= - UT A. M. r. ' i Tr,r r a to r o • '"f beltii t !lett! . ,it•p , Ti Pl u ttil s it 1 . i i . 1 !, ? prAioablibt#4. 71 ;7117 0, i ' i ' .e;r o ri t a c irt ti,a% n 47 ass tifyhirrp ' fil;.l4l4 the qpriaggdo WA Lllketria. ' l'. "'''a wr i. ntmz u ..., 1 i . przit:7w, « it" T hey nre a raqes k suriabe battle err, AO the hyeniWi work Jo done, And the armour bright they are laying by, From the brave ilimpo,,,the eon. • And the ranaket's aleheyvaidulbes o soldierir drill, And the tattee'emikkiellgeinee We shall beer so inonicwitls, inj trews thrill. Nearp ; liemas,•thesrarestiirsing arriund. There era InanimpreilleaAllsouSlilad air, • • Oa, the burnin. Note quy et Jot, not • wedoweie cheer, Aaderdr brawr sena denting beck. There ace fair jinn* beide in their morning Like the Mlles pea they bow;er YU°, inet a mentors leto lb* wadies utd •; ltod help, Ond kelp thine nowt ^ There ate martial star; that we Lay not bear, There are forme that we may not ace, Tleatb's inuter.rOrl Sing hire answered 'clear, They are /As—thank Hod, eon, are free 1 , Not • SaSterfast, not a prioonor'a chain For the noble ariny gone. No conqueror comas in the bearculy Peace, Poise to the dead alone! They are ringfng Pause, but stranger. tread O ' er the laud where oar fathers trod, And oar birthright Joys like a dream Sc. Bed And thun ; where art tlion, 06, tiod I They ire Miming Peace. Not here, not there, Where She rlcbr. march I. rat, • Roll book to the North ICI mocking cheer, No Peace to the Beathland yet. —Staunton ( Wincheator. PEN AND INK PICTURE or THE CAP ITAL. The oily of magnificent Coombe, as Randolph ceded Washington, has nearly doubled in population since the war com menced. New streets hire been opened— borne ralleolds Imes been laid down, spec ulatrors have gathered here to fatten Upon the corpse of the eountry, and.money ma king Is the order of the day. The time wits whoa Washington wee admirable pleas of residence—when the society hero was of the bestorder—when some of the first and best families of the 'maim matte Ibis their residence and brought up families of .re.. speofsbility. There are a few such here no*, but an a general thing, Itcenllouenees and drunkenness are the prom inenefeatures of Washington Isfie this season. Members of Congkeu Spend their afternoons and evenings In billiard and drinking esteem!, Mat their nights is hoses of ill fame or as signation. Five-sevenths of the Itopubli „ can members ofCongressekteatiiheir nights in licentious dissipation. ' While a majority of ILe Democratic members are working for the good of the country, the opposition, re lying on its majority, goes in for a'"good thee," so sailed. The "private" Renounce ment that a new lot of girls have arrived —'a, Is stif- Seinhateldl the planes named with Aboli tion member, of Congressr-tivlng" lights and pious members of toe ',',Cod and moral ity" party that they ate. Washington Un der Abolitton auspices, is the most Been twee, depraved city in the Union. Drink ing salons, gambling houses. house, sf prostliattba and Resignation are about the Capitol as side-shows are stout a chaise.- - Harlots and nigger' occupy the galleries, smile on their pet members on the' thi,or, and throw kisses to the 'led and morali ty representatives of 'tweed ooestit neat:ries. Prestltates ampere the streets to chat with member. at Cepgresa for a few moments, thee walk off togetheredleappearing in the Plinio entrance" of some "eating house" lir "Barocco totel." We have been in Waihishetan many times before now, bet never saw on much dissipation. Money' is no object. Members spend five times their hinetnes. Drinking saloons are like pale ees—proet hetes dress better then tlitseette— thick tongues, red eyes and private doctors Are the order of the day. And this is legislation I Bargains kre 'made at Fero Banks or in parlors of houses Hof assignation. "You tickle me—l'll tickle Jere. A fresh girl ..from the country" will' a heat ankle, a pretty leg—a stylish 'ward robe, a pottling lip—n saucy tome to her Stead and a watery eye will carry a measure throagb Congress after arguments have felled. If the devil should come to Wash , jpgiggs and establish a first Mass caletial beam Mrothitutiorilliag. it. with fine sad beautiful woman, he could legislate thli oputdry intp hell la fifteen teinlqta. The membee of Congress who has sot • bdf•deetnt misteessee is exited - a "copper hoed," ltd kept out of the political ring. It may be that our endears will not relish these Pete—that Is their baslegoi, not ours. IWO pnbneh ik plain, kindle& neeisPeCeh— me have swlrtatedia posses, reputation and Itiosleses'hir tailing the bade won ,e right th. weak of things se-theyas,e— Washlaglen is a city of migalfieentta tridees—tif aliases and esighpaintion4--of whisky and Moonlit:nista-44 dust and liah. 'Mns /rimed; illtiP Wortuption, .drunk , dissipation, sztrassaptses and IJoentioosnwss In Week thee in /law Yorittit'd'hilibniWe oc;inbined. If s:Aiso walks out witirs.ittip •bete, as &Satter if .she be a sister„Rsoo,,tillisk I her s pro/fi lets, so agehlanis, ire fhb, gips" of tames ;atm. Ifl utan tomes to Washinsiten-with ;Ids 4 i t tnal . 3004 Jt) looked ha' a Ipleasalit ..gae—tbe sleek/ of the hotel "rinks as if to oof.lit Ti10l: Ul7 . 00V114 7 ti A 4 r2, V U NEW:I Ml° 49 4 arsied i won , — t 6 N— ensioners for Om utopiaWm Wrung from Viii i klet WV 1640illittr• io this bouo—who priky.luullMili.doo moral alittieffhWirelWrifty, 7ftfl'Apl4ktoe - obijijks. 01 Reif ariAit''aine 'Vol 't m ! r ipe AnA 1 64 ut.r. 4 1° , 71° V 4 YikiCvAljalkati' mriii itZ44 003 imiiO4,4oo ink ream and 04,4 to bollittroS.,,Ouidiiiir lueak*Alls,4o4,:o,: btu areril t o ws... 424,4 ..;....hut .: 4 2 1 M4;11.1 , Lr i ti,* 4 ......e...., ti,, r , ov i r p,4 ,A. . z _.... 2 4, A. ,116141 JIM lbws •14•IMILVidalt *elate b. : aeoro . ooaar 4o4 4cur anifilld 7 eh places oa our Oar of observilloo. The are. nod +llept eprigdiKfklihighle. *a, AMA BMW 4.40.1 1 4P+X, 1 40 1 partineeN LW/40w owe waste r Adaili oat Of aill/ditidead~livisiid aroma o ttAlia 0.1 4 4 6 /1410474441Nra1 l as hoo deomisfr planer, willies down rapidly oa "..' H w a im ag we {4 fall of druid/aid/4 doss ••IVlN 4 woomea, ejaculatore. alders, lioa, s IN laitgeriaid• Teacart f liversamg,lrtin ' 00 . 111 ' 610 ',lOl l l4OP t al oval& • 11111144NIAMili Tomes. Fliefillia Make 4: It, if . -3.-a ij ir r , )1, , .- l d ..?I,lte / VOL ". labor each day the girls who are generally Imams& reoekre good pay, half of which or half of their pay for •'night work". is given to the radical gentlemen to ♦bout they owe so much for position, sad than members of Congress who are basking in the eurtabints of abolitionismnan •tusnsge to live an three thousand dollars a year, 'and have something over—mire than they get at home. Of °aurae there are exceptions to this wickedness, but they arefew in the dominant party. dens of infamy are under the epeciad plantar of moo prominent Re publicans, to these places the country Mende of these members aro token—their expend it ures are liberal—Ahe inmate. ''tlead head' the Honorable gentleman who brings them custom, and all goes 'Merry as a horse down hill. flow in the name of God, or the devil, honest Christians in the country can We for the plass of men now making Owe in Congress, for the ruling o(• the country, is more than we can tell. Verily the difference between ❑te voter' and the members% more tkan etrange There seems. to be little value attached to money.Bere. The cost of living Is escrbi taut One member of Congress, with his faintly, servants, bornes, lives at one of the hotels, and pays for his living one hundred and eighty dollars per day. Ifs has a large suit of rooms, sad indulges iu much style, but is not half as good a legielator as the honorable gentleman (Sir. Brooks) who was ousted to tuahe root, fur him. Wo looked in ruin in the different de pi7tuients for the one armed, crippled or veteran soldiers, who were to be rewarded by the Bevel:Menu party. The one-armed heroes are 'not popular. The left-handed writers are not there Ono. in a while we &and a poor widow in some of the depart ments—merely to built a newspaper article on for country consumption. But we found •Itundreds of negroes swarming - about these offices—opening and shutting doors, as if those who poised through could not welt on themselves—we found these dusky lambs of Abrsham answering ,bell calls every where—we saw them in the gallon' , of Con •groa, scratching their dirty heads, ohew• lug pea-nuts and smiling approval on their Redleal deliverers. andwo saw one-arat, ed o one legged eud'othwinensutilated white .soldiers, selling apples, pei-unts. papers and such stuff un the streets—generously provided fur by—themselves. Looking rover and about Ibis city we feel were than ever to thank God that we aro not office seekers, and that we are not afriad to write of these things as we find them. If god et - tilted us with the last war for our national sins, He wili ri analhilate us as a nation for the sine, wickedness, extrava gone., corruption, licentiousness, drunken ness and dissipation now marking life in the Capitol ELEVEN MILLIONS FOR NEGRO PAU , PERS. The bogus affair itself a Con: geese has just voted eleven millions fur the "Nigger Bureau," to establish eoltools and support nigger paupers in the South! Just think—the negroes of the South produoed some three hundred millions of surplus or real wealth, nearly all of which was finally secured to the people of the North, who built their Fifth avenue plattes'•nd velar teens churches on this result of "slavery," sod in 1800 there was riot one single pau per among all these four million. of m gr.:me. Fow this labor and all this mighty preduotion of wealth is abolished, for the time being us absolutely so as if the negro himself was stricken out of existence, and illek northern laboring Odessa are loaded down with a debt Of three thousand millions aecomplish the stupendlous crime.— Counting in the negrestme of the Boutb,who produced es much cotton es the maleo, per haps, the producing forces of the two sec tions were about equal, therefore it comes to thj,s, trot only le the labor of the negro lost to the whole country, but every labor ing man iu the North moat hereafter give a very considerable portion of each day's Ate destroy the former. The emi grant, the Irishman, the flamer, the me 011htlitl, every man who adds to the produc tion of the aoaatry, must Past give up a portion of each du's toil to pay the in lereet en the debt animated to "abolish" he labor of the negro In the South, and what I. itift he may spend on his wife and obildren If his children have not quite enough to fill their bellies or to cover their nakedness, why be can only reply to them : Be patient, for though you suffer for food and clothing, and I era giving my sweat end very life-bleed, and-will doubtless die in the almahoteae, Biel* the glorious cause of ereanelpatiew Degrees froth labor. 'But since this riaPPreaohable oriole of to goo,. the negrdea are not onlylost lo pro duotioa, but Northern' laborers are to be taxed eleven minion. More to support ne gro paupers. Well, why not 1 Since their hand is in, why hot complete the job 1 Why not, indeed, bring the negroes Forth and taro the expense of eendirit agents in the emote South to look after them t Why 'xiaty , ladeed, give every negro a while lutist to utOpit,Blf Mat 6/treenail" II would simplify, ~, late Allalter -mightly, and be the iamb thing Ailedf ; '-44 7, 'Day Boa,. Vhe 4iado l— lre. a ly line (He vsbliea) *ye Geary easiest bs• elected Mum the Hirriebhrg landaus . an 4 Ods : ..kikally for soy one to Bailer himself with , the belief that the tsdlest= erleinent alone an tarry in 'WO= In lesonayps- Ids, ant lif•tbr orterystlen Union poa 1 ' 044:14W,fiattaip from" voting.' TM 4 ,Ilailabilaula Pennsylvania estuug.. Led tiotlep 9,„"iy:00,0.4t,.. -0,0... ,064.„,,b.,...14.. ale.a lhaeliviiklifelaiNamErolir hiabAlp wt . of treasinal ANY:4 , 404 litsmoai lei iallaalliaalal deiaat at 41;to polls. Owl blifilti l loopalsrit7 of bit ovillill ;ar'still- Ilas7. Hs is knewil theelsklsNel Mb &tato 0141164:04#A, I{l4lloo9l l , r As Most b;orika•iikiatraWiswir waggiktakil digli a , .9 11:4 1 1V tabor satilar. e With . s litaitkaion. 40,14, to be dispr askairol4lie Oat eta alubsigekairli ItittihA4lo•Plittolitild oit lin woo, y S ~ m.01101441:t.e drew risq - aig itaroald appear UM Inheill bang nava 4lmotlier 4114111MbigthOlinitaMI tool Whit ; t f " 'Mteaye . .n .Pr. , 15. r : ...-:,. • . . r. •. ' ' .-. IV. " • . .. l . 1 • • ' ... 4 i. l ' .— . . -. ' t 1-1 0 •s i ' I ,t. :: '.'","-. /!.- ',. V ';" ,„.: ) Al I I ill i• d AY ( . ~. 1 . . , '1; :Cl l iti ' i f :// /I - 4n . . i , Ter 1 EM TEN BOLA It BLAZE Vs. TEA BOYS TN Dens.—Gen. Geary, the Disunion candidate for cipternor„ is now the wader of Ihn brigade," heltai deserted the •tboys in blue," I% order to take charge of the boys in' Meek f He Is the candidate of the lkuutp Congress which does nothing but leg. islet. for the negro, esti which deolared the Union to be composed of but twentylire Stoles. Grant and Sherman, Meade and flancook elicit to lint principles ; they, are for the Sag with thirty-sax stars upon it and for thil Union with thirty sis Stotts Included within its limits. They, also, stick to the boys in blue acid disdain to lay off their battle harness to eloth• themselves in bleak to serve the purpose of office galling. — Not so with Geary. He is for the Thad. Stevens Rump Union of twenty-five States, for the Sumner multilated flag of tekenty•five stare. lie has laid aside his uniform of tree blue, and donned the .bleoh. of the Freedmen's Bureau and the paddle color of the Negro Civil Rights RIM While Gcsin and Bhe'rbui, Meade end Hanoock stood by Andrew Johnson, who in the Commander in Chief of the Army Ind Navy of the United Stale., Geary oppow him and suffers him self to bo used are tool in the hands of the, Dlsuniontets. Thad. Stevens is in the interest of the conspiracy orthn Rump Con green against that noble patriot. There is a direct issue, therefore, between Geary, the leader‘oll the boys to Glaek, and the friends of the patriots' who fought for a Union of therty•eis Stoles and under a flagvf thirty -it.. stars, the soldier oh Irene, the bails in blue.—Bedford Gazette, TNM KUM or 0110 ANIMATION we NEED.— The Democraey should organize elube im mediately In every eleetiou'distriqt in the State. The object of these eldbs should be organization. There in no special necessity for much speech making just yet. That will be done in due time and done with ef fect. When the appeal donned to be made to the people of l'enesilrani. on Ole great issues now agitating the nation, we have no doubt so to the response which will come swelling up from the groat popular heart. The slump will be more potent than it has ever been before. The Radicals cannot de fond their policy, and it will be repudiated with soma and loathing. We shell have h.• • the masses with tie nentiment. But enthusiasm alone never yet accom plished great results. We need organize tlon—close,Perfeet, working organisation. There is much other work (o be done be sides milting and listening to speeches.• In the New Englaud states and in New York the 11,publicaos bare bad as elßoieut or ganisation for years, which reached to ev ery school district in those elates. Every voter has been registered and marked as with them, against them, or doubtful. O W could count up and alcertnin very nearly whirl the result would he before so election occurred. Such organisation as that Is a moat potent engine of power. That is just what the Democracy must do iu Penneylvards and elsewhere If they would * will. The time has gone by when elections can be carried without organisa tion. We have a clear Democratic majority of voles in Pennsylvania if they are alt polled. To do that must constitute the chief work of the Deumerney.—GreitysOury Computer. A Lassos PO{ DA o.—An old gentleman farmer, who had two or three very pretty daughters, was so very mations of his charge that be would not permit them to keep the company of young men. Howev er, they adopted the following expedient to enjoy the society of their lovers, without the knowledge of their father: After the aldlso had retired to rest, the girls would hank a sheet out of the window, which was quAewt tibial:4lton/ the grouise; and the beatt would seise bold of It, and with the assistance of his lady-love, who tugged lus tily at the end above, would dhus gain en trance. But It so happened that ono eve ning the girls hung out the abeet.rat her ear ly : for the old gentleman, by some ill wind, was blown around the corner, sad spying the bed-covering, could not conjeeture, the meaning of its being there. Ile look bold and endeavored to pull it down. The girls, supposing it to be one of their-beaux, be gan to hoist, and did not discover glair min. dike until the head of the old man was level with the window-sill, when one of them ex claimed, "Oh I Lord, it's lad I" and letting go their hold,-g, use came the ohl-asan on the bard stones and pound below, dislocat ing one of his shoulders, which convinced him that his efforts to make old maids of his dsughtere was not a matter so easily accom plished, and, withitnftring all oppositlon to , their keeping oompanyylle was soon a futh esdn-law,—A. -111eClure's Repository soya Bargees'/I "lblepreAlakes ommelonal spells of ma lignity toward Gel. Curtin, and as it can not safely attack le yatecutive t imenolts Lim indireotly.". Bergnedi said Secretary Biller was opposed to the sisaln. of the dithanohisement bill. The Rjosito ry says this is not true. Bergner says At torney General Meredith has pronounped that bill titutioual. McClure mays this ain't so ; that Meredith has el pressed any opinion upon die subject. Then Aleck goes on to read the Deacon a lecture about his "perrersions" and "suppression," and his • many and general wickedness, 'all of *bleb we are prepared to believe as be ilia au; "gospel ; troilue: one,pcps pollard& tiff - lily can get. A: [t'ain't our {bey non wallop each other as much *Weibel' sikyks•pasd.when they get through, their ,saugiiiose7 ekeroises we shall make n*ogrittt;U:dlyt i reditiltabby Curtin over the 1001111.—literiat'sa thetas. - getfq : 7--rof Crime - i)csopered soya "W, Wien AbeilOttotry would b baler Off taday . If every ropublioon, Lad abolition traitor, maddlte. 8 , 00 0 1 ' 4 4 ilebnifit Okla trotter on tool of Wilton, wan la the bos om oidbrabots." An *migration of And kind . would b: intik a blessing to ibis wan try as has nom Iwo visited Opon any poapla, bat w)nt kind, of h 'IMO would- it whiz of •stbraltasa's boom for any one Ilbli to to int .-:" l 9oo4omOttkpf No aPPlled a rattan to (belting of the Attnnireetill Una gigrd erissiloorleirk eliwall4lo.l6 ors TIMONItaICAMION.VI4M3IIII.I4POdo iiOryprosoLoi , rn nab• -:•J—....6411, midi An Wog; Wax a5i74.104 4.00,1,064.• 44 # 0 BWIEFONTE:: PA., FRIDAY, JUN 29, :1866. BANKRUPTCY AND RUIN MUST FOL LOW. The nosteful extravegenee of the Bump Congress has been the theme of mnny a eon• demnetory article in the' newspapers. and the subject of much animadversion among the hardworking tax-payers., Among many other useless or queetionabie expenditures may-be mentioned the folio's ing • $75,000 to Mks. Lincoln; $40,000 for daubing some perishable caricatures upolt tqa ceiling of the rotunda ; $25,000 to the vagrant negroes lying around the capital ; $15,000 to Clara Barton for making lists of missing soldiers. &c. ; $6,000,000 to Missouri for imaginary war expenses; $12,000,000 for the Negro Bureau ; $lOO,OOO to carry Thad Steven's resolution of °engrain' *ion to the Cnnr of Russia; and several - more million to build and arm a lot of forts in Now England— . other projects of expenditure only yht partially noted upon or attempted and detested, are the Niagara canal,slo,ooo.ooo —all for private pockets ; the 'Batik rail road, 4 hundred million—a grand field for private plunder; the soldier's bounty bill, $200,000,04i0—0n0 fourth for the usher, ant and the balance for loyal" thieve.; the air-line railroads and telegraph., mil., lions mote for Milder; the negro bureau, $75,0C0 ) 000--vetoed, Sc Besides all these, several million dollars have been wastefully spent ill smelling and white witching - mittens, sent out to manufacture (Herndon capital. These had hundreds of other ex penditures and projects of ex pendkree show how recklessly the money rung from the people in taxation is squandered, But the wasteful extravagance of the Rump Disunion faction might, in time, be remedied, Tina is not the worst feature of their acts and schemes. Their course of captiousness, hatred pnd injustice toward the whites of the South and their patronage of the black race is keeping alive dial rust and-ill feeling, and etc greatly unsettling the business and fin...mini prospects of the coun try that the weekly lone to the people in gen eral prosperity may safely be estimated at millions of dollars. The country cannot en dure this elate of thins. much longer. It is almost as devastating as war itself. Al though peace has reigned for more than a year, there is no hope or confidence at the South. Confiscation is sweeping away the lands from the originnl owners Into the pos session of Northern Yankees and thriftless negroea. l'untilftneut for rebellio'n,by hang ing, Imprisonment, banishment.loss of prop erty, denial of the right to hold any office or to vote, is hanging over the heads of thous ands and thousands of Southern men, de pressing and crushing them as with a moue lain. Over all hangs the sword of Damocles —negro suffrage—by which,should they es cape the other impending dangernthey may be buried beneath the Political tyranny of an ignorant and brutalised race—the wit hin tools of Yankee Disunion politicians Consequent upon this state of agitation and danger, there is no plantirig of cotton, of mine, of tobacco ; there is no gathering of rice ; no manufacture of turpentine,pitch and tar, nomtnensurate with the demand for these articles, or with. the desire of the peo ple to labor and produce them. •.," Recon- Yruotion." that foul sohente ,of darkness, with its latent aurae of disfranchisement and political tyranny, stands in the way not on -11 ache restoration of the Union but it is withering and blighting our country's pros perity nod happiness Not 114 South alone, however, is suffering. Every it'ity annriown. and township in the Northern Steles is altar ing in the general depression. The South ern- people are merely cultivating wheat, corn, vegetably, fruits, &e., and raising such stock And fowls as are necessary for their subsistence until the troubles now en compassing them shall be settled. Conse quently there is no market there for the nut pine corn and pork crop of the Western Staten, as there was before the war, and ought to be now. The same influences have combined to prevent a demand upon our Northern workshops for plows, harrows, mowers, reapere,stenm engines null boilers, cotton gine, crushing mills, baling p;rbsses, refiniog machinery, and the thousands of Northern manufactures of hdusehold com fort and luxury, which a prosperous South would have demanded to the extent of many millfon dollars daring the time the Rump Congress have been engaged in their self aggrandizement schemes. Every man eau see how much has been 1 lost to the Northern business and working petiole by the agitation in Congress. The 1 cloning up of numerous workshops through out the country devoted to the manufacture of agricultural implements and useful ma chines is significinnti"•. But a few days ago our citizens sew the exteuotve manufacner, known as the Novelty Werke go undo.. the Sheriff's hammer in this city. Every ob• server is cognizant, moreover,of the stagna tion of bugloss. in the manufacturing cities and of the decrease in the demand for and remuneration of labor. It dew not require a very close lehsoner upon cause and abet to trade the source of all. these obstacles to our prosperity to the persiatentdisunionigat of the political dimagogues now doininating and legislating for eontinped =prat:tatty. It the people are wise, therefore, they Will at once out loose from entangling alliances with Thad Stevens and those who go on with him for their private gain. No one enders lAng his views should be elected to any office, fue so sure *Aix plane are carried out so cure will general bankruptoy and rut re snit to the people of the North in r turn for impeding political slavery upo the South. Let the Union he Mlle natured, bow er, and the Notation; people admitted to pre sentellon,with • 'felt tOPPMthillts le,rig 1 1 " tbe peat, and a new era will at none dawn Ural 00 !teeth tut the North. Plantations will spring front Nihon inth'ithdtialieiltis —from Maryland to Plies; cotton,' swiNur. ripe, turpentine,. alt., Vll flow upon the 114,.A tors Galt pork " will tax tLair pristsis voiSis'deiViNhe 1410.44401. tend every Northern Worishelp latratio . ii and ,iisinuhkotory lOU rattle with the bathe of ea the And' remnontatims %dusts?: The pimple lure his their power to bri ng prosperity maul". which will they ohoone f —Patriot it Cosies., Tai Claottuar—lt 4 sow }nit" eildmat -cast tits ebelatitprillquW sprolid :Oyer thi :01MityLte 432,* O,I~W !West thk IiO 4 ;4IICoNP4 0141; *l4' . 1 444 1( tiligpsiple as to gplostat lot Dick* sills abellebaipsimp 4 die uses Um*. HOW TO KEEP .A HOTEL Robison. in the New York Seturtley Pres., says: fleeing !reveled considerskly niy time, 11 havet hong', t some brief suggeii ions, short, pnimpit, of n perfect mnntial on fhtt subjtel, might be useful. Proonre n well dressed clerk with huirlj blank little. if possible, to etnnd at the and by all menus insist on hie wearing dia monds. Seedy risitore will take no liberties with sunk It' man,' When a trltialer comes In he is not to no tice him for the spaint'of Ave minutes at least; it puts the obligation nt once where it belongs You take him in, not he you. • It Is anipliellent tlevioe to have the 3111M hers 95 your choral:tars reversed from the old plan, i a let them begin to count from the root. Thus, when the guest sees the clerk Ai " No 10," for instouce,opposite his same on the register. he departs satisfied, and is too much eshausted and cowed hp the time he di s scovers its whereabouts to make anYlaom pla Instruct your clerk that eta not his boat near to know anything about departing earn and nteambonl■ Also, if your house bei , ppens to bo a country town, to add one dollar a dity,insts viably to all New Yorkers' bills. They will not thiiik much of your house no herwise. When it guest has paid his bill, and is nbout to depart, let the clerk ask cheerfully which way do you go, Mr. RODIRSOIIr ' Some persons are so easily imposed upon that the esti aortlingry fact of itghly bedi zened clerk knowing their 'nom two mht tales after reading show on the regisler,tlck les them tremendously. 111 regard to the dining room yon cannot bare too impudent a man no bend waiter It 'Mould be hit duty when a guest enters the room, no matter bow empty it may be, to tale him in convoy, and make bun walk Ike entire length °fit before assigning him a Feat. It nut only nerves to Impress the arnlitleur of the apartment upon him, but invariably disconcerts haeltful men, en that they de. Tour choir meals meekly and make no troub lesome request!. Ladles shouldjm served In the same way for slimily contrary 'melons. . It affords them a very fine opportunity for to dirplay their clothes, and puts them in a good humor. Lot the ewes be kept religiously apart while fecoling,uriless it should be in the case of husband and wife Married men traveling alone will suffer ao much from the dearth of female sooiety,that the nest time they will probably bring their wirer. It will scarcely be neoesaary to make any suggeatona in regard to extra charges iu the bill, an they will naturally occur to the feeblest of landlords. You should,however,in winter, charge for o fire'in every room that has conveniences for it, nod if remonstrated with, ,reply that it is tho "rule of the house," nod that the guests might Inv* had it. This phrase you will find of immense ser vice on all sorts of occasions. Croduce the largest Chinese gong you can find to awaken your guests in the morning and call them to their meals. They will conclude that your house is a stunning af fair. A nigro will probably Wei it more thor oughly than a white team Alrb, on the counter au the office, keep an immense Hemmer bell. A judicious clerk will produce a very humbling MUM -upon a modest guest by sinking it rapidly four or five times when be is asking absurd questions.. THE ASSASSINATION OF LINCOLN We did tlnnk God for calling Linctedit home: It Lincoln' is in !leaven, as Aboli tioniste soya, Luis hotter off then be was in Washi?gton, beset by thieveS, Abulltiou istar.tariny•contractors, uffloweeekere and gaping listeners to hie smutty jokes. As a friAd of Lincoln we thank God for calling so great end good a- man home before be should become diagusted with the Anise, the Janes, the Thaddeuses, the Benjamin', the Charities, the Feeds, and others of the leaders of the God and Morality party. We thank God for calling Lincoln into the presence and contpany of Defnocrals. as be is if in Heaven. Tae poor President stf fered enough from being with AbolltloAta on earth, and we thank God for calling him beyond their reach or influence here or here after. %Meter is, is right. God, who rules us all, wanted Lineoln removed—He made Beath his agent ; no one but God is to blame far Lincoln's death. God is never to Warne we, who aro Christiana. should thank him for evergtklog; we do so thank him ; he who does not thank God la no Christian ; those who assail no are no Obilstiens. We believe the emulate is better off now than when Litwin was alley. ; , WkhnUee.ptoreb ataleinuyealiip khan in nigger Bongs, or in hnantrona yarns in time of war. •We believe Lfneoln Maa n mare mart of putty In the hand of traitor. add ihieretr, knows latterly as Abolitionists. lye believe that Ood mar 'that be was mot rant even If ornamental, and removed him to mile room for a better man. ' We belleee Johnson Is a better man than Lincoln—if he ttee,ll, - **r*lY the great Iteptibllttan party would not have gene out of the Union for i candidate for the Vies Presldenej, why; they had no many good, pure, honerahliLstatestuen in the North .We' *ire' the eiwityl Would be better elf 148,4', if eibri ftvOilllnen WAI4I- tiot"a meddler, syeephant, aPoloitst iji " l . e z loiter, tor toolediralio're„ were la the :19IPbfa * h ti • e believe, tar ra, that the AbollliOn pert 4 AWE . to the literati, aid To do 144.541.69•.4144, . ,t qpd we ,till further hailer. that Atntlek" &amoral . treemoreereeiriezeht La the *wee ter thee dyls 3‘hreete.holl—aluat se do net weasolhi weep eta dew tee t e goad ow in *plebe wattan , tU Abeittlaweintree lags hmid..4o4roddill sink, nate pepewjeet,as Ws 40 $4, 1 4a akt_ _fflithAithmtattp! a,, , ' 000 4 0 don ile - tat4Votkkitil , wft*Atthe Ptastitr—iiimmiti4,4l Fiefffflf* 1=461 . ! 44:Aist 'MA Orlintiti e. *saw ha en titetiellag twedttloe. • THE LATEST INFAMY. OVER THE WAY. • We take the renewing deapatob from the t Oene to rrhildlilie parity columns of the New pork Tribriftelo Oat from the golden day; f yttfer- p.a . * nnny in e day vifbere the hirer stars sad .. the sunbeams meet. Over the silent way. me Cons teinftiond Amentitirrat—Propdortfion; t for Ingonrelisin Stele Arlion. nat..419111.P111.4, Thursday, June 14, IOGA. After the Senate adopted the Constitu, tionat amendment. joet concurred In by the House of Representatives,,ilevarnor Curtin addressed a °neuter letter to the Governors of all the loyal 'Slates, suggesting the pro. priety of Union in wet tin in milling together their legislatures for the retitle:hien of that amendment. It is now understood that such uniform achoriwill be had sod that before the adjournment of Congress a yatineation of the amemendtuani will be shade We bad snore than ono* heard a hint that *scheme, of the kind here boldly-avowed, was in onntemhtstion and had long been's matter of secret dieensaion in the councils of the t4tilloals. But we did not believe it. It seemed incredible. There wee nothing in "Governor Curtin's recent political course on which to ground a s!piefol that bewould lend himself to such a shameless work, but, on the contrary, there were many things to justify an assured conviction that he would spurn any connection with it. But it seams that we were mistaken. We honored him overmuch lie has not merely given hie as sent to this base scheme for forestalling the judgment of the people upon a question of vital interest to them and their posterity, but has taken the initiative in ii, and ap pears before the publie as its author Let se consider whit it is he proposes to do. It will be remembered that the Legieln tore of Pennsylvania, which be propose, to convene in special session, was' not chosen by the people in anticipation that any such amendments to the 6onstitutiots as those which have recently passed Congress would be submitted to it. We Venture to assert that not a single condidate fora seat in that britly dared to avow biurek pending the election, an advocate of negro suffrage We know pi:941,01y that every Republican wit'n was chosen did his beetle convince his con stituent., when he solicited their suffrages, 'hot no such purpose as that of enfrancluen ing the blacks was in contemplation Ity Ids party. There cannot be n doubt that had the yeople understood that this wit ion was an immediate and practical one, that It would come up for settlement by their rep , resentatives before another election and that by obgg4►ng a RepubliCatt Legislature they would give their assent to the establishment of at gro equality within their own borders and throughout the land, they would bare mist strh an overwhelming Democratic vote as would have left their opinions In 'no doubt. But they were deoeived, and the party whieliNot control of the Legislature got it on a faire pretense. Their hypocrisy was all along 'unruliest to us, but we did not suspect them of a design so outrageous as that which Governor Curtin's circular fore shadows. It is now proposed to take away from the people the opportunity to say yea" or "say" to question* of nearer libhcern to their right's and interesle than any that have over been presented to them since the Con etitution won formed Their judgment:is to be anticipated. A partizan Legislature is to be called together,in specialsession,to hur ry through a work which dare not be trust ed to their successors, who will be elected with,open eyes and a full kgswledge on the part of their eonstitnents of the Interests which will depend upon the choice they make. The Witehington Chronicle declared last winter that If the Republicans' should go before the people of Pennsylvania upon the issue of negro suffrage they would be beaten hopelessly and everywhere. In this declaration lies the secret of Governor Cur the.' baste. It is hoped by giving a speedy ratification to the amendments hot only to ensure their adoption, but to take the clues lions which they involve,and which the rad• ioale dare not meet In the campaign, out of the arena' of discussion. No grosser mintion of the spirit of the Constitution than this wee ever Conceived, even the party which have distinguished thereelven by their contempt. (or it. The provision which requires amendments to be submitted to the Legislatures of the respect ive Stoles is. of course, designed to secure an expression of the sense of the people of each State, speaking through their repre sentatives. But, here, the Legislature is summoned to flarrkburg to decide a ques tion °folk.' importance upon which the peo ple of Pennsylvania have net passed, sod have had no opportunity to pass, judgment. This is a fraud—a gross and palpable fiend —one which must rouse the indignation of every honest breast. We 'hope that it will he exposed and denounced as It should be by the whole Conservative press of the Com_ monwealth. It is the West and basest of those multiplied (mirages upon law...Pietism, and decertify, by which the Republican nex t), has hitherto ?imaged to maintain its power. We prolest against it, not merely because of its-intrinsic wickedness, but be• cause of the strife it promisee to engender —the stormy, Buture which It forbodes for this country. Because we would not see revolution, we protest with all fhe might that is in nee against an dotrige which it would almost scent Is Intended to Lprorbllt l'ne.Gantmet Same or UXSIIIO.I4—I the Woo 'of home oddly ilbeetieted in Ore gee elm night ,ha 1t aiontry bar 1111014. Home well dressed wen. l• • Male of la•mill drink wads houliNl of resp•otirs pAiMr at of nativity." "I.' eon' ono, 'l'm bora 1R Jl4liteisolppi, were the son ever altlnee, and the amino. Use bloom All the happy par round.'!- ..e} s od I," sold apothoo. w.l ?tarp ip ipla• tullkythe Lome, Rooter" home ottM7 ; fide ot hphoiidhi ". :ea Neki tioYd l ia Illy oat; ' dpi'i ob tA tio of Ohlrilior As* !hod Aoblo h00f444 1 41., if ; fl 0:•!! /049w.k.ilre d 1 ,4 - lowsti4opodp.,l/1/0 Int of atiNZ, ty of *Load who bed hoot qwlo4l7losto '‘.44l t P 1 1 1; 4 4- 119 "g* s _ mum iloook 40,,Y0F! Pg44041.748 " r" to th, 1ai, 44 . 11 .41!t:AP4 1 ”•1 , . 1, • 14 4.1! hero Li thi k t,b th e l lOsa. • i , •.1 ' 4 14 11.044, ..kta ail lira ji**ex•arrikgl4llraim AthiPir. u g p r i veis , Van_ f Noe lagfVfliftif lor4 Golf riff=grOok sod that of our people to the Coartilaiidba. -NO. 26." Over the bosom tenderly 1 r The peerl white hands erte'presseti ; The ladtee,lie on her ebeerks so thin— Where the softest blush of the rose bath heels Shafting the blue of her eyes within The pure lid. e;eeed to Net. Oror the sweet brow lovingly Twineth her sonny hair • She was so fragile that lore sent down !from his heareni7 gems that soft bright crown To shade her brow with Its warm no brown, = Gene to sleep with the tender smile Frown on he silent lips, By the farewell him of her dewy breath, Cold in the chop of the easel Death, Like the last bed of a faded wreefh, Whose bloom the white fund nip.. Robin-rhaehed to your downy be,l ' Over the turliglug bough— Do you wise her rul e from. your glad duel, Whem the dew In the heurr of the ruse to set, Till Its 1 rivet lips with the euenee wet In orient erlturnu glow. Rose bud—undeeyour trendy Ire, .llid from the Funny day— Do you miss the glance of the eye so bright, Whose blue was heaven to 'Mir timid right , It Is blossureing.now in a world of light Over the starry way. Hearts where the darling head bath lain, held by Lore'e chilling ray— Do you know that the touch of her gentle bond Doth brighten the harp Le the unknown laud! Oh, she walla for no dish the •ogel band, Over the Marry way. g . THiS, THAT ANErTHE OTHER —There is very large eusigrelion to Colo redo this Neuron. =The Johnson men in lowa giro about to hold a State Convention. —The wheat borstal Was rommeneed in North Caro/Ina last week. —Young men who Wuhan young women drays long td be joined to there Hole. —Swimming Is one of the regular branches of a Honolulu female boarding retool. —There were 800 divorrea in Ohio tart year. Oooti many fur • “Union" State. —Colonel W. W. Seaton, of the National bateifigeocer, died on Saturday, aged 81. --The Paris Conference has Leen broken oil, and a European war ',considered Inevitable. —Their°ld mine! at Dablunega, Owen, ere about to be worked with Improved machin ery. --The Moamar Magnolia wu burned at M. Louis on Tuesday morning. The ion Is about $lOO, 000. —Thelpare on which many • .poor fellow bliftlben carried away,'is the wave of a lace handkerchief. • —A boy, twelve years of age, •tabbed 4ls mother, in Beadle Von Friday, addle she was punishing bins. .-2The Bight.hour League of the New Or. leans werbßsgmen rigidly exclude. neagrom from membership. Jamea llompbry, member of Con gress from Brooklyn, N. L., died. la that city on Saturday. —Jame.; W. Patterson was on Friday elec ted United States Senator, by the New Hatnp. sit ire Legislature. —There is a report., thit: Fredrick [(NW* and is to be the 'Republican candidate for Gov ernor of New York. —Tbe merehanta A of Savannah, GM., ore making arrangementito celebrate the Fourth of July in grand etyle. —The Pontroaeter-Geueral reran. to m ere.., the pay of New England railroads for narijiwg the mall.. —Why is a dog with a broken lag like • boy In arithmetic? Answer, Because imoputs down three and carries one. —lt le rumored that the New York Lees lature will be eonvened in August to ratty.the Constitutional amandmout. employees or the re Alm In (hot& sad Booth Carolina are resigning, be ing uneble% t►R the test oath. —Colonel Roberts, of the Fenian Brother hood, was in Washington, on Saturday, and" was .felted by several Congressmen. —A destructive fire occurred at Newberry, South Carolina, on Monday. A number of store. and dwellings were destroyed. —The Montreal Gazette worts that thou, opposed to confederation are simnel, In Amor of annexation to the United Stater. —A female writer says the "nation wants a man." Perkspe she has roarbunded her ems penonal want with that of the nation. —A wag, attempting to quiz an Irish depot tender inquired, "Has the railroad got In I^ "One Ind has," was the prompt reply. —The Bt. Oland D.woeeet states that a train or ea. hundred warms t0...m011y left St. Oload, Minnesota for the gold Woes of hide hum. —Thighs= Ilany's' sisty-fiftb birthday wee eelebrated in Mew York on Friday last by the Mormons now stopping there, le a Maas, at the MetropolAaßMoteL ' • -- .At the recent trial of Oallaher, in BoMoo for murder, the Ant juror that was caged was • neirm. ,14 was supposed that 'VI zsitr% *Wild be challenged, but he was not. —.Do you know the primmer, 14. Wig. gins y. Yrs, to the boom" What Is his shun ter t Blas% know be bad soy. Dose kr live near you.? So soar thud ho boo only moat $h for Ira wood to Meta year& "---0011114A121 Doolittle and Cowan, 0. Browning of Moo* Gress Cloy Smith of lieu lucky, and W. A. liurisigh of boosts Territory ars members of .ti,. JOhnron Clot Isesathe Committee id Washington. ' (Jog. Ditvialltualth is fitillas rapid ly. 'll - b Mated that tholsommant iossy trernr. Up and shaming of the c ipanisaroost his Nil has prneand him haring ammo thao two boon of %obtains,' shop at any ono time ittring tM past yeli.— Officio lapori of Aik Dwtr DOLL On'Tthunday . tilght be (holm') dapt= s Webody staiiiimi I tic tte v is Mott stippm, kept op bb andtY"Wilk MD side -.Ammons V Ms ationimar're Pratt hlisteimg, dediasist vTIM. aieolloo4ll l l ll Ilia.sumber et WO Nosh& Fir ":lo4l449ftriiroVrall Whins'inantled iron link bank fralltgagt 'Whose IsTlini berloi t 11•11 Wbettless****snaldsoil peinifioliaifiess ,') • 4... • ; INssit inns ? :0 1, 4 1 4t1 104 # 0, 14v=e, IMO% tag sous?• liustair•ll , ta disisslTW4 • nordiiins?,l2s bLuitilpidu •• • • •.• 'I VI Amt. •o• igloo We asi AlarlabQibit i elFP '.•.:, ?NOW SO. Ai r e, fries& inereprneallei s use to allow them to causes sod palplida laiiiftwalmtrlabletre is a hook. Vale took will .g dent emagoin about a mostb from this date. Prom a let• ter 4 1. ' 14 rebba.ar% o' l 4 l 11410erel lie introduction L.A. Wok, Wo makethe Oil loweeS efieWelea fogmr that tifilllon' gives the Zeiffesieldinose of his mind," Ls words ..with the lweillt i qui." CoPtPlersd• Nit At )1 ", accepted the elfwallen. • have pledged ourselves to alahli by It. We hove sworn to dO so. We have dpslaraidlt most Wear in convent lon. We hare asserated it in nett' 'Mt and deed aatedie.ii Q&4r. skids our enemies eaanot appreelete, bat widel•fi..untaradalteil ¢W/A4. is the seat of our good feith. Wherrer testi fies to the eristonas ens'enliiioila tassel* doe deaclosiug • *wawa at Allersisdlime, is either it ho victims of his owe stmairdieti, or else the 'lmhof of a selfish and imorttesaUtt 1 say les with feeling and Indignatiom for. we mein such teetimbny • williegnese, A desire, on the part of our military to retain over an Mel? power aqd !belt ly ranny for maliolous or &twelfths et*. 'We have long felt, and we arc till fahhig their insults, their black wail, lkelr rob beries. Ours is the stranded skip, Mel the Federal ofileers'imong us are the wreckers: Ours the eareatee ante they the vultures/41w are picking our tentaded hones. Thi little that was left our people is Belied, wed re leased upon paying a pert lido private pock ets.. They get Helk wed realer, mid a Mesh maps of vetopiros lake their please, to re. new the operatiou. They Lava even boot known to steel by night, and haul away the poor pittance of damaged corn. that our gen erous (1) Government bed stored for distri bution to Wit vision's poor. It hi for-ssen purposes that 'military dominion be is be continued. • Would that this were all I But not content with even this sahaustimeof our scanty 'beasts, the! are annolling our commits made with the laborers who were content to work in our gelds for fair magas. and are lonia' the.. off to parts unknown under false pretence.. Our ploughs are slhnding In the fields idle, our farms will go untilled.and the land swarms with agents who ore bribing the poor magma away un der promisee of higher warm, mil ender the sanction of a Bureau as rotten as the promises of Pharoals. Viz Weds. Bet Milt we abide all those sad results, and look upon It as • part of the war, and is keeping with the ehnteeter of those who have se long besmear eUennes. They but ezhibit the. anitatti"ar a people whose hate and avarice Induced the "rebel lion. SuelWeppresslon lee tamed hum them almost the last opponent of miaseeko, and cauMed them to regret that they did nut throw then lives" and fortunes into Molest. Perhaps this is all for the beet We son not tell. We lave almost meelad to phi losophise upon it, for we fare ea time to think. The work of actual reiteasimetion absorbs our lima end energies. Imegathe reconstruction, of our individual' foetuses, our houses, ourlielde and fano), OW mil. roads, ..notimouns, gramask,pdtistiis and ebumbes. We have noting lofty and mourn over the loss of liberty. But I find time to ask: What has the lirerth gained by the wall What prinetplest have been eitabllsbed ? What great or vital questions have been settled 1 Is the Meer 'linty of a State forever samiled T Than let Giblets take down her deesithol sign, obliterate her gnu seiafklate, •101 dome another, for Ute one oh. Lai Inobtioleti—ess tees promfty pertami made • gown WI "Mate docerdosty" upon It. Is it the fire* door of slave* that has bees seetompWilbed Alsel the sue and a half mipions who have perished liktlve war are eirreida . lily free; the remainder Mu rapidly reollisbeg the Wm liberty, or finding • new bondage fa other I.lke the poor IrdL., the ism is doomed, .64 the mighty ,fleetta, sail. tri umphs In the glory of sesempliefineists. Rut I wliknee splash more of Ws. Tit the charitable reader let mot my. Pongive me it you find something to madmen in the following pages. It is not in my beset to offend a good MR, whether he Use Borth or South ; and there be botiMilidiftel *al I of whet should have, or have Dot, been unified. It maybe said that the ohmmeter of these letters has no Mildewy to, soften the animosities engendered by the late un happy strife. roan only answer, dud* is not 'in 'rebel entire to be Weida to those who would put the NSA spun as. Our people are a unit upou the morel of the fight they made. They diesel' that the preveastion of dm wee wee sioCof their begetting. Many Vitae and oft base men and witless been coatenneekbut not *winced. The story otlivelatid. Po land, and the 'Hero of the Lekesoia• hies often deProdlamd. legends are not remedied, nor rights totorgarkisy wager of battle. • While amusing ie lowiePhop t er4e ( of the aobleefet rp• Too 0.;111111, lb° W ert, daI AVO. - .FV44 1 1.5. 1 * quesors him* pa.,,iyiki).6141111111,7‘ stings with the ruipi ?iota aline 'drill Oft hastens water *taut Winced 80 . irow:ltioa Who're 'perseittoa. It hi s$ tare to metier teasettlet ' utowa who would NW play the us late dust. • ""• • ra Hut to pet, tied rtuder;4ldiwil timer woutli te th sowlug li4lterAirrill) Who would pet-wa*pft li o loymio.oho o , oud prefer the boil eindeidieWiliitkiltilko lay tildt. theeshiteloweidelhuot oteritimo- Wu, the noels isosidueoweilaur feepliedll weeelettsoddilblly ettbe frbeoiweee• aid tow,* oubbeweroilderoemeiihuleiu Viled/w -who 110414/00p-ortbeirresesegtager heart. owldlillite the red wow etebtionou igolPfof lir tkwigiosakmotoor wrisigkaa • hal!PPrld
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers