ri SINGLE COPIES, }. VOLUIfI xi.--rarmna., 13. THE POTTER -JOURNAL, ?MISTED EVERY TBUR9DAY MORNING, BY Thog. S. Chow, To whom all Letters and Communications shou.d be addressed, to secure attention. Terxs--Invariably in Advance : 81,23 per Annum. tttttt Terms of Advertising. S'ldare [ it) lilies] I insertion, - - - 50 11 " 3 11 $1 00 ESChsabsequent iusertion less than 13, 25 Equarz three months, 50 SIX " 4 00 " nine " 550 6'oo 3 00 18 00 10 00 7 00 per year. 30• 00 4/ 16 00 1 Jouble-calumn, di.lplayed, per annum 65 U 0 e: months, 3 00 11 three " 1 600 31 one mouth, 600 41 per square If le lines. each insertion under 4, 1 0.0 of column; will Le inserted 'at the same one - -year, fie and figure work, per sq., 3 i ns , ;ery sub;equent inF"rtion, - Co!u:an sis mouths, - 1!=11 Adn::aistrrtor's or Executor's Notice, 200 la!'or' Nolictr:, eacb. 1 50 Y.l.:ll's S.L!eii, per tntct, 1 50 Stlr:.agt N0t771'3, each, 1 00 Ihrzce Soceq, each, 1 50 112titilv..-ator' , S.kles, per square for 4 Liertions, 1 50 or Professional Cards, each, cot evedirg 8 lin !I, per year. - - 500 Ncial and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 . t3 - 8 .,1 transient adv !rtiseuients must he :IA in advance, and no notice will be taken if adccrtisc:nents from a distance, unless they et accompanied the money or satisfiactor. r!..!renze. Sit iiCESS (it arb . 111111 l Minuinuntammxtfilittinlliiiitins JO N S. MA NN, !HORSEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Coaders.port, Pa., will attend the several Courts in Potter ar i d WKeart Counties.. Ali t.:linccs entrusted in his care will receive prompt attention. - Office un Main st., oppo iitethe Court Howe. 10:1 F. W. KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Couder.spert, Pa., will regularly att. d the Courts in Potter and the adjoialug Counties. 10:1 - ARTHUR G. OLMSTED, . 117011NlY S COME:A.OR AT LAW. i:odersport, Pa., will attend to all business teTusted to his care, with pronaptnes and in Ttrupersnce block, se.:;- ol .Igor, Mail: St. 10:1 ISAAC BENSON. • ATTORNEY AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., wil: ttieud to all business entrusted to him ; with aze and promptness. (Alice corner of West and Third st& 10:1 L. P. WILLISTON, iTTORNEY AT LAW, Welistoro', Tioga Co., Pa., will attend the Courts in Potter sad )(lean Counties. 9:13 R. IV. BENTON, r;SVEYOR. AND C& EYANCER, Ray goad P. C, (Allt.gany Tp.,-) Potter Co., Pa., attend to oll'outio , 2ss in his line, with tart.aud W. K. KING, :RVE 7. 0 it, D f AN D C VE Y ASCEP.. Smethr,ort, 311f.rean „Cu., l'a., will r,tud to bu.:iness for Lor.-resident Lind lo:ders, upon reasonable terms. Referen -4; give n if I;! , laited. P. S.—Maps of any ?1-t of the County made to order. 0:11: 0. T. ELLISON, .R. I .CTICING PHYSICIAN, Coudersport, Pa. , informs the citizens of the vil ku: aad vicinily that he will proruply re r osd to all calls for profession:a services. ;f.ce on Main St., in building formerly oe tpied W. Ellis, Esq. 9:22 COLLINS SIIITTI SMITH & .JONES, : I :4.r.ES IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, Fancy Articles, Etatioilery, Dry Goods, G:sceries, sic., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. :0:1 D. E. OL:kISTED, LLEr. IN DRY GOODS, READY.IMADE 11)11 :ing, Cro , :l:crr, Groceries, Ifain st., Caudersport, Pa. 10:1 M. W. MANN, ALEB. IN BOOKS s STATIONERY, MAO in ZS :kl ,, siP N. W. comer of Maiu 5;.3.. Coatb,7c.ort, Pa. 10:1 111 GILLON, TAILOP., late from the City of Ccrpol, England. Shop opposite Court "?e, Coudersport, Potter Co. Pa. • s. --Particular attention paid to CUT -TiNG 10:3571y. .1111;1.11.' J. OLMSTED, (STCCE.9BOR. TO JAMES W. EM:TtI 2 ) - .ER. IN STOVES, TIN & SHEET IRON I E, Main st., nearly op'polite the Celrt - tdersport, Pa. Tin and Sheet to order, in good style, on 10:1 ALLEGANY HOUSE, , 41 1: M. MILLS, Proprietor, Colesburg tser Co. ; Pa., seven miles north of Cott 'lForti ou the Wellsville Road. 9:44 .m7l=zglmim= -r i; ?iiiiiisi rk 2, ..' ...' a'- .-- ,a'•':l. - , - -`,'" " .'•;`, ~ . ~_..1. e--- '- ,--,------ - "--- ' '''a ?- ' ", . - -,..,. -, - .....1„. „,. -- -- ~.. -, v..... ~,:'': - , , S ;17' t's - j 7::::..:: -. :-L `..-:":``.:-..1,. ''' ..4( ''' ::-.. 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'-• -' -. . . . ._ . , • . : 1 • 1 ' -* , . _ . , , ' ' '• ' - , ~. ... ' . _ .-‘ ~ -. , ...;.: . _ . Oft I've 'heard a gentle mother, I i . A 3 the twilight hours begad,: Pleading with a eon on. duty," .! I.7Qlng him to be a Mau. Ent unto ber blue-eyed daughter, . ; Thongh with love's words quite as teach.; Points the out the other duty. "Strive, my dear, to be a lady:!' What's a lady'? Is it something, Made of hoops, and silks, and!airs;! Used to decorate the parlor. • Like the fitney rugs and ehairiii? Is it one that wastes on novels Every feeling that is lintaan?l If 'tl3 this to be a lady, 'Pis not this to be woman. Mother, then, unto your daughter Speak of something higher far, Than to be mere Cushion's hdy— . "Woman" is the brighter star. If ye, in your strong affmtion, Urge your son to be a true man,' Urge your daughter no lest strongly To arise and be a woman. .1 : Yes, a woman—brightest model! Of that light end perfect beauty, Where the mind, and soul, and :body, Blend to work out life's great; duty l = Be a wormn—nenght is higher . On the gilded list of fame ; On the eatalog,l, of virtue '1 There's no brighter, holier name.. Be a woman—on to duty, ' R..lise the world from al that's I*. , ' Place high in the,socia/ heaven Vi:tue's fair and radiant bow ! Lend thy intluence to each effort That shall raise tilir nature lnreaan;. Be not fashiot,'s gilded lady--; Be a brave, whole-sonled, true woman Stop thief! -L Not only him who gets by stealth From banker's safi and tradesman's 'shop A fractioa of his neighbor's wealth, For there arc other thieves to stop. Stop thief! He is a thief who holds the cup • - To other's lips for paltry gain, Who eats a brother's life-blood up, • And hlclies reason from his brain. Stop thief! • He is it thief whose robber trade - Is in the rights our lathers gave, Whose gold is coined, whose breed is made From sundered heart-striags of the slave Sto'p thief! , He is a thief—the pampered priest, • Who with God's chart and compass stands ant runs your freighted bark at last On moral rocks, or moral safv.i.i: Stop thief! He is the prince of thieves amoni, And needs in hell the hot'ese - fir Whose lying lip and slanderous tongue Can :ub another of a.natne. EXErfn, Maine From Emery's Journal of Agricultu. , ;Lwow to Entertain. our Friends. Among the many conventionalisms that now a-days clog the wheels of that ponderous vehicle, sc::iety, and ritakt them go es:caking over the hard thereng'.2.- fares o: life, like unoiled market carts, setting • our nerve's ajar by • discordant gratings and groaniugs, are the rules e etiquette regulating fashionable calling and viidtir.g. Friends thar really esteem each other and would be only too happy to spend tit evening- once a week togeth er for mutual pleasure and social .con verse, are found marking tie and i re membering with distinct care; who Made the last call, and counting the days till it .hall be conventional to 611 Whose faillt is this? Do you want your neighbor to be sure and.A7ait till you have returned her last ere she Cowes in again? Do you care whether she comes in every day dress (all ladies should be neat and trim at home as well as•ahroad) and] brings her work, and sits with you socia. bly au hour or two, or do you exact that she shall come in her last bisque and flounces, with her best bonnet, parasol, fan and gloves? If you do not eXact this formality, from her, why insist upon imposing it upon :her Why not live out what you .profess to admire? Her heart is perhaps_ as true yours. Do not go dressed .up nest time, to wait in dim parlors, with closed• blindsOill she leaves . her .work and goes through the same operation of "dressing up" before. she can venture into your presence ! will perhaps be compelled leave work that - she is hurrying _about, to'lundergo all this inconvenience — beeause She really desireslto see you, and consequently' Will not ask you to excuse . her. How 'silly, how cumbersome is all this, and yet eve ry day of my life I see or know of ladies who have been acquaintances for: years Finn. - through with it all, wheni a little good sense and carrying out of tihe* rule they each process to strive to follow, 4 7 ing unto others as they_ wonld that oth ers should do unto them, would dispose of the whole difficulty. : .The caller would call in her 'daily 'at tire, ,(we hope all ladies dress neatly,and A. A. JONEtf. HOTEL, • - Corner of -, rt, Pot -1•44 EOM flT.l+ LE A W4DM4.14," From tile tvcnray - Po3t "STOP THIEF 1" BY DAVID BA.P.EI:II eipirt 'grating/ M2=!= `D . ctioilialo , ti) 4 ; kk•i?7,Ciilks,'.9 ' f 'kw .Qatgoevqc),J, ,qija . :l4e, DiSS Oil i.qqiipli . ..o : :: - iljoil lit, 1 gliif,Ogliii_4,4q3l, te i'))s.!' . . tif COUD.RSrORT r IOTTER CCURTy, - .P .A.. - , , TEURSDAYOOTOBE4 P3U tidily at hotue).and her friend receive her in the same...way, each continuing. as far as possible the regular order of-ber work, or_ if not hwy . , Cad") .aceepting . --the other vit,tl the freedom of true fiiends'nip,: In cities and ',lthieltly .populated-neigh borhoods this . callinc , becomes a - real pp • I -b pressien, and :many people. unable to keep with its requirementff, arc -drop pc.d. out of society and are "scarce known as ]lying, breathing - Members of the geol. bodY.• To - those who cannot relinquish the ples‘thre of the social circle, who End no friend, they want to lose, and: whose mode of life increases. the• number daily, it semi becomes a serious affair; and con mimes so much time ai to leavethein fPr anything else. "I have so much company, is the exclamation' Of nearly every agreeable well to do wife and house !keeper in the country. "I was just ready to set about Louse cleaning or washin g bed clothes, or had everything prepared to can my fruit, when who should come but neighbor Smith and his 7ife and two girls. I was very . (!la-1 to see them. Mrs. Smith is so aarceable, and 31r. - Smith.is a perfl:ct. en- L cyclopedja. But then-coming•in at such a time s just spoiled the whole visit." Now is there not some way to avoid all this, or most of it? Say each lady agrees upon a reception d?y, once a week or once in two weeks, tis she cap S;farcl, and lets it be known that upon that day she i will receive her friends, not to feast them with good dinners. and , exquisite teas, but to pour out upon them. the thoughts and let:lings she had been gathering up as she Walked with steady steps, throug.h ti:e intervening days of duty in the house wife's department, avid receive from their experiences during the same inter Val. It is higa time that our social relations should be based on somethilag less ani mal than eating, and drinking. Many social evening would thus be spent by congenial minds 'with both pleasu - re and profit, nenwg and beautifying life, it persuw could be .released from the drudg cry of cooking,,, table-setting, . dressing, and the irksomeness of waiting on a large company. ' l oll'l but," you exclaim, fiit is not al-. ways convenieuttryree..eive company jrist such a7daY, or to go abroad just such a day." • I - I 'lt is not always convenient to have : Sundtiy come, and yet who would do with out it, even if there was no duty attached to it. It is tho central point of the week, the time when ; most well regulated fami lies square up the household arrange ments,,- put a new polish on the spoons, let in new light, open the windows, clear out the old• cupboards, dispose of al! mould, dust and euhwebs, and wake Sab bath morning cican and new,, with bread enough cooked, and all the, wheels fresh oiled and eleaue.d, s.O that, they will rim smooth and quiet through all the day, and the body, releas.ed- front its toilings and Moiling, 'gives. strength 'to the up ward scaring pinions of the truly rag, ious spirit; those that seek .prod from the innermost of their - being, as the source of !fight Mid strength,' to' enter into and dwell will; Him and Ie with them. . So would" it be. with these set times for social intercourse. They wmul:i prig- ' irJate.hope and energy, induce order and t row a kind of halo over the various ar• r !mordents of the week, make the heart beat•lighter, call the mind away from.the mere' detail of busluess, and more • than all make us, think, compel us, toiarrange Something to s:iy.' to make - olirstAves in, tr.:resting to : thniie that Come; and 'those we go 'to Meet. • And thestrife in a neigh borhOod would Soon conic to be, not who can get up the most luxuriant and ext.:en ' sive supper, but who makes all guests I feel the most.happy, and Scuds them away iwith-tho mo`st new - i - de.asltdeeigitate upon in the weeks to come. DissiMilar minds would be brought together : , and iperha.ps ,to the astonishment of all pftities thciy would find there was not after alllso - wide , a gulf between them, and that idle gos i sip had given poor pictures of byta frac ! lions,. quite ,uojnst to the originals. - In social soal communion, these common re centiOns,-by oil means let the yoing and old visit together. It is a fact past dis- I pute ; that young people do vitalize and keep •warm and fresh the i life ;currents of the old, while the old harruonize i and cool down.the over-heated- emotions and dm pnlses.of the young. . . ,• -The rummers of all'would be improved. The. jolly - mart brought in -contact • with the: sober,. tho nervous and: excitable ; with the. phlegmatic; the Men, or vvoman; - . who .has the. blues , iyith..their. -enthusiastie neighbors, wbo: See,suisheams , .and rain bowsi.all the - ,year: roiled, and are quite 'sure that,.tis the Sun,always -shines, there 'is no need of, being in a. hurry to make !hay;: - ..:. - • t! Nit, aboye all.ptber advautagcs, would .we place that arising front the association of men and women in common converse: — tion.. ,Now, visiting.% and callings are done mainly by the ladies, and men, par ticularly business men, grow into a post tive dislike to doing, either. Calling I,cemes at unseasonable hours, and yi, - t in ,r -g ,/ . BEIM is Butt: to a fashionable middle .Of the night party witha supper nt eleven:. No wonder they hate it, Rarticularlyi ;when they see in the prospective the like Or r r_cil at home, and the same oppressive b:lls to Xecti. Just - -hi . • ust set:apart this one day in the week or mouth—bend . all things to it just a little, (for it will take but little bending.} 1 -and men-will come - to love it as .th,ey dO their clubs,or their lodge. Aye, plord, : for no men are to he found in any eonsid. erable numbers ; who do not. like the cOnct pany of, ladies, particularly if they liaye a: wife, at home, who has floated inl their minds_ beyond the fear of any uprooting the evergreens of true respect and love for. the sex. • Men would become more refined, delbi este,-gentla and amiable, for this constant ,comMunioni ti omen. more strong; noble and earnest to act their part well, hi these private theatricals of neighborhood! life; and the family reee.ptiou evenings, or the "re-union" (as they are LOW called,) I would soon come to her one of the bright= c,-it days in the calendar. ; Don't be afraid your neighbors', will ,call you proud ard "stuck up" because, I like the President of the United States, or the school board; or-the bank direct ors, 'you have your special days and hourS for disposing of 'this One of the impoilant duties. of life. - - . . . . Is not the whole detail of home duty as social to you and yours as the work of thePresident.t Aye ; they are more so; more full of deep and thrilling intarcst.: They are the all of life to von, and must not be interfered with to their loss. Let your neighbor and friend know and feel that you think them so, and thep.Will immediately respond .to the same great fact, and live and set, accordingly.. Men never infringe upon each other, at least, proper meribever do. Business before pleasure is their motto. Why should not women bring their duties and pleasures. into the same - °tile:- ly and -harmonious. arrangement? Who will try it ? F. D. GAGE.. Waste In Dress. . . :46y71ojatoodIaokl:4 . a.flower= bed, into which some really exquisite ros es, besides pansies, mignonette, English daises, verbenas, and other blossoms, had . been transplanted. Kate, our Irish cook, and a beautiful girl, by the.way, was hang ing out the Monday's washing to-day, over' a plat of rich new giaiss, green and velvety, and delightful to the eyes and feet. She sympathized with_ our admiration of the grass, and the delicate, soul-enchanting roses ; "but this," said she. ' is the purti est Gower of thermalr, I thiult ;" and she pointed:out a sprig of the scarlet bloom of the fish - geranium. It was the. gayest,: and therefore handsomest to ler—she re quired not the yearning holiness of the lily, nor the grape. and love Inspiring per f.umes of the roses and panzi. , a. _Would not give one half-expanded rose-bud, with the blush diffusingatacif . outward froMits• odorous heart, for. a basket,t'ull • of _fish-, geraniums. But which of us was right ?. Often, when we have heen•thinking Upon' dress, as a subject for study, to be cultiL vate.'i as a fine art; we have gone to na ture, who is the mother of art, for lessons. ; We have seen that she mingles ail colors with effects which are truly harmonious; and why should we be more arbitrary than she in her adornment of the flowers, when we would prescribe the hues - aud coniblna dons fbr 'a lady's toilette ? The " puritan' pansy" puts : on a yellow Vest with its pur ple velvet robe; the queenly fillips are-gor geous with streaks" of fed_ and•yellow, gay I enough for an Indian squaw; the florist la-. born for rainbow effects hills pet dahlias ; the poppy daunts her.searlet looped petti coat, and the peony shakes out her dozen of crimson jupes; the Morning-glory - trims her blue robe' with a Read - of pink; while one and all, vithout exception, tinda man ileOf green bedonnrig, -Nature tries all kinds of experiments with; the materials ! at lien CoMmailit. and her success isalways certain.' If nothing in nature - is - ted3-, thou is nothing in art ugly:Whetl .- it:simply' copies nature ;.and it cannot truly he said (though it "is often asserted), that • e. taste limits the colors of the-toilette, apil that (hub, or black, or white, .glightly're lieved by some. trimming in harmony-,.not hi 'Contrast, is the only really elegant cos -tube. If a 'dahlia •citu look" *elf pie, black, .and • yellow, . thea/why: not -a lady.? . If a maiden. fasten".the flounces of her azure ball-dress witli pink: o•arlandS. copyingshe is only the pattern of the morning-glories—and/would she ask to be more Illodestap t d ta,atefulthan they ? . Still, there seems..to besuch a thing as the cerrespond,nce of attire-with the corn. plerion, styleOud scars. The fragile lily of the yell /does. not depend, from a mut. lenstock„ner is the superb japonica nestled amid the mess and grass with the violet. Therefore ladies may well and profoundly atuay, which, of all the' various patterns add hues-heat aiisimilate with the charac ter of each ; and therefore it is that wn enter our protest against the blind' adop tion of any and every color and shape ==;l . . Which fashion .ma.y, dictate.- - .Trion the broWoffai hio n:is ivntten# onangef; the is a chameleon yet there-is: no ',woman' (al 7 - moSt notie).hut will pronounce he'r beau tiful;WhapVei aspect She...ssuines;:and the aspect is hideous and.ludierouS. ''The woman who adored her elegance ib large bonnets, coat-sleet-es; and lender skirts, now turn from the memory With uplifted hands.: 'The. name of . fashion is caprice,' and. of herfollowers is 'folly.: It is well that nature knows - her own mind better; else,:sotne ,seasons should have sal the flowers of the garden, regardless nf what. was intended for them; dressed uiriu the queenly bell-shaped robe. and snot y trail of the calla; again we should , hive' .the hollyhock and peonies all. squ4d into dainty ladyslippers ; anon; the violets and: primroses smothered in the'mande of the dahlias. • - ; • Let word come over from Pais that green is to' be worn by Mistress paShion: and straightway every sallow-face I woman becomes sickled o'er With the p;le cast" of jaundice. Or let the mandate be blue. and no.facle is so florid but that i(can af ford a deeper tint for the sake of being in the fashion:. No woman is too short. for plaids or too tall for stripes, when they are fashionable—nor too thick for short, waists, ,nor too thin for long ones{ It is impossible to arrive at , any.flxecl standard of taste in dress ; for it ib oils fact that, what our eyes have beeo . frie accustomed to, that we regard aS becom ing. Most new fashions displeae first seen, and become more ehaning as we grow familiar with them—we regret to change; yet after the . r,hange is made. it 1 grows more beantiful than the last. Study- ing the art of dress is like gar.ig into a! whirlpool of babbling water S—the longer it is continued, the more confused we grow. We would only suggest, that while fashion is not neglected entirely, proprie ty, becominomess, style, and place, be al so respected.—A Lady- in. Cosmopolitan , Art Journal. .1 " Asiasti . PA."—l Ara not pleased with a . paragraph which I read,- to-day, in a pa per of extensive, influence arid high moral tpne. This exceptionable paragraph plain - - ly: intimate's that if ." pa" - reuses his-con ' sent to. hiS daughter's marrying the man she loves,. then she is justified, in marry ing witineut - this " consent," at any sacri fice 1 H Is that girl capable of securing to her husband a life of happiness, Oh .can so far forget or ignore her mer.ii . obligations to her parent as to. outrage his feelings when be is most solicitous for her wclfare ? She who fails to see her dutt to her father will soon lose keenness of vision in reference to her husband's hap inesS, if the circumstances which effect a s happi ness conflict, with her inclinati - ns. No matter' what the.civil law says:, l bout it, her obligations to regard her pareni's feel ings'is 'as binding now . as it was teu years previous. duel the man who could coun sel, the violation . of, those feelin g s, lover though he be, i's. not - a safe deph ! itory . for woinan's heart. We. have known many to ac ug,gesti,;ns which this paragrap; and in after life either donie. , tic bi .._ and distrust turned their lives t trial and misfortune quenched t their bea.rtb;,till'they,uished th cover their. hoes: '.Then' they ago n y, " Thy, judgment is just i.l 0 God, ate righteous I" , Then La . euthered tlieir sin, and tlkeir.tr —" Wait if it is good for you that - one, your father will after it.and consent. But ueveona position to his 'expressed wish. listen I Be nut deceived. SUMSEit. From eze I;;:dependent f Oct. 14. Tur, ENDURANCI OF BEN- „ATOR SU,MNEII. , A letterifrom the lion. Charles. Su mner, dated t Aix, Sept. 11, says: r "i‘lylife is devoted to my health. I wish. that ,epuld say,that I am , not still an,invalid; but, except when attacked by the pain in. my ehest,..l.am.now.comfort ible, and enioy my baths; my walks; and the repose land incognito which I find here. "I fie,gin the day with-douches, hot and cold, and wh'eu - thoroughly exhausted, am wrappe m sheet...and blanket , and ...apple 4 in sheet. auo. ~,......_, conveyed to thy hotel and laid on my bed. After toy wal l k I find myself obliged again to take to iny, bed, for two, hours bz-loro dinner. , But the whole treatment is . in pleasant conitrast with the protracted suf. fering-,s from fire which made My summer a torment.. 1 And yet I fear that I must return again to that treatment." We have iheen,deeply affected with the simple, forcible, mournful recital of the suffering *lured by the honored Sena tor from 1 Missachusetts, in consequence of the brutal injuries intlicted on him, andln his person upon Fre - edon and Hu manity, in the Senate. Chamber_ of the United States. The chief 'actor-in that most cowardly and infamous outrage has since gone to, his a.ccouut. Erom him ; 1 BERM .;`,. lIMI TERIiIS.:-$1.25 PER ANNULI. ion to other side the 'grave,-..-we— [yet receive intelligenee; 77 —pessihly if we rn eould, we should hear soetliiiie pout Rrotineted sufferings from' . fire teteslso. ..,.i sufferings 21ik• side the grave; fire~ i 9 "refr ~ ns~ig; the other side, retributive anittienir But Setiator . Stitarier's' encrdraVei of pain lo the noble and righteiinicaiiiti fod he 'lain. m illers, tin; honor and blessi nod' the more, bren • inlin it is so,- peculially - a-1146.1 of 'the iiiiidAnd Heart; and of the noblest 'sensibilitleit as well of the body.. What, he a dds t071.1h0. description.of Ins Medical tr e atment is truly affeetintr. - 4-" "It is," he says; "with parigttnipdalt, able that I find myself thus arvited in the labors of 'life, and' in the duties y .position. This; is harder to bear - Man' t he fire. I do,not hear of friends engaged in active serviee,like - Tr - gmtml l lu Illinois --"without a feeling of etiVY. l4 : , •* *Yet perhaps the' distresed,' dejected, and , suffering soldier-at the baths,of Aix, is doing more fcr the cause 'of freedom and of the blare in . this .country, (still deeper depressed and suffering-0 than Trumbull - , or any other active'pOlitician, even an the right side, nay, itlian all of tliem. put together. I Who knows'? Who can tell ? This continued disCiPline of inactivity, as . well as suffering; is of au all-wise And gracious proVidenee; and per hhps it looks directly - to a preparation, of its subject .for some vastly greater good for the slave and his freedom,thaii_sity thing Yet attempted or accomplished.' Meanwhile, it Massachusetts -ever-Yor get_ her son, who still on earth entitires these sufferings in her cause,'_hltd •in 010 caush Liberty, let her right-- hatid for gatits cunning! The scepter of.lierpilw or will have departed from her, !Entitle children of her soil.caunot be thus'treach ergus; not even iby the help.of anodynes at night, and,a2ologics in the tporntng. * It. is now With our frientraig brother, a:trial as by Are. May.. 'tire- trial of his filith, which is much more . precious than of gtild that perisheth, though it,be4ried bY',fire, he found unto praise and liotlgr and glory. May he *enjoy', that'ithpe* Able' faith, and conquer by it.. '• +1,4 .L , ft" , A:t 4 rdY IS hi ing, il A trre. o. tvinelove,*zit burnlu in the soul. There is a fire: the Sin and of its penalty, comphted.„Critif the endurance of which,, no discipline Of"sitt fering here is to be received, bat' blessing'; it *becOmeS not only toler,o4, hit -the purchase' of an'exceeding —, and' ti-tjrnal weight of glPry, if it saber risffo tit the wrath"to dour. And' this; . tlifopg4 faith iu Christ; and by his siifferitippttl. tleath, it often God's 'main instrument iu dying. But- the sufferer' here S muSt - iikg . again return to that' discipline cf•firWif God sacs that itis-necessar7fOr is God's ,chosch welt of britiging his redemption! fran.i7dll future - r i-oi:tina evil. And men cast! in snob. h caieratia. for :truth and' right ' bous calmly as into Neiniehadnezzafri .and without - bartn;dif only the''Sbiiis! God walk with theinl •. ay faith•ldliii ii, not a hair of their heads shall be eitige neither shall the smell tf fire pp.s4 upon their garments: • . - • OT the a iives, itterness gall, or I I . God grant that such may be theidivine , companionship with this living martyeto the cause of litimanity and Freedom I jt is a distinction most, honbrable to hini: I . that in the Senate 'of the .United; States; 1 , w.`len the utmost of .men's 'moral'couragb 4eberally -only, carried them io ta:r4s4t! leg pardon, and apologize for their senti ments of freedom, he took the bold-ag gressive groUnd of attack, inveatiVe;:,and fiery denunciation - againat -slavery-.!-±iii the words of Burke, " he had thoenlarge- Ment7to comprehend, the spirit tounder taker and •the. eloquence to 'support, :SD great a measure of. hazardous benevoleriaii.'? n doing it, he has not only put to hazard his ease, his security, his interest,' but-his brought upon himself, besides being-Ara: &aced and abused for his noble. motives, years of the Severest personal suffering. Again, - in the . elevated language diid Spirit of. Burke, " he may remember, that:oblo quy ia a nadtssaryinoredient in the coei position of all true glory; be will-remem ber,_ that it was not only in the;:.Romala customs, but it is in the nature:anti elm, stitution of things, that. calumuy 'ana • abuse ;are essential parts -of trininpit.!+ These thoughts will support a mind, wlaitgi only exists for honor, under- •tho burden of temporary sufferings.:. .The hot:tore-y/111 be paid, when all thejargorl , of irdnenee, and party, and patronage,: am : swept:law oblivion.' • ~ ', • -:..1_.:.; 2:1 Dear Brother, our -hearts ,go out to you in sympatiayand prayer. _ ,The Lord.blesn yon ; the Loid hold you as ia•thehollow: of his hand ;- the Lord lift npbis counte nance upon you, : and give you. peace I- T 143 Lord direct poor heart, into the love-of God, and into the • patient- waiting for Christ ! - And, out of your , sufferings, ,as f•om his appointed 'crucible, there , shall y t come gold, bright gold, not for your se f only, but for Africa, and for her cruel; ly enclosed children in America! ~ C, is Le fire of grave to cried io thy laws, they i.e- Iviee was i to time-see ry i❑ op- Girls, I r. - 'irtue is trrie 4appineas - _.4MS , MEM 6 "Vet- MEE n i. . 11- 4 1 • • ft l t :1•••! 11' 1 '1 ' ll '7 411C1 .. :C .:h .~; F P UR, CRITS.t Ili ISM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers