'IS' rtf i i ! i i - 4 THE BLESSISUS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE BEITS OF JlEirEV, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE. VPOS THE ttiail AXD THE LOIf. THE RICH ASD THE POOR. ew series. EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1863. VOL . 10NO. 19. I , ,n V . fl.a 1T1.1 1 VL 0 SEXTWEL" every v eanesday miblislied , it Ose Poixab axo Fifty CbntTs nayabJe iu advance; OsbDol The 'Way the Abolition Resolu tions were Hushed Through the Army. rs, if not paid ! What ax Officer who was Pkeekt at o Dollar if! THK Officer's Caucus bats about thb until tlie termination of the year, j ripti.ia will be received for a j :rio4 th;iu sit months, and no i Affair. The following, letter from the Iowa Cou- .Tvr will be at liberty tn discontinue ner, will serve to give our readers, an in .r until all arrearages are paid, ex- j sight into the, way Abolitionism is forced people at home can't swallow him down in such large doses. . After a considerably talking the resolution was witlidrawn The other resolution?, after some little discussion,' were voted upon as first read and endorsed by a majority of the officers present, although quite a number did not sign them, and still greater number re luctantly attached their names to them. The fourth resolution was opposed by a majority of the officers, but tliey could not repudiate it without throwing over board the entire affair, which would not do. After they got it milled through the line officers, they next set about getting an expression from .tlc men. Several .fix r i - t : a. i - . ;4eTu? X?'&?? upon "the army. Although the letter refers f'" " i.. - to the resolutions if Iowa. ppfnmntj it yl UOLLAt, uuicsks liic liivucjf j r : I H in jilvanoe. j nevertheless shows the way that things are Advertising Rates. j done by a wicked party to bolster up a rot- One onert'M. Tiro do. Three do t -,,. an,i mv u .w. L.-I1 lines 1 t 50 1 75 Jl.00 . . "1 2 ' V. r-. l- . . - - -y . Ai a i in I frit in iv unirii inp itutnmft rMfiiinrina ' i . . m ... tores.! 24 lines j i "o w vu i - . , were proposeo. ine one wmcn Jo lines f - vu vu. j t- - j . ...v.. v,. tuuoj.u,. i usiinaiiy concvueu 10 . uc inc most o . regnneuis, purjruug to te the sentiments j proper and hononible was to have the 9 0 'C i0'CT t',eret,' wcre forced upon ; company commanders submit them 12 00 1 taose regimcuts, and are row heralded ! to tlieir companies. lut they soon 14 00 ! broadcast over the land by the Abolition ! found this method impracticable, and that press, as a timely rebuke to copperheads. ,l " tor there w:is a great Lakk 1'irovu.KNcm Lo.,1 I P"5" ftvlinS '" 3tnoc wf tl,e f...i.-iri. ih.vi (resolutions. v. a. f t avw J Kwrou Mi-si;atixe CVnuiKit, j Suiuetimc since we were ! -,Ul(1wm verses were found on the i 3our tor eiglit or ten d UaCnfedenUe VolunUer, killed at -o c-vv ;t-M "'r- would dare onnose them, a.vl von will . . ... i anxious inquiries as to tne nrooiiwe ume . , . . J 3 ni-nths. $1 50 4 00 (36 linesj 6 00 L:,f.ilumu, If jaiaa. 15 00 m. or loss. $ f. fl21incsl :ires.f36linest 6 do. $3 00 4 50 7 00 0 00 12 00 22 00 20 oe 35 (X V a Request or a South Carolina volunteer. It was finally determined that they .should be submitted by tlie commanding 'denrived of "ccre of eac" ""ginjout, and voted upon bv acclamation, for by this course they krle of D.-iiinville, Virginia, LVxem ilS41.I tivjumc of our rctting a luaiL nrobiible rinalh- a move 1 1 i t i .t... .1 i . it . ii J SOOII It. 'ill 1 1 Ik IKVI l IU" UfMilll u-i. Alley ment was set on foot, (straN-getic of j course,) llr tlie puqiosc of - reviving the lwtj Uic iMCh w wu v-tf- j drooping j,irits of the officers and men, wcr' put in the following order and man ner : They were first subiiutU-d to the 11th i ....i .n.. .-t- i .1 i i - i regiment on derss iarade. Tlie 3Iajor i ami more iKirticuuuiy the dniin2 spirits c , . 1 . I.. if. i. i - i ' csinie out arxl made a fl.ftnin'; speech : tie little field I fall; oh! take rne j of a defunct p.irtj-, orotic which is now ! , i ! ... it ...tli i . .i i i . i . .t! WBe imoe mure. I t'iiM sileralj rest, beneath the bright :i!irgin ; my youthat Vat. t?.vr? A me lie. 'byswryme hark, when the blooly tnts t )r. W tdt nvtRfT .l'ar. with t;rattful tear. ni!i bk-si j'.i evermore. w t'w. rnj iU n,-,t for-rt. a brother's last rcjuest, . t.'cre . cne o.mraile sp:irel. he will tAt iiw hi line to rest : : tr!l r!: v.vcj ,.ncs there, of the murii- in iii.uxeh'ild Imml. k Tne on tit blissful sh.f. of the l-riit spirit land. ('Trirrr nf h.ii L r.i-r- ... 1.... I- If - . v.... . . v.&ia I .lie. 17 lnHllP. no ni,,rp tn r.-vin 4 . "uuM I lie. j struggling with death, (and may it die, is j j the prayer of every true patriot). 'litis j jj i inoe ment or ?c!ieine was conco t d bv ; i , V four or five fi'jld l-r of tlie 'brigade, who lu-hl a meeting or caucus, (privately) ami arvw- up a series ot recolulioun to peech nil tv:ul tlie resolutions, aftiT which lie Ihivs. every on of vou sjiv icn give three cheers for the old fl.itr. Of course llieir was no ueca- tive vot thj thins was unanimous. In the 13th they were presented in a present to the officers and nun of the b.i- j , ""T1- g:itle for their approval. Ihe lirst mti- ! , . ' , ' . ... .t i- ' V , , e , i a milliner who notwithstanding; the tres- mation the line officers had of anv suHi i . . ' . P , ,. . . . ... . , ' sure, voteil no. After panule was dis- a thing I mug in the wuuL was an mvita- 1 , , , ' . . , . .1 III l i I flioir I klfHul aft it liu fliim li-xl I.." VI I quiirt Lieut. Col Albercombie, for what pur- .se no one khew, unless to hear a lec ture on the 7ijties of a sold' them marched up and down in front of his tent, took down their names, and - ! waiiti.il the other bovs to hiss :it them. lure on the ibities ot a soMier or army -.r ,. . ,. . - ... hi' Here is liberty !or yon. liscipiuie, niRvr of which woubt have i -vt " .1 .,. i -n . . 4 ' . i . . i- ow ciwiics the S(th. Ihe Lieut. Colonel after parade wa over, made a . , s'nort speech, read the resolutions, after of the ...... V ' . ' j iucu nit nij, now uoys, cei v twie 111:11 as Ihi-ii very appropriate subjects fo discuss. I hey were however disapjiointed At T 1-2 o'clock the majority o5hiT, loth held and line, had assem- , ... "In -i . , - endorses this sa- ave. .VII was silent a ; bled at Ihe rendezvous: a Lnatrmau was . , 4, . " i i ... , , . , , i death ; not an officer or a man moved t ! niMiointciI bv acclamation, who statiil the IT ,, , . , ., , ! , - . ' , said ave. lit was thunder struck. II object ot the meeting was to adopt ! scries of resolutions, expressing the. i or He injjrs of tin? oIImxts :uul men if litis a da-am !at nihi, it was so full of i pulf, with nanl to the war, ariI he J'Ii i t'liriiier Mati-tl tlr.it tlw fa-M oficrrs had n-1 . x i . .. , ... ,.. r i iuii irci-i uviim kxtj iw iiicii iu noi- this?" '"W'shand was on my brow, 1 felt a s kiss 'mas st ream, ti:e tiM moss- c vrro, mj, 1 n scat Wmath the tree, tin; cot- on tlie hi!l. xnt. i:viv, IU MMl tn tmr "n-iitaiu blue. 5 Wive town, thT lav me down, 'tis " 1 sk f v.rfi 7, t..i. :n niv dream, a m itdcn 1 fiir, "c.l...ririg girl was she. with sunnv ?'J-nliair; h15 seite1 J my siile, and we whisper ,,,,r't lure nnc- t- . . - . " .... "vi ue my unie, sum we -Mabive. Vvi,-. . . t , , , , , ! -j uk wi'K, nere only wouki ti m.iiilpTi r,; i.i t.t iii, 11111 jijinrii ii.ni. m.icr s grave may weep. 3 D'jblc State, and generous hearts "e !:f re "pw kind and clieerin?r wonl.s. to the tjtl strAnro J wi MUUIVCI ' tr !) c. rgmia's soil I fall to rise no roii rir back. carry me back, to loved 'aa s shore." crry mc back. T .ik no mnrb1 of 0,n. in tbi !irrHl f round, of mJ own dear mountain homo. 'lovely sjx.t iu th ' ; t cunrci,. n shade, . w and spreruling Oak, where e oft m hi,.i . , n rt.. . I l.f tl t. r .i r oi me organ tan, so sect'yonth.M, i!!of the Sabbath morn, from W. . "U,LU sianuing near. met and formed a series of resolutions wliich would lx" submitiiil to the lUv-eting. A gi-atef sirt of the line olfieers were completely surjiiisvil ; th-y had nothing to sav, for it was the fust attempt ever made ! to demoniliz this liuo lirigiule bv introdii i . ; - i -. - - i . . .i cing miiucs m us muisi ; some oi uieiu looked rather serious to think how nicely they had lxcn sohl, but being once tlie re they ileterniined to sec the show out ; 1 from all that could be learned, it promised ! to be a comic atlair. . The resolutions in due time were read. Several field officers spoke in favor of them, they could not do otlierwise, as they were the autliors ; they discussed their merits and seemed quite proud of so able a production, and one that wn destined to spread terror among the charging columns of the opposing jiarty in the army as well as at home. They luul it all their own way for some time. Finally a motion was made to strike out the 1th resolution and insert a more conservative one in its stead. This, however, wa soon voted down, which greatly elated the unterrified ; they took J fresh courage, the meeting was a success, the Iowa brigade were all right on the nigger, and they thought could push down almost anything, no matter how' woolly. TJiev then introduced another resolution, one which did not appear with the orig inal, but which I. have no doubt was written at the same time, and by the same parties, but which they were afraid to introduce until they had an expression of those present. The resolution referred to urged tlie War lKiiartment in strong terms to arm and equip all the negroes able to bear arms, and have them sent into the field immediately, and march side by, side with their deliverers, carrying death ami destruction into the enemies' country, slaving those who dared to oppose by act or in sentiment. Tlie resolution was warmly debated by several ; one said it ex pressed his feelings and sentiments, and he honed he would soon see it carried into ' k fe,r ' 'pints.' low tlie loudest. iVhv " was Not because they were traitors; far from j it, for there is not a regiment in this bri- gage- that has been in as many engage i ments, done luirder lighting, marched i further, lost more hien in action, and not one in this eons that sustains a higher reputation to-day than the IGlh leva; ami tor proof ot this 1 would reter vou to (Itneral Orders No. 100. Army of the Mississippi, after, tlie battle, of Iuka. lut, sir, the reason tlicy rejudiatcd them was tins : I Iiev are oiosiil to making this war a crusade against slavery ; con serjueiitly they could not swallow tlie emancipation resolutions ; ami one otlicr reason tliere was tliej- know they are not employed to help to sustain a party whicl is rapidly gonig to decay . Ami I must say, in justice to Col. Chambers, of the ICtli that he would not participate in the discussions at the meeting, or have any thing to do with it whatever. Tlie 16th now goes by the mime of the Copperhead IJegiment. Hut, sir, they can endure tlie persecution, knowing their deliverance is near at hand. Correspon dents and others may write anil say there is a good feeling existing in the army, but they are mistaken, , and only write this because they are paid for it. You go among the men and you will find them in groups, talking over our prospects of sub duing the South ; you will find them hopeless. They denounce the administra tion ; the proclamation is repudiated by them, a great many of whom were for merly warm supporters of the party in power ; and, sir, instead of this bitter feeling against the administration dimin ishing in Ihe army," it is increasing. There is no use disguising the f:ict, the soldiers are becoming disgusted with this war as now conducted. Their . spirits have been kept up from time to time by promising that the war would end in sixty or ninety days. This ruse lias played out. They arc now determined to be heard, and to have their lights rind feelings respected, ami dignity prcscrvciL Thev will not fight along side tlicse " Americans of African decent." , T lmvfl alreadv written more tbnn I how their valor, and share the glory. ,,.,.11 in i f4R. iilft .vrremt 1..I Hut with all thlf, he thought the resolution , riders adieu and remain an tor, say he, wet' Oi:.n:vi n " I nm mournin" ' must break the dose. Tho soldiers emit ; wjtj i o - i noncu ne wouiu w" " uom nuo teo'rse tlltre' Whc my ea,tl,1J practical effect, as the object of the war " air 8 r10 ! now wa to free the negroes, and he thought o?0t''er Jear ""y s1j1 a tear, i tliey ought to be allowed the chance , to " grave of her only son. Au Oasle In the Desert. The Katon'(Ohio) llegister, ' a ' republi can paper, has the following just and sensible remarks upon the recent mob proceedings at Itichmond, Indiana, and Columbus, Ohio: Tlie office of the Jeffersonian at Ifich mond was cleaned out by some two hundred paroled soldiers, who were de tained by a misumlerstanding with the railroad company, and obliged to wait over on tlieir way home, r lndui? a copy of the .IctTersoniiui, containing senti ments whicli were distasteful to litem, they proceeded immediately to take the law in their hands, by destroying the office. In connection with tlie mobbing of Medary's Crisis and following so liard upon that outrage, it compels a question. and involves a rinciple demanding our serious attention. Wliat the pecuniary damage niay have been is a small matter. The moral degeneration implied in an attack of tliat kind is a cause of alarm. What may have been the o flense of Meda- ry or the Jetfcrsouian is not to the point. Americans have long enjoyed the eigh teenth century to very little purpose, if tlie light and progress luive not taught them that at any time, under any circumstan ces, with whatever provocation, or for whatever crime, mob law is an insane resort. It is never right. . " It is untntiiilif. Two hundred excited soldiers to attack an unarmed :uid unpro tectiil man. It is dmhoitt. The wanton uVstruc- tion of liard-carmil property is in it. It is Hi'jrrfit. o I Iydra -headed, lrre ponsiblc mob, half crazy with rum, is a proper judge in any matter. It is f'uhft'. If anv man imagines that proceedings of such a kind foster loyal sentiment, or, in any wise as.-ist tlu; gov ernment we ln-g 1 ii in to dismiss the idea. Yu-ba-Daiu." . Iu the northern part of this State is a stream called Yuba river. Across it some, enterprising individual built a bridge : and on tlie bauks somebody built three or four houses. Th.:. inhabitants called the place Yuba Dam. Three bars were instantly erected, ami the "town, increased ra pidly. About noon one cool dav a trave ler ami a sojourner in the land passed tins ! Xero of America, and for Lis many oual obligatkn, ought ry he pays no attention to good advice he gives great heed to tlie devil be will nev er go ti Heaven he most go' where be will receive the just rccompen of ward. " " C7 We find the following btrong reso lutions publLdied in the 1'iUsborg Gazette. I!csolvtly That Abraham Lincoln Is the . - J ' I j "iTJ iu vtucnc2i, BJ flourishing loe-.uity, and seeing a Iong-k-g- I crimes, misdemoanora and flagrant vio- gei specimen ot Humanity in a ren smrt , lotions of-coustitutioual smoking lie fore one of the bars, thus ad dressed him : " iieiio r to be impeached. Jiesohrd, That the clergy of tho present , day are the devil's select and - inspired Hello r replied the sliirt, w ith vigor, t reoresentatives. nreachintr irv. fair. ii- removing his pip from his mouth. j TYTynir, bf.jod tvvl murder, instead of 44 Wliat place is this," demanded the iniYy f ArVy, cAH.liawtt,; and tlw doctrines traveler, whose name was. Thompson. cf (j-hrijt, and liereby receive our un Tlie answer of tlie thirt was unex- j qualified and indignant rebuke. peeled : - j Tliat ue are in tivor of an Yuba Dam ! j armistice and a National Convention Tliere was about fifty yards between . ComiKsed'of di-k-gRtes from all the State-, them, ami the w ind was blowing. Mr. - to niret such place as may Iiercafter be lliompson tin night he had been mis- ,les;nated , to wncider UTms of are-union taken. " WTiat did you say 1" he aked 44 Yuba Dam, replied the stranger cheerfully. 44 What place is this? roared' Mr. Thompson. 44 Yu-ba-daiu ! said the man in the shirt in a slightly elevatnl tone of votcu. 44 Ixxtk Iktc ! yelhtl the irate Thonifi of nil the States ; that bing iinossible, j X KY.-lTSUiS or XJ1E SVTl AN1 i"T AT i LI. IIAZAl:ls. I 7.uW, That C. Lw VuIIandigham, , our noble ami fearless ' Kcprcsentauve in j Congress, for his bold and manly oppo j sition to execute usorjiaUon and uncousti- tutional enactments, deserves ami rect iTcs ! our warmest thanks. son, I aske.1 you politely what p!ace iAivtf, That this Gocrnment is why in thunder don t you an- Intocratic machine, ami tliat none hot i Democrats know how to run it ; and He rose ' il.r.-r- n-i will vnic for no mnn . f r no tins was swer r Tlie stranger became excited. ami replied with the voice of an Srt- Olrjo,.t unless he gives posithe proof that pounder : 4 Yn-lt-l)i:n .'" Do you lu-ar tliat ! In a minute Thompson, ' burring with the. wrath of the righteous, junied off his horse and sulvanced on tlie stranger with J be is a sound, Fiibstartinl Yallandfghara I cmocnt. AVsom, Tliat Abraham I.i:iootn and his minions in p'.x-r are using their .ut- most endeovors to centralize tlie C .overm an expression not to lie mistiiken. Tlie I nicilt :nlo ono iMiml.-rou? IVlend heaI. iyaiiT, oy ns wry tiorivatHMi, is tulw J shirt arose ana asMunoi a fo?iure oi oi- ; iv obliterating State liir, nain lulls I-et not loyal men tlien fence anl definro. - i f ft. t . m.. 11 aro vfM, i...iutwr vi . better bcvithdrawn ' t;uid xj iniK-h .nigg r at oiMe, ami' lhi j fj-Om at doe? not make a habit. mission to law. fore, imagine that because the fierce passions of the inob have been this tim' directed again.t phcets with which thev have n svnuiathv, the matter is :u-ide ! fnni their duty or inteivst. There i- no law, but ulter lawlessness ; no loyalty but di.-Ioyaltv to every principle of good gov enuiient, in nioliocnitic outnigi. A'hilc it works no good rcr-ult, it inef fably runs to eil and di-si.-ter. And that by the very nature of the case. Sin must work iiiisita-. And it will. While iHtiuan miture is weak and wicked enough to resort to such measures, other human nature .will not lr slow to renicmbT that tlie sudden alarm, and with it jiervhancc, the midnight torch, are a sword of double edge. They will not stop to think that when both edges are cutting, " it is civil war: nay, more, ho'ischold war, street war, iH'ighborly colli.-ion, tumult, blood a reigu of terror. . One feature iu both ca.-es alluded to de mands instant attention. Tlie jiarties engagiil were jiaroled soldiers. Mcii sworn to alli'gietnv to their government are found using the arms and equipments of tin government to take the Administra tion of law out of the -hands of the gov ernment How do we know, who can tt 11, which man of us in M-iton, may find himself the victim of revenge on the jkuI of a soldier who may persuade his , com rades to help Itl in in the attainment of his own private en Is ? It may seem almost a work of supere rogation to say so much on dain, well settled matters of long establisluil truth principles that all the world is familiar with, ami lluit iioIkhIv tlenie? lut tlie times seem to demand it. It is said bv Mr. Ferguson as we heard it that threats were made :d Kich inond of a visit here for the purpose of destroying the property of the l'rei-s. It is, therefore, our lu-iness. SRould any evil result from these threats, the commu nity will benr in mi ml that the Uegisler wanuil thTu, and e.liorted every mnn, as one soul, to resis-t to the last, any such application of drunken frenzy atiHuig'ns. If any man thinks, in his conscience, that the I'ress is an unfit paper to be published, let him. like a man. and on his own resjionsibility, accuse Mr. Fergu son before the proper authority, and prove his case, or failing in that, take the con sequences. . ut no nrJ in l-jiton. IN it woes. At ruling prices potatoes have censed to lie 44 tin poor mans foml They are now silling at S 1.2.1 mt bushel, (some of them of inferior quality at that,) with an-upward tcmlancy, ami will soon bo classiil among the luxuries in which people of limited means cannot arlonl "to indulge. Everything issuing up 44 higher than a kite exeejt the wsiges of me chanics and laboring men. S much for Ihe nigger war inaugurated by Altolition policy ami mismanaged by. an iniliecile and corrupt Abolitb n dvnastv. ff-n-rt.'-.... . Arrived wlthm a yanl of him, Tliomp sou sanl : 44 1 ask jou for the hc-t time. What place is ibis?" Putting his hands to his month hs op ponent roarcil : 44 Yi-iix-Dam :- llie nvxt minute tltey were at it F'irst Tle'ruipsttii was down; then the shirt ; and then it was a dog-fall, that 1, both were down. Tliey rolled alM.Mit. kick ing up a tremendous dust. Tliey squirmed around so energctic:illy tluit vou'd have thought lliev ruid a dzen leg in place of four. It looked like a jnze fight betwiTn two Higalis:ie eentijK.'des. Finally they both roulled off ihe bank r :.. i : r. .u. i . r . : . iur tiRivuiiiiii nij inr m i-fiiw bm ul.i ; ry arrest and for enrolling the militia, Arc-, I and vc hereby denounce such an cxercia of pwcr as usuquxlioti ami tyrancy. Tlit rmlutxe lrfts r.!nce" ami, aceordingly, that spirit of mob law, which has again began to Tianilcsi itself i in several parts of the country, ought to ( be met by violence ; and. therefore, we , recommend bullets. A motion that Valhutdigham be th next candidate for lresil-nt w as unani j niously adojitfL A. Tixxnei:, IVk-aidillt-! .1. M. Wauwick, Stcretary. AnourioN Ivk roR the Su tittB. At ihe late municipal election in ar.d into the river, the water cooled ihem ; ; Maaco Chung, tliis State, iIm? Abolition ihev went down together, but came up ists triiiini'hiil by a niaiorav of a few sejarate, ami jmu out tor sliore. liotii reached it :ilxut the same time. Thompson " scrambled up the bank, mount.d his war-like steed, ami made tracks, hi foe gouging tlie mud out of his eyes. Having left tl Sisiness ftortion of tk- -otes, as a consvHj'jonce the abolition' slux-t at that jAice felt very julnlant. and ln'adel tin- n-siik of the 4ectkn Gent lu ir j'i-ym .!" Aiming tlie tkfcaled wiis a Mr. Tlionias Sjurrwl, who ran as an ittlrj nfJrnt candiUate for Constable. Mr. Siwvwl icturnorl from ths war some town, that Is to say the corner where the ! tinn since :winu tlie u; of one of his three bars were kept, lie struck a house arms, lost in the service of his country. in the sulMirbs, before whicli a little girl of alout five years of age was playing. 44 Wluit J.ice is this Sissy ? he aked. The little girl, frightenetl at the drowned rat figure which the stranger cut, streaked, ii for ihe house. Having lleiog thus di.-al!od from making a hv- ing lor himself ami family by ordinary work, he n-snted hiinsvif as an imle juii'h'nt candiilate f.T Constable. lift hainnTMiI, however to be a I!uocmt a good fighting IVmocrat ?uch a one a reached the djir he stojijieil, turneil, ami the Abuiitituis stjlo 44 Copperhead, and squealed. 44 Oo-bee-Dam! tin result was tliat the very men wb 4(looil Heavens! said Thompson chiim all the jHttt-kmi. and wht prate digging his heels lietweiii his horses iils 44(lotKl Heavens' let me out of this horrid place, where not only men but lite very-balics ami sucklings ;wcar at inof fensive travelers!" ltrjT's Jfptznf. I'tinct nation I'uzzlc. r.lMMit Ihe vWwir frinnls of the soldier. not only voted ngniust him, because a full dyel lvepub!i-:ui, tiiil a mat: tluit never smelt gunpowder, was his opjKMxut, but they must m-eils herald the m ult as 44 go-id ikvs for tle soldier. We shvull think the soldier may well desire to be "ilie following paragraph, extneud ' saved from trh fiicmls. Such is the from tlie 4lortland Tmu.vri i a j treatment lle Aboliiioiusts U-stow opua capital illustration of tlie iniortance ofj Ihe men jriiing their liw-s in ihe field. iHinetiiation. There are. two wars of' " """ miiuting it, one of which makes tlie ' indi- A n'3ni,ters little daughter was in vidua! in question a monster of wicked- j he ro0"1 w,,cre 1,or fat,,,,r WOi b,1Mlr ness, while tlm other converts him into a ; engaged la preparing a sermon. A visi- modcl Christian, let o,,r readers exercis.- ltyr ne to wlam Mr. I ;aid: tlnir in'nimity on the pn.blem ami see 1 n endeavoring to prrnare a sermon whether" they can discover its two-Sold "n x,ie tcxt- walk.d with Col. solution : ! was "" for f"ti t,, ,!in- " Iac,,c, 4IIe is an old experienced man iu vice I"'kfd '! d vvith evident concern : ami wickedness he is never found opjwsing j ' IJl xv,'.v dt 1 nm ? then he eouWt the works of iniquity he takes delight in ! ,,avc m " tlie downfall of the neighl.rhood he never rejoices in the prosperity of any of his fel low creatures he i. :dways real' to acsist in destroying tlie jn:iee of stxiely he takes no pleasure in serving tlie Tnl he is un commonly diligent in sowing discord among his friends and acquaintances lie t:ikes no pride in laboring to prt.mote the cause of Christ ianit v he has mt lteen C-3" -n indivMlnal who tried ti clear his conscience with an egg, in now en deavoring t raise his spirits with yeast. If he fails in this it is his deliberate in tention to blew out his brains with a hr-Hows, and sink calmly into the annsof voting lady. CT" What are ytm writing such a big negligent m emli'avoring to stigmaliz? ail j,:ld f,- Iat ? public teachers he makes no ex.-rtions to Whv, vou see my gnrm?motIn r dafe miUIih- Ki pv'd u-isshis he strives hard to ! aiM pm wHfiog a loml letter to her. build up Satan s kingdom he lends no aid , lo supjiorl ihe gspcl amiig tlx lira then i C51Vt If ci-nSributv.- !irvly ir tlie evil :!dvcrfa- 1 upp ar rsim? often la-k courag" lo
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers