Term or PuUlIoatlou. TB WATSrSBrWJ RPl'BLICA!f, OfllM ifa Bayer1 bolldlnit, fait of the Court House, li pub. Ilihed every Wednesday mornlnir, at S3 per annum, is aotahce, or SU If not paid with' in the year. Allsnbuerlptlou aeronnla uxM be e tiled annnally. No paper will bo lent out of Ilie State unless paid for is adVakcb, and II each subscriptions will lnvurtnlily be discon tinued at the Mplratlonof the time for which they are paid. , tijmmunlcatlnnson subject of local or general Interest are respectfully aollelled. To ellnure attention favors of this kind must lnvurinlily he accompanied by the name of thuauthor, not for pulillc iill'in, but iu guaranty against im position. All letters pertaining to business of the olllce must be uddressed to the Editor I'octvy. "OOU DtFEXU THE RIGHT." (We sea It announ ;ed lint General Charles O. H:irplno-oltlclally known as City Register, po lltlrally as tire Democratic Union Party, and poetically at Miles O'HIelly has heed appoint ed to present the claims of Mr. Chase to the Domouratlo Convention. Uen. Halplne will In troduce his speech by singing the following verse from one of hls.beat known lyric. We fancy the sensation tho strains of hi manly and aplrited tenor voice will create as he warbles the following :Tkiiii'Nk. Come fill your glasses, fellows, Anil stand up In a row, Kin a ('residential drinking We are going for to go ; Le us have no more d Iscussion here At least no more to-night While for President Ulysses Grant We tuke our foremost flight ! O, for Presiilent Ulysses Let every glass be bright May he rufe the country he hxs saved, And Uod defend the right. la the world to-day no prouder name Is bomo on any breeze, And with Grant tosteer thashipof Slate, Oar flag shall rule the seas ; NnnDorahitn" ahull bo north of us, And South of us no foe Our Slurs and Stripes in the Canada, And likewise Mexico! For with Presiilent Ulysses Will he few who care to tight May he rule the country he 1ms saved, And Uod defend the right! 80, boys! a final bumper, While we all In chorus client 'For next President we nomlnatn Our own Ulysses Grant!" And If asked what State he halls from, Th Is our sole ropiy shall bo, From near Appomattox Court House, With Its famous npple tree!" For 'twas here to our Ulysses That I.ee gave up the light Now, boys, "To llrunt for President, And Uod defend the right !" ilhcWiipcjsbuvg Republican. Tim tovixu ovi;nii.. The groat question in politii-s now is, what will he dona on tho 4th of July at the Democratic Convention in New York ? We arc:"not a prophet, nor the son of a prophet," hut as "com ing events cast their shadows before,!' we may predict the course of that body, and let time tell how near we arc right. The first struggle in tho Conven tion will be on the "two-thirds rule." This, adopted we think in '1 1, requires a majority of two-thirds hi the Con vention to nominate a candidate for President. The Pendleton men will undoubtedly move the suspension oj this rule, thereby making a majority sufficient for nomination. The sub ject has already been broached in the Tims. Tho opponents of Pendleton will as firmly oppose its suspension, and having Democratic usages on their side, it will bo hard work to carry it. The Democracy is notably opposed to siny change or reform. Wo may pre dict then, that the two-thirds rule will continue in force. The next .struggle will likelybc on the platform, that is, if it is taken up before tho candidates, as was the case in. our own Convention. Hero there is bound to be a mighty conflict, and one that may rend their party into two factions 1 Negro suffrage mu.it come before them. Tho inevitable ghost of Cuffy will rise up and . "Shake Ills gory locks" at them, and will not "down" at their bidding. The World has already de clared for manhood suffrage, arguing thnt the negro vote an important cl ement in the next contest can be car ried only on that platform. But the old "untcrrificd" war horses of the Pomeroy kind will rise up in their might to utter their everlasting pro-' test against making the black the equal of tho white or else they will shut their eyes and swallow it down with a gulp and a gag. But seriously, tak ing all things into consideration, it is not rashness to predict that negro suf frage will be a plank in their platform. It must com"-, and the sooner over the better. But oh! what a change will that be! Then, on the Bond question. The De mocracy aro not united on this. The Pendleton and the Seymour factions will come into contact here, and it re mains to be seen if money or ignorance will rulo that body of enlightened (7) men. We say that money will win, and therefore that tho platform will not be anti-bond. The very fact that the Convention meets in the headquar ters of the bond-holders argues in favor of this. It will be strange if Belmont, 8eymour and their fallows will not triumph over the West. But the "greenback" men will die hard, and their apostle, Pomeroy, has declared he will support no bond-holder. In this, as in all their questions, policy, not principle, will be their guiding motive. They must give, the lie to their Chicago platform of 64. The war has NOT proved a failure, and they will be forced to admit itat least so far as subduing the rebellion is con cerned. .'. This will be a bitter pill on them. '' And what their declaration in JAS. E. BAYERS, VOL. XII. regard to tho war will be we caunot tell, nor do we care to predict. The platform arranged, the next fight will bo on tho candidate. Pen dleton, Chase, Hancock, Seymour are in the field with their backers. If, as we have said, the two-thirds rule is set aside, Pendleton will be nomina ted on the first ballot. If it continue in force, he cannot be nominate 1 at all, as those w ho are opposed to him will never yield to him. Then, how ever formidable tho movement may seem now, Chase cannot bo tho candi date. That would be too much of a desertion of principle to command any respect from the world. Chase can win no Republican votes, and cannot gain all tho Democrat votes. Han cock will be quietly laid on tho shelf after the first ballot. Seymour will likely not be voted for at first, but what may bo done afterwards, no one cm guess. Perhaps some great "un known" will be seized upon to enter the course against our Captain, Grant. It is thought now that the outride premtre will control tho nomination. Certainly the Five Pointers will be there in force. It is also feare.l by the Pendleton men that the delegates will be bought, that money will nominate the man as well as the platform. Wo shall see what c shall see. Let us contrast our Convention with theirs. ():irs was all unity and har mony; theirs will all be disunion and discord. In ours there was not a dis senting voice on any measure; in theirs measures will be carried amid storms of opposition. Ours was animated with the wildest enthusiasm; theirs will be a fiery, contending body, void of genuine enthusiasm. The whole party re-echoed the action of our con vention; their action will be received with curses and disappointment. Is any one incredulous as to the result in November? Can a house divided against itself stand? Can a parly torn with I'ictions and rebellion pre vail against one united on every sub- j'-cf? u J. .moo riti:i:ini:- ! itinr ton utisii I.S fll.lt I V. Irishmen, as a clas are inveterate haters, of the "nagur." But few arc lovers of Briton's sons. The two ele ments, African and Irish, have a com mon dislike for the English. The former remember with bitter feelings the arms of English make furnished to their musters, the clothing and mu nitions of war. Sympathizing with those who are persecuted for the "wearing of the green" they again offered to fight in the struggle which "once begun is battled oft, yet ever won." In proof of this we submit the following extract from tho pro ceedings of the Sixth Fenian Congress asssmbled- at Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 1867: New OiiLEAxs, Sept. 3, 1867. To Cot. W. Ji. Hobcrts, President, F.li.: Five thousand colored men of this city have offered to fight for Irish freedom. Wm. Ci.eary, M. D. On motion received. On motion tho following resolution was unanimously adopted: Resolved, That if there arc five thousand colored men in New Orleans willing to fight for Irish liberty the offer bo accepted, and that in the name of the Irish people tho Fenian Broth erhood accept tho services of every man who truly loves liberty nnd is willing to fight for Ireland, without distinction of race, color or nationality. In this instance Erin's sons place themselves in equality with the negro. Why is this thus, and who can account for it? Orf OF TIICIR OWX MOt'THS THEY A lit; iOSDEMSKD. When Geo. V. Lawrence said (or was reported to have said) something about the still-houses nnd schools in Greene county, the whole copperhead crew raised a fiendish yell of indigna tion. All their filth, accumulated for years, was thrown at him. The pious and educated Democrats branded him "liar." A prominent Democrat of this place, in describing their nominee for Assembly, said, "If we had mauy such men as he in our county, ire would have more BTILL-iiouses, and fewer scuooLsand churches." There, swallow that, ye pious hypocrites. Is not this the man you have chosen to represent you in the Assembly? . Is he not a fair and honest representa tive, more so than any of the other candidates . If you are consistent, tako back your filth from Lawrence, and cast it on Sedgcwick. . . Hexby A. Wise and the Chief Justice visited the African Church in Richmond together on Sunday, and heard divine service. . FIRMXKSS IX TlIE KIGIIT AS GOD GIVES US TO SEE THE lytlHT. Lincoln. WAYNESIJUHG, PKrM'HEl V 1 1 1.1'It.I.F.U. "If the infernal fanatics and aboli tionists ever get power in their hands, they will overrule tho Constitution, set the Supremo Court at defiance) change and make laws to suit them selves, lay violent hands on those who differ with them in their opinions, or daro question their infallibility, and finally bankrupt the country and del uge it with blood." Daniel Webster, March "th, 18"j'J. We clip the above from the last Waynesburg Messenger. It goes the rounds of the Democratic papers every few months. No such utterance is to bo found in Mr. Webster's 7th of March speech or any other that he ever made. Tho pretended extract is a bald forgery, and has been branded as such fifty times, but still the Cop perhead journals continue to publish it as genuine. HWiiiijIim Reporter. Don't make any difference, it suits them just as well. "Wounded error" in her last throes. THE v ir!l) A I' VKM.VIJ:. We trust that the campaign for the Presidency is not to degenerate into 0 strife to see which party shall take most benefit from the narrow preju dices and penuriousnoss of the Ameri can people. It is too late to sell the republic to. the lowest bidders the last purchase having been made with millions of money and seas of blood. This republic can never sell for less than the cost of its la,st purchase; and we commend this proposition to those vain and noisy politicians who lately talk so much about appealing from the ballot to the bullet. No party ever sacrificed a fundamental principle and lived to win a victory, No party in the field to-day can hope to succeed by any such faerilice. The Republican party began its life with the demand that this generation should act in good faith toward succeeding generations. It demanded that no man should be privileged to carry local laws wherever lie migrated ; or inflict a system of compulsory labor without compensa tion upon virgin territories. Its birth cry was a demand for universal freedom and equal and exact justice. When it weakly recedes from that invulnerable position, and trades oil' its principles for temporizing policy, its days willbe numbered, and of the whole number of honorable men in its ranks, few will appear as mourners. , We see it stated that the popular vote will be with the pal ly which tiro- poses to make tho public burden light est. If that be true, repudiation of every dollar of the public debt, State and .National, is the kev to success, But unless the American people be thoroughly (lemoraliz"d and einascu- latcd, the party which would invite success by such a proposition would ho i thrice damned. We do not choose to measure the people tv such a base tandard. If they deserve it, they ascended the height of folly when they gave their lives and treasure to rescue the nation from the toils of treason. The fact that they elected to incur the debt rather than sillier the triumph of the Southern armies, ought to exempt them troin so mean a suspicion. J ho people havcaright todemand retrench ment, now that the necessity for extra- ordinary expenditures has passed away. Anil as an earnest 01 this (letermina- tion on the part of the Republican party, we have the action of Congress upon tho estimates submitted by the heads ot department, cutting down the appropriations many millions below where the Administration de sired them to be placed. Theburden of taxation must be heavy cnoiio-h to pay the interest 011 the public debt and pay tho current expenses of gov ernment. Heavier than that they must not be, and heavier than that, in our opinion, they will not be during tho year 1 Sort, and thereafter. Wo hope the Republican party will stand firmly by its demand for the full and complete performance of the con tracts between the Government and its creditors. It must insist on the redemption of every dollar of the fund ed debt, at some time in future, in the money of the world. And if the American people cannot nbido by that high toned business honor, let them tako the infamy which must attach to such bad faith. That the people, as a body, do not propose repudiation as a remedy for the evils to which we aro temporarily subjected, is clear enough to any man who takes the pains to inquire; for the majority of men regard the payment of just debts as a religious duty. The debt of the na tion, in chief part, was incurred for the common good and in the common defense. It is a lien upon all the real and personal estate of the Republic. Every citizen is morally, as well as legally, bound to assist iu lifting the debt as it matures. The only escape from this is in bankruptcy, and bank ruptcy in a nation is ruin to every citizen. There are some men so blind as to imagine that they could live and prosper though political ruin were utter. But the more intelligent citizen understands that repudiation by a government of a dobt owed to its citi zens is repudiation of every debt be tween citizens. To this point . the popular mind must bo trained assidu ously. Come what may come, the credit of this nation must not suffer by the action of the great party which has just conducted it through a great and exacting war tor lite. " We must afford to do just right ; we l'ENXA., WEDNESDAY, JUNK '24, 1S0S. must insist on good faith to every citizen in law and in finance ; we must inaugurate retrenchment and reform. All these things belong to the work which the Republican party was organ ized to do. If the Democratic leaders will bid for the patronage of ignorance, vice and prejudice, let them bo without competitors. No power can bo stable which roots in the weaknesses of human nature. Give to thai base party the Vote of every swindling repudiator, and every illicit distiller, in the land, nnd if the votes of the virtuous and law-abiding shall not suffice to overcomo them, then let us go down. But the votes of the virtu ous an 1 law-abiding will always siifhce to keep in check tho unmanly ambi tions of the leaders of tho Copperhead party. The work is in getting the people to arouso and enter into the fight with spirit. So we declare for absolute good faith toward the nation's creditors ; for a funding of the present evidences of debt in bonds bearng a lesser rato of interest and payable at long dates ; against unnecessary inflation of tho currency, as well as against a violent, compulsory, contraction of the same; for the relief of tho necessaries of life from taxation, and fbr retrenchment in all places where it can be accomplished without detriment to tho common good. The Republican party can succeed in a campaign made upon such issues; but it cannot it ought not to succeed, upon anv issues involving the sacrifice of n solitary principle. Harrisburg Telegraph. M'.iioi'ii.vnc ioctrii:. Under this general head wo find the following in different Democratic news papers : " llesoltcd, That wo' are opposed both in principle nnd in policy, to ne gro suffrage."- Ohio Democratic lles oMiions, 1808. 'Jiesoked, That under tho action of the State of South Carolina, hereto fore taken, wo recognize tho colored population of the State as an intelli gent element of the hotly politics; and as such, in person ami property, en titled to full and equal protection un der tho State Constitution and laws. And tlint, 11s citizens of South Caroli na, we declare our willingness, when wo have the power to giant them, with proper qualifications as to prop erty and intelligence, the right of suf frage." South Carolina Democratic Resolutions, 1808. "A very largo torchlight procession of Democratic Niggers nro marching through the streets while I write. I have addressed an immense audience in toe Com t House Squarc-the jar- cost proportion beiiiir nozroes. They carried transparencies with most np- 1 prnpriute Democratio mottoes. Pro- claim it throughout Upper Georgia ; that cvcrvthinir is safe honor sate. peace seen red , 1 lemoeraoy Iriu m pliant; Letter of J). C. Hill, a leading Democrat in Georgia, April 11, 18G8. "We have a word for our colored citizens who aro anxious to vote for Governor at the ensuing election. Your professed friends have nomina ted a man of the name of Bullock for that oflice, nnd it is right that you should know beforehand what sort of a man he is who solicits vour suf- f'rages." Savannah Xews, (Democrat- is,) April, 1808. " 1 011 pays- your money- ami you takes your choice." WHAT VH ItEA.V DT OJtOAMZ 1TIO.V. 1. To furnish information, through periodicals and pamphlets, to all who will read ; 2. To obtain a complete list ot the Legal Voters in each Election Dis trict ; !5. To provide efficiently and sea sonably against tho polling of Illegal Votes. Each of these ends is important; but the first is the most urgent and the hist most indispensable. No one ever heard of a Democrat who was heartily desirous that Illegal Voting should be prosecuted or punished. Every copperhead organ is now claiming Pennsylvania, on the strength of her last October contest, when Judge Sharswood was elected by a few votes, put through by means of Natur alization papers forced for the pur pose, lhe (Jouuty ot ljiizerno lias notoriously lccn a'focus of these frauds for years. See how her poll has been swelled by them : Itcmlilica. Democrat 18fi0 Lincoln .",.100 Fusion lSfii Cochran.. 5, 7ii8 Slenker 8.3M I8IS3. Curlin 7,02 !!' Woodward 9.808 1 8M. Lincoln ...7,t-VMcCMUn 10,048 I8(i. IlartrunfLii, l''(i IMvij 6,l 8(iC. Ocnry 8J33 Clymcr H,iW" 1SG7. Williams. 7f!8.1 Sharewoocl 10,401 These monstrous majorities for McClcllan, Clymcr, nnd Sharswood, were fabricated by meaii3 of forged Naturalization papers, stained with coffee to divest them of their natural rawness of appearance, and otherwise fixed up so that aliens could vote ou them without election judges would take them with- out hesitation. Such are tho means whereby Grant is to bo swindled out of the Presidency, if audacious, unscru pulous villainy shall prove eqnal to the emergency, Republicans! Wo must bo so organi zed that fraudulent Naturalization papers shalt nowhere pass unchalleng ed, and fraudulent votes be nowhere polled. To this end, we must organize in each Election, District, BEOisyiSG sow. 1 -" i Should the Oeinoermtc I'nrty b 1:11. trusted with foil I leu I rower T We answer no. for tho reason that a parly destitute of moral principle is entitled to no confidence. That tho Democratic party as a party, is with out moral honesty, must be obvious to the most careless oliscrver. Let a few facts be submitted in proof of this propositioiii Tho Dem ocrats inaugurated the slaveholders rebellion, by the commission of perjury and treason. Every leader in tho re bellion was a Democrat. Tho first gun trained on our flag ut Sumpter was sighted and fired by Democrats. Our soldiers on their way to the do fenso of the Capital of the nation were shot down by Democrats in the streets of Baltimore, and fbrbidden passage across Democratic soil. When the Chief Magistrate of the nation called fur men to defend its life, tho Demo cratic party opposed the call, nnd sought every possible way to defeat it. When a draft was ordered, the Demo crats mobbed tho officers of tho law to prevent it. The Democratic party in the Democratio city of New York shot down, like dogs, tho Government olll cials who were there only to discharge theobligations of their office. Tho Democrats of tho Democratic city of New York murdered defense less colored women ami children for no offense, save that they loved and honored the flag of their country. Democrats are to-day burning down colored school houses, that colored children may bo prevented from learn ing to read and write. Democrats in all the unreconstruct ed States nro murdering Union men, where any Union man dare avow his Union sentiments by openly proclaim ing his love of country. Democrats are now openly threat ening to assassinate any Radical Pres ident that tho people of this country may choose to elect to that high olllce. When Democratio Buchanan sur rendered the Government into the hands of a Republican Presiilent, he surrendered it robbed of its last dollar by Democrats. When our Republi can President came into possession of the surrendered office, he found the army and nuvy scattered to tho four corners of the earth by Democrats, that Democrats miglit rob and plunder, unmolested, the arsenals of the nation. A Democratic mayor, in tho Demo cratic city of New .York, lamented that ho could not surrender to his fel low-Democrats of the South, who had there purchased arms and amuiiition with which to shoot down Northern freemen nnd prey on Northern com merce, because, us he informed his . . . , , , 0' ' a(i-IVM;wr ..,,ti... n..,....i i 1....1 i... that it it fay 111 ins power tlicy should nt once bo delivered for tho use and purposes for which they had been pur chased. There is no depth iu political degradation to which the Democratic party will not descend to secure politi cal ascendency and power. Murder, arsen, treason, are mere playthings in the hands of the Democratic party, iu this their last desperate gamo for oflice. The Chromotype. Jl'DUK li:. The Republican party stands- before tho country again in 18G8 just as it did in 18G4, simply upon its record. It asks to bo judged by what it has done, and relies upon no uncertain promises of the future. In 18G0 it advanced no new principle. It took its stand upon its well known advocacy of unceasing hostility to slavery in the territories, and the people approved of it and elected the Republican candi date to the Presidency. The slave power chose to stake its existence upon the defeat of the principle of freedom in the territories, and it lost the stake slavery was obliterated. This was the page of events to which tho Repub lican party pointed in 1864. Again the people indorsed it. The reaction ists, unable to maintain slavery, but regretting to part with it, attempted to establish caste in its place, and the struggle thereon has lasted until the present time, but is now closing upon a record of the republican party, in which is inclined tho full establish ment of the civil and political rights of the oppressed race, and the recon struction of (he south upon a free basis. In this contest many other things have bceu settled. The Presidential power has been restricted, Congress ional authority vindicated, and the Supreme Court restrained within bounds; tho banking system reorgan ized on a sound basis, tho currency made national and reliable, popular liberties protected at the south, the supreme authority and power of the the Republic itself forever fortified against assaults from the spirit of sec tionalism, tho State governments purg ed of oligarchy, and tho. foundations laid for a system of small lundholdings at the south. Thus the Republican party intrenches itself for tho ensuintr campaign, nnd acts upon the defensive, as it did in each former case, It asks to be trusted on account of what it has done. It lias made the nation greater and more respected by tho civilized world. It has built up domestic manufactures on an immense scale by means of a protective policy. It has introduced at the south free common school ' education. It has built the greater part of the Pacific Railroad, brought in four new States, brought everything ' back' to a peace, footing, arid 'has 'steadily reduced ! taxa EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. NO. 2. tion at all points. If, then, we are asked why the National Condition did not declare in favor of this thing or that, we answer that the partv bus hitherto made its claim for support always Upon tho ground of what it has accomplished or essaved, and ask ed to be judged by tho spirit of that. mere is very much yet U do, and the Republican party is the only one com petent for the work. North American. ttR.t.rr as'i w.istnirnxr.-THEin George Alfred Townsend in his last letter to the Cleveland Leader narrates tho following : When the war began. Washburno stirred himself to raiso a company in (ulena, nud as it was known to a few that Grant had been a captain in the army, ho was looked to us the proper man to be chairman. Mr. V ashbiirne described to 10 this liard-working, coiiitnoulv-drcssod man, with an old faded dragoon cloak upon hisshoulders, mounting to the bench of tho Court House and stating the object f the meeting. When tho company was raised Grant was found to bo perfect in all the details of equipping it from boots, to buttons. ushburiie, Grant and tho rest took the company down to Spring field. There, with scanty means, paying three dollars a day "for board, Grant waited tho disorganized process of tho state authorities, with Dick Yates, impracticable as now, at tho head of the State. Finally Grant said to Washbiirne: "I can do nothing here; am running short; I shall go homo nnd go to work." "Hold oiiI".s:iid Washburne. At last Grant Was placed in the Adju tant General's Department, and by happy luck was One day placed a, the head of n regiment afllicted with a drunken Colonel. So began his fame. Tho celebrated despatch, "I will fight it out 011 this lino if it takes all summer"' was brought, from Spott sylvania to Washington in Mr. Wash burne's pocket. He Said to Grant ns he quitted the field : "General, have you uny message to send up to the War Department ?" "I guess not," said Grant. "I think it would be well," returned Washburne, "if von sent some little word up to the people." "Very well." General Grant sat down in the tent, and as quickly us he could transcribe, and without reading the message over, gave it to Washburne, scaled. The latter came to Belle Plain, took a boat, landed at tho Navy Yard, rode in a horse car to tho War Department, where ho found everybody bluo and doubtful, and delivered the letter to Stanton. That simple bulletin thrilled the country nnd went into our epigram matic literature irrrstnR;ii. A western editor thus describes tho things which Leibenitz could not cx efiect produced by the numerous fonn- plain tome, on space, infinity, on being dries, iron-works, &c, at Pittsburgh. I on nothing." ' And on wishing to in It is only slightly exaggerated : i troduco a Calvinistic minister to her' "Pittsburgh people never have fresh "he said, ''let me die in peace, without air, except when out of town. They disputing on this occasion." This was live on coal smoko nud floating eiu- a philosophical death bed. ders. ' We inhaled seven tons of smoke Ansel in, Bishop ot Canterbury, iri the first hour wo were there. The his 70th year, when dying, wished fop people breathe smoke, oat smoke, chew smoke, and carry it loose in their pockets. It is now seventy-two years since Pittsburgh has been warmed or reached by the sun's rays. Once a streak of sunshine, for several years condensing, undertook to penctrato the cloud of smoke over the city, got lost, became smoked, and fell like a standing edition of the 'Black Crook.' Tho ladies use smoke and coal dust to protect their complexion. Little boys and girl's stand on the corners with wet brooms and sponges to wash peo ple's faces, for five cents. Everybody is of a color in Pittsburgh. At the post office window the clerk distin guishes people by certain signs, it being impossible to soo their faces from the layers of coal dust and smokc We saw a little boy crying on the street because bo had lost his father, who was six feet ahead of him in all the blackness, Every one wears mourning in Pitts burgh. A barber once went there to color whiskers. He mor'n busted in a week. Men kiss each other's wives in Pittsburgh, unable to tell which is their own only by tho taste. Women send their children on errands first .writing on their faces with a thumb nail or wet sticks. People feci their way by door knobs, and read by raised type. -. man once siooci in nis room who the window raised changed his shirt nine times in four minutes, and only got a clean one on him when tho win dow fell by accident, and kept the smoke out. Meet a man with a cold who has been blowing his nose, and that organ looks like a burnt stump on each side of which a woodchuck has been bur rowing. Bed clothes are unknown fit Pitts burgh. I.cave the window open and sheets of smoke settle upon you like newspapers from ' a machine press ! Some years since some snow fell into the city from the cloud xif smoke the smoke ,was not hurt,, but tho snow looked, sick. Men carry lanterns to see io'tiako hands. When looking at a watch to see the hour it is the fashion to light a match. .They make black broadcloth by hanging a spider's web out till filled with smoke, and use hot coal dust for pepper. V)They roll the 'smoke, sweetened, into'sticks, and sell it for licorice"" Terms of A.irertlfatX Son w o n k . , ADViHTMBitiwni liwerlntnt SI lit per quitm ftn .!.. t..ii.liii. nv I n Mil Hit -.nlll VHP square fur ich ailjltlomil insertion ; (ten line or lerwof thin type counted n "unre. All tran sient nrlvnrtine'ment to bo paid fur iniulwiuee. llcsisESS Notices set uniler tin nena 01 meat news wil! he ehtirged lltvurlulily 10 eenua Una K.r cnel insertion. A lioenU deduction mnflo In nr-rwmn advtrl. In tho cniurter, Imlf-yenr or yenr. HrMlnl notlees elmrunl one-lmll tnoro Hum regulur ad vertisements. ' ' i Joli PniNTiNciof every kind In Plnlnand Fan cy colors; Jliind-Mll", ItlankH, Curds PinunWet ifec, of everv varlelv nnd si vie, printed at tlm shortest notlee. Tin) Kcpum.tCAS okkick Ima lust been ie-llltd(itii'l every thliu; In the Print. liM lino can ho exi-cmed In tliu most artistic m-innerimtl at the iowt-xl rates. .1VI.U. It is singular to contemplate tho various traits of character which aro developed in the last stages of exist ence, exhibiting tho singular impres sions, passions ami prejudices of our nature, at a moment when restraint is no longer necessary, and when wo speak s we think, the world's'censura having pascd away.- There are, how- ever, somo beautiful samples of calm ness on a dying bed. Tho lato Dr. Cullen, of Richmond, with tho gentleness of spirit for which he was distinguished, said, when dying, in an almost inarticulate tone to a friend; "I wish I had tho power of writing or speaking, for then I would describe to you how pleasant it is to die." I low" like the calmness of Ad dison at the same crisis. Louis IV, the orhl knows, was a remarkable man, and in many re spects a model of a king. Thcro was a grace in all ho did, n precision nnd elegance iu all ho said. He spoka rarely with any one, and when he did it was with majesty and brevity. No harsh word ever escaped him. Ho was polished to the very limits of na ture. His dentil IhkI was a piece of acting its any other in his life. Ho died as ho had lived, with all the graco and decorum of his brightest moments. His last address to his friends and at tendants were distinguished by that remarkable neatness and propriety for which ho was so remarkable. In fact it appeared to be so studied and so1 perfect in the whole scene, as to piO dune the effect of a well achd play. Talleyrand was n courtier, with all his eminent talents. When In the last moments of his existence, this remark able man received a visit from Louis Phillipo, King of tho French nnd thought ho had but a few moments to live, lie introduced his medical atten dants, nurses nud friends, with a fa miliarity belonging to tho ancient regime. . "How do you feel?" said the King. "I am sulfcring sir, all the pangs of the damned." Louis Piiillippe, with tho point and sarcasm which belonged to his char acter, said sotto voce "What! so soon?" Tha old politician heard him, and hud he lived, would have paid him for the nialicjous inuendo. There mo some singular incidents of death bed peculiarities, which mark the character of tho suflering parties. Sophia Charlotte, the first Queen of Prussia nnd sister to George I, was a woman of great learning, intelligence and piety. The chaplain who attend ed her in her last moments was so 1 ,trU(,,k witl lwr '"rae and calmness, that instead of exhorting her became a listener. "lam now going," said she, "to sat isfy niv curiosity on the principlo of a little delay, until ho could finish a very curious rjuestion ho had began on the origin ot tho soul. This was a metaphysical end. Beaufort, Cardinal of Winchester, who was extremely rich, was worried on his death bod, on finding that wealth could not conciliate tho fell destroyer. "Fye!"said he, "will not death bo hired? Will money do nothing? Must T die, who have such great riches?" Here was another ruling passion. Buithe, a French dramatic poet, who had written a play called "The Selfish Man," having learned that his friend, Cohirdeau, was dying, flew to the house. "I am shocked to sec you so ill, but I have a filvor to ask it to hear me read my 'Selfish Man.'" "Consider, my friend' sain Cor lardcau, I have but a few houra to live." "Alas, yes but that is the reason I am so anxious to know your opinion of my piece." He forced him to bear it. "Your piece," said he, "is only de ficient in ono point. It wants tho power of forcing a dying man to attend to tho reading of a comedy of five acts." Fabro d'Eglantine, when preparing for the guillotine, had only one re gret. Ho had lett an unpublished, comedy among his manuscripts, and apprehended that Billcad Tarrennes would publish it as his own. When the iood Master Samuel Hern lay on his death bed, rich only in virtue, his wife was lamenting her forlorn condition. "Peace, sweethart," said he; tha God which fcedeth the raven will no' starve the Hens." The instance of such peculiarities in exiremis are numerous and surprising, and they all indicate the peculiar tern-" per, through habits and pursuits of individuals, on the verge of the other world. Sunday Timet. . ; Obatob Morley Tuushon got off a good tiring the other day when requested to speak.- "Speech is silver and silence is gold,"' said the orator, "As Ido not happen to have any small change about me this morning, you will , accept the gold ' , and hj gave them nothing else.'