11111 THE NOE 1 llo IV. U. JAC02Y, TcSIisfccr. Truth and Right- God asd onr Country. $2 30 in Advance, per Auirrrra. VOLUME 16, BLOOMSBURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 26. 1865. NUMBER 40, .J. THE STAR OF THE NORTH IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDKESD&Y BY tVM. H. JACOB Y - Office cn Sain St., 3rd Square below Market, , TERMS : Two Dollars and Fifty Cents Hn ads.rrce. II not paid till the end of the eaTr, Three Dollars will be charged. iNo subscriptions taken for a period less nan six monins J no a.6couui.u led until all arrearages are paid ucless at k,k,.,;( ... . RATES OF ADVERTISlFa : ' , TEN I. INKS CONSTITUTE A SQUARE. , "One Squar-e, one or three insertions, SI 50 , ; ,Kvery subsequent insertion, leas than 13, 50 ' 'Oae column one yeaT, v - .. ; 50 00 .Administrators and Executors' noticea,3 00 Transient advertising payable in advance, all other doe alter the first insertion. . . mischief mrn ' T)h ! could rTrete in this world be found Some little r poi of happy ground, Where Tillage pleasure might abound ' Without the tillage tattling I ' How doobly blest that spot would be, Where all might dwell in liberty, , Free from the bitter misery . Of gossip's endless prattling. . If such a spot, were really fcnown, ! Dame peace might claim it as her own, And in it she rrikt fix her throne, . " Forever and forever; -...-.. There like a queen might reign and live, V While every one would soon forgive The'little slights they might receive, ' '" And be offended never. , Th9 mischief makers that Temeve . From dnr heart! tire warmth ol love, And lead us all to- disapprove What gives anotrrer pleasure They eeera to tafce one's part ; bnt when r They've beard yonr cares ; unkindly then They soon retail itrern all again, Mixed op wr.h poisonous measure. And then treye such a cunning way . Of telling ill-meant tales ; they say, "Don't mention it, I pray, - - I would ooi tell another." Straight to your neighbors then they go, Narrating everything they know, And breaking the peace of high and low Wife, husband, friend and brother. Oh ! that the mischief making crew ' Were all reduced to one or two, - And they were painted red or blue, That every one might know them ; Then would our villager forget .To rage and quarrel, fume and fret, And fall into an angry pet, Wifb things so much below them.. Fcr Ma a sad, degrading part, ; ' . To make another's bosom smart, And plant a dazger id the heart We ought to love and cherish ! Then let us evermore be found In quietness with all around. While friendship, joy and peace abound, And angry feelings perish. Tu Aukij Lover. 'No longer a lover !" exclaimed an aged patriarch; "ah! you mis- mm H'wnn think ana hn hlnMPil nnl m v . . ., . . , ,, . heart- 'Though silver burs fall over a brow all wrinkled, and a cheek all furrowed, yet ' 1 am a lover still. I love the beanty of the maiden's blu3h, the soft tint of flowers, the singing of birds, and, above all, the silvery laugh of a child. 1 love the star-like mead- owi where the butterenps grow, wrth a! most the tame entbutiasm as when, with . rav r!nolf flvlnrr nf.nm in lha win it nmt , , , . , . I roy cap it my hand years ago, I chased the ; painted butterfly. I love yoo aged dame. Look at her. Her face is careworn, bat it has ever held a smile for me. Often have I shared Ihe bitter cup of sorrow with her and eo shared, it seemed almost sweet. Years of sickness bare stolen the freshness of her life; but, like the faded rose the per fume of her love is richer than when in the fulf bloom ol youth and maturity. Together 'we have placed flowers in the casement. and folded the bands, of the dead ; together -we&tovcr little irraTes. Throuzh storm and ! u: v.--,. , ,i ' i J BUiiAiiuia wn ii a v a l uu lucktici. auu aiuw i - - (9 O - iha sits with her knitting, her cap quaintly frilled, the old-styled kerchief crossed white and prim above the heart that has beat so Jong and truly for me, the dim blue eye than "hrinking!y fronts the glad day; the sunlight throwing ber a parting farewell, kisses her brow, and leaves upon its faint tracery of wrinkles anselic radience. I see. thouzh 1 no crn else can, the brhht.-glad young face that wen me first, ehine' through those withered Fa at ores, and the growing love of forty years thrills my heart till the tears come. Say not again t can no longer be a foVer. Though this form be bowed, God implanted eternal love within. Let the ear be deaf, the eye blind, hand platsed, the finis itl?ed, the brain clouded, yet the Wrt, the true hea?f, J &IJ ob wa,lh tl Jova, that all the power of death. W$. the ifctsnozi cirt a shall nor vC t0 PDt ?ot its i3eoe!)!95s flame."- KiCtiT levels all artificial distinction. The fccggir on his pallet, snores a9 soundly as a kinj cn abed of down. Night kind, gentle, soothing, refreshing night, the earth ly paradigm ot the slave ; the sweut obliv ion cf lha worn soal, the nure of romance, of Mere . "cn. How the great panti ng heart of tcciasy yearns for ihe. return of night and rsit ! Sleep ia God's special gilt to the poor ; tor the great there is no time fixed for Teresa.- "Ht'JEAND, I must have some change to- day. V.V! vlav at fccmsj and take care of .it vi',i to chan; e'louh Adventure of Lord Byron. Lord Byron, during his residence at Ven ice, made frequent sea excursions, and one ol those trips involved him in circumstances of no small peril.' The privilege of attend ing him on those occasions was strongly coveted ; and there was not a gondolier in j Venice, nora .ailor ia the Adriatic, but re ....... .. t carded his lordnbip a his countryman, am lordabip countryman, and would cheerfully have exposed himseif to any -danger for his sake. Hs Jwas par ticularly fond of the island of SaDioncello, situated near Ragusa, and often repaired thither in a lour-oared boat, accompanied by the Countess Guiccioli and two or three other friecds. fie always carried with him the reqaisite materials for writing; and the countess, who drew tolerably well Irora na ture, took her portfolio with her. It is well known that aloug the coast of Dalmatia there are manysrna,d islands,aed on ono or other of these, the company frequently landed, lor the purpose of taking refreshment and fish ing and shooting. The isiacd ol Grossa Alinroe is a rock covered with scanty ver dure, only hall an English mile in length, and ot about ibe same in breadth. Here rbey went ou shore one morning, and there was nearly in the centre of the island a fine spring surrouuded by bushes, the only, spot which affords shelter from the heal of the sun they reo!vd to dine there. The gon dolier, too, left the boat, made a fire, and set about cooking fi-th, while ihe company amused themselves. After passing several hours in this manner, when they would have embarked again they found that the boat, bavitjg been carelessly fastened, had got loose, and they perceived her at the dis tance of two miles, drilling away from the shore. Grossa Microe s about twenty mile (rom Sabioncello, and none of the contig uous islands are inhabited. Lord Byron smilled wh-on ha Baw his companions turn pale : nevertheless, it was by no means a laughing matter, a vessel rarely eveT ap proached this spot : They had plenty of fowling pieces, shot and fishing tackle, and likewise a small quantity of provisions; but onboard the boat there were stores suffi cient for a week, and these were all lost. They hoisted Ihe chnctesy white shawl on a pole, as a signal of distre33; and spread mantles upo.i the bushes to farm a kind of tent. They had nothing to expect but to perish by cold and hunger, unless they were rescued by some vessel which might pre ceive the flag, or hear the shots which they fired from lime to time. Luckily, the weather was flue; the countess slept in the tent, and the other? streatched themselves like Bedoni-us upon the ground. As long as the wine' and brandy lasteJ, they kept up their spirits lalerably well, but after they had passed two nights in this manner, all of them became - extremely aneasy, and they resolved to construct a raft, forgetting that there was not upon the whole island, a stick more than a few inches in circomler ence. To swim from the island to another was utterly impossible, and Lord Byron himself began to be aMarmed, when a Ve netian, who was commonly called the Cy- i . clop!, because be had but one eye, proposed t ' ... a plan for their deliverance, and urged -by his own danger, and iuduced by the prom ise ot a handsome reward, he determined to pot it into execution. There is no good water on Sabioncello, and they had in con- 'elO0nce froogtit en snore a casic lor me purpose ot lilting it at the spring. falling to work with their knives, they cut this cask in two through the middle, and in the tick- . , , c ik lish kind of vessel formed by one of the halve-, the Cyclops embarked with a coup le of pole for oar. To keep up his spirits, i they bad previously given him a dram of ' brandy, and the company were over joyed ' to see that he preserved his balance per fectly well. He pushed out to sea, where his singular boat turned round and round ' with him, but in the course of an hour, it ! got into a rapid current, and they soon lost ! sight of it. They could perceive that this current set it towards the land, and their hopes of deliverance revived. Another night passed, and! by daylight the following morning, the Cyclops, hailed by a general shout of joy,arrired in asij-oared boat,with an abundant supply of wine and fruit. He had been driven beyond the Island of Sab ioncello, and not far I rom Ragnsa, and bad performed in his frail vessel a voyage of nearly one hundred miles. Lord Byron lib- era,,y rewarded him, and on their return to Venice he purchased for the Cyclops a boat as a memorial of that remarkable event, of which the latter was justly proud. Chatium. When streatched upon his bed, in the agony of the gout, it was report ed to Chatham that one of his official sub ordinates pronounced an order impossible of execution. "Tell him," said he, rising up and marching across the room on his wollsa feet, his faca Blroaming with per 6pi?aTiim tTOm ,e 0JCcrac'al'DS efforfj ''tell hini it ia theorJer of a" nail treads op. on impossibilities." - , The wild man of Oronoko said to a priest: "Thou keepest thy God in a church, as though he were sick and needed thy care. Our God is on the mouniain-top, directing' the storra,and guarding us in the still watch es of the night" : " - - . Trie law is the wall of a state and when a prince shows his head above it he de serves to have it taken off. . Why is the toothache like an unanswera ble argttmentl Because it makes people held their j-jw. ' , ' ORATION or , COL. CnARLhS J. DIDDLE, Formerly of Ihe Firtl Pa. VohnJcos, Buck tail's) ot the Democratic Celebration of the Fourth of July, at Ilirriburg. . Fellow Citizens of Habrisdurg : 1 have come, wiili great pleasure, upon the invita tion of your Committee, to lake part in ikis celebration. I was g.lad to -hear that you intended to revive the proper observance of this day, which ha?, of laie year., been too much neglectd. We can all remember when it was the universal custom of the American people to assemble on this anniversary to celebrate the great event that heppened on Ihe 4ih of July, 1776, when the old thirteen colonies of Great Britain declared that they V were and of right ought to be free and independent States." It was the custom, too, of the speakers appointed for the occasion to strain to the utmost their powers of language to express the greatness of that event, and the conse quences that flowed from it; and, indeed, 4th of July oratory was sometimes charged with dealing a little too much in exaggera tion. But, while! shaM not try to rival the eloquence of those who have preceded me on former anniversaries, I will say briefly this that -no 4th of July oration ever ex ceeded or came up to the truth in speaking of the blessings that the American people enjoyed during the long period tha sue ceeded the establishment of their Liberty and Independence. We who have known the evils, and dangers, and burdens of a great civil warcanjook back now and see how prosperous our lot was, how lightly the troubles incident to human nature fell upon this nation, from'the end of the war of the Revolution till the beginning of. the late attempt-at Revolution which the valor of our armies has, at last, with God's bless ings, ntteTly defeated. And by none was was greater valor shown than by the gsllant eoldieTS who crowd your city to day. To all who are here, ah d to all who celebrate this day elsewhere, we utter the voice of welcome. Welcome, Sons of the old Key sione,ta the homes you have well defended ! Welcome to the Siate upon which your deeds reflect immortal honor. Eighty-nine years ago, this day, the Amer ican Colonies cast ofj the rule of George the III. 1 n-Mr joyaliy which means the love n peo; !i have lor a king was exhaust ed, and the men ol the Revolution drew the sword in the name of patriotism which is the love we bear our country. They drew the 6word upon no insuflicicnt cause. They first tried every peaceful ef fort to obtain redress within the Govern ment under which they lived. The Decla ration of Independence says, ' In every stage of these oppressions, we have peti tioned for redress in the most humble man ner. Our repeated petitions have been answered by repealed injuries. A prince whora character is thus marked by every act which may define a tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people' Nor did the leading spirits of that day rashly plunge their country into war. There were statesmen then who calmly weighed in the balance the imposing but distant power of Great Britain, and saw that the colonies were able to cope with it. By a Revolution, justly begun and wisely prose cuted, the people of the '0!d Thirteen" States freed themselves from the rule of a king whom they regarded as a tyrant. They established a government by the people, and under it they grew and prospered, till they reached a heigih of prosperity never surpassed among the nation of the earth. Surely the events of the last four years should net abate our reverence for the fath ers of the Republic, or for the free Govern ment they founded "for themselves and their posterity." We cannot charge on them our sectional controversies, ending, at lasf in civil war. They foresaw the danger and showed us plainly the way to avoid it. They wrote it down in the Great Charter of American Liberty the Constitution of the United Slates. Enlightened by long expe rience of separate .colonial governments, ibey framed a peculiar government for States which had some interests in common, and-many interests separate and distinct. And how did the framers ot the Con.titii lion provide for all these interests, so as to avert '.he danger which they saw must flow from any unwise tampering with the in terest of one State, by other States which did oot share that interest. How did they provide against this danger, which could not escape their sagacity ; for it was not a doll, flat uniform despotism they were founding, but a Federal Uuion among States,' of infinite diversity in climate and soil and institutions and in the habits ot their peo ple. They provided against this danger in a way bo plain and simple thai the smallest intelligence could understand it; they pro rided against it in a way so complete and perfect that till '.he corner stone of their buildiug was rejected the whole grand edi fice stood erect and firm, defying the storms of political passion and sheltering all who dwelt within its precincts. They rested the cart of the common interest in the Federal Governneat, and they left the separate and peculiar interests to the care of the Slate. ; This was the great cardinal principle of the American Constitution. Let do man blush that he has maintained it. Let uo man who looks for a future for his country, cease to maintain it still.' I know that some treat this principle as if. it bad becri devised solely to protect the intitnliofi of jrlsvfry. in hn S''h.eTn"S'?.!q as if it were of uo concern to u. No, fellow-citizens; slavery has perished by the sword of Var, but this principle is as vital as ever to froa government, as vital as ever to each State of the North and the South, and to the people of every one ol them. It me illustrate this by au example, that has no relation to slavery. Many years ago the good cause of temperance was seized upon by fanatics, and of -course pushed to the most absurd extreme. In many of the New England States, a law was passed called the ''ilaine Liquor Law" which undertook to change, by the stroke of the pen, the habits of mankind and to com pel total abstinence from every sort of liq uor, from bTandy to lager beer. Great ef forts were made to pass this law in Vcr.a sylvauia, but our legislators, having some respect for the will their constituents, couldonly be brought to pass an act refer ring the queston to the decision ol tho peo ple ; and at the next election, you remem ber it no doubt it was in 1851 we voted down the proposition to enact the "Maine Liquor Law" in Pennsylvania, Tima has shown that we were right, for the Jaw prov ed a total failure where it was first enacted. YeT, I rernembeT that when I was in Con gress three years ago, and the tax bill was under consideration, there was some de bate as to what lax should be put upon whiskey.. Up jumped the member from Maine and proposed to tax it ten tkontanti dollars a gallon, (or, ha paid, he wished the Federal Gpvernment to put an end to the manufacture ol an article that was very ob noxious to his constituents. Now I conies (hat I opposed that proposition ; not that I am partial to whiskeynt because I thought the Federal Government had no right to "abolish" it in Pennsylvania. Iet me illustrate this further by an ex ample that has something to do with "the negro question" which still remain? to vex us, though slavery has fallen by the sword of war. -The Convention that framed the present Constitution of our State decided that negroes should not vote in Pennsylva nia. Our courts had always eo conetrueJ our former Constitution of Pennsylvania; for the men of the Revolution, while they mitigated with the mo6t enlightened benev olence the lot of the slava, yet regarded his race as a recent offshoot from the barbar ous tribes of Africa, and did not extend to it the political franchises which they secur ed "for themselves and their posterity." But lo pat ihe matter beyond all cavil, the framers of the Constitution of 1833 declared expressly that the elective franchise shonld be exercised only by the "white freeman." Now, oppose, when we had thus decided, that Mr. Van Baren, who was President then, had issued a proclamation declaring that, whereas, the people of Pennsylvania had decided that negroes should not vote, now he, Martin Van Euren, President ol the United Stales, believing that the Constitution was no longer binding on hirn, because there had been a war with the Seminole Indians, did declare it to be his sovereign will and pleasure that negroes should vote in Pennsylvania. This seems a monstrous snpposiliotij; certainly, it would have seemed so then ; yet at this day there is a large and active party claiming that the President may do this very thing, and demanding the instant conversion of the field hands of ihe South into voters, to wield the political power of one-third of the States of this Union. Un der pretence of establishing universal suf frage, this scheme aims al the destruction of popular suffrage by degrading it, .and making it impracticable for its foundation is the intelligence of the voters. The au thors of this scheme do not want a Govern ment founded on the intelligence of the people. They want a Government founded on force and propped op by bayonets. They want a Government which, if il fail to elevate the negro, will at least drag the white man down to his level. Every effort has been made to draw from President Johnson a proclamation as unconstitutional, as impolitic, and -as revolutionary as that which I have, by "way of illustration, as cribed to one of his ptedecseors. He has resisted the demand. 1 am not hero to bo hia eulogist, bol lei us recognize that since he was suddenly called to his high functions by the lamentable fail of Mr. Lincoln, his course has given encouragement lo all who hope, aod pray, and strive lor the mainte nance of the Constitution of our country One speech he made lately which merits your applause. I can repeal to you every word Ot it. A large body of politicians as-j sem'bled at Washington to try upon him the effect ol what was known in Mr. Lin coln's time as "a pressure." They had determined to extort from President Johnson a proclamation in favor of negro suffrage. Mingling threats with persuasion they told him, at last, that they would crush any man or any party who stood in their way. When they had finished their speeches, the Presi dent made a reply eo significant and so ap propriate that I think you will join me in applauding every word of it. He said to them : ' Gentlemen, I wish you all good morning." That was all be said, and they went on their way by no means rejoicing. 1 give you this anecdote as 1 find it in the newspapers; but many official acts show that President Johnson has not joined hands With the men who are seeking to establish a different Government from that which the men of the Revofulioa handed down to us. The cry of this party is "down with the ac cursed doctrine of Stale Right3." They aim as directly at ihe overthrow of ihe Consti tution as the rebcIsSdid before they laid tlavn thou aTrr)oJuci devbt h? joined in the cry who do not comprehend i i;s meaning. Many who talk of "accursed ) State Rights'' mean only to curse secession. Thay may do that and welcome. Tha doc trine has never found any (avor in our sight. No body of men have testified against it more emphatically than tho Democracy of Pa. Every platform laid down by their authority has denounced it. To quell il was the first and highest aim of the Democrats who swelled the ranks of onr regiments. The same may be said of the great mass of the Northern Democracy. Their latest political act was to . nominate for. the Presidency George B. McClellan ; Ihe earliest hero of the war ; lie, like all its later heroes who have won true renown, struck for tho Un ion, and gave it the first place in his heart, even above "Abolition." Secession was the doctrine of the Southern leaders; it has fallen with them ; it ia dead, killed, slain by the sword.. The" great raa3S of the Southern people regard it now as the "blood iest blunder in tho book of lime." But let us never consent to bury in its grave the Constitutional rights of Pennsylvania, or of any other Slate in the Union. Strike them down, and the whole beauty and filncas of cur Govcr.mient is gone. It would no more be the same Government than the British Government would be the same if you could strike out iu Parliament, anJ leave tli.j United Kingdom to l governed by ihe ar bitrary will of Ihe man, woman, or child who may. chance lo fill the throne. "The Constitutional rights of the States are the only sure dfences of civil liberty. It was left under their sheler by the. framers of the Constitution; even Alexander Ham- j ikon, who was the most indulgent to Fed eral power, lays it down as an axiom in our political system that ''the State governments will afford complete security against inva sions of public liberty by the National au thority." One of ihe great charges which the Dec laration of independence brought against I George the III was, "ho has effected to J to render the military independent of and Bupeiiui iu lilts civil luwct. 1 ins ;icii-ii- sion, revived in our day, and reaching even ' to the total suppression of the civil power, j in all its relations lo civil liberty, is the j great political heresy thai has prevailed at j '.he South, both deserve the signal cotulein J nation of the people. The absolute sway exercised by officials in the Nor:hern States i was in nearly every instance, mere wanton, J useless, irritating usurpation ol functions j that the Constitution and laws have wisely ; vested in the civil tribunals of our country. Do not charge il upon Congress ; no net of Congress ever authorized a military court j to'try a citizen noi connected with the mili , tary service. Every act passed during this war carefully sont all such cases to the ; civil courts. Even the Conscription act provided that those accused of resisting it, if arrested by the military, should be "forth with delivered over to the civil authori , ties," for trial. Yet here, in Pennsylvania, citizens accused of this very offense, undr this very act, were, in open contempt of the law, imprit-oned in tho guard house at Camp Cunin, tried and sentenced by "mil itary commissions." Do not chargo on tho military power the bass acts dono in its name. The military power of our country has its sphere, and it has filled it grandly '. it needs no triumph over the. civil institu tions of our cunnlry. The great soldiers of the war are soiled with no complicity in tho acts of petty despotism done by Secrela 'Ties of War, and politicians in civil office. You men of Harrisburg have seen the guard house of the neighboring camp tenanted, : not by disorderly soldiers or Rtibel prisoners, ' but by editors, and farmers, and men in ev ery walk of life, robbed of their civil rights, , and subjected to tho "lynch law" that is administered by military commissions. For all this there could be urged no pica o j "military necessity" such as may leave a ! commander in the field of war no limit but his owa will in the exertion ol his power. Tli6 pica of "military necessity" could not, wiili truth or decency, be urged in Penn sylvania, where no civil court was closed by armed rebellion, nor ihe due course of law obstructed, 6ave by those who made that plea the pretext for their acts. These acts were dona from iiu "necessity,- civil or military. They were prompied by that bad principle in human nature which the laws aud constitutions of free governments are meant to curb. Shakespeare describes il when he says : "Man, proud man Dresi in a little brief authority Plays such fantastic tricks before high heav'n As make the angels weep." Your highest interests and the interests of your children demand that these acts shall not pass nucondemned, to be treated here after as precedents. The highest dutyi now, of the people of the Commonwealth is to vindicate the Majesty of the law. To vindicate il al the ballot-box and in the j courts of justice, so that never again upon j the soil of Pennsylvania her citizens shall be wantonly stripped of the rights that are their birthright by titles older than the Con stitution, older than the Declaration of Inde pendence. - The great founder of our Commonwealth, William Penn, in his first frame of govern ment for Pennsylvania proclaimed this great truth: "A government is frea where the laws rule, and ihe people are a party to these laws, and mora than this is tyranny, oligarchy, or confusion." It is no tyranny, bat the rule of la that he established here; and "trial by jury" j was provided for so amply that ocr latter ' Con!tit!l''rt,)S Jtiv !ouil only tf;ip to sr; "trial by jury shall be as heretofore, and the right thereof remain inviolate." To this the Constitution of the United States has added. "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of tho States and district wherein Ihe crime shall have been committedj which district shall have previ ously been ascertained by law; and to be informed of the nature and cause ol the ac cusHtion; to be confronted by the witnesses against him, to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance ol counsel (or his de fence." How this was specially added to Ihe Constitution, by amendment, upoa the unanimous demand of the people, is a fact too well known to you for me to dwell upon it. You may not be 60 familiar with the facta that iauglthe founder ol Pennsylvania the value of "trial by jury." I will relate them briefly: they will not seem inappro priate to the day dedicated to civil liberty nearly two hundred years ago, William Penn was tried in a Mayor's Court ol Lon don, on a charge of "riot." You may smile to bear lhat Ihe riot consisted in holding a Quaker meeting. The trial was one of the invasions ol the rights of conscience to which men were exposed, who, in that day did not follow the form of worship ol the Church of England. The Mayor and the Recorder and .the Al derman of London sal as judgos, and twelve sturdy freemen ol London were ihe jury. When William Penn was called upon to plead he said: T desiro that you would lei me know by what law it is yoo prosecuted mo, and upon what law yoo ground my in dictmenj." They had no law to show, so they tried to silence the prisoner. The Re corder cried out to the Mayor, "My Lord, if you take not enmo course with (his pesti lent fellow to stop his moslh, we shall not be able to do anything to-night." "Take him away!" cried the Mayor, "take him away, turn him i.ilo the Bale-dock." To which the undismayed Quaker answered, "Is this justice, or .true judgment. Must I, therefore, be taken away because I plead for the fundamental laws of England? How ever, this I leave upon your consciences, who are of the jory, and my eo'e judgoj, that :i these ancient fundamental laws wnich relate lo liberty and property must not be indispensibly maintained and obser ved, who can say he hath a right to the coat on his back? Certainly, our liberties are openly to be invaded; our wives to be rav ished; our children slaved; our families ra ined; aud our estates led away in triumph by every sturdy beggar and malicious infor mer. The Lord of heaven and earth will be judge between us in that matter." But they thrust him into ihe dock and gave his case to the jury. Now mark the sequal. The unjust judges were willing enough to say that a Quaker meeting was a riot, but they could not bring an honest jury to say it. Tl.ey wonlJ not convict the prisoner. Then the Court stormed at the jury and threatened them with fine and im prisonment. At this William Penn cried out from his dock, "It is intolerable that my jury hhou'd be thus menaced. Is (his ac cording to the fundamental law? Aro ihey not my proper judges by the great charter of England?" Thon the Recorder troke in again, "My Lord, yon must take a course with that same follow." "Jailor" cried the Lord Mayor, "bring fetters and stak him to the ground." "Do your pleasure" said Penn, "I matter not your fellers." Then the Re corder spoke these words, mark them, lor they are the creed of him and all like him, and there are many like him alive this day. The Recorder said, "Till now I never under stood ihe rea'on of the policy and prudence ol the Spaniards in coffering the Inquisition among them; an 1 certainly il never will be well with us, till something like the Span ish Inquisi.ion be in England. But the sturdy English jury were no Span ish Inquisition, and they stuck to their ver dict o( "not guilty." Such is "irial by jury," dear lo the heart of every freeman. The worshipers of arbitra ry power hate it; they prefer the Spanish Inquisition or "the something like it," a military commission. Let the people whom William Penn planted on this soil say which system 6uits them best, if they have not degenerated, ihey will declare for "civil liberty,'' as their forefathers did upon the 4th of July, 1776 ; for which we are here to-day to honor them. And now, fellow-citizeiis, in cele brating this day, let PonnYylvanians not for get its later illustration, from the great fight which lo us, 6urely, was tho greatest o! ihe war. Two years ago, the rebel army flush ed with victory at Fredericksburg and at Chancellorsville was marching to the invas ion of the North. You have not forgotten it here, for it had almost reached your doors. But il mel at Gettysburg, in fair open fight, the gallnatarmy ol the Potomac, under a Pennsylvania soldier occond lo none ihe gallant Meade and after three days of des perate battle, the rebel host was driven, baf fled, beaten, btck across the Potomac. Let us recall this to day and on evpry succeed ing annivorsary when Penns)lanians meet to honor patriotism and valor. In tho time that I may appropriately occopy, I cannot rehearse the other great achievrnen's of the war. In many of them tho gallant soldiers here to-day have played a glorious part ; id tho armies of iho Union, tho tons of Penn sylvania were never surpassed in numbers or in valor. Let them take care as citizons, not to looso tho fruits of their victory. They fought tor the old Union ot (ree elates as their forefathers founded it to re-establish nt poltt10 it. Fellow citizens of Harrisborg, I have spoken of the past; I will not assume to speak ol the future. The failure ol so many predictions that the war should last but six ty day s prodic lions that it would last many years teach us how fulilo are the attempts of man to penetrate the future. But always he may look foward to it trhb manly hope and Christian confidence for himself and for hi" country. The limes afford us many au guries of good. Difficulties that seemed in sufferable are being easy surmounted by the intelligence of the American people. The South is recognising again her duties to a common country, and the North will recog nise the rights lhat belong under the Cons titution to alt who seek its shelter. A broad spirit of tolerence is taking the place of the narrow spirit ; of sectional bigotry, which was the first source of our troubles. We may see again a united country, not unche quered by difference of interests and feel ings; small must be the territory, or small the intelligence ol (he people, where no such difference exists: but we may yet see the whole land ruled by a Constitution that wasfrmod and admirably framed to ac commodate all the differences that spring from the spirit of liberty. An Old Bachelor. An old bachelor is a poor critter. He may have heard the sky lark, or (what is the same thing) Miss Kel logg and Charlotte Paltioing ; he may have heard Old Bull fiddle and all the Dods worths toot, and yet ha don't know nothio' about music the real genuine thing the music o! laughter of happy, well-fed chil dren ! And you may ax their father home to dinner, feeling very sure that there'll bo no spoons a missin when he goes away. Sich fathers never drop tin five cent pieces into ihe contribution box,nor palm 6hoe-pegs off onto blind h-d 5 so s for oats, nor do any thing which is really mean. I don't mean lo intermate thai the bachlor is up to little gama3 io this son, not at all; but I repeat, he's a poor critter. He don't livo here : lie only stays. He ort to 'pologizeon behalf of his parents, for bein here at all. The happy married man dies in good style at home, surrounded by his wcepin wife and children. The old bachelor be don't die a till, he sort of runs away like a polly wog's (ail. A. Ward The "relic" fever has caused considera ble damage lo portions of Ford's Theatre in Washington, where Booth killed Mr. Lin- i coin. Thai portion o( the stage carpet upon which Booth leaped from the President's box has been cut away for a diameter of. four feet. The latest "manifestation" of ibe relic fever is that of a-visitor who went into the saloon attached to the theatre, and asked the bartender : ''Havb you the sarrie bottle on band out of which Booth drank on the ni2ht of ihe assassination 1" ''Yes, Sir,' Can I have a drink ol lhat same brandy out of that same bottle?" "Yes, Sir." "Let's have it." The visitor tastes the brandy, makes a wry face and continues : "And that's the same brandy that Booth drank?' -Yes, Sir." "Well, 1 don't wouder that he killed the President. A drink of lhat brao dy would make a man kill bis grand mother." . A Nick Pucr to Live In. The Chicago Jju ma, descanting upon the crime in that city, says : Our local columns teem with highway robberries, house breaking, pocket pickings, and the marvellous achievements of the "confidence" charpers. The curtaid of ihe night is scarcely down, before the villains are abroad and busy. In the early gray of the evening; on the most frequented avenues, the honest aud unsuspecting citi zens is hugged to silence by the arms of. one garroter, while the fingers of another lilt his watch (rom his fob, and his purso from his pocket. A clergyman returning home Irom prayer meeting loses all bis monej and other valuables, and all the sa cred keep sakes ho has about him by tho hands ol a pair of ruffians, at utue o'clock, in the evening, in the heart of the metrop olis. Mode of Burying Atiobxkys in Lonqor. A gentleman in the country, who had just buried a rich relation, who was an attorney, was complaining to Foote, who happened to be on a visit with him, of the very great expenses of a country funeral, in respect to carriages, hatbands, scarfs, &c. "Why, do you bury attorneys here?" asked Foote, gravely. ".Yes, to ba sure we do; bow else?" "Oh, we never do lhat in London." "Noi!" 'said the other, much surprised; "how do you manage?" "Why, when the patient happens' to die, we lay him out in a room. over night by hiraseli, lock the door, throw open the sash, and in the morning he is ea lirely ofl." "Indeed!" said the' other, in amazement, ''what becomes of him?" "Why, lhat we cannot exactly tell, not beiug acquainted with supernatural causes. All that we know of the mailer is, there is a strong smell of brimstone in the room the next morning. A Jerscvman wa vory sick, and was no expected to recover, his friends got around his bed and one of them says : "John do you feel willing to die?" John made an effort to give hia views on the subject and answered with bis feeble voice : I think I'd rather 6iay whore I'm better acquaint ed. An Irishman being asked for a certificate of hia marriage, bared bis head and ex bibited a huge scar, which looked as though - 1 1 was tnado with a fire shovel. Theevi-. tnce was satisfactory. i -