one soaking of the waste it has run, with the cars, ■JtMKX) miles ! All railroad, omnibus, livery stable and Kxpress companies that have tried it pronounce it the neplus ultra. It combines the body and lluidity of tallow, beeswax and tar, and unlike general lubrica tars, will not run off, it being warranted to ttand any temperature. 1 have it in boxes 2Jto 10 lbs. Also kegs and barrels from JO to dOO His. for general use and sale. Ihe boxes are more prefera ble; they are G inches in dhimeter by 2J inches deep, and hold 2} lbs net; the boxes are clean, and hardly a carman, teamster, expressman, miller or farmer, that would not purchase one box for trial. F. G. Fit AXC ISC Lis. Lcwistown, February 12, ISG2. LEWISTOWN BAKERY, Wfd Tlarkct Street, nearly ooposite the Jail. / 10X11 All I LLUIOII. JR. would res pee t- V fully inborn his old customers and eiti ns generally that he continues the Baking BREAD, CAKES, &E., at the above stand, where those articles can he procured fresh every day. Families desiring Bread, Jtc. will be sup plied at their dwellings in any part of town, i'ruit, Pound, Spunge, and all other kinds of cuke, of any size desired, baked to order at jhort notice. Lewistown, February 20, 1802-ly AMBROTYPES AND aai&aiaisrewas. The Gems of the Season. 'PHIS is no humbug, but a practical truth. X l ire pictures taken by Mr. Burkholder are unsurpassed for BOLDNESS. TItUTII- I I XXESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH, and Id LABILITY. Prices varying according to size and quality of frames and Cases. Loom over the Express Office. Lewistown, August 23, 1800. WILLIAM LIND, has now open A NEW STOCK OF Cloths, Cassimeres AND VESTINGS, which will be made up to order in the neat 66t and most fashionable styles. apl9 ffl a kt w a is as TIN WARES! CIOUNTRY MERCHANTS in want of Tin > Ware will find it to their advantage to purchase of J. B. Selheimer, who will sell them a better article, and as cheap if not cheaper than they can purchase it in any of the eastern cities. Call and see bis new stock Lewistown, April 23, 1862-ly. m* & Wmi* 233 £2 "CP OFFICE on East Market street, Lewistown, adjoining F. G. Franciscus' Hardware •Store. P. S. Dr. Locke will be at his office the first Monday of each month to spend the week. my 31 I AA DOZEN Coal Oil Chimueys, Wicks, 1 VU Brushes, <&c., for sale at city whole sale prices to retailers, by mhl2 F. G. FRANCISCUS. HAMS —An excellent article at 10 cents pe lb., for sale by MARKS A WILLIS. Lewistown, April 30, 1862. graartruig) AHS) ggaaasaiaß) a? ffmisssjsaißa mtmsmim3 9 HnnHyaasr &, IHE HIHSTMi. From the Atlantic Mouthlv OUT OF THE BODY TO GOD. Wearily, wearily, wearily; .Sobbing through space like a south-wind, r touting in limitless ether, Kther unbounded, unfathomed, w hero is no upward nor downward, ... nor shallow, nor shore? * Wearily floating and sobbing. Out of the body to (jiod! host in the spaces of blankuess, J.ost ill the deepening abysses. Haunted and tracked by "the past: No more sweet human caresses. No more the springing of morning, Never again trom the present Into a future beguiled: I.onely. deiiled. and despairing, Out ot the body to God! Heeling, and tearless, and desperate, On through the quiet of ether, Ilelph'ss. alone, and forsaken, faithless in ignorant anguish, faithless of gasping repentance. -measuring Him by thy measure, — Measure of need anu desert, — Out of the body to God ! Soli through the starless abysses, •Sott as the breath of the summer Loosens the chains of the river. •Sweeping it free to the sea. Murmurs a murmur of peace : ■ ui the deepness of heaven r tiniest thou shallow or shore? Hast thou beat madly on limit; Hast thou been stayed in thy tleein Out of the bodV to God! "1 hou that hast known Me in spaces Boundless, untraversed, uiilathomed, llast thou not known Me in love? Am I, Creator and Guider, Less than My kingdom and work? Come. O tliou weary and desolate! Come to the heart of thy Father Home from thy wanderings weary. Home from the lust, to the Loving, Out of the body to God !" 1-Miti-d i>y A. Smith, County Superintendent. For the Educational Column. Human Rights. It seetus well enough, at a time when so much is said about 4 liberty' and ( human rights,' to occupy the Educational Column for once with some inquiries concerning the origin and extent of this liberty and these rights. \V e are in the midst of an epoch ful of human interest, and pregnant with results that will advance our country to a loftier career, a more wholesome prosperity, a larger liberty, and a diviner destiny than the world has ever seen or dreamed of, —• except the large-hearted, prophetic souls that believe in the constant working of a moral purpose throughout all the agitations oi society and the petty aims which engross the thought of the majority of mankind ; or will blot out our nation from the list of leading powers, and loaVe us to be only a byword for all time to come. So it concerns us to understand what lib crty is, and what constitutes the basis of our rights. It is sometimes loosely claimed that ev erything God has made was designed to be free, and that the fact of our being created by Him is the foundation of our right to equal Ircedom with other men. Rut this is altogether too generous; a horse is crea ted by a divine power, as much as a man. and on this hypothesis, is entitled to equal freedom. The absurdity of the statement is obvious; for no one considers it any in justice to the horse, to make him the serv ant of man, if he be treated kindly. That seems to be the object of his creation, to find his enjoyment in lending his strong, fleet limbs to the service of a kind master. The same is true, to a greater or less ex tent, of all animals ; the common voice of humanity pronounces them servants of man kind—as for food, clothing, labor, amuse ment or mere adornment. Not so in regard to man. Though al most every race has in its turn been sub ject to servitude, though millions are held in unrequited service to-day, the almost unanimous voice of humanity protests against it, as repulsive to human conscience, as odious in the sight of Heaven. To be sure, there arc apologists and even strenu ous advocates of the practice, but history proves that it is opposed to the humane and generous sentiments, as well as the moral convictions, of our nature. This general voice against the practice of depriving any innocent persons of equal rights with others, cannot be the result of caprice or of accident; it testifies to some thing in human nature that requires free dom for its proper growth and enjoyment, to something in each over which no other has rightful control. And this is the basis of all rights, the title to freedom; it is hu man nature itself, —the powers, thoughts, hopes, affections —or that interior essence which urges those powers, developes those thoughts, cherishes those hopes, and kin dles those affections —which distinguish men from brutes. By common consent, these and similar characteristics are the stamp of humanity. He who possesses them is, by virtue of such possesion, a man, and entitled to all those rights and immu nities which belong to men. Even though he possess these distinctive elements of hu man nature in a smaller measure or a less developed degree than the average of men, be does not thereby forfeit his claim to be regarded and treated as a man; only crime can work a rightful forfeiture of this claim and of that liberty which common conscience pronounces the birthright of all. Any vi olation of another's rights on the ground of assumed superiority —whether of intel lect, or character, or of person merely, is an outrage agaiost the essential rights of humanity; aod he who oomrcitß such viol&- WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1862. tion knowingly and voluntarily, distinctly declares himself an eneuiy to his race. lie may veil his act uuder pretty names, and claim for it a divine sanction, but he is still an unblushing foe to mankind. For it is the unquestioned right of every hu man being to increase in wisdom, to grow in spiritual knowledge and strength, to be come vigorous in will to do right, to exer cise perfect self-control; —and to accomplish all this, it is absolutely necessary that there be tor every one—for the weakest yet more than the strongest—perfect freedom both of body and of spirit, liberty to use the phys ical powers as conscience and phi 1- anthropy dictate, and to employ the in tellectual and moral faculties in a manner corresponding to the duties and dignity and destiny of an immortal being. 8. WAR HIWI. THE BATTLE BEFORE RICHMOND. i lehl oj battle before Richmond, ) SiJNDAr, June 1, 18G2. j A battle before Richmond has at last put to the tesi the Rebel boasts as to what they would do with Gen. McClellan's army when they should get it beyond the protec tion ol the gunboats. Though the advan tage of a sudden movement, against the weakest point iu our lines, gave the enemy a temporary success, the final result has not been such as to afford encouragement to their disheartened and demoralized troops, or occasion any fears as to our ulti mate possession of the Rebel Capital. The attack commenced shortly before 1 o'clock on Saturday, on the left wing of the army, on the further or south side of the Chickahominy, where the advance posi tion was held by the division of General Casey, much the weakest in the army, com posed almost entirely of raw rey intents, and reduced by disease to an effective force of some 6,000 men. The vigor with which the enemy pres sed forward to the attack indicated the confidence of superior strength. A battal ion of two regiments pressed against Gen. Naglee on the right, another fell on Gen eral \\ assell at tlie centre, and a third on General Calmer to thellet,f t, pouring in at once a fire hot and heavy, and advancing with great resolution in face of the steady fire of canister and grape from the rear, mowing down their ranks in all directions. '1 he Rebels had but little artillery, and wore evidently disposed to make good the deficiency by pressing to close quarters by weight of numbers the feeble skeleton reg iments ol three and four hundred men who composed the advanced division. Most of Gen. Casey's troops were thrown forward to the edge of the woods in front of his.position to meet the advance of the Rebels, a few regiments being left behind the partially completed rifle-pits, a short distance to the rear. Thus a division near ly new to warfare was suddenly exposed, in an opeu field, to the heaviest of fire from an enemy covered to a considerable extent by the woods through which they were ad vancing. Terrible the tempest raged, the air almost growing thick with musket balls; officer after officer fell, or was borne from the field a wounded man; the men dropped by scores, and the usual number of weak-jointed ones were falling to the rear. Rut spite of the rapid thinning of their ranks, the regiments generally held their ground until the enemy succeeded in rushing around on the left flank, and poured in an enfilading fire from that di rection, against which the rifle-pits were no protection. The sixty rounds of am munition with which they entered the fight were nearly exhausted, and no more was at hand. Arrival of Reinforcements. Meantime one of Gen. Couch's brigades, commanded by Gen. Abecrombie, was or dered up to the support of Gen. Naglee on the right, General Devens, ef the same di vision, sustaining Gen. Wasseil on the cen tre, and Gen. Peck, with the remaining brigade, supporting Gen- Palmer on the left. When Gen. Casey's troops were forced to give way, the Rebels fell on these brigades of Coueh's Division, who disputed every inch of ground, until sustained by Geq. Kearney, pressing up the Williams burg road with reinforcements to meet them, supported by the division of Gen. Pooker in his rear. Pressing rapidly for ward, Gen. Kearney advanced along the Williamsburg road to within a short dis tance of our original position, where he bi vouacked for the night in front of the ene my. It was along this Williamsburg road that the main attack was made, and here our troops were forced baek for half a mile or more, before the arrival of Gen. Ileintzel man's corps, tho leeble brigades of Casey's Division, averaging less than 2,000 men, being completely broken up, many, if not most of the officers killed, wounded or mis sing, and the privates scattered through the woods and along the road. Bravely and well did General Casey do his duty, pres sing on to the extreme front and cheering on his men, regardless of the storm of fire and hail that raged about him, cutting down his officers on all sides but strangely escaping his own person. Bravely and well did most of his officers stand by him, until, one after auother, they borne from the field dead or wounded. The Loss of Artillery. Colonel Bailey, Chief of Artillery, was shot early in the afternoon, the ball strik ing hint in the head and causing his death alter a short period of insensibility. Maj Van Vaultenburg, the second in command of the First New Vork Artillery, was kil led, Adjutant William Ramsay wounded, while every battery but one lost its quota of men, and some of them lost nearly all their horses. Bates' Battery of Napoleon guns—l2-pound brass pieces—which was to the front, thus deprived of locomotion and stuck fast in the mud, was left behind in the retirement of our troops, but not un til General Xaglee had taken it upou him self to see thut several of the pieces were spiked. In addition to this, one 3-inch Parrot gun of Battery H was disabled by a shot, and fell into the hands of the ene my. The Pennsylvania Reserve Battery, of Couch's Division, also lost one of their guns- these eight pieces of ordnance consti tuting our entire loss, so far as I could learn. We can better afford to spare the pieces than we can afford to have the Rebels prof it by their gain. They show every indi cation of being much in want of artillery, and the need is evidently stimulating their efforts to profit by the chances of war to possess themselves of our guns. Gen. Sumner's Advance. Meanwhile Gen. Sumner had succeeded in bringing his troops across the Chickahom iny, and was' advancing on the right to maintain our position there where less ground had been lost. After several days of labor, (Jen. Sumner had thrown two bridges across the creek between Bottom's Bridge and New Bridge, where local re ports held it to be impossible to find any foundation for piles to support the super structures. One of these bridges was some two miles above Bottom's Bridge, and tho other a mile further up the stream. The lower of these was carried away during the heavy storm of Friday night, and Gen. Sumner was obliged to depend upon a sin gle shaky structure for the passage of his troops, who nearly all, however, succeeded in crossing that night, the head of the col umn reaching the Nine mile road, along which the Rebels were pressing our troops, at about 7 o'clock, holding the enemy in check for the night, preventing them from following up in that direction the advan tage they had gained during the day. The Fiyht on Sunday. Flushed with t"'etr seeming victory of Saturday the Rebels awoke with confidence on Sunday to follow up their movements, sure of driving us this time to the Chick ahominy and beyond. But they had made the unfortunate mistake of estimating the strength of our reserves by the weakness of our advance. Most bitterly did they pay for their mistake. Pressing eagerly for ward with confidence of victory, they were met by the trained troops of ileintzcliuan and Sumner, whose unyielding columns checked their fierce assault, turning the tide of battle everywhere against them,u/tc/ forciny them at the point of the bayonet on toicard Richmond It was their turn now to break and run, and their losses of the Sabbath left them little cause for rejoicing over the trifling gain of Saturday. Ter rible also to them were the frequent char ges of our solid colums, pressing them back step by step, to the lust point of endurance, when they broke and run, ingloriously leav ing behind them many of their men and of ficers, as well as privates, prisoners in our hands. The number of these it is not yet possible to ascertain, several days neces sarily elapsing after every engagement be fore a full inventory can be taken. JffieEttASEOfß. The Presbyterian Church on the War. We publish below a very able and im portant document on the state of the coun try, and bespeak for it the attentive perusal of our readers. It was prepared by that able and unflinching friend of the Union, in Kentucky, Rev. J. Breckinridge, D. D. to his talents, influence, and efforts, per haps, more than to any other man, was ow ing the stand taken by Kentucky for the Union and against rebellion. And because of his efforts in this behalf has he been so much persecuted and greatly villified. But he has manfully braved all, and has the consolation of seeing his native and loved State standing by the stars and stripes for their defence. The paper was prepared by him, and pre sented for the adoption of the General As sembly of the Presbyterian Church, (Old School,) of which he was a member, and in which he is an able minister and Theo logical Professor. That body held its an nual meeting at Columbus, Ohio, during the last month, when and where this paper was presented, fully and ably discussed, and passed without amendment by a vote of 206 to 20. Taking into view the ability of the pa per, the character of the body, (aoknowl edged to be one of the most venerable, learned, and pious ecclesiastical budics in the world,) and the large majority by which the document was passed, it cannot but have great weight with the public. Histo ry will doubtless record this paper as one of the deliverances of this eventful period, worthy of preservation; and be cited in coming ages as the evidence of the loyalty and high-toned patriotism ot the Church which Ink? passed it: The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Luited States of America, now in session at Columbus, in the State of Ohio —considering the unhappy condition of the country in the midst of a bloody civil war, and of the Church agitated everywhere, divi ded in sentiment in many places, and openly assailed by schism in a large section of it; considering also the duty which this chief Tribunal, met in the name and by the author ity of the glorified Saviuur of siuuers, who is also the Sovereign lluler of all things, owes to him our Head and Lord, and to his flock committed to our charge, and to the people whom we are commissioned to evangelize, and to the civil authorities who exist by his ap pointment, do hereby, in this Deliverance, give utterance to our solemn convictious and our deliberate judgment, touchiug the mat ters herein set forth, that they serve for the guidance of all over whom the Loid Christ has given us any office of instruction, or any power of Government. I. Peace is amongst the very highest tem poral blessings of the Church, as well as of all mankind ; and public order is one of the first necessities of the spiritual as well as the Civil Commonwealth. Peace has been wick edly superseded by war, in its worst form, throughout the whole land ; ucd public order has been wickedly superseded by rebellion, anarchy, and violence, in the whole Southern portion of the Union. All this has been brought to pass in a disloyal and traitorous attempt to overthrow the National Govern eminent by military force, and to divide the nation contrary to the wishes of the immense majority of the people of the nation, and without satisfactory evidence that the major ity of the people in whom the local sover eignty resided, even in the States which re volted, ever authorized any such proceeding, or ever approved the fraud and violence by which this horrible treason has achieved what ever success it has had. This whole treason, rebellion, anarchy, fraud, and violence, is ut terly contrary to the dictates of natural reli gion and morality, and is plainly condemned by the revealed will of God. It is the clear and solemn duty of the National Government to preserve, at whatever cost, the national Un ion and Constitution, to maintain the laws in their supremacy, to crush force by force, and to restore the reign of public order and peace to the entire nation, by whatever lawful means that .are necessary thereunto. And it is the bounden duty ot ail people who compose this great nation, each one in his several place and degree, to uphold the Federal Government, and every State government, and all persons in authority, whether civil or military, in all their lawful and proper acts, unto the end herein before set forth. 11. The Church of Christ has no authority from him to make rebellion, or to counsel treason, or to favor anarchy in any case what ever. On the contrary, every follower of Christ has the personal liberty bestowed on him by Christ, to submit, for the sake of Christ, according to his own conscientious sense of duty, to whatever government, how ever bad, under which his lot may be cast. But while patient suffering for Christ's sake can never be sinful; treason, rebellion, and anarchy may be sinful—most generally, per haps, are sinful; and probably are always and necessarily sinful, in all free countries where the power to change the government by voting, in the place of force, which exists as a common j right constitutionally secured to the people, ] who are sovereign. If in any case treason, rebellion, and anarchy can possibly be sinful, they are so in the case now desolating large portions of this nation, and laying waste great numbers of Christian congregations, and fatally obstructing every good word and work in those regions. To the Christian people, scattered throughout those unfortunateregions, and who have been left of God to have any hand in bringing on those terrible calamities, we earnestly address words of exhortation and rebuke as unto brethren who have sinned ex ceedingly, and whom God calls to repentance by fearful judgments. To those in like cir cumstances who are but chargeable with the sins, which have brought such calamities up on the land, but who have chosen, in the ex ercise of their Christain liberty, to stand in their lot, and suffer, we address words of sym pathy, praying God to bring them off conque rors. To those in like circumstances, who have taken their lives in their hands, and risked all for their country, and for conscience' sake, we say we love such with all our heart, and bless God such witnesses were found in 1 the time of thick darkness. We fear, and we ' record it with great grief, that the Church of God, and the Christian people, to a great ex tent and throughout all the revolted States, have done many things that ought not to have been done, and have left undone much that ought to have been done, in this time of trial, rebuke, and blasphemy; but concerning the wide chism which is reported to have oc curred in many Southern synods, this Assem bly will take no action at this time. Jtdeclares, however, its fixed purpose, under all possiblo circumstances, to labor for the extension and the permanent maintenance of the Church undsr its care, in every part of the United States. Schism, so far as it may exist, we hope to see healed. If that cannot be, it will be disregarded. 111. We record our gratitude to God for the prevailing unity of sentiment, and general internal peace, which have characterized the Church in the States that have not revolted, embracing a great majority of the ministers, congregations, and people under our care. It may still be called, with emphasis, a loyal, orthodox, and pious Church ; and a]l its acts and works indicate its right to a title so noble. Let it strive for divine grace to maintain that good report. In some respects the interests of the Church of God are very different from New Series-Vol. XVI, No. 32. tbowj of all civil institutions. Whatever may befall this, or any other nation, theChurchof Christ must abide on earth, triumphant even over the gates of hell. It i 9 therefore of su preme importance that the church should guard itself from internal alienations and divisions, founded upon questions and inter ests that are external as to her, and which ought not, by their necessary workings, to cause her fate to depend on the fate of things less important and less enduring than herself. Disturbers of the Church ought not to be al lowed—especially disturbers of the Church in States that never revolted, or that have been cleared of armed rebels —disturbers who, under many false pretexts, may promote dis content, disloyalty, and general alienation, tending to the unsetting of ministers, to local schisms, and to manifold trouble. Let a spirit ot quietness, of mutual forbearance, and of ready obedience to authority, both civil and ecclesiastical, illustrate the loyalty, the ortho doxy, and the piety of the Church. It is more especially to ministers of the gospel, and, amongst them, particularly to any whose first impressions had been, on any account, favor able to a terrible military revolution which has been attempted, and which God's provi dence has hitherto signally rebuked, that these decisive considerations ought to be addressed. And in the name and by the authority of the Lord Jesus we earnestly exhort all who love God, or fear his wrath, to turn a deaf ear to all counsels and suggestions, that tend towards a reaction favorable to disloalty, schism, or disturbance either in the Church or in the Country. There is hardly anything more inexcusable connected with the frightful con spiracy against which we testify, than the conduct of those office bearers and members of the Church who, although citizens of loyal States, and subject to the control of loyal, Presbyteries and Synods, have been faithless to all authority, human and divine, to which tbey owed subjection. Nor should any to whom this Deliverance may come fail to bear in mind that it is not only their outward con duct concerning which they ought to take heed, but it is also, and especially, their heart, their temper, and their motives in the sight of God, and towards the free and beuefioeut civil Government which he has blessed us withal, and toward the spiritual common wealth to which they are subject in the Lord. In all these respects, we must all give account, to God in the Great day. And it is in view of our own dread responsibility to the J edge ot quick and dead that we now make this Deliverance. Parson Brownlow and Yancy Duriug a recent speech of Browulow'a delivered at New York, he referred to the above notorious traitor and villain, as fol lows : But a few weeks prior to the last Presi dential election the disunion papers an nounced the great bull of the whole dis union flock to speak at Ivnoxville—a man, the two iirst letters of his name are W. L. Yancey—a fellow that the Governor of South Carolina pardoned from the State prison for murdering his uncle, Dr. Earle. He was announced to speak, and the crowd was two to one Union men. I had never spoken to him in all my life. He called out in an insolent manner, ' Is Par sou Brownlow in the crowd V The disun ionists halloed out,' Yes, he is here.' ' I hope,' said he, 'the Parson will have the nerve to come upon the stand and have me catechise him.' 'No,' said tlio Breckin ridge secessionists. Yes, geutiemen, wo had four tickets in the field in the last race —Lincoln and Ilamlin, Bell and Ev erett —the Bell and Everett ticket was a kind of kangaroo ticket, with all tho strength in its legs—[great laughter]— and there was a Douglas and Johnson and a Breckiuridge and Lane ticket. As God is my judge, that was the meanest and shabbiest ticket of the four that were in the field. Lincoln was elected fairly and squarely under the forms of law and tho constitution, and though I was not a Lin coln man, yet I gave in t the will of the majority. [Cheers.] The Parson then, resumed his story : But the crowd halloed out to Yaney,— 1 Brownlow is here but he has not nerve enough to mount the stand where you are.' I rose and marched up the steps and said I will show you wheth er I have the nerve or not. ' Sir,' said ho —and he is a beautiful speaker and per-, sonally a very fine looking man—'are yout the celebrated Parson Brownlow 'I am the only man on earth,' replied I, ' that fills the bin.' [Laughter.] 'Don't you, think,' said Yancy, 'you are badly employ ed as a preacher, a man of your cloth to be dabbling in politics and meddling with State affairs V 'No sir,' said I, 'a distin guished member of the party you are ac ting with once took Jesus Christ up on a mount —[uproarious laughter]—and said to the Savior, look at the kingdoms of the world. All this will I give thee if thou, wilt fall down and worship me.' 'Now sir,' J said, 'his reply to the Devil is my reply to you, 'Get thee behind mc, Satan.' [Re newed laughter and applause.] I rather expected to be knocked down by him; but I stood with my right side to him and a cock ed Derringer in my brecohes pocket. I intended if I went off the scaffold that he should go the other way. [Great cheer ing.] 'Now sir,' said {, 'if you are through,. I would like to make a few remarks.' 'Cer tainly, proceed,' said Yancy. 'Well, sir, you should tread lightly upon the toes of preachers, and you should get these disun-. ionists to post you up before you lannch out in this war against preachers. Are you aware, sir, this old gray headed, maa sitting here, Isaac Lewis, the President of the meeting, who has welcomed you, is an j old disunion Methodist preacher* and Bu chanan's pension agent in this town, who.