jr|if tCrntrr 7Onnocr.lt. BELLEFONTE, PA. rho Largest, Cheapest an* • v Worl,l Dr. William 11. White, of Atlanta, (ia recently visited his birthplace at Cherry Valley, in Otsego countv, in this State, and at the published r , iu . s ts of its townsmen in both parties Java them in Union Hull what he railed "A Talk About the South and Smthem people." Mr. Kenneth (. White, who was the predecessor of Mr. John Davenport as Clerk of the I I'iiited States Circuit Court, is a broth er of Dr. White and has sent to the World a full report of the "talk," from which to select interesting passages. Dr White soon after his medical edu ction in this State was completed settled in lowa. There he becan'ie a Kepuhlis'an and was the tirst surgeon appointed from that State for service during the civil war. When peace returned Dr. White determiner! tore main in the South, with what results and present views he himself now tells: MY FRIENDS: Alter the close of the civil war a soldier on the Northern i side was impelled by considerations of; health to seek in the South a home. : I entertained the views of the domi nant party of the North ; 1 carried with me the ideas, hahits and manners of an average, typical Northerner. I j went South with strong prejudices, ; lmt at the satne time with the resolve | to judge fairly and to study with crit ical impartiality the people", to live as I had lived, with respect for law, with courtesy to neighbor, and with inde- • jiendent sincerity and freedom of con viction. I did not intend to play the , part of a self-appointed pharisaical re former or malicious marplot; nor did 1 go as a political adventurer, seeking on the strife of races aud in the chaotic ' wake of unsuccessful revolution those j twin objects of the hummer's desire,! pelf ami preferment. 1 went as a simple citizen to make my home there. 1 After fourteen years of thorough mitig- ' ling with all classes of Southern so- '■ cietv, ami experience of every varied phase of Southern life, after nn ac quaintance with a considerable num ber of the leading men of the South as well as with the masses of the peo ple, it is my privilege to tell my old friends what I have learned and the judgment at which I have arrived in regard to the misunderstood "Sunny Smth." The most perplexing prob lem connected with the Southern pol ity is the relation of the white and black races. 1 went South conceiving that there must he more or lo* of the spirit of the old masters towards their former slaves that would require the repre sentative hand of power to regulate; that the changed reiatious of the races had an inspiration of white tyranny that was the inexorable vestige of slave domination. The truth has been a revelation to me, working a revolu tion of belief that arrays inc in con trast with my erroneous suppositions. Uuderlving all the massive miscon ceptions growing directly from the ]ast year the num ls-r was 72,665. This year tho Hchool Commissioner tells me the number *ill reach 90,<100, with a large in creased school fund. There were 1,457 colored schools, between 400 and HOO of which were taught by colored teach ers— cnpahle men and women. Of our State school fund, $411,000, the colored and white teachers qf colored children received their pro-rata, or 8157,000. As you see, the number of colored children attending the public •whool* has steadily and rapidly in creased. The State has given to the colored college in Atlanta the name as to its white university, SB,OOO per an num, and its successful progress hn* been fostered, as seen in the several reports made by the visiting commit tees appointed hv the Governor*. It* , graduate* would do honor to many of your best Northern colleges. They can teach successfully, Htill more, I add, the larger cities of Augusta, Ha vannah, Maeon, Columbus anil At lanta have supported and fostered with pride at public expense some eight to ten public colored schools each, out of tux largely gathered from the old masters of the fathers ami mothers of the children attending them, and as a rule it lyis been most willingly paid. Our Htate Hchool Commissioner has the universal respect of the colored preachers and teachers nil over the Htate (as they think and uet so do the masses of this people), and of the whites everywhere, because of his care of this publio charge. Aside from the good feeling entertained, it is the best of policy to educate and elevate the colored race. It is cheaper to pay for schooling than crime caused by igno rance. This is understood and being promulgated. The thinking, reason ing planter as well as others who em ploy labor realize that intelligent labor is better than ignorant labor. They also realize that they will always have the negroes among theni, that it is best for both races that they should stay in the Houthern Htates. I proclaim it to he the teaching of our leading Houth ern statesmen that this people should be given the same common-school ad vantages as arc given to white chil dren. If this ]>enple get into trouble or need advice or are sick, they uni versally go to their old masters and mistresses feeling they will be helped. Their surplus funds they give to them to take care of; in a word, in every way they trust them, and while some times they are met with a coarse re huff, they arc generally pretty apt to get what they want. The truth is, the former links which bound them to gether are often thought of, and a sympathy aroused which could hut gratify you all as it has me. I never saw more patience, more generous kindness, a better appreciation of the wants of those needing assistance than I have seen exhibited by the whites of the Houth towards the colored people. Northern people do not know how to get along with the blacks of the Houth ; they have not the patience to put up with their thoughtless, inefficient, thriftless ways. I have become con vinced they are best off in the hands of their old owners, No Southern gentleman or lady hesitates to speak to them when thev are recognized by them, and general ly n kind word is returned. The war left very much of the Houth a desolate waste, Great armies had marched over the country, plan.ation fences, gin-hojses uud cotton-gins, family res idences, as well as many of the old slave tenement-bouses, were, with vil lages and cities, left in ruins, and the dependent, truly helpless, ignorant and generally homeless colored race in the first days of their liberty were in a frightful condition. Many for a time followed the Union Army ; others fell into the hands of new-comers, de signing men, ami were senttered like : leaves before the fall winds. Those who remained with their old masters, | like them were without provisions. Cattle, sheep ami hogs had Imen taken to supply the demands of the armies. Thev were nlso without money, and had they had it for a time they could not have procured the common com forts of life. Htill they by untold nnd 1 many laughable but commendable dodges kept their bends above water. It was about the year 1872 that the present system of working this |>eoplc I was generally adopted by the land owners. Briefly this is done on one of three different plans, viz.: One mule and food for it, with working tools, a small house ami a certain number of acre* of land are given to a family, with the understanding that one-half i of the cotton, one-half of the corn, and whatever else raised, except on the acre garden patch, belongs to the landlord. Where the colored man owns everything save the land, and feeds his own tnule, then one-third of | everything raised is the landlord s part. Others hire a certain number of bauds and supply them weekly with i rations of meat, meat, flour ami tno , lases,Iases, anil |>ay them on nn average $lO per month. Under these systems ' the I test of feeling has been developed, 1 ami it is to the interest of the employ -1 er to deal justly, and of the laborer to work faithfully. There certainly has liecn, and is, a growing feeling of mu tual interest. It is very rare that marked injustice is done nt this time by either party. When tramps and thsic who had everything to gain and nothing to lose had possesion of leased ground, or a large proportion of the planting lands of the Houth, I heard of rntieh injustice having lieen done to the poor ignorant blacks. On the Ist of last January the col ored people owned in Georgia 502,000 acres of laud ; town and city proper ty, awiessed at $1,110,147; horses, mules, hogs and cattle, at $1,641,367 ; mechanical tools ami farming imple ments, at $620,000; had out at inter est, $76,608; or paid taxes on an ag gregate of $5,124,876 worth of proper ty at its assesses 1 valuation ol two thirds of its real value ami which was about 15 per cent, below that of the previous year. I have taken some pains to gather like statistics from other Houthern Htates ami the general result has been alike favorable —iu some of the Htates, all things consid ered, even more favorable. 1 hold the reports of the ('nmptroller-General of Georgia and that of the Htate Hchool Commissioner for 1878 and the fact* as above given are just a* they reported them to the Governor and legislature. 1 shall ho glad to show tlicm to any one who may desire to examine them. Vanderhilt once said he found it harder to make the first $2.'i,000 of his fortune than the next $5,000,000. When it is considered that the negroes of Georgia have made this start within the past seven years, and that they had to purchase the im implcmcnts to work with and supplies on credit at gamblers' prices, what may not he expected of their showing at the end of the next ten years? They have their churches, Masonic lodges and any number of benevolent socie ties. The latter are composed of both sexes, and when they, with their clean white aprons and badges appear upon the street they attract attention. They are fond of making a display and are extravagant in this respect. We also have in the State several colored mili tary and fire companies in Atlanta, four of tho former are splendidly uniformed, the gift mostly of the white citizens. Their fine guns were fur nished by the State. Before entering upon matters in the evory-day life of this race as seen by me, I will try, in purt, to correct what 1 grant may have appeared strange as to their political rights and the large dropping off of the colored vote siuce the five years succeeding the war. This seeming durk cloud has caused a vast amount of food for a certain class of Northern political speakers and writers. It has been assumed that all this people would have voted a Republi can ticket if they could and dared. As well might it IKS said of all white men in the North. For a time, I grant, they believed nothing of a JH>- litical nature save it was told theni by white Republicans; hut it is not so now. They learned these practical lessons—that the pomp and display inside and outside of loyal leagues meant office uud power to worthless men and no good to them. Our elective franchise laws as I see their operation nre made to fall equal ly upon both races. Three years ago all male citizens in Georgia were re quired to pay their poll and other taxes liefore they could use this priv ilege. It* justice has beeu questioned, but a glauee will show that the delin quent white tax-paver is at lea-t as five to one of the blacks. People South soe the advantage they now hold in this colored citizenship, and they will not lose the large increased Congres sional representation it gives them. They also believe in an intelligent use 1 of the ballot, and thus favor the edu cating of the colored children. The j intimidation of colored men at the | polls is only in the imagination and the preaching of interested politicians. We have read of how they have been shot, deliberately murdered aud other wise outrageously maltreated. Yes, I know you have. I admit there arc some barbarians in the Houth, some drunkards and some thoughtless, reckless men, as well as ; in your .State, the world over. I late -1 ly picked up a newspaper ami counted j five murders, three hurglaries and oth i erTrimcs committed in this good Htate 'of New York, and a few days after wards called and examined the ex- I changes of a certain newspaper. I . found no savage comments as to the barbarous, terrible condition of yaur | society, but nearly all of the rmpent examined raged and waxed wild over the condition of things in the Houth, of the poor blacks, thus magnifying aud turning the unfortunate private fights, murders and acts of desperadoes here aud there in that section into n general lawlessness, a propensity to ' bloodshed, and insisting that there is a lack of proper administration of the i laws. I pronounce unqualifiedly such a general arraignment of the Southern iieople as undeserved and ungenerous, t evinces to me a want of magnanim ity not in accordance with my notions 'of the intelligence and candor of Northern men and women. This altered relationship between the whites and negroes has resulted I in materia) advancement to leo ple, no matter how sadly crushed by the adversities of war and the general derangement of their industries, no matter how great mistakes or wrongs they might have made, do otherwise than regard this as an indignity uud humiliation ? I did not tight them nearly four years for the pleasure of mortifying them and then continually trampling them uudcr foot, hut to keep our Government intact and to bring them hack into the Union. Great injustice is down them when it is imputed to disloyalty or a continued spirit of rebellion. My best informa tion and olwcrvation, obtained by lis t ;ning to conversation in cars, hotels, reception-rooms, in private ami public places where I was uuknown, lias con vinced me that the earnest, anxious desire of that people at the close of the war was to resume quietly and diguitiedly their political relations in the Union. They accepted in good faith the results imposed upou them by the constitutional amendments and strove by accommodating themselves to the changed condition of labor to build up again their waste places and regain their lost prosperity. The solid South would soon thaw and par ty crust crumble if they were left to manage their domestic affairs unmo lested. I feel that that |>eople will not le correctly understood and a general, liberal, generous sentiment established over the North until Southern states men come here and meet the |>eople on the stump, face to face, and make known their manly feelings aad hopes of a grand future for our great and blessed Government. The First Attack <>n the American President. i 1 ■ It may interest President Hayes to read Mr. James l'arton's account of the attack made hy Lieutenant Kan doljdt on President Jackson in 183'!: "On the sixth day of May the Pres ident, accompanied by members of his Cabinet, and hy Major Donelson, left the capital in a steamboat for Freder icksburg, Va., where he was to lay the Washington which is still unfinished, j At Alexandria, where the steamer touched, there came on hoard a Mr. Randolph, late a lieutenant in the navy, who had been recently dismissed the service. Randolph made his way to the cabin, where he found the Pres ident sitting behind a table reading a newspaper. He approached the table as if to salute the President. "' Excuse me rising, sir,' said the General, who was not acquainted with Randolph, 'I have a pain in my side which makes it distressing for me to rise.' "Randolph made no reply to the i courteous apology, hut appeared to lie tryiug to take off his glove. "'Never mind your glove, sir,' said the General, holdiug out his hand. " At this time Randolph thrust his hand violently into the President's face, intending, as it appeared, to pull his nose. The captaiu of the boat, who was standing by, instantly seized Randolph and drew him back. A violent scuffle ensued, during which the table was broken. The friends of Randolph clutched him auas*eu ' gers knew what had occurred, and I thus he effected his escape. The pas j *ctigers soon crowded into the cabin to learn if the General was hurt. " 'Had 1 known,' he said, "tlint it was Randolph who stood liefore me 1 should have been prepared for hint, and 1 could have defended mwclf. No vidian, said he, 'has ever escaped me before, and he would not had it not beeu for my confined situation.' "Some blood was seen on bis face, and he was asked whether he had been injured. "'No,' said he, 'l am not muehhurt; but in endeavoring to rise I have wounded my side, which now pains me more thnn it did.' "One of the citizens of Alexandria, who had beard of the outrage, ad dressed the General and said : 'Sir, if you will pardon me in case I am tried and convicted, I will kill Randolph for this insult to you, in fifteen min utes.' " 'No, sir,' said the President, 'I can not do that. 1 want no man to stand between me and my assailants, and none to take revenge on my account. Had I been prepared for this cowardly villain's approach, I can assure you all that he would never have the tem erity te undertake such a thing again.' " Randolph published statements in the newspaper of the 'wrongs' which he said he had received at the hands of the Government. The oppositon paperv though condemning the out rage, (lid not fail to remind the Presi dent of certain passages in his own life which sanctioned a resort to vio lence. Randolph, I believe, was not prosecuted for the assault. His friends said that his object was mdVely to pull the Presidential nose, which, they fur ther declared, he did." . AT KKMT. From tin* t*rUri. "How 1 long to lie at rest," wrote an aged Christian lady to a Scottish rela tive. "I'm weary, faint, and worn ; ' life's a dreary burden ; all my early Friends have left me ; I'm standing at- | most upon the threshold of eternity; I und if it were not for the fear I might j prove h castaway, my prayer would lie, O! Father, hid me rest! The letter was duly received, and read to Dr. Guthrie, who was on a vis it to the family at that time. The next moraine he gave them the following lines, which he said the letter had sug gested to his mind during the night. They were sent to America to the old lady, and highly prised by her during her life. The prayer was soon after- j ward answered, and her weary body is resting, "life's duty done,' r in the j Presbyterian church-yard of Wicomi- 1 co, Aid.; and Dr. Guthrie, with tliei tears of a nation following him, hath entered the golden portals, and though strangers on earth, they have now met in their eternal home, "where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest." UXM IT ML OCTSMk. I'm kn*liiifr t the threshold, weary, faint and aore, Waiting for th* dawning, for th* owning of the 4m*- ; , Waiting till the Master ahail bid Die ri*e and rrnns To the glory of Ilia pretence, to the gladneaa of hie home. A weary |ml)i I've travelled, 'mid darkneaa, atorm and •trtfe, Bearing uiauy a burden, *t niggling for my life ; But now the morn la breaking, tny toil will aoon be o'er— I'm kneeling at the threshold, m> hand ia on the dor. Methink* I hear the voice* of the hle*ed aa they •Hand lingering in the aunahine of that far-off tinier land ' o: would that I wera with them, amtdet the abiding throng. Mingling in their worehip, joining in their aong ! The friend* that started with me have entered long ! ago- One |.j one they left me. tmggllng with the foe; Their pilgrimage waa shorter, their triumph sooner won. llow lovingly they'll hail me wheuall rny toll ia done? ' With them the Lin**#*! angels, that know no grief nor •In— I see them by the |>oriala, prejMred !• let me in ? <>? I>rd, I wait thy pleasure—Thy time and way are heat- But I'm waatad, worn and weary, O? Father, bid me reet ? A Kailwaj Hollduj Scene. HOW THE I'RAVEKH OF TWO LITTLE EMI- j GRANT* WHO IIL'NC. THEIR STOCKINGS ON THE UAR WINDOW W ERF. ANSWERED. Frem the Bradford fPa.) Era. On Chri mas eve as the night ex press on tuo Krie Railroad left New York Ci y there were seated in the car a poor woman and her two little child ren, aged about four and five years, Eoing tq the far West. A conversation | etween the mother and children in j which Santa Clans was talked of was I listened to hy the passengers. The mother told her little blue-eyed girl ! that as they were iu the cars Santa Clans could not give them any pre*- i cuts because the train was running too j fast for him to get on. This statement i east a shade of gloom over the bright- i faced children. They sat for some! time iu meditative silence. It was : soon oliserved that the little travelers ] were growing sleepy. Tears gathered ! in many eyes as the little ones kneeled on the car cushions to lisp their evening prayers. The little girl said, "Please tell < good Sauta Claus that we are on this | train going to see jwpn, and if he can, I to put some presents in little Joey and ; Maggie's stocking* hanging up on the 1 car window. Amen." The children ; then hung up their stockings hy the car window. Iu a few roiuutcs more they were soon asleep in the arms of J their mother. After a pause a geutle- ! man in front of lbcm spoke to the pas- 1 senger* as follows : ou have heard 1 the prayers of these two little children. Now 1 will give one dollar towards making them happy when they wake i up in the n orning." He then passed j his hat around the car and collected j so.7f>. He next bought some candy, | oranges ami tigs and a picture book for each, which with two more silver dollars he placed in the little stockings. When tliey awakened in the morning and saw their stockings full the little girl exclaimed,' "Oh, mamma, see what Santa Claus has found us be cause we prayed." His First Offence. An affecting scene occurred in the New York Tombs Police Court re cently. Charles B. Sheridan, aged eighteen years, was arraigned for stealing a valise, the propertv of Mr. McVeigh, of Pennsylvania. The pris oner freely admitted his guilt, and i conducted the detectives to pawnshop where the stolen property waa recover ! ed. The detectives agreed that it was | Sheridan's first offense. After the : formal complaint had been made, Jus ; tire Morgan asked Sheridan what he had to say in his own behalf. The boy burst into tears and said: "I nev er stole anything before. I had not eaten anythiug for two days and I wanted to bring some food into the house." Justice Morgan said : "Your I story may be true or not, but with | that I have nothing to do. You are : held for trial in the Court of Special ! Sessions." As Sheridan was being taken away, his mother, a respectable -1 looking but pocr'.j-clad woman, ad vanced to the railing before the bench and begged the detectives, with tears in her eyes, to be allowed to speak to her son. The officers could not resist the appeal, and granted the interview. Mrs. Hhcridati throw lier arras around her son's neck ami said, "Oh, Charier, why didn t you t*-II me where you got the money ?' fc The boy answered, "Mother, what could I do?" He WHS then taken into tin* prison. There were few dry eye* in the court-room. —* - ♦ ■ t'lrero'* t ha meter. AS DRAWN NR DR. I.ORD IN ILL* I.ECTL'BE ON TIIE GREAT ROMAN. At noon yesterday Dr. John Lord opened his course of historical lectures ill Association Hall to a large and in tellectual audience, mainly com|H>scd of ladies. The subject was "Cioero, and His Influence on Civilization." The character of the illustrious Hu man was fully considered, his faults as well as his virtues lining handled with much fairness. In closing his lecture, the s|eaker said : "Thus did he live a shining light in a corrupt and godless age, in spite of all the faults that mod ern critics have raked out in their am bitious desire of novelties, or in their thoughtless desire to show up human frailties. He was a patriot taking the side of his country's highest interest; a statesman seeking to conserve the wisdom of his ancestors; an orator exposing vices unci defending the in nocent ; a philosopher unfolding the wisdom of the Greeks ; a moralist lav ing down the principles of immutable practice;—a sage pondering on the mysteries of life, ever active, studious, the charm and fascination of cultivated circles, as courteous and polished as the ornaments of modern society, re vered by friends, feared by enemies, and admired by all good people; a kind father, an indulgent husband, a generous friend, hospitable, witty, mag nificent—a most accomplished geutlc inan," Coming Events for IHHO. The present new year, IKSo, will have .'hit! days, the extra day being tacked on to I'ehruary. On January 11 there will be u total eclipse of the sun, visible in the western part of North America ami the Pacific ocean. \N ashington's birthday will come on Sunday, February 22; Good Friday, March 26; Faster Sunday, March 2*; decoration day, May .'lO, will fall on •Sunday; the Fourth of July will also conic on Sunday ; Thanksgiving day will be Thursday, November 25, and t hri-tma- will fall due on Saturday. There will lie a total eclipse of the moon June 22, invisible here; an au nular eclipse of the gun, July 7, visible in South America and Southern At lantic ocean; December 1, partial eclipse of the sun, visible in Southern Atlantic oc^a n; Dee. 16, total eclipse of the moon, invisible here; Sunday, December .'ll, partial eclipse of the sun, partly visible here. Sun rises eclipsed. Venus will be the morning star until July 13; Mars after October 25; Jupiter, after March 15, until Ju ly 12; Saturn, after April 8 until Ju ly 9. Venus will lie evening star af ter July 13; Mars, until October 25 ; Jupiter, until March 15, after July 12; Saturn, until April 8, after July ' A Slave Saved by a Itank Note. A Paris curiosity-collector has in his possession a hank note with a strange history. Sixty-one years ago a Liverpool cashier, while holding the note to the light to test its genuineness, noticed some faint red marks upon it. which ou closer examination proved to be semi-cttaced words scrawled in blood between the printed lines aul upon the blank margiu of the note. With a good dial of trouble the follow ing sentence was made out: "If this note should fall into the hands of John Dean, of Long Hill, near Carlisle, he will learn hereby that his brother is languishing a prisoner in Algiers." Mr. Ikan was promptly communicat ed with by the holder of the note, and he appealed to the Government of the Dev for assistance in his endeavor to obtain his brother's release from cap tivity. The prisoner, who, as it supsc quently appeared, had traced the above sentence upon the note with a splinter of wood dipped in hie own blood, had leen a slave to the Dev of Algiers for eleven years when his writing first attracted attention. His family and friends had long believed him dead. Eventually his brother, with the aid of the British authorities in the Med j itterranean, succeeded in ransoming him from the Dey and brought him home to Knglaud. ♦ Traveling Stone*. The Virginia City Enterprise pulw lishes the following: Mauy of our readers have doubtless heard of the famous traveling stoues oT Australia. Similar curiosities have recently been found in Nevada, which are described as being almost perfectly round, the majority of them as large as a walnut, and of an irony nature. When dis tributed about upon a table, or other level surface* they begin traveling toward "a cdfflfton centre, and there lie huddled up in a bunch like a lot of eggs in a nest. A single stone removed to a distance of three and a half feet, upon heing released, started off with wonderful aud some what comical celerity, to join its feh lows; taken away four or five feet it remained motionless. The cause of these stones rolling together is doubt leas found in the material of whieli they are composed, which appears to he loadstone or magnetic iron ore.