VOLUME 4. (Brinimtl |3oetrn. For THS Ctfaxiu THE WIDOW'S SOLILOQUY. Wliil* J B nze U P°" !»«< picture, oli: whit nn»rnoriM ffciiwig my hrfclo Of In.urn 1 spi-nt beside bitu, W hi. h ran no'er return lluw it |IIIIII» IUV hi-nri t-» linger (Tottgiif <-f nntitocan never trH t>o the tUi.uglit, that ray -Inar hu^hind, I'ieicod with rebel ballets fell. With the gory sward him, With no cofWrtjt fai awaj 112. oiu *iU n».l 1«»vr-.i ••!»<*— . N'l^lJOto ciuno fjf'ieyt.i lu'deatb. God heard, I'know hi hujiplication, While hl-« li • «'i " • «• i «w*y; And on uoK' 1 wnpg- hii "pint Soared tor Mlm i 'f nllei lay: And 1 ku >w ii«i •luil.-o me With a tender hitd>-i»i r ire. While hiii children kri ? i around ia«. \V h«u we brc.iti.e « Ml fn| H? timber, Willie riclllliiiK on Irty Wed, I Krie*». to tin I 1.11 w AKing, Tbut my loved ideal's IleU. On the field th.* sirnnaer f!i I him. And prepared for him a grave; There be i.led a L ni m mildler— There he a Lilian brace. O'ei hii K' »vein Houthern wtxnlland, K.< Jeff, It.ivis, in so' liciting to become his bond-mm, and transgressed in claspih'*, in the eye cf 'he nation, 11 hand which consigned thou, sand* co illy tide ill), he is tung by re*. pi'Oaeht'a to justification. His ill temper poured out on the New York League ins dieates a mini cajiable of' it* Self by rudeness and 11 take sli Iter in »<*; ln-.try. In ill.- J'riiiuw of Monday June Bd, the warping, oi which, we C IIU< plained in the big nniug of this article, is sadly shown. Mr. is.le ito multiply the points of resemblance be* tveeu ttie joints of the American ttevo. iuiion and the R. be lion They were a ike he says, first, in that bit* were formidable insurrections against local, paramount national authority ; secondly, both speedily obtained such magnitude I that, quoting from Mr. Webster. '• there I could now no longer be a question of pro* ceeding aglinst individuals as guilty of treason and rebellion." And in ad vocal s nig universal amnesty in 1867, towards the r bels, lie impliedly relics on our sup posed bcliel that lieeorge Hid should not have hung Washington had he crush ed the rebellion, and up HI the authority of Mr. Webster's assumed declaration that he, also, thought so. Hot, as it is ninety years since the revolt of our fath crs, and we have inuglr oilier wars and seen another great mm appear and d is- a p|tear from our sight, we are cmancipi ted as weil from the lending strings i»f tradition as 'ram s .litary hero worship Uir lijVolutioii apycars as it wis—a ro- VoI against a 'thoiity and law justified indeed by grievance* I > be red; e-i}r an cestors I'ortnoir ITM- n A- 'aw and fight i wore understood by him And who else ! shall int-rpre I'-e-n 112 Shu! th« enlfirit? : Mor doe-< Mt. U eiister inplied v siy so j I-I his Banker I'lli. s mvli ll< ,ivi t I c Oil I now iii long r i>e jm;-r o pro ceeiiiug ag.itusr in livj iu»l- j-x' y .1 ire !.-i iV) in- re' elliort. Wtictt ? N w oii ri ig the «trilo. while halites wire lim: and won on bitiier side, an! prisoners in .cither's hands Why, ? Because ot re talitftion. For no other reason. Ilad ll.iWe hung a Continental, a rcl ciat woul l have sWuni for him Kx^ediencV oik 1 lie axe and the i I t.i'oii Km. George's 1) i)l. The i-io use l-»iii musket.and ihe ean.i ij K,g men'-aa-. batteries alone could >vi ve i;>)■ • Hie uieti wlio used thiin i!il' vi Scßiriimr equivalent to a ion n.r-'n Do we Are execu e a crim ii.d in-fore we Cue.li hiir? Rv«*a -drti. tii is, j,r» e -r rabbit in haul i.cl'ore inukiog lij i soup.- in piusocutii.it a war made necessary by ihe number ol opponc'hts, it does spee lily bi>emU> a q»e«:i >n, not of indu v-iduuis, but of nn-ehanics—g ven so much resistance to bo ovefptSinC—by wh»t mean.- shai< it be sunn iunonj '( But the disposition of ihe m.-inbra, the treanmint of the inert frasr'nents, the problem 112 fraction once solv>d. is anoth er question. It is the same as if, in an tic i pat ion of injury con ciuplated by an outbreak, the Supreme power were seeks ing to prevent its arising; save that the two questions of vsugeance for wrong and reparation of hurt i'-ourrfcd are add ed. Security for the ftture is the i hief cotisidmatwu in teuiuity lor the pust ac sedes. lu dealing with ,tlie-e two questions, no miserable allugatlon, llnft in tho strug gle to get the in tstery we dared not pun ish, need tie our liartds. Law justifie.: it. gu)lt deservos it. It is a fallacy to extend the potency of roxsous which the , chances of war alone create to a period when they have ceased. Mr. (Jreeiey is hot alone in this, however. He borrowed it from the rebels who proclaimed )i as tftate tallowed State in scei.Bs)on. Yet even Toouibs said numbers only , '• mndc treason rftspectablt-." We must not ad aiit that the magnitude id a rebellion changos its iharaoter. We agree with Mr. Greeley lb it the Revolution »nd fbe "etieiiiou ditierei iu their hoped for : effects upon luank.nd ; that, tl.e former was intended tw and has emancipated many uieu from' misrule aud oppression, and that the latter was intended and \ doubtless woukl, f«r twenty five years, t have life'steno I the ehiius ol four mil— t lions, but tiiej dill'ered uot ouly i,u their i intended results, but in their causes. They did no! much differ in their ostcu i t sible causes. Both bodies of insurgents , I clamored of injured liberties—liberty I j was the watchword in both camps. The , | one was right, however, and tbo other wrong Our ancesters had griefs—our ■ j lebels had n ne. Taxation without rep j ! resentation and spoliation were griev ■ j oncCa —to be enamored of a Uprosy aad . "Let us have Faith that Right makes Might; and in that Faith let us, to the end,dare to do our duty afwe understand it"-- A LINCOLN. BUTLER, BUTLER COUNTY, PENN'A, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1867. i to be restrained from contaminating the race is not a grievance. Nor is this do». matism—the writing of Punic history hy a Romm. And if it bs, are we not the judjee—the nation,—at this crisis, and who shall complain ? Puritan. Cove nanter. dogmatism, is the life of the ni tion—it has made us aid will sustain us When ire weakly yield to latter-day in. difference in all tliin.-s—the days of the Consul* will he over and the Jvnperors, vilb their luxury of life an 1 eif .- uin.iOy d' th ujht «■ II come in. The relie - tcrt* wro tzfh'en In #r : l« wo ho ii onuse—li V would imve bemi * ei/ iii w r II fur any em • \ sto jiu .. i ne ; i II ■ . l-tl-r ml <•*;>' i ling if •hoie i'C in ainj lo sn'ity valve in good ■rJer. Should any one Imr du- e:t keg of gnnpr.vier arid a miteh he should sutler lor,the•Coh-equnnces." l»ut .Mr (ireeley ti-iundcrs still worse in a succeeding paragraph, where he at tempts to Construe the , constitution.— Italicising "only" in the definition ol treason, he, rightly excluding all con sirneiive treason as bavins no foot-hold iu this land, successively enumerates for-. Ogners, Indiaiii. and Jjoiuu ywing allegi auce {n»tiri*uiiz.?d cii.izeus) as not fiwillf of treason liy levying war against the government. That British and Mexican soldiers,who wage War against us, are not traitors is seli-ev)dent, noraie Ip.ltan.B for they are not citizens, if not taxed—yet they owe a qualified allegiance in retura for our protection, aud when they wag; war in Colorado, Hancock and Augur will, seek to kill them, and in peace we direct their in "veuieuts. That in 181.3, England, un Jer her denial of the right nt tiitttio'u. thrt?atcne 1 t> bang Irishmen who fought iu our lanks luij that we re sisted h -r cliim, csrablishei only the cx istence and the nat we of the different opinions held bv the Iwi nations on the question of man's right to shift his alle glance lay changing his sky. In main ,aiuing the Irishman's right to throw off t'iiigl sli lies, we asserted the strength of tl os winch hoi ill him to us and con ..trained ourselves to the doctrine that to wage war against us. being a citizen, would he treason And, if we stretched lie point.mid kept unnaturalized Irish men inviolable, we did it on the ground tmi an ocean inteivened and they were denizens ;it 'oast of our land. In Wiek low or iu I >ei ry we would not, and could not protect ill em, nor even ill the Domini inn of Canada \ et, with Ihe entering wedge of this Irish precedent, it is insinuated that sow who ow -allegiance.may m ike war again-t us. A more destructive heresy never wa- enunciated. Allegiance and loyalty are inseparable, Rut who are they who rn ly war tig linst us ? Our own citizens ? Then they must quit the land and enlist under a foreign banner. It too must protect ihcin if we threaten punishment that is all the case cited suggests. Why was it cited? Plainly, that as some, owing allegiance to a foreign power, vlio It to i quiitel their land and renounced its protee ion as well as its allegiance, were ne time projected hy ns when they lo uglit fpr 11-, ih.it utider cover of the ambiguity of the term "some,*' and the slighting allusion to the circumstances, it might be inferred that r> lior circnin'' stances could arse, when " ' mo" of our i-itizm* might, war aj on.our own s.iil, sit king rctire.-« [or fiilicie 1 griefs hy I ore* when ihcy hud redress at law. nch, unfolded, is 'li 'nji re'ice its re sult the justifying i I all' who cTinse to urge it for thcm'elvi's in the >S mth Un derthesliiftingsliitldof the word • souic," all traitors find a surer def qce than be hind the interpose ! States sovereignty so 1 mdly invoked in 18CI. Pirially, as an ov idt.-i.i.c th.it Mr. Greeley is in the toils of a sophistry to himself, and employed only th .t in his exetise his judgment has bent to his nefcess tios, lie admits that " in the infhney ot the rebel lion, the government might have seued aud tried the leaifing secessionists as traitors." What is this but an admission that we may h eg when wo can hung? Wherein does the Davis of 'O7 differ from the Mavis of *01;-or the Lee defeated at Five Forks, from the Lee in a Colonel's coat, (rest) from capturing John Brown at Harper's Ferry, offering his services to the rebel chief? In nothing save that they are fiv years oiler—and burden"! With the crimes' it' K four years' merci less war ! In 61 w« could have hunj i hem because ihey were in our power at one time So can wc in 'lit. with better reason, if we please. TTie popular ju lg incut is u i loubtc lly, still expressed in refrain which those of us who hate ser ved. have si often heard, when our blue t coated defenders were ou the rfng ! n_' ori the morning air. across the. 1 fields and throng!) the woods of the Did Dominion : - * We'll hang .Toff. Dnvia on a sour apple tree, ' Ah we go marching on.' And so let it lie.-— Franklin U-positOii/ To TIIE (IMHS. —Girls, beware of transient young men; never suffer the. atlilresses -nf-a ntri>tiy r; recollect that a steady fanner boy or a mechanic is worth nil the floating trash in the world. The allurements of t£ dandy Jack witli a gold chain his neck, a walking fdek in his paw, some hoaest tailor's coat on bis buck, and a briinlesa skull, can never make up for the loss of. a father's hoilse and ' a good mother's and llic soci ety of brothers and -isters; their affec tions last, while those of a rich young man are lost in the wane of the honey moon. Tis true. I know no manner of speaking so offensive as that of giving praise, and closing it witb su exception. SATURDAY NIQHT. ET **TTH "WN«ri«LP Toiat*. Tlio cafes of the w«»*k nfo all ond« 111 toils n**J Its labors ure o'er. Its j tn.it witii sorrows are blended, filta'l bless «r oppro* 1 * us o«» mure. VTIMi hvnts Idly Rildea we're sitting Within the red lire light's glow. M'hile slowrfv tho daylight is tlittinir, r th*: world s!ialo»t« glow. Oil, w»H 112 onr loads hare been lightenod. Hv W'.jnU ot' affuctl-uj and love, And well II tb«i ways hav her-i l»ri« lu try twin love tli.it is dead. fft» think of tliem now,-in otir gladne9«, Mi I j> .v Ihe go > I ftrhei t» hltrn^ Th • h art* tlvit ar« lifavj n(th i«lne«; W lli\ t.i soiro# i),i|H .-iwd. How d r.; < *e.n» ' e •* -v -nid buug men 11 have spent a few thousand dollars of the twen ty thousand squandered in two weeks at having them so rancrhr and trained that money would have been safe iu their bunds; so as to make both it and them selves useful to tlie r follow men ! In these days, when cr. many men are be c lining -ud leul, rich, and when there *r»counter indications that so many -ol ilieir pjstcrity may become suddenly poor, thero is g enter cause than ever for impressing upon tlie min is of parent tho dangers of allowing their sons t' grow up with habits oJ'iiHpness, uu l .wi h • >nr li'i -w;..-lge I»f any (is i'u! oil: .i;< •, •vli cli iliey miy be nhin IN earn liviijj for tlibins 'ves. —/Vm'v In-Jarr GEOW Iff GKM3E. •• You must h iid mti.rcoui so with O d qr your c inverse wiln sinners nr Saints, rcadi' g ilie li'i be eaiefullv. tuer seeking to lean it tru lis, wiih niueli p avei-; s -< win s >uls io Jesu-. n e ft in the furthernnee uf any s ct, 'Kit to lielfc on tHs jtfirt u. unity id".aU iu Christ Jesus, wliu believe in him. nnf 1 liis fiat liis aetious pro ceed run the depths uf a he.irt full of the OV- 112 (lo I. 'lhe last elai-a uf'bis len -e Is one w i tli» A ten' ON of all I!U:?C wlio li ive uiude it p ofession. j.f rellgi"n once but who arc no v llv'rtfx in ihe world, oi* of b.s bildest nd\oeates >1 aTI kinds nl ple i-ure. but who knew nothing • 112 thecu in qu ft gr iwth el spjji u ility -on the mill nf ihe /I'JC iielie*'i - n r Hjutificy ever know it util«r pleng ure neither grow in grace nor win souls to Jesna. I " Blest ar« iuih Ins uo interest with the •ia c party, because of its opposition to n-gfo suffrage." Similar Sentiments have' been cxjireiwed by other*. N't)i is it surprising that such a scnti tp nit shpuld giin grpund am'tig the S 111 them as they perceive the true bearing ui ilie It p iblicau policy "n their restoration to jlieir normal c.ndi tioir in the Union, aad ou the lentpin t.on ami prvspcity o)' thojr at', furs. And lliat feeling will, ot course become more extended an I influential in the same quarters when ft is seen that ihe policy of the Democratic party simply regards the Simtheiu people as make weights aud auxiliaries to it. This idci cropped out distinctly in the speech'of lion. W. A. Wallace in opcnHg the Convention, describing"the enterprise nnd purpose ot the party as doing battle for the sceptre ei' doiniuion. It is a strange position for a party to lake. If anyt lung could demonstrate the ibrlotu condiiion of the party as to all live questions of public ptVficy, its own platform does it riTOst forcibly. It pro poses issues that are nit born, as well a« hose lh.it are dead. It courts the S mill l>y denouncing what the South has de cided to accept, and seeks a fellowship, of partisanship with the Southern people, while they are wisely aril hooeitly re-> fusing it. It courts tfie American work itl^iu.iß-by a pretoiieo that he knows to be untrue, arid endeavors to throw the •Jcjcrved odium of the Democratic bus tility to a protective tariff on the Rcpub fican party which is and has been its ■mly trne friend (JumnxerrSat. NEVER KI-SSED A WHITE Glߣ'.: .Some lime ag > a p'anter a shbrt. Hlstanoc ! riom Mcnijims gave a pSrty tTthty<>niig folks in the neighborhood. It was a gty one and in the course of the evi-riog the l.oys and girls pj,id b.r.eits. While this was going on, lj. chaiiced that the sou of the planter, a nice, modest fallow hail to etsihi a Tirrelt of .ionic of the girls, but he was ovcicnno with diflidcaee. lis ahead, John,' said Ihe planter, -and kiss sotue of |he girls.' John hitched from pnu foot to the other blushed, and linilly blurted out: 'l—l never kissed a white L'lrl, father.' The laughter that ensued may be imagined. Gen. Longstroet peblis'-ies a let- 1 ter in a New Orleans phper rccomen ding coißpliiiice with the military reconstruction bill which he says "is a peace offering. ' ♦ THE PRINTER'S ESTATE. —Tlio prin ter 3 d illnrs—whore nre tlioy ? A dollar here, and« dollar there scattered over numerous small towns, oil over the couu : try. mi e.s nnd miles npart—how shall they us gathered together ? The paper maker, the building owner, the journey. IUJII compositor, the grocer, the tailor, j and all astistunta to him in carrying on I his business, have their demands, hard ly ever so small as a single dollar, lint the tii'tes from here and there must be diligently gathered and patiently hoard ed, or the wherewith to discharge the large liabilities will never become suffi ciently bulky. We imagine the printer will have to get up an address to these " wi lely scattered dollars syuiething like the, following , ''Dollar*, halves, quarters, dimes, and all manner of fractions into which ye ire divided, collect yourselves, nnd come home I Ye are wanted ! Combinations of all sorts of jneu that help the printer to become a proprietor, gather such force and demand with such good reasons,your appearance a' this oouuter, that nothing short of a sight of you will appease them. Collect yourselves, for valuable as you are in the aggregate, single, you will nev er pay the first cost of gathering. "Couie in here, in single file, that tlie printer may form you into hatallion, and send you forth again, to battle for him, and vindicate his credit Header, aro you sure you liav'nt a couple of the printer's dollars sticking about your "old clothes?" Poppi.voTiiu QUESTION. —The'Chim- ncy Corner has the following on "char acteristic popping Yankee : Jonathan—-"Sal, der yer love doughnuts ?" Sal—'-Yes, JohnAtban; why?" Jonathan—' Oh, nofliin'; only jnSoon- I sider me one o' them doughnuts.' Western : LuqactoOs individual.—* "Hollo, oil gal— see here ! I've scatter lofisticate l all over the equinimity of this 'ere country, looking for just such a critter as you. Whatsay, will yer hitch?" Western gal—"Oh, slrueks, I ealkor* late; so let's git upani git." utch : Haris—"lt4i will h*l>ea you, Johanna*., I loves you more bettoi thin i do >s mein ligur beer." JoUanna«-i-"Oli ya. Hans, datis goot." French : French Gallant—"Ob, Mad emoiselle, yon will do me le very much honor to accept, *3 hind ?" Mademoiselle—"Oh, Monsieur, you make my fice very much rouge. Ask madam. Voulievous ?" .low : Ilamman—"Matilda, T have five gold watches. almost as good a*, new, von good lot of scond band clothing, nnd von-good camel hair shawl, which I will give to- you if you will bemine bride?" Matilda—-"Pcnr Hmnman. T can't ro (3i st ; hut lot mo see the cum el hair uhawl first." Irish: Patrick—"Biddy, darling,would yoez like a new house, a cow, a pig, nnd tnoself in the bargain?" Bridget—"Och. Paddy,don't be tn/.ing | mo ! "i'is the p'nste wore aftor wauting." Trite BHST INHERITANCE. —The following paragraph we clip from ono of Ifeivry Ward lloecher'a recently published sermons: " Not money, not honor, tiot even a good name is the best inheritance of a child. Far above all secular gilts is a parent's good name ; but there aro some good things that are better than that, namely, those trans inissable moral qualities which put t'to sole, frop. the first, under the dominion of the higher instinct.—• bYmn my mother I had a legacy which I would not be able t) thank Gr tl enough for in this world, if 1 was to live for long ages. Have you not nason to thank (rod that you sprang from such parents as yours Were? And doyou not know that the nature which they h mded down to you was one that represented, as it were, in our jour nal, the point at which they left tho conflict having gained victory upon victory that your warf.iro might be less and your victories easier ? And that which youhave inherited of tend encies towards things noble and true and away from things selfish and false Vnii may transmit" with augmenting power. " Here i3 a great lesson of life. ■r-. TX>- ■ » 13 ,73 U.siN'a To3 \C: J V stro ig and sensi ' e "vriter says a govl sharp thing, an 1 a true one, to>, fir bo/- wio u as a most baneful poison. The laws of health arc infallible; the 1 relation between transgression and the i penalty is invariable, and tho infliction of 1 the latter is certain to follow upon the | fjrmST. "Tfttrffi* nothing about which I young persons aro more boguiled and de- I luded, than the belief that they can trans* I gress natural laws and jump the penalty. '• I'uuishmeut for a Violation fo natural laws is just ar certain as that tho suu itself shines, and none can violate a law of his bidy. or any part of it, that there is not legif tired iu him a penalty. Why is n bullock a very o'jndisnt ani mal? Hecainse he will lie Uotvu if you axe I him. NUMBER 88. Our boasting of privileges without I duly improving them, is like pleading for our ottn condemnation. The remains of the bachelor who "burst into tears," on reading the description of married lifj, have been found. r —lt is remarkable that the worda in all European languages whieh express fat» giveness, or pardon, till iniply free gift. —We see. in a reoent statement that the Census enttimrea seven militia of women. Who wouldn.t be Census ! . —Gen. Fremofit has pnrchilsfed tha late residence on the iiudstrtf of Gen,, Watson Wobb, cur Brazilian minister. —Beauty iis a great Rift of Heaven j noi for the purpose of female vanity, but a great gift for one who lores, and wishes to be bo loved. —There is no policy like politeness; ani a good • manner is the best thing m the world, either to get a good name, of to sup ply the want of it. —Wonderful ! that the Christian rolii , gion, whieh seems to have no other object than the felicity of another life, should also constitute the happiness of this. —Attach not thy heart to those treasure with which this fleeting life is adomtd. If llinfl enjoyest, learn to lose, and. if happi' ness is with thee, remember grief. A WAGGISH editor says that tho streets of one of the Western citip? are,to bo lighted with red-headed girls; We'i liko to hug the lamp posts. A contemporary suggests that a lady on putting on her corset, is liko d man who drinks to drown his grief, because in so lacing herself she is getting tight «. . » Young ladies, now a days, when they aro fireparing for a walk, ought not to keep tlioir overs waiting as long as they used to do, for now they have only to put their bonliet) half cn. A lady took her little boy to oburch for the first time. Upon hearing the organ ho was on his feet instanter. 'Sitdown,' said' the mother. 'I wont,'he slfoutod; ' 1 wanf to see the monkey.' A wag seeing a lady at a partt, witir a low necked dress and bare arms ex pressed his admiration by Saying sfe& outstripped the wholo party. —lion. Hen Wade is the favorite Presidential candidate of many Ohio politicians, and Senator Chandler is said to liave promised to eiprt hi* influence to secure him tho delegation from his State. w " *of my existence, will you give moan askod a young printer of his swoot hcart. With an ! atsuch an? shemadea at him, and planted her tST between hi* IPs. "Such an outrage," said Fanstf looking ff at her, "is without a ||." —Spend your time In nothidg you know must bo repented of. Spend it in nothing in which you mi ;ut not pray for tho blessing of Ood. Spaai it in nothing which you could dot review with a quiot conscienco on your dying bed. A text of scripture, verse ofu iiyir.n. or a sweet song of Zion, often proves to tho weary and timid Cristian like the sprig of mass in tho desert which s,ni matod and inspired Mungo Park. Let Christians often speak in psalms, snd hymns, Add spiritual sodgs, da the pil grimage of life, HEART RELlGlON. —Religion is I ji an eminent degree, the science of tho "heart, and he who does riot reboivo it into his heart studies it to verj little purpose. Evory Chris tain ought,theuf fore. to study with the heart Ai well a3 with the head; letting light and heat increaso with an equal progressitJU, and mutually assist each othft. NEVER mako use of * woman's name in an improper place, or at an improper time, or in mixed company. Never mako assertions about her that you think are allusions that you feel she hersolf would blush to hear. When yon meet with men who do not scruple to niake use of a wo man's name in a feckless manner, bhun them, for they are lost to every sense of honor. INFLUENCE OF WOMKM.—If wo wish to know the political and niofal condition of a State, we must ask what fank women hold in it. Their influ ence embrace the whole Of life. A wife, a mother, two magical wo#ds comprising the sweetest scourcc of man's felicity. Theirs' is the reign of love, of reason. A man takes coun sel with his wife, he obeys his mother, even long after she ceased to live, and the i lea which be has received I'rorn her become principles stronger even than his passion. HE is the most thoroughly educated ftun Who derives his knowbdge not from books alone, nor from men alone, bat from the careful and discrimina ting study of both. A truly learp.ed man is liberal towards opponents,, toN j erant of error, charitable toward frailty and compassionate tdvanis failure. Only the ignorant and half , 1 educated arc dogmatical .illiberal ami i intolerant.