liat.HB Ol'TlUJ "AmiUKlCAJV." TEHM3 TWO DOLLARS pet annum, fl M If ot paid within ths year. Ko t&ler discontinue ntU all arrearages ere peii. Thee tormi will be strlotly adhered to Ivnltw, If aurribersnegleotorrofuse to take their news, papen from the office to which, they are directed, they are responsible until they hare let tied, the Mill ul ordered them discontinued. ...... i Postmasters will plea act a our Agents, and frank letters containing subscription money. They are permitted to do this under the PostOlfioe Law. JOB FBI NT tXTQ. We have eonneeted with oar establishment a wail solootod JOB OFFICE, which will enable as to execute, In the neateet ityle, every variety of Printing MBBIC4S . The fnlloSrlnff1 mm S)iA v.tns fnr ilvvrial.k, In Ot Amfricii. fheae bavins adrertiitaa te do will nnu it convenient fur reforcnoe : Bite. Square, 1 1 1. 2 t. Jim. 2m. Am 1 y. 1 a ?l,WVfl,&n $2. 6(14, !,, 0010. 00 2,00 3,00 7 .on 12.110 I column, B.Ofl B.Ool i&.ooJ 20.00 86.0ft 10,00 14,00 20.001 1 115,00 26,00 35,00 60,00 Ten Unci of this liied tyno (miuiotil nake una square. , .. Auditors', Administrators' and Eiecutora' Noticos S,tl0. Ohilunriua (except the viu4 announcement which Is free,) to bo said Piratedortising ratos ,. Local Notices, ocolcty Resolutions, Ao-, 10 cent por line. AdverlijomeDtefor Religious, Charitable and Edu cational otoem, one half the above rates. . JjTA "menu win ba published until ord?r?4 to la Ah soaUuu'id, and charged accordingly Published EVt:iiVrSATURDAY morning, by h. b. masser & co., sunbury, Northumberland county, penn'a. NEW SERIES, VOL. 4, NO. 37. SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 11, 1868. OLI) SERIES, VOL. 28, NO. 07. MSB A yiRTUt 'utaTa, .f -TapirrNEtNgT BTJSIKESS CARDS. B0YER & W0LVKBT0N, ArronNEi's at law, SUNBURY, PENR'A. 8. B. Botbr and W. J. Wolvbtos, rospectfully aunounoe that they have entered into co-partnership in the praotioe of their pri land and adjoining oountioa ofeseion in Northumber land and adjoining oountioa. Consultations can be had in the Urmiar April 4, 18IM. ly II. II. HUSSKK, A ttorsaey a Iw, BUNBURY, PA -i Collections attended to in the oountioa r or Nor Jhuniberland, Union, Snyder, Montour, Columbia and Lycoming. MHRiitcia. Hon. John M. Reed, Philadelphia, A.Q. Cnttell Co., " - Hon. V?m. A. Porter, " Morton MoMichaol, Esq., " E. Kotcham Co., 289 Fearl Street, New lorlt. John W. Ashmcad, Attorney at Law, " MrtthWl Cox, Attorneys at Law, gunbury, March 29, 182, Wat. M. Rockefeller. Llovo T. Robrbacb. HOCSEFELLER & B0HBBACH. MTOMia M HOT SlnKIILKY, Pli-VA. o FFfCE in Haapt's new Building, second floor. r.ntranoe on Market square, riinuury, January 4, 1?B. O. "W. HAUPT Attorney it ml Counsellor ut Ia-v, CrriCE in Haupt's new Building, onaocond floor. Entrauco on Market Square, SXTITBTJR.Tr, FA. Will attend promptly to all profeaaionnl business rntrustcd to his care, tha collodion of claimi in Northumberland and the adjoining oountioa. Sunbury, Junuary 4, 1808. ' C. A. BEIMENSNYDEB, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BUNBURY, PA. All business entrusted lo his care attended to promptly and with diliowce. t-uubury, April 27, 1S6T. Teeth I Teelh! ' J. K.. ckeshiui:", SURGEON DENTIST, Formerly of ASULAND, O., announocs to tho citi zens of Northumberland county, that he haa located in t-UN'Bl'RY, for the praotice of Dentistry, and ,vpectfully aolicita your patronage. tieciai atten tion pniil to filling and dressing teeth. Teeth cx Xraeted without mini, by using Knrcotio apray which I havo used for throe yoara with perfect suc itss nnd no injurious ronults. Oli'ice in Room formerly ocoupiod by Dr. J. 8. Auj;le, in l'lcaiant'g Building, Market tkjuare, Sunbury, Pa mar. 7, 68. .-ieonoB Hill, Bmos P. AVolveutoR . HILL & WOLVEBTON, lltururyw and 4,'ouneIor ut l4iw. STJ3SrBTJR-5r, FA. WILL attend to tho collection of all kinda of claimt, including Back Pay, Bounty and Pen .niB. npl. 1, '61. JN0. KAY CLEMENT, Kusineffl in this and adjoining couutioa carefully nnd pnimplly atttended to. OUice in Markot Btreot, Third door west of Smith & (j nither 'a Stove and Tinware Store, SI III'KV PK.'S-A. bunbury, March 31, 13HB y JACOB SHIPMAN. KIJRE AND LIf E IN8DEAHCE AGENT, 6UNBURY, PENN'A. KUPRESESTS : Farmers Mutual Firo Inaurance Co., York Pa., t'uniborland Valley Mutual Protection Co., Now York Mutual Lite, Oirard Life of Phil a.4Hart ford Coun. Oenorul Aocidont. o. J. nnuNER. B- ltAS'- Attorneys and fjonnaicllora ut law, Cbnut Street, woat of the N. C. and P. A E. Rail uad Depot, in the building lately occupied by F. Laiartu, Esq., STJJSTBTrit'Z' TBITJSIA Collections and all Professional business promptly Kitondcd to in Korthumborland and adjoining Coun- www ". r Nunh Side of Public Square, one door east or the Old Bank Building. SUNBURY, PKNN'A. Collections and all Professional business promptly attonded to in tho Courts of Northumberland and ailjoining Counties. Sanbary, Sept. 15, 18M. TTi7PtTnr, J.D.Ja.e. PTJRDY" & J-OOS. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BUNBURY, PA. . m;-. i., ik. uu.nnil .inrv tit Dewart's building:, ad joining the Democrat office, on the north side f A'fket Square. ... ill attend promptly to tho collection or claim and other proleanonu nusinesa uiuiuimi u -, in Kortnumoerianu anu aujoiuuig November 0, 1887. fi s. Webeb, Joaa Rdrklb ARCH STREET, between Third and Fourth Btree iiii,Aii:i.iiiiA. WEBER 4 RUNKLE, Proprietors. June 29, 1867. )y ADDISON G. MABB, ATTORNEY' AT LAW, KIIAMOKIN, Northumberland County. Pa. A LL business attonded to with promptness ana ailizence. Ahauiokin, Aug. 18, 1BB7. ly Dr. CHASABTHUB, IDomcropatfjic lahwsictan. Graduate of the Uomoeopathio Medical College of rennaylvania. OrricE, Mnrkot Square opposite the Court House i:vkiiiiy. PA. Otiico Hours 7 to 9 morning ; I to 3 afternoon ; 7 to K evening. . -'unbury, April 7, ly JEBEMIAH ENYDEE, Attorney & Connaellor at Law, KU.liUL'UV. 1A. rp-iaii-l-t Attorney lor Iortlium-t-rliiil t'onnly. J. R. IIILBUSH SUEVEY0B AND CONVEY ANCB AND JUSTICE OF TUB PEA CE. Muhoiwy, KorlliumLwluiut County, reiiiCa Offioe in Jsokson township. Engagements! eaa be made by letter, directed to the above address. All business entrustod to hit care, will be promptly attended t'. . April 22, 188. Ty if XC B OBEO I, MERCHANT TAILOR, And Dealer in CLOTHS, CASSIJIERES, VESTING, Ac t un u street, woaath f WeaVer'm Hotel, H XT TSfJB XT li Y, A. Man.131 Ihfift TO B'dlLDICB.O. I NDUW liluss and Building Hardware, at the lowest ' frices at The Mammolh iS'toreof 11. r. FRILINO. i ALL and see tn beautiful Bird Cagcj at the j uew Hardware Itorcol ' I U. 00KLEY CO. ; INTRODUCED INTO AMERICA ! FROM GERtiAltb, In 1135. s HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS, HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC. PREPARED ST DR. C M. JJCK30.V, PaluiDsiraii, Pi. The grtateit known rtmrMet for 1 r Liver Complaint, , DYSPEPSIA," ; r ITerront Debility, . . JAUNDICE, KsefiS of tie Xidneja, ERUPTIONS of the SKIN, nmt all Dlfeasea arlalnt; from a Dis ordered lilvcr, fetomacli, or IXPVRITT Of THE llLOOl. Read the fallowing tymptomi, and if you find thai ynur tyttrm, U affected 6y any nf them, you aiay rat auturd that diseate hat commenced its attack on tlte moil important nrymu of four oorfy, and uiUeu toon checked by the. mm of ptnoerful remedies, a miteraOU life, toon terminating in death, mil 6c the result. Constipation; Flatulence. Inward Piles, Fulness of Blood to the Head, Acidity of tha Stomach, Nausea. Heart . bnrn.BiaRuat for Food, Fulness . or weight in the Btomaon, Bour Eruotationa, Sink- . . L. -" Inpor Fluttering at the Fit ' " ' of the Stomach, Bwimining of the Read, Hurried or Difficult BreathinR, Fluttering nt the Heart, Chokinsc or Suffooatina Sensations when in a Lying Poature, Dimness of Viaioo, . Sots or Webs before the Sight,, Dull Pain In the Head, Deri- cionoy of Perspiration, Yel lowness of the Bkin and Eyea, Pain in the Side,' Back, Cheat, Limbs, etc, Sud den Flusboa of Heat, Burning In the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil, aud Great Depression of Spirits. All Uuie imlioate disease nf the Liver or Difostiet Organt, combined with impure btood, : LjooflaulJ'o (German I3ittcra ' Is entirely vegetable, and contains no liquor. It la a coinponiid of Klmld Km tracts The Hoots, Herbs, and Uarks from wlilcK these extracts are made are gathered In Garmtny, All tha medicinal virtues are catraotcd from them by at scientific chemist. These extracts are then forwarded to this country to be used expressly for the maiiufiicture of these Blttrrs. There Is no alcoholic substance of any kind used In compounding the illtters, ' hence It. Is tue only Hitters that cau be used lu cases where alcoholic stliii nlanls are Mot advisable- Ijooflnnb's crimm Sonic is a combinntum of all the infjrctiirntt the Bitters, with I'vnz ,S.inta(Yux Hum, Oriw;f, tie. Ititutrdfvr th $tnt dineattn tin the Bittrrt in ctftiJ9T smnc pure ah;uh'dic stimulus it rtquirtJ. Ytm iM tear in mi ml that these renuilies art enUiwjy tiiiTHrwiit from any nthnt oWrtrftnl or the tare of the. di$ratt named, ttte$e hewg icirtttiftc prejtamtxms ofmedicirutP extracts, wtitt the other art mere decoctions nf rum in some form. The TONIC isdecidvtly me of the nwnt pleamnl and agreeable rrmedifs evrr njfrred to the pnbtic. Ps tasie is exquiritf. It is a pbtt$Hre to tabs 1, while its tifeyirintji erhilarativp, and wtdiciwd qwtlities have caused it to be known u V,t greatest uf all tonics. CONSUMPTION. ThouwamW t cimcse wltrii Hie iia- tlvnl innnnifd he vai aflllclrd Willi tltla lcri-ille dlicMiCf have brfii cured by the oft line remedies. Kxtrenie e 111 at: In ( Ion, debility aud rough are the imual attendant upon severe canes of dyspepsia or disease of the digestive organs. Kven lu cases of g-it til ne Coi-riumptloii, these remedies vlll be found of the greatest bene Atf strengthening and Invigorating. DEBILITY. Vure is no medicine equal to Ttoofartd's German Biltrrs ft Tnnie in rases of Debility. They impart a Ume and vijor to the whole system strengthen the n jtctilfy eattte an enjoyment of Hit foodt enable the stomach tn digest it, purify the blood, give m pood, sound, healthy complexion, eradicate the yellow tings from the eye, impart a bloom to tht cheeks, and cJtatw the patimt from a short-brcithcd, emaciated, weak, and nrrmc invalid to a fnU faaa slout and vigor ous person. Weak and Delicate Children are made itront; toy using the Bitters r Tonic. In fact, they are Family Medicines. They can be administered with perfect safety to a child three months old. the most delicate female or a man of ninety Thus Htmsdiu art tin best Dlood Purifiers ir knou-n, and will cure all diseases resulting from bad blood. Ktrp your blood pure; Jctep your Liver in ardor; keep your digestive organs in a sound, healthy cot id i- tion, by the use of these remedies, and tto dinase mil tctr assail you. TH3 O0HPLSSI01T. . Ladles who wish n fair skin and rood complexion, free from m yellow ik tlntte and all other dUAgareai.al, shoulu use these remedies occasion ally. The Liver In perfect order, aud the blood purr, will result In .park ling eyes and blooming cheeks. , CACTIOX, 'joTand't Gem an Rtmediet are counterfeited. The genuine hart the signature of V. JIT. JmirltMon on the front of the mttsiile wrapper of cues botlte , and the mime of the arlide bknen in each buttle. All vthui are counterfeit. Thousands of letters hav been re eel ved, testifying to the virtue of these remedies. BEAD THB SECOMMENDATIOSS. FROM ITON. GEO. W. WOODWARD, CUI.f Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. raiLiPiLran, Miaca loth, ls67. .aul "HoqAamTt German Bitters" is not an infos tctrtt'Hy beverage, but is a good tonic, taeful in unor ders of Vie aiyettioe organs, and of great benefJt in cotes of debility and want of Hereout action in Vt tyttem. yours truly, . C0. W. WOODWARD. I H0M HON. JAMES TIlOUrSON, Ju'lgeof the EupreoieCuititof Peaasylvaula. PaiuuwLriiu, Araa i0lb, ISO. I conalder " Iloofland's Gsrman Hit ters" a viilueiMa enedieina In ease of at lacks of Indigestion or Dyspepsia. 1 can certify this from tuy experience of It. Yours. wlh respect- JA1ES TnOMPSdN. Froia UEV. JOSEl'U U. KEN.NAUD, D.D., Psatur of the Tenth Bsptitt Cburch, riiiladxlphia. Da..lACSsoa Dua Sis : I hart Uenfreauently re quested to connect my name with recomtneMdutior.i of different kinds of medicines, but reyurduig Vie practice at out of Mf appropriate sphere, I boot in U eases de clined ; but wilh a cUar pnmf in carious initancee, aud particularly in my own family, nf the usefulnees of Dr. iloeijuind's German hitlers, I depart for once from my usual course, to express my full conviction that iur eouil debility of tbesjrfttui,ad epcUlly Iur Liver Cnniplsiut, it is a ssfe sod vsiuabls preparation, hi some oases it may fait i but usually, I doubt not, it witi be very twyioiirt le those who suffer from ties above oauKt, 1 -, wry respectfully, J. II. A tiVlfB, Eighth, betoiy Cbalci St. Frioe of tha Bitters, 11.00 per bottlsi ' Or, half dozen for 15.00, Prioe or the Tonic, tl0 por bottle 1 Or, half doaen for 17.60. . . Tbs took la pot op la quart bottles. ' jlcaJUct thai it it Dr. BooflaruTs Comas Remedies' that art to univereally asei and to highly recommend ed; and do not alio the Druggist to induct yon is taJu any thing else that he amy tag is just as fW, If cause he mulct a larger profit en it. Thet AfmuiMS will btUKtbf ejtoreu Is any locoiuy upm appiutituM PniBiClPAL OFi'ICE, AT THk OtRMAN MIOICINC STORE, Kb. 031 A RCH STREET, PhOaittia. . CHAS. U. BVANB, Proprietor, formerly C ACKTOS 4 CO. Tkcss nemedie'a are fair aale by Druggists. Ktorckccpsrs, and WtdU , cine Dsalsrs everywlitie. Do nl forget to examine wH (hi miLd, toe ' w eider Hi gel (hi genuine. POETICAL. A CAMPAIGN BONO. , 'Ait xx-"nsnnh" writes the following Grant cam paign song for the Atlanta (Oa.) Em : hm Bonnie Slut Flag. , Old Maine to California sends The welcome, welcome word, And Northward rolling to the South, The swelling cry is heard, And tnon of every age and raoe llave oauglit the glorious shout, llarrab. hurrah, for General Uraot, And fling his banner out. Ilurrahl! Hurrah, For General Grant, hurrah ! Hurrah for tho Union Flag V.'ith every Southern Star. Tbo wavo of Reconstruction rolls From Old Virginia's bills, Aoross tho South to Texas plains, And every bosom thrills. . When this is duno, we'll join the fight, And it is our intent To hoist the name of General Grant And niako him President. Hurrah ! Hurrah, to. We swear upon the sword of Loo, I Besido our Jackson's grave, To battle only for the man , Who ean tbo Virion save. ..-'' Sy all the blood tho war has shod, By all wo hope to be, ' We'll rally to the standard now That keepa the people free. Hurrah ! Hurrah, a. Thoy'ro rallying North, and East, and West, We'll rally in the South, With ringing shouts for General Grant, Upon eaoh patriot mouth. Hurrah for Grant ! tho shout must roll ... . From erory Union lip, , . And every man must rally now To mail the Union ship. . Hurrah ! Hurrah, Jto. MISCELLANEOUS. The . Manufacture of 4Iubh. The Bridgeton Chronicle, published in tlie neighborhood of extensive Glass Works, in New Jersoy, gives the following in reference to tho history and manufacture of that com modity : According to PlitJy, the composition of glass waa first discovered by a number of merchants who were driven by a storm to take shelter at the mouth of the river Belus, in Syria. A fire was made on the ground, where there was a great quantity of the herb called kali. The plant" burning to ashes, its salt become mixed and incor porated with the sand, and thus formed glass. However this may be, glass was in use amongst the Greeks and IiomanB aud Egyptians from the carliebt periods of which we have any authentic information. Its manufacture was first begun in England in 1557, but it was not until over two hundred years afterwards that the English could compute with the Venetian manufacturers. The great ubundance of saud in South Jersey naturally pointed to the manufacture of glass as a hopeful enterprise. Tho process by which the sand and tho 6alts used are combined by the actiou of an intense heat so as to form the new sub&tauce called glass is termed vitrilication. The substances con sumed in the manufacture are put into a large trough or tank, made of pipe clay, and subjected to the heart of a fierce tire which is kept constantly burning. A special de partment of the glass house is appropriated to the manufacture of theso troughs. The molten material is then taken out on the end of the blower's pipe, by a boy whoso business it is to feed the blower with a con stant supply of the uufurmed material, and whose work, in common with every other process in tho manufacture, simple as it seems, requires the most delicate skill. A few well-practised, aud mysterious manipu lations on the part of the blower, and the hot mass has been blown out to the requisite dimensions, neither more nor less, or ruin must be the consequence, moulded into the required shape, and delivered into the care of another boy, who lifts it on the point of a stick, dumps it in front of another, who again gives it its place on the pile of others in the annealing furuaco. This last is heat ed by a wood fire which can be tempered at leisure; and here the bottles remain, leisurely cooling down, for about a week. When the jars are sufficiently cooled they are consigned to a number of boys who knock off of them a thin superfluous neck formed by the gradual withdrawal of the blow-pipe from the mould. They are then taken to the grinding room, where the edges are ground perfectly smooth on a hard stone turned by steam. A simple india-rubbrr top, which renders them perfectly air tight, completes the work, and the jars aro ready for packing. To stand aud watoh the heated men at work, nothing seemingly can be more sim ple, and there is hardly a single inexpe liencod person who would not undertake to do as they "and risk it." However, every operation even the most simplo in appear ancerequires tue most delicate skill, and there is uo species of manipulation in which the skilled workman is more highly appre ciated or better paid in proportion to the lest skilled than the manufacture of glass. Want of skill on the part of the blowers or their attendants may, while apparently pro ductive of th6 best results, completely ruin tho credit of any establishment In a single season. There has always appeared to be a singu lar resemblance in character and mind oe tween General Grant and President Lincoln. The following coincidences of expression, pointed out by a coteuiporary, manifest it in a very marked way r .. r I hope pence will soon come, and when it comes will come to stay. Abraham Lin coln. Let us have peace. 17. S. Grant. 1 have not controlled events. They Lave controlled me. Abraham Lincoln. New political issues, not foreseen, are constantly arising ; the views of tha public on 01a ones are constantly changing, and a Eurely administrative offlcer1 should always 1 left free to execute the will of the people. I always have respected that will, and al ways Shall, U. B. OretHt. s saw i 1 . A young Rir1 who' works in a shop in Manchester, N. II., at one dollar a 4iry, and whose brother was at work at Worcester, Mass., at the time of tlie last election, wrote to him to be sure and come home to rote, as she feared the Democrat would carry the day. The day before election, taking the cars for Nassau and thence to Worcester, she started after him, as he did not appear, found him, and came back with him: That's a girl for a young man who wants a good wifo to be looking after him. The wheat harvest commenced la North ern Georgia last week. The grain is excel lent In quality but the quantity is not great Ten thousand swallows find lodgings in a chimney of the Anioakcag Mill at Man chester, New Himpshire. low Will the Soldier- Vote? Throughout the War for tho Union, tho party which received the vote of every op ponent of that War every one who deemed it a War of invasion and aggression on the part of the North stoutly claimed the rank and file of our Volunteer I'Boys in Blue" as recruited from its rants arid devoted to its principles. A majority of the officers, it as serted, might be upholders of the "Lincoln Despotism ;" but the men without shoulder straps were Democrats, as their votes would prove. "Then," we suggested, "let us unite in so altering our laws, nnd our Constitutions, too, where that shall be necessary, as to en able every citizen who, during War, shall be necessarily absent from home, whether in cninp or hospital, as a soldier of the Union, to vote as though he were at home," Sot one single Democratic LcyUlattire closed with this proposition. New-Jersey, Indiana, Illinois, chose Democratic Legislatures in 1802 : so their soldiers were not allowed to vote for President in 1864. Nearly every Republican State, with Kentucky and Mary land, then ruled by earnest Unionists, ena bled their soldiers to vote in the field. Gen. McClellun was tho Democratic nominee for President. He long commanded the largest of our Armies, and was for a time General-in-Chief lie studied to ingratiate himself with his soldiers, was kiud to and popular with them. If ho could not secure their votes, no other man of his party could. In this State, tho soldiers' votes were so cast that no one could say how they votod ; in most States, it was otherwise. Here is the aggregate vote of the soldiers, in every Statu from which we havo returus : , Slates. LtscoLN. McCldlun, Maine 2,603 473 Hhode-Islaud , 657 243 New-Hampshire 2,015 671 Pennsylvania . 20,712 12,349 Ohio 41,140 0,757 Maryland 2,800 1,821 Kentucky 1,194 2,833 Iowa .17,310 1,812 Michigan 9,462 2,059 California 2,600 237 Wisconsin 14,550 3,291 Total 121,041 35,050 Note. Missouri and Colorado soldiers voted at previous elections almost all Republican but not distinctively for President in '64. The soldiers of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Iowa, Califor nia, and Wisconsin, voted likewise in '63, as did most of them in '62, with results substantially iden tical with those exhibited in tho forcgoiug table of the vote east in '64. J Tho soldiers of several States who had not yet been mustered out of service when their elections fur 1805 occurred respectively voted again, with results substantially like the forcgoiug. In no year of the War, was tho Republican voto less than three fourths of nil that cast by volunteers in service. Such being tho recorded facts, we submit that tho pretenso of getting up a Convention of Union soldiers to oppose tho clectiou of Grant and Colfax surpasses all recognized hounds of partisan imposture. Not that there arc no good soldiers who dislike and oppose him we know there are such ; but they aro scarce as white biackoirus. lho bulk of the soldier voto against Grant will be cast by Confederate, not Union, soldiers by tho men whom ho defeated, captured, and paroled, and who have personal reasons for preferring such antagonists us Buell, Franklin, Fiujobn Porter, aud McClellun. If ltobert E. Leo could be iuduccd to unite in the anti-Grant call and preside, over tho Convention when assembled, ho would give it respectability aud force ; but a Conven tion of Union soldiers to oppose Gen, Grant is too broad a joke for the season. It was wise Jo hold it in this bounty-jumping city, where all sorts of meetings can be got up to order if the proper appliances are used ; but the houorably discharged Union volunteers are almost solid for Grant, as the returns of next November will prove. A Convention in 1787 of Revolutionary soldiers to oppose the election of Gen. Washington to the Presidency, or of defenders of New-Orleans in 1828 to defeat the election of Old Hick bry, would not have been more preposter ous than is the attempt in 1868 to muster an army of Union soldiers in opposition to the election of Gen, Graut. N. Y, Tribunt. low to Ktaccccd la Iluslnesns. Tho wide-awake, hard-working men are the most succcsful business men of our large cities. Neither wealth nor honorable posi tions can be picked up in tho streets like lost money. They must be obtaiued by steady, uncompromising labor, Tho New York correspondent ot the Boston Journal shows how a young man of that city work ed aud persevered until he became cashier of tho bank whero he was first employed as an errand boy; The cashier of ono of our leading banks resigned sorno timo since, and the paying teller was immediately elected to fill his place. He was quito a young man, and was promoted over the beads of those who had been in the bank many years in tubordiate positions. - Tho secret of the promotion is well worth knowing : He entered tho bank when quite young. He resolved to make himself useful. Living farthest away some miles out of the city ho was tho first at his post in the morning. Having tho farthest to go, be was the last to leave. Ho never was afraid to work, and never hesitated to lend a hand when his own duties wero done. Others would go out to restaurants and hotels for their lunch. Ho brought his with him and ate it in a lit tle closet. , . For his own pleasure he never left the bank during business hours. If any of tho clerks wanted to go away he was always ready to take their place. lie could, always be found and was prompt at anj call, lila spare time was devoted to an intelligent study of hi business. As paying teller he was very popular". lie was never snappish or ungenilemaoly. Growling, grumbling, unreasonable customer! could not irritate him. He overstayed his time to accommo date men who were belated' with their checks. . As cashier, be la the same geniat, agreea ble, prompt officer that be waa la aubordi nate life. Men disappointed la their dis counts take a refusal from the cashier With a better spirit than they do an accommoda tion from some men. lie still keeps up his habits of closa attention to business, and takea bis fregal lunch' in his closet, as he did when struggling for a position, , Those who fall In life, or are desirinir success, had better look at this incident and copy tbo examrne. Yellow hair is expensive. The first cost in Pans is 8.00, warranted only tor a year, when the dyeing must be repeated, unlus tha Idtumn changes. , , Sterling Advice. A lady makes some sensible suggestions tri A London journal on the tubieet of Mar- riage or Celibacy, a Tow of which we annex, ana say that there is a great deal of truth in them : "When a girl marries, she ought, to a cer tain extent, to give up her acquaintances, and consider the company of her husband the best company she can have. The young wifo must lenrn cooking carefully, if she docs not already havo a good knowledge of it. There are many excellent ctioke'ry books, but she must not follow them implicitly. "My own plan, for some time after I was married, was to take some dish and preparo it once according to tho receipt given, and note carefully what ingredients could be dispensed wilh. The sccrind time I gener ally managed it at half the expense. A use ful plan is to keep a blank book in the kitchen table drawer, and whenever a deviation from the orthodox cookery book is made, to jot it down. . Dot not wait till you have washed your hands ; let the book bo finger marked rather than lose an idea. "You will thus learn more of household economy than if you trust to memory alone, and when your daughters grow up, what a fund of practical information it will be for them. To a great extent the celibacy of our young men is owing to the way in which girls are brought up. Through mis taken kindness mothers often do themselves what they ought to make their daughters do. Let them teach them houso-keeping, on a fixed methodical plan, nnd they will then learn their history, French, and music, all the better. "It is natural and right that a mother should wish to see her daughters well edu cated, and even highly accomplished, and it is a mistake that good and careful education should unfit a girl for the homely duties of cooking, dusting, &c. On the contrary, thoso duties would be better perfonnod, and if mothers would, at the same time that they seek talented instructors for their daughters, impart to thcai soino of their own culinary talent, there would bo more good wives aud more marriages. "Little girls should bo taught, as early as possible, to perform simple household du ties neatly, and as they grow older let them become gradually acquainted with the theo ry of house keeping in such a manner that when they are married they will be able to adapt themselves to their circumstances, and be useful as well aa pleasing compa nions to their husbands." A Sensible Southerner. Prom a lottcr written by Judge B. F Pouter, of the Second Judicial District of Alabama, and who is also a native of that Stato written to the groat Montgomery Grant ratification meeting, we extract the paragraphs below. The. axiom that tho wisest statesmanship is identical with good common sense, wag never moro clearly il lustrated thap in tho observations which conclude this letter. ITc writes : As nn individual, I will give Grant and Colfax an earnest support. It in the ticket of reconstruction under the Constitution nnd laws of tho United States, of pence, and of obedienco to the authority of the Union. General Grant hns been the instrument, under Providence, of closing the war of a revolution with which, while I had many local and personal. I held no political sym pathies. I ahnll hail him. as he advises to deposit his sword upon tho altar of perpetu al peace, as ono whoso administration will obliterate tho Mason and Dixon line of dis cord, and silrnce forever the spirit of dissen sion and civil war. The clamors of nesro supremacy, which apsail this Presidential ticket, receive no countenance from me. No man in his senses, in the South or elsewhere, need fear that in this intelligent country, and in this Christian ago, intellectual and moral power will not reach the apex of the templo of lib erty and hold it. It is the storm of revolu tion which brines ignorance and corruption to tho snrfaco of societv. In times of peace and of submission to the law, thev sink to obscurity, and control no nation's destiny. Civil equality is not personal or social deg radation. With very great respect, your obedient servant, Bf.njamin F. Porter. What an Old Democrat Says of Gn ant. non. Isaac N. Morris, an old and influential Democrat of Quincv, Illinois, made a long and able speech lately, in favor of Grant aud Colfax. The conclusion of it was as follows : "If you ask mo to forget the rebellion if you ask me to blot out from my recollection the memory of the fivo hundred thousand brave pntriots who died that their country might live some of whose graves you have been strewing affectionately to-day with flowers, sweet emblems of gratitude if you ask roe to shut my eyes to the widows, and orphans, and maimed soldiers left by the war if you ask me to assist in restoring to power treason and traitors or their auxilia riesif you ask me to embraco men whose hands are stained with the precious blood of our fallen heroes, and who only wait for a favorable opportunity to overthrow the Government, I tell you frankly I am not with you in that. "If you ask me to lift ray voice against the great Captain to whom we are more in debted for our preservation at a nation thau 'to any other living man, and who hat writ ten his principles with tha point of his sword on the national records, and enstamp ed his fidelity to liberty on the national heart, I tell you plainly I cannot do that., I claim to have tome little gratitude left. The ensuing four years will, in my judgment, be the most dangerous and eventful in our history, and we must have one at tha head of the Government who will be equal to the. emergency, or we will sink under the weight of a crushing revolution. No tremulous hand must be at' the helm; no politician who will seek only hit own interest at the expense of national security. I need hardly add that, If I live until November and can reach the polls, appealing to .the God of Hosts for tbo rectitude of my intentions, and believing I shall bo serving the best Interests of humanity and my country be lieving there Is a. necessity which rises fat above conventional platforms, and party demands, requiring every patriotic citizen to do his duty I shall cast my vote, Demo crat though I have always been, for the In corruptible patriot, the beat judge of cha racter, and the best thinker I know in the United Btates, Ulysws 8. Grant, and go thou and do likewise, counting it a great privilege." The Fort Pitt workt cast a forge hammer the other day weighing twenty-one tons. It took fourtef-n horses to haul it to its destination Annual Vacation. IlARnlsncno, July 3, 1808. Tlie regular annual vacation at the institutions receiving soldiers' orphans at the expense of the State, will coinmcuce on Friday, July 24th, and terminato ou Monday, August ,3l st. school duties being resumed on Tuesday, Septem ber 1st. The principals, superintendents and man agers of these institutions will please ob serve the following regulations : 1. No child will bo permitted to leave tho institution to which it belongs without a written furlough or leate of absence, signed by the Superintendent of Soldiers' Orphans, and countersigned by the priucipal superin tendent or managers of the institution, spe cifying the causo of absence, and its length. This leave of absence, for which blanks have been furnished, to be carried by the .child while absent, and shown whenever re quested. 2. No leave of absence will be grauted to any child, unless pronounced by the attend ing physician, after special examination had for the purpose, entirely free from sore eyes, and tho other contagious diseases. Upon their return, after vacation, children must be re examined, and all doubtful cases iso lated until known to be entirely cured. The presence of these vexations and annoying diseases in any institution is regarded as an evidenco of inexcusable neglect end mis management on tho part of tho attending physician and the authorities of such insti tution, and will not be tolerated, ,, 3. No child will be sent home except at the written request of tho mother, guardian or friends. All others must be furnished with proper care and attention, nnd permit ted to enjoy vacation at the institution,. free from study and labor, except such as may bo necessary for tlio. comfort of those. re maining. The labor required must not ex ceed the regular detail period of two .hours per day. The library and reading .rooms and the play grounds must bo open to them, under proper supervision, the f&maining portion of tbo day. , Children should be conveyed to and from the proper railroad station free of charge. All other expenses of travel, and at home, must bo bo'rned by their mothers or friends, 4. No child will bo deprived of vacation as a punishment, no matter what the nature of the offense niay havo been. To do so would lie cruel. If in any caso, as for in stance where it is known that vacation would be spent amid bad association and demoralizing influences if children were permitted to go home, principals, superin tendents or managers think best to deny them the privilege, they must be able, to produce the clearest proof of the existence of the facts upon which the detail is based. 5. Each girl will take with her, clean and in good condition, aud legibly marked with her name, a change of underclothes aud stockings, two dresses, hat, sack and shoes ; and each boy, in like condition, a change of underclothes aud stockings, two pairs of punts, oue jacket, cap, and shoes. All other clothing will remain at the institution, ex cept in the caso of transfers. Girls will not take their bluo winter dresses. Tho articles of clothing taken, with their condition, must be entered on the check to the furlough, aud re-examined and checked off, with appropriate remarks as to care and condition when returned. ;.. 0. Those ordered by transfer to other schools will take all their clothes, nnd will be instructed to go direct from their homes to the schools to which they aro ordered, when their furloughs expire. Every article of clothing taken with them, with its con dition, will bo entered on tho check as a record, and on tho back of the furlough for the information of the principal of the school to which tbey arc transferred. 7. The objects of vacation should be ex plained to the children, and the duty and necessity of good conduct and care of clo thing while absent, prompt return, tic, carefully end repeatedly impressed upon them. It i3 hoped and beliovcd that, with few exceptions, attention to study and industrial instruction, and to the cultivation of good manners and habits, has bcon attended with so much success that this visit homo will be gratyfying to mothers and friends, nnd ere- uuaoie to tho institutions to yh!cri these wards of tho Stato belong. It is also hoped that after enjoying the cessation from study, and tho visits to home and friends, which vacation allows, children will bo promptly returned in cood condition, eratfflerl ami refreshed, and encouraged to pursue, with renewed energy ana zeal, tlie exercises of their respective schools and homes during the ensuing year. And if notwithstanding past discouragements, these hopes are evea Curtially realized, the fact will be regarded y the undersigned and his co-laborers as compensation, in some moasure at least, for the severe labor, weighty responsibilities and constant anxieties of the past year, and as an encouragement to work with increas ed energy and hope to achieve still greater rcsutis in luiure. ueo. r. m r arland, Superintendent Soldiers' Orphans. Tub ministers of the gospel in ChamberV burg, have passed a series cf resolutions in reference to funerals, which raicht be adopt ed without detriment in other places. They are as toiiows: Whereas, Groat confusion and inconve nience frequently result from the customs that prevail in this place, in connection with the burial of the dead ; therefore, Itesoltxd, 1. That we earnestly recom mend that the hour named for funerals shall hereafter denote tho exact time at which the religictia service tcilt b eom'tr.ncexi, instead of the time when the people are to assemble; and that families and friends be requested to take tbia into consideration in making their arrangements. 2. That wa esrptstly.reques't our, people not to appoint burial services on Sundays, when it can possibly be avoided. , 3. That n cases when families do not belong to any congregation, the minister ex pected to officiate should receive especial notice of the fact, 4. That we wish it fa be regarded as no mark of indifference, if we do not always attend funerals la connection with which we have no official doty. - , 5. That hereafter it should not bocoa sidered a discourtesy, if ministers and peo ple should fail to return with funeral pro ceasiooj to'the place from which they have started. ; A Bostoniao hag a toy barometer on exhi biuoa which consists or a miniature cottage with two doom. . At one of these stands a man clad in purple and fine linen ; while at the other appear a female arrayed ,in like apparel. . If there are signt of rain, the man steps boldly out of doors, while the woman shrinks into the cottage. But if the aigna are favorable, the woman goei forth to shop and gossip whilo the man stays at hojna and tfndt bouse and baby. , iM. Lkavb Her pUI:rlr Brawn.-Ati aged ncgress whose eminent piety had se cured for her an extonsive reputation in walking her usual rounds of visits, dropped in upon a neighbor .who was . equally vJcll known as a temperance man and a huter ol tobacco. ' ... After being courteously received, the negress pulled from her pocket a long pipo, and commenced smoking some very "union" tobacco, to the infinite disgust of let host : The man maintained his composure, eevcral minutes, but the fumes and smoke soon be came too powerful for him, and rising from his chair, l:o caid ....; "Aunt Chloe, do you think you are a Christian f" "Yes, bruddcr, I specks I is." "Do you believe in the Bible, aunty I" "Yes, bruddcr." , . "Do you know there is a passage in the Scripturo which (Jeilares that nothinir un clean shall inherit tLe kindom of Ileaven t" "les, I've heard of it." "Do you believe it I" "Yes.". - .... .. .. "Well, Chioo, you smoke and vou cannot enter the kingdom of Heaven, because there is nothing so unclean, as the breath of a smoker. What do you say to that t" . W ny, specks to.ioave my breff behind me when I go to Heaven." Thaddeus Stevens' law practice was Worth ten thousand a year, when he attonded to it. Freedom of the Picas Gnatchinn- a kiss from a pretty woman in a crowd. "Whero's iay wire i" inquired bur friend Nil, on returning homo earlv one .cvenintr. and missing his better half. "Sho's gone to bed with the toothache," was the reply of some member of the family. "Well." said the indignaut Nil, "if she had rather go to ueu witn the toothache than go to bed with me, let her go i". tnd tie sculed him self to the perusal of the latest newt. .. f I-'.CIPEM, Ate. Itemed- Tor Kuake Kite. A writer in the .Journal of Agriculture, gives the following remedy for the bite of a venomous snake, aud we reprint it for what it is worth : . "I. know a remedy that is a sure cure for rattlesnake bite. . Take a thimbiefull Of rifls powder, wef. it so that .it will burn slowly, then place it on the pnrt bitten, and burn it off;burning the wet powder draws the poison to the surface ; then wipe the poison oft with a cloth, then split a re w.: onion, bind one-half on the wound, and go about your work as usual. In the year 1825, 1 was a resident in Waterloo, Monroe Mo., III..,, Mr Brad I y Rust, a resident at the samo place was bitten by a yellow rattlesnake on the instep of his foot, . I applied tho abovo re medy by his (B. Hust's) directions B.Rust had Been an Indian in Onanduga Hollow, in tho State of New-York, who was bitten by a rattlesnake, use the wet powder, of when B. Huat learned the abovo cure. Tho pow der was applied within one half hour after he was bitten." French Method or Uaisi.no Tom uoeo. As soon as a cluster of flowers is visible, the stora is topped down to lho cluster, so that tho flowers terminate tho stem. Tho erlect is, that the sap is immediately impell ed ir.to tha two buds nar.t below the cluster, which soon push strongly and produce another of flowers each. When theso aro visible, tbo branch to which they belong is also topped down to their level ; and this is done successfully. By this menus the plants became stout dwarf bushes, not above eigh teen inches high, in order to prevent. their falling over, sticks or strings aro btrutcued horizontally along the rows, so an to keep the plants erect. In addition to this, ull the laterals have no flowers, and after thi fifth topping, all laterals, whatsoever, aia nipped oil. lu thic v.xy the ripe Bap is di rected into the fruit, which acquires a beau ty, size, and excellence, unattaincd by other ccaus. Hats How to F:s Thkm. Chlo.-iuo of lime has frequently proved a sure thing to drive rats from any place infected by them. An exchange says: An ounce of it scatter ed in tho placo w hero they come to feed, or wrapped in muslin and put in their holes, where it acquires dampness, produces a gas that is not offensive to man, but is to rat3. If chlorido of ,lime is moistened with muri atic acid, and placid iu, a drain, vault or cellar, and closed from the air a little while,, the rats will depart, because it will be death to remain. This is also a good disinfec tant, and will, for a time, cure the effluvia of a dead rat. .One application of chlorido of lime to rat holes has driven them away for a year, when a renewal of it started them again. To Clear a Room of Mosquitoes'. Take of gum camphor a piece about one-third tho size of an egg, and evaporate it by placing it in a tin vessel, and holding it over a lamp or candle, taking care that it docs not ig nite. The smoke will soon fill the room and expel tho mosqu'ttuca.. One night, not long since, I was terribly annoyed by tbeni, when I thought of aud tried the above,, after which I neither saw nor heard them, that night. The next morning there waa not ono to be found in the room, though the wludow had been itift open all night. Cleaning Wiutb or Colored Kid Gloves. Have ready a little . new milk in, one saucer, and a piece of brown soap in another, and a clean cloth, or towel folded three or. four times ; on the cloth spred out the glove smoothly and neatly ; next take a piece of flannel apiAcoujiucuce to, rub the glove downwards towards the fingers, .bold-, ing it firmly with the left hand ; contiituo this process till the glove, if white, looks of a dingy jdlow, though, .cloan ; if colored, till it looks dark and spoiled. Ley it out to dry, and you will have the. pleasure of teeing old gloves look equal to new. Tbty will be toft, glossy, smooth, elastic, and of uninjured shape. , , Toulm fob OAftDEHa.14' correspondent of the Lamoille Keit$ Voalcr eaya he success fully defends hia vino patch by laying boards between the rows, in such awanuer as to, affod shelter to toads fa the day time, and leave it undisturbed, so that they will make, their home under it, which they.wilUlo in great numbers. At night they sally out and devour every bug, and grow fat as al dermen Uo y ! has a dozen or more of theso little philanthropists making their home under a tingle board not more than six feet loag, . , To Destroy Insect oh ram Tbkks. A writer to the London Journal of Horticul ture says that either common alcohol or me-, thylio alcohol (wood spirit,) at a wash, will destroy the wooly aphis and other insects ou fruit trees more effectually than soft soap, tulpher wash, oi any other componmt generally used fot thm purpose