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I , .--.._ ..-_, •---=2-7 " -- ~,, -- - Pr ! r. 1.-.....- - , - -r... ,- .^- !---- -..-- \,,,, i., . - _ _ . . • ''''r , l"" 1.1- ' - " A 0 g _ : . ,•.:•, C - . .!,•..,, .::•-• A.: • ::,:. -A , . . ... . _ , ..---- -,.. - -----,- •-, .. .- - ' ' " • LIM'LIM=- , ~.:42:.,i,1 : ::: 5 .... ';'..g.:,!•.i 5 - '••• - •'"--‘1-1 ' T . A ~,, Meeting of the Freedmen's -.- Aldlociety. '.- ME AN. OVERFLOWMG ATTENI)LNCE: What the Society hasatecomplished. 'INSTRUCTIVE STATISTICS. Addresses 4briMajor General O. 0.. .Hcrerfkrd9J•../•• i ang a tan i „ _ gighlai!d- 4 4 1 :SsfAt”: Last evelaktiVtir i!*EPPOIi; meeting, in behalf of the lreedmen's Aid! 'Comm:dud= of Western Pennsylvania, *as held in the Third PresbYterian Church t. (,Rev,, F.,„A Noble, prior) f Slith aye- 4C - ieetink - instance of the Amrie Missionary Soci ety of the !few q3cltool Presbyterian church, into the Commisslon had beit iudi tt en zutti oe,v 4 t el a_ll im d iti sttrac to t o e v d er 7 owin ismn g ense the cpmmodlnuseditice which it assembled. The r **mPn4 l 4; 4 ogecaba. with% r ItS.la e eboittaftei , Bev. J B Clark lurked the Divine Bless ing nport the enterprise:and the ministers, officers ana:-TAssAirtii#44o chunk which had aasuniet theremcaldhititir . of'oiirilhg out thwObject.. -fOr_widoli.Wwes organized:” Rev. p.; A. Noble ' read the ndred and ildit.)4troond hyntil; In AI 'Stoking of tr,.gtotPc 2 810.1 01 4: forced. At the oone 4 *of thhi iiiirAck t 4l44. Mr. , Noble, ?n.a few pertinelit7retuarim, intro dbOett Ho ~ the menla Bureausitird c°PireF av W e d hil l follo wi ng : who • address : i,... ~- ~ - --eS A- -- .,, :- , %-: nemoinictokr„lvesteiurs; --.:.,, e.4.,03 Cochhi, in his resume of the results _Of enrurticipstlen l iinksti %%How sit raised , to the riMiii:of e a- freeman,. By three, de itress—rOlkl- Ors . fillittiY, - . Property - . - ' Him does the freemeritledead to the leiverof a ' nblvgi'';:TP7t I. l3 nixtg - .loPnr i y%, - fIFOPY;7,et ligion." - . Now, these three "essential geode," mho calls -theil44iiipit , education. It is. Dot ' 4 lrnitta:toOlet!qtdk:%thek...ll4 l l44 :-of -men, toe exercise aerciat of these important ' , late: . 'silent .-..stf„ civil ly-I%4nm t'There must, . be. mottee-poice#- , brought , 'to ..; bear ` ` to .! se.' core,tks-propex ; sanctity of tke family; secure the-;establisninenti of pure re new, free-from the debasing influence & superstition, and , to render prop9rty in any degree permanent or_ valuable. 11 Eels*. session. The Motive power, this awaken ing, living preserving /ince, is education, nthvomo cm want= Trott. z ...••• ~ • - After emancipation in the several West India Islands,. a coloniit wrote thus : "Great indulgence is.' nesided'3owardirthose who „ have experienced in their lives both the weight.f the chains of slavery and OS' boundless joys of freedom.:, Their memo ries are not sufficiently effaced them to continue to seek the ergovieent ef idleness after a long day of labortz . ttitle*lll be the fault of the colonists ifjbe, children of those men are sufrenidstelpiest-to become a re. 'mach and *wimp the country." So it will' be 'one Inuit -if the children of the late slaves,: are _pot ,educated. Educa tion, has aoooMPUObjea liti;ithe.',West s ll%- dia islands, and has ' brought it to pass ..0571731,Witerg•ri4P' PrOollskt.eff time, succeeding , emancipation, the greatest results. - 'The.-FaineselpideiC . T.taN% there salvos been beneflted,b y it, but their next succeedingfinf*VOn'bnvd 1 ainifoldlY .0 1 -, lablISC the.=ffitiri/of r 434te4iOnst work. Wherever this work has been neglected, or in any war,.'hlnders43 , 4 l wvoyerning classes the.desirees- of OpstreSiChave been smallVen" , t , .. ,-:,/,'-,. -.. , ~. •:,,, ,-: , ,:-, - - -• Tnelifstoribff-A.ftreaktill 'with sixty of seventy years, presents a gloomy picture, Historians settled dowftrupon the convic. don that the diffietdty_Was organic, and the peat mass of,Wrilees: , okbitseAt - that rea aonhtgs solely uppnlthe material wants men, constantly_ enunciated : the doctrine of the aettltd laferiorityof thcr black man, and the ! utter 11W - of attemptitigle - rsise him to positions that 'God never fitted him to odeupy. Asetkaftet.lace,-pOople.efter f people, have ' lad thii.%chainir - of -slivery strickentrim their Embs, and have had the: appliance, At. civgizgies Jrrejight to bear upon 'thein;linA ,ft'',-theY-littie been raised „trent, supentitteli t 4noranee , and, cmlniiitsl4.4*l444K4At Puke,tkzTA With marmot% tii'arno.. . could, _mi7tne _, , _ ' time be , maid YoDarknsair mrerth the d.: . a t n o l c irosedirknoteitsrpOPle": 'The sap ' causes of this 'perpetual - night are , assab/04 1 4110 neglect „ of the Awards(' of the same appceeilletliinidiud4lnVisiat England • • ARP ,:-/Wninntriut to vili __jrizatien. I mean the usual apidiances of, Christian clidlisation, as miirsions, colonisation, com merce, With - - .thelr, Schoola, char es and per. -prinifig tlielf 'lrdipiences *dm the i almost eMlleas night of Africa, men deciare to tneftluentlY-that-if Abe MeltrOeeln-thik country - anoi-lwiseParate4- completely from all contact - with -- thehiirhit4 l they woad ptiffinilly - ileadeild 'ln - the 'scsle of eivilliationLp e birth to new superstitions ; and idols -d, in: process of tithe, be come wlutip smeestore_were,Y itc• most unlumpyiktid , ” ditid peoplif:lf-thie be tz true, it proves unless it can be de , nunistrate4 that 'meth will not the result witli - othee - recia-iiiid Veople: :,'• How '• Is It . with all those nations'that 'have risen to plinicles orgraildeneand then declined in •vel7 idi entgl ofehhltration.and now are only , mini oast tdattot ~! . '•• _: •,, • s• . • HOW IS it leith.chureh caganisms that once bid - the . piti e ,: a i n i - l e gmiplef , but now ezhibiChut faint traces, it, merelya mare •of IniPoWnltliiiik'indll ' ir-:littee?;.Tric e v h be tine thilVtli*`„wiird f - Brawl -• down ward-by them:slits:WAG u n teh -g reaterts the necessity of never 'cutting -thanikidesnfrank ~the civilizin g . influences : that have now be= come tnetrtiortion 7 Fortunately they are so thQiiat - teMitigliid truth men Oatli; every pan of the world, they are so thor oughly in posseosioe of the , :English len -Wage, so well moulded add 'developed by , our Christian systems, -so deeply im'bued with: the -gran& spirit' of :,- our liberty= : making institutions,, that i a separation, 1 an isolation•like that spokennf is an abso ,, lute impossibility, a mere hypettaisis. They are among us, they are of as, and they wilLtto doakt continue with lie to .the - 2.;,.:1.1 . 7-,5:4. -? , ];:.:::;7.-.'1''.'; • • end,,a that the .sooner we trample : upon mere prejudice and folly the better. ABOLITION OF THE SLAVE TRADE—MISSION URT EFFORTS AND OTHER MEANS OF EN- Within seventy YearitheUlavee trade has been abolished. Civilized nations have . ' taken active measures to reclaim captives froni mid-ocean, missionary efforts have been unremitting, frOMHarepe end-Amer na; z t h e ' Republic of" Liberia has been established, and emancipation _bee trans fired in • the British, , (1833) Frftch, 1NO) (1848) Danish. - (1848) Elm,. h, (11346). , AbUD1U - dir(lBC)`z.cOltinies, and lately in the 'United States. In Liberia and at the English and . American stations along the coast, the People have the advan- I tag° of the English language, and the An thill • literature with theigood ;influences which must always flostfrOnithein.'• These places . are now becoming :not only -the nuclei of every kind of posititre Christian • work, bat also the centers of trade, so that' commerce, too, is brio out and, exercis ing its wonderful el zing _forces.. • PROGRESS OF EDUCATION IR *MICA. 11 ^F.MOSt remarkable :diets are brought: us from Africa: the estiblishinent:of schools and colleges, the inflowhig of, people from the interior`brought under the influence of civillzed imple, and the outfiowing of thousaide of strewn* of civilization more or le%pute. t•We lupin - that the eagerness for govedinstructlari Is so great in interior towns that the people restrain the mission aries from leaving them to visit other places, 'fearing they will not return, and give them 4 / greatest attaitlon, • e have seen: that , till the -beginning of this century, there was a deep, impene trable gloom hanging over the African ..centm, „titeao.,viho., have,taten- toni tlieir ; native. shores ii and (tarried away to different quarters of t,ho globe, and sold to American - and Euro peen Masters, are, through-thskir children, blessing those Wholume minted them; and these children are retiftningitfthe land of - 110 Ir Whets laden with knowledge, with language and With the flible v te carry, good tidings of Veld . joyto their friends in the veryteglonfrof darkness. How, what further part are weAtuericans to act in this great work that „is - .beilltt_ s o-,' leomplished? We brought the negates here as alavesi'yet, In the providenotinf God;' in Spite of laws to the 'OO nt r a trtll 1 4 Vita Or projudicekend hatredlgrowing outuf *false eystem, in* spite of We evil, passions and, appetites that shivery/bus engentleted,great• benefits have been center r ed • upon the. olaveS, se - that it is int a *punt which lib- - arty ~wiliZprobe, which 'good management and good government :will' STArS PROM AN EPI7CAIONAX:VOTIPP Or VIER. In an educational polnkt,of view Plitt the present statnaut n fin this coon+ try? -To jeivkeny tatigitd* idea upon this 'subject, it:Nvoild be neotasiarYio *Marfa tenadvely Into detailsving the: number of schools, scholars, tea chers, etc.. - Even this would glee no complete'view of the edlicational work, .for, in:freedom. Men and women learn what they Could not know in 'slavery. More l methandes lare learning trades. They are-lighting against tradenunlims composedof > all taws but 'theirs.. The aohool•of ,povertY-14- theusands-andltionsfta to nelitrelianoci; to;frugidity," to the wring of their small, earnings.: They are learning totniffic, they, nre purchasing laud, and providing for their cultivation, and they:are learning how , to govern-as well as to be governed. 'Ver . ," ~ many churches,; every Southern Legisla= lute, every owtendon, every': political '. •Cluli, must he regarded - as n positive source Of knowledge. Newspapers nein the NOttl44 that a few years ;ago could not; penetrate ,into the SoathernStatm, _ere now read night - after night' ixt. ?bon's colored men: No &obi t prejudiced• me n. even in Washingtonentettain" Yoe by the ' day with stories of the-hatless, careless habits of . tionr„ negro, and of his general tvorthlesentkag yek . U.'e 'faCtlhat itt popu lation of upwards 0f„, 3 30,90(1.• ..lotedpeople,. less thenowtho indigent brie; marhable. -thaw hopeful signer' .Its poll le estimate of the number of pupils brought within 2 the' Influence of inatinction)stililluo fact stares, win the face that only abent,'onetenth (if the *doted popUlationlas yetteen reached by the schools fWe know from experience that three yaork of training cannot.prOduce scholdia. Few are able yet to pass the dinau primary college examinations. Two millions, at least, of ,people cannot-to-day read the word of God.. While we claim for them every " . right. that,; to men,' ...stilt we cannot 'help', pondering upon .. the fdingera to libe , to- ClirisdaMty, to civil izationn y:Avrapped up In such a mass of ignorance. The enemies of education, the enemies of ;.freedom, the andirdeffOf man, never cease to hatp upon this string: "The ignorance of the masses of the colored people." I know. they are respowible for it,. and they strivetuate this ignorineo by burningchotol ,, houses, by ostracising teachere, o PerOtual ants 'establish their theoryOf the absolute inferiority Of the negro; by thti•Veryt,cinetVot voice.. that , deny him the' right of *mitlihbed," by every: species, of intimidation 'and - opposition, int= malicious lying to open blows, often` culminating irr riot and murder. ' Stillr the herd fact remains. -'How plain; then, is the dtity of the, friends of humanity to acquaint themselves with the situation as it is, -that. they may , bring every possible influence to best to multiply the means 'of knowledge. 112 EMI .•;• , • • , , , In ordertofeel forcibly the necessity of educating the masses of: the negroes, one shoitld travel considerably through the fikitithi s 'atid vittit dlifeitentassemblages. The, lismtrikettietween thbse schools w hich have' been in`operation for the past three years mider good teachers, and thcorregentlyes tablishedtAit ant*. to - attract attention. Schools like the one tn ;Atlanta, 6a., ex! , .hibit . remarkable fruits. The modest, quiet aid orderly d e po rtment of the pupils,: their culture in sin reading, or re citing, indicate the fac not'only that they are rising, but that they have already risen far enough to - exhibit fair acquirements and - good prothise for , the future.. Theaftbot of such a school is*Vemarkable upon the pen- Pled The families from whick,thesoholars e have gathined'in it little Of: the "line ttOorrlitte• and “precept,,. upon preopt," which ]rave pint , edao beneficial to then bil dren. -Wherescheols • have never been es tablished,'where neither parents ncor chil dren have eye r been gathered lido - eV' kind of SOW/04' these poor people exhibit far leis intelligence. Their religions. moth* 111 :6101 1 lances we apt to afford'nolity exhibitions of Ines-, Mario excitement instead of sound and joy tful Christian demonstratiomi. - Many min isters assume to'Preculh who impart little or AO information ' but - merely. by their , man -.13,er, - work t,henisalies and their people into n a io sof , frenzy, difficult to dual and very objectiOnWe. - - • - When visiting three of the Witham Leg islatures I listened to speecheehom colored man Fthatsubjected, themto ridicule, not, from' a wank ofgood sense trip speeches but from their inability to the Eng //eh age oOrreetly....E ry too Man slonpathi7istwillt them, and.-makes all due allowance for the errors exhibited.' I cungladtaintAble testate that many. colored members of . the legislature exhibi PITTSBURGH. , Mo.hl D :Y, NOVEMBER 28., , tea not oulyilue . nat.ive talent but pa aine,ll aegreti ditnittire da'tilaplttyikit !the peer language which they, need. - BDUCA.TIOIif..4TI3.REFESSITT ASPROTBOTPIN „At Bastrop,' Teiaa, a r colored 'Mak cantle' into the office of the Bureau - Agent, begged the agent to go with him.; and help him sell bia-gotton.,- He could,not. read go figures on thescalabeam odd that drth , ' less tlze 0 1 ) 1 1cer,Wp with him teetradetittas !Pre to 7 deceive"' hiin A. - niodictimicir knowledge would:hive afforded him pro tectiork, _ . Bad men.- not including - the teiiindoil. carpet-bagger and scallatiag, have gone into Southern States for the purpose of robbing *very rieople of their, honest "earnlags.' *very species of fraud is resorted tb,:and too o ft en with - celdsiderablesnbcess. , ' ! One may studylkciety in the schools; the churches, at the places of trade, on the; plantations, in the houses, in politidal sgatherings, on the steamers, or ,elsewhere, and froin every posSible point •,of view the necessity of education is•constantly exhib ited. Mentally,' Morally' and~ apirituallY_ this need makes itself seen arid felt. Northern men vtto are generonein their contributions,Wish to know why the South, ern people, white and colored, cannot pro vide for the education of their children. The answer is simple. On the part of those willing to - educate.them, there Ilan inabil ity; and on the part of those able, there ill an unwillingness.' Mat is the hindrance in the way of the loyal Legislatures so taxing the property as to carry into execution a' thorough system of cominon echools in each State? Why should northern people be called upon for voluntary contributions, to cartr,forward the 'work. of educlition;, when this is the case? The answer to this is, that it is the people that make np the State. If they are Impoverished, the State is impoverished. - . The political traiditien of these several States has heen 'such as to preventcapital and capitalists ♦ from moving. in that &reo. tion. Therefore r nny „SysteM o f schools is at present but a skeleton sinews or muscles. Under a quiet.and orderlyadd. ministratien, , which ~vre now „expect, ..yra. shall Ree-a.markod , entuagein itangleyettr. : The land, the climate : and the boundless resources - of the , 8 0 ,14 wilt roxuAttriott tide, of inlinlitiation from Its accustomed , accusto highways: , Men and means will-give anew life and energy te that and edit.= allied school . 1 01 41 70f* WW•grittitYlXtfet aw y in active operation. ' Then h ot` wait midi this state of things: shall:,. beirought 'to pass,. without endeavoring to do for the people what they ought to do for them. selves. The answer is, if we wait we will be likely to wait forever. - . - ' --,.. To bring -property , holders ; Jo • top - Any lan& in the e ducation of negro children, it mares aeractical demonstration, first of itoefigba ilMillexk of Pi urgiV,lo.the ,tecaplents t h emselves . This hasbeen done y the actual establishment of school& that are at present' -16CoMpllatilnir-What We claimed for those children. • , 1 . !'Such schools have teetc,estohlished in nearly all the cities lady.l4.lliteref-the South,' and nreindice and op . . Bon are lietrptev* vaY, . Yet; mY.ftlet4ti - are still ninediat rot; , e.To , stop now , tiiii happy surrender. 1 I,' ': ' DettPitate.e t ts rat2kiFbert l ii,i. .4.. sinsi Vt Staunch old s P. 'I es,, Who - limier ceased :to 'Support • the _twiny and. the ..!oeuttry: .4 , Now, air, I guess you have got enough of it," Such is the'cryef the weak an d wicked'in the midst of every, battle. This N,ttle for education is a great struggle for human rights; -it is a war of-great cost and of great sacrifice; but as my parlotio i step. father answered the lady just referred to, "though the ' cost and acrificeinay be treat,, Still the work must.be , done.":. - . Those of my hearers who may be tunio. quainted with the present prospect of our educational,. WOE *BY i l l q uire 4 °7 g " 1 the -ball& - • We answer therein every prospect of a successful faun % -,When I soy we , I mean . those of - us areengiged in thestrug gle. who are of:a ;sianguine,temperament, 'Who see in obstacles only. hal gplaces, .and in oppesition only new opportunities for activity, for vigor, for,laierificel and itiho hive faith in the black man, faith in _the , s'white, man, faith" in ilie - famity, , lhe 'school ' , the church, .faith , in the, past, the present, the future. faith in God. Mason- and;Dixon's• entrenched line, , breasted closely on the north with schools,. ' and bristling with oppteition °tithe south, .. bad to , he broken up: The VrarJ , Clid--1t.3 Schoolefollowed closely onlhe beelseftbs ' army.,•Tlie.ein' iiV,liitikethrinigVand 441(4 the land t the schools have been left to m entor IP, ". '' , ''' -.-% 1 7. ; (),!/ 4- ---' 4 - ~ ' , [Here the Onlieidiatie,itinnitiPiltiliinl exam ofpractim.l tittooess in the educe ,tion work , • referring, to the American ovary"; Association, with its forty' thousand pupils; the 'Union OimMission with about as many, the Methodist, Epia. „copal. Presbyterian and Friends Commis , sione and theirlahor. ,"' Then he demispare" ted theeagerneW 'of t ile;colOrtkpeople Ng' knowledge; they Contributedlast year some '8360.000.._ ._ ' Next he speknet.the opposition en • the part of some ignorant and depraved adored pepple. Also of the ridicule and hindran. ces on the part of certain whites. He re ferred to the'alAni6::Of the :i I S - 6 11 6 , 04.470 83 and preferred the grateful plaudits of those • who thought he , had helped them. Notwith, standing all oppositien. the" prospect it most Schools of all kinds 4;026; Pll - 241,819; amounts contributed fbr the year by beneveledt tecieties MO*. 'For a few moments Gen. H. demonstrated the neseasityof educatiOn in 'view of the wel fare of the riliole.ixnultry, piemoting order =in the families, the church, thecommunity. . Now is Oren ,some interesting anecdotes 41 tincouth, and strperatitious - -customs, on joyous and 'solemn occasions. Than, the speedy effects of the school` work is illns tratedey. ,strikitfg examples—at, Norfolic r . Raleigh; 'Atlanta - and' other f)laces;; Its compares the body politic with ignorant inasseS' tertlialititnan body full Of "sorenr The cleanaing-Power is instruction, strearas. of knowledge. , • . . . ~. • ' Gen. H.'s next point is. "This work of edtv cation ehmild• be Chriatian. " The neccea=. ties of the field demand thehighest Christian sharacter ,of theleacher,.the.okuiest:-walk with rod. ,The Christian teacher has the key to tbetneatt; others to'the mina. The word is timeelcmer, but for eternity. - "We dare not,na Christian believers, ben writing upon the tablets of tender - hear ted 'children leasons that do not tend to preeppaarree them _for that endless life of which ; Shia le" but the beginning." •The (lenerathensayst wo w , my , tongs, in view of the.remark: able history of this race, left for "hundreds' of years la) pagan- darkness, ;treated ' by their fellow men as ehattke, captured and shipped to.different parts of the globe and Watt Into keratosis - Slave:7. worked like the `mules and oxen to save tne white man's la-. bor and to seetimulate his wealth, used for his luxury and Sts' eenvenience, -Without • the *Pe of utenkttel. and. Wlthont, eY,_Ol l - 4 1 1 8 .,taltiklite I •bt ; llastruction-iiii *lee , - of their present efforts, their strnggleil may .Say r forknowledge; shall we not extend So than's - helping htrt''' " -.. • '.. ,4 .„ . In spite of ever y di sability= Sia - dOgra ol6;; tion, they have gridually, beeoine ,from ob- , Pxst of strifelind hatred in the ' world, ob." joat of .ohrliltteizt- interest' end sympathy. Asthe effects Of.divine truth:-may - becollie wore and raguicobssmablY felt among civil.: Ized -nations, these. nati on- began=to see • , .. .their iniquity. Jeteed no bigger than a 131111e5band l epreads , . until it envelopes theteholeliestoeinvEstin' sersecution i erninal indulgence,insatiable avarice, murder, ' riot and - tebellidn' haying, _been, made Instrumenta in:- GIRO liandadti - ,:tifitible,them knoiviedfie,wealth, christlan ity, and t u d r yttivel energies from -the4lo.- tions where hey were captives. 'Their children " to, the-Aand of: , _ their . tathersiladen with theseprecious spoils.. In full-view of, the ScheoN.bolleges and 4 dniversities that • have sprung into exist ence in thiS' . .PoAntrY; Whet* net are acltic itriy.drinklng from the fountains of knowl mige,Os avaconteMplate Mir . on 4°49 as we . cent - Obviate :In° -part . _welia4 :per: formedin m1'001 , 006 too do far the; inind- to compass - an - enter rise where evidently the Ilueld 0f..-tho-$ p ity bas !Shaped its„ beginning has fashioned 'its proportiontatal tunignided itscompletion whet can we savf.Shall we say "step” and. 'soutane 'coat r Shall- we sigh over the tax ? Stuillmre-'.xeckona what we have donef for , shnrches- arid schools .at home, and= enunciatethe - anti-chriatia4tanti? bible dtatitrine; that- -cWty and ;ends aVlioilset . --Shall -sayfoi t-thent: take care of their own children," forget- Ong that sire' hive hid I . hand in`creating' weaknosainstsad4st; tart in - the past? ShalLantoty.l , Boi .0 rother's keep., -er ?f',- ShaThwEitrtist tint .I‘to' the - Liar.' rtow-minded,*: the prejudiced; , _the-tviolons andiunbelleabig, or to the careless and the indifferent; to-those-wh.,olAinking in the. bitterness of their owiesim axe so fall of gall that it neutralises`- all , their gratitude for past:favors 47:Shall - we - , even , commit this worklethode vtlfo`! are to edu cate, fittarhe.•With„eier, iDtte 'Dit*Pt perNtially: , din : 'the ears'. of .:their pupils Idea of ~inferlority_apd incapacity ? Shall re not bather ptiventiolienda td , the plow „ amt. ,lool i c forvrardt Shall we, not,- press Sri With energy and *ittilerebideeey, `till we shall have , won the battle for hn inanity beStbid , ' Y4 . * •bp: , ward. and, Mkttard. In the -light - of, ,past . achieventepts,AUi the ;Ina blaze of pteoeta: Success, under the triumphal arch , cov /ered with •Ititiehli'-thimighlythb';‘: nditig pathways;:tistdde the gmves of 1300,00 q cow, ' panionSiald upon tho - Oer stiartificki*, holding - 4U-the distiatate . ; the torches and banners of that irrunaiktirthlii,4pi6Oeielatti which encountered ..and,nsfercame the"or eanized host of rebellio n` end Opened the way of tantalise' lihertig and odtmatlotanit.: jilt now been tramping . pnand on to secure .the frnitti'ef-416tory , T itk Civil :6intSW - fel: lowing still the old leader, him tipenwtitate 'banner is 2 *titan mho , insvhave - peaces;" what will-yes do,„Yotimlwit,fed the,' n/e-tmeNe'YienOiitlt, No , Ana =ore Into! tine•" "Pnrielelitetr." l gOert -stinil, --.1 - 0e life,' ever teardi'in the neig hborhood 'in srhloti-yon - titrey a l mouton=,by.v:annne,;•,: white p!%blasktchave ";Yenkelreg-stieededtir 'fraYee•leeekiniet" "Plefr;riever. Jog in? 'the' presence' - of thaV)Mait; Ina- - pince:of that fact,. I said7