£hc Slodlt Stanch Dcm m eal. HARVEY SXCKT E±i., Proprietor.] NEW SERIES, gjjctji flfraorral. A weekly Democratic tics, News, the Arts f|j and Sciences Ac. Pub- " Jay, at Tunkhannock, |ffc*> * f^^PF Wyoming County, Pa. 4 /I*\ WW IJ p BY HARVEY SICKLER. Terms—l copy 1 year, (in advanco) 51.50. If not pain within six months, £2.00 will be charged. A33VEH.TISITJG. 1U lines orl > ! I > less, make three four two ahree six '< one one square veeksaceeksmo'th mo' th' mo'th\year 1 Square I,€o> 1,25] 2.25' 2.87§ 3.00? 5,00 2 do. 2,00 2.50 3.25 3.505 4,50? 0,00 3 do. 3,005 3,75 ? 4,75 5,50; 7.00! 9,00 I Column. 4,00; 4,50; 6.50> 8.00? 10,00- 15,00 4 do. 6,00 7,00 10,00 12;00i 17,00; 25,00 I do. B,oo' 9,50' 14.00? 18,005 25,00 35,00 1 do. 10,00 12,00:17,00* 22,00,23,00 40,( 0 Business Cards of one square, with paper, $5. JOB WOJIK of all kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit the times. ghisinrss flotirfs. BACON STAND.—Nicholson, Pa. C. L JACKSOX, Proprietor. |vln49tf] HS. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County P'a. GEO. S. TUTTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Tunkhannock, Pa. Office in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga street. IT7M. M. PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Of- YY fice in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga St., Tunk hannock, Pa. IITTI.E * HEWITT, ATTORNEY'S AT J LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tunkhannock, Pa. R. R. T.TTTI.K. J. T'"F.WITT. J V. SMITH, M. I>, PHYSICIAN A STRUEON, • Office on Bridge Street, next door to the Demo rat Office, Tunkhannock, Pa. HARVEY SICKLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW and GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT - Of fice, Bridge street, opposite Wall's Hotel, Tunkhan nock Pa. J. T7HEIOA33S, M. D., (Graduate qf the University of Pcnna.) Respectfully offers his professional services to the citizens of Tukh'innock and vicinity. He can be found, when not professionally engaged, either at his Drug Store, or at his residcuce on Putnam Street. JM. CAREY, M. I).— (Graduate of the E. • M. Institute, Cincinnati) would respectfully announce to the citizens of Wyoming and Luzerne Counties, that he c mtinues his regular practice in the rarious departments of his profession. May i>e found •t his office or resid- nee, when not professionally ab sent jj Particular attention given to the treatment Chronic Diseas. Centremoreland, Wyoming Co. Pa.—v2n2. DR. J. C BECKER A Co., PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS, Would respectfully announce to the citizens of Wy oming that they have J oca ted at Mehuopany, where they will promptly attend to all calls in the live of their profession. May be found at his Drug Store when not professionally absent. DR. J. C. CORSEI.fUS, HAVING LOCAT ED AT THE FALLS, WILL promptly attend all calls in the line of his profession—may be found r.i Beemer's Hotel, when not professionally absent. Falls, Oct. 10, 1861. WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE/ TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING CO., PA. THIS establishment has recently been refitted and furnished in the latest style Every attention will be given to the comfort and convenience of those who patronize the ll<>ue. T. B. WALL, Owner and Proprietor. _ Tunkhannock, September 11, 1861. WORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA IULEY WARNER, Prop'r. HAVING resumed the proprietorship of the above Hotel, the undersigned will spare no effort to Fender the house an agreeable place ol sojourn for ill who may favor it with their custom. RILEY WARNER. September 11, 1861. MAYWARP'S HOTEL, TUNKHANNOCK, WYOMING COUNTY, PENNA. Jt)II N MA Y N ARI) , Proprietor. HAVING taken the Hotel, in Hie Borough of Tunkhannock. recently occupied by Kiley Warner, tho proprietor respectfully solicits a share ot Public patronage. The House has been thoroughly repaired, and the comforts and accomodations of a first class Hotel, will bo found by all who may favor it with their custom. .September 11, 1861. M. OILMAN, DENTIST, MGILMAN, has permanently located in Tunk • hannock Borough, and respectfully tenders his professional services to the citizens of this place and surrounding country. ALL WORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE ATlS faction. r"tf Office over Tutton's Law Office, near th e Pos Office. _ Dec. 11, 1861. Blanks ff Blanks !!! BLANK DEEDS SUMMONSES SUBPU2NAES EXECUTIONS CONSTABLE'S SCALES Justice's, Constable's, and legal Blanks of all kinds, Neatly and Correctly printed en good Paper, *od fer sale at the Office of the •' North Branch Democrat." T IME FOR FARMERS, AS A FERTILIZER for sale at VERNOVS. Meshoppen, Sept 19. 1861. I |1 oct's Comer. The Printing Press. Hail, mighty Lever! whose unwearied power Sends rays of genius o'er each darken'd land ; Where memory's record, changing every hour, Gives place to truth, stamped by thy giant hand. What glorious thoughts flashed in chaotic waste For want of thee to register their birth; And sparks of genius, poetry and taste, Just kindled up, then sank again to earth ! But thou, Mind's railroad, bearest along the store Of Knowledge, Science, Fancy's pleasing strain ; Or the design of Nature to explore, Where peace and harmony and order reign. Yo whose high trust it is to rule the Press, 0 guide it Peace and Freedom's cause to bless; With man's best hopes ye have a great account — * Taint not the life-stream at its sacred fount. 0 " ponder well" what thousands every day Ye guide to truth, or basely lead astray j Let no mean dread of indigence defeat What Reason dictates from her judgment seat. Be honest, faithful, seek with noble zeal To teach expanding Mind her power to feel; Then clouds of ignorance shall pass away, And Truth's resplendent sun make endless day. — - Woman's Heart. BY SI'JHE. Music, wild, thrilling music, Throbs out o'er the midnight air; A thou.-and lights are flashing, And happy hearts are there. I hear the tread of dancers, As graceful forms glidi past ; 'Tis ascene of wildering beauty— Too fair, too bright to last. And I have been the gayest Amid these scenes so bright ; They think that I am happy— But oh ! I'm sad to night ! 'Neath the diamonds coldly flashing Upon my heaving breast, Though my laugh has rung the loudest, My lone heart would not rest. And he hath viewed my conquests, And heard my mocking laugh, And his burning eyes have followed Whene'er I near him passed. He hath knelt in love betore me— Oh ! his anguish I could see— But I turned as coldly from him As once he turned from me. And in liastv words I told him I could ne*er love hiin more ! 'Twas wild, wild agony for me, And my heart grew sick and sore, Yes, I masked my love in coldness, And from him turned away— From my wildly worshiped idol— And my heart strings shattered lay. There was ever in my memory Vows uttered long before, And though I smiled upon them, . They soon forgotten were. For another form had won him — An angel form he thought; But soon he wearied of a love By golden purse-strings bought. And to-night again he met mo ' Mid this scene of revelry ; And I viewed his pale lips quiver in love's fearful agony, llisface was pale and ghastly, As he stood from the rest apart. Wtth his proud arms tightly folded Upon his bursting heart. I could have died then for him; But I seemed as proudly gay, And the grandly swelling music Bore my merry laugh away, 0 woman ! thou canst worship And still be proud and cold, Though a weary heart is breaking ' Neath the satin's gleaming fold. jlUscrllancotts. NEW TROUBLES. BY GEORGE MARTIAL. It is all very weH for " Ilamlct" to talk about taking " arms against a sea of troubles, and by opposing end them," if he had been George Martial, he would have found that there are some thoughts not so easily dispos ed of. All the arms I have taken have only sunk me deeper and deeper; and the man who thinks that " opposing" can put a stop to troubles, has never seen a Mrs. Polly. 1 think I have often mentioned my eldest, a girl, and likewise a Polly, arrived at this pres ent writing at the mature age of sixteen, whose existence has been principally obtru ded on my notice quarterly ; that is, when the bills came in : as she never came to break fast before I left for down-town, passeed her time in school and at small evening parties, except the Sundays, which she divided as im partially as possible between the bed and Fifth avenue. She was also reoommended to my notice on the occasions of moving up-town, getting new curtains, giving a party, and other such steps in the geateel ladder as " the poor child for whom I might be expected to have some con sideration, if I was low and vulgar in my tastes myself." I have also bowed rather "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT."-Thomas Jefferson. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOV . 5, 1862. doubtfiilly to a very stylish your.g lady, whom I thought, from the family resemblance, must be my daughter; for it was about three months ago that she became a portentous and very fixed fact, to be taken into account in all my domestic calculations. One morning, as I was peacefully munching my toast, Mrs. Pol ly, who had been nncommonly and portentous y bland for a week, brought her heavy guns into position, and suddenly opened fire after this fashion. • "My dear, T have concluded to take Polly out of school. I have also stopped Signor Tittertivia, and Madame Smolenski's lessons." " Quite right," answered I, in the innocence of my heart. " One of our chief follies in this age of folly is, the manner in which we edu cate our girls. They must know all things; never mind about knowing them well; and the girl whose position in life makes a knowl edge of Mrs. Glass and proficiency on the sewing-machine desirable, must have a list of accomplishments that might well stagger an intellect of the best calibre, if each well learn ed. I hope Polly that our daughter—" " llow perfectly intolerable you are !" an swered Mrs. Polly, with a snort of disdain. " Polly a proficient on a dirty sewiDg-machine, indeed ! Why sue has finished her educa tion." " She is to be congratulated," I returned, with a how. " She has accomplished what has never been done before, and put Solomon entirely to the blush, as he went on learning to the end of his days." " She is a young lady,—then ifyou like the phrase better." I turned and examined my daughter—a pretty, fresh colored blonde, with a good deal of what is called " style". " A young lady, as you nay," I pursued, looking again at Mrs. Polly. "\\ hat is to be done with her ?" " George I wouldn't be a brute," answered my wife, aud Molly giggled and colored, and said : " Dear me, Pa you are so odd." Mrs. Polly swelled a few minutes in silence ; that is her way of asserting her dignity. Then came the storm. " Now Mr. Martial, this is a serious matter ; and if you can give your attention (though it is hardly to be expected that you should be stow any* of your thoughts on your own faini ly), I should like to have a little sensible con versation with you. Yawn, of course !if it was only Lou Baracole, or that flirt of a Yi via ! but, as it is only your own daughter, who is twice as smart and three times as good looking any day, I must expect to be only half heard." " It would be only a deaf man who could give you just cause for that reproach," I could not resist saying. " That's right Mr. Martial ! Sneer and gibe at your wife ! She is fair game. However, 1 can bear it. I have stood it all these years, and it shan't prevent me from speaking my mind now, and doing my duty by my poor child. I have the feelings of a parent, if you haven't. I can see how she might shine in the world, if she was only advantageously placed, and it shall not be my fault if she is not. She is now a yoang lady." ( Immense emphasis.) " Parents possessing the ordina ry amount of feeling would be anxiously con sidering how to secure for her the position she is so well qualified to fill. Even personal sacrifice would not be regarded by them, and shall not by tne. I have always been weak and yielding ; but on this one point I am de termined, and I will stick fo it if I fall a mar tyr to the cause. Oh ! you may sneer, Mr. Martial! I know very well how brutal you can be, and how obstinate and pig-headed, and that you are a perfect dullard where any of your own family is concerned, but lam ready for you. I intend to spend the season at the Bel lev ue. Mrs. Sturges and Josephine are going ; so are everybody that think any thing of themselves; and I am determined that Molly shall have the advantages of a fair start in the world," " A start in the world !" I answered (you see I don't generally oppose Mrs. Polly, but as the future of my eldest daughter was in question, I couldn,t help at least remarking upon it). " That child is sixteen ;she knows —what? a little smattering of French, a perversion of music, and the system of ma king caricatures facetiously called drawing; the English branches 6be probably knows by name. I have heard you say that she dances very well; she shops very well, and is au fail in the fashions. Doubtless, under) tuition, she has a proper comprehension of the people she is to recognize, and those she should cut. Having diligently read all the sensation read ing, is probable that she has exceedingly developed views on the subject of matrimony, but very crude ones or none at all, on the way in which to regard and enter upon that holy estate; with this knowledge, you, madam, propose to start her into the world into which men and women of long experience, purest hearts, finest minds go daily crying out, like children to their father, " Good Lord deliver os !" " Hadn't you better save that for the next time you want to do the pious in some of the papers 7" remarked Mrs. Polly, rather con temptuously. " And I must aay, pa, that I don't think I am quite a baby," says Mils Molly, reddening. " You have euch old-fahioned idts-r calling young ladies of sixteen, children. You 6ee we live faster now than in those slow old times. We develop young ;we have better training ; every possible forcing and pushing influence is brought to bear on us mentally and morally. Girls of sixteen might have been iufants in your day sir ; but I assure you, now, they are beings of thought, and feeling, and emotion: and 1 think parents don't sufficiently consider this, and are not attentive and obedient (I don't mean obedi ent)' but miiylful of their children's wishes Bread-and-bu; ivr systems don't answer, for minds and hearts filled with the poetry, and the wonder, and the magic of the universe ; beating with ardor for the untried life , full of mysterious thought and aspiration. "There," said Mrs. Polly, "do you call that childlike." "I ? Truth forbid ! What have the race of children done to me, that I should so ma lign them ?" "And then, j'ou see, pa," said Miss Molly, in a much more natural tone, "we must go, for everybody is going ; and we could never hold up our heads, if we stayed at home iu this horrid place. As for the expense, we'll make that up somehow. We needn't send the children to school, this winter. I can teach tbein at home." I don't think it necessary to say, that I yielded the point. I had simply argued by way ofrelieving my conscience; the idea of any one man offering systematic and deliberate opposition to two women, is simply prepos terous. I said Yes, of course, and stumbled over a dress-maker, aud boxes, and trunks, for the next two weeks, and bought all kinds of things on being bid, and, finally, took my wife and daught r to the hotel, saw them and their boxes safely landed in their room, and left them alone in my glory. It had been arranged that 1 was to remain in town with the children during the week, and only on Sundays make my affectionate wife and daughter happy by my presence. I, therefore, knew very little of what went on. Mrs. Polly told me that Molly was vastly ad mired, that she was quite the bell of the ho tel, would doubtless make some brilliant match before she season was over, etc. Occasionally, I saw Molly, and was treated by her in a very kind and condescending way, indeed; and I frequently caught a glimpse of her on the piazza, in one of those jaunty little hats, in which she really looked very well, walking with a very mustached gentlemen, who, it struck nie, looked into Modie's eyes in what old-fashioned people used to call "a lover-like fashion;" but, on mentioning it to Mrs. Polly, she assured me " that it was nothing at all—all the gentle men did so ; and, even if it were serious, it was Count Lusigniani, and, therefore, a very desirable person." Long exper.encc has taught me the utter uselessness of argument, so I tried to believe tnat it was as desirable as Mrs. Polly assured me, till one morning, sitting peacefully in the grocery, smoking a cigar, and half dozing at that, I was somewhat startled by the unlook ed-for entrance of iny wile. "\Y here is Molly ?" was her first ques- " Molly—Molly who." " Dear me, you are so stupid. Mr. Martial; our Molly, of course." "I am sure I don't know. I haven't seen her." " Haven't seen her ? You dare to tell me you haven't seen her ? Why, she came to town yesterday, and was going to 6pend the nigh tat the house. You haven't been home yourself, you pitiful, sneaking thing, and are found out in your meanness, as usual. You see, you never can cheat me. I knew that was the way you would go on, and that was the reason you was so willing to let us go so that you could flirt with every widow and forlorn old maid in the neighborhood." "Save tho abuse ; you have always time for that, and a stock on hand ; but the ques tion is now, Where is Molly ? I was home last night, and she was not there, nor had been there." Mrs. Polly did not answer. A letter lying among a pile which I had just received, and had not yet opened, caught her attention She opened it, and read, growing pale—read it once, twice, and tossed it over to me. It was from Molly, and was as follows : "MY DEAR FATHER : —I write to you, because you are not so prejudiced as ma, and can make more allowance for the irrepressible instincts of the human heart. 5\ hen you receive this, I shall be married to Guido Lusigniani, not Count; he assumed that title only to win my love ; that done, his noble nature for bade bim to deceive me, and he confessed to mo that he was a disciple of one of the highest and purest of the arts, when not debased to ploose public taste—l mean the drama. Knowing the idle prejudices ex isting against his profession, we thought best to mar ry first, and seek your forgiveness afterward. Ad dress, Mrs. Guido Lusigniani, 2364 street. Give my lovo to ma arid the children. Your loving daugh ter- MOLLIE. I sat stupefied, but Mrs. Polly is equal to any emergency. " You see, now "'she comenced, " the ef fects of the example you have set your chil dren. I always told you it would be so. llow could she have any ideas of what is right and proper, seeing her own father cut ting up and gallivanting with everybody and everywhere. I shouldn't like to have your conscience, Mr. Martial." Walking out of the store with such dignity, that I couldn't but smile. But, alas! poor Molly ! MY WIFE IS THE CAUSE OF IT". It is now more than forty years ago that Mr. L. called at the house of Dr. T., on ve ry cold morning, on his way to H Sir," said the doctor, the weather is ve ry frosty will you not take something to drink before you start ?" In that day ardent spirits were deemed in dispensable to warmth in winter. When commencing a journey, and at every stopping place along the road, the traveller always us ed intoxicating drinks to keep him warm "No," said Mr. L., "I never touch any thing of that kind, and will fell vou the rea son : my wife is the cause of it. " "I had been in the habit of meeting some of our neighbors every evening for the pur pose of playing cards. We assembled at each other s shops, and liquors were introduced.— After a while we met not so much for plav •ng as.drinking, and I used to return home late in the evening more or less intoxicated. My wife always met me at the door affection tionately, and when I chided her for sittin up so late for me, she kindly replied : I prefer doing so, for I cannot sleep when you are out." p n • This always troubled me. I wished In my heart she would only begin to scold me. for then I could have retorted, and relieved my conscience. But she always met me with the same gentle and loving spirit. things passed on thus for months, when I at last resolved that I would, by returning much intoxicated, provoke her displeasure so much as to cause her to lecture me, when I meant to answer her with severity, and thus, by creating another issue between us, unbur then my bosom of its present trouble. "I returned in such a plight about four o clock in the morning. She met me at the door with her usual tenderness, and said : " Come in husband ; I have just been mak ing a warm tire for you, because I knew you would be cold. Take off your boots and warm your feet and here is a cup of coffee." '■ Doctor, that was too much. I could not endure it any longer, and I resolved that mo ment that I would never touch another drop while { live, arfd I never will. He never did. He lived and died practic ing total abstinence from intoxicating drinks, in a village where intemperance has raged as much any other in this State. That man was my father, and that woman my mother. The facts above related were ! received from the doctor himself, on a visit ! to my native village not long since. LABOR, Ihe fallowing is a beautiful tribute of la bor : H h\*, man of idleness, labor rocked you in the cradle, and has nourished your pamper ed life—without it, the woven silks and wool upon your back would be the silkworm's nest, and the fleeces in the shepherd's fold For the meanest thing that ministers to the human want, save that of the air 'of heaven, man is to toil indebted; even the air by God's wise ordination, is breathed with labor. •' It is only the drones who toil not, who infest the hive of the active like masses of corruption and decay. The lords of the earth are working men, who can build or cast down at their will, and who retort the sneers of the ' soft-handed,' by pointing to their tro phies wherever art, science, civilization and humanity are known. Work on, man of toil, thy royalty is yet to be acknowledged as the lator moves onward to the highest throne of powers. " I.abor is not only essential to true digni ty and independence, but to happiness. It is necessary to ensure the strength and health of the body, without which the mind must suffer and become the prey of anxious and featful thoughts. Without occupation of some sort, there can be no contentedness of heart. It is the greatest preservation from both sorrow and sin. The hardest work in the world and the most demoralizing, is do ing nothing. No state or individual can pros per where labor, in any form, is despised. CELEBRATED AUTHORS. Steele wrote excellently on temperence— when sober. Sailusf, who declaimead so elo quently against the licentiousness of the age, was himsels a habitual debauchee. John son's essay on politeness is admirable, but he was himselLa perfect boor. The gloomy ver ses of Young give one the blues, but he was a brisk, lively man. " The Comforts of Hu man Life," by B. Heron, was written in pris on, under the most distressing circumstan oes. " The Miseries of Human Life," by Beresford, were, on the contrary, composed in a drawing room, where the author was sur rounded with every luxury. All the friends of Sterne knew him to bee selfish man ; yet as a writer, he excelled in pathos and chari ty—at one time beating his wife, at another wasting his sympathies over a dead monkey. So Seneca wrote in praise of poverty on a ta ble formed of solid gold, with millions let out at usury. C3C Another political priest wants to go to Congresp. Rev. T. Starr King is being urged for successor to Senator Lathatn. from California. , L TERMS: 81.SO PER ANKTJIMK; • V r OL. NO. 13. A countryman went into a store hi Boston the other day, and told the keeper that I neighbor of his had entrusted him with some money to be spent to the best advantage, and he meant to do it where he would be treated the best. He had been very well treated in Boston by the traders, and woukl not part with his frietSd's money until he found a man who* would treat him about right. With the ut most suavity the trader says : " I think I can treat you to your liking, how do you want to be treated ?" .1 Well," says The farmer with a leer in fii# eye. "In the first place I want aglqsß,of tod dy," which was forthcoming. "ow I wfll have a nice cigar," says the countryman. It was promptly handed him, leisurely lighted, and then throwing himself back, with hfe feet as high as his head, he commenced puff ing away like a Dutchman. " Now what do you want to purchase ?" says the storekeeper. " My neighbor handed me two cents when [ left home to buy him a plug of tobacco," answered the farmer " have you got the arti cle ?" The storekeeper stopped instanter, and the next thing that was heard from him was thst his sides were shaking and his face on fire as he was relating the sell to his friends dowtr town. A SOLDIER'S STORY.-. ? ' i S i -V Not long since a lot of us—l am an Hu'R, " high private," were quartered in several wooden tenements, and in an inner room of one lay the corpse of a young secesh officer, awaiting burial. The news soon spread to a village not far off, and down came tearing a sentimental, not bad-lookidg specimen of a Virginia dame. "Let me kiss him for his mother!" she cried, as I interrupted her progress. "Da let me kiss him for his mother !" " Kiss whom V " The dear little Lieut., the one who lie# dead within. I never saw him, but oh !" 1 led her through a room in which voung Lieut, ,of Philadelphia lay stretched out on an upturned trough, fast asleep. Suppos ing him to be the article sought for, sbe rush' ed up exclaiming— " Let me kiss him for his mother,* and ap proached her lips to his forhead. What was her amazement when the " corpse" clasped his arms around her and exclaimed : " Never mind the old lady, Miss, go it on your own account. I haven't the slightest objection." SPEECH OF EX-SEYATOR ALLEY, OF OHIO. A large meeting of the Democracy of Ohia was held at Chilicothe, on the 4th at which ex-Senator Allen delivered a speech, in the course of which he presented the fol lowing picture of the eSects of negro emanci pation m consequence of the President's Proc lamation :• Suppose that the contemplated Emancipa tion should be inaugurated successfully, sev en or eight hundred thousand negroes, with their hands reeking in the blood of murdered women and children, would present them selves on our Southern border, demanding to cross over into our State, as Ohio's share of the freed slaves—seven or eight hundred thousand negroes, without money, without food and without personal property of any kind, who, in virtue of nature's law, were compelled to eat and be clothed. Then would come the conflict between the white laborers and the negroes. The negroes would euter into such a competition with the white la borers that the latter would have to abaudou the field of labor here make way for the negroes—or maintain their ground by waging a war on the negroes, that would result in driving them from the State, or in their ex termination. It was hard to compel a while man who earned seventy.five cents a day to contribute twenty-five cents of that Bum to be expended in schemes to buy the freedpm of the negroes. He won't like that. The fanat ics claim that these schemes are prompted hy philanthropy. Carried out they would end in the death of the negroes. If it were possible to colonize the negroes in Central America, where it is proposed to colonize them, they would starve, and if emancipated and not re moved from our country, their extermination were sure to follow. L ntil the negroes shall be recognized as socially the equai of white men, they cannot be politically their equal. None of those fa natics, who claim to be acting in behalf of philanthrophy, would consent that their son# and daughters should inter-marry with the negro. From the marriage altar spring our political privileges ; if not equal there, we are .lot politically equal. No objection# are interposed to our sons and daughters inter marrying with Englishmen, Germans, Inth men, Frenchmen, Ac. We all belong to the same family. We are simply "the advanced guard—they arc the guard—our father#, mothers, brothers, and sister. All these in termarry, and soon their blood becomes melt ed into the great pool of American blood Not so with the negro. He does not belong to the same family. That he is different 1# palpable to the philosopher, if not the theo logian, and why he was created differently is immaterial for us ty know ; it is suffiaeat to know that he is different, without seeking to obtain the affidavit of the Almighty on the Bubject. * THE BEST ADVANTAGE.