SJr gulf tart fcfttt. Friday .Horning- June H, 1566, DEMOCR ATIC STATE TICKET. FOR GOVERNOR, Hon. HIESTER CLYMER, OF BERKS COUNTY. THE CLIMBER. A Campaign Paper. The undersigned propose to publish a campaign paper to be entitled "The Climber," the first number of which will be issued on the 4th of July next, and continued until the Gubernatorial election in October. This publication will be devoted to the support of President Johnson's Resto ration Policy and the election of such candidates as are openly in favor of sus taining that policy. It will contain six teen columnsof matter and will be filled with racy editorials and the spiciest articles of the campaign. No conser vative politician should be without it. TERMS: Ten copies to one address, cash in advance, DO Twenty " " " " 8.00 Less than ten copies toone adiress. 60 cts per etpv. Get up your clubs and send in your orders at ouce. No attention paid to any order unless accompanied by the cash. Persons getting up clubs should be particular to specify in their orders the name of the person to whom they wish the package addressed, as all the papers in the club will be sent to one person for distribution. Address, MEYERS A MENGEL, Bedford, Pa. FIT/.. "Down with the accursed institu tion!" "Away with the 'relic of bar barism!'" "The curse and sin of Slav ery must be removed!" Such was the chorus of the yelping hounds unken neled from the infidel pulpits of New England, until civil war abolished the institution of Southern Slavery. Oh! how they whined about humanity, how they prated about philanthropy, j how they preached anti-slavery Chris- I tianity! The poor oppressed Negro; the overseer's l&sh, the auctioneer's ham mer, the blood-hounds' bay; these : were their texts, the burden of their songs, the subjects of their prayers or the objects of their maledictions. How the gullible noodles who pinned their j faith to the skirts of these pious phil anthropists, shrank from the very men tion of the name of slavery ! How the men groaned as thev listened to there- ! cital of Sambo's wrongs! How the wo men wept as tney heard the story ol Dinah's saie upon the auction-block! Oil! it was pitiful, it was sad beyond expression, it was horrible above all that could be conceived of crime, that the poor Negro, 'a man and a brother,' should be doomed to pine in the chains of Southern Slavery. The Rev. Mr. Fitz told his congregation so from time to time. The Rev. Mr. Fitz said so in the annual meeting of the Boston An ti-Slavery Society. The Rev. Mr. Fitz repeated it in a hundred stump speech es delivered in the disguise of lectures. So slavery was abolished, the Freed men's Bureau was erected, and the great christian philanthropist, the Rev. Mr. Fitz, was made a Superintendent of the Freedmen in the State of North Carolina. Hail, glorious Freedom! No more hard work for poor old Ned! No more lash lor lazy young Bill! No more auction-block for lovely Dinah! No more bloodhound for swamp-fox Sam! Every thing goes "merry a.-, a marriage bell." But by and by, Pres ident Johnson, meddlesome man,sends two fellows with star* on their should ers, Steedmanand Fullerton by name, to inquire into the condition of Bro. Fitz' portion of the Negro vineyard. Alas and alack! not a frmlman did Steeduian and Fullerton find within the bounds of Fitz' jurisdiction—not a -ingle freed man, but lot.- of slates! Ne groes hung up by the wrists; negroes shut up in prison whilst their wives and children were dying from small pox; negroes compelled to burry their children in the cradles, in which they died; and to cap the climax negro chil dren, inoffensive little picaninnies, thrown into dungeons for playing in the streets on the Sabbath! And all this by order of the distinguished a postle of the new dispensation of Afri can liberty, the great New England humanitarian, the Rev. Mr. Fitz. But what boots it to multiply words? We can oniy ask the negrophilists which system of slavery they prefer, that which was lately abolished by the Itev. Mr. Fitz and his-frieuda, or that-which hney havte kujuti is ha dtoai THE "BOYS IN BLUE." I York. Cumberland and Perry in Line! THE HERO OFTHF. HARI'ERSi FERRY SPITTOON RF.PI UI.VTED! The Soldier* (Ml Stand Xeyro Suffrage ! A few days ago the soldiers of York ! county met in convention, nearly three hundred in number, and passed resolu tions in favor of Clymerand the White Man's party. Thesoldiers of Cumber land followed and elected five delegates to the Geary Pittsburg Convention, but instructed them to vote for Clymer, by a vote of 132 to 21. Cumberland is Geary's adopted county and his repu diation by the soldiers of his own home, is a blow that will tell upon his prospects all over the State. And now, to make matters still worse for the he ro who captured the Harper's Ferry spittoon, the soldiers of Perry County, tuo hundred and fifty-sir in number, with Major Robinson, Capt. D. L. Tress ler, Capt. B. F. Miller and other dis tinguished officers at their head, have formed themselves into a "Clymer Club," declaring that they cannot sup port Geary because he belongs to the Negro Suffrage party, led by Thaddeus Stevens and other Disunionists. The following, among other resolutions, was adopted by the Perry county boys: Rusolred, That as white soldiers we cannot support any party which favors negro suffrage and negro equality—that refuses to admit new territories while the word white remains in the declara tion of qualification of voters—which sympathizes with negro interests in preference to the cause of the poor of our own color—which wastes all its time in providing for the freed men and can not be induced to equalize our bounties; and believing that John W.Geary, the Radical candidate for Governor, i- a follower of Thud. Steven.-, and i- fully committed to the cause of the Disun ionists in Congress, and is the enemy of the conciliatory polity of the Presi dent, we cannot and will not support him at the poll-. We call upon our fellow soldiers everywhere to remem ber that the party that Geary is a can didate of,has repeatedly declared in Congress, through it- p:v-- and on the stump, that the war could not have been ended but for the bravery and a— -istanceof the blacks, giving to the ne gro the credit which alone was merited by our white soldier-. EVERY township should have a club of twenty or thirty copies of the "Cam paign Climber" circulated among its people. Will not some of our friends.; take contributions for the "Climber" at the coming Delegate Elections? THE SLAVERY OF THE FBCKJWEXA, ItIHEAI. Where is Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe? The country needs another; "Uncle Tom's Cabin." To be sure, Leg roe Is dead; (he was hung by the Confederates as a spy ; Topsy, too, has been taught by a Yankee "school inarm" to know where she came from and she doesn't "spect" any more that i she growed;" and I "note Tom's de- i scendants are free to starve, or to die j by any other process. But then the Rev. Mr. Fitz, Superintendent of the Frecdmen's Bureau, has taken the place of I.egreeand Topsy's saddle-colored ! offspring iCapt. , Agent of the Bureau, knows best how that "growed)" iaquiteasgood a subject for Mrs. Stowe's pathosas her maternal ancestor; whilst Uncle Ned, hung up by the wrists by ; order of the aforesaid Rev. Mr. Fitz, ! answered just as good a purpose as did his much lamented cousin, Uncle Tom. We would call the special attention of Mrs. Stowe and the writers for the! New England Magazines, to this fine field of romance opened up by the phi lanthropy of the Freedmen's Bureau. ! A dozen of novels founded on facts, might be worked up from the report of Gens. Steed man and Fullerton. For j instance the following extract from that report, might be made the ha.-is of a second Uncle Tom's < abin: "Amongmany acts of cruelty com ' mined by Superintendent Fitz. we found tiiat he had, in two instances, freed)/xn with cords urouml their tarisfs, with their feet not touchiny the floor, ond kept them in /hi> pewit ion, in one en** four and in the other raw six , hours/" Shades of i.egree and of all the slave drivers that ever cracked a whip! Here i- an opening for enterprising writers of pathetic hooks! Here is a fountain from which can be drawn a sea of tears ! In shortand in fact here ' is an opportunity to give the people who sympathize with the poor negro— j Fitz ! i BERLIN, Somerset co., sends us a list i of fifty-five subscribers for the "Clim ber." What tow nship in Bedford coun ty can l>eat this? DEATH OF JE.Y. WI\FIELD SCOTT. The sudden demise of Lieut. Gen. j Scott, has cast a gloom over the country i which will not soon be dissipated, i Gen. Scott's name is deeply interwoven j with the history of the country and is dear to every man, woman and child who loves American Liberty. He has lived to a good old age, and is gathered to .his father* in the ripene® of his timil Place d) adbeß! TW O PHI'jr.VY PHEUOWH. The Patriot A Union says that Cly mer is already at the top round of the! ladder of popularity and asks us what more there is to "climb?" The Hol-j lidaysburg/Standardthinks this is a po ser. We might with the same propri- j ety ask, what use is therein having any j more Patriots , or any more Unions, or j any more Standards, since every body . considers himself a patriot, a I T nion man and a standard citizen. But, seriously speaking, we fear our friends of the Patriot A Union and the Standard will tind, as usual, quite as much Abolition ism to "climb" in Blair and Dauphin j counties as will be agreeable to their : taste. Sharpen your claws, boys! SERIOUS apprehension (says an ex-i change) of a general European war has been created by the announcement, re cently made by Louis Napoleon, that he detests the treaties of 1815. This declaration is supposed to imply, in connection with various significant oc currences, his intention to encourage the outbreak between Prussia and Aus tria, and while Vtetor Emmanuel is striving to gain the Quadrilateral) to extend the frontiers of France to the Rhine. The Empire is at this moment believed to typify war, not peace.— Some writers allege that a few months hence Europe will resound with the tread of a million of men under arms. BE CAREFUL! The Disunionists in this county always base their hopes of a reduced Democratic majority, upon dissatisfaction engendered by the Dem ocratic county nominations. We know that there is not a man who is an nounced as a candidate before the coining Democratic County Convention who would willingly minister to the gratification of tne wishes of our polit ical opponent. But ungarded words and too zealous partisanship, frequent ly result in heart-burnings and personal estrangement Be on your guard, friends! If you are to be nominated you should be able to unite the party in your support, and to do this thor oughly and with the proper spirit, you must treat your follow candidates fairly, kindly and generously. GEARY has been asked by the Phil adelphia Daity Sews to repudiate the platform adopted by the Disunion State Convention which nominated him. That platform endorses Congress, and, in so doing, sustains the efforts of that body to force Negro Suffrage upon the District of Columbia. But the hero of Harper's Kerry, is mute,and continues to upon the Congress-N'egrO Suffrage platform. Therefore, the lxidy .Veics aiid a number of other "Republi can" papers in the State, refi;-e to sup port him. Geary must repudiate Ne gro Suffrage, or lie will tie beaten at least OO,MU). KVERV third"Republican" you meet prpf< to be opposed to Negro Suf frage. So far so good. Now, who is the representative of the Negro Suffrage party in Pennsylvania? Who will he supported by Thtlddeus Stevens. Win. 1). Keiiey, John M. Broomall and the balance of the Negro Suffrage Con gressmen, for Governor of Pennsylva nia? The answer is, without the shadow of a doubt, John W. Geary. How, then, tan those '"Republicans" who are opjiosed to Negro Suffrage, vote for Geary for Governor? We have been asked who.her "The Climber" will bo. a reprint of the GA ZETTE. We answer, not wholly so. It will contain much original matter, and will be illux'rafeil with '"Jfx and rtngrw ings which alone will be worth more than the subscription price. WE call tiie attention of the reader to tlie President's nmssage vetoing the bill for the admission of Colorado as a state of the Union. The message will be found on our outside. It proves con clusively that Colorado is not at pres ent entitled to admission. Br;toi ßE any 'Republican' who claims to voteintelligenlly, rnak sup his mind to east hi.- ballot for John W. Geary, we ask him to read and consider t.:e resolutions of the Fayette county sol diers commanded by Geary in the Mex ican War. Those resolutions will he found on our first page. MOKE TREASON.— The New Lisbon (O.i Jinckeyt State, a Republican paper, closing an article on the political situ ation, says: 'Oh, that the hand of Booth had been paralyzed, and the heart of Abzerot more firm." Abzerot was the man who was charged with intending to kill Johnson. A SEVERE PARODY.— In a recent ad dress to the"uuterritied," at Tamma ny Hall, Captain itynders, referring in his neeuliar and sarcastic manner to the Disunion party, said its motto was from Pope, and was: "Honor and shume from no condition rise, Steal all you can, ther* all the profit lies. MODERN" patriotism is a queer thing. For instance, that eminent lover of his country, H. Greeley, said as recently as i860: "Ail nations have their supeiVti tions, and, tint ttf <tur peopfd-id t4rc <A>o- Stftfatzom" INVASION OF CANADA BY FENIANS. CAPTURE OF FORT ERIE. 1.1K(U: LIOIMF.M OF TLKST AMI MUNI TIONS OF WAR ES ROUTE. I'IHLERITL TROOPS IN MOTION. BUFFALO, June 1.-r-The reporters of tiie Express have just returned from a point one and a half miles below Lower Black Rock. The head of the Fenian Column, (WKI strong, had reach ed that point with their armyTffTin of nine wagons loaded with ammunition. They declare they will effect a crossing before daylight. ST. ALBANS, Vt., June 1. —Three hundred Fenians arrived here this morning. CINCINNATI, June I.—A dispatch from Columbus, Ohio, says that 15,000 rounds of ammunition were shipped from that place to New York, 150,1)00 to Chicago, and 1(1,00(1 muskets to Buf falo, within a few days. These arms, it is reported, are for the Fenians. NEW YORK, June I.—lt is reported that Fort Erie, iu Canada, opposite Buffalo, was ca Mured by Fenians to day. They are -aid to be 1,000 strong; 2,0' Oof themar dd to be marching unopposed into the interior, and have already out one telegraph line. BOSTON, Jum I.—Two companies of U. S. Regulars left this morning for St. Albans. Ai additional force of 100 Fenians also lef, it is supposed, for the Canadian border. One i housand five hundred men is the alleged quota of Massachusetts for the present enter prise. BUFFALO, June I.—Notwithstanding the vigilance < the authorities in this region, the U. S. steamer Michigan be ing under stealt and having her ports open, and in fad thecity swarming with Canadian spies, several regiments of Fenians cresset over into Canada last night, includiig troops from Kentucky, Tennessee am Indiana; a regiment from Ohio and a regiment from this | city. At this >oint they crossed in ca nal boat- dravu by tugs, and when: ncaring the Oaiadianside they sent up a wild Irish cluer, with the green flag flying. Vol. O'Neill.of the 11th regiment, of Nashville, isii: command at Fort Erie. Large numbers of persons are viewing the sight from this shore. The' Fenians-av that no depredations shall be pernii ted. All the telegraph wires to Canada are cut on the < "auulian side, except those via the -uspeu.-ion bridge. BOSTON, June 1. —The two enmpa nies of regulais wholtft for the North this morning vere from Fort Warren, and are commanded by Col. Living ston. The newly raised r'enian cavalry regiment, under the conmand of Co!. J. leonine, late of Mose.iy's guerrillas, i- part of ihe expedition from this city. Gen. Fit/. Hugh Lee will command the cavalry wing of their army of in va-ion. BOSTON, June I. -In addition to the Fenian cavalry regiment, the Third Fenian infantry, Col. Conner, 1,200 strong, has left here for the Canada border. The transportation for the cavalry regiment was paid through to St. Albans by a citizen of 80-ton. Detachments of United States troops from Forts Warren and Independence, also from For Preble are under orders to leave for tin' northern frontier. BUFFALO, June I.—Railroad officials from Fort Erie report that the Fenians had torn up the track in several places, burned down some buildings back of the village, ai.d are seizing all the hor ses within.their reach- They have ta ken twenty-five or thirty prisoners, but these were released on naroie after " icw hours* ftrtcntiuii. At i- o clock, the Fenians started down the river to ward Chippewa. All communication with Canada is now cutoff at this point. The United States steamer Michigan has been stationed opposite Fort Erie and commands the river. The agent of the Associated Press has returned from an interview with a prominent Centre, who sayst bat from 1,500 to 1,(>'(( men have effected a land ing in Canada from this point, and are hourly reeeiviug accessions in Canada and from 1 his shore. They are well armed, and have -ix pieces of artillery . it is said to boa general descent along the whole front ier, and the Fenians have as many as thirteen batteries of artillerv in Cana da. LATER. NEW YORK, June I.—The Herald contains the following account: BUFFALO, June 2—*7 ?• M- —An eye witness of the engagement near Bridge way says the Fenians were one thous and strong, under O'Neill, and had reached a small village about ten miles from Waterloo Ferry when their scouts announced the approach of a large force of Canadian volunteer-. The Fenian- tore down a fence and went into an adjoining field and form : ed in line of battle, Geli. O'Neill being ! assisted by Colonels Starr and O'Brien : in making a disposition of the troops. The volunteers .Advanced upon the Fe nians, and the action commenced, the skirmishers on cither side exchanging a brisk aire. Th ornier was then given for the Fenian skirmishers to fall back to the main body. Both parties fired several rounds when the Fenians ad vanced on the double quick with fixed bayonet-, but as the Canadians were pressed in an on-hard on either side of a swamp, ami were separated from the Fenians by a thick bru.-hwood, G'Xeil deemed a charge useless and gave the order to halt and fall hack. The Cana dian.- believing this a retreat advanced from their shelter on a run, but wen met by the Fenians with a counter charge and were instantly routed, the Fenians pursuing them for two miles when '' M ill ordered a halt. The ( an - adian- were completely demoralized and continued their flight to Port Col borne. The Fenians lost (> killed and 15 wounded, and theCaiiadian-21 killed and wounded in all. The Herald's Buffalo special says Gen eral O'Neill with his staff were cap tured. TORONTO, June 1-2 A. M..—A dispatch from Waterloo says Colonel Dennis' command, numbering about eighty men, engaged so or 100 Fenians. About half-past two O'Neill, ordered the Fe nians to charge upon the volunteer with fixed bayonets when the volun teers broke and ran in every direction, I throwing away hats, belts, cartridge boxes, ETC. At 1 P. M.the "field of Wa terloo" was in possession <>f the Fe nians. Col. Dennis is said to be wound i ed. Two Fenians were killed, and the British had five orsix wounded. Rein forcements for the Fenians have cross ed at Frenchman's Creek. The opera tor at Port Coiborne reports a large bodv of Fenians crossing into Canada. LATEST. THE F.NI> OF THE FORT ERIE AFFAIR BUFFALO, June B.—The Fenians e vacualed Fort Erie last night, and most of them attempted to reach this shore but only a small number succeeded.— About seven hundred were gobbled up by the United States boats guarding the river, and are now prisoners under the guns of the United States steamer Michigan at Black Itook. Th© Cana dian ftntiß, undor Cbkteft Peal tick, arts now in possession of Fort Erie with- j out a skirmish. The ultimate disposi-; tion of the prisoners is uncertain, hut | the British Minister has been telegraph-1 ed to. Colonel O'Neill and staff are captured. The only Fenians captured by the Eng lish appear to be thirty-two pickets, who were left by their friends in the hurry. By order of General lfcyry all communication is forbidden with the Canada shore. It is reported that a small Fenian force left this neighbor hood last night, destination unknown. Those that attempted to reinforce their friends at Fort Erie were prevented by the United States picket boats. We have conversed with some escaped Fe nians, and they say, having no artillery, and they positively assert they have had none, and finding the Canadians had Armstrong guns and were closing around them, with no prospect of rein forcementandnosupplies, they conclud ed not to be gobbled up, so they "ske dadled" as best they could. The men were completely worn out, having fought two battles (though the Fort Erie affair they regard as only a skirmish), and have had nothing to eat and no sleep. (i EN. ME APE AT BUFFALO. BUFFALO, June 3, 2. P. M.— Major- General Meade has just arrived here which fact is considered its a coniirma- i tion of the statement that a general in-! vasion along the border is contemplat- j ed. Gen. Meade while here issued a gen j eral order giving Gen. Barry full com- ■ rnand and authority in this department to make such disposition of troops,and to use all means in his power to pre-, serve neutrality between the United j States and Canada. DETROIT, June A large number j of rifles in the Merchant's despatch j warehouse were seized to night by the United State- authorities. General, Meade's Order. Head Quarters Military Division 1 of the Atlantic, Buffalo, June 3.) Brevet Major General Barry: Gen eral orders will be sent you from Head quarters of the Department of the East, ; assigning you to the command of the! District of Ontario, extending from j Erie, Pennsylvania, to Oswego, New ■ York, both places included, Headquar ters at Buffalo, for advance of the or-: ders and accompanying instruction. I direct you to use the force at your command to preserve the neutrality by preventing the crossing of armed bodies, by cutting off reinforcements or I supplies, by sei/.ingali arms, munitions, etc., which you have reason to believe are destined to be used unlawfully; in fine taking all measures precautionary, and otherwise, to prevent violation of law. For this purpose you will move , the forces under your command to such i point- as are threatened, and you will employ vessels, tugs, etc., such as can be procured, for watching the river and lake shore, and taking all such meas- ■ ures a- in your judgment the emergency requires. Very Respectfully, GEO. G. MEADE, Major General Uomd'g. Official- Order from General (Irani. BUFFALO, June 2. —Lieut. General j < irant passed west at noon to day. He sent the following telegram to General Meade: BUFFALO, June 2.—-To Maj. General Meade, U. S. A., Philadelphia: Gen. Barry is here. Assign him to the gen eral command from Buffalo to the \ mouth of the Niagara river. 'I he State authorities should call out militia on the frontiers to prevent hostile expeditions leaving the United States, and to save private property from destruction by mobs, U. S. GRANT, Lieutenant General. I. STEWS*. SENATE.— Mr. Wilson reported a ser ies of resolutions providing for the ad journment of Congress until Monday j next as a token of respect to the mem j wrv of Lieutenant General Scott, and j also that a committee, composed of ! members of both Houses, shall attend i hi- funeral, which is to take place at West Point to-day. The resolutions were unanimously adopted. A bill de lining the number and regulating the appointment of officers in the United States navy was reported from the Co mmittee on Naval Affairs. The Senate concurred in the report of theCommit teeof Conference on the amendments to the Pension bill. This biil now goes to the President. The Tax bill was re ceived from the House, it was refer red to the Committee on Finance, and five hundred extra copies ordered to be printed. The Senate then resumed the consideration of the joint resolution from the Committee on Reconstruction, the question being on the amendment proposed by Mr. Howard as a substi tute for the third section, which dis franchises all persons who have taken an oath to support the Constitution of the United States, and afterwards en gaged in war against the Federal Gov ernment. .Mr. Dooiittlc made a speech against the amendment, and pro nosed several amendments modifying it, which were voted down by a vote of 12 nays to 10 yeas. Mr. Howard's a menduient was then adopted—yeas 12, nays 10, a strict party vote. The Sen ate then adjourned until Monday. HOUSE.—A message was received from the President transmitting the re ply of Brigadier General Whittlesey, Chief of the Freedtnen's Bureau in North Carolina, to the report of Gener als Steedinan and Fullerton, which was referred to the Select Committee on Freedmen. The House concurred S in theSenateamendmeutsto the House bill regulating commercial intercourse between the several States. This bill now goes to the President. As passed by Congress, it authorize.- any railroad company iu trail.-portpassengers, mails, freight, Ac., from anyone State to any ; other State, and to connect with roads of other States, so as to form continuous 1 lines for transportation of the same to i its place of destination. The House then took up the hill authorizing the ('levelandand Mahoning Railroad Corn pan v toconst root a continuation of their road from Youngstown. <)hio, to Pitts burg, Pennsylvania. After a long dis-: cussion the hill was passed—yeas 77, nays 41. The Senate joint resolution j authorizing the Secretary of the Navy j to appoint a commission to examine a ; site near Portland, Maine, with refer- j enee to its fitness as a fresh water site for iron-dads, was passed. The House | concurred in the Senate resolutions in j reference to the death of Lieut.' Gen. j Scott by a unanimous vote. The report j of the Committee of Conference on the j "Pension" bill was agreed to, and the • bill stands as passed by both Houses, j The bill fertile completion of the Pitts- j burg and Connellsville Railroad, be- j tween Cumberland, Maryland, and Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, was taken up j and passed after a brief debate. The i road is to be completed in three years, j The bill regulating the pay of the Uni tedStatesarmy was taken up, and pend ing a vote was laid aside until Monday. The House then adjourned until Mon day next. —Judge Erskine, in Georgia, has de cided that the act of Congress prescrib ing the lawyers' test ami.is unoonsti- : tutibffal. PUBLIC SPIRIT IN ITALY.— Private I letters from Italy describe in glowing. terms of admiration, and not without j surprise, the unanimous, concentrated, ; anrl profound enthusiasm of the whole Italian nation—an enthusiasm too deep 1 for idle show, hut rather expressing it self by calm and resolute self-sacrifice, | at the near prospect of the final battles j for national independence. "War," we read in one letter which has been j placed in our hands, "is now for us a , certainty—peace an impossibility. It : is a question of lifeor death for the dy nasty and for thecountry. 1 f you could only see what life,what movement, what energy, the settled purpose to have done once for all, with the ruin ous uncertainty and precarious incom pleteness of the present condition of the country inspires. Every man and every woman seems to say, "Italy ex pects all her children todo their duty." In another letter from a Florentine geft tleman to a friend in England we read: "Ah, my dear friend, if you could see Italy now—how beautiful inspirit, how full of life she is. There are but two i ways before us—war against the Austri an, oracivil war; independence or rev olution. How I wish those countrymen of yours who cry out against us could see' us as we are. No more parties; no more factions; hut one single heart •andsoul and strength. alike for ! war. All ready to make sacrifice to j the last penny; nay, to the last child. ; I am not speaking the language of ex- J eitement, but the simple truth. From ! the poorest peasant to the richest noble ! in the land there is the same will; the same obedience toduty. All are ready ito serve in the ranks. To see fathers land mothers accompanying their sons to t/ie offices of enrollment might move the heart of a lionrsicr." —London Dai ly Xeics. NKGKO SUFFRAGE. —The Radical Disunionists have now boldly declared in favor of negro suffrage. They voted in the House directly in favor of forc ing this measure upon the people of the Territories, without consulting their wishes at all on the matter. They have made up the issue at last, and the peo ple know exactly where they stand. The Radieal-disunionists, witn Geary at their head, are in favor of negroes voting and crowding around the polls with white men ; the Democrats, with ('lymer at their head, are opposed to negro suffrage, and believe that this government was instituted for the white race. This is the issue in the pending eanva-s.— Genius of Liberty. THE Hon. Reverdy Johnson, in a letter to Mr. Slogan, one of the mem bers of the House of Representatives from Missouri, confirms the statement of the latter in regard to the decision of the Supreme Court on the question of the "test oath." Mr. Johnson states that a majority of the Judges of the Supreme Court decided that the oath was unconstitutional, and that the rea son alleged for not making this decis ion public at once was mainly owing to the fact that the Judge select* d to de liver the opinion had not time before the close of the term to prepare such a one as the importance and gravity of the question required. Mr. Johnson adds that he has no doubt that the o piuion will lie delivered at the next term of the Court. G EN. STON EM A X says, in hi* report of the Memphis riot*: "Very few Con federates were mixed up with the riot ers, the larger portion being registered voters." Scarcely a person in Tennes see can be a registered voter unless he is "loyal" and i- a supporter of old llnwnlow and his rascally "legisla ture." Four-fifths of the bona tide vo ters have been disfranchised bv the lirownlow Disunionists, for their con nection with the Confederacy. It ap pears from Stonenian's report, there fore. that it was the "Southern Union ists r of the Brownlow stripe who pre vented the darkies from again "hear ing off the palm." This takes much of the "pressure" off the "reconstructed rebels." Two hundred and thirty-live (235) honorably discharged soldiers of York borough lately enrolled themselyes as members of the Ciymer Club, at the first meeting. The names were pub lished in the York Gazette. The llar risburg Telegraph discovers that////<< n are dead and/oWf/nre deserters. Strange that the citizens of York were oblivi ous to these facts until so informed by the Geary Telegraph. Evidently to hear of home the Yorkers must come to JLarrisburg. We would not have it understood, however, that lying i- the great speciality here. — Patriot it- Union. MIWEI.I.AXEOIS vt:ws. —General Grant has received a let ter from General Ilalleck, in which the latter pronounces the report of the Ft. Goodwin massacre a hoax. —By the latest reports from New York Quarantine it appears that since the transmission of previous accounts there have been received into the chol era hospital from the steamship I'niou forty-live patients, and from the Peru vian thirty-nine. There have also been fourteen deaths—making an aggregate of persons now under treatment of sev enty. The Lynchburg Virginian says: "We Understand that there are a great many muskets in the hands mostly of the negroes in this city and neighborhood. We even learn that they are forming companies, and mustering and drilling in the suburbs." —.V boy, seven years of age, while rummaging in a bureau drawer, at Al abaster, Michigan, came across a revol ver, and while carelessly handling it, discharged the contents of the same in to his stomach, causing death in about five hours afterwards. —A grist-mill at Middleton, New York, appears to have been "dealing death around the land" by infusing lead, with which crevices in the mill stones were tilled, into the flour and meet which is produced! The conse quences are quite serious. —ln Utah, Judge Drake has denied the right of the Territorial Probate Courts to naturalize foreigners, and has himself refused to naturalize foreigners who practice polygamy as being in vio lation of the act of Congress. —John C. Fremont has sent an agent to St. Louis with &}2o,fHK) to make the first payment to the directors of the south western branch of the Pacific Rail road on his recent purchase. —A man in California has madeprep erations to hatch sixteen thousand chickens by steam during the coming season. Since the "Night-Blooming Cereus" charmed the town, Whole swarms of bogus perfumes have gone down. Manufactured by Phalon A Sou, 517 Brtta'dway. &f!d Cvferytyhort).. ANNOUNCEMENTS. All notices under this head must he pre-paid to insure insertion The following are the rates Prothonotary, $5 00; Sheriff $3.00; Associate Judge and Commissioner, $2 00 : Poor Director and Auditor, SI.OO Tickets will be printed at $4.00 per thousand, when not less than one thousand are desired SHERIFF MR. EDITOR : —Please announce A.J. SANSOJI, of Bedford borough, as a candidate for Sheriff, sub ject to the decision of the Dcmocatic county con vention. EDITOR GAZETTE :—Please announce ISAAC D EARNEST, of Bedford township, as a candidate 1 fur Sheriff, subject to the decision of the D uio -rat | ic county convention. I MR. EDITOR Please announce WM. KEYSEK, ! of Juniata township, as a candidate for Sheriff. ; subject to the decision of the Democratic county ! convention. MR. MEYERS:—PLEASE announce D L BEFI BAUGH, of Bedford township, as a candidate f, r , Sheriff, subject to the decision of the Democratic | county convention. We are authorized to announce ROBERT STECK MAN. of Bloody Run. as a candidate for the off. - e ■ of Sheriff, subject to the decision of the Democrat | ic county convention. j MR. EDITOR .—Please announce THOMAS C ' REIGHARD, of Union tp., as a candidate f r jhe i office of Sheriff, subject to the decision of the Deni- I ocratic County Convention, j EDITOR GAZETTE You are authorized to an nounce HUGH MOORE, ol Bedford tp.. as a can -1 didate for Sheriff, subject to the decision of the j Democratic County Convention. WE are authorized to announce GEO. W. HORN" of Harrison tp., as a candidate f-r Sheriff, subject t, the decision of the Democratic County Convention We are authorized to a< nounce IJKN V FLI KE of .Middle Woo lberry township, as a candidateCr Sheriff", subject to the decision of the Dewocrati ! county convention. MR. EDITOR Please announce GEO. STEEL | of liopewe'l township, as a candidate fur sheriff subject to the nomination of the Demooratic Com,, ty convention. We are authorized to announce JOHN C. FI -1 1 GARD, Broadtop twp.. as a candidate tor Sheriff, subject to the decision of the Democratic county ; • convention. ASSOCIATE JUDGE. MR. EDITOR : —Please announceF. D BEEGLE, : of St. Clair tp . as a sui'able person for the office j of Associate Judge, subject to the noinina ion of | the Democratic County C-nvention. WE are authorized tq. announce GEO. SMOI'SE, Jr., of Snake Spring tp., as a candidate for A- -, ciate Judge, subject to the decision ol the Demo cratie County Convent! n. We are authorized to announce JOSEPH SEL LERS, of Bedford township, as a candidate for Associate Judge, subject to the decision of the Democratic county convention! MR. EDITOR :—Please announce GEORGE W. i GUMP, of Napier township, as a candidate for As sociate Judge, subject to the decision of the Dem ocratic county convention. We are authorized to announce JOHN C : BLACK, of Bloody Hun, as a candidate for Associ [ ate Judge, subject to the decision of the Democrat ie county convention CO M MISS 10 A' ER MR EDITOR:— Please announce Joseph Souser of Napier township, as a candidate for Commis sioner, subject to the decision of the Democratic | county convention. We are authorized to announce John S. Brum baugh. of S. Woodberry township, as a candidate ! for Commissioner, subject to the decision of the J Democratic county convention. We are authorized to announce David How-tire. ; of .Southampton township, as a candidate for the 1 office of County Commissioner, subject to the de • cision of the Democratic county convention. We are authorized to announce Jonathan Bow ser, of Coleraiti township, as a candidate for Com j missiooer. subject to the decision of the Democratic | county convention. We arc authorized to aiiDounee Dar.iel P. Becgle. • I of St. Clair township, as a candidate for Commit sioner. subject to the decision of the Democratic county convention. . I POOR DIRECTOR. WE are authorized to announce HEXRV M r| S'Kv 1 j of Bedford tp., as a candida'e for the office of Poor ■ ■ Director, subject to tbe nomination of the Dcmo > | cratie County Convention. MR. EDITOR :—Announce the name of Isaac j- j Grazier, of Napier township, as a candidate for t he | office of Director of the Poor, subject to the deei -1 j sion of the Democratic county convention. • i We are authorized to announce Michael Diehl, - j of Colerain township, as a candidate for Poor Di : rector, subject to a nomination Irum the Detuo j cratie county convention. We are authorized to announce the natneof Si | mon Brumbaugh, of Middle WoodberrJ townr-bip, t j as a candidate for Poor Director, subject to the tie . 1 cision of the Democratic county convention. SPEC IA L NOTICES. ' Cholera, Diarrhoea, and Dysentery! |—A cure is warranted by Dr. Tobias' celebrated | Venitian Liniiuent, if user, when taken by persons )of temperate habits.. This medicine has been i known in the United States over 20 years. Thoas j ands have used it, and found it never failed to cure any complaint for which it was recommended I and all those who first tried it, are now never I without it. In the Cholera of IS4S, Dr. Tobias at j tended 40 cases and lost 4, being called in toulate j to do any good. Directions. —Take a teaspoocful in a wine-glass : of water every half hour for two hours, and rub ; the abdomen and extremities well with Liniment To allay the thirst, take a lump of ice in the mouth, about the size of a uiarble every ten min utes. It is warranted perfectly innocent to take internally. Sold by all druggists, price 40 and 80 cents. Depot, 56 Courtlandt at., New York mayll.'66.— lm A Single Box of Brandreth's Pill* contains more vegetable extractive matter than twenty boxes of any pills in the world beside; fifty five hundred physicians use them in their practice to the exclusion of other purgatives. The first letter of their value is yet scarcely appreciated. When they are better known, sudden death and continued sickness will be of the past. Let those wno know them speak right out in their favor. It is a duty which will save life. Our race are suhjeet to a redundancy of vitiated bile at this season, and it is as dangerous as it is prevalent; but Brandreth's Pills affurd an invalu able and efficient protection. By their occasional use we prevent the collection of those impurities which, when in sufficient quantities, cause so much danger to the body's health. They soon cure Liv er Complaint. Dyspepsia, Loss of Appetite, P.iin in Head, Heartburn, Pain in the Breast-bone, sud den Faintness and Costiveness. Sold by all re spectable Dealers in .Medicines, [may 11 ,'6f> -lut TRANSFORMATION. —SThe supersti tions of antiquity are onty "food for laughter at the present day, and yet this is an age of MiracJec. accomplished with the aid of science. For exam ple : grey, sandy or red hair is Changed in Moment. tq the richest conceivable black or brown, by a simple application of Citstwloro's Hair Dye, Manufactured and sold by J. Cristadoro, t> Aster House, New fork. Sold by Druggists. by all Ilair Dressers. To CONSUMPTIVES.—The advertiser. having been restored to health in a few weeks by a very simple remedy, after having suffered for several years with a aeverclung affection, and that dread disease. Consumption—is anxious to taake known to his fellow-sufferers the means of uure . To all who desire it, he will srtnl a copy oi " ie prescription used (free of charge), with the diree tionsfor pr-paring and using the same, which they will find a sure CrRK for CoNslM!'Ti".v. ASTHMA. BRONCHITIS, COLONS COLPS. and Throat and Lung Affections. The only ohj y' l the advertiser in sending the Prescription is t0 benefit the afflieted, and spread information which he conceives to be invaluable, and he hopes every sufferer will try his remedy, as it will cost tbetu nothing, and may prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prescription, FREE, by K" turn mail, will please address Ktsv. EDWARD A. WILSON, Williamsburg!). Kings Co , New Y'oik Jan. 5, "66—ly. ERRORS OK YOUTH. —A (Scnth'llUlU who suffered for years from Nervous Debility- J re* mature Decay, and all tbe effects of youthful in discretion, will, for the sake of suffering I . l ' ty, send free to all who need it, the recipe and an reotions for making the simple remedy by which he was cured. Sufferers wishing to profit by the advertisers experience, L in do so bv addressing JOHN C OviDEN. No. 13 Chambers St , New York Jan. 5, t)6—ly. STRANGE, BI T TRUE.— Every young lady and gentleman in the United States can beu something very much to their advantage by re turn mail (free of charge,) by addressing tbe un dersigned. Those having fears of being humbug ged will oblige by not noticing this card Other, will please address their obedient servant, THOS F.CU.rP.VIAN. 45Jl Broadway) Sow \or Jan-, ffj 'tfff-ly.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers