maw pooncloarix V9LVME XX,11.-NO. 5. , • • ritinmytiop Nogg Amours n i ma s *T Tim ronte,iol7 r, l.llVa BUILDING, SOlCheartnied street, vi i 1 Jo , 1... ....... ..... us nts ale. lt rile Mrs* are invited _to attend his funemi. on 'Thum the ay_ lair in t , at steel_ 00k. • FLOMEUFEI/F—On the Uth inst., Mr. A. I. Flotnerfalt sad 51 Yea" " '''' ' ml•-•• The relatives and Mauls sf ~... hunit m also Lodge NI A. Y. 14.. Weecacee and Franklin Fire eanie/. are Invited to attend the funerg, from his late residence. No. .212 Catharine street, on Thursday' aftenumn. at three lif van ti ms--:?k.4„,:vii#ol.o.4oFtv 7 itk tbe ve 0 e relitivm Mends Of the filunGYlns resPortfullr 041,1 6 10VS=tilt% or g iic hut L, at tr iitn s • fill, ttee 15th . ilienrietta Garrison. miff of George L.' WM. and YEA daughter of George la . wt... to the year ot e notice wit inagdmea fl eterst .. '' . 4 " iicKEN NA thaw& insti. , „Taw* McKenna, .sald 66 yam. " Tn. remakes and friendlier the hunily are reapectf oily ; lanted_lo attend lib funeral. from his Late resinemce, ni stsoutb mrth stmt. on Friday morning, precisely at II , - .,.yelock. lifigh Moss at fat Joseph's Church. Interment at get. , . i REtti- 6 104/1 het, to Bel Md... Mra. .M ' tad% a n e 01y. county 1 let i Zog P9ZF or . So t rl • IT7 - 71Trril NOTICIL—A SPECIAL MEELING OF THE ,--. Stockholders of TILE 8 WATARA OOMPA.NY vvlll • i.. el •at No t teXpilh Steroilinetitit , ttr af eltr ze of • Adis ilitalWrDAY.4l snm woot 34' tee k for &hi re of the 'of of aa • riot o Anastab of the Illotrunoaresa 'of Pansy viola. Ilpprot ed the t rd day ofE t r entitled "An agt ex. 'tradiag the Charter of Th e Oporpoor. and antbo rn the sold iLlompany Real additional lands. to tame rr.tionde and monastic b a Eattate,'! and of determining , 'whether the me shall bo aeceoted or mimed. ss 1 •. , Hs order of the Board of Diroctora. _._._,.. ..-.. ' ' ...* 4pLO. IrAULL: Searrtsry. '';.,,, Ar l ittEmfb,.'inits '••' " ' - • . - . aplttsvals aer FitiWKL" EISTI T L IZ . T7 II IS be EVE t e ve L.,: ti t %pe_ tu A 11....411„.w pww the. No. t r South Seventh Once: Wore 7 o'clock P. M. A PoPer ca the auez Cana nal be and ?OM new elrctncal s34l"b4WaLlWllitteall4Wl•lll2.l3lo7* l or INTIOIREWMG ALKICTINO AT ?UNITY M. •• _! street Owe wEDzumuDAY ' lU. eiS,Velp be useetbsol rl4 • t xi ek, s ew AMA/MAU. Apia 15,1 , 01 L Its .agir EIVICE.—.A.N t h e OF COLORED ApriZal ZOT tOO P0011!:11 01 T 00411411 in the tfAelored *obi of tblo Pot:tot be bold st the School lima,. Six th street. staves Low ard. on FRIDAY and *ATV et AY 17tle and Ilith, hoot .eonatnencinit at II o'clock Y. IL ett Army. - • ', ~ - • r , • • _ BF Oh* of trotandttosigi hola_ ...iiitim of Testhers. ItPf eli 111 174 O. W. c „4I.ANYIIII.L. t ecrebul% e a r A OPFAINIL+ !NG OP MN STOCXtwigLO en Abe mercintile Library Company b 8 held en 'TUESDAY EVN YInG, the Stith Instant, at 8 cockick. for the outvote of taking further action an the vending aniendnnuits to the char'. numb*" , , • J tiOUR 'GARDNR. Recoing Secretary. mal la NOTICE.--TEE ANN EAL MEETING OF /STOCK ‘•••••• b of the Voce Internee:netas rnpane for the -deeding to serve the anguteg year. wilt be held aiISI Nejg Exchange, OA TUESDAY, Max Bth; th. ht. *pin Lenin GEO. IL COLEET.fleeretal7. MEW , kEIII44DWHIA ONTIM4SDIC HOSPITAL. ••••••s= I MOUtli shah efteet Uttsb4oot, tip and_ opt nal ttis=wi WWl' .4 4 #-S9rax4l* ;Mood. 4 tfir k = st Ito A7f, .7 4 1* 7 • • ap eir Ld EMED . r , NAM. t e DM AND MO patMenc—Nedi• ea thimi potatiouory to Lb* 'am r "twan : pa, roxser iftwAsts ethezr!"te- Y '. No. 61$J sttEll'eet. Ilannizt, AND harm DOOM' a =Weal event of the mien will tra c ritiOnetten _ week, by the Han del and Si• do - li a 011io of "Judas to e Macestr a lee 0 winter llia yit in the study of the t mmic of defy or. and idnit maetered it, the mem of the /sme inith aide in regard to its recces.. Oratorio is the very higneet form of music and in its construction d rendering all the resources of poetry sz ariteutdrod... .111,gland bag been Darticula avtagwatile nut home of thia clams of wale. 1114 since Huaird And produced "Messiah" there. la 1741, tki ' intinalata ePrasd to all parts of that country. In able city cultivated musical torte bar demanded and and sustained the per. formanee of these works. and the Handal and }lapin" have spared no time in their study. and no eqpeese in their production. The result hu always been z dic srded t i. u p,,, , seere id their io cajo th alut eirin giAtao a i r p r i. /Dial tl i tif flair cinierhusimoritnan the en tire recelDte. but from core love of the art. Judas has not limptita i iit atitylafwis, and ts mat a Itinifb .1 Ora %There are, how ...ye* itfici i . ileet ' The tenor solo, "Bound LBO OLIOM16", Olt e OnOffA_... the fOll - fOnleerale * , _o**:. vino- so o perfor mer,. tile excipption Of .)fre hozszt, lit New Xork, are or own Car Of nektioWWw. reputation. The performance will be the lut of the preeent season. Eamon Hainuill% i n will in to our public two new . Whilatiow hely, Signor antr% Id Boy and id, . " tome dietitian amateurs from Now Ka *ay a th. D. l both pupils of Signer .0 hie • . iris& %.tavvid and Miss l'ettolof this ' c i p , N. meat. The selections of. music pi meat twisting char- abler w co s q l % alyratidatewn erne Bluer .Ba le ads p iil* t each e s -of the lumm ot art o riming, has Wm long eons with dultut opera - in this oonetrY and Weal and eye an excellent reputation se comp Ile g produced mu et hia . operas in New Xork,a an 44 publisher of an I s album of original corn , !owadtroise f beatity. several of which will be sang on Miley Orr ~, Cam. Wousentie 'o**Ovi t: Orpraine—The ' eighth inatial6e ~tit UN 'aerie) Will be In the Foyer of • the Academy 'to-morrow . (Th a) afternoon, at elg o'clock_. ,: i fa i vritio Istograminq Name.. ~upo: Amis. te — clo,lor. • St. , Tempo di nefelltetto. Der enbatum. Schubert. twists-1P minor, opus lit. (Sonatrissionata.) . . Allegro Assai—Andauto con mobs.- *tun ma Mon troppo. Dle LDweetbrant; 'Sakti- Inuit, Sona ta --A malor, opus 101. Allegretto met non troupe—. 'trio altaldatcia: Adagio Ma non troppo—tkl. leer% .. f , 1 ' ' . COAlrrt If/int*M— Tomorrow afternoon at 3i. o'clock: 4,.Vairlailinktil WiilAhre Ida twenty - eighth orches. trawl ink ,z 0 at itorticulta,l Ha 11 .4 s The following ti ;or t ri griteMy e ar LiVolicti ( gt u ada Y ocTalb6. s ' t vine cal. L Andante. L hinuette Allegro motto. 4. e—Allegrernieltk , ()Whirs, Maple .Flitte (Ity it • l i tirsich 1 ) t i igt4 4 et pi NV l L 'a P ° ' OTri l g i rt r t F l' a r n: l t! z— g i t t t i a lf dr l ig I': Belie 'feline, Btratuo. . Jasirtabffit hitifitirr.t-Slat . Saturday evening next, at 1 the At • Mew of Music, , otr...l"esitt,4ouis will have ten ..lered to , .. Arta i complimel t ilioncert. The Men. delssol .. v t trim 1 4 . 0 ... via ;ilia. wag some';'..., I.n to 0,.„„ al erg ir"Aigh r i, `Lure line" , nr,.,r. . .. 'a =Oa 1. 0 are On the pre - Itii . t(iiimia. ittnii.z.—khe hie Pah that, the favorite Rio PO , Trottimit will begin ok brief isem94 it the Aced mf tr ill. wm e filiars of ilfaract. 1. he sale of . tickets scow . the gth. at Trumpler'a Mulct B. tat ,P• aleChia a otreet: " , Conosmi.—At Concert ILA on, the evenlinfif Thum. • day neXt.A.Vl4** concert will be, liven inald of, the Co tholDX,rnWitatrinkt,llotdetilr. A •number of eminent artists:ma *DPW.! ,t , Pt e . I .•. -.' T E,÷T Etk, , Eitii,;,..-,,, . • -.... Tait Itiposiz*.qiitAii i oi_ostiiit ickititit the spectacle' i The JAW o .ll.r , O2V.MeßMe.Witti.' wlactiov The Writ • wils'oe Fault loft set e'..?..11v1 ~ ler. Eill ,1110 Will lit be, ‘ rib as 4totneix , Mimi Me Kern= verformaneeibi , . lka•sOo,'4kkt*l , /AClYL''''* 4 3 •• L.. OP * . `i l oo* 4- 11%:„ eat off E eVr ' ~ ''' .riVOWO "'-- :' , I rwin , be of •,• 'VII?,ir anno env 'en '' -- T , i ORA:.; Meattudpiti; igtoA. I Oat" he , Prelef - , TT .• , on • Traeeiere will eileo.be eivenivithilie nen " .. so. ne performance; including Nam g.tiN farte;•.nciero , o om ic a p„ ties,lolll,4ll alleging - by . lan J•ii. arncrou, end:O mutt'.' , lode of other,.. goon thinse. . ' _ ... ... . ' .‘' Y . :.: ' ' '- : ' '.' , . ' ''• - , .' 1 *': -:. '' ' '.. i .. , - . , , ' ' Al ;.!.r." , :‘,..' ' 1 ~. t•,. , f , r , s. f i g ,-. , t r r ~g,, , . t , ' It , ,T , , ;., ~,... ~ • . i i :, . , , , , ..,,,.• , , r , 0 , -0 i : .: ~-, 4 1, t„, t.,^r - • " , 1:1= ravousu Rarrityrx,pt IT,Eutriro. • Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, went to Dub lin to-day, and ho bad a reception on Irish sell which was as hollow as it was pretentious. This is the first formal visit to' begird 'l7 a:Prioce of Wales since that 'made hyfthe last preceding Prince of Wales (tfien beco me George IV) in 1821. The latter (meet' Wasilitteectelized by Byron at the time' of he occurrence and, we re produce his terribly Scath elfettiow as • apPro paste to 1110-Prosoult occasion.. ; 'Albert Edward does not go "Is, the idehriof, thretearrem turtle great-uncleeurisititisfret *Alen die heart *lbis Wife, as Gitrge broke the Wit of Ceroline; bht there' is still muck -in "The Irish Avatar that will lit the presentochitiabn. _ ' 'll.O Wild" /Liman, Ere `the Asejthtir cold is hec And her ashes still float to their home o'er the Le! (leer e the iiititophantSpeeds siver the wave To the oureherieheit isle which he loved like bis—bride. True, the great of her bright and brief era are gone, The rainbow-like epoch where Freedom could peruse , k • For the few little years, out of centuries won, Which betray'd not, or crushed not, or wept net her cause. True, the chains of the Catholic clank o'er his rap, The castle still stands, and. the senate's no .1110,.re, And the famine which dwelt on her freedotaless crag& Is extending its steps to her desolate shore. To her desolate shore—where the emigrant stands For a moment to gaze ere ho lies from his hearth, Tears fall on his chain, though it drops from his hamlet, For the dtu3geon be quits Is the place of his Bnt he comes! the Meswiah of royalty cornea! Like a goodly Leviathan roll'd from the waves! Then receive him as beat Buchan advent becomes, With a legion of cooks and an army of slaves! He comes in the promise and bloom of three score, To perform in the pageant the sovereign's part— But long live the shamrock which shadows him Could - the green in his lie itsnsferred to his, heart! Could' that' 1 ongwither'd spot hnt •be ,Verdritit again, And a new /prim of noble affections arise— Then !night freedom forgive thee' this tatice in thy chain, • And this shout of thy slavery which sadietus . the sides. Is It =hums or meanness which clings to thee Were be God—es heti iret.this commxtvnest clay, With lICAMi fewer wrinkles!than sins on his Such servile otevotion'mtiht 'shame him away. AY, roar in his train! Is; thine orators lash Their fanciful spirits to pamper his pride— Not thus did thy Grattan indignantly dash His soul o'er the freedom Implored and denied Everglorious Grattan! the ben of the good! So ample in heart, so sublime In the rest! With all which Demosthenes wanted endued, And kis rival or victor in all he possess'd. Ere Tally arose in the zenith of Rome, Though unequall'd, preceded, the task . was begun Bat Grattan sprung up like a (iod from the tomb Of ages, the drat, last, the saviour, the one! With' the skill of an Orpheus to soften the brute; With the fire of Prometheus to kindle man kind; ' Even Tyranny listening sate melted or mute, And Corruption shrunk scorch'd from the glance of his rind. But back to our theme! Back to despots and • slaves/ • Feasts fuinish'd by Famine! rejoiclngsty Pain' True Freedom but welcomes, while slavery aril raves, When a week's saturnalia bath loosen'd her chain. • Let the poor squalid splendor thy wreck can afford (As the bankrupt's profusion his ruin would hid Gild over the palace. Lo! Erin, thy lord! Ries his . foot with thy blessing for blessings denied. Or if freedom past hope be extorted at last, if the idol of brass find his feet are of clay, Must what terror or policy wring forth be class'd With what monarchs ne'er give, but as !wolves yield their prey? Each brute bath its nature, a king's is to reign— To reign! in,that word see, ye ages, comprised The cause of the curses all anneds contain, From Ccesar the dreaded to George the de spised. Wear Flaga.l, thy trappings! O'Connell, pro- Hls aecomplishmeats! His!!! and thy country convince Half an age's contempt was an error of fame, And that "Hal is thelateallest, sweetest young prince!" • • • Will thy yard of blue rlband, poor Fingal, recall The fetters from. mlllione of Catholic 'lnaba? Or, haa it not hound thee the fastest of all 'ie slaves, Who now bail their betrayer with hymns? Ay! "bad ! a dwelling!" let each give his mite Till, like Babel, the new royal dome hath arisen Let thy beggars and helots their pittance unite— And a , palace ,bestow for a poonhoneo and . prison ! spread-spread, for Vitellius, the royal repast, Till the iluttonons despot be stuird to, the .god An d the st roar of his drunkards' proclaims him , at hi The Fourth of the fools and oPPressors call's "George!" • Let the tables be loaded with feasts 1111 they Till they groan like thy people,l4ciugh ages of wo!= {?;: Let the wine floW around the old Bacchanal's throne Like their blood Olen has ..flOw'd,,4o yet. has toloW. Bu 'AO t i let net name --u n hull# 1,14 0 801 Two 411 , to r giterrgh et cik .11 1 wash; never #arned'' 14 4.1M14, 6 r4 01 5.L.A 04 , ie°9 l l. ' "rL 4, 1 jiii t N* , uvitefa-Irliesitzeirtr now, when le w o ue or his birth, Deep, deep es the gore which he shed on her =MI WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1868. Ipeenie proud. of the reptile which' erirWlfd from her earth, And4 u or ro e arder , rePaye•him with shouts And a Without one single ray bf her genius, without The fancy, the manhood. the fire of her race— The miscreant, who well might plunge . Erin in doubt 'lf she ever gave birth to a being so base. If she did—let her long-boasted proverb be bush'd, • ' "Whiehtfocialms that from Erin no reptile can Bee the ) cl:blooded serpent, Withveiront full tili n t i v i a si ntng Its folds in the breast of a Iting! Sboirtoirltik feast, : ind getter! Oiii(Erin, how wettthousu n bynrrune arttyfannytil iVeleodnitlSlt thee below ,ledepti of threep In a eeirgalf still. My voice, though but humble, was .raised for thy m righlt ai f a. aim ' s' et3ll This band , though but feeble,w v o c uld sr *hee m, free in thy fight, ,And this heart, though outwOrn, had a throb 614./I for thee! Tea, I loved thee and thine, though thou art not ' my ignd, I have known noble hearts and great souls in tby sons, ' And I wept with the world o'eithipatriot band Who are gone, but I weep them no longer as once. For happy are they now reposing afer,- - - Thy Glutton, thy Curran, thy Sheridan, all Who, for years, were the chicle in the eloquent war, And redeemtd, if they ''have not retarded,' thy Yes, happy are they in their cold English graves! Their shades cannot start to thy shouts of to day,— Nor the steps of• enslavers and chain-kissing slaves Be stainp'd in the turf o'er their fetterless clay. Till now I had envied thy sons and their shore, Though their virtues were hunted, their liber ties lied There was something so warm and sublime in the core • Of an Irishman's heart, that I envy—thy dead. Or if aught in my bosom can quench for an hour My contempt for a nation 13013ervile, though sore, Which thot4ll. trod like the worm will not tarn upon power, ' • 'Tie the glory of Grattan, and genius of Moore. September, 16th, 1821. MASHY. ; [From the Toledo Bladed A Very Peculiar Law Salt et the Cern. era—Polteekintangler-LTlie Witnesses hubvensed and the Way the Dispute was Sewed. Poor Ovms, CONFEITIT X ROADS (with Is in the fltait. ter Kouttrcky),Airiit 18680— The Comers is, amtinyooally eggated. ticexcely does one fever Fit herself allayed afore another is set agom and the result is the community is kept a bilen perpetooally. There aint nothin like pecce here. Pertickel erly does this occur when Bascom runs short. His barrels contain the troo oil wick flows onto the troubled waters uv, our passions, and when them is out there is a zninatoer Tophet to-wunst. The last eggsiteraent wuz probably the most pekoolyer that ever happened to enny peeple, rho it wuz nothin More then could be expected to grow out uv the altered' relashens uv the races to each other. It wuz one ny the lega cies left us by the tyrant Linken, and by ne meens the least uv em. Under the old patriarkle system, it wuz the custom uv the niggers to go by the name uv their trooly patriarkle masters,wich wuz nes sary, and not only neasary, but proper. Onto every plantashen ther wood be , feesers, Han niWs and Pompeys, and the only way to distingrish era wuz to ' call em Ceeser -Po gram, rMnnibal Gavitt,et settry. This sheered very well ez long ez they wuz in a state uv ekriptooral servitood; indeed, the proud Can cashen masters rather liked it than otherwise, ez the frekency with wick their names wuz called indikated the extent uv their posses sions. But Bence these cusses hey sot up for themselves it aint so pleasant. Now that they kin own property and . perform all the func tions uv men, the same ez any one else, ithez become distasteful to the Corners. It is a singler fact that the . Corners kez diskivered, since the niggers wuz set free, suthin they never knowed afore; to wit: The-niggers hez an odor onlike the white. When they wuz slaves, and used to miss em and „play with em, and wait on em, and'sich, this odor wuz not! perceptible. It hez developed Bence tmancipashen. jes so with, ther nanunt. „in ther normal cendiahen it war. well—sence,its a degradashen:the Corners won't brook, no how. j Deekin Poram and Issaker Gavitt per tikelerly chated under it. They mourned and lost flesh under the inflickshen. "To think," sed the Deekin "uv a hundred niggers bearin the honerd name uv 4 Pogrom!". "To think," syed Issaker Gavitt," ny a hundred nigizers bearin the illustrus name uv Gavitt!" And so they petishened the Legislacher at Frankfort to releeve elm by pass* a law perhibitin niggers fmm bearin the name uv white men wick . 'wuz their former masters. The fact 141 red out and thiSlinbrollo wuz the result. Pollock the Illinoy store-keeper, wick is a disturber, imme,litly seal Joe- Bigler for a store debt,' and , lied him hauled up afore square Punt. Joe immeiltly subpoenaed all the citizens UV the Corners ez Witnesses, and bed em all the Court ,renta.. "Cowie," sed Deakin Pogrom "severe lie and let me go. I don't know nothin about this 'matter any how." - ' ' "Not yet," sed Bigler, "I hey other testi 'monY wia I Vikel put in; Mr. Constable , call lEbtrudide Pogrian. ' The Deeken started ea if he hed "And eh we 'kin save thaSyooable time uv this court by swain uv em in a lump, yoo may call also Pompey Pogram, Joanna Po gram, Ceeser powam,riaeorge Washington Pogram (Re fismalbecoz, like the first G.W., he coodent,tellnle * %doh is proof poncloo siv #tat titylet Pure*tick anO , haint got no FO bloofi idaialns), Molloy Pogram, um FOgraMo ,ClOPPatra ROgrf#ll, Paul Merle -j4torittqitegrikoo,: , Bona 'AN' ha - Pognun t Oherkea Watley, Pogram, ?* . 1 1 3 i'Weriltahrl inoan' , 3 6 1 b oa. ' 8Z they 10.1 70, 1 4 at do yoo court all tit ° "Wat 401 4 ' ' ,Orreilieo is It to Yoe -neer InSi witnesses—'by these tatei. figent freemen I repose to prate , that ter ounliVoLE COUNTRY. Pollock a perjered villain and a. most Uncoil" shunitble swindler." . And he grinned at Pollock,. Who winked wickedly at him in return. "And I," sed Pollock, "to save time, mite ez well hey my witnesses swore. Issaker Gavin stand up." 'maker arose. "sow, Mr. Constable, call Pompey Gavitt, Melindy Gavitt, Augustus'Oavitt, Petronella Gavitt, Lycurgus Gavitt, Abslum Gavitt, Moises Gavitt, Judith Gavin . , Jeffersou Ada* ' Martha Washlugton' GaVitt, Paskel Gav—P stin t ' to be swore with all these niggersy'' roared 'beaker, red in the face. giit ee l y:t 7 04,4 kiciutm4 Pant, " coa l „per_ "But ice mat," eel Bigler. "Ez &sprit a wretch.ez it this Politick, ez deeply ez ke bez wronged me, ez much ez 1 loathe, hate and despise him, be shel _hey fair play in a court uvipstis. Even shoed he beet me an& crush meneath his iron heel, I insist that, be ,shel it a l rites. But the Squire hed better &wear first. " And ez they generally don't like trouble with 13iglar, the Square, pale ez a goat, fir he didn't imortwat wuz comin, swore the pile. "Now;" sed Bigler, " Ceeser Pogam, stand up. CeeSer, do, yoo know, the naeher uv an oath ?" "Yes,• sah !" 'Mho wuz yoor father, Ceeser ? "Don't know, ash." "Is your mother in the room, and hen she bin sworn?" "Yes, sah." .."Yoe may set down for the present. Will Melissy Pogram. arise?" The wench got up. "Now Melissy, state to the court the pa ternity uv - poor eon. "I object," shreeked the Deekin. "What hez 'that to do with. zoor owin Pollock a store debt?" "Is this your case?" retorted Bigler. "Are yoo defendant or plaintiff herein? Melissy, sneer. No, Melissy, on second theta, to spare the blushes uv the Deekin—to cast the mantle uv oblivioh over the peccadiloes uv his yooth—yoo needent miser. Do yoo want to cross-examine the witness, Mr. Pol lock?" "No !" returned he. "Lyeurgus Gavitt, stand up. What rite hey yoo to bear the name Gavitt?" *pi may faddef's name.", '"Ti with pertikeler Gavitt do yoo al ood . "The lately deceased Elder." " Then yoo are half-brother to Inaker ?" "Too may Sit down. I will state to the court the ob - ick , nv these question's, which, without asp ashen Inv *appeatirrelovant. Mr. Bifiler and I woad unanimously ez to haw. OAS soot sheW be conduCtor _ igg9i's alone ktIOVIUIO.4* UV (rani= that. un fortnitli anxliatween ns, and knowing that the pure African wuz unworthy nv beleef, we deter/pined to rose only sich ez cood show indisputable descent from good trustworthy Caucashen cidzene. Hence this preliminary eggsaminashn. We hev here the niggers uv mixed blood from every plantashen in the naberhood, and we she! reject all who ant show mitt blood. Their evideace must be taken, for to doubt the word nv the sons and daughters uv sigh men wood be the ht3ighth uv presuinpsken, and an insult with they wood be justified in resentin." "Certinly," std Bigler, "and let's git at it. Bonaparte Fovea], stand up." "Hold," shriekt the Deekin, observin that . Mrs. Pogram bed just stept into the room; "how much is at istwo in this yer soot?" "Ninety-one cents and the costs that hey acrood," sod Pollock. "I'll pay it," retnarkt the Deekin, ner vously, "rather than'hev this farce go on. Don't call no more ay em—don't. Here's the money." "It can't be," sed Bigler, "I'm bound to crush that Pollock." "Don't perceed—don't," yelled Punt, Mc- Pelter, and every . other white man in the room, ez they notist their wives droppin in one by one, "it's really too small a matter— reely It is." "Well," sed Bigler "ez there appears to be sich a yoonanimous desire therefor, I hey no objeckshen, on them terms, to forgive Pol lock," and the cusses embrased in open court, While the Deekin, MePelter, and the rest uv em wuz a paying the niggers their witness fees. Ez they wuz a leaving the Court Room, Bigler sung out— "Deekin, of yoo send on that petishen to Frankfort, I shel send on a protest, provin thet eery one uv the niggers who bear yoor name hey a nateral rite to it. Let it alone, Deekin, let it 'alone. 'El' the niggers lain stand the name yoo ought not to object," And he and Pollock rolled off together,laffis vociferously. It wuz a' plot atween em, to annoy the. Corners. Wood, 0! wood that we cood be delivered from em. The Providence Press, of the 18th inst., gives the following account of 1,6' trial of hose which took place in that city: "Tatar, oP trim of rubber hose, manufactured by the National Rubber Company, whose works are situated at Bristol, R. 1., came off this morning'at the,Ho2e Iron F oundry The hose experimented with is what is known as the four-ply hose; warranted by the Company to stand. a pressure of 150 pounds to tho square inch. At a trial tlds hose stood a pressure of 440 pounds to the square Inch." This is a Most conclusive test of the strength and reliability of rubber hose, qualities that every fireman will understand,' Every description of hose made bY'llris' company can be, procured from Mr. Riehind Levick, at the Philadelphia agency, No. 708 Chesnut street. arr. Foreiffn. The i]tendard gives the following as the text of some revolutionary circulars whlOh haVe bear distributed at Renneevitt:thetpnrt of the West nothing appeali to the popninee: the old Brf - of "bread;" g 7 not of ...4..., cor to bt vitt PBTEOLIATit V. NABBY, P. M., (liVieh is Postmaster.) India Rubber Hose. alum Nom oniacatas. Ttie eiairle pect Oros —Custophot ftecelpir—ltintreixdAss°. ciatts*V—illunday Altietteette eine s , Worteepottliente of the Philidelphis Eveziltet New Oniaraers, April B.—The anfittal soling meeting:on the Metairie Race Course will open on Satnrdey. It promises to be unusually latilthant and successfid. Theek &re is now in flee'creder, , • . There will bp many stables. from distant parts of the Country. Thelist of entries is alreadylargn, The crop prospects ara:getlendiy good. re , the lower part al the. BMW, there is ranch cotton up, with lour,•eta, mid even eight leaver Already. An unninalir lame area `of _land' is deirOted to corn; Meet Of tie*, hart slinidr hadi iirst hoeing, and is ilolog well. Sugar-cane *also fair. Greater attention than betetofore*patd to gardening. , Altogether theslgne , look tensed an • abundant itarrest One of the most faverable , of these is thefacreased thrift , Thelleitraructi fences bear.tutmletakable mnatts- of . they Improvements which could some only from fnereseedindastry. The commercementenereiSes Oftholawllebool of the University of Louisiana , were.- held Monday. The degree of LL. 8., was conferred upon fifteen graduates. Meseta. John J. Finney and Horace E. Upton delivered addresses on= the part of the graduating cline, and Walter Rogers spoke in behalf - of the Alnmnh.' Mr. John Gauche, a member of the Common Council, died recently. He: was .a native o 8 France, but had, realded here for many , .yeann He was a man of great energy and deeishm ofr character. His funeral was attended by a' large numbertaf the Whose of the city government. The receipts of currioms'at this port for the month of. March ansavnted to $545,815 00; this compares favorably with the corrmponding months for several years past. , In March,. 1807, , the recepts were $456;84158; in Merch,'lB66 , they were $468,840 10; while in March of 1865, they were only $66,547 05. The Howardssociation have published a re port of their operations during the peat. year. The total amount of contributions to the funds et the AssociatiOrt for the year was $108,866 49, and the expenditure, was- $88,324 66, leaving a balance en baud of more than thirty , thousand dollars. New York contributed . over 044,000;' St. Louis sent $9,401; Louisville,s3,B47 50; Cin cinnati, $8,070; Philadelphis,.s47o; Boston,sB,, 601; New Haven, $00; New Orleans herself gave $11,499 50, besides many valuable miscellaneous articles. During the epidetnie the Association, attended Ito 4,192 cases, of which only 340 proved fatal. The Orleanians hid a very unusual amusement at the Fair Grounds on Sunday last when a party of 50 Indians played some games, including that known as racquet or Indian ball game, and danced some of their old-frottioned dancers. The total number, of interments for the past we ek . was 75. , . . The general trade of the city shows consider able vitality. The trade with the interior is on the increase. Cotton is much, more satisfactory than the most sanguine factors and holders eonld have anticipated a month ago. The money mar ket is decidedly easy. Altogether, a few weeks have largely improved our prospects for the year. Sensual in than isetutte. [Washington Cot. of the Clnehusatt'fimumercha]' , TIM TWO D/LOHLOS SHY/MAN. I was .a good deal amused this', minting _tit see John' Sherman come in and Salute' Ma "brother_. unt Getio John glided to his sett.madpreetwaded. to' tiara , up. and' read ecarespcualmsee. andirons= ldidaolf for theeWleid work of :the any.. The Geßscsullokk,S.lrAle*: - • '' • f ast and disconne c tedly. in his 'crazy' -WaY. with fir Emile gestures. Both the Shamans are careless man. General Sherman has •is brain •larger Mtn:John% and he is apparently tOnbeara older. ;,Hu looks like, the • big brother who had been off to the wars; returned to find his little brother thrifty and economical. Tho little bro. ther seems to be very proud of the big one. and not a bit troubled to Mid that the people pay the latter' moat adula tion. Johnny is aware that the Addition-Stick Is net as mighty as the Sword. though on the occasion of the Stan ton imbroglio he came up promptly with ids pen and wroth a guarded financial article exonerating that - tenets' One can scarcely see the superior rminhoon of General Sherman in its full advantage till ha, catches John anal William together, as I saw them to-day. John Sherwin'. ia a fair looking man alone, a little "canny , ' in his expres sion, but full of inches and anxiety ant' public devotion. mesas his brother, his forehead degenerates, the lines of thrift chow too deeply in hie face; Matruh' hhi eye ten to to be a mere twinkle. The General's head is like a benoon; one Tecumseh-like tuft of hair sticks' cut • atthe back Of his head his bluegray eyes are all scliffillinit with mtg. gestions that come trooping by <Mick and thick. De cision holds his lips together, till his broad fissure Of • mouth seems to he the line between. wo 'situated hetet= 'Were*. Taking quickly. unguardedly. tbsolutely. lon a%) apt to Mistake the power 414 the man till, ou occsailn. you see him settle down from his flights of genius to reason gravely and ponderously as Adam Smith. a heroin' common 1t1156 as he is a miracle in &Mina relations with Johnson are as plenum today as ever TEE ACTOES IN THE nargactermrn TRIAL. [From a Bell Boy d to the N. Y. Indenendenti' There sat Bell Boyd. with very black eyes and a verY blue veil; a few acute behind her eat Richard ft Dana, of Boston. one of the counsel of Jefferson Davis. with a profile reminding one forcibly of the much-honored Sir Frederick Bruce, though not nearly so noble- a looking man; and, a, little, further on, Mrs. Ann titephene„ in queenly , array looking a very formidable lady of litwature. Below. the. Chief Justice, the grandest looking American in public life :brought down the mallet with feeble sound. and spoke in mumbling and muffled tones, the Radicals ad. dressing him as • Mr. PreaideatP and the President's friends as "Mr. Chief Justice." Before Ma desk, at the left hand, eat the managers of impeachment for the IllOnee, At the head of the table eat Bingham, with hie hands in his thin long hair. looking both web d and intellectual: , next then sat Logan, black and .miscue as an indian ; then Wilson, of lowa. a noble, •honest. leaking man; and, last on 'that aide, Butler, perfectly nonchalant, ',via, one arm hanging orer his chair. the other lying on the table. Opposite hies Was 'lhaddeue Stevens, in an armchair, apparently m 100: Physically he is se feeble that it is impossible for lam not' to seem a stock-figure to the scene in which younger men , act such earnest and passionate parts. Neat him sat f Mr.. Boutwell, a man of fine and distinguished face , whoselk nit y, earnestness and eloquence add much to the intellect ual weight of the house management of impesuilit, Around the table , at the left hand of the (Thief Justice, sat the counsel of the President, Mr, ,l'lrßlack. having forsaken Ma chief, who with char:scion/Mc! Obstinacy re' fused to follow his advice. Mr. Groesbeck eit y rn las place.; a gentleman whose Roman nose had so near exhausted the remainder of hie face that 'little else" was visible:," Beside him was Judge Curtis, 'Of Maasaehruetts. , a man , with a form and face resembling the Prollidenth own, Wm. .l. Evarts.of New York, rose for the first time: men his very impressive manner commanded the un divided Attention of the vast assembly, below and above. Be seems the pure type of the intellectual American— slight, thin, nervous; with intense eyes and clearly-cut nom lie is the only Republican in the President's corm. eel and personally is not in sympathy with him; lie be trayed it, perhaps. by showing less than his nasal elo quence, by making you feel that ' he did not feel quite at home in his unusual position but he could not bales' than, earnest and impressive: Stambery le tall, ereet, elegant, with a Duke of Wellington face. An Indianola, Duel—file MOO. Spilled—. Very AinnuslewSedrae• . [Correspondence of the Cincinnati 'Quetta] KOKOMO, frID., April la—Last Monday evening, sewing a crowd gathered around about "Wildcat" ,We ifigellea down and found to oar amazement two duelfids drawn up in line of bath). Tbiyarticulank as far, as we caw learn, are as follows: o young .. men of 'our oak, of the highest respaota fifty. _ got into '" ;a- difillmlty about a very' fine young lady of this placer,. which !emitted in one al, A. Lindsay) . Sending the!' other ( 0 . H. Le ach) n' COAllOttle 'to fight a duet with him, to which Leach acceded.' The place chosen by the seconds Ives the fertile banks of the Wildcat, Attila calling of nunabersone and two they were to face about,and at three fire. As the numbers one, two, were called, the faces of both grew Aa ,as dea t h. but the had steady nerves. At the pistol in Leac h'q hand was discharged, .to rind its refuge in 'an old stump near, by. while Lindsare. Ids' of failed to so off, it having napped. . Neither being inhu ed. Leach. drew ids coat end ealAthat he would now whip his antagoniat in true Indiana style. to which the seconds of both inter- f* red. saying, that wan not in the:bargain, for they agreed' that one shot should attttio the matter. I..eacb. therefore. put cubits coat' andnow they can be aeon walking arm. in-arm around city, as if nothiag had occurred to Jar their happiness. Thua ended the drat dual fa Kokomo.. The following iethe,beiligerent correspondenee in foil. as 'lnhibited in the Kokomo Tribune: Holcomb, Ind., April 2. thei.-.ollariett-ri admit the , fact: that we were both somewhat wrolog an our notgett word each oilier. lam wchnii to rerget and, .fg. la k but you appearto be 4 fightlat'and man a hem ea between tut. I will say, to rut' Okuuter,4kid._ a Ines ' apologise tp 31bot the , for vi e ? 'new Yee c arried. ,tas i , r e , Y o r hl i a!ld n jt friend ' , Cacr4.4aok4 , tlto 44 1 u 4kfiVe air 4. 9 1. 1, 14-1 44 eA o lefl let Vt . Pitt.? ta g 1 . 4 111!Pt rt alia 7 i $4llllO totes sir iseesssient f .„; Oh, Sumnier i dear ,dummeri tome - httefittit , „, „„, '• now - • 5"? 'Don't wait any 10*(0 10/4'nalt—;„; We're tired of winter , of co la , and of snow, Which now can't bemalled , "just the The streets'are fired up witkiee, -Water ? c?,t:011000 : The sidewalks are dirty and we t, The horse-can are filled witika`kitgulairui*oß And milking Is horrid; "you het .° Oh, Somiier Su inert Cores' . ~(4011;!;41 re sure of a Wan* welcome We've let April feel fit so mach MAC:We're IN* • And losing our• tempera, I fear. - Oar old overcasts are nownearly wont u • Thiel. hoots - ,lod are *Mak quite Of Arctica and rubbinwvalibtiag since were And our coal getting law _, Summer! dear Stanmert 011 .1N417e:11019 ,L 4. Of winter we've had quite euentgl4-4.4 ‘'t" Mike forty-two snow-Moroni alt a cans re 't That. we've aot been:used rather' "" Onr sortittide's e, and now n l ionkathieks , Al(aigns are discouraging ‘ tea. , • - • So, Sasamer!dear Summer! , do pray is4kric t , Aid a.CI w ill say "bully for you." • again marries Mkggie Mitchell, —JOU hs a eritiftntateelhOslfif„.,, —*ince Alfred has giVes *OS to the p.**aouni Acuticraila. - - r liieverV Tacker is; Sick isrOttuda. , lb** be still Bieber if he conies to Um Vished,Stittesw,.. —Beecher's advice to a pooryoung man hi istibto` marized.:_get married and run Indebt tor slaw —The Queen's journal - has been Prentleeengestapaylngoff the nagiLrial by selling the lee of Wslnmate. —The book-binders of Washlngteri hive bumf fancy dress hall. : , , - „ • Jefferson, the comedian, epent last week? at Munmoth - cave, in Kentucky. ' —The earthquakes, reported Inllqew Engiand, are generally, "no great shakes." • • - —Only six men In Cincinnati are taxed income over $50,000. - —The Aster estate is valued he rio o#6who.p4":, teases to know at about $144,4100, —A new magazine Is to ke precipitattee* on I;it-; , don, under , the editorship of Arthur a Beckett. —Tennyson has a poem—"Lucretiusn—im the' May ,3faczailtan, which we, kope wll) be better. than his other luenbratlons. —New Turk has 235;000 smokers, according to the oust of a reformer. Not hiehiding , .• neye, oteotuaosp =Hepworth Dixon has published a vindication of his - Spiritual Wives" in his A theurnm, , under • " his own signature. • ' • —The armies of the world are now said to be , larger than ever before Since ,the ginat'yranspc," Napoleon. ~—An English lishtneeker kelpie itititself ' S2llOOO fine for selling shrimp 44 Theigult, considerately let him off with twenty obi/Naga. • —The New Ir 4 okaruststr * Adver*o - 421114/4 , : ,, ' this April will be known py its andiron filtliker than itashowers. • • ~ • ' " 0-. 1 —Threeßol ese professors haVe'heen inn; radettd an .lo46lllo't astibeiri44l. Georgia paper - ,heads Its swami of OA. murder of Hen. G. W. Ashburn, at Colutatiris i '. "One Enemy less," and virtually . it!stifite.the —That very unsuccessful machine, the liteant MB*, islands the stilpiect of description, disetta.- ; don and confluent in most of thranglistt --"fleury Ingalls", says te has founds printed play by lihalcespeare, called "Albutnazar4 ' "courts inyestlgatlon" of his alleged Mscoyerry„ It bears date 1675. , , —Cardinellionaparte's title of f3t. Padontitusiii. a. delicate empliment, !Wends Wag , the Ant Item= woman who sheltered the apostles ins the days of Milan& • ' —ht Thomas's opera of Hamlet the mertindudr • • Dane Is said to stab the King and live tivettany. some one else taside Ophella. The compaserAW Dansed Eihakesptare's story. , , t --, • • —The various Christian Sects in the United States are said to expend $6,060,000 annually In the support, of :their ministry. That is about , • half as much twit righteously ought to be. —Madame Celeste hag arrived at LOnrfoo front Australia, and will take her farewell of ttut ' stage 'tinier the patronage of the Duke of lillitte — " burgh." . • . ~, ~, —A - merchant in Ripley, Tenn., though tip, , .• play a praetical joke on his clerk by "pia A 4 robber.' Be brake into his own store, witm, ~ clerk fired through the door, severely , wonadfag: , the merchant. .• , , . -, .., .i • , , , —The Protest ant Chtirchincul ,thinks that:•::an**, ~7 probably ihipoirablelhat the ,ol relations of. the ~ .. different parties in the, Episcopal ChurchA eau i • ever be resumed. But the Ckurckaczn is net wiser, ) • than the rest of the world, . ' • , r FrsrlehlreM, who.,was arrested InlB4/ A thr i s . " crying 'Wive l'Empeveur," was sent to Lite oilier daffor sltoutlng)"Vtva la repnb 'Eke judgo told him he must not only learn what.. to ery, but wheat. , • —Permanent barracks for the accommodation' of one thousand men are being erected'; at lanta, Georgia:. The apartments of , lineetunt officers and men are separate.. , TheCdrit bet , : ',) l ' .150,040. • —Tbe latest alarm , iir regard Or. diet ,litllntst.... l leged discovery of,. a , minute insect in sugar. , It nee ,:not alartn us Very' tench, as In s ~i nuts insects pervade the air we breathe andltrr', in and upon everything we eat and 7 1 ;`,r ;$;: —Canova's statue of the First Napoleon :I,oslata.- • under the reign of Jerome stood,* th Etats * WestpWis, but Was it 18 Wr and brohnn, baslust been found in a, ,1 the garrison at Cassel., The Preach ~;1100' , applied to the Prussian authoritlea, for , • 9nuti- liteil e lZ i g. n It is found that they;cannaelly be uni: —Juat. 144. years age a Benedictinelmorras • burned, et the stake for heresy . In Pat er r and ,to cover the, exPesse an Iselstsel • tine has . . been exacted from Itee, lesegyk :? up Vv. this ...time. The represeutatie& of the family now appeals, ; to-theltallan went for relief from theltupOSition. Rougkon the family, decidedly. . —The foolish and: importune deouimmAnt oft 41, soldiers at Carliele Barracks, Pennsylvania; ;that held a meeting .= and paseed resolutions; denotneod.'''' ,o `. clog •Impettelpncet t and pledging thePrealdtaltko'lis 'their support as armed men, hate bean seat toino" , .a the . 4 . 0 . 1 en frontier, and the commander of 1b1e'444,0 u re a-, eiLEWUIL PEN THREE CENTS. ' ' • •,,cr rALOICEIPMD/V1(04111101:, ;...,.. , ;;;! , ....: 7 . .. , ,,r r „1,1,.:t.01 . , : ,- .: 1-,. ::;•::':-.; - ...Y.....jlii..; - .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers