.•...... . . . . .. . . .. . • - .. . . ' • . . . • . , .'..~:•• ,1 . . - _. . • , . . . . - . • •--•- - • - .. . .. . _ - . .. . _ ,• i . , . . .... ... ..- , • :. , •.;- C.7. A' ' ' 2, '' , ' l. . . ' • • -.-. ...-- ,- - ..._:;:' - -i. --..- : . ,-:-. , ~,,,, 7:,...... ..„::-.1 .:. .._ • ... .: , . . . „. . _ .. . . .... _ . , -' .- -, . '.'-. --..--- • ,-,,, : - ,:: ...._ _ •,• • - _ ..•• : • ,:,... ...„„, 'Zz_ ,- .".. , 7,1 ''C i• .., .", , "..v.. ... 'l's ,;''' 1 .. - i-'- . -:-. -'" .:.::: ..-'_•..;." .7. • --•-- ' ... . . - • • . ~. ' ..., - .' .`:). 1: '', = ' t , ...- " , ; , ..•_. .; •,,ii,„ .. . .. _ . : - ' ' - •• - • - ' - " "'- ' - .. - •-•'.• - • . '"• ' • . . _ '• ' , . . . . . . . . - - . T. LXII. TILE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER elmasam. 17111' .10115 DAY, AT NO. 8 NOIIST DONA !massy, ' • BY GEO:SANDERSON. - TERMS . _ 8133130111MION.—Two Dollars per annum, payable ln ad vance. No subscription discontinued until all arrear agee are paid, unless at the option of the Editor. Anviratizsucirra—Advertbscments, not exceeding one square, (12 Duey) will be inserted three times for one dollar, and tidentyjive cents for each additional inser tion. These Cot' greater length in proportion. • - Joe Piunnsa--Such ins Hand Bills, Posters, Pamphlets, - Blanksi Labels, do., &c., executed with accuracy and on . Shortest notice. THE PLAYMATE. The pines were dark on Ramoth hill, The song was soft and low; The blossoms in the sweet May wind Were falling like the snow. The blossoms drifted at our feet, Tlie brahard birds sang clear ; Thii.tiweetest and the saddest day It'seertied of all the year. ore to me than birds or flowers, 41iiymate left her home, kwith her the laughing spring, e jangle and the bloom. the Idssed the lips of kith and kin, ALZIae laid her hand in mine ; more could ask the bashful boy Who fed her father's kine? • left us, in the bloom of May : constant years told o'er , :'", - 4 1 11eIr seasons with as sweet May morns, t-:.,fitt;:she came back no more. ,f;Xisialir, with noiseless feet, the round ;,.14 - .-.oitnneventful years; 411,111 o'er and o'er I sow the spring "...-;‘.4p4-reap the autumn ears. Bias where all the golden year ' Het - summer roses blow; The dusky children of the sun . Before her come and go. :Theiietaply with her jewelled hands smooths her silken gown— No more the homespun lap wherein "I shook the walnuts down. The wild grapes wait ns by the brook, ,The brown nuts on the hill, Arid still the May-day flowers make sweet The woods of Follymill. The lilies blossom in the pond, ..A. , --•The bird builds in the tree, • The dark pines sing on Ramoth hill • The slow song of the sea. - .±Volider If she thinks of them, And how the old time seems— If ever the pines of Ramoth wood - Are sounding in her dreams. I see her face, I hear her voice Does she remember mine? And what to her is now the boy Who fed her father's kine? What cares she that the orioles build For other eyes than ours, That other hands with nuts are filled, And other laps with flowers ? 0 playmate in the golden time! Our mossy seat is green, Its fringing violets blossom yet, The old trees o'er it lean. The winds so sweet with birch and fern A sweeter memory blow; And there in spring the veeries sing The song of long ago. And still the pines of Ramoth wood Are moaning like the sea— The moaning of the sea of change Between myself and thee ! THE DISUNION CONSPIRACY. LETTER TO ONE OF THE LEADERS HON. JOHN FORSYTH : " Remote, nnfriended, melancholy, slow," it is long since I have used my pen at any length on the public questions of the day. Ido so now with pain. He is a brute who cannot or does not sympathize with the sufferings of the people on both sides in this sad struggle. Sympathy with your cause is another matter. I little thought when we met at Cincin nati in 1856, after more than a quarter of a century of separation, and exchanged mutual reminiscences of our happy days at old Nassau, and of the hisiory and fate of our college companions, That within so short a period thereafter, if we met again, it would not be as friends, but as foes. Why it is so, or at least what seeps to me to be some of the leading reasons, I pro.. pose to consider in this letter. I think I know something of the immediate causes which led to the temporary overthrow of the Democracy, and if your rebellion suc ceeds, as it may to your own confusion, to the partial destruction of the best, wisest and freest Government ever devised by the wit of man. Quaque ipso miserrima vidi, Et quorum par, magna fist. I publish this with the hope it may meet your eye, and will take such measures as I can that it does so. Should it not, I trust it will nevertheless not be written in vain. To get at the real reasons of your rebel lion it is necessary to examine your pre texts. And first, you claim absolute sov ereignty for your and every State. This is the foundation of the Secession doc trine. It is not even plausible. It is ab surd. I will demonstrate it to be so. The old Confederation, which was moulded out of the furnace of the Revolution, was strictly a league, or confederation, be tween sovereign States, Mr. Lincoln to the contrary notwithstanding. It resem bled in its main features the Germanic Empire and the Confederation of the Rhine. It differed from them in one par ticular. The acts of its Congress were obeyed or not, as the several States pleased. The decrees of the Diet of the Germanic Empire were and are still sure • to be enforced by the bayonets of Austria and Prussia, when agreeable to those pow ers, just as those of the Confederation of -the Rhine were executed by the cannon of Napoleon when they suited him. Our States carried into effect the acts of Con gress when it suited their convenience or interests, and not otherwise. There was no real power to enforce them e The great men who had weathered the storm of civil commotion, saw the helplessness of the Government at home, and its insignificance abroad. They called the Convention of 1787 to remedy this and other evils, quite as plainly`proceeding from the weakness of the Government. if the Constitution it formed did not bind these States into a firm and perpetual union, only to be sev ered by the consent of all lawfully ex pressed, and did not, within its limits, in vest the Federal Government with absolute sovereignty, at the same time depriving the States thereof, then the profound and wise statesmen who formed it did not com prehend the purpose for which they no toriously had assembled. They neither understood their duty nor did it. Can this be supposed of men, who were mainly instrumental in arousing the public mind to the necessity of revising their frame of Government I if the imagination could wander so wildly, its phantasms must yield to the plain fact that they all spoke, or wrote fully upon the subject. We have their sign -manual that they well 'knew what they were about. If you still doubt read the speeches of Mr. Pinckney and others, in the debates which ensued when :the Constitution was offered to South Car blina for ratification. If these tried patri ots did their duty what becomes of the absolute sovereignty of the States? If your position be correct, Lang don, King, Sherman, Hamilton ' Livingston, Read, Madison, Spaight, Franklin, Rutledge, Baldwin, their President, Washington, and all their zealous co-laborers in this mighty work, there assembled in solemn conven tion, not only did not dO•the very thingS they came together to do, but did the very contrary. This is a logical reductio 'ad absurdum. Next, you claim the right of revolution. It is undoubted. No one denies it. But in order to justify and maintain that right before God and man, your leaders and your people must show a plain case of in sufferable oppression, on the part of the Government from whioh they have revolt ed. Can they do so! ,They attempt it in two ways. First, by comparison. They put their rebellion. on the footing of the revolt of the Colonies from the dominion of Great Britain. A brief reference to those things of whioh the Colonies com plained will show how futile this is. It is usual to consider the tax on tea as the im mediate cause of the American Revolu tion. It was by no means so. It was really the pretext. That tax was, in fact, a reduction of nine pence on the shilling. The difference was, that whereas the tax of a shilling on the pound C had previously been required to be paid by the Colonial merchants in London at the ware-houses of the East India Company, which had the monopoly of the trade, the reduced tax of three pence on the same quantity, was di rected by the act of Parliament to be paid to the collectors of the Colonial ports, to be accounted for to the Company. The - effect of this was to out off smuggling, whioh had been extensively carried on with the Dutch and French. The advan tages of lawful trade, with a moderate duty, are so great, that it I cannot be denied that this act of Parliament, although made the pretext of the first out-burst of popu lar fury, was highly beneficial to the Co lonial traders. What really infuriated the people were some thirty acts of Parliament, royal edicts and ottarters,l leveled directly at the trade and industry, of the Colonies. A few instances must suffice. The charter of William and Mary, whilst se curing to Massachusetts vast possessions to the eastward of the boundary line pre viously disputed, clogged the gift with provisions which made it almost valueless. All pine trees of the diameter of twenty four inches at more than a foot from the ground were reserved for masts for the royal navy ; and for cutting down any such trees without special license, (which was only a mode of indirect and unequal taxation, and sometimes a means of favor itism,) the offender forfeited one hundred 1 pounds sterling. As to the nature of the 1 acts of Parliament, I quote from the His torical Essay prefixed to Mr: Lorenzo Sa bine's American Loyalist : " Neither of " these laws touched so much as the "'Southwest side of a hair' of an cabstrac " tion,' and hardly one of them, until tho cc passage of the 'Stamp Act,' imposed a 66 direct tax. They were aimed at the cc North, and England lost the affections cc of the mercantile and martime classes 6 , of the Northern colonies, full a genera ., tion before she alienated the South.— cc They forade the use of water-falls, the c. erecting f machinery, of looms and cc spindles, d the working of wood and li t cc iron ; they set the King's arrow on trees .6 that rotted in the forest ; they shut out cc markets for boards and fish, and seized c. sugar and molasses, and the vessels in cc which these articles were carried ; and cc they defined the limitless ocean as but a cc narrow path-way to such of the land that 44 it embosoms, as wore the British flag.'— Your turn came in good time. I could show how England outraged and oppressed the South, but it is not necessary to the argument. It would be worth your study. I think you will admit there was real and intolerable oppression in the- systematic legislation I have mentioned. There was much more of it before the Revolution broke out. If you compare, as you Southern gentle men generally do, the various tariff acts passed by Congress, to those acts of Par liament, and cite them as oppressions of your people, the answer is conclusive.— They were passed by Legislative bodies in which the South was fully, yea, more than fully represented, as it had a representa tion for its human chattels. The South has flourished and grown rich in spite of them. Passing by these two most impor tant facts, you know, and every well-in formed man knows, that the existence of a really oppressive tariff in this country has always been limited to a very short period. It must always be so. The rea son is plain. Nine out of ten men in all communities are consumers, and of course pay the tariff. As all vote, at least with us, it does not take long to convince the nine, that a high tariff taxes them unneces sarily for the benefit of the manufacturer. So true is this, that if ever that question, alone, is made the issue between parties again, even in Pennsylvania, she will, as she did when it was so done formerly, again give her 30,00.0 majorities for mod erate duties. I rejoice to think that it will hereafter be treated as it is, as a ques tion of finance, and be withdrawn from the arena of parties, with which it has no proper affinity. So far, therefore, as the fluctuating legislation on this subject con cerns your rebellion, it neither deserves to be, nor can it be, raised to the dignity of -oppression. Raving, I think, shown that the argu ment whereby you compare yourselves to the heroes and, patriots of the Revolution (who unlike you were' loth to take up arms, who pat off the evil day until the last moment, and who clung to their allegiance, until the prison -ship, the dungeon, and the gallows, were offered them as the ten der_ mercies of their king,) is wholly fala oious, I next proceed to your second argu ment. You charge directly upon the North the settled purpose to destroy slavery. It is not so. The great conservative masses of the North know that the evil is not your fault, and as little as yourselves van they see an adequate and practical remedy, consistent, with:your own ',well-being. Un til they did, they would ! never have inter fered with it, nor then,;exoept with your consent and co-neratio. stand, be facts '1 I do not speak. of -opinions _but of 'deeds. You knotv that it is an elementary principle both of the common and the civil kW, that no than Can Sustain an action, *doss he can prove that he has sustained an injury. So by' the litw of nations; no people can justify a revolt unless they can establbith - a - case of oppression. Of course they may, without th4tomooeed and establish a Dewy - vernment. .Thit is MINIMS "THAT 001fliThar 18 THI - MOM' paoselsoui WIEI3II LABOR • OOKIWIDS Till 9ara.7113T BrilrAE/1."--BUONAHLE. LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY „MORNING, AUGUST 6,:1561. the case now trying., It is by the law, and according to the law, that we North ern men desire and intend to be governed, and not otherwise. What has been done by the North to injure you I Has slaveiy ever been attacked by legislation? Not so. There are many acts of Congress in tended to secure and establish it ; not one that is leveled against it directly or indi rectly. If there be one or two, whose in direct operation tends to weaken or destroy its hold, such were passed at the instance of your statesmen, by the votes of your representatives, and with purposes directly the contrary. So true is this; that the last Congress, with a clear Black Republican majority, after the cotton States seceded, granted yon all you have ever claimed, by passing bills erecting the whole unorgan ized p9ssessions of the United States into Teiritories without the Wilmot proviso, and thus, under the Bred Scott decision, the acknowledged and undoubted law of the land, opening the whole of them to your slaves, provided you were willing to take them there to starve. Nay more; when this revolt broke out, the control of the Senate of the United States, so far as concerned legislation on this ,subjeot, was absolutely in your hands for four years, that of the House of Representiltives, cer tainly for two, probably for four years; and the Supreeme Court of the United States had decided the law in your favor, and could not be changed. So entirely has its decision been respected, that the present Executive, the only power in the Govern ment that the Republican party could have wielded had the South remained loyal, was obliged to recognize slaves as property, in consequence of General Butler's famous " contraband " letter, and only yesterday Senators Trumbull and Wilson recognized them as such, by including them in the con fiscation bill. On this point, then, if you have any case at all, it is dannunt absque injuria. You may reply, if there be no real cause for this rebellion or revolution, how came it about? Men do not plunge into all the horrors of civil war without some good reason. No individual risks his life, un less drunk or insane, without an adequate cause. Neither do nations encounter the expense and all the known evils of war from the mere love of fighting. It is true, there are two main evils for one of which this, war furnishes no remedy, but rather exasperates it ; whilst for the other it may. These, with minor ones, have enabled your demagogues, with the aid of'•mob-law, to inaugurate this civil war, and to get your people to present a partially united front. The first of these is, that the agitation of the slavery question has rendered your labor insecure. Although the fanatics of New England, supported by the example and money : of : Exeter Hall, are responsible for the commencement of this abhorrent agitation, yet their efforts would have been of little avail, if they had not boon aided by the politicians of both sections. These wretched vultures, whose grovelling na tures disabled them from attaining the bad eminence of demagogues, have for years sought office at the North, by pan dering to and exciting the natural anti slavery sentiments of our people, and at the South, by the like course toward the pro-slavery opinions of yours. In the North their success made little difference. All knew the Constitution, few were un willing to abide by its provisions,and there could, therfeore, be no practical result.— It was mere brutum fulmen. Their exer tions only served to give office to men, who, for the most part, had no real at tachment to the principles they professed, and who certainly were not ready to make any personal sacrifices for them. In the South it was different. The eternal ha-i rangues of your candidates on slavery, could not but affect your slaves. They are men, however ignorant and stupid, and will think, and when opportunity offers talk: Gradually, but surely they have done so. The result is, brag as you will of their fidelity, that most of their owners are in constant dread of an insurrection. How well justified that dread is the names of Nat. Turner and Denmark Vesey will I remind you with a thrill of horror.-1 It only needs the evoking of a new Tous saint L'Overture to convert imagination into reality. It is not surprising that a l people exposed to the perhaps irrepressible fury and nameless drimes of a servile in surrection, should lend a ready - ear to the plausible plans of the ambitious and de signing who proposed to relieve them from its terrors, even if they knew that their execution must be attended with heavy sacrifices of their interests, their peace and their liberty. The second o rose was first suggested to me by the returns under the bankrupt not of 1841. If my memory serves me cor rectly the schedules of debts in the States south . of Mason and Dixon's line, wiped out by that law, amounted.to about $500,- 000,000. The appraised value of the schedules of the assets came in the aggre gate to something over $2,000,000. At present the South owes the North, aocord to the best authorities, about $300,000,- 000. This result is not owing to legisla tion, but, as might be demonstrated, to moral and physical causes, which will ever keep the South in debt to some nation, should it form its kaleidesoope Confeder aoy. The debtors are among your most active, vigilant, intelligent and practically influential citizens. I do not mean that they seek or generally obtain political honors. Those are reserved for your planters and professional men, among whom I include journalists. They are practical thinkers. They .are men who silently control your daily life. They are your business class, who, with jou or with us, really guide the whole policy of their section, without making the noise about it which the professional or gentlemanly politician is apt to think an indispensable preliminary to the possession of power. To this silent but mighty class the civil war is a convenient bankrupt act. Many of them are not very serupulous, and to the best and- most honorable man, the postponement or escape from ruin, is a relief which will insensibly bias his reason. Perhaps this principle may extend into other classes. The high price of !cotton for some years past makes it proba ble, No doubt many of your planters, tempted by extravagant profits, have mort gaged their farms to buy negroes and open up 'new-land. Our coal miners and iron Masters are apt to pursue that, plan during seasons -of high prices, and : rnin is gen— erally the result. There are many Ininor.eauses whieblave aided to produce tolerable unanimity, 1113, for instance,. the mutual rage, brought about by long years of sneers and abuse, and the like, in addition to those I have mentioned. All of them put together would have been unable • to over-ride the deep Jove for the Union which I firmly be lieve still underlies your reballion, had it not been for your partisan leaders, and, iI am free to confess, ours. De mortuis nil nisi bonny:, is a maxim generally to be ob i served. Nevertheless, where the public acts of a man lead to such tremendous consequences, the fair discussion of them is no trespass on his just fame. Stephen A. Douglas was the unquestionable author of the repeal of the Missouri 'Compromise line from which act dates all our serious troubles. He was right in principle, bat time had made the compact sacred. The South assisted him and must share the re sponsibility. Had that line been extended to the Pacific, as was wisely and ably counselled by Mr. Buchanan in his' Read- ing letter, the present convulsion, would .probably have been in defmately postponed. A was , not to be so. The lesser lights of free-soilism who based their notion on the let the U nion slide' school, although no , friends to Mr. Doug las at that time, aided him in the work, the result of which they well foresaw. How nobly Mr. Douglas sought to redeem his irreparable error, I have neither time -nor space to disbuss. He died honored by his worst foes, beloved by his friends: We all believe that in all human probability, his untiring and almost superhuman labors cost him his life, and he was as much a victim of this miserable war as if he had fallen, shot through the heart, on the field of battle. The contest of 1860 which destroyed this great man, proved two things. • It showed that with reasonable prudence and conciliation, the Demooraoy would return to power in 1864. It also showed that when it did, the Northern and not the Southern Democracy would for the future govern its polioy. Hine Wee lachrynace. I was not a member of the Charleston Convention, but my experience in those of Baltimore and Cincinnati, and a careful perusal of the proceedings of those held in 1860, together with conversations had with members of the last-mentioned, enabled, me to see that the Southern Democracy, satisfied that they could no longer occupy the highest places of power under our glorious constitutional edifice; VeWdetet mined to pull down the pillar on whiol it rested, even at the risk of being buried in its , ruins, without a thought for the true and honest hearts, who, sacrificing their natural and honorable ambition to princi ple, had been for years battling in their cause ; caring nothing for, if they thought of, the misery and desolation, ,which their pre-determined course would bring on thousands of innocent and happy homes at the North and the South. Indifferent to the well-being of the youth of the nation, its hopes and its stay, who, left at home in the walks of peace would have beoo 4 rpre, useful and good citizens, but now, if txhit killed, many may either wander crippled and useless to a pauper grave, or worse still, ruined body and soul by the license of the camp, return to demoralize the com munities, they were intended to adorn.— They Were blinded to everything but their mad ambition. They were 'gifted with sufficient understanding and forecast to see, that from the causes mentioned and others, they could measurably unite the Southern people in the contest, and delib erately and with malice aforethought, they plunged .this happy and prosperous nation into all the horrors of a civil war. They did it with the hope of factious and trea sonable support in the North. It cannot be denied. Well, be sure that not the bit terest abolitionist who treads the arid soil of New England, or the most fanatical fol lower of Joshua R Giddings in the Western Reserve of Ohto, feels half the soreness of heart, or hopes more earnestly for vindic tive retribution, than the sincere Breck inridge men, who so long fought your po litical : battles with ever diminishing forces, with their friends and neighbors. Not ret ribution on your people. God forbid.— They are deluded and deceived. But on the deluders and deceivers. I know hun dreds of men in this State, whose talents and knowledge would grace any, the high est station, who have been content to lead a life of comparative obscurity, solely on account of their devotion to that Constitu tion which was and is your only safe-guard. They thought they well defended its sacred guarantees when they contended for your rights under it, and which were always se cured to you. When it would no longer serve the purposes of the selfish ambition of Southern demagogues, they have as plainly denounced it by their ants, as a covenant with death and a league with hell,' as Wendell Phillips and Garrison have in word. They had not the apology of the latter, of sincere conviction of the truth of the blasphemous dogma. Those of these, your former friends, who could go, are al ready in the field. Those who cannot, have or will, if occasion demands, send their sons. It is a feud of broken faith, of un provoked fraternal treachery, and, of course, proverbially bitter and unforgiv ing. I think I do not misrepresent the North ern Democracy when I say that they are thoroughly in earnest to put down this re'- bellion, nor as little, when I declare that their attachment to State tights is as firm and immutable as ever. The Douglas Democrat and the Breckinridge Democrat, as ready as they are to stake their all for the support of the Union, just so ready are they to wage the same stake in support of a strict construction of the Constitution.— They will never submit to a centralized Government, as foreshadowed in the speeoh of Secretary Cameron to the St. Andrew's Society, whether he meant it or not. There are some ominous tokens of a disiegard and irreverence towards the letter and spirit of the great charter of our liberties shown by the Administration and its sup porters, which if continued will certainly cast it from power. It will however be done by the ballot; and not by the ballet and bayonet. Those we reserve for trai tors, and though the current -news seems favorable to your unholy cause, I feel an abiding faith that God will not desert the nation on which he has showered so many favors. It has been my lot before now, to see the wicked great in power, and flour ishing like a green bay tree ; nevertheless I passed, and•they were not, and the place thereof knew them no more.' I remain no longer your Moine, JOHN WEIDMAN, LEBANON ) Pa,, jily. 23, 1861. (177 Prometination is the thief of time. One day a Rich Man came to a Poor Man who stood talking by the roadside. It was where a fountain, gushing from the rooks. and half, shadowed by vines, sprinkled coolness upon the heated dnst and sent low music upon the evening air. The Rioh Man was clad infine apparel a diamond shone above his young forehead amid the curls of his ohestint hair. He might turn his eyes to the right, and be hold swelling hills dotted:with flocks of sheep and herds of oxen. These were his own. To the left, and see white and black men toiling in the harvest of that fruitful land. The toiling men and,the harvest were alike his own. Gazing, to the west, where the last flush of day lingered over the white dome of a palace, he might feast his eyes with the prospect of long lines of slaves, who spread before the portals of that palace ' bearing vessels of silver and gold in their hands. And this palace, these slaves, these stores of gold--alt were his own. For he was a Rich Man. The jewel that gathered the folds of his robe across his young breast, was worth the life long labor of a hundred slaves. And the Poor Man who stood talking by the roadside was clad in the garments of toil. The landscape before him was very beautiful—golden harvests blooming in the lap of emerald valleys—streams of silver winding from the light into the shadow, and from shadow into light again—a great palace lifting its white dome into the sun set heaven from amid a grove of palms— and yet the Poor Man could not call one inch of ground his own.,He knew not where to lay his head. The coarse gar ments which covered him, the rude staff in his hand—these_ were all his possession. He was a wanderer upon the face of the earth. And he stood in the midst of a throng of men who listened to him with earnestness, and hung upon every word as though every word was life or death to - them. They were all poor men—the very poorest of the poor; some clad in rags, and not a few orippled by disease, or pitiful with blind ness,'or miserable to look upon with their leper's sores. . And the accents of the Poor Man's voice held every ear, and those who were not blind looked earnestly, into his eyes,, and one half-kneeling on a solitary rock, re garding with mute wonder—a kind of dumb adoration—the white forehead of the Poor Man. For the face.of the Poor Man, with its flowing hair covered with dust, and its sun burnt cheeks touched by the trace of thought, or time, or hardship, was a facie that won you to it with a peculiar power, and made you wish to look upon it forever, and mark the strange light of its eyes, and note the smile which hung about its lips. There was, in truth, a strange Power upon that face. The Rich Man drew nigh with steps at once languid and eager, with a manner at once impetuous and full of dignity. His fair face, and perfumed hair, and jeweled robes, were terribly contrasted with the rags and lameness, the disease and leprosy, which encircled the Poor Man." Still ho drew nigh. He was won by the face of that Poor Man. May be he had heard of him before ; may be some story of a wonderous power wielded by this Poor Man had reached the ears of the Rich Man. However, he drew nigh, and quickened his steps as the accents of the Poor Man's voice trembled through the silence of the evening hour. The Rich Man sighed. He pressed his hand to his fair forehead. With all his wealth, his lands and his slaves, his har vests and his palaces, he was not at peace with himself. He felt his bosom devour ed by a gnawing restlessness. He was unhappy, and yet the darkness of these blind men had not visited him ; his rounded limbs were free from leper's sores ; the curse of the Poor Man's poverty was not upon his delicate hands. Still ho was not at peace ; for he sighed and pressed his hand to his brow and shud dered within his robes of price. He was unhappy. Quickening his footsteps he drew near the Poor Man, brushing his fine linen against the beggar's rags, and with his gaze fixed upon the dilating eyes of the Poor Man, his ear enchained by every sound that fell from the Poor Man's tongue. A word rose to his lips. He could not choke it down. And yet that word was MASTER.' He felt that the Poor Man, clad in the humble garb of toil, and with no plaee to lay his head, was his Master ! This Poor Man, encircled by rags and lameness, by the 031 d eye-balls of blindness and the distort ed faces of leprosy, was the Master of the Rich Man, who'could call the lives of a thousand slaves his own. This he felt; and the word DIAI3TER' rose to his lips. Thrusting himself into the miserable cir cle, he joined his hands, and said in a trem ulous voice— MASTER, WHAT SHALL I DO TO INHERIT ETERNAL LIFE 3' It was in these words that the burden of his soul found utterance. It was as if he had said, What shall I do to be at peace with myself, and while I live, and at my death to have a hold on Immortality 1 The Poor Man raised his eyes. They were touched with a gleam of divine sad ness. He looked first upon the Rich Man, then upon the wide harvest fields, and the herds of cattle, and the white palace with slaves thronging before its portals—and last of all upon the crowd of miserable men who were gathered near him. It was a painful contrast. Fora moment the Poor Man did not re ply. He raised his eyes to the sunset sky, and his face was•invested as with the bless ing of God embodied in sunset rays. All the while the Rich Man awaited in the anxiety of undisguised suspense the words of the Poor Man. At last he spoke : ' SELL ALL THOU HART AND GIVE TO THE POOR !' And a.t,these words the throng of miser able wretches looked up in wonder, and the Rich Man retreated backward and bowed his head as suddenly as though some one had smote him on the forehead. 4 SELL ALL THOUTIAST AND GIVE TO THE Poop. ! It was as though he had said—, You have a palace, Rich Man. Let its luxurious chambers he tenanted by the blind, the halt, the, famine stricken, who now surround me. You bantiando,:•Ainh Man. , Divide.thein among the white ana I)4* BiskY,oo lOW now golguT(Yohar fel* , / I The Poor Man. • i ll,' with the labor .Of hopeletis bondage-and baptize their hard earned food with;bitter tears., Youhive herds atoxen, Rich Man, and flocks of sheep upon every:hill. , Let the fleece of your sheep clothe these naked ones ; let the flesh, of your betkete give these starling ones soma llouriphakent, some life. Sell all thou, hest _ arid give to the Poor, for the Poor are as much the ohildien - of the great family of God as you are.-:•as much' entitled to his fruits; his'air; his lands, 'as yotfare ; with as holy a right to peace in this world, immortality in the next, as 'yourself. And -as the Poor Man -spoke, his face lighted up with a serene:glory and with the sweetness of his accents there was mingled a strange tone of Power. , . Bat the Rich Man, recoiling, from, the light of his eyes—frightened by the very simplicity of these words, 'which said so much in so brief a oompassturned sadly away; and went dpwn the hillside, now rais ing his eyes to gaze upon his . great posses sions' now burying his face in his tremb— ling hands. Bat the Poor Man remained near the fountain by the roadside, talking to the blind, and the lame, the slave in rags and the leper clad in sores, who gathered near him and felt the light of his eyes, while the accents of his voice penetrated their souls. Thus it is over all the world, in all ages, among all people. The Rich Man goes down the hill, fall of restlessness, yet gazing earnestly upon his great possessions. The Poor Man remains upon the road— side talking tit . the outcasts of all the world, and telling them of their'right to peace in this life and immortality in the next.—Lippard. ABOUT DOGS. -If an Englishman is persecuted and followed by a yelping our, he can generally manage to get rid of him by stooping down and pretending to pick np a stone, for all ours have a mortal dread of a thrown stone ; but, on the bogs of Ireland, the dogs do not care a bit if the person they are barking at pretends to pick up a stone; they know, cunning brutes, that there are no stones on the bogs to be picked up and thrown at them ; but they act very differently if there hap toabeja heap of stones anywhere handy. It is an unpleasant situation to be attacked by a dog. If you are thus circumstanced, never attempt to run; try throwing a stone at him, present your hat in your hand, and when he has seized it, hit him with a stick across the nose and fore-leg. These are the most vulnerable points in a dog ; a blow on any part of the head but the nose will not hurt him a bit. Ha dog comes to you and grotvls and will not be friendly, do not withdraw from him, but put on a bold face, and streach your hand towards him, keeping it quite still—if you withdraw it after stretching it out, he will bite yon—the dog will come up and smell the hand behind, and having once done this, will be your friend for life. A chimney-sweep once made a match to fight a bull dog single handed, armed only with his brush. He entered the arena with a brush in one hand, and a foot of brnsh coverd with thorns in the other. The dog sprung at him ; he presented the bramble-brush to the animal who seized it in in his month, and so got hooked by the thorns on it; the chimney-sweep bela bored him over the head and nose with the back of the brush, and won the watch.— We may learn from this, that if a man is attacked by a bull-dog, he should hold cut a stick between his hands, and present it to the dog, who will seize it, and give the man time for further measures A rat catcher lately told me that he had a mon key that would be a match for any dog in a pit.' The monkey was given a short, stout stick; he watched his opportunity, sprang on the dog's back—it was impos sible for the dog to throw him—and the monkey beat him about the-head at his will.--Buckland's Curt osities of Natural _History. A WISE SAYING.L An English farmer recently remarked that cc he fed his land before it was hungry, rested it before it was weary, and weeded it before it was foul." We have seldom, if ever, seen so much agricultural wisdom conden,ed into a single sentence. Reader have you not some land which, this summer, will pant and blow and struggle under the burden of a starveling and sickly stalk of corn.' cg Weeded it before it. was foul." Why, some of our farmers raise weeds for ma nure. Vile peste,of no use to man or beast, are suffered to grow up. and encumber the ground merely for the sake of the privilege of burying their dead bodies to supply vegetable matter to the soil. On a per feotly conducted farm, no plant would be suffered to maturcita - seed which was not of some known and positive utility. Peas or plover are better than Weeds—they feed both the soil and domestic animals, and give no - trouble to succeeding crops. Re-- member the practice of tee English farmer. Do not wait until your land begins to get poor' before you manure it. If it is rich' make it richer. Do. not wait until your land begins to fail befOre you rest it— give it rest in time to prevent it ever being tired. Do not wait until your farm is stocked with weeds before you begin to de stroy them. One weed destr9yed this year will save much hoeing next year.— Manure soon and well, - give abundant rest, and cultivate clean; . He is a good farmer who observes these rules. A BEAU .rim UL FiGunE.—How beautiful is the following , and how happy must be the heart that can see these beauties and understand them : g Why is it that the rainbow and the clouds come over us, with a beauty that is not of earth and then pass away and leave us to muse on their faded loveliness l Why is it that the stars which bpld,their nightly festival, around the:,miclx#ht throne are placed 'above the se. ; . pg. our limited faculties, forever us with their unapproachable glory nd why ra it that the light forms tof litmati beauty are presented to our view and taken from us, yet leaving the thousand streams of affec tion to flow : in Alpine torrents upon .the heart ,We , are borufor a higher destiny than that of earth. There is a realm where the rainbow never fades !, where the stars will be set Ikefcire us like islandeslumbering on the ocean, wheisi the bsiCiftd be ings 'that: pass . before us like meteors will stay in our presence' forever.' (h. Bacon "Then debanehes • Of yontkare 80, Many ocuusp.irsoies against ebt,,,age''. • •. 7 " F'A SisoitildiNnan WOltsx ox . Be.- lats.—The eeeentiii . l*s,Swinshelm says that a majority CC tabu; are to their mothers what - ..itliolria-"ti . a little girl 1 - iminething to dreii-e meansnf displaying 'odds and eridi : ot-finem, and , exhibiting one's-tastes. • If infanta were ;treated on the,piinoiple on which a , fatiner ' treats lambs,-goslings, ohiokensi.pigai eta, viz: well:fid and kept warm, they , would live _ and grow just as well oared for goBlidgs live and groW;Aiid. we never. :. . knew one die. Dutch babies wear ceps; end' how could any lady of taste have . her baby look like the Dutch, Just mini* the Dstch babies generally live, laugitand gLnw fat, for they are "smothered . - in flannel" and feathers ' and keep all in 4 sweat" : Match mothers do not keep their, babies for model artist exhibitions. They cover thism up keep' them warm and quiet en( raise a wonderful number : of attntly boys and, girls. . „ Gg'"While some boys were stout 'recess recently, at one of the village schools Sonth Adams, Mass., a gentleman- riding by, stopped and enquired of a bright look— ing lad,what they did , in there The nroh , ing looked up, scanned • his, interrogator's face a moment, and men with a wicked leer, and knowing wink replied, 'They taiihidee sir!' THE LANCASTER INTEL LIG.ENCLER JOB PRINTING .88TABLLHLMENT. No. 8 NORTH DUKE STREET, LANCASTER, PA." The Jobbing Department Ic thoroughly furnished with new and elegant type of every description, and is under the dame of a practical and experienced Job The Proprietors are prepared to PRINT CHECKS, ' • _ AND NOTES, 'km*l,4lll CARDSEllitimuls, BILL HEADS AND HANDBILLS, • -• PROGRAMAIRS AND POSTERS, PAPER BOORS AND PAMPHLETS, • BALL TICKETS AND INVITATIONS, PRINTING IN COLORS AND PLAIN PRINTING, with neatness, accuracy and dispatch, on the most masons ble terms, and In a manner not excelled by any establish ment In ihe city. • Alar Orders from a distance, by mall" of otherwise, promptly attended to. Address GEO. SANDERSON & SON, Intelllgencer Office, No. 8 North Mike street,- Lancaster, Pa. SPECIAL NOT:ICLEL,• WENTZ BROS Offer every possible inducement to • OASIS BUYERS OF DRY. GOODS. Determined to reduce their stock, they give GOOD BARGAINS. BEAUTIFUL FANCY 'SILKS, At 33, 50, 75, worth double the money. GRENEDINE AND BEREGE GOODS, About one-half their value. Every variety and style of SPRING AND SUMMER. DRESS GOODS. SHAWLS, SILK-.AND OLOTH-OLOANS AND MANTLES, Fruoloa LAOE MANTLES, Pointe, Shawls, Bornons, Eugenee, French and ChantilLs Lace Goods In every style—without regard to met. • 6-4 and 84 Soper Black MERINO AND DELAINE fbr Shawls. SUN UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS. LARGE BTOCE OF MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR, LI USE THAN MANLIPATIIREWB PRIORS. A great eacrifloe In a lot of BEREGES AND LAWNS, Which are closing out at 1214 centso' ne , half price. Great bargains in COLLARS and SLEEVES from Auction. WENTZ BROS., But Ring and Centre Square. Juno 18 St 23] "p - OItSIC AND CATTLE.,YOWDER. TATTERSAL'S HORSE POWDER 3 HEAVE POWDER, ROBIN, FENNIIGREEK BIILPHUR CREAM TARTAR, • - COPPERAS, For sale at THOMAS ELLMAKER'S Drug k Chemical Store, West King street, Lower. feb 9 tf 4 N P ANTS' DRESS - PRESERVERS P.AT,ENT: • . . This newly.discovered invention Preserves the Clothes from being Soiled, renders' Nursing. safe from Moon venience, and is a great comfort to Mothers and Nurses. Xi"- To be had at ALL LADLES' STORES, and sent fres by post, direct from the inventor, Mils. ARMPIELD, No. 512 Twelfth street, Washington, D. 0., by remitting the amount. PRICE, ONE DOLLAR. EACH. LADYA GENTS WANTED Xir A liberal allowance made to the trade. oat 2 NEW SPRING MILLINERY "GGODS The subscriber has just returned from Philadelphia and New York, with a complete and well selected stock of SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY GOODS, which he offers to the public In general, at wholesale and retail, foe the lowest cash prices. My stook consists in Silks of all colors, Crapes, Lawns, Mambos, Mode, Tarlton, Crown Lining, Capenett, Jeanbiond, quilling; French and Ameri can Flowers, Silklace, Edging, Strawglmp, Rib bons of the newest style, Wire, Bonnet-Frames, Bonnet - Blocks , Straw Bonnets, Hata add Shakers_ • of all colors, and the newest style and shape; Bon- . net materials, and Trimmings of all kinds, Jewelry, Notions, Dry Goods, and a great many/alleles ton numsa ons to mEntion. Also, TRIMMED AND BEADY MADE BONEETS all the time on hind of the very latest fashion, which he offers cheaper than the cheapest, The subscriber is thankful for past favors, and hoPes'a continuance of all his bid customers and plenty. mart new ' L BaUfd, PETZELT., wiraroy, . STILL CON. tinne the milsonewrsimoßmattn3nirAs in the THE GRANITE BUILDING, No. VA, North Queen Bt. Our stock consists of the Choi*. est. FRENCH CLOTHE; such as Raloittes, Samonied -and Nellasons finest Cloths of various colors; the ,okolout French Cassbneres; Black Doeskin Casstmerat; Eandj Cassimeree, the bestaelettion; .Vestingsof gulch:lo4omq, and a large ussortment of oIiISTLEDI)SN'I3 FI7II.NII3ILING GOOD& . • We respectfully suidc a continuance of the patronage so liberally bestowed upon • our predecessor, and trump by strict attention to businessto receive It. . . . One of the firm has bad considerable experbmice hi one the largest and most fashionable Merchatit, Tailoring Es tablishments In Philadelphia, and flatters himself that he will be able to render satlifaition to - thiglatrons, of. the firm. PETZ2I4 d hicIIVOY.. apl 7 - - tf 12 D S '-15 HAYii •JR firiLRY- STORB, No. 206 lioarn•flrs MIXT 430,2 BACA - • PHILADELPHIA. On band and for sale, a chutes assortment of swabs patterns. and will plait to order BRACELETS, EAR RINGS, FINGER RINGS, BREAST, PINS, :• GROSSES. NECKLACES, „ GUARD AND VEST CHAINS . . *. Air Orders enclosing the hair to be plaited may be sent by Mail. Give a drawing as near as you can on-paper, and enclose such amount u you may choose to pay. - • . Costs as follows: Ear Binge $2 to sB.—Breast Plus $3 M s7—Finger Rings 75 cents to s3.so—Vest ChalnasB to 117. Necklaces $2 to $lO. . . 04- Hair put into Medal - lona Box Breast Pins, OLD GOLD AND AILVER.BOUGHT. AT PAIR EATER. apr 16 Iyl4 ' JAMES H. BARNES, . . j BANDY' AND 'WINDSOR; OHMS. MAKER, No. 5934-East King . ,streat,. Lancaster, Takes pleasure in inviting the public to call at his Ware. rooms, and examine: his BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OP CHAIRS OP VARIOUS PATTERNS. ' t:ORDERS no:died and. piomptly attended to at the sharteet notice.. None but the beet workmenareemployed In this establish's:63dt, - consequently Chides purchaß4 this houSe are fully equal to anyartleleeold in thaZastarg Citlee. Call and examine for yourselves.. Ding 18.1 y Si' . . LIFE DEATH.--The stabaitrlitert take pleasure in announcing that they are. note "So.' pared to mail (free) to those who wish it, .a copy: of. 4.11,11* portant little work, by tbe,late Dr. Brampton, entitled THE INVALID'S MEDICAL CONFIDANT,", published for the benefit, and at a warning' to yonng men nadzier• sons who stiffer from Noncoms Debtlity, Premature 'Decay, do., ke., !supplying the meant of, self earn,. The reader Is irresistligy led to compare a useful,llle with- en: gnohle Reader, Rae not a moment, hitt - send yons_addlatt qtr's copy of this little , work . 'Addremithe - Publiidiern DR, JOBB 0...0aD/IN a Ca, 64 and 66 John St., New To& apr 30 3m 16] TNO.ORP ORA TICI-D; 1. HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE COEPAIff, OF HARTFORD, CONN. • 0 APII , AL AND :Al-EfSBT-814031;1 - 09.0 O. P. O.- Alt TU; Facie:Ur i. 141.141:111P4674, • '• Pz:B'44efit. Polleitas Wood and rinumedOdosFlteqPitabi.t a djusted and paid immediately upon aatiehetary proo lreio York .findr,by the undersigned, the DULY AIIT1101112&D ApENT. JAMES IMAM oat "41 411 ' • -•- Alentfor ATPEMTV:PIN MILIT TaE VN HARDEWB BIELB zap INBANT.I4 OlLliAld'B MAIIIYAL: • BAXTER'S YOIAINT*OII3 . . iiLLSWO,II42I3. 1 04:4 1- )btlilo life. tam voarirrEillva 'Taxi BoOsiktinadigiiiiinostriatH . ablarinformation,for. lilillaanh_2loinstwa t elltiltli, 111 ;•-ttra Omni, .IPleld,•or on the Natoli:- t • wawa/111mo SQUAD DULL th . 13BADLE'll SON4BIO t THS W - AD the above, snot . . Envolopeo, Be., for sale at . tem] : :ci:hL. 11. iiTEUTION lli.ikkr 4 l4,,lJ every menhor i ohipleteria . 6oli imam% • 26 ciente, or hatly4;44l43S ir boondia-ons ' 40 cents, at •,,.< 0 • , 0 1 7 / 3 / 19 44 %.‘,..011 1 4:411 , ft ..utsg.c.4.yarrs.. ni—acet uLSI 1. , 1417( ipgib awl* 7..q1 :; NO. 30. . . . . ._,.- No. 01 North Queen street, 'Lanes/tea; Pe. . len 10. M=M