Till" KI.K ADVOCATM, A LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWSPAPER, INiftlfArrfrj,' Ti ii mil a if. bYVOllN p. MOOHE. Per Year in advance fl f0 Hates of Ad vortisiTu Adm'rs nd Executo-'g 'Notices, ch G times !? 2 V Auditor's Jwitucs. rneh..... 2 ' Transient ndvei lising, per Fuunrc of 10 lines or less, 8 times or les '1 l) For each subsequent insertion,, fi' Professional cards. 1 year o t"r Special notices, per line 1 Obituary nnd M'tiriajre Notices, tnch 1 ( Yearly Advertising, one fpinre Dl ( J Yearly Advertisintr. two squares 1-lt'i Yeai 'y Adver'ing three squnrcs '2l ( t Yearly Advertising, column !2-" ' Yearly Advertising, column..., 3.1 0- Yearly Advertising, 1 column "0 ( Advertisements displayed more, thai ordinarily w ill be charged for ul the rate (per column) of l'O 0 down to Mr. M. It. Wilson, for .CI 5, 7t30. Two and a half vears ngo slur cost .C35.000. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. ft JfF ' s ' I , ill JjyAU suVcriptions In ho r-i'd in ad vance. Orders fur Job Wink respectfully folieifod. r?,.Oln'('p on Main Street, in the Peoon-1 tlory of Honk & Oillij ;'to:c Ad-lroe.i JOHN G. HALL, epitor & rr.oriur.TOR . -JO JIN O. 1IAL.L., Kditor I'OLIWE ft-.Vf'.Tf Fff( 11. J. P. MOORE, Publisher. Ti;j??S 1 50 Ftr carin .Itlvancc. JIIOC.MYfV, JE.V.Vf., TfIl3f, 1866, I 1 J CJ 1 Id! I in I It 2 1 I I Ba .'A B3 PI ,1 TnTSTX7SS CAHDS. OlIN (1. HALL, Attorney nl law. llhlp! way. l;ik county Pa. mav'JJ'Oi! lv. rAL'UIE J. P.LAKF.LY. Attorney nnd j Counsellor nt hw, nnd U. S. ("ononis, io-nor. Ridgway or Peninqer P. (.. Klk eointy. Pa. m:ir-J'i'GO.ly. S" OUTIIFU AN1 WILMS All ornevs nL I.nw, Kidgwny. Elk county Pa.. wi'd n:tend to nil professional business prompt ly. in.ir-i!:!'ii(!-y. IV'l- J- f- HOIUHVHIX P.icclic Physi- cinn. I.nto of Wnrron county Pa., will j,.- mptly answer all professional calls hy mr'it or day. Upsi-h-iieo no door oast of th' late residence of Hon. J. I,, llillis. Mnr-T-.i-ly. DP.. W. 15. 11 A It ''.MAN. St. Mary's, Elk counly Pa Lute of Ihe Army of Hie Potomac. Particular attention given to all i ics of surgical nature. mar-l'J'tiil-ly. D P. D It. W. J.-lMKS DLAIvKLY Physician and Surgeon, 't. -Mary's, Elk county mar-'J-'tid ly. P 11. W. W. SHAW Practices Medicine and Surgery, C'entreville, Elk county mar-llj'litily. II DP.. A. S. ill LL Kersey, Elk county Pa. Will promptly answer all professional oal's by night cr day. mar-i-'Uti-ly. YI!', HOUSE, M. V. MODKB Propri' ctor, Ridirwav, Elk county Pa. .Mar-2 oo-ly. OT. MARY'S HOTEL. P.. K. Wclkndorf 7 Proprietor, St. Mary's, Elk county Pa. Y'iU house is new and titled up with cspe. cial care for (lie convcnienc and comfort of j;ucsi.-, at uioderate rates. Free Hack, to mil from the lcpot. Good stabling at tached. mar-l'J'tiij- ly. IXUHAXGE HOTEL, Kidgwny. Elk J eounly Pa.. Pavid Thayer Proprietor. Thi-t house is pleasantly situated on tho 1) in'; of the Clarion, in the lower end of the to vn, is well provided with house room and stabling, nnd ihe proprietor will spare no pains to render the stay of his guests pleas ant and agreeable. mar-l!2'00-ly. 47aSUIN'uTON HOUSE, St. Mary's, Elk county Pa., Edward Pabel Pro. rrietor This house is new and fitted up with especial care for the convenience aii 'sts. (iood stabling attached. Mar-i'J'O'i-l.Y. of )0R1JWELL AND MESSENGER Drug I) gists, Dealers in Drugs and Chemicals, Paints. Oils and Vainish. Perfumery Toil. ,-t articles and Stationary. P.idiway, Elk county Pa. mar-:!-liu-ly. 4 1 H. VOLK. Manufacturer and lc.ilo' J . in Either Deer, opposite the Railroad Depot, Si. Mary's, Eli; county Pa. Mar-'ii'ij'l-ly. W'tt Ai I' 1 0 A L CLOCK AND WATCH- t 1. i.- j'i' l i; s I.' .- rmimv EdvaiJ MeUride. keeps constantly on 1 and for sale, Watches. Clocks, Silver ' :d Ware and Jewelry of all descriptions. C'VRer-.'urin;r neatlv executed, and done u. ....... 1 ..aj.nnl.ln lormn' IV. lU:CONST.lUTCTION. TESTIKONY OF HOK. ALEX. H. STEPHENS BEFORE THE COMMITTEE OF FIFTEEN. Tftc Truth flalnly Tola. Continued from our last. Aruii, 1, lti(. Examination of Alexander II. Stephens rcsnmcd. y Mr. Umitwcll : Q. lo you mean to bo unJcrstoml in your nnswer that there ia no constitu tional power in the eovertiniont as nt present orsranize-J, to exaet condition protcdeiiteJ to tho restoration to politi. eal power of the eleven Stales that have been in rebellion ? A. Tlint is my opin. ion. Q Do yon entertain tho same opin ion in rel'Menec to the amendment of t lie Constitution abolishing slavery ? A. I do not. 1 think the States have abolished slavery in pood faith as one of the results of war; their satisfaction of the constitutional amendment followed as a consequence. I do uot think there is, any constitutional power on tho part of the government to have exacted it as a condition precedent to their restora tion under the Constitution, or the re. sumption of their places us members of the Union. Q. IF hat, in your opinion, is the le. pal value of tho laws passed by Congress and approved by the President in the absence of Senators nnd Representatives from the eleven States? A. I do not know what particular laws you refer to, by niy answer generally is that the va lidity of all laws depends on their con. stitutio'iality ; this is a question for the judiciary to determine, my own judg ment, whatever it might be, would nave to conform to the judicial determination of the question ; it is a question for the courts to determine. (). Have you formed any opinion up. on that question ? A. I cannot say that I have formed any material opinion in reference to any particular act of Congress embraced in the question. O. Assume that Congress shall, at this session, in the absence ot Senators and Representatives from the eleven Slates, pn?s an act levying taxes upon all the neonlc of the United States, in eluding theeleven,i.s ityour opinion that such an act would bo constitutional ! A. I should doubt if it would bo ; it would certainly in my opinion, bo mani festly uniust and atrainst all ideas of American representative government its constitutionality would, however, be a question for the judieiary to decide, and I should be willing to abide by that decision, whatever it might be. Q. It tho eleven States have at pro. my decided opinion is that a very thor ough change has taken plncj upon the practicul policy of resorting to any such right. Q. What events or experience of the war have contributed to this change? A. First, the people are satisfied that a resort to the exercise of this right whilo it is denied by .ho Federal government will lend to war, which many thought before, tho late attempted peecssion would not bo tho case, and civil wars, they arc also now very well satisfied, are dangcroiu to liberty; and, moreover, their experience in the late war, I think. satisfied them it greatly endangered their own. I allude especially to the suspension of the writ of hahriis corpux and tho military conscriptions, the proclamations ol martial law in various 1 . . . ... places, general impressments, ana me levying of forced contributions, as well as the very demoralizing effects of war generally. (I lieu were you last a member ot the Congress of the United States? A. I went out ou the 4th of March, 185!). Q. Will you state, if not indisposed to do so, the considerations or opinions which led you to identify yourself with the rebellion so far as to accept the office of Y ice Presidency of the Con federate States of America, 60-called? A. I believed thoroughly in the reserv ed sovereignty of the several States of the Union under the compact of the Union or tho Constitution ot 1787 ; I opposed secession, therefore, as a ques tion of policy, and uot one of right on read and those who had served in the Iln'on armies, would that modification affect the action of the State? A. I think the people of the State would bo unwilling to do more than they have done for restoration. It eat rioted or limited suffrage would not be so objec tiouuble as gcncrnl or universal, but it is a matter that belongs to the State io regulate. The question of suffrage, whether universal or restricted, is one of State policy exclusively, as they be lieve. Individually, 1 should not be opposed to a proper system of restricted or limited suliruge to tins class ot our popuUilion ; but, in my judgment, it is a matter that belongs of right to the States to regulate exclusively each for itself, but tho people of that State, as I have said, would not willingly, I think, do more than they have done for resto ration ; the only view, in their opinion, that could possibly jttstity tho war which was cairied on by the Federal government against theni, was the idea ot the luuissolubleness ot the Union; that those who held the administration for the time were bound :o enforce the executiou of the laws and tho maiutcn. ancc of the integrity of the country un der the Constitution ; and these that was accomplished, since those who had as sumed the contrary principle the right of secession and the reserved sov' ereignty of the States had abandoned their cause, and the administration here was successful in maintaining the idea upon which war was proclaimed and waged, and the only view in which they ir '! ot' III PRINTING, such as Cards. Posters, Han lD'Jls. Uiil II -ads Jte., done at ADVOCATE OFFICE on short notice .nd at rc- isoa able prices. 1SG0 13G6 the part of (ieorgja ; when tho State so- supposed it could bo justified at all when that was accomplished I say tne people of Georgia supposed their State was immediatelv entitled to all her lights under the Constitution. Tint is my opinion of the sentiment of the peo ple of Georgia, and I do not think they would be willing to do anything lurther as a condition precedent to their being permitted to enjoy the full measure ot tneir constitutional rights. 1 only give my opinion of the seutiment of the peo ple at this time. I hey expected that as soon as the Confederate cause was ubandoiifd that immediately the States would be brought buck into their rrac tical relations with the government as previously constituted. That is what they looked to. They expected that the State would immediately have their representatives in the Senate and in the House, and they expected it in good faith as loval men, as the term is fre- ciuentlv us:d. I mean by it loyal to law. order, and the Constitution, to sup port the government under the Consti tution. That was their feeling; they did what they did believing it was best for the rirotection ot constitutional Iiber- setit au immediate constitutional righc to p.-t of the States on which the Consti- ty. Toward tho Constitution of the be repicscnted in Congress on a footing i;nn of tlm United States was or'uri. United States, as thev construed it, the ceded, against my judgment and vote, 1 thought mv ultimate allegiance was due to her, and I preferred to cast my fortunes and destinies with hers and her people, rather than to take any other course, even tuoiign u mignt icaa to my sacrifice and her ruin ; in accepting position under the new order ot things, my sole object was to do all trie goon i could in preserving and perpetuating the principles ot liberty as established under tho Constitution of the United States. If the Union was to be abau. doned. either with or without force. which I thought a very impolitic m.-as ure, I wished if pussilile to rescue, pre nerve and oeriietuate the tirineiples ot the Constitution. J his I was not with out hope miht be done in the new con federation ot Males termed. hen the conflict aiose. tnv efforts were diiectcd to as speedy and peaceful an adjust rucnt of the duestiotis as possible. This adjustment I always though to bo last ing ; would have ultimately to be set tled uimn a continental basis, loundcd unon the principles of mutual conven ience and reciprocal advantage on the nillLABELPIIIA k ERIK RAIL X KOAI). This great line traverses tho Northern and Northwest counties of Pennsylvania to the city of Erie, on Lake ijric. It has been leased by the l innsiha Hi'd Rail lioad company, and is opera cd by them. Its entire length was opened for pas senger and freight business, October 17th, 1SG1. TIME OF PASSENGER TRAINS AT KIDGWAY. Leave EustwarJ. I repics with tho States at present represented, has that had a continuous right irom tho formation of tho government, or from the time of admission ot the new States respectively, or has it been inter rupted by war? A. I think, as the Congress of the United States did not consent to the withdrawal of the seceding States, it was a constitutional right, un der the Constitution of tho United States, to be exercised so koou as tho nally formed ; I was wedded to no par ticular plan of adjustment except the recognition as a basis ot the separate sovereignty of the several States ; with this recognized as a principlo I thought all other ouestions ot ditlertnce would great mass of our people were always as much devoted in their leelings as any people ever were toward any cause. This is niy opinion. As I remarked before, they resorted to secession with a view ot maintaining more securely these soon adjust themselves according to the principles, and when they lound they best interests ot the peace, welfare and were not successful in their object, in prosperity of the whole country, as en- perfect good faith, as far as I can judge lightened reason, calm judgment and a from meeting with them and conversing s,?nse of iustiea mioht direct : this doc. with tin ni, looking to the future devel. seceding States respectively made their trm0 0f tl10 sovereignty of tho several opments of their country, in its material Erie Mail Train 2 15 Erie Express Train 7 5'3 Lravc Wtsticarrf. Erio Mail Train I 30 Erie Express Train 2 o!) Passenger cars run through without change both ways between Philadelphia and Erie. NEW YORK CONNECTION. Leave New York at 9. 00 a. m., Arrive at Erie 9.15 a. m. Leave Erie at 1.55 p. m., arrive at New York 3.40 p. ni. 1'leof.nt Sleeping Cars on Express Trains both ways between Williamsport and Baltimore, and Williamsport and Philadelphia. For information respecting Passenger business apply at the S. K. corner 30th and Market Sts. And for Frsight business of tho Com- ranv's Agents: S. It. Kinffston. Jr. Cor. 13th and Market Sts. Philadelphia. J. IV. Reynolds Erie. W.Brown, Agent N. 0. It. Jt. Bal tlmoro. II. II. Houston', Gen'!. Freight Aft. Phil' a. II. Wr. G WINNER, Gm'I. Tklcet Ayt. PhiVa. Alfred. L. Tyler, Cilit i "! Spt Willi' t . . . . , r . , readines to resume tneir lormcr practi cal relations with the Federal Govern nieiit under the Constitution of the United States. As the geueral govern incnt denied the right of secession, I do not think any of tho States attempting to exercise it thereby lost any of their rights under tho constitution, as States, when their people abandoned that at- tempt. Q. Is it cr not your opinion that the Legislatures and people of the eleven States respectively have at present such ;i right to elect Senators and Jtepresen. tatives to Congress ; that it may bo ex. ereised without regard to the part which persons elected may hava hau m tho re bellion ? A. I do not think they could exercise that right in the choice of their Senators and members so as to impair in the slightest degreo the constitutional right of each House for itself to judge of the qualifications of those who might beehosen; tfio rignt or constitutional election of a State to choose and tho r igh t of each 1 1 ouse of Congress to j udge of tho qualifications of thosu elected to the respective bo lies are very distinct nnd different ouestions, and in this States I regarded as a self adjusting regulating principle of our American system of State government extending possil ly over the continent. O. Have your opinions undergone any change since the openiug of Ihe e bellion hi reference to the reserved rights of States under the Constitution of tho United States? A. My con victious on the original abstract question have undergone no change, but I acjopt the issues ot the war and the result as a practical settlement of that qucstiou The sword was appealed to to decide thy fiucstion, and by the decision of the sword I am willing to abide. Q. If the proposition were to be sub. inittcd to Georgia a one of the eleven States lately in rebellion, that she might bo restored to political power in the government of the country upon the condition prccedented that she would on tho one hand extcud suffrage to tho negro, or on the other consent to their exclusion from tho basis of representa tion, would she accept either proposition and take her place in the government of tho country f A. I can only give 1 do not think she would resources as well as its moral and intel lectual progress, their earnest desira . ..' -11 l. - L and expectation was to auow mo pasi struggle, lamentable as it was in its re sults, to pass by, and to co-operate with the true friends ot the tjonstitution, with those of all sections who earnestly , . , .- i I desire me preservation oi consiiiuuouai liberty and the perpetuatiou of the gov. ernment in its purity. They have been a htlle disappointed in tins, and are so now. They are patiently waiting, how. ever, and believing that when the pas sions of tho hour have passed away this delay in restoration will cease. I hey think thev have done everything that was essential and proper, aud my judg mcnt is that they would not be willing to do anything further as a condition pre cedent. They would simply remain quiet and passive. y. Uoes your own judgment approve the view you have given as the opinion of the people of tho State? A. My own judgment is very decided that the question ot suffrage ia ono that belongs under the Coustitutiou, and wisely so too, to tho States respectively and ex. clusively. 4 Is it your opinion that neither ot may take my opinion, or tho opinion of any individual, but they will not ena ble you to judge of the condition of the State of G-eorgia so well as from her own representatives to bo heard in your public councils lu her own behalf ; my judgment, therefore, is very decided that it would have been bettor, as soon as the lamentable conflict wiss over, when tho people of the South abandon, cd their cause and agreed to accept the issue, desiring as they do, to resume their places and to look to tho halls of Congress and the courts for tho protec tion of their rights in the Union it would have been better to have allowed that result to follow under the policy adopted by the administration than to delay it or hinder it by propositions to amend tho Constitution in respect to suffrage or any other new matter. I think the people of all tho Southern Mates, would, in the halls oi Congress, discuss these questions calmly and de liberately, and if they did not show that theVicws they entertained were just and proper, such as to control tho judg ment ol tho people oi tho other sections aud Stales, they would quietly, patient ly, and patriotically yield to whatever should be constitutionally determined in common council ; but I think they feel very sensitively the oiler to them of propositions to accept whilj they are denied all voice in tho common council of the Union under the Constitution in the discussion of these propositions. I think they feel very sensitively that they arc denied the right to be heard, and while, as I have said, they might differ among themselves in many points in regard to suffrage, they would not differ upon the question of doing any thing further as a condition precedent to the restoration ; and in respect to the alternate conditions to be so represented, I do not think they would accept the one or the other. My individual gen. era! views as to the proper course to be put sued in respect to the colored peo ple are expressed in a speech made be. fore the Georgia Legislature, ref'ered to in my letter to Senator Stewart; that was the proper forum, as I conceive, in which to discuss this subject; and I think a great deal depends in the ad vancement of civilization and progress looking to tho benefit of all classes that thesequestions should bo considered and kept before tho proper forum. Q. Suppose the States that are rep. resented in Congress, and Congress should bo tho opinion that Georgia should not be permitted to take its place in tho government of the country ex cept upou its asscut to ono or tho other of tho two propositions, is it then your opinion that under such cucumstans Genrgta ought to decline Witness l ou mean the States now represented, and these only ? Mr. Boutwell es. Witness You mean by Congress Congress as it is now constituted, with the other eleven States excluded ? Mr. Boutwell I do. VI ltuess And you mean the same alternative propositions to be applied to all the elevn States as conditions pre cedent to their restoration ? Mr. Boutwell I do A. Thou I think she ought to do cline under the circumstances, and for tho reason stated, and so ought the whole eleven. Should such an offer be made and declined, and these states should thus continue to be ex eluded and kept out, a singular specta cle would be preseuted ; a complete re versal of rjosition would bo presented In 1861 these States thought they could not remain sately in the I. mou without new guarantees; and now when they agree to resume their former prac tical relations in the Lnion, under the Constitution as it is, the other States turn upon them and say they cannot permit them to do so saleiy to their jn- terest without new guarantees on their part. 1 he Southern States would thus present themselves as willingly for iui mediate union under tho Constitution, while it would be tho Northern States opposed to it. The former disunionists would thereby become unionists, and the former unionists practical dis.uniotr.sts. M hat kind of mornings are most like vegetables ? Those that, turn up a virtue which some every ono wants but a little reddish. I adene pLOple think themselves. Hon. lliester Clymcr ha.i rcsigno-T his seat in tho State Senate. How many a:i enamored pair haver courted in po?try aud lived in prose. H'oman An essay on grace, in one volume, elegantly bonnd. Gentleman. A manual of good man ners, bound in cloth. A dyspeptic man think more of himself in n week than a well person does in a year. Mom's brains ought to work very smoothly now, they have to much oil on them. li'hy should volunteers especially dislike the letter T ? Because it turn.- rifles into trifles. t going to law for all you ever sometimes yu established by it. Q. State whether from your observa tion the cvetitsof tho war have produ ced any change in tho public niiud of tho South upon tho question of toe reserved rights of tho States under tho Constitution of the United States? A. That question I answered in part yes terday ; whilo I cannot state from per sonal knowledge to what extent the opiuions of the Southern States upon the abstract question of tho reserved ri"hf of the State mnv bar fhnnjod. that these terms ought not to be offered as eonditious precedent. In other mv omnion : 1 do not ttiint sue iud-'inir of oiulitieations, I am free to nn(.int either ns a condition ureeedeut , r. . !...' i..,i,i -... 7. .. . . .i.i i - admit mat in my opimou ou uuu biiuu.u presented by Uotigrcss, lor they do not mo uoeruanvcs augguoitu iu mo .ji.co- DO admitted us a meraucr oi emici uclive that Congress lias tho righttul uou ougui to ue aucepieu 17 mo pcwio House of Congress who IS not really and nowor under the. Constitution tn nra. of Georgia? A. J1 Y own opiuion IS truly loyal to tne constitution 01 me gCnbo such a condition ; it Georgia is a Uuited States and to tho government tato in the Uuion. her neorde feel that she is eutitled to representation without words, my opinion is that it would be conditions imposed by Congress; and if best tor the peace, harmony aud pros- she is not a State in tho Union, then perity of the whole oountry she could not be admitted as an equal with the others; if her admission were trammeled with conditions that do not apply to all the rest alike, general uni versal suffrage amongst the colored peo pie as they are now there, would by out oeoplo be regarded as about as great a political evil as could belall them. that there should be au immediate restoration, an immediate bringing back of the States into their oiiginal practical relations and let all theso ouestions then be dis cussed in commou council. Then the represcntatires from the South could be heard, and you and all could judge much better of the touo and temper of could Q. If the proposition were to extend the people, than you could Irom the 1 ho right of suffrage to thoo who pouM I opinions riven by any individuals ; you Sale of the "Shenandoah Tho London Times says: -Mr. C. IP Kellock, of the firm of Kellock & Co offered for sale yesterday, at Liverpool, the screw steamer Shenandoah, HU tons, net register, known aa the lute famous Confederate cruiser. She was built at Glasgow, ou the composite principle, and has engines ot 0110 hundred aud forty horse-power. bhc was put up at 10 000. The broker remarked that the condition of sale, which required the purcnascr, at trie time 01 delivery, to sign a certificate or declaration that the vessel had not been bought for any bo ligerent or warlike purpose, or for auy beligerent nation, was uot intendent to prevent the purchase by a subject of any beligereut nation, but simply to prevent her employment for warliko purposes. Thcio was a numerous attendance, und for some timo tho bidding was very fpiriftd. Sbo wa? it length kn?Vi Soma oni siys tin mighty cold business ; get is but just-'-", and don't get that. A man niakcth a wry face over !t gill of whiskey, but he taketh down a gill of whiskey without a twist of his snout, ll'hy is au offer like a matrimonial engagement ? Bccuue it begins with an offer and ends with a ring, Il'hy is a tree when being divested of its leaves, like a tree in the fulness of . fruit ? Because it is baring. A man must have a very bad opin ion of himself not to appear what ho really ia. An Englishman being asked how he spelt saloon, replied " With a hess, a hay, a hell, two hoes and a hen." It i.i not enough that you aro praised by the good ; you have failed somewhere iu your duty if you arc not cursed by the bad. A man who retires from business and lives on the interest of his money may be said to bo resting on his owers. In marriage tho heart of a widow is like a turmsued apartment, wncro ono is apt to find something left there by a former louger. Never tread on tho tail of a cat, or tell a woman she is uot handsome, un less you are fond of music. A Misnomer. Culling a certain nether garment betweeu five and nix feet in diameter, a "petty coat." -Nothing makes the earth so capa cious as to have lriendi at a distance '. they make the latitudes and longitudes- Tho orator who " carried away his audience " is earnestly requested to bring it back, by pcrjons who had friends preseut. None ever have been so good and so great, or hvo raised themsclve so high as to be above the reach ot trouble. If a man reapeth whatsoever ho sewe'h, what a harvest of coats and breeches our tailors wid havo ouc of thcfe days. A Ulstem editor, puffing an ex. press company, says : "Anything in. trusted to its caro will go through straight. How about corkscrews : Josh Billings said the other night that u good way (or a man to train up a chil l in the way it should go was to travel that way occasionally himself. One principal point of good breed ing is to suit our behaviour to the thrro several degrees of men our superior?, our cquaU, and those below us. -The man everybody li!;es is gener ally a fool. Tho man nobody likea m generally a kuavo. 1 110 mau who Im friends who would die for hnn. and foes who wonld lovo him broiled alive, is u? ualh a nun of aomn worth aud force. Everybody knows tho-supcrstitiou reverence too Uueen pays ti Princt Albert's memory. Cine day after Lord Paluierston had exhausted voico and reason iu a vain attempt to bring her ' his way of thinking, which she resisted because " my poor Albeit thought si aud so," his lordship exclaimed : " By Jove, 'lis a hard thing to argue agait:t a live prince ; to arue ug liuat a deu I prince is a thing impossible. An exchange says a gud j ;k ; id told ot an ex. officer who figured in tho confederate army to the extent ot thre 1 wreathed stars on his collar. A friend remarked to bun on me street that ho heard so and tj said of him, an I wish-.-1 to know if it wis a truthful statement. ' Well, if a negro told you that, he is Bimpiy uiihtaxeu : or, nr. it 11 h.- -1 U: 1
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