TERMS OrADVERTISING One Square one Inuertion, For each salbsuqUent Insertion, • For %le vantllu Advertisements : Legs! Nantes Protefolo sal (lards without paper. Obituary Not .us an Oa tion rul sing •o matt, sot pri vate interests ;thaw, 10 soots per line. JOI PitINTINIO —Our Job Printing Office is tho irrest and most c onplet° u.tablishment in tho Warr Z;°..; I Prolisas, and a - genuria - variety of material suited for plain nod Fancy work of ovary l,ho OA On us to do Job Printing at thu thou test antic°, sad on ths moat reasonable terms. Persons qttl , of Bills, Blanks, or anything In the .I.lobblaig' line, will hod it 'h their interest to give us a call. kl6,ol:rsal , 4lll( , ollnilti,o2l. U S. GOVERNMENT President— A NiitE, .1011NsON, Vico ProAlaent —h. S I , o;rEtt., tio,l . oEAry or kV.O. 80,,retary ks. II •ICI.‘N. ~,,Itary 01 ULLOCII, SPerotury 0I War—Fliwis M. STINTON, s'•crotnry of Nutty -(111. , 1 l'o,t Ma-tor tioloiral— \lm L/F.NNISON. • — ,ornay iteniiral—.l%mrs S. of Lhc Cnpn 1 Slateq—,+Nl.Nlo3 P. CIIA9r. STATE (10 VE RN ENT - . I,.,,ernor ANDREW CI Cittrix, S wrl3 or y ,tato--411.1 1 . 11.1R11R, iurveyor Uo u•'nrl— I AM.III 1141111, 11Lor Goner:U-Ist AC . 11.1.NRER, y 1)0111,11 ljutmit General—A Stole Treasurer-11 ,1 1.r . 310 nit 11. 0111,1.1 . 0 tie of the z 4 uprome Court—lire. W.Woon WARD couNTy OFFICERS. Jan., 11. Graham. 4-tooti .o .1 tiLl,p,s— I ion. icha,l Cocitliu. lien !I u4ll It Ll:lrt Ih Arict A torney--.1. 11'. D. ()Melon. P • , th Jnotatry-8n lino! Shireinan. CI ir t an I It-ti . osior —Ephraim Commun. Itottisto`r—( lllo 11'. North. - IllLh ihoriff —.John iambs. Prossorer—ltonry d. Ritter. Cm' olor —David Mt ith Cot oty Hari., .1111 v fly. .litoholl Saiiorint endsnt ol It Snyder Physician to JOll-1)r. ‘V. flab , . Physician to Poor W W. Dale. BoßoUu oFFECERS Chief 1101,...5..—.11,1111 Campbell, t'amerm.. i'mlneil—i.art .I,l I 11'.II UIII 11,1, drew LS. Z. ILA,. lie, 111 telliar U. mak., R nru ,, I M4lllllll. ,1 al 11. -..1 k It ImeM../. 11111 S. •l,kki 11 1118 11. 11. 11,11111111 , ar.mhammer li•motk.;lt U 11 1 ,1110; , 1,11 k (11.11111,111. 111.211 01110:11.1, Elll.l/1 kkk.lirl Prmstables. E tat IVard. 111411,, k... James Rid •..;r: u •, x kWh' , w k.. 1. N 5.1.1 C. i %Vold.Jae I. 1100:I) ' .1. II It N‘ Strku.t r, Pat J of 1...-11Duvia Smilb brut I) .11 11.01•0tob Lamp 1.3u1110,---Alcs t EOM IMilliMil =I vor, .L I' 5...u1 11. II L Im•I VIII l•L lrl• I \..1 lIIIIIIIEME P. NI. IC: 1.1.1.c..1.1111101t1p of !oo /..1 •./.Ir It.v I. .1 v. •L,.r n na . . n. 3.1 7 cl.n )1. 1';t1411411 •Itt. iri•tAt 'llllr. tti ,t1••1.1, `li• z•0r ,,./1 I'l .t 1.1 ll'• i hull.ll I. lit 1/.1, t'lts 1•.1 at tu I . ILL . , 'l.llllO, ' • .:. 'it I i , 1,1.• . . t N. II .1 , 1 , 1.. r 11 . !I Ili it ~,•1 .11M' , 111111 la I • it. :1 ,Ilur It I I. 'I. I I , il 7 I, I. NI • h ../ Chu , ~., 1 1•1 .•h”rl. 111 t,in LB. i'l-0/1. '1 0 , 11. 1..1,1 M I (hot 11 tk, .11.161.6 ,t 1, ..t ‘l. , nu;h 11 of %%est Ft ttlol u,! . , (v, 11. I.' Panto. z-crl at 11 it, ni.. .ud i; .nufbirt near East ct evvry other NO. =ME bath. At I , espris at :1 I'. NI. IA I,oler:tit 14 , 1111-, rf l'or.df et auk) dun 'T. I •tr, H. I•er, leen ni cluck P . d. tiint 11‘,11 . 11 arc tur.esti.kry ILr rotor .irr ratify DICKINSON COLLEGI, Rev her!. in M. Jollll,llii. 1) D. P1,1(1.11 and Pro tensor at sod IIILIi,.J lotermture. on uel D. Wlllll.lll. A. M . iif rt ethriAii tier Jonn IC 61,13'1'11 in, A. M., of the Latin n~,d Fieoch 11 ,i 1 .1 r Ile , .1 e,lurn, LI, It , lAw. Charlea II it'''. A. (.1 Alalural ori eneu Curator o the Rev. .li.nois i A \ lel len er. A. M., Pitif.issor of the Greek and lierrntin Lan:relive, it er Bernard 11. D 1). Pi one,sol of Philoso phy argil Hee. Henry C. Chesion, A M , Principal of the Uralutnar A. NI. 'Primo er, Pri11.11 , 31 if U.' Commercial Depart ment. C Mi•KV1`11:111. %,s1: holt in Crammer School, 1111L1 Tea, her of Pell.l.lo,Lip. TllE MARI I NSITITTF sTioN : 1111! It , tor, It,ur ,t , u, and '"oat rytntln 01 ( ho is 1.11111 , 1 t. The ReV. F. .1. kn.,. It 11 t 1ic14 , 11 anti Ttea , urnr. Mrs John It tinn•ad. P[lOElll.ll Mit. A. E. Don knre Ie , I o(trllCtor In Laingungi, INl3ss 1,. I. \telo-ter, 1 u-u wtir in Initthentalit, and Vocal Slush. . . Mrw Si. sl Tvaclivi of . I imlo. Mts. E. 1/ rev am eaciler of r.,, , 11112; and g . c.e.v S. 1.1.t•LI111 . 1 . Oil I.lneu Uou Itn4 Psyt.hu. BOARD OF SCIIOOI, DIRECTORS IL C .rn la Privsivl eat, Jaynes Antall 11., II Slut). It C. ward, Ilatity •ea sham. v I' Ilut,rich Sect'y, , .1. VV. Itlvy, Crei,vvrovv, Jowt vvall vs. NI essenge, Me, t is tll., vy v.l each I,vtly O'CIOCk A )1 , at ltd.,. ttioa CUR Pl./RATIONS ,A , ltyr II sAtt —l've•illont. It )1 Hondo!' sou; t;ti,111.,..1 I'. Ilassisi. I ell. In 1.. A trot 11 A Ct.!Et 11e1-;on: .lm lin 1 , sw. . l:nr.ciul n, It 11 Presl.lvot, It C. Vt'fioaward. John D. Nur gag. Joh .1 nil u3rt. jr.. bin. 11"slsr, 11,•nry I -A Atop' J u, 11 ni Ilupbnru &111,..tr N " . 1 IN O. 6,111101 11101..1 Blind e, ‘l., /111 Ilr wti Win .nn DU11 , 111) 3tl;ll'd Wo .1 .lro It toil tp, stnc 8r01111.11.111. Atorrott. 131.11111Ei1L% V.,1.1,LY C.011,51% Feu t o rt,.., Watt,: ~,,, r otar and Tr eat.lll,r. 21. di rrh.: .;,rrierinto..,lont. O. N. Lull Paso:. 1.... re trot a; Litre., tin a day. rlirlish. .tio . aura erica. ties C Irll,lu 5 53 A. NI , arriving. at Cur linle sdt P. NI. l'orLia.r;ll trains I.: tsLwArtl, tit le A 11. .and 2.12, P, \Vest ward at 1127, A. NI ,end 2.55 I'. M. Clnustx U H &VD Wu ER CUE NV. — President, Lem uel 'Co l'rt.,,,arer, A. L. Spin, en, Ocorge 0. 'so: Diroet trs, V. Watts. Wm. M. Ileatemt E. H. Diddle. floury :.+l)‘ too. t'. N 001“ N ard, J. W, Patton, F. ~ardner and D. 9, Croft SOCIETIE , I Cumin,land AtAI Lodge No. 197, A. Y. Ti. moots at Marion Hall on the 2 and 4th Tuesday II of m Or) month St John's Lodgo No. Diu A. Y. m. Nleaqs 3d Tburs day Manch month, nt llarioo II:111. ' Oarlialo bodgo No. 91 I. II of U. I? Moots :Monday 0001100. at 'I rout's building Letort I.odpo No. h 3. I. I) of (3 T. Meets every Thursday (Welling ill I. Ammer, nail, 3d story. 0 FIRE COMPANIES. The Union Firo Company wa• organized in 1780. Howls in [Anchor bstween Pitt and Hanover. 'Cho Cumberland Fire Compary was Instituted Feb 19. 1809. Cause In Bedford, between Main ann Pom feat. 'rho Gond Will Fire Catnnany was instituted In IGfnreli; 1855. 110080 IW - I , nmfort:Taur - Ittmovor. - Thu Empire Hook and Ladder Company was Ins tu• tod in 1809 House . In Pitt. near Main. ItATES ,or POSTAGE Postago on all lottors of one half ounce weight or under. 3 cents pro paid. Poctagc on the 111111 A 1,1, within the County, free. Within the State 13 mints per annum. T., any part (Atli., United States, 2 1 3 cents Postage on all Iran ole at papers. 2 cents per ounce, Advertised letters io bo charged with cost of advertising. MRS. R. A. SMITH'S Photographs; Ambrotypesflvorytypes Beautiful Albums I Beautiful Frames Alhunis for Ladlist and Gentlemen, • Albums f r SHans,.o d for Children, Pocket Albums for Soldiers and Civilians! Choicest Albums I Prettiest Albums I Cheapest Albums! FOR CHRISTMAS. GIFTS 1 Fresh and N ow. from New York and Philadelphia Markets. IP you want satisfactory Pictures and, polite attention call at Mrs. It. A. Smitten Pilot& graphic Gallery, South East Corner of Ilanovor.Etreet and )Terkel Square, opposite the Chita Muse end Post Oillco,.oerlielo, Pa. •, Mrs It. A. Sralth'ivell'ltnotvn as Sirs. It A. neynehle, and so well known as a Daguerrean Artist, gives per attention to Ladles and Gentlemen visiting her Gallery, and having the best of Artists and polite at tondante can safely promiso•that in no other Gallery eon thosn'who flavor her with a call get pictures sup,- ' lot' to hers, not even in New York or elilledelphia, or meet with tranr ,, kind and prompt Attention • Ambrotypes inserted in Rings, bockets, Breast Pins, &C. Perfect copleg of butitterrolypes and Ambrotypes ,made of deeenee , l friends. Where copies :tea defaced, 11 ii-Illto'plcture.c.-ty still be bud. either for frames". r for 'cards. All turpatlves preserved one year and orders by mall or otherwiseproniptly attended to. Detember 23, 1.864—te Dot: WIYI . H..-Cdor;, . . ,HONOEOPATEIIO 'PHYSICIAN; .. Surgeon acid AcCouchour , • , QdTFIGE at`: Iris' residence in P y , t airo l e , t l , B at u dj . otalnis the Methodist Church, •1 00 25 00 00 7 0 VOL. 65: The following is pronounced by the “Westminister Re view" to he unquestionably the finest American poem I=l Within the sober realms of leafless trees, The russet year inhaled the dreamy air, Like some tanned reaper In his hour of ease, When all the fields are lying brown and hare The gray barns looking from their hazy hills, O'er the don watess winding in the vales, Sent down the air a zreetlng to the mills, On the doll thunder of alternate flails. All sights were mellowed, and all sounds subdued, The hills seemed further and the stream sang low As in a dream the distant woodman hewed ills wintry log, with many a 'nified blow. The °what tied forests, erewhila armed with gold Their hanners 'bright with every martial hue, Naar stout fi6lllo Sad, beaten host of old, Witlith,,Vll afar in Mill's remotest blue. On t o Wing the voltnre tried his flight : The dove senree hoard Isis sighing mate's romplaintt And, Ilhe it star elow droivnlng in the light, The tillage church Vulle Seellied to pale and faint. The sentinel cock upon the crew— Creo tlirli 1.-1111/i all IVO, htiiilT 1111111 h 1.11.1, File id, 1,11 replying warder Hems 111,..11i1.11 110111, 1111.1111..11 Wan 11.1a1 . 11 11.1 11101.1 11 here curl the jay, within the eint's tall cruel, Made garrnliins trouble riitind her unfledged And ‘,11 , 1 , Ih , • oriole hung her aura.) nig nest. lt3 etere light wind like a i its swung. lit (Anti tif circling FM - litt• Iri•iiev re Au I,llly 11:1,, , t un4 n 1/11 . 11101111S your 1111,1.1.,,,•23 held th,it 1114. =I TI. %1.11 . 11 OW I'o.lllol 1110 1 . 1 ft,% hit All ,ntply told forlot Alto t•, I,m t.lll.tht• •tublilp, pip 41 the tomil And t .1:0,1 the t I.ltw thro'tntrt all the dreary gloom 11.• pi rirv.iul. ilrifinming ill the sole Ion) no 1.1...... th.• : Th. Bpi LI • 1,4,111 t 11100 hy nigh lintlin.ll..-.1.,%11. 111...m1y ghost 111,, t II r••J illn==ll I ut 111 night ill ittivmy !IIMIll!=1111 MISSES IMENIM Ml= Autl II ,4 ili• rd -1111 , 11 , • ,tir I=l I , ‘ 11 , , it ,V,1 4 1.111410 SI(II Hlll 11111 c ). ! If or ;;,tilitz., -1111111;;;Iloil and •lw int% hor ;tfl ; Aiitl t,14 r .6le phttf.— 111 Cl' list 111,111111,. R, 1 4 .,,,• tut itat not thatlllllll that dr.,' And , tllll 6 fitt dying 1.10,v in. l'•11 tip. ~f hiv,ling foe. 1. 1 .11 g. 1.111 401Iti. 111'04/111g ty11,•1 W 1411141. 1.11, 1111' 1411 nuu nnu.•f lit 110,1 ; but 1114 14114. the 1114.1114.ry the gulls Ili oar hod t 11, lip, is untl and 1 ro.ntitlon. At last the throw) vk .:tl.l,4l—hot - heati uns , 1,ite..h.41.pa1l the ,ii-t: 11-throil4h her hands sere A I,d lug iug t•Firt•fill nirrot NN .1111 HI, nllllllll3l ,cel Welthia Washburne's Reward "What is it, my darlinfz?" "I want ynu to help that poor man in the jail, papa. lie has no one to he kind to him, and he feels so bad; it tuake me feel sorry " Who told yon ahont him, WeHie ?" "Why. I etw him when i went to the jail will) Mr: Ilarnzami yes,t(rdav ; and after we came I,mne she told me he had no fri, nds, and no monpy .0 get a law- yet. to—to-1 don't know what, but Mrs said it. would izot him out of jail anvw,ay, Now, ;:apn, you're a law )er, and won't you do it without money ? Say yoki, lika f .xmal papa and tba child twined her soft ;MI'S ahnut. his neck and kissed him again and again. It was not in the great lawyer's heart to refuse iinything that his brown ey, d darling—this only child—requested at any time, certainly not when the settle fountain spring of benevolence that wel led up so sweetly in his child's bosom, gushed from his own heart, and whispered of common humanity, urging him to al leviate the sufh•rings of hie erring broth• ers in this uncharitable world of' ours, where many are willing to render assist ante doWn.life's hill, but very few in the difficult ascent... the rager,.eunest child, with loving epi thets, was pleading, "Say yes,,i)apa ! There's a good papa!" • "Wehills. I am astonished ! Behave yourself, child ! Miller, why don't 'you make her.stort ? That comea_of letting her go with Mrs Hapgood to the ,jail yesterday. Ever since she came thing or telling me of the horrid wretches she sow there You ought to know bet ter than to let her go; but you never con• suit my wishes," and Mrs. Miller Wash. borne arranged the folds of her silk morning robe, and leaned mournfully back upon the velvet cushion. "What is it so terrible that my'birdie is ,tibieg ?" - arid hir passed his hand light ly over the brown curls. " I don't like the way Mrs. liapgood is bringing her up," said di.: lady, petu lantly. "She is always talking some 'Quixotio idea into her hertcl;stich as go ing flit() the jail; and I do net . Want„ , mY child to mingle in sueh scenes." ""Martha; Mrs. 'Hapgoint'isnna , of the noblest w;itten God 'everpliMed on thiSt' earth. She has been my teacher, thore than mother, through life; and ',I, Am perfectly' willing she - 'Should lead my child in the• Santo path 'ji-for - what ; little of good there ropheart isOwing.to the principles she has insulated; - pleiMea to ate the kindnesS'of. licart this little one , .Monifesis by the intereitt she•tak4iti the, Suffering's 'and . sorrow's of othersi:' i.laligood wished Wellie to, go : with' liar k\ • ' ' 1 ~.... . •. !...: . _ _ ~,, , ...., ... ~.-.... , RHEEM & 'WEA.KLEV", Editors & Proprietors THE CLOSING SCENE BY TIMMAS ISTIMANAN READ. =I 'Say yes, papa ; do, please." But for a moment he hesitated, while ome ebe has been teasing about some , I-, .1 y'esterday, and I unhesitatingly gave my consent, as I knew she would he as safe tl ere as here. Mrs. Hapgond's project is a noble one, and I think she will suc ceed in reclaiming many a falling one from the gulf of ruin beneath his feet,' and the most abandoned there would not dare to treat her with rudeness. How did the men behave, Wellie ?" 'They wasn't all men, papa; some of them were little boys, like Charley Wil son. Mrs. Hapgood took them some flowers, and then she read to them out of the Bible a long time, and then she had a school, and great, big men, as big as you, papa. said their letters, and some wrote. Before that, we all sung one of my hymns, and then we came home.— Mamma said they mould he rude and noisy ; but they wasn't ; and they said T was a good little girl, and Mr. I%.ionroe sail T was an angel ; he didn't think" I wore a white dress, and had wings, and flew in the sky, did he, papa ? But," suddenly jnn ping up, "you didn't say you would help him, yet, papa." "Yes, T will do all I can for him (11)1'1- ir.g." And, with a farewell kiss,, the de lighted child hounded away to tell Mrs. llapgnod the joyful tidings, while, with a groan of dismay Mrs. Washburn() turned to hoe husband. '•Surely, Miller, you do not 0 ink of, knvintr, your business to plead for some miserable creature, whom you know noth- in_ )f " •rf know whom Weilia means. It is youm4 Ylontoe, formerly book keeper at WiT•cm's. He was arrested for forgery, .I,ort time two and if anv one meti , s pity. he does ; an T shall do all T can for him " And .Vr. Washborne left the =IIIE room, while his wire returned to her with the firm belief' that Miller and mrs. thipond would ruin the whole ritnily yet. That child, Wcllie, talk ing and singing with the horrid .creat ures ; it W3S terrible, but there was no use expostulating. Dliller would have his own way." Miller ‘Vashburne, left an orphan when but a few months old, bequeathed by his dying mother to her girlhood's friend, Mrs. Ilapgood, loved the childless widow who fostered the parentless child as a mother. A mother she had been to him in all those long days of childhood ; and upon his mariage, finding, his wife illy fitted to command a household, he sent for that one true friend to come, and, among other cares, guard the wee pearl God has consigned to his protection. Dignified and quiet. yet always pleas ant. Mrs flapgood's sixty winters sat very lightly on her head. A truly benevolent woman was Mrs. finpg.ond, not in showering pence upon none wam ering, vagrant, but in search ing out the truly suffering, striving to al leviate their 'sorrow, and rescuing., the erring from a path of vice and -- ifffinty; hut her last and greatest folly, in Mrs Washburne's eyes, was entering the coun ty jail, to assist, relieve and if possible, reclaim some of the many children con= fined in that soul hardening place. But let us follow Mr. Washburno up stairs, where lie rapped at a door, receiv ing Mrs. nap g ,,,a , , , , pleneant "now° in" "I was wi'hin, to see you, Miller.— ThiQ little girl,"—and he put her hand on Wellie's head—"wishes to go with me to visit the prisoners, this afternoon Are you willimr she should go ?" "Yes, and I will accompany you, and see how young NTonroe's case stands." "Wellie came in a few minutes ago, and told me you had promised to do something for. Mr. Mem;oe ; she did not know what " And she smiled quietly upon little brown eyes. Half an hour afterwards, as -they en tered the room where Nathan Monroe was eonfined, little Wellie skipped g i qy across the finer, and torching the bowed head, said ,"I'm here, and Mrs. Hapgnod's here, and papa's here, too. Are you glad 1" When the lawyer came forth from that long conference, there was a firm look in his eyes ; and to Mrs. Hapgood's anxious inquiry, "Haim you_any _hoPc_for_himr_ ho responded, "He iS innocent; rind I will save him." . And he redeemed his wotd. The al most lost was saved ; and the lawyer led the innocent man from the shadowy fel. on's',doom, looming so black before him, to, freedom and honor. "God bless you, all 1" said he, as the trio met him for the last time. "I am going'far f om here to try my fortune in a strtitige'plaae; but though I can never, never" express my ,gratitude, I am assured that God will sometime place' it in my: power to repay,. at, letiht-a part' of the kindness you have done me; and•Jr,pcly life shoillti'be the price, will etnee more bless my good augel I" and, for"a - Moinerit,,his lips touched the child's, forehead, then he was gone. , Time passed swiftly, one by:one, Mrs.. hapg,ood, , with„ Mr. ~and Mrs. Wash burne; were laid ibegath' the Waiiig wit I low, until none,,but Wellie remained; and as the-wife , of the' young merchan t', FldWaid ,Wynne, trod the , streets of her 'birthplace, 13uV the aeotheuluted wealth of Years melted away before speculation's frown;.and.'the' beggared merchant, with : faniiryi wandering west Ward. to 'retrieve his'fallen fortunes. in the btist wegterii'ati; 'he made • =MI 1, . 01 4 :::..;,:,...':-..•.'..,,.-'..,.,...... '..'.,-.‘..;,...-,, ~•.: (40, ..-(.., .. ~,:.,, C A t,-...,t......,y; : . , .:., ,•,. ", .. ~,. ~! ~. 9.- . . ... t . ~ . • MEM i J 4 = =EMI . „ . Cailisle 'hi.day,',December 22, 1865 home,:he soon found employment; but fortune seemed to spdrt with the strug• glint man even here, for the firm by which he was employerltlosing several thousand dollarS, charged it to his inat• tention and carelessness, and he was thrown from employment. After months of ceaseless searching, which drained the last dollar from his light purse, he obtained another situation; but, within three weeks a heavy robbery was committed in the store; Suspicion fastened upon Edward Wynne; an under clerk asserted to have seen him conceal the money ; and because he was a friend• less stranger the tale obtained ample cre dence. Wealthia Wynne, her husband in a prisoner's cell', was left penniless, home• lesS, and friendless, to—fold her babes to her bosom and endure stifferint),•—suffer ing.such as she had never known; but hers was not a heart to sink under mis fortune, and though very little hope for the future illuminated her path, she un fearingly trod the daily rou'ine of al most superhuman labor to procure bread for her helpless children. God only could read the future, and in his wisdom her faith rested. It:was evening; and in the library of a noted lawyer the lamp burns brightly, shedding its brightest lustre upon the face of an elderly gentleman sitting by the table busily conning the endless parchment in preparation for the coming court term. Lines or care and sufferino. crops the broad high brow, and shadow the dark eyes w•th a kindly look, as though he had passed through the fiery furnace of sorrow Tie is interrupted by a t3et‘Vaitt. an nouncing, "A woman on business' sir," And with a kind respectful air lie rises to greet - the poorly clad woman; hut, as he motions her to a seat, and inquires her business, lie gives no sign of recognition. Probably they are strangers ; but that cannot be—yes it is—the fairy like Wel lie Washburn° of our memory, and the Welthia Wynne, of latter years ; and so Chon . ged ! In a voice, faltering with the danger of a rude dismissal, iibe told the tale of her husband's danger, of their poverty and friendless situation, concluding by asking. him to plead her iusband's cause in the °riming trial. "We have no fc.e to offer you, but we will labor as your ►laves our, Oh, do not refuse tie! Whatia"so little to you is life or death to us!" and a gas ping sob closed the ippeal. lie hesitated no linger, but said, "I am very busy; Fat I will do my best, for him—save him, f possible. I must. lose no time writing to his former_ ae- quaintances, to certify to his previous good character; and i!• you will give we the address I will write in the morning." You may address in!' father's brother, Lemuel Washburne, Lt—d, Connecticut. Suddenly the lawyer *heeled around and peered curiously at her. "le d your natke place Mrs Wynne'." "It is. My father was 6,lawyer there" "And your name was---?" " ealthia Washburne "My God,' thank thee!" Same fervently from his lips, but, rising, at, he noted the look of astonishment with ivhieh she re garded him, hemdded, "Pardon me, madam. lOs unsafe . in le streets. I will send this. carriage to like you. home." And he rang the bell for he servant, scarcely heeding the expressiins of grati tude poured forth by that palif care worn but hopeful, thankful women* she left him alone. That night, as he restlessly Paced the luxurious apartment, he thougit of that time so king ago, when this woilen, then a gleeful child, plead to save hid from a fate worse than death, and a layer of thankfulness ascend to the Greit Being, that it was his privilege to reft l ore light and happiness to that desolate tme that in this hour of peril.the head f Provi dence had led her to liiiiWilingly—yes thrice willingly given aid ; tile in the low tenement r00m,,. where., Wealthie . Wynne laid "her children to rAinnocent babyhood breathed a prayer loil l‘ th9 good .gentleman who was going to.big papa back." After anxious days of waiti?g, the day of Edward Wnne's tri4 crier, and 1 ) found the busy lawyer at' is post. Ho had never worked upon . Mutest hope-. less case with greater en 6', but, he ha--- gained a clue to work Om ) and he . wits Satisfied. -- .IT - titiroisible he So , I witness ,'against t and he had giv with a stern o. I addressed the 'an. , r "What ,e in' when you v" the P ri iliOneYr . , ' asked 'oA t , Ppdst Sev i ...; ling beneat .'d limn -pro J . yoU ' were -in et." , A . 11 his testimony, then tenance. he arose and ure, ql And bast ilk followl (i'9 ni tnfliiia liion'ayr ( ai and - overoolne witli deed. - ' ' • . • ~. - That night,aa Edward Wynne eat with hie family, talking gratefully of the late deliverance, the door opened, and their benefactOr entered. When the gratitude they felt would have found vont in words, he POW. "No, you owe mo nothing—l have but paid a debt. Mrs. Wynne, years ago, when you were a little child, you and your family saved me frem a fate wtrse than defith, and made me what I' am. without reward, except such as your own hearts gave you. In saving Mr Wynne from a similar fate I have only repaid a part of the great debt I owe you. All I have I owe to you and yours, and think you I would see you want while I have the power to assist? Step over to my office with me,Mr. Wynne,and we will arrange a plan I have for placing the merchant's staff in your hands again." And he tried to smile, but his lips quivered, and a mist. of tears gathered in his eyes. vs Mrs Wynne sobbed her mingled greeting and blessing to him she now knew as Nathan Monroe. And was Wealthia Washburne's reward. THE AGED PASTOR. lie stands nt the desk, that grave old man, With an eve still bright, though his cheek is wan, And his long white locks are backward roll'd From his notle brow of a classic mould. And his form, Om' bent by the weight of years, Somewhat of its primal beauty wears. If, opens the page of the Sacred Word— Not a Whist, r, nwr low lair loud, is heard: Even folly assumes a serious look, An lie readeth the words of the Holy Book ; Awl the thoughtle.B not gay grow rev'rent there As he opens Ids lips in ferv, nt prayer Ile stands as the (;rare old prophet stood, 1....1,—i,, ,nell,iff Ciutl— Pouring reproof on the earn of Clio Who..• hearts are nt ease iu their folly and sin {Pith n eltallenge of guilt, still unforgh To th4..n1l until ted, I for 1101,011. Oh, %rho can but honor that good old man, An he neareth hie three-score years and ten— Who hath made it the work of his life to Idees Our world in its wt. , and wretchedness ; Still guiding the feet which were wont to stray In paths of sin, to the narrow way. With a kindly heart through lapsing years Ile Loth shared our joys, hath wiped our tears, Ile 1111111 hound the wreath on the brow of the bride Ile 'lath stood by the couch when loved ones died; Pointing the stun to a glorious Heaven, And the ties which bound It to earth were riven. Methinks you'll weep another day, 'She❑ the good old nun shall have passed away, When the hutit Of his ebbing sands have run, When his labors are o'er and his work is done ; Who'll care for the flock and keep the fold, When his pulse is stilted nod his heart is cold? You'll miss him than every look and tone So familiar now, when forever gone, {Sill thrill the heart with an inward pain, As we long anti listen far them in vain When a stranger limn and a stranger un, Shall stand in your nonto . .l inaaol - 13 lilacs Mr. Nasby Suggests a Psalm of Sad ness for his Friends South, SAINT'S BEST, (which is in the } Stnit of Noo Gersey) Sept. 12. A SAM UV AGONY. On thestreet - fsee a nigger ! On his back a coat of bloo, and he car ryeth a n uskit. He is Provo Gard, and he halteth MC ; ez wun Levin authority. And my tender daughter spit on him, and to he arrested her, and she languish eth in the Bard house. My eyes cloth dwell on him, and my sole is a arteshen well uv woe ; it lan• guisipth with greef. For that nigger wus my nigger I I bought him with a price. ,_„, A lass ! that nigger is out uv his nor mal condition, he is a stir out of its sphere, with sweepeth thro the politikel hevens smashin things. Normally he wuz mouth gold and silver, now he is a nitemare. Wonst I wuz rich, and that nigger was he basin the'•cof. Wo ez me ! i owned him, sole. body, sinons, muske!s, blood. b. ots and brichis. His intelLarlc wuz mine, and his body wuz mine, likewise his labor and the fruts 'thereof. concubine The normal results of the eonkebin age rsold, combining pleasure and profit in an eminent degree. And on the price thereof I, played pok er, and drank mint gool0„ and road _in gorgus cbarats, and wore purple and linin every day-. iVuz micegnashun or nigger equal- ity ? Not any. For she wuz mine, as my ox or my horse, or my sheep, and her increase wuz mine, even ez was theirs. Abliehn micegnashiln elewates the nig. ger wench to, her did it for gain with degraded her muddy. And when the wife uv my buzzpm lift ed up het-voice in complaint sayin, "Lo! I am abused— this little nigger resetn• blktb thee!" Half the price uv the in fent chattel wood buy a diamond pin with wick to stop her yawp. And my boys follered in my footsteps and grate was the mix, but:profitable: - But my. dreetu is bustid. in til the pri i ioipa. prisoner was called The nigger is free, and demands wages whether she'll cleave to her husband, or he evening was it sorer concealing the be my concubine. , .Yistorday I• bade her come to me, and lo ! sho remarkt, !'Go 'way white man, or t hust yer head," And I Bode. nilraterod the crest the searching look. that •at half pat saloon o'n 'Fourth Her children are free';—tbey are mine, likewies; but can't sell.'ern,on the block to,•tie highest bidder. Therein Lincin sinned—he. violated the holiest knstinks of nor nature; he in• ierpand a prailumashen ataton fathar aaa ahila: • up Lis' lidvontage, ed forlhp (:urn concemied the His wife was mine, and she was my ~-~ ~~1~ We took the hethen from Afreca, and wuz a making Christians 'uv 'em. Wo to him who stopt us in our mishnnry work. It is written—" Kin the flthinpe change his shin ?" I wuza ohangin it fur him, and my fathers, and we bad mellered it down to a brite yaller. Dark is my filcher. I obeyed tl e gate Law uv Labor, ez served in the army, by suhstitoot—now steel I have to stane my hands with labor, or starve ? In what am I better than a Northern I kin eit no more diamond pins for the wife of my buzzum, and she yawpeth con- nonally A rrnynd in homespun she wrestles with pot and kitties in the kitehun. Weighed duwn with woo, alio , ajp. Snuff in silence. She Rsks ity me 'comfort—wnt kin I say, whose pookits contene only eonferier nte Fk ri pt. Save us from Massachusits, whieh is celery and cussid. Protect us from nigger sojers, which is grinnen feends. Shelter us from the ghost uv John Brown, which is nuirellin on. PETROLE 'M N. N NSBY, Lait pester nv the church uv the Non disperrsashum Losses in some of Grant's Battles The New Ynrk Expreaa, in an art;ele bendel "Mnterinitt for Tii.tnry," givpQ name reQnits of recent inreQtimitions by the Wnr Pennrtrinent glinwing vai , h more neenrnev thnn the pnhlie hive vet 111)4 TIP tinmher kill r~ l vrrm nard end ini..;et , n the hnttles of the TTnion. The Pe prirtment are vet renkine: enrefel ios. to pot on record n enrroct statement of the losses in all the battles. The fel loNvino- is a list of castialties in the earn raign of the Army of the Potomac from May 5, 1864,10 Novemberl, of the same year—a little less than six months: In the battles of the Wilderness—May 5 to May 12—•260 officers and 2019 men were killed ; 1017 officers and 18.261 men wounded; and 177 officers and (3077 men missing—making an aggregate of 27,- 310. In the battle of Spottsylvanin—May 12 to May 21-114 officers and 2032 men were killed, 2P9 officers and 7697 men were wounded ; and 3 officers and 321 teen were - missing—aggregate, 18,381. In the battle of the North Anna—May 1.1. 10 01.—is ummrs anti 10Z twzo were killed ; 67 officers and 1,063 men were wounded, and 3 officers and 324 men were missing—aggregate, 1,607. In the battle of Cold Harbor—June 1 to 10-144 officers and 1,561 men were ; 421 officers and 8,631 men were wounded, and 51 officers and 2,456 men were missing—aggregate,, 13,153. In the battle of Petersburg—. June 10 to 20 officers and 1,143 men wtrc killed; 361 officers and 619 men were wounded, and 7,427 missing—aggregate, ME Battle of Petersburg—June 20 to 30- 29 officers and 576 men were killed; 120 officers and 2 374 men were wounded, and 108 officers and 2,100 men were missing —aggregate, 5 316. Battle of Petersburg—July pO-47 Of ficers and 373 men were killed ; 121 of. ticers and 1,555 men were wounded, and 91 officers and 1,819 men were missing— aggregate, 4008 ; In the battle of the Trenches August 1 to 18-10 officers and 120 men were ; 5S officers and 726 men were wounded, and 7 officers and 4a men Were missing—aggregate, 868. In the battle of Weldon Railroad,, Au gust 18 to 21-21 officers and 191 men were killed ; 100 officers and 1 005 men were wounded, and 104 officers and 3,072 men wcre missing aggregate, 4 543. In the battle of Reams' Station, Au gust 25-21 of cers and 93 men were killed ; 62 officer's and 484 men wounded, and 95 officers and 1,674 were mistiing-- aggregate 2,432. In the battle of Peeble's Farm, Sep- tember 10 to October 1-12 officers and 129 men were killed; 50 officers and 738 MOEI were wounded, and 56 officers and 1,700 men were missing—aggregate, 2,- 685. In the battle of the Trenches, August 18 to 30-13 officers and 184 , men were killed, 91 officers and 1,214 men were wounded, and 4 officers.and 811 men were missing—aggregate, 2,417. In, the battle of Boydtown Plank Road, October 27 to 28-16 officers and 140 men Were killed ; 65 officers and 981 men were' wounded, and 8 officers and 691 men wore missing—aggregate, 1,902..., The totals are 796 yofficers and 9.796 men killed ; 2,796 officers and 71,161 men tvon , nded, and 775 officers and 23,- 685 meri‘inissing.7—Total aggregate, 88,. I= All , this is in one oainpaign of six months I The loss in killed and wound ed in this oampaign—over 63,000—is du osed to. be equal to,abou one 7 . thirti of the total force under Gen. Grant's dont rnand when it left/Culpepper, and aftev reinforceurnts had been sent to it. ImPAumo pleasure is like putting money out at interest;" It .benefits both the lender and borrower at - once No ode, oan be really anti - truly . happy. unless othem'syroputhize in and sharp that hap. „ - TERSIA3iS2,OO in Advanee, or A2,so,:vilthfir . the year. ~~,~M ......_ i As the Philadelphis Press is a welcome daily 'visitor in hundreds of families in our county, the following description of its new building and improvements will doubtless interest our readers.—En. FORNEY'S PRESS BUILDING-ITS INTERNAL ARRANGEMENT AND EXTERNAL APPEAR ANCE-VAST FACILITIES AND IMPROVE MENTS IN PRINTING NEWSPAPERS-THE "PRESS" AND ITS PROJECTOR. Correspondence of the Harrisburg Telegraph. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 12, 1865 The immense pile of bricks and mortar, known as "Forney's Press Building," a sub stantial monument to the energy of Col J. W. Forney, stands at the southwest corner of Seventh and Chestnut streets. It is the largest and most complete newspaper estab lishment In Philadelphia. The entire cost of this great improvem nt is estimated at one hundred and sixty thousand dollars. It is perfect in all its departments. The ground floor is occupied by the publics ion office, the largest. and prettiest in this city. Ad joining this on the south, is a large apart ment appropriated to packing purposes•.— This- room, of itself, presents a busy hive of industry when all the men and boys are at work within its spacious limits. Adjoining this on the same floor, though in a building erected especially for the purpose, is the press room, where the last fast four-cylinder rotary machine is worked to its utmost ca pacity, but this is not of sufficient speed to meet the increasing demand for the paper. An eight cylinder with all the recent im provements has been ordered, and will be placed in position as speedily as possible.— The stereotyping pr,,cess will be introduced, and by this invention. with twelve cylinders in full activity, thirty thousand well printed papers will be produced per hour. It is thought that the presses can be made to print thirty three thon.Tand papers in the same Cl/1. Forms)• desires to run his daily circulation to one hundred thou-and paper, per day, and there is do doubt about his 111 . - conipli,bing this much. So far as indomi table will—daring courage—unlimited awl unyielding energy are concerned, it a ay be safe to pr e dict this amount of success. In regard to the establishment, allow nit to say that at splendid engine, and tubular upright Indices, are located in the basement. From the steam generators the building is heated ; and warm water forced to the fifth story, occupied as the comp singroom.— There are more bands employed here than in any other establishment in Philadelphia. The room is 15.) feet long by 25 feet wide, with ranges of windows on the eastern and western fronts. Overhead is a long skylight, with sliding sashes on both sides. The ven tilation is perfect, the light unquestionable and the air pure. Such a place \till add twenty per cent. to the length of the lives of the compositors The editorial rooms lace on Chestnut st. There is a clear front of thirty nine feet by the same in depth. 1 he nod') room is ap propriated to the editor—the au j omoi g 111 M. ~ ment for his assistants, together with the financial, commercial, managing, literary, amusement and theatrical editors, critics, &b. To the south of this is a splendid apart ment appropriated to the exclusive use of the-local editor and his numerous corps--of assistants. Ala.. these gentlemen have had more or less experience in the profession, and all wm k in the most perfect harmony ; each k uses his business, and the paper shows 110 W well he performs his part.. Ott the same floor is an exchange room where al. the leading papers in the country are filed regularly as they are r ceived. Tho old four-story corner building, one of the most substantial structures in the world, wits carefully preserved in the improvement, with another story added to it, so as to make the cave uniform all around. The entire surface is painted four colors, and thus makes a pleasing appearance. We might have stilted before, that a continuous stairway ex tends from Seventh . mtreot to tho uppor in the south end of the edifice, fur the espe cial accommodation of the compositors.— There is 111.50 a stairway fronting on Chest nut street, for the use of the editors and others. So great was the demand for prop erty in this part of the city, that Col. Forney yielded to earnest solicitations and agreed to rent portions of the building out to other business men. The Press is now located further west than any other daily newspaper printed in Phila delphia. It is in fact the great sun of the westward, as old So' himself, and gives vi tality to all around. Already it has drawn. the Public Ledger and Evening Bulletin as far west as Sixth street, where both these papep will soon be located. The Press and Ledger are beyond all question -of doubt the leading newspapers in the eastern part of Pennsylvania. So far as the Press is con cerned, copies of it May be seen in all parts of the country. It always had a circulation in Pennsylvania. It will in a short time circulate more. Its teeming sheets; big with the wonders of each ,passing ere lon4 be unfolded in the pure breeze of the mountains, and in the graceful valleys of the old Keystone. It will--cariT light and life into the coal regions, and it must become a familiar companion-with oleagin ous residents of the oil territory. It will bo sent to every city in the country ; from the 'White Hills of Now Hampshire to the gold regions of Californ a. ft already has Oirger' circulation in the last flaws.' place, than some of the papers printed Philadelphia have in . our onrn city. It is the only Phil naslphia paper that lirigham Young :sub scribes to—he receives six cooies.i A special clerk is employed merely to : receive new sub 'scribers, and to snperintend the transportn tion of the papers to their, many places of destination. A. corps of Men nro traveling in the'Several Staten, with. the view of estab ing agencies for the ,paPer., Twenty-one, of these agents have reported nn additional list of 87,000 subscribers to the daily paper, and positively more for the weekly. tlinn can be well printed. Col. Forney, will. prObably, introduce a last fast ,four cylinder rotary : machine espenially for the weekly weekly. editions. , I should ;not ite Surprised:, that Counting,nil tho'papers of the'dokk, tri Weekly, Weekly, California and 'European' editions,le will, in .the course pf, time, print nearly w'million of papers per - week.' This is 'enormous; but Seceinfilisleci: . 'iNrhat 4oYou'SiippOSol3eit•*ranklin' i liMi4 say, ; could he 4jtly yevisiti.thie earth jiess so gigantic an opsration? The success of Col, Forney is simply -owing to theft* that be las•i+ell studied huSin Suture. uniforni 'kindnesi;. hi'S . ey'er- - . • ready willing Less to useist young Men . whp.. assist themselves, is one : of 'his agreeahle characteristics. He dtieS'ncit, pull down his: Struggling business follo*:.ereature, but takes him by the coat'collar,sti fti speak, and pulls t , him up. Tho Colonel ought .tohavo been born in New York, for his motto is Excel sior. His present building is ,ndmired by every one who,. can appreciate_ enterprise, honor and honesty. Taking the vast num ber of on- ployeoe in tho building into -consid eration, the carriers ?, ,packers, agents,.&c.,. outside of it, most of whom are married and pave iiimanee, It May. tilfr lg fely said-that bread 'and butter are put in tho — iiitiuth.-of,stitroyal. thousand human beings by this extensive establishment, because of tho energy of ono . Yours, W. NO, 51, man Origin of Illustrious Men. Columbus was the son of a weaver and a weaver himself. Claude Lorraine teas bred a pstry cook. Cervantes was a common soldier. Homer was the son of a small far mer. Moller was the son of a tapestry ma ker. Demosthenes was the son of a cutler. Terrence,was a slave. Oliver Cl.omwell was the son of a London brewer. Howard was • an apprentice to a grocer. Franklin was a journeyman printer, and son of a tallow chandler and soap-boiler. Dr. Thomas, Bishop of Worcester, was the son of a linen draper. Daniel Defoe was a hostler, and a son of a butcher. Whitfield was the son of an innkeeper at Gloucester. Sir Cloudsley Shovel, Rear Admiral, of England, was an apprentice to a shoemaker, and afterwards a cabin boy. Bishop Prideau worked in the c.,,11000. 0,, ford. Cardinal Wolsey was the Son of a butcher. Ferguson was the son of a shepherd. Dean Tucker was the son of a small farmer in Carding shire, and performed his journey to Oxlord on foot. Edmund Halley was the son of a soap-boiler at Shoreditch. Joseph Hall, Bishop of Norwich, was the son of a farmer. Virgil was the son of a porter. Horace was the son of a shop-keeper. Shakespeare was the son of a wool-stapler. Milton was the son of a money scrivener. Robert Burns NT as a plowman in Ayrshire. Confucius was a carpenter. Mahomet, called the prcphet, was a driver of asses. Mohamet Ali was a barber. Madame Bernadotte was a washer woman of ..Paris. Napoleon, a descendant f an ob,cure family of Corsica, was a Major when he married Josephine, the daughter of a tobacconist Creole of Martinique. Gen. E , cartero was a \ esti y clerk. Bolivar was driwgist. Vasco de Glona was a sailor.— John ,Jacob Astor ones. sold apples in the -trees, of New York. Cathurine, Empress of Ile- , sia, Wit, it rump grim Ate. Cincianatus NrisS pit/Wing i n his vineyard when the Die tator,hip oI Rome wh, 0 ffered him. To this 11,1, the Cepty•rhemN add Abraham Lin coln was tt clown rail-splitter I" An drew Johnson was " a boorish tailor l" Mr. Seward's Account of the Attack The American correspondent of the Lon don Spectator writes that ho recently heard Mr. Seward and Mr. Frederick Seward give the following account of their own sensa tions at the time of the attempted assassin ation: '< Mr. Frederick Seward said that oh step ping froth his bedroom into the passage and seeing: the assassin. he merely wondered what he was doing there, and called him to ac count.. On „his resisting the fullow's.enifea vor to press into Mr. Seward's room, the as sassin drew a revolver, whidh he presented “t r yi•edcrick Seward's head. What fol lowed, It, mu s t be renwmpervil, WOK 111r1,C lu a few seconds. Mr. Frederick Seward's first thought was, 'That's a navy revolver.' '‘ The man pulled the trigger, but it only snapped, and his it tended victim thought, • That cap missedliib.' His next sensation was that of confusion, and h'ing upon the floor, resting, upon his right arm, which, like his father's jaw, was barely recovered from a bad fracture—the assrsin had felled him to the floor with the butt of the pistol—he put his hand to his head, and finding, a hole there. he thought, That cap did not miss fire after all.' •• Then 'he h came insensible, and remain ed so for two day and more. His first indi cation of returning comeiousness, was the question, Hare you got the ball out ?' after which he 6.11 off again into a comatose con dition, which was or long continuance. "On the very afternoon of the day when Mr. Lincoln was assassinated, Mr. Frederick Seward, who was A ssistant Secretary of State, had asked his father what preparati;M should be made for the presentation of Sir Frederick Bruce, which was to take place the r ext day. Mr. Seward gave him the points of a reply to he made to Sir Frederick, and he laid the outline of the speech upon the President's table. and, as I have previously informed my readers, Mr. Lincoln, that afternoon, wrote out the reply, adopting Mr. Seward's sug gestions, and thus preparing that reception of the British Minister by President Johnson which was regarded at the time by the peo ple to whose representative it was addressed, us so friendly, and fair, and dignified. ‘. Mr. Frederick Seward's first inquiry af ter he came fully to his senses, which was a long time after the assassination, was :t 4 Has Sir Frederick Bruce been presented ZI He thought that only one night had_passeftsince he knew not what had happened to hiiinsnd his mind took Up matters just where it had loft them. Mr. Seward's mental experience during his supposed a'snssination was in its nature so like that .f his son, that it raises the ques tion whether this absence of consternation and observation of minute particulars is not common in circumstances of unexpected and not fully apprehended peril. Mr. Seward was lying upon his side, close to the edge of his bed, with his head resting in a frame, which had been made to give him ease and to protect his broken jaw from pressure. He was trying to keep awake,.having been seized upon by a sick man's fancy—it was that if he slept he would walco up with lock_jaw- -He-was-brought to,full-conscious ness by the scuffle -in the passage-w: y, fol lowed by the entrance of the assassin, and the cry of Miss Seward, Oh l he will kill my father But he saw nothing of his as sailant until a hand appeared above his facd; and then his thought wits, 'What handsome cloth that overcoat is made of.' The assas sin's face then appeared, and the helpless statesman• only thought, What a handsome man P -(Payne was a fine looking fellow.) "Then mum a sensation as of rain striking him smartly upon one side of his 'face and neck, then quickly the same upon the other side, but ho felt no severe pam. This' was the assassin's knife. The blood spoUted he thought, 'My time has corne,t - und from the bed to the floor, faintoL: His first sensation of returning consciousness was that Le was drinking ten, and that 'it tasted'good.' —Mrs. Seward 'was giving btu:ileawith a' spoon. He heard low voices .around him, aslcing,and replying as to whether It would !be pdisible for to recover. He could not speak, 'but hid dyes shoWed hid cOnseioud ness, 'and that. he desired' to ' They brought him a porcelain tablet, on which he managed to. write, 'Give me some:more tea. I shall got well.' And from that moment ho line slowly but steadily recovered health and strength."- ' , . , • • —Cotton , culture is soTiatible "in the :oath - . at present' prices, that' many - small Iplantations in Alabama are being leased by, hlrortliorn men, among; thorn Many offlaers and' soldiers, disbanded'sincd . theetose of the ' \Ver. 'it may seem'strange that the planters . dive uP'theit' plantations if- the btisinesirie '.so: profitable,. but it may be , well-toinentiini ;thitt.tho'planters have no faith in free latioi;' ivitile-thebeW Operatordhalie". , Thicit t ante, therefore, is a healthy one. , „ • upon Himself. AN INTERESTING STORY