JLU 1 BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA , "WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1861. VOL. 7-JfO. 47. r ; THE TRUTH DOTH NEVER DIE. Though kingdoms, and Empires fall, And dynasties decay ; Though cities crumble into dust, And nations die away ; Though gorgeous towers and palaces . In neaps of ruin lie, . Which once were proudest of the proud The Truth doth never die ! "'We'll mourn not o'er the silent past' Its glories are not fled, - . Although its men of high renown - lfr numbered with the dead, We'll grieve not o'er what earth hath lost, It can not claim a sigh ; For the wrong alone hath perished, The Truth doth never die ! -All of the Past are living still, All that is good and true ; The rest hath perished, and it did Deserve to perish too ! . The world rolls ever round and round, And time rolls ever by ; And the wrong is ever rooted up, But the Truth doth never die ! REPORT OF COUNTY STJPEBINTEITDEI7T. In compliance with the- law, I proceed to re jtort the condition ot the sbools in Clearfield County, for the school year 1861. The coun ty contains thirty school districts, all organ ized and in operation. Thirteen new school houses were built da ring the past year ; this is an improvement in the right direction, and confers great credit upon the directors who had them under care ; indeed old houses are being replaced by new ones on improved plans, and in more desira ble locations, as fast as the means of the Dis tricts will admit. A number of new houses are now under contract, some of which are ta ken at so low a figure, that inferiority in one way or another must bo expected; this is im proper inasmuch as it is a waste ot funds. Many of our old bouses arc bituated in the most uninviting places imaginable, and not one in the county new or old, is enclosed by ven the rudest kind of fence, shade trees flowers, and shrubbery, (except such as nature planted,) and other things that would render a nchool room attractive, are sadly neglected There are but seventeen houses in the county sufficient in all respects to be the training pla ces of youth according to my standard. Six ty-two defective in many respects, but snscep lible by repair or alteration ot being made suf ficient ; Fifty-three wholly defective, and in jurious to the health of our children and youth making a total of one hundred and thirty-two bouses, as shown in the following table : Names or Districts. 1. Beccaria, 'J. Bell, 3. Bloom, (new di) 4. Boggs, 5. Bradford, 6. Brady, ; Bnrnside, Chest, Clearfield, Covington, Curwensville, Decatur, Ferguson, Fox, Girard, 10. Goshen, 17. Graham, 18. Guelich,(n-dist) 10. Huston, 20. Jordan, Karthaus, Knox. Lawrence, Lumber-city, Morris, X. Washington, I'enn, Pike, 7 y. 10. n. 12. 13. 11. 15. M "2. 2a! 24. 25. 20. 27. 28. 2'J. Union, 30. Woodward, Total, tf - si' 2 '52. -5 B as I C3? g s o e P . a o ? g r 7 7 0 0 1 6 7 0 0 3 4 3 1 1. 2 0 3 1 0 2 1 6 0 1 4 1 10 0 0 6 4 9 117 1 5 112 2 10 0 10 5 0 0 1 4 10 0 1 0 6 -1 1 1 .4 1 1 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 1 3 2 111 3 1 11 1 4 0 0 3 1 5 0 0 2 3 3 0 2 0 1 3 0 0 2 1 3 0 0 2 1 4 1 1 0 1 11 2 3 5 3 10 10 0 C 0 1 5 0 10 10 0 4 1 11 2 7 0 0 2 5 3 0 0 2 1 3 0 0 j 1 2 132 13 17 I 62 53 One new house in Burnside, one in Chest. one in Decatur, one in Girard, one in Goshen, one in anui, one in juawrenco, and one in Penn, deserve particular notice for their neat ness aud good arrangement. They are built ol plank, weather boarded and painted on the outside ; are well seated and have an abundance of blackboard surface, one end being witbont windows for that purpose. They however, as w ell as all our other bouses, are destitute pt nearly every other essential article for con ducting well regulated schools ; such as globes, maps, charts, blocks and such like things. Our school buildings are also entirely destitute ot out-houses and other conveniencies needful lor comfort. In the seventeen first class houses the teach ers desks are properly located ; the tables and seats for pupils tastefully arranged. The six ty two hare scarcely medium furniture and very little sparatus of any kind. The fifty tbreeare destitute of nearly all furniture and apparatus desirable in a school room. Three bouses were burned within the year. Clearfield and Curwensvill are the only Dis tricts that make any pretention to graded chools; they have three each. The number of ungraded schools itb proper classification Aod nnformjty of books in all the branches, is sixty-seven. One half the Districts at least fail to classify all their schools in all the branch es, for want of books in some branch or other. I have advised Directors to insist upon a bet ter supply of books in some schools. Fifteen teachers with county certificates da ted in '58, '59, '60 gave general but nor full satisfaction. One hundred and twenty-four " li provisional certificates; a part of whom taught in summer that did not in winter a jvge majority gave middling good satisfaction, chough in almost every neighborhood there as found some one to complain. Some twen J gave very poor satisfaction indeed ; such teachers had better observe the precept "quali .Jour8e,ve8 before undertaking to instruct ,.,.er8" Twenty-three teachers received 0 'tner in Mental Arithmetic, Geography or grammar, or in all. la writing, three was the , tst grade as low as four was given to some chers, either in one, two or three branches. . f Prhable scarcity of teachers on account nnt v War lndQce me to believe, that I shall "l able to raise the standard of qualifica- ' bond Present year above the last. One D1red and forty -eight teachers examined J within the year one applicant only rejected In some Districts the attendance of teachers and people was quite respectable, in quantity and quality : In ten Districts I failed to meet either teachers or Directors. In consequence of this failure, 1 gave private audience to more than fifty teachers ; this was attended with great loss of time in visitations. No certifi cate annuled. ' Meral Instrnction is given' in three fourths of onr schools, either by Scripture readings, text-book, orally or by precept. I mnst, how ever in truth but with pain say, that in many schools no such instruction is given in any way whatever, as far as I could see or learn. All the schools in every District were visi ted once, excepted eleven ; twenty-eight twice, and nine a third time. The average length of visits ninety minutes. The whole number of Directors in the coun ty, when the Boards are J"ull, is one hundred and eighty; not more than two at any time accompanied me at visitations ; much more frequently none. No County Institutes this year political ex citement in the fall, and war excitement in the spring seem to forbid or excuse them. In the Districts of Beccaria, Burnside, Guelich and Morris, Institutes were regularly held one eve ning every other week ; in two of which, the good effects on the Districts were very evident. In Pike, the Directors had a clause in their articles, providing that the teachers should establish and attend an Institute one day in every alternate week during the term; but for some cause or other it never was carried into operation. I should be glad to see this feature of the system carried into effect in every District at the commencement ot the next term. District Secretaries acting as District Super intendents none worthy of the name. 'Recor ding Secretaries of the Board receive from two dollars and fifty cen's up to ten dollars each annually. Good progress is manifest in some schools in evert District : In others no perceptible im provement worth naming; though 1 am well satisfied no retrograde movement can be laid to our charge. Almost everything depends upon an efficient Directory which is the back-bone of the sys tem, and regular attendance of pupils if the people could only see it: irregularity in at tendance is the greatest drawback we have to contend with. Public sentiment is mostly fa vorable to the school system ; it is taken to be a fixed fact, though occasionally I hear it de cried. I have been mure or less connected u'ith the schools of this county for the past eight years ; and although the advancement has not been as manifest as I could desire, yet there has been an improvement in public sentiment favourable to education, and prospects bright ened withia that period which cannot well be over estimated. No new or untried plans for next year have been matured, nor is it intended to experiment upon any thing of doubtful expediency. The opposition to the countysuperintndency that has been felt to exist, is fast giving way ; and 8 prudent course pursued, by that officer will enable him to blend into harmony the most discordant elements of public opinion in rela tion to it. A few boards of Directors, not having the fear of the county superintendent before their eyes, continue to employ teachers without certificates. This course is very reprehonsible and cannot longer be tolerated. There is no justice in subjecting one class of teachers to the ordeal of an examination, and let another class, not more meritorious, escape. I have refused to recognize or visit such illegal schools. Teachers next year rimy desire the same privilege and claim this as a precedent, and there would be no end to the difficulty. It would be well if Directors and parents could visit the schools more frequently ; none of them visit very often, and some not at all ; true there are a few worthy exceptions. A goodly number of teachers are laboring with commendable zeal to make improvement in other departments of learning, so that they may be able the better to give instruction in those named in the law ; for it is a fact, that teachers cannot know too much to impart in strnction even in the most elementary branch ; they are also shaping their course towards ob taining the county certificate. If other teach ers could be induced to imitate this example successfully, they would be wore fortunate in procuring employment, and would likely ob tain better compensation for their services, than at present. Jesse Broomall, County superintendent. Curwensville, 6th mo. 25th, 1861. Ltnchiho a Woman. According to the Mobile papers, some ot the ladies of that city recently waited upon a female teacher, who was reported to have spoken against disunion and the Southern Confederacy, and gave her notice that she would be taken severely in hand if she did not leave by a day they named. Tbey say she left. Not merely hundreds but thousands of the mothers, wives, sisters, and daughters of the Southern disunionists have been going North dnring the last few months and are still going North for the purpose of security. Beyond all doubt they have found and will find the security sought. They can say in any Northern State what they please about the North and the war, and no commu te of women or men will call to notify them that they must quit the latitude or expect a dozen lashes upen their bare backs. What people were ever more renowned for most cbivalric and knightly bearing towards women than the people of the South 7 Surely the spirit of secession works sad and direful chang es in the souls of human beings. Warmth. The best fire in winter is made up ol exercise, and the poorest, ot whiskey- lie that keeps warm on liquor is like a man who pulls bis house to pieces to feed the fire place. The prudent and temperate use of liquor is to let it alone, if you don't touch it, it certainly won't bnrt you ; he that says there is no danger, boasts that he is some thing more than other men. Two eentlemen noted for their fondness of exaggeration, were discussing the tare at dib erent hotels. One observed that at his hotel he had tea so strong it was necessary to con fine it in an iron vessel. "At mine," said the other, "if is made so weak it has not strength to run out of the tea-pot. An old fashioned tea-party, participated in ny old women, was recently held at Koch dale, France. The average age was 67 years. The oldest lady present was 105. : SEEM0JT OF REV. B. A. CAEUTHEKS. : FCBLJSUED BT REQUEST. 'The powers that be are ordained of God. He is the minister of God to thee for good. For this cause pay ye tribute also." Rom. 13. The human family are the subjects of a two- lold relation, embracing our duty to God and the relations we sustain to each other: God, the supremo Ruler of the universe., has made provisions for the regulation of both ; for the nrst in ecclesiastical law, and for the second in civil government. The powers that bp are ordained of God; hence, whatever partains truly to the political interests of the nation is the legitimate work of men fearing God and working righteousness.- As God has constituted mankind the proper subjects of government, and has ordained powers for that purpose, it will "follow, from the consistency of the divine mind, that there is a perfect harmony between the law and the wants of Its subjects such a complete adapts tion of the one to the other, that w here the law is properly administered the subjects will not be sensible of the restraints which it im poses. Such has been the Government of the United States, when administered according to its constitutional provisions. Wherever the principles of the Declaration of Independence have been regarded, the law-abiding portion of community have grown old and gray-beaded without having realized that they were govern ed at aU. Law only galls and irritates the lawless. " Law, to be correct, must be based npon the Scriptures. The Bible is true to nature, to the nature of God, and the nature of man. Its object is to reprove the evils of our cor rnpted nature, and to bring us into harmony with the mind of God. That form of junspru dence, then, which will best promote the le gitimate interests of the human family, must reuect me principles ot the law ol Uod, a synopsis of which is found in the Golden Rule, "Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them." Matt, vii, 12. A transgression of the law is sin ; and this axiom of the Bible is true, whether we speak of our physical, mental, or moral nature ; whether we have respect to our dudy to God, to our neighbor, or to ourselves ; and the uncompromising de mand of the law, according to the high pur pose of God, is, "The soul that siuneth.it shall die." Sin is an element of destruction: it is a disease in tne organic structure ot a thing; it is a beginning of dissolution a suspension of the laws of being. The per fection of sin is death. Sin destroys the sin ner, but leaves tne law intact. The man that sins against the laws of his organism does not destroy the laws of organism; he only sus pends their operation m respect to his own person, and destroys himself, lie that in his own person violates the laws of sight becomes" blind ; he that violates the laws of mind 02 comes insane ; he that violates the moral law of God destroys his morals ; he that sins a gainst Christ forfeits his Christianity. So also political transgression will result in po litical death, and a violation of the scriptural basis oi government will work ruin in every department of the body politic, whether we speak of civil, political or ecclesiactical law American slavery, in exacting more of our neighbor than we are willing to concede to him, is a violation of the Golden Rule; in withholding from the bondmen an open Bible; a sacred marriage relation, and in the separa tion of families, it is a sin against God; and in depriving him of liberty it is a sin against the Declaration of Independence, which pro claims liberty as inalienable, God-given right And because it is ain, it has proved itself to be an element of destruction wherever it has been even tolerated. Jt is true, the Hebrews had a form of scrvi tude, but it was not the form existing in the United States; it differed from it in many im portant particulars. I he Hebrew law recog nized no right in a Jew to sell a servant ; uuty could only be bought of the heathen. The law required the circumcision of the servant ; and, ascording to the best Jewish historian, the rite must be conferred within a year from the time of purchase, and. by the consent of the servant ; otherwise he was sent away without the benefits of a disciplinary probation as a member of a Jewish family to wit, mcor poration into the Church of God, and the right of citizenship to himself ami his chil dren after him forever. For being circum cised he became an entered apprentice to the Jewish polity, both secular and religious, and in due time graduated into all the rights and privileges ot the native born circumcised sons of Abraham. This emancipation might take place at any time by the consent of the Master, but was affected by force of law every fity years at the greater Jubilee. On the seventh year the Hebrew servant "went out free for uothing," but at the end of seven sabbaths of years liberty was proclaimed "throughout all the land unto all the inhab itants thereof." Levit. xxxv. 11. To whom does a proclamation of liberty apply 7 Not to freemen, of course. Bondmen alone can go out free. In the case before us the ser vant of Jewish extraction was already free. Other provisions applied to his casa ; but here all the residue of the inhabitants in bonds are made free ; and to whom could it apply but to the persons bought of the hea then? Hence, upon the proclamation of the trumpet of liberty not a bondman was left in all the borders of Israel. Give us such provisions to regulate American slavery ; buy none but fuch as you are willing to incorpo rate into your family and instruct religiously; give them an open Bible and a sacred marriage contract; allow them a family hearth and a family grave-yard, and once in fifty years pro claim liberty to all the inhabitants of the land, and our opposition is at an end. But the A merican slave is not thus compensated for bis years of toil and suffering ; bound to the car, and lashed on forever, he is made a mere chattel, and taught no higher aspirations than beasts with horns and hoofs. American slavery has lived long enough to have a bistoiy, and the character it has de veloped proves it to be a monster ruinous as death and as unsatisfied as the grave ; the plague-spot marks the band that touches it, and those that would befriend it are the first to be sacrificed upon the altar of its cruel lust. To satisfy ourselves of the despotic nature of that system covertly mtroduced into our na tional structure, in the nse of the terms "oth er persons" and "persons held to labor," let ns turn to the history of the M. E. Church. No other document in the land so well indi cates the change wrought in the Southern mind upon the subject of slavery as the Meth odist Discipline. From the first it has been opposed to the system.. In 1784 the question was asked, "What method can we take to ex tirpate slavery 7" and that question has in some form been asked ever since. The gen eral rule prohibiting the "buying and selling 01 men, women and children, with an mten tion to enslave them," has had a place in the BQok since 1789 ; yet with such sentiments as mese sentiments which forbade the slave traffic and looked to the extirpation of the system altogether, and by which every minis such as would ignore the fundamental basis of the Government itself. Slavery agitation has brought the nation up on the eve of dissolution j but who have been the real agitators 7 I reply most emphatical ly, the South. Who but such as were thor oughly impregnated with the spirit of slavery would have dreamed of property mere chat, tels being represented in the legislative halls ot freemen 7 Yet that was slavery's earliest demand. To concilliate the South, three-fifths of her slave population are represented in ter and member of the Church was pledged to. Congress, and the self-constituted representa seek its overthrow, the M. E. Church was re ceived with a hearty welcome into the very heart of the South : even South Carolina re joiced m the labors of the itinerant messenger or uod with bis open Discipline and constitu tional opposition to slavery. So large, indeed, was me proportionate innuence of Methodism in the South that for the first half of the whole period of her existence her General Confer ences, with a single exception, were held with in the bounds of slave territory. For forty years she was the child of the South, and her discipline was the true exponent of the pub lie mind upon the subject of slavery. The Book remains unchanged : no more opposed 10 slavery now than then ; yet in tl is now a book of treason, and the man that would openly avow its sentiments would be hanged upon the nearest tree. Side by side with him, too, would swing the man that would dare to avow the doctrine of the Declaration of Independence principles to maintain which southern blood was shed upon the field of bat tie, but which now finds no place in the hearts of their degenerate sons. Long begging for an existence, cringing for a place among its betters, tolerated only upon the grounds ot expediency, slavery increased in arrogance as she increased in strength, un til, like a true daughter of the old serpent, she would swallow everything that would cross her path. Once she was subject to law ; now she gives laws to the nation. Her motto is, Rule or Hum, and the terras of her eivinc lives of the cotton fields mingle with the rep resentatives of the freemen of the North. It was the slave power in Congress, the represen tatives of slaves, that proposed the Missouri Compromise as the price of Missouri as a slave State. Even as far back as 1821 the dis solution of the Union was threatened by the South. Her motto then, as now, was rule or ruin; to the Union she gave the terms, sue- comb or die. It was slavery, too, that secured the repeal of the Missouri Compromise ; her object was the enslavement of Kansas, and she was ready to break the faith of the nation to gain her purpose. The fugitive slave law was the price of peace, and the principles of the Dred Scott decision must become the pol icy of the nation, or the Government itself must be dissolved to make way for the on ward march of the demon of chains ; and an appeal made from constitutional ballots to leaden bullets to decide the question of who shall rule over the "land of the free and the home of the brave." We have read of a devil of more than usual malignity the most dev ilish of all the demon crew ; other devils re t are, sucbumb or die. Poisonous as the upas tree, the very atmosphere she breathes is death ; like the vampire, she sucks the heart's blood of her friends, and, Amnon-like, she feigns sickness that she may deflower those who would minister to her wants. Slavery has divided the M. E. Church and the Protestant Episcopal Chnrch ; it has sev ered the Democratic party; it has rent the Stars and Stripes and trailed in the dust the insignia of our nation's glory, and kindled the fires of dissolution among the ranks of the staid, conservative Presbyterians. Methodism fell first, because she was foremost in the fight, and the first to succumb to slavery die tat ion. The suspension of the rule making non-slaveholding a term of membership, in 1785, was the death-knell of her national char acter; it was the opening of iho flood-gates or slavery aggression, rrom that hour sla very never ceased to.demand, nor the Church to yield, until 1844, when a firm determination not to submit, in violation of the express rule of Discipline, to the supervision of a slave holding bishop resulted in the secession of the southern conferences and the division of the Church. Statesmen of the first order, such as Henry Clay, deplored the separation of the M. E. Church as the opening wedge of the nation a dissolution. Seventeen years nave luiniled the prophetic statement: the nation now is moved to its very foundation, and seems to be tottering for the fall. In all this was Methodism to blame 7 She indeed ought not to have yielded at all. The conces sion of 1785 made way for the imperious de mands ot 1844. Grown strong, slavery gave her terms, Succumb, or die. The Church could have maintained her integrity by sub mitting to slavery dictation at the expense of a further degradation of her moral character This she could not do. She feared God rath er than slavery. The South seceded, and in troduced the first chapter of insubordination and treason. Next-in the category of her victims is the Democracy of these United States. The par ty honored with that name, and the early ex ponents of the doctrine, dates back to the ad ministration of Washington. Thomas Jeffer son, the author of the Declation of Indepen dence, was its earliest head, and his election to the presidential chair was its first great victory. Between democracy and slavery there is no natural sympathy : they are essen tially antagonistic. There is a charm in the very name Democracy that falls like sweetest music upon the ear and hearts of aU the des pot-ridden sohs of Europe. This party, well organized, well disciplined, and timehonored, embracing many of the best names of the nation, seemed as if it would live forever. Its very existence was a pledge of national stability to us and to our children for all lime to come. Yet, strange to say, it has been through the agency of that party that the slavery-worshiping aristocrats of the South have controlled the destinies of the United States.' As early as 1812 John C. Calhoun said in a conversation with Charles Stewart, "I . admit your conclusion in respect to us southerners; that we are essentially aristo cratic I cannot deny ; but we can and do yield much to democraicy. This is our sectional policy ; wo are from necessity thrown upon and solemnly wedded to that party, however it may occasionally clash with our feelings, for the conservation of our interests. It is through our' affiliation with that party in the middle and western States we control, under the Constitution, the governing of these U mted States; but when we cease thus to con trol this nation, through a disjointed democ racy, or any material obstacle in that party which shall tend to throw us out of that rule and control, we shall then resort to the dis solution of the Union." The year 1860 brought about the specified condition : the northern Democrats, who never did enter into the treasonable purposes of the South, by re fusing at the Charleston convention to sacri fice themselves npon the altar of slavery, broke the arm of southern despotism : but the South, in turn, by bolting from the Cincinnati platform, broke the back ot the party she had so long controIIed,and their subsequent defeat was the signal for the dissolution of the Union. Regardless of the honpr of their northern friends, with' whom they bad been so long associated, from the hour of their defeat, se cession, thieving and misrule became the or der of the day, and the most glorious govern ment the sun ever shone upon is now at the dagger's point contending for an existence. The Democratic party could bava avoided division only by submitting to be enslaved; and no compromise could save the Union but tire with dignity when bidden ; this one sough to kill, threw down his subject and rent him sore, leaving him as one dead. Such was the devil that took possession of the southern wing of democracy, and controlled the cabi net of the retiring Administration until tho force of public indignation ousted the traitors from their place of power. No sooner had the result of the late general election been made known a result which indicated a clear ing out of the old official incumbents of the general Government than there wai inaugur ated a system of chicanery aud fraud the par allel of which the world never witnessed There were traitors in the cabinet, traitors in secret conference with onr Chief Magistrate, traitors in our legislative halls, traitors in the army and in the navy : secession, revolution and treason were concocted in the capitol and inaugurated all over the South, and thieving and robbery became the order of the day rons, navy yards, snips, arsenals and muni tions of war were stolen : United States mints and treasuries were robbed, and war with all its baneful concomitants stalked abroad. At whose feet must the blame lie for all this de vastation 7 Who must be held responsible for the present prostration of business, fcr the sufferings imposed upon the poor, for the blood of the battle-field, for the sorrows of the widow, and women made childless by the sword, and for the wide-spread demoralization of the nation 7 Certainly not the North certainly not the present Administration. Can a thing act before it exists 7 This ruin was foreshadowed and much of its details wrought out before the present Adminlstra tion drew its earliest breath. The bombard ment of Sumter was the culminating point of treason. Iut why was Sumter bombarded No invasion of southern rights bad been either enected or even threatened; no aggressive steps had yet been taken to recover the prop erty already taken; not even an attempt to reinforce Fort Sumter, but only to supply A- merican soldiers with provisions. To feed men who firmly stood by the national flag was enough to open the ore of slave-serving bat teries upon the devoted fort. Could the Ad ministration have done less 7 Must the heroic Anderson and bis noble band perish for lack of bread 7 or must they, as the representatives ot our national honor, submit as prisoners of war to the traitors of the South 7 True to the trust confidad to their care they stood famished with hunger they toiled on at their appointed task, while amidst the fire and smoke of the contest tho walls of the fort were battered about their heads. But tho thunder of those cannon stirred the nation's heart, and thousands of northern freemen are rushing to the rescue. The American eagle must not die in the loathsome coils of the southern rattlesnake. The war is upon the part of the South one of aggression. Northern invasion is the sub tance of their military programme : the con federate armies are marching to the overthrow of our national capital ; the men to whom, in a constitutional way, the interests of the com monwealth have been confided, are to be driv en ironi the seat of government, and the ar chives of the nation are to pass into the hands of self-constituted rulers. Give Jeffer son Davis possession of Washington City with an army sufficient to sustain him there a con tingency which supposes the subjugation of the federal Government by force of arms and the Government of these United Stales is rey- olutionized at once ; the doctrine of equal rights, of our noblo Declaration of Indepen dence, would be swept from the face of the earth ; and the freemen of the North now free no more would never again rally to the polls for the election of a constitutional mag istrate ol a tree people. But cannot there be a peaceable adjustment of existing difficulties 7 Cannot the evils of civil war be avoided 7 Certainly it can be doue, if Freedom will consent to die with out a struggle ; if the Chief Magistrate of the nation will submit obsequiously to retire at the bidding of the South ; if the doctrine of the confederated traitors is admitted as the law of the nation. Complacent as the demon that severed the M. E. Church. and treacher ously rent the Democratic party, slavery only asks of the national Government to succumb or die. . Let the federal Government, either peace fully or at the cannon's mouth, succumb to the dictation pf the South, or under any cir cumstances yield to her demands, and ner prestige aud glory yea, her very identity will have passed away. A doctrine would be inaugurated essentially opposed to our pres ent cherished institutions : in three important particulars would the change be seen. The right of a State to scecede is a conceit made to order for southern convenience, which strikes at the yery root of government stabili ty, and consequently national prosperity ; it is a rope of sand, the very existence of which is pledge of insecurity, and adumbrates a sys tem f petty, uninfiuontial States, and inter minable war. The national policy of the leaders of the confederacy the woull-be masters of the nation is seen in the wet that they havo not submitted any ot their seces sion measures to the vote of the people ; their first act has been to dethrone their constitu tional sovereigns; a new power has risen that knows not the masses a power of the few o ver the many a power to decide upon tho destinies of the nation without consulting the) nation's will. What have we at the North to expect at tho hands of successful traitors who have ignored the rights of their obsequious friends 7 What but that our rights, both civil and religious, will pass from ourselves to an oligarchy sustained by military power. That God has endowed all men with certain inalienable rights, among which are life, lib erty ,and the persuit of happiness, is thejmain pil lar of the temple of Freedom. The new con federacy stands not upon that rock : they have built upon the curse of Ham ; they car-, ry the mark ot Cain ; they arrogate to them selves a God-given right to trample under their feet the children of Africa, into whose veins the best blood of the South is being transferred ; these, too, to be held in bonds forever. Even a dog won't eat the flesh of a dog; but the demon of slavery devours its own children ; the tender and delicate female that toils unprotected in the cotton field may be fairer than the daughters of him under whose lash she is driven forth. The Vico President of flie cor Tederacy proclaims ilavery to be its main pillar, and for the supremacy of that political heresy they thirst to drf1ug our land with blood. Let that doctrine pre vaillet the supremacy of slavery be acknowl edged and what will be the practical state of things in the North 7 What but a duplicate of what already exists in the South ! A reigr of terror is upon them a terror verging upon the worst days of the French revolution ; and the demon of despotism now crushing ou their soul seeks to spread her raven wings o ver the fair land of the North. Should the South succeed, then our book of Discipline becomes a book of treason, and the conference ol the M. E. church are con gregations of traitors. Bewley was hung in Texas for no olher cause than bis adherence to the M. E. Church. Others have been shot down in Missouri. Almost every slave Stato has its victims, and this war against conscience and religious liberty must be carried every where. Every other denomination of Chris tians must also submit ; the rostrum, the pul pit and the press must be bound : subject to the censorship of slaveocrats, they must all take character from their masters, and civil and religious liberty would be buried in one common grave. America is now honored wherever tho sun shines. Tho United States has been and still is the asylum for the poor and down trodden of the world, as on eagle's wings the inhabi tants of the earth ore flocking to us for refuge. Must this glory depart 7 Must a despotism worse than that of Europe stalk over our free mountains and unchained prairies 7 Must the hope of the world bo confounded 1 Let Jeff-, erson Davis succeed ; let our republican Insti tutions proves failure; let our Administra tion succumb to the South transJer tho temple from Liberty, to Slavery, and tLo world has gone back a thousand years, anJ the hopes of mankind are buried forever. I ask not now whether slavery is a sin against God. It has proved itself to bo an enemy to our civil I:berties ; it bas developed a brood of traitors, and organized an armed oppositioq to the peaceful administration of ourconslw tutional government; and being thus fruitful of evil caught in the very act of treason it has forfeited its very right to an -existence. Time was when we believed that slavery, bo? ing a creature of State law, should be controll ed only by the States in which it exists ; but that day seems to have gone by. The demon spirit of rebellion bas wandered beyond its limits, and is shouting the battle-crv of tba nation's dissolution. I fear the time has come when the people will rise in the strength of their reserved rights, and, as a matter ot State policy, in a contlituiiunal way, sweep the system from our land. A soldier from the North has fallen in the defence of our common country. That man was my repieseatative ; bis blood was my blood, and the blood of my children. Onr blood the blood of the nation has in him, baptized the earth, and craven and dastardly must he be unfit to mingle with freemen who would not give bis own warm heart's blood that the flag which he defended might wave undisturbed over the place where he full. Our fathers bled upon the field of battle, that the scacred inheritance of freedom might de scend to their children and their children's children forever. May the last dollar be ex pended, and the last r.ian of this generation fall, rather than our children's heritage should perish in our hands. With the flag or our country upon the Bible, and our hands upon both together, let ns, kneeling upon the blood- baptized earth, pledge eternal allegianco to the American Uuion, nor tire in our efforts until the spirit of rebellion is buried in an ob livion deep, dark, and relentless as the giave. NEt"TRLui'ro Poiso.v. The followicg if true is valuable : "A poison of any conceiv able description and any degree of potency which bas been Intentionally or accidentally swallowed, may be rendered almost instantly harmless by simply swallowing two gills of sweet oil. An individual with a very strong constitution shonld take nearly -twice the quantity. This oil will most postively neutal ize every form of vegetable, animal or miner al poison with which physicians and chemists are acquainted." A Disobedient Husband. Considerable a mcsement was created in Mount Holly on the departure of some volunteers, by a strong minded woman seizing her husband, dragging him frorji the ranks, and cuffing him on tba head, ordering him home. The poor fellow complied but finally succeeded in eluding ber vigilance, and went off with bis company. Every sinful outward word and deed, and every secret thought and purpose of the mind, re-acts upon the mind itself and leaves its own Impression there sa upon an ineffaceable tablet. Aside from all the influence our sin may exert upon others, it puts imperishsble Impressions upon our own minds. "Pa," said a lad to bis father, "I often read of people poor, but bonest ; why don't thsy some times say rich but honest t "Tut, my son," said the father, "nobody would believe them." ' r.O -1 St ir