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PRINTING of every kind in Plain an4Fan .tPS. done with neatness and dispatch. Hand plank*. Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va ,l stvle, printed at the shortest notice. The .TEE OFFICE has just been re-fitted with Power and everything in the Printing line can recutcd in the most artistic manner and at the . rutes. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. gkportw. THE KUKOPEAN CONFLICT. ~ aince the Reformation commenced Europe, there has been a convictiou . ilily growing in the minds of the mmon people, and that is that the - and privileges witli which nature • lowed them as men, were usurped . other class ; whose only claim to was the accident of birth and posi- To litis fact we may ascribe the ef ts of Algernon Sydney and his com ers in the times preceding the revolution ■ piss and also the spirit of the Puritans •ho sought a retreat in the wilds of the \,w World, where they might worship : :r common Father in peace. Every one . ws the result of their labors and sacri •s—that a spirit of Liberty grew up di ■tly antagonistic to oppressive exactions : the ruling class, and that this spirit cul ..hinted in the Declaration of American In i-.peudeuce of 1770. That declaration was a manifesto to all world that all men were equal in nat .! right,—that God had not endowed one Ass of men with privileges he had with >'Ul from another, —that free government, i-preseutative government, self govern icnt was a natural rigltt which man pos ■ssed, or was entitled to, by virtue of his .uiiiood and power to preserve it ; and .it kings had no divine right to exact the Amission of their subjects to their rale. Republics had had a prior existence, but r was one established upon the express ;i that men were rational beings, and ..sufficient intelligence to choose the _i.t. rather than the wrong ; and not up : .at 1 expediency, which had been the ' principle in the foundations of those, h in earlier ages, had preceded it. • world beheld with astonishment the ■ ration of tree government, and felt the -ting of the leaven. A new element nt si d into the effete nationalities of I t'M W urld. They began to think, to :re, to compare, to reason, to know. :y imformed them, duty to the present !t: > c ming age, urged them, and that -lUic.i'ss aspiration for a free life, which uicnt soul ever cherishes as the true J un of its being, impelled them | ' •• was rocked by the tempest from its j nt its furthest circumference, and q mded to the call by shedding the • ! her tyrants, and often of her ends Tin* conservative spirit of Eu pe was aroused, and then followed the - ■ '■■■'■ First Napoleon, the dynasties, ;: .v with age and reeking with the blood tie true and the brave, until the last i. carnage of Waterloo, where conser ' - w a its last victory, and the treaty 1 enna secured its last diplomatic tri _■ . j ere is nothing more true than that medom's battle once begun" will in the •• won." The host enlisted under anner. represents a principle of uni interest, one springing from the '•al constitution of every sou of Adam, I N-rtwined with all his interests and af- j us, and duties and responsibilities, attle-field is the wide earth, her sol-1 rs the entire family of men who love | and Ler warfare will endure through ng ages of the life-time of the world, i y life lost, every drop of blood spilled, ' 4 ?acritiee upon her altar calling for -iiuice, a vengeance as sure to be ren a> that a just God rules in the affairs i men. "Te is every indication that we are 'it to witness a great European war. at this distance are inquiring what J i- spective combatants are expecting to Are the little Duchies of Sehleswig 1 llolstein of sufficient importance to j • r belligerent, to warrant the loss of so ; • y and the expenditure of so much cure ? In one little battle, or march. ! • treasure would be sunk than both are "hi >o, is Venetia so necessary to Italy I Austria, that these great states should • utely peril their future prosperity for ;r possession ? !, ut in this reasoning we overlook the philosophy of the matter : It may •ie that the belligerents themselves do v ictlv understand their position. The each state is impelled by motives - r asp and significance of which is only to Providence, who permits ' struggle. They are in the hands of a " : y which brings them into a warlike 'i t ! or the sake, aud in the interests of -'-unity—into a struggle for life, in which ! w.-r they have so long wielded for " SB 've ends is in jeopardy, and may es from their grasp. Nearly all the • i '- wars of the last three hundred years '"'ended in the establishment of some - -'Don which has elevated that of the E. O. GOODRICH, Publisher. VOLUME XXVII. masses, and done away some foul wrong to their moral interests and natures. Those of William of Orange in Holland, those of Queen Anne with Louis XIV, those of Fred eric 11, of Prussia, each and all, served to lift some oppressive weight from the crush ed spirit and open to it a pathway nearer the throne of its Maker, to let some light into the soul benighted by the ecclesiasti i oul darkness of a thousand years. If Pru sia is victor in this contest, which may God grant, such a result is inevitable ; for Prussia is Protestant and intelligent, while Austria is ignoraut and steeped in the foul est dregs of Romanism. Italy is also a party in this war. She goes into the struggle to recover Venice, a state that is purely Italian ; handed over to the tender mercies of Austrian rule by the Congress of Vienna and Paris, in 1814, and 1815. No one can blame Victor Em anuel for the part he is about to take. The people of Venice have besought him through long years to come to their aid. Deserted by Napoleon JII at the very mo ment when the door seemed opening for their enlargement, they have mourned their sad fate without the power to free them selves from it. There are not words in our language to describe the utter hopeless ness of their situation, unless released by this war, and no pen nor pencil can por tray the depth of their debasement, as Italy now is. She maintains a large army of her own sons to enslave herself, —she is sub ject to a grinding taxation to fill the coffers of the Austrian State, her sons are torn from her hearthstones to fill the ranks of the Austria 1 Army. Austrian officers des ecrate her firesides and altars, robbing beauty of its bloom and purity,—in truth, the slavery of ancient times had no fea tures so revolting as that has which now curses the proud city Venice. If Germany were united under one head, with a government like that of the United States, her law would be the law of Eu rope. Her population would then equal sixty millions, occupying a territory hav ing a most fertile soil and a healthy tem perate climate. The largest rivers of Eu rope would water her provinces, bestow ing upon her sites for great centres of pop ulation and commerce. But here stands that eternal, everlasting, bug-bear of ty rants, —the " balance of power " the theo ry of which is, that these crowned robbers having spent their lives in robbing their subjects, and acquired the habit of rob bery, to prevent mutual encroachment have ; fenced themselves within certain bounda ries and limitations, outside of which they | have agreed to rob no more, and to exer- j cise their talent at robbery within their I own borders, or in a direction which will j not intrude on each others territory. Thus England has agreed to rob no Continental i Power, but to bestow her attention upon ! helpless, famine stricken Ireland, or upon ; her Indian subjects in Asia. France, hav-1 ing been so great a robber in the time of Napoleon the First, now obliged to dis gorge some of her plunder and confine her self to her old limits ; though upon Algiers and Mexico, neither of which seemed to j tempt her predatory appetite much then, she might try her cunning hand. Russia was to perpetrate no robbery upon Turkey —she might rob all around the further coast of the Black and Caspian Seas, all over Asia, and particularly China, but she must play no tricks of her trade upon any portion of the Mediterranean or Atlantic coasts. Austria, having acquired all her possessions by wholesale robbery, agreed to be satisfied with the plunder of Lom bardy and Venice, with now and then an inroad upon the Turkish Principalities ; and Prussia, overjoyed to retrieve her Rhenish Provinces, felt well paid for the dozen drubbings Bonaparte had given her. Denmark was to keep the Duchies now in dispute, but to her and to the lesser king doms and sovereignties, were given no for eign field to steal in, the greater Powers solemnly agreeing to respect them as make weights in any bargain they might have on hand, or wanting that, to protect them as they were. These self-imposed restrictions and agree ments constitute the treaties of 1814 and 1815, and in them we find the far-famed " balance of power," which became the pub | lie law of Europe in the policy of each state, as regards its intercourse with the rest. It will be a study for the historian, furnishing a dark chapter of human deprav ity and greed. It has crushed the spirit of the people, resting like a dead weight upon their moral aspirations and hopes. It was a league of tyrants, a conspiracy against truth and right, a pledge to hunt down each I effort of the nobler nature to rise in the : scale of humanity and to assert its equal j claim to the free air of Heaven. It has banished Mazziui from the land of his birth, ; set a price upon the head of Garibaldi, and loaded Kossuth with chains. The hopes it lias crushed, the blood it has spilled, can only be known in that day, when the ty rant, stripped of his power, shall stand naked by the side of his victim, at the bar of a just God. The parties to this treaty broke it them selves Nicholas wanted Constantinople, and then came the Crimean War. Louis Napoleon, to humble Austria, took sides with Victor Emanuel, and then came the Italian War, and now we have this quar rel of Austria and Prussia, ostensibly about ! the Duchies. But the greatest infraction of the treaty was when Louis Napoleon Napoleon seated himse f upon the imperial throne of France, as the executor and avenger of his " Uncle." It is barely possible that we have exag gerated impressions of the rigor and in justice resulting from a system like the above ; bui it is said to cast its shadow over the commonest affairs of life. We hesitate to award to human actions their just claim to condemnation or commenda tion, irrespective of the position of the ac tor. If in any portion of our civilized land a dozen men in the common walks of life should conspire against the peace, pros perity, and lives of those around them, if they should pry into the motives of others, spy out their domestic affairs, maintain spies in their kitchens, cast them into pris on upon suborned testimony, banish them from their native soil, or bring them to the gallows and then seize upon their property as confiscated to their sole ownership, we should think such men depraved to the very marrow of their bones, and hunt them to theiY death, and yet, we are told such a system is in daily operation in nearly ev ery portion of Europe, except that the au thors and originators of the foul wrong wear crowns upou their heads, and are re garded as the source of all honor, and pow er in the state. The Ireland of to-day is cursed with it. Every fifth man in Paris and Rome, is a spy, every third in Naples, Venice and Vienna, every fourth in Peters burg and Constantinople. In every city of Continental Europe, men feel little securi ty compared with that perfect confidence in Government which is the lot of an Ameri can citizen. In view of all the circumstances of the present situation of affairs in Europe, have the friends of humanity much to fear ? War has become inevitable, not from the fact that a more humane solution of the difficulty is in wanting, but that the Pow ers most uearly concerned will not embrace it. Each complains of each, each has long averted the present moment, each has made due preparation, and each expects a tri umph. Let them fight, fight to the bitter end. Nothing cau be lost to Freedom aud humanity 7 , and since in just such struggles they have gained all they have, let them hope to gain more, and at last, to gain all. There can be little doubt in the mind of one who looks camly upon all that is pas sing, that Louis Napoleon is the genius who is directing the element of discord. He has found in Bismark one who is willing to take the initial step while he afiects a neu trality. Does any one believe that Prussia would have been so determined on war, if France had withheld her consent? They act in concert now, knowing they are to separate when certain objects are accom plished. England has already signified her neutrality. Russia will interfere only in certain contingencies. Austria is to be thrashed out of Germany into the Turkish Principalities. Italy is to be liberated from Austrian dom inatiou and will find her mas ter in France. Haviug gone thus far to gether they will quarrel, for Louis Napol. eon, having kept Bismark in countenance to the end of his complete triumph in Ger many, will demand the Rhine as his boun dary, Prussia proud of her position in the very center of European civilization will demur, even through her consent is at this moment registered in the Tuilleries. A French army will now cross the Rhine, and while the toiling millions of France and Prussia are cutting each others throats, Russia will march upon Constantinople ; for Turkey is still sick, —sicker even than iu the days of Nicholas, and less disposed to receive Russian physic. And now ev ery element of strife is let loose, old ties are severed, new combinations arise, every power in Europe as principal or auxiliary hasten to the war. Then will be fought the great war of modern times, the great war ol all times, —the great battle of Arma geddon. II Louis Napoleon and Bismark shall both live through the next teu years, or if but one through the next twenty years, the above predictions, within the periods men tioned, will be accomplished. MRS. GRUNDY Sron.s OUR GIRDS. —Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, who, by the way, is a good teacher, gives soine good advice about the girls, and it is a pity his coun sels could not be heeded. By-and-by there will be no girls and children, they will all be women from ten twenty years old. Mr. Beecher says: A girl is not allowed to be a girl after she is ten years old. If you treat her as though she were one, she will ask you what you mean. If she starts to run across the street, she is brought back to the nurs ery to listen to a lecture on the propriety of womanhood. N.ow it seems to me that a girl should be nothing but a girl until she is seventeen. Of course there are pro prieties belonging to her sex which it is fitting for her to observe, but it seems to me that, a.-ide from these, she ought to have the utmost latitude. She ought to be encouraged to do much out of doors, I to run and exercise in all those ways which are calculated to develop the muscular frame. What is true of boys, in the matt | er of bodily health, is eminently so of girls. It is all important that woman should be healthy, well developed. Man votes, writes, does business, etc., but woman is the teacher and the mother of the world ; and anything that deteriorates woman is a comprehensive plague on human life it self. Health among woman is a thing that I every thing that every man, who is wise and consideratd for his race, hould more I earnestly seek and promote. REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., JULY 26, 1866. [MB. EDITOR—One morning very early I found this manuscript upon the side-walk. It manifests such a profundity of thought, such an acquaint ance and familiarity with the writings of learned men, thut I cannot withhold it from the public.— I presume also, that the author will not object to seeing it in print. I give it word for word, as I found it. It is possible you may think the poetry not sufficiently meritorious to be embalmed in print, but it conveys a moral lesson and deserves preser vation.] The wind roars, The rain pours, Do up your chores, Fasten your doors, And go to bed. And thus every night, May you take your delight, In doing the right, Indifferent quite To everything said. The rain does indeed pour from the clouds, and, I would have you, under the rule of right, determine your position, by dutiful consideration respecting the basis or un derlying priuciple of all philosophical in vestigation. To analyze the theory of me chanical force as it may be applied to mor ality, and ethics, you are to prove all things holding fast to nothing, for nothing venture nothing have, and nothing is the result. Mr. Carlyle has written the life of Fred eric Bradenburg, our old school-master, whose theory of volcanic phenomena is contained in Paul's speech to King Agrip pa, on the occasion of his coronation by the Lord Bishop of Durham, at Schone, iu the highlands near Cape Matapan. You will understand from this fact, that water is a fluid of a specific gravity of one in ten, or a hundred, or a thousand, as you may chance to place your numeral on the right or left of your decimal remainder.— But all this counts for nothing in the great calculation of antipathies, or as some the ologians say, idyosyncrasies, Put whether of pleasure or pain, whether of justice on the one hand or of conglobation on the other, this deponent saith not. Further than this, my Lord, 1 cannot assert ; for I am bound by conscientious scruples and have no doubt of the atomic theory of in dividualities and infinitesimals, as contra distinguished from Mr. Emmerson's Histo ry of the Russian Campaign in Algiers, and the duel between Peter the Great and Emanuel Swedenborg. That we may proceed in order, we are to consider, first, the positive Philosophy of John Calvin, and compare it with Swift's Tale of a Tub ; for in these we find the sum total ol the Unconditional Philosophy ol Alexander Hamilton—but of this more when we come to our second part. The American drama is founded on incongrui ties and impossibilities. We are lost in meditations upon the starry heavens, and borne away upon the wings of our own fancy ; for where is the proof of the Divine afflatus in reconstruction and gravity. Sir Isaac Newton and P. T. Barnum, have filled the measure of their couutry's glory, and the style of Naval Architecture has been vastly improved since Boswell wrote the Life of Andy Johnson, aud the Loves of the Angels. Ours is not the degenerate age some cynics call it, for the sun, the moon, the stars, the nebula, and other bodies belonging to the solar system, prove the universality of nature, and men are taught by irrefragible evidence the vanity of human reason, and the folly of common sense. Our second part treats of man in his so cial aspect, as an individual entity, as a compound of body and soul, or of matter and spirit. In his social relations man's inhumanity to man, makes countless thou sands mourn. This is not a text from the Bible as some divines quote it, but a mel ancholy truth, nevertheless. See Josephus, where not only a thousand, but a thousand thousand mourned, not only in sackcloth and ashes, but in starvation and death.— See also—but it is too long a list to men tion here. Julius Ctesar says, or said, that cowards die many times before they are stabbed in a Senate house, as he was, when the ideas of March obtained such a fixture in his brain as to banish all fear of death. Pity for him and all the world too, for had he lived, Kome would never had a Pope to write such nonsense about Troy, and Paris, and Helen, the —(but we won't call names in a moral discourse,) aud a wooden horse crammed with a thousand living men. I doubt it somewhat, —a Pope should'nt tell fibs for he sits in Peter's chair, and is Peter's legitimate son in the church. But enough of the Pope, aud Pe ter too—let all who read this history, bear in mind what our great American poet has written of Truth, one line of which I quote lest it be forgotten : '• Truth crushed to earth shall rise again in her majesty and beauty in some one of the long years which are hers." Alas, alas, how long deferred is her resur rection from that death dark tomb which error is one day to fill. Now, nobody ever ijuotes the above line in these days of premiums on Gold and Fenianism ; but we must hasten to a con clusion, nevertheless. Man is an individu al, and life is a forced state. He breathes, but the breath is forced into his body— how did Adam get his first breath ? The air enters our lungs by its levity. Hippo crates says by its gravity, but I beg to differ from that learned modern author.— Any one may be assured that it is just the 1 opposite property of air that carries it through the bronchial tubes, if he will re member the time honored principle of all physical truth, that nature abhors a vacu um. Let a man persist in consecutive breathing, will he ever die? No, verily, and this answers the long agitated ques tion propounded by the ancients but never solved by the moderns, respecting the seat of the soul. When one stops breathing is not the breath forced out of his body? Now here is a logical conclusion deduced straight from the premises—it is a syllo gism having its major and minor terms, and the ergo is that the human body is a musical machine, —in fact, a harp of a thousand strings, and animal life a jig Who has not heard of the statue of Mem non in Lower California, that played a tune every morning when the sun rose ; or of St. Simon Stylites who stood erect forty years upon the top of Bunker Ilill Monu ment ? Bat we must not, on this account des pair of our race and country. Some phi losophers say that apes are our progeni tors, and Adam aud Eve gorillas of the most approved pattern. But here again observation and speculation are at logger heads. Who believes that Uncle Ezckiel Webster was more gorillious than was Dan himself?—or that the present age is ahead of that of Stonehenge or the pyramids— those extraordinary works of ancient art and architcture that taxed the energies of the ancient Peruvians through the lapse of a thousand years ? Everybody regards China as a model na tion ; but does the China of to-day equal the China of Confucius, and will our own model republic, which embodies the wis dom of modern thought, compare with that venerable empire that dates its origin in an antiquity whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary ? f FOR THE REPORTER. REST. BT TATL I'EMBERTON, JR. Ch ! this strong mother-love, why was it given ? Up from my heart comes the passionate cry, Say shall we learn in llis beautiful heaven, Why our lost darlings were given to die t —Mrs. J. P. Oliver. Thus on my ear from a mourner's lip, Falls the low moan of a mother distressed ; Joy's cup a moment 'twas hers to sip, To know how earth fails when promising best. The beauties of Nature her spirit gave joy : The song-bird, the cloud, the bloom on the rye, But the pride of her heart was her beautiful boy— Ah what were all else if the darling must die ? The sun shines the same, the stars are as bright. The rose-buds they burst, and the sparrows are g ft y. But over one heart is a limitless night, The joy of her home is extinguished for aye. Oh, let the sighing forever be still, Tears all be dry, and hushed every moan, Where Baby is now he can never know ill— JESUS has claimed him in love for his own. Listen, fond mother, and hear his light wing, Rustling above you so softly at even, Hear the sweet "voice of a cherub who sings : "Come to me Mother, oh! come up to Heaven!" §M&*UatitoU& ME. NASBY PRESIDES AT A OHTJECH TRIAL. CONFEDRIT X ROADS, wich is the Stait 1 uv Kentucky,) June 9, lb6o. j They Led a ruction in the church at the Corners yisterday, wich bid fair to result in a rendin uv the walls uv our Zion, and the tearin down uv the temple we hev rear ed with so much care and hev guarded with so much solissitood. When I say " we," I mean the members thereof, ez the church wuz re-organized sence the war by returned Confedrit soljers and sich Dimo krats ez remained at home noDtrel, but in asmuch ez I am the only reglerly ordained Dimokratic paster in these parts, I ginerly conduct the services, and hentz hev insen sibly fell into a habit uv speekiu uv the church ez " my " church, and I feel all the solissitood for its spiritooal aud temporal welfare that I cood ef I wuz reglerly or dained ez its p ister, wich I expect to be ef I fail in gettin that postoffis at the Corners wich is now held by a Ablishnist uv the darkest dye, wich President Johnson, with a stobborness I can't account for, persist ently refoose6 to remove. The case wus suthin like this : Deekin Pogram wuz charged by Elder Slather with hevin, in broad daylite, with I no attempt at concealment, drnnk with no attempt at concealment, drunk with a nig ger, and a free nigger at that, in Bascom's grocery, and to prove tiie charge Deekin Slather called Deekin Pennibacker. The Deekin wuz put onto the stand, and testified ez follows : " Wuz iu Bascom's grocery a playin sev en up for the drinks with Deekin Slather. Hed jist beet the Deekin one game and hed four ou the second, and held high, low and jack, aud wuz modritly certin uv goin out, particklerly ez the Deekin didn't beg. Wuz hevin a little discussion with him—the Deekin insistin that it wuz the best three iu five, instead uv the best two iu three, jest ez though a man cood afford to play five games between drinks ! The ijee is | preposterous and unheard of, and there aint |no precedent for any sich course. We wuz settlin the dispoot in regler church style— he hed his fingers twisted in my neck hand kercher and I held a stick uv stove wood suspended over his head. While in this position we wuz transfixed with horror at seein Deekin Pogram enter arm iu arm with a nigger and— The Court—Arm in arm did yoM say, Bro. Pennibacker ? rrr*. ~ . • • Witness—Certainly. The Court—The scribe will make a min- uit nv this. Go on. Witness—They cum in together, ez I 1 . ii_j a ai 1 1 sea, arm 111 arm, walked up to tue bar ami drank together. #3 per Annum, in Advance. By the Court— Did they drink togeth r ? Witness—They ondeniably did. By Myself—The Court desires to know what partikeler tlooid they absorbed. Witness—Can't say—spose 'twas Bas com's new whiskey—that's all he's got ez the Court very well knows. By Myself—The Sextou will go at once to Bascom's aud prbcoor the identicle bot tle from which this wretched man, who stands charged with thus lowerin hisself, drunk, and bring it hither. The Court de sires to know for herself whether it wuz really whisky. The pint is an important one for the Court to know. A wicked hoy remarked that the pint wood be better onderstand by the Court if it wuz a quart. The bottle wuz, however, brought and thfe Court, wich is me, wuz satisfied that it wuz really and trooly whis ky. Ez the refreskiu fiooid irrigated my parched throat, I wished that trials based upon that bottle cood be perpetooal. | I considered the case proved, and asked Brother Pogram what palliation he bed to olier. I set before him the enormity uv the crime, and showed him that he wuz by this course sappiu the very fouudashun uv the Church and the Democratic party. Wat's the use, 1 askt, uv my preechiu agin nigger equality, so long ez my Deekins practis it. I told him that Ham wuz cust by Xoer, and wuz condemned to be a servant unto his brethren—that he wuz an inferior race, that the Dimocrisy wuz built upon that idea, and that associatin with him in any shape that indicated equality, wuz either puttin them up to our standard or lowrin ourselves to theirn ; in either case the re sult wuz fatal. I implored Bro. Pogram to make a clean breast uv it ; confess his sin and humbly receive sich punishment ez shood be awarded him, and go and sin 110 more. " Speak up Bro. Pogram," sez I pa ternally and yet severely. Bro. Pogram to my unspeakable rslief, for he is the wealthiest member of the con gregashun, and one we daren't expel, im plied : " That he DID drink with the nigger, and wat wuz more, he wuz justified iu doiu it, for TIIE XIGGER PAID FOR THE WHISKEY !! " But shoorly," I remarked, it wasn't nes sary to yoor purpose to come in with the nigger arm in arm, a attitood wicli implies familiarity ef nut efi'eckshun. The Prisoner—The nigger and I lied bin pitchin coppers for drinks, and I, possessin the most akootnis, won. I took the nigger by the arm, feariu that ef I let go t\y him he'd dodge me and not pay. They are slip pery. Overjoyed, I clasped him around the neck, and to wunst dismist the charge as unfounded and frivolous. "My brethren," sez I, "the action of Bro. Pogram is not only justifiable, but is commendable anil worthy of imitashuu. — Ham wuz cust by Noer arul condemned by him to serve his brethren. The nigger is the descendant uv Ham, and we are the descendants uv the brethren, and ef Noer bed a clear rite to cuss one uv his sons and sell him out to the balance uv the boys for all time, we hev ded wood on the nigger, for it is clear that he wuz made to labor for us and minister to our wants. So it wuz, my brethren, until an Ape who bed power interfered and delivered him out uv our hand. Wat shel we do ? Wat we can not do by force we must do by financeerin. We can't any longer compel the nigger to furnish us the means, and therefore in or der to fulfill the skripter, we are justified in accomplishing by our sooperior skill wat we used to do with whips and dorgs. There wuz no confession uv equality—no degre dashua, but contrarywise the spectacle of Bro. Pogram's marching into Bascom's with that nigger, wuz a sublime spectacle, and one well calculated to cheer the heart uv the troo Diinekrat. He bed vanquished him in an encounter where skill wuz re quired, thus demonstratin the sooperiority uv the Anglo-Saxon mind —he led him a captive and made uv him a spoil. " Wood, o wood that we all bed a nigger to play with for drinks. The case is dis missed, the costs to be paid by the com plainant." The walls uv our Zion is stronger than ever. This trial, ez it resulted, is a new and strong abutment—a tall and strong tower. J PETROLEUM V. NASBY, Luit Pastor uv the Church uv the Noo Dispensaslntn Toledo Blade. THE PROPOSED CLYMER-SOLDIERS' CON VENTION. We noticed in the Post of July 10 a call for a State Convention of honorably-dis charged officers, soldiers and seamen of Pennsylvania, to be held at Ilarrisburg on the 10th day of August. Who may be the prime movers in this affair we know not and care a little. But it is a singular fact that a call for a convention, professedly originated to represent such a large body of honorable and influential citizens of this Commonwealth should have appended such a very large majority of signers who are of little or no consideration either in mili tary, political or social life. Its avowed : object is to meet and adopt resolutions to be endorsed by the so-thinking military" supporting Hiester Clymer, Democratic candidate for Governor of this State. We have no objections to this call for a convention. But why is it that none of our renowned military leaders from this State —and we have many of them—have sign ed it ? There is not the name of one major general to the call, not one brigadier gen eral, and but five brevets ; but there are forty-one sergeants and corporals and one hundred and eleven privates : whether ev en these have honorably served in the ar my we have not the records to show. We cast a hasty glance at the call, and by ref erence to the adjutant general's report, are able to inform the public as to whether these men are properly to be called the fighting representatives of our grand old army. The following are some of the of ficers whose records we examined : Captain T. McDonongh, \ ll servioes m 4 ' to "'Lieutenant Alfred Robertson, (marked samet in service from Jnlv 26th. 1661, to February, 1562. Colonel W. \V. Corbet, iu service from July to October, 1^ 51 - t 7°. mc : ntLs - . , n Captain R. C. Johnston, in service trom Octo beri lo j uly , I^2-ten months. Lieutenant Augustus F. Bartlow, resigned Aug ust 11, I*6l. V-Fcaster, in service from Apnl, 1861, to October, 1862—resicmea. Francis K. Genger, served distinction) as hospital steward awhile. A. N. Light went into the army in 1834 as as sistant surgeon. Captain W. W. Murray, mustered out of the gervice in 1862. Colonel John B. Emblish, not on record, but commanded hundred day men. Second Lieutenant N. D. Bennett, in service from November, 1862, to April, 1863—six months —resigned. Major James 15. Tread well (published Frewell), in service from June, 1862, to Septemlier, 1862. Major S. C. Siwunton, discharged from the ser vice in June, 1863, after serving seven months. Lieutenant McLean Thorn, in service from Angest 20, 1862, to September, 1863—resigned. Lieutenant Colonel B. McDermitt, resigned in January, 1863—was not in the service one year. Major It. E. Taylor, resigned in July, 1862 — Adjutant W. 11. towers, in service from August, 1861, to July, 1862. Captain W. Augliinbaugh, discharged from the ; service in July, 1862. Major James Ellis can't lie found in reports, i (must be a Revolutionary hero.) Colonel Joseph Jack, drafted man- Captain Lewis A. Johnson, in service from Sep tember, 1862, to September, 1863. Lieutenant Archibald Douglass, in service from September, IsOo, to January, 1863 three and a hall mouths. We are sorry we had not time to run through the whole list, hut we think en ough has been seen to show of what mili tary material the convention will be com posed.—Fittsbury Gazette. LAItOB. There's a never-dying chorus Breaking on the human ear, in the busy time before us, Voices loud, and deep, and clear, This is Labor's endless ditty ; This is Toil's prophetic voice, Sounding through the town and city, Bidding human hearts rejoice. Sweeter than the poet's singing Is that anthem of the free ; Blither is the anvil's ringing Than the song of bird or bee. There's a glory in the rattle Of the wheels 'mid factory gloom ; Richer than e'er snatched from battle Are the trophies of the loom. See the skillful mason raising Gracefully yon towering pile ; Round the forge and furnace blazing Stand the noblemen of toil. TLey arc heroes of the people. Who the wealth of nation's raise ; Every dome, and spire and steeple, . Raise their heads in Labor's praise. Glorious men and truth and labor, Shepherds of the human fold ; That shall lay the brand and sabre With the barbarous things of old. Priests and prophets of creation, Bloodless heroes in the- fight, Toilers for the world's salvation, Messengers of peace and light. .Spe6d the plow and speed the harrow ; Peace and plenty send abroad ; Better far the spade and barrow, Than the cannon or the sword. Each invention, each improvement, Renders weak oppressions rod ; Every sign and every movement Brings us nearer truth, and God. A CAPITAL STORY'.—Some years since an eccentric old genius, named Barnes, was employed by a farmer living in a town some six or seven miles westerly of the Penobscot river, Maine, to dig a well. The soil and substratum being mostly of Band old Barnes, after having progressed down ward about forty feet, found one morning upon going to work that the well had es sentially caved in, and was full near to the top. So, having the desire which men have of knowing what will be said of them when they are dead, .. nd no one being astir, he-concealed himself in a board fence near th mouth of the well, having lirst left his frock and hat on the windless of the well. At length breakfast being ready, a boy was dispatched to call him to Lis meal, when lo 1 and behold ! it was seen tliat Barne . was buried in the grave uu con>cious!y dug by his own hands. The alarm being given, and the family assem bled, it was decided to first eat breakfast and then send fir the coroner, the minister, and his wife and children. Such apathy did not flatter Barnes' self-esteem a bit, but he waited patiently, determined to h.ar what was to be heard and what was to be seen. Presently all parties arrived and began "prospecting"' the scene of the catastrophe, as people usually do in such cases. At length they drew together to exchange opinions as to what should be done. The minister at once gave his opinion that they had better level up the well and let Barnes remain ; "fur," said he, "he is b- yond the temptation of sin, and in the clay of judg ment it will make no difference whether he is buried five feet under ground or fifty, for ho is bound to come forth in either case." The coroner likewise agreed that it would be a needless expense to his family or the rown to disinter.him when he was effectu ally 1 urvd,and then fore coincided with the minister. Uis wife thought as "he had left his hat and frock it would hardly worth while to dig him out fur the rest of his clothes,'" and so it was decided to let him remain. But poor old Bornes, who had no breakfast,and was not at all pleased with the result of the inquest, lay quiet until the shades of evening stole over the landscape, when he departed to parts unknown. After remain ing incognito for about three years, one morning he suddenly appeared (hatlcss and frockless as he went at the door of the old farmer, lbr whom he had agreed to dig the unfortunate well. To say that an avalanche of questions were rained upon him as to his mysterious reappearance,etc., would convey but a feeble idea of the ex citement which uis bodily presence created. But the old man bore it quietly, and at length informed them, that on finding him self buried lie waited to be dug out again, until his patience was exhausted, he set to work io dig himself out, and had only the day before succeeded, for his ideas being much confus >i, ne Lad dug very much at random, and instead <>{ coming directly to the surface. h< cume out iii the town of 11 'den, b.x miles east of tiie Penobscot river. No further explanations were asked for by those who were so distressed and sor rowful over his supposed final resting place. CONTRAST BETWEEN THE CAREER OF MAN AND WOEAS.— Man lives in the contentious crowd ; he struggles for the palm that thousands may award, and far-speeding renown may rend the air with the h>ud huzza of praise. His is the strife of the theatre where the world are spectators and multitudes shall glorify his success, or lament his full, or cheer him in the pangs of death. But woman—gentle, si lent, sequestered—thy triumphs are only for the heart that loves thee —thy deepest griefs Lave no comforter but the secret communion of tbine own pillow ! No matter how long you have been mar ried never neglect to court your wife. If a toper aud a gallon of whiskey were left together, which would be drunk first. NUMBER 9.